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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77783 ***
+
+
+
+
+ THE GATEWAY TO CHINA
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: MR. BAO ON LEFT, ONE OF THE THREE FOUNDERS OF THE
+ COMMERCIAL PRESS, WITH OTHER MEMBERS OF THE STAFF
+
+ (See chapter “_A Wizard Publishing House_”)]
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ GATEWAY TO CHINA
+
+ PICTURES OF SHANGHAI
+
+ BY
+
+ MARY NINDE GAMEWELL
+ Author of “We Two Alone in Europe”
+
+ _ILLUSTRATED_
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ NEW YORK CHICAGO TORONTO
+ Fleming H. Revell Company
+ LONDON AND EDINBURGH
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1916, by
+ FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY
+
+ New York: 158 Fifth Avenue
+ Chicago: 17 N. Wabash Ave.
+ Toronto: 25 Richmond St., W.
+ London: 21 Paternoster Square
+ Edinburgh: 100 Princes Street
+
+
+
+
+ TO MY HUSBAND
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+Shanghai is a little world, where all China in miniature may be studied
+at close range. Thither drift Chinese from every province in the
+country, who for the most part in the new environment follow their
+age-long customs and cherish their inherited traditions. But the city
+is also remarkable for its rapid and constant changes. A member of
+a local book-firm declared not long since, “We have never tried to
+publish a guide to Shanghai because in six months it would be out of
+date.” To an Occidental the chief fascination of this busy metropolis
+lies in the curious commingling of things old and new, practices
+ancient and modern, which meet one at every turn. More strikingly
+than any other city in the Far East, Shanghai represents the Orient
+in transition. To catch and portray some of these shifting scenes,
+the following “Pictures” have been drawn, with the hope that they
+may stimulate interest in China and awaken a new love and admiration
+for the Chinese people. It need hardly be explained that no attempt
+has been made at a complete study of the subjects described. This
+is particularly true of the last chapter, where several phases of
+missionary activity have been touched upon by way of illustration,
+while societies and organizations doing an equally valuable work have
+not been mentioned. The history of the Christian Literature Society,
+for example, reads like a romance and it is a well-established fact
+that its books had much to do in shaping the radical policy of the late
+Emperor Kuang Hsü and the liberals of that period, which eventuated
+in the dawn of progress and a New China. To all friends, Chinese and
+foreign, whose suggestions and criticisms have helped make possible
+this little book, warmest thanks are extended.
+
+ M. N. G.
+
+ METHODIST EPISCOPAL MISSION,
+ SHANGHAI, CHINA.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. EVOLUTION OF A CITY 13
+
+ II. CIVIC FEATURES 20
+
+ III. STREET RAMBLES 42
+
+ IV. THE LURE OF THE SHOPS 57
+
+ V. HOUSEKEEPING PROBLEMS 73
+
+ VI. SOMETHING ABOUT VEHICLES 91
+
+ VII. A PEEP INTO THE SCHOOLROOM 106
+
+ VIII. A WIZARD PUBLISHING HOUSE 127
+
+ IX. THE CHINESE CITY 140
+
+ X. CUSTOMS OLD AND NEW 155
+
+ XI. A TYPICAL SHANGHAI WEDDING 172
+
+ XII. FOREIGN PHILANTHROPIES 185
+
+ XIII. CHINESE SUCCESSES IN SOCIAL SERVICE 199
+
+ XIV. THE ROMANCE AND PATHOS OF THE
+ MILLS 217
+
+ XV. A PAGE FROM THE STORY OF PROTESTANT
+ MISSIONS 234
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ Mr. Bao on Left, One of the Three Founders
+ of the Commercial Press, with Other Members
+ of the Staff _Title_
+
+ Chinese Policemen Drawn up for Inspection 20
+
+ Some Shops on Nanking Road 58
+
+ High, Black Rickshas Outside the Foreign Settlement 92
+
+ Advertising Singer Sewing Machine Products 106
+
+ Miss Zee’s New School Building. Kindergarten
+ in the Rear 120
+
+ Chinese Composing Room 128
+
+ The Original Willow Pattern Tea House 140
+
+ A Modern Chevalier and His Happy Family 156
+
+ The Coffin in a Funeral Procession 160
+
+ School Girls in Gymnasium Drill 168
+
+ Rescued Child Just Brought to the Children’s
+ Refuge--Old Men at the Home of the Little
+ Sisters of the Poor 186
+
+ Rescued Kidnapped Children as They Were
+ Photographed for Advertisement in the
+ Chinese Daily Newspapers 200
+
+ On the Way to the Mill 218
+
+ Chinese Boy Scouts 234
+
+ Corner Stone of Boys’ Building, Y. M. C. A. 244
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+EVOLUTION OF A CITY
+
+
+From time immemorial the Yangtsekiang has deposited at its mouth
+quantities of silt borne downward from the far West on its mighty
+yellow tide. Little by little, water gave place to mud flats, and
+mud flats to green fields. On this alluvium a handful of fisher-folk
+settled a thousand or so years ago, and from their straggling village
+gradually evolved the Shanghai of today. Shanghai means “Mart on the
+Sea,” but the city is now sixty miles inland. The Whangpoo River, a
+branch of the Yangtse, that flows past it, has during the past fifty
+years narrowed one-third, and only by constant dredging is the channel
+kept open.
+
+For many years the obscure fishing-station gave no promise of its
+future greatness; but all things come to them that wait, and Shanghai’s
+prosperity began when an official in charge of shipping and customs
+was stationed there in 1075. Five hundred years later, the place had
+blossomed out into a kind of Oriental Athens, celebrated for its
+musicians, poets, prose writers, and statesmen. It gave birth, also, to
+women of repute, praised far and wide as models of virtue and filial
+piety. The city, like human beings, had its vicissitudes. Again and
+again, it was infested by Chinese and Japanese pirates, swept by
+typhoons, inundated by torrential rains. Although in the latitude of
+Savannah, Georgia, one piercingly cold winter it was almost buried
+under snow, the river covered with ice, and men and animals frozen to
+death.
+
+At the beginning of the nineteenth century Shanghai’s population was
+estimated at over half a million, and her star was in the ascendant.
+A forest of masts from a thousand quaint junks, each gaily painted to
+represent a fish, with staring eyes--for how, say Chinese mariners, can
+a ship see where to go without eyes?--thronged the anchorage. Shanghai
+was the busy seaport for the central provinces reached by the Yangtse
+and for points up and down the coast. Long before ever a foreigner
+settled within her borders her commercial possibilities had been
+largely realized and her position as “Queen of the Sea” assured.
+
+In 1842 occurred the great epoch in her history, when with four other
+cities she was forced by Great Britain to throw open her gates as a
+treaty port. The first Occidentals to reside within the city were
+the British Consul and his suite. The most pressing business that
+confronted the resident British was to secure land for a permanent
+foreign settlement. They soon discovered that it was one thing to
+select the site but quite another to get it. The territory chosen
+lay to the north and west of the Chinese City and for the most part
+consisted of cultivated fields, dotted here and yonder with a village,
+and always and everywhere graves, rising in pyramidal grass-grown
+mounds. As usual, the chief difficulty was over the graves, which the
+purchasers agreed should remain undisturbed. When finally the British
+were in complete possession of the land, they decided the struggle had
+been even more severe and nerve-racking than the capture of the City.
+The French followed close on the heels of the British, demanding from
+the Chinese a concession of their own, something that the Americans a
+little later, with less friction and noise, simply quietly appropriated.
+
+In 1848, five years after the opening of the Settlement, it is recorded
+that the foreign population numbered over one hundred, including a
+few women. How imagination takes wings to itself and pictures the
+conditions under which the community lived at that time! There were no
+hill resorts to flee to for a refreshing breeze in summer, no electric
+fans to temper the heat, no ice-cooled drinks, no screens to shut out
+the flies and mosquitoes. A stroll on the street was robbed of its
+pleasure by lack of sanitation, and a ramble even in the near suburbs
+almost unendurable because of the excrement used on the fields as a
+fertilizer. Cholera, plague, and other Oriental diseases waxed rampant,
+and in the first foreign cemetery many a tiny mound watered with
+tears wrung from aching hearts, told an eloquent story of young lives
+sacrificed to make possible the Shanghai of to-day.
+
+An outstanding event in the history of Shanghai was the investment of
+the city in the early 60’s by the T’aiping rebels, those fanatical
+hordes that for fourteen years kept the country in a ferment, and
+well-nigh overthrew the Manchu dynasty. As the excited rebels advanced
+from the west the populace around fled before them to Shanghai. In
+the original Land Regulations drawn up by the foreigners Chinese were
+forbidden to reside in the Settlement. The panic-stricken refugees,
+however, could not be restrained. They camped first on the outskirts,
+but soon afterward pushed in and overran the Settlement without let
+or hindrance. Shacks were built to house them. They went up by the
+hundreds, like mushrooms, in a night, and real estate speculators
+reaped a rich harvest, for often the refugees were people of wealth and
+paid handsome rentals. Many of these same speculators, who, carried
+away by their good fortune, continued to build at a mad rate, suffered
+heavy losses, and some even bankruptcy, when at the close of the
+Rebellion the crowds began emptying out as fast as they had poured in.
+One reason for the wholesale exodus of the Chinese was their dislike
+of the sanitary regulations at that time in force in the Settlement,
+and they were in great fear lest the foreigners might gain sufficient
+control over the Chinese officials to put the same hated rules into
+operation in the interior cities. Though so many refugees returned
+to their homes just as soon as it was safe to do so, large numbers
+remained, enjoying the protection offered them in the Settlement.
+Efforts were made from time to time to eject them, but without avail,
+while others gradually drifted into this desirable haven. Thus began
+what Shanghai has ever since continued to be, an asylum for the lawless
+from all parts of China. The class of respectable unfortunates is also
+numerous. A Chinese “Who’s Who” for Shanghai, if accurately compiled,
+would astonish the reader with its list of half-forgotten, erstwhile
+famous personages, deposed officials, bankrupt aristocrats, antiquated
+scholars, men who figured prominently in the affairs of the world,
+but, having lost “face,” favor, and fortune, find the cosmopolitan
+metropolis a safe retreat in which to end their days.
+
+“First things” always possess a peculiar interest, and of these
+Shanghai can lay claim to her full share. The first railroad ever laid
+in China ran between Shanghai and the forts at Woosung, twelve miles
+distant, where the Whangpoo River joins the Yangtse. The two men sent
+out to survey the line had a hard time of it and one of them was nearly
+killed by the infuriated people, who declared he should not desecrate
+the graves of their ancestors that lay in the path of the proposed
+road. This line was completed in 1876, but it was destined to a short
+existence. The stealing of window-glass and the blue silk window
+curtains by Chinese passengers, unable to comprehend their utility
+except as a means to fill their pockets with coveted cash, was a small
+matter. The road roused the deep-seated resentment of all classes,
+and from the first was doomed. The grand finalé came when a group of
+Shanghai officials perfunctorily inspected the entire line from their
+sedan-chairs, scorning to stoop to the indignity of riding on the
+train, and gravely pronounced it a menace. Soon after this the rails
+were tom up and it was long before others were laid in their places.
+But the world moved even under the reign of the Manchus, and before
+their sun had set the shriek of the locomotive was heard many times
+every day between Shanghai and Woosung, while in the “most pro-foreign
+city in the world” sedan-chairs are almost as great a novelty as trains
+were formerly.
+
+It seems strange that it should have been during the stressful period
+of the T’aiping Rebellion that one of the greatest boons China ever
+fell heir to was conferred on the distracted nation. That was the
+inauguration in Shanghai of the Imperial Maritime Customs, called
+by one writer “the most telling Western leaven ever introduced into
+China.” The story of the Customs service under the Chinese is one long,
+tiresome record of failure, graft, and loss, and it was not till 1854,
+when the management was assumed by foreigners, whose probity became at
+once the wonder and delight of the natives, that a change was effected.
+Guided through half a century by the master hand of Sir Robert Hart,
+to whom must also be given much of the credit of the National Chinese
+Postal System established during his incumbency, the work has gone on
+growing steadily and yielding an increasing revenue. It is eminently
+fitting that a statue of Sir Robert in characteristic pose, should
+recently have been unveiled in the Bund Park close by the Custom House.
+
+Shanghai has not yet reached the zenith of her prosperity. The Customs
+receipts last year were larger than ever before. Twenty and more
+vessels bound for as many different ports often leave her docks in a
+single day. Never was there as much building in progress, especially of
+Chinese houses. The Western traveller who looks out upon the wide Bund,
+flanked by handsome foreign buildings, with automobiles and carriages
+speeding to and fro, almost wonders whether he is not arriving at a
+European capital instead of a city in China. The native population
+has grown to over a million. Of the twenty-one thousand resident
+foreigners, including Japanese and East Indians, about five thousand
+are British and fifteen hundred Americans. The city is a political
+theatre where plots are hatched and reforms initiated. It is the
+national headquarters of missionary work, the chief seat of commerce,
+the home of progress, in short the nerve-centre of China whose
+influence reaches out to the remotest corners of the land. Shanghai
+faces problems and dangers peculiar to the Orient, but her future is
+bright with the promise of boundless development.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+CIVIC FEATURES
+
+
+“The quaintest little republic in the world” is what Shanghai is often
+called. Certainly there is no city like it in China. Within its present
+limits are peoples from many countries, eighteen having consular
+representation, and all living, in the main, amicably together under a
+polyglot governing body whose members are elected by popular vote. The
+working out of the present system of autonomy was a difficult task. The
+city fathers long ago fought their way through more than one bitter
+controversy, for there were many minds as well as many nationalities.
+The Land and Municipal Regulations now in use are practically the
+same as those adopted back in 1869. Ten years after Shanghai became a
+treaty port the French withdrew from the union and set up a government
+of their own. The others formed themselves into the “International
+Settlement,” latterly known as the “Model Settlement.” Truth compels
+the admission, however, that it is not in all respects as worthy a
+“model” as its wellwishers would like to see it. Still it has admirable
+features, and as self-respecting a metropolis as Hongkong was urged by
+one of her citizens in a recent appeal to wake up and emulate the
+example of stirring, progressive Shanghai.
+
+[Illustration: CHINESE POLICEMEN DRAWN UP FOR INSPECTION]
+
+The centre around which everything political revolves is the Municipal
+Council. The consuls of the International Settlement each spring call
+a meeting of the rate-payers or electors. Any foreigner who owns or
+rents property of a fixed value possesses the right of franchise.
+The rate-payers elect the members of the Municipal Council, and that
+done they retire from the public gaze till the following year, unless
+convened for special business. The Council holds weekly sessions. Its
+nine members are unsalaried business men. Chinese are not eligible to
+membership, but Japanese are, though as a matter of fact there never
+had been a Japanese member, greatly to this people’s displeasure, until
+a year ago, when one succeeded in getting elected. Judicial authority
+is vested in the consuls. Each consul arbitrates for his own nationals
+except in the cases of the three countries having fully organized law
+courts with resident judges. These are England, America, and Germany.
+The English court was established years ago; the American held its
+first session in 1907. The Chinese are extremely sore on the subject
+of extraterritoriality. That it does not exist in Japan only adds to
+their grief and mortification. Since the New Law Codes have been framed
+the nation is more insistent than ever that this thorn in its flesh
+shall be removed and foreign courts abolished. But the new laws are
+not widely operative, and until the old methods of bribery and torture
+are forever relegated to the past the Treaty Powers will continue to
+claim exclusive rights over their subjects, and the subjects to demand
+protection.
+
+A unique institution peculiar to Shanghai, indeed, as some one has
+called it, “the most unique institution ever dedicated to justice,” is
+the Mixed Court. In the early days, when Chinese were made prisoners in
+the International Settlement, they were turned over to the Chinese City
+officials for trial and punishment, but justice was rare, and cruel or
+unduly lenient treatment the rule. To protect the Chinese, and insure
+fair dealing in those cases in which foreigners were involved, as well
+as to try the cases of foreigners having no consular representation,
+the Mixed Court was established in 1865. It has not proved a wholly
+satisfactory solution of the difficulty, for the law in force is the
+Chinese law, and the foreign assessor, an Englishman, American, or
+German, according to the day of the week, who occupies a seat on the
+judicial bench beside the Chinese judge, ranks as little more than a
+figurehead, acting merely in an advisory capacity. Practically though,
+it must be said, and this is particularly true since 1911, he is coming
+to be the real power behind the throne, and to exercise pretty much of
+a controlling influence. At the time of the revolution the management
+of the Mixed Court passed from the hands of the Chinese to the control
+of the Municipal Council. The change was effected quietly, so that
+while the Chinese were well aware of what was going on they could
+appear not to know, and thus save their “face.” If only “face” can be
+preserved facts are of small moment.
+
+A morning spent in visiting the Mixed Court is to most people an
+experience of absorbing interest, as it throws innumerable side-lights
+on Chinese life and character. At half-past nine each morning, the
+hour of opening court, the foreign assessor and the Chinese judge
+walk in and take their seats, each flanked by his interpreters and
+clerks of solemn mein. The witnesses, Chinese and foreign, assemble on
+opposite sides of the room, the prisoners, most of them poor forlorn
+specimens of humanity, file into the docket closely guarded by Sikh
+and Chinese policemen, with an English sergeant-at-arms on duty near
+by, while in the hall, around the door and pressing as far inside as
+they dare, gathers the curious, motley crowd of onlookers, many of them
+relatives and friends of the prisoners, but stolidly immobile during
+all the proceedings. Is there another place in the world where such a
+variety of cases is heard as at the Shanghai Mixed Court, cases civil
+and criminal, tragic, pathetic and comic? Some are intricate enough to
+tax the wisdom of a Solomon, and some are simple as a child’s play. An
+old couple appeared one morning to petition for a divorce. Their faces
+wore such a kindly expression, they seemed so at peace with mankind in
+general and each other in particular, that the judge was puzzled. “Have
+you quarreled?” he asked. “Oh, no.” “Don’t you live happily together?”
+“We are most happy and that is why we are here,” hastily explained
+the old woman. Then the whole story was poured out. An evil omen had
+convinced them that in the future they would quarrel frightfully,
+separate, and die apart of broken hearts, so in order to avert such
+a calamity they had determined to take time by the forelock and part
+company while they were still good friends. A few words of advice and
+assurance set matters all right, and it was not long before the aged
+lovers, for that is what they really were, passed smilingly out of the
+courtroom, hand in hand, to return to their humble home. No executions
+take place in the Settlement. Prisoners sentenced to capital punishment
+are handed over to the Chinese authorities, and here again “face” is
+considered, for while the death sentence has actually been passed the
+court in the Chinese City is allowed to assume that it has not, and
+proceed as if the prisoner was condemned on its own initiative.
+
+The building occupied by the Mixed Court is bounded on the right by
+the Woman’s Prison and on the left by the Debtor’s Prison. Under the
+Chinese regime discipline was practically nil and affairs were left
+largely to run themselves. Inmates of the Debtor’s Prison might smoke
+opium and gamble to their heart’s content, provided they could get the
+money, while dancing-girls furnished them entertainment. In the woman’s
+prison conditions were even worse. The top floor was set apart as a
+rendezvous for the young children of the prisoners, wretched, neglected
+little ones, exposed to every kind of evil influence. Their mothers
+in the cells below did pretty much as they liked. One of their tricks
+was to thrust their hands between the iron rods at the windows, and
+tear away by main force the corrugated iron screen so that they could
+chatter noisily with the people in the street below, and by letting
+down a string draw up food or anything else their friends were minded
+to tie on the end. The wardresses (the only man about the place is the
+gatekeeper) were deceitful, faithless, open to bribes, in fact little
+better than the women behind the bars.
+
+But marked changes have taken place during the past few years. As soon
+as the foreign municipality assumed control, a prerogative by the way
+likely any time to revert to the Chinese, who are considerably nettled
+over their loss of authority, the young children were removed from
+their pernicious environment and placed in a Home under the care of a
+Christian woman. The Municipal Council supports this Home. The whole
+staff of wardresses was dismissed and their places filled by others who
+were strictly watched till their faithfulness was proved. The filthy
+building underwent a thorough cleaning, repainting, and calcimining.
+Baths, laundries, and doctors’ examining rooms were added to the plant
+and the prisoners required to exercise an hour daily in the sunny,
+cement-paved court, which has resulted in a marked improvement in the
+health record. The chief lack now is industrial work for the women,
+who have absolutely no employment except scrubbing the corridors and
+washing their own clothes. The sole break in the dull monotony of their
+lives comes when the gentle, sweet-faced missionary from the Door of
+Hope visits the prison with her Chinese Bible woman, going from cell
+to cell to sing, read, and pray. Four women are confined in a cell,
+which is fairly well lighted and sufficiently large. The Chinese beds
+are entirely devoid of bedding even in the coldest weather, the padded
+garments of the prisoners being expected to suffice. Nursing babies up
+to four or five months old are allowed to stay with their mothers. Most
+of the women are convicted for kidnapping, and the sentences do not
+extend at the longest beyond eight or ten years.
+
+The Debtor’s Prison is officially known as the “House of Detention.”
+Its prisoners are not chained, may walk about freely, smoke, play
+games provided they are not games of chance, and at certain hours
+each day are allowed to see their friends in a small room at one
+side. On a winter’s day, when the windows and door of this room are
+shut, the contracted space packed with people, and the air heavy
+enough with tobacco smoke to cut with a knife, it is almost as much
+as a foreigner’s life is worth to take even a hasty peep inside. The
+prisoners provide their own bedding and food, with the exception of
+rice, and on the whole appear to enjoy themselves and to be in no hurry
+for their release, though some have hidden away quite enough money to
+pay their debt if they cared to, and others have relatives or friends
+who could easily pay it for them. Recently two men were set at liberty
+by the court on the presumption that they were really unable to meet
+their obligation, one after seven years’ imprisonment and the other
+five. The Municipal jail for men is several miles away, in a more
+open part of the city. Its massive, gray brick walls shut in between
+eleven and twelve hundred prisoners, all of them Chinese, for foreign
+prisoners are lodged temporarily in small prisons connected with
+their consulates, or, when the consulate has no prison, in the British
+jail. The discipline and upkeep of the jail are about perfect. The
+superintendent is a Christian who arranges for regular Sunday services
+for the prisoners, the Young Men’s Christian Association having general
+charge.
+
+Industrial work of various kinds, including tailoring, mat weaving, and
+carpentering, is carried forward on a large scale, and a considerable
+amount of the city’s road-paving and repairing is done by the
+prisoners. Short terms in jail are rather welcomed than otherwise
+by many of the men, for they mean to them shelter, good food, warm
+blankets, and a chance to learn a trade under the most favourable
+conditions. Indeed, it has come to pass that many habitual offenders
+are in the habit of flocking to Shanghai as soon as the cold weather
+sets in with the express purpose of putting up at the jail for the
+winter. A specific instance occurred a while ago when a Chinese walked
+into one of the police stations and cheerfully announced that he wanted
+to be arrested. “My belong velly bad man,” he said, “velly bad man.”
+Not being able to give any special reason why he should be arrested
+at that particular time, he was told to go about his business. But
+he insisted. He was “velly bad,” and wanted to be arrested, and it
+was with a look of pained surprise that he made his way out of the
+station. As he walked down the street, thinking with dismay of the cold
+weather ahead, a happy inspiration struck him. He went in search of
+a policeman, and having found one, proceeded to beat him. He did his
+work thoroughly, was quickly arrested by another policeman, and taken
+to the nearest police station, beaming with satisfaction. The problem
+of his winter’s lodging had been solved. A moot question for some time
+past has been the advisability of reviving the practice of flogging
+with the bamboo. Many officials, Chinese as well as foreign, contend
+that this punishment as formerly administered by the Mixed Court, was
+thoroughly humane, and that as it has real terror for the Chinese
+nothing begins to be so effective in preventing crime, which has of
+late been greatly on the increase.
+
+Formerly there was no Reformatory, and young boys convicted of no
+worse crime than petty stealing were often confined in the same
+cell with hardened criminals. It was the present superintendent who
+agitated the need of a separate building for the boys under sixteen,
+and finally a great three-story warehouse was purchased and fitted up
+for this purpose by the Municipal Council. Some of the lads are as
+young as nine. “The longer I live in China and the more I see of its
+poverty-stricken multitudes the less I blame any one for stealing,”
+exclaimed a Y.M.C.A. visitor at the Reformatory. The boys do industrial
+work in the morning and in the afternoon study, drill, and play. The
+fire drill is fine, but the military drill is the boys’ delight. Those
+best trained take turns in acting as drill-master. They give the orders
+in English and the company responds with a vim. Insubordination is
+punished by obliging the offender to scrub the wooden floors with sand,
+sometimes for a whole day. They are kept beautifully white. “You should
+see the kitchen!” said a frequent caller to a new comer. “It is so
+clean you could eat off the floor!” Several Christian Chinese business
+men in Shanghai have an understanding with the superintendent that they
+will receive a limited number of boys sent out from the reformatory,
+give them employment and a chance to begin life anew.
+
+One of the first things that impressed itself on the early foreign
+settlers in Shanghai was the need of an adequate police force. In the
+beginning it was limited to a handful of Chinese watchmen under the
+joint jurisdiction of the Chinese and foreigners. An amusing story
+of those days is that the police were in the habit of lining up for
+inspection in their own nondescript garments, but wearing foreign
+military caps and carrying in place of rifles closed Chinese umbrellas
+of oiled paper! Now the city is well guarded by 230 English policemen,
+450 Sikh Indians, and over a thousand Chinese. The picturesque red
+turbans of the Sikhs are conspicuous everywhere. These men are harsh
+but efficient preservers of the peace. The Chinese are afraid of them.
+There is one especially tall Sikh of whom his foreign superior says,
+“He is the only man that I am absolutely certain will carry out my
+orders in my absence as if I were present.” One of his duties is to
+punish Chinese police delinquents by putting them through a severe
+physical drill half an hour long in summer and an hour in winter. “It
+looks easy enough,” a foreign lady remarked, as she watched the men,
+“Why, I exercise harder than that when I play tennis.” “Oh no, you
+don’t bring into action every muscle in this way,” smiled the head
+officer. “These men are glad enough to lie down and rest after their
+stunt is finished. I had one man that fainted, but he was abnormal.”
+What makes this punishment especially objectionable to the Chinese is
+that it is administered by a Sikh. If an English officer were over them
+it would not hurt half so much. The work of a policeman attracts the
+Chinese and there is never any lack of recruits. The course of training
+lasts three months. Scientific wrestling appeals to the novice strongly
+and he soon acquires real skill. The officers have a unique method of
+putting a stop to fighting among the men. The combatants are given
+boxing gloves, forbidden to bite or kick, two favorite forms of attack
+with them, and then made to fight until they are thoroughly tired out.
+One such experience usually works a cure for all time.
+
+Chinese barracks are clean and severely plain. “We carry on a constant
+warfare against bedbugs,” says the foreign sergeant. “I do not allow
+a hook or nail in the walls, except the bracket back of each bed for
+holding the rifle, and that I wouldn’t permit up again, for vermin hide
+in the corners.” Every Saturday the planks on which the men sleep are
+scrubbed with sand and water. The sand soon works into the pores of
+the wood where bugs are apt to lodge, so it acts both as a cleanser
+and an insect preventive. When a man goes home to spend a day, as he
+is sometimes allowed to do, the barracks on his return must undergo
+a special cleaning, for he is sure to bring back a fresh relay of
+bugs. The past year an innovation has been introduced in furnishing
+the Chinese police with rifles, a convincing proof of their general
+faithfulness and the trust reposed in them. They are not permitted to
+take the rifles to their homes, but when going off duty leave them at
+the police stations.
+
+The Sikh recruiting station is on the same grounds with the Chinese
+but in a separate yard. The chief embarrassment in connection with the
+Sikhs is their food. They are East Indians and can not eat what the
+Chinese do. Caste rules are inflexible and time must be given them
+to prepare food in their own way no matter how greatly the staff is
+inconvenienced. The Sikhs are stern disciplinarians, but in character
+no more dependable than most of the Chinese, nor in some cases as much
+so. A Sikh watchman patrolling an outlying district rang one evening
+the doorbell of a foreigner’s house. “It is raining,” he remarked
+blandly. “Can I have a chair and sit on your veranda?” It was observed
+afterward that he frequently camped on the veranda when it was _not_
+raining. The Sikhs are not required to learn Chinese, but they are
+encouraged to do so by being promoted and given higher salaries when
+they can speak it. Chinese is demanded of European policemen. They of
+course constitute the backbone of the staff. The Municipal Department
+supports a hospital, one of the cleanest and best in the city, for
+Chinese policemen; it is also used for prisoners from the Municipal
+Jail. Women prisoners when sick are sent to a woman’s mission hospital.
+
+In case of riot or other emergency Shanghai would not need to rely
+wholly on the police force, for it has a dependable Volunteer Corps,
+at present 1,300 strong. As long ago as 1853 the Volunteer Corps was
+organized, and ever since the T’aiping Rebellion, when the members
+rendered such valiant service, there has been occasion time and again
+to turn to them for help. Their most recent laurels were won during
+the Rebellion in the summer of 1913, when Shanghai was the centre of
+the war zone. To watch the Corps at drill or on parade, so many sturdy
+young men among the older ones in the ranks, gives foreign residents
+an exhilarating sense of security, and warms their hearts with a glow
+of honest pride in their defenders. Among the many nationalities
+represented in the Volunteer Corps is a strong Chinese contingent,
+and it causes a still further quickening of the pulse to learn from
+the commanding officer that whenever the Chinese Volunteers have been
+called into action their efficiency and loyalty have been in the
+highest degree commendable. During the past year a Volunteer Motor Car
+Company was added to the force. It started with eighteen private cars
+and men to run them, but in case of need practically all the private as
+well as public cars in the city would be placed at the disposal of the
+Volunteers.
+
+The Shanghai Fire Department dates back to 1866. The three chief
+officers are employees of the Municipal Council, but all the members
+of the four companies are volunteers. There are three fire stations
+and three watch towers, besides a one-thousand-gallon fire float
+moored at one of the jetties on the Bund. Three motor vehicles are
+in use and the purpose is to abolish horses as rapidly as possible.
+In a cosmopolitan city like Shanghai, where all sorts of buildings
+crowd upon one another in the densely populated districts, fires are
+constantly breaking out, but the Fire Brigade handles them so well that
+destructive ones are rare.
+
+“Why is it your letters always come to me with a two-cent United
+States stamp on them?” wrote a bright American club woman to a friend
+in Shanghai. Her perplexity is not surprising, since even certain
+government departments in Washington have been known to send to
+Shanghai franked envelopes bearing five-cent stamps. The independence
+of the “Little Republic,” albeit on Chinese soil, is emphasized by its
+having six foreign postoffices--British, American, German, French,
+Russian, and Japanese. Three countries--Great Britain, America, and
+Germany--have legalized the domestic rate of postage to and from
+Shanghai. But home letters forwarded from Shanghai to interior points
+require the usual foreign postage of five cents, and parcels from
+abroad sent inland must be rewrapped, restamped, and go through the
+Chinese postoffice.[1]
+
+[1] As these pages go to press arrangements are being made for an
+International Parcel Post.
+
+It is a pity that China failed to improve her flood-tide of opportunity
+in 1878, when she was formally invited to join the International Postal
+Union, in the hope that it would encourage her to establish a national
+postoffice. But with a short-sighted policy she declined to do so, and
+it was not till September 1st, 1914, that this privilege was finally
+embraced. Though for years a national postoffice was urged upon the
+people and often seemed about to materialize through the efforts of
+progressive statesmen like Li Hung Chang, yet it did not really make
+its appearance till 1896. Up to that time mail was distributed from
+local stations under local control, and as means of rapid transit
+were very few, much of it was delivered by couriers. There are still
+many courier routes in the interior where railroads and steamers do
+not penetrate, but the couriers, often on foot, sometimes on mule or
+horseback, waste no time in getting over the ground, not infrequently
+travelling between eighty and ninety miles a day, and this in spite of
+unspeakably bad roads, to say nothing of brigands, floods, and a few
+other minor difficulties! Shanghai is the largest distributing centre
+in China, and in the substantial red brick Chinese postoffice, just
+across the road from the British postoffice, an enormous business is
+carried on. All heads of departments are foreigners. Periodically the
+Chinese voice a protest, declaring that as the Chinese staff has now
+received sufficient training, it is prepared to fill unaided the most
+responsible positions. But sagacious Chinese politicians are loth to
+release the foreigners, realizing that a change at the present time
+would inevitably entail a grave risk. It is rather interesting that the
+newest and handsomest postoffice building in Shanghai is the Japanese.
+There are no foreign postmen except Japanese. Chinese postmen in neat
+green livery cover their route on bicycles. There are six deliveries a
+day in the business districts and three and four in the residential.
+One family was so disturbed by the postman bringing mail at ten o’clock
+or later at night, and insistently ringing the door-bell until it
+was answered, that they requested him to defer delivering the late
+mail until morning, but he continued to call whenever he had letters,
+evidently impressed that the postoffice rules were inflexible and must
+no more be broken than the laws of the Medes and Persians.
+
+Probably the most interesting of any branch of the foreign Municipal
+government is the Health Department. Eighteen years ago when the doctor
+in charge settled in Shanghai and started a campaign against disease,
+he was not building on another man’s foundation, for nothing like it
+had ever been attempted. A member of the staff has aptly called the
+Municipal laboratory “the brain of the department.” It is certainly
+kept busy in a thousand ways. People from all over China, for one
+thing, turn to it for the Pasteur treatment. But its chief work centres
+about plague prevention. Plague is the bane of the Orient, and plague,
+it was discovered in 1908, is transmitted to human beings through fleas
+that carry the poison from infected rats. Then to prevent plague,
+rats must be exterminated, no easy matter in a city like Shanghai.
+The campaign began in this way. The city was divided into districts,
+the districts into sub-districts and sub-districts into blocks, and
+a map made of the whole. A raid on rats followed. Every one caught,
+dead or alive, was taken to the laboratory and an examination made.
+A black-headed pin was stuck in the map over the spot where each
+plague-infected rat was found. A red headed pin on the map indicated
+a human death from plague. In this way it was soon learned what parts
+of the city were specially invaded by the pests. To kill the rats,
+however, amounted to little, for others soon appeared to take their
+places. Something more radical needed to be done. After the Municipal
+Council had passed rules calling for the rat-proofing of houses, a
+more difficult task confronted the officers of the Health Department
+in getting the rules enforced. They were needed badly enough for
+foreign houses, but were drawn up especially for Chinese dwellings
+where often four and five families are crowded like sardines into one
+small building. At first the Chinese strenuously opposed and ridiculed
+the rules but later came to regard them more favorably. The people
+are terrorized at the outbreak of plague, and when a few years ago
+Shanghai was threatened with a bad epidemic, they were ready for the
+time being to submit to anything that promised to stamp it out and
+prevent another visitation. The rules demand that there shall be no
+open space underneath the ground floor, and by laying three inches of
+tar chips on six inches of concrete, it is impossible for rats to enter
+the house from below. The health officers also urge upon householders,
+although not included in the rules, that walls be made solid and the
+upper story left without a ceiling, showing simply the bare rafters.
+Many old houses as well as new ones are treated in this way. Sometimes
+a whole block of old houses is rat-proofed at one time. While the work
+goes on the people turn out of their homes and camp in the street in
+front of them, cooking their meals over little charcoal fires, and
+squatting patiently about till they can go back. But education is a
+slow process and opposition still continues. The ideal worked toward
+is the one already reached in Manila and held up as an example, “_No
+hollow spaces whatever accessible to rats._” With the most careful
+economy it costs the Health Department two cents to catch each rat,
+yet whenever notified by a foreign or Chinese tenant it is prepared to
+send its employees with traps to rid the premises. Stationary garbage
+receptacles of concrete, with spring lids, that are fire and rat proof,
+have been placed in large numbers all over the city. Several times a
+day they are emptied through an opening below and the contents carried
+off in municipal carts. The receptacles are liked by the Chinese, who
+seldom now throw their garbage on the ground.
+
+[Illustration: DISTRIBUTION OF PLAGUE 1914]
+
+The danger from contagious diseases is not so easily controlled. There
+is no law requiring small-pox, cholera, or even plague patients to go
+to the Chinese Isolation Hospital. Moral suasion is the only influence
+that can be brought to bear on them, and it is not always sufficiently
+powerful. But a vigorous campaign in the interest of the prevention
+of disease is continually in progress. Every month, and every day of
+the month, printed circulars are scattered broadcast. They are written
+in both English and Chinese, and relate to sanitation, hygiene, the
+danger of promiscuous spitting, of flies and mosquitoes, the need of
+removing stagnant water and rat-proofing houses. In the autumn and
+winter notices are posted on electric light and telephone poles calling
+the attention of passers-by to free vaccination for Chinese at any
+one of the sixteen branch offices of the health department. Health
+lectures are given weekly at the health offices, and not only that
+but heed is paid to the old proverb: “If the hill will not come to
+Mahomet, Mahomet will go to the hill.” Although the lectures, which
+are of a popular character, usually draw a large, attentive crowd,
+trained Chinese employees lecture in schools, tea-shops, and other
+places where the people are wont to gather. They carry around a dinner
+bell which they ring to attract an audience, and they soon have it.
+When the lectures first began the people did not understand their
+intent, and they aroused almost fierce opposition. But the Chief of the
+Department, a physician of great tact and urbanity, sent invitations
+to some of the leading business men and officials to meet him at a
+specified time and place when he addressed them in person explaining
+the character of his campaign. After that there was no further trouble.
+A large force of coolies is employed to fight mosquitoes. They work in
+pairs in districts assigned to them. Their duty is to gather up old
+tins, bottles, and broken crockery, warn residents against leaving
+about their premises tubs, empty flower-pots, and other vessels capable
+of holding rain-water, obliterating shallow pools and slushy places
+by means of scratch drains or filling them up with house ashes, and
+sprinkling kerosene oil on stagnant water that can not be drawn off.
+The coolies are inspired to faithfulness by frequent and unannounced
+inspection of their work.
+
+Among the many business houses regularly inspected by the Health
+Department are dairies, laundries, tea, fruit, and meat shops,
+restaurants and bakeries. Licenses prohibit in tea-shops the hawking of
+fresh food stuffs on the premises; dairies, bakeries, and laundries
+must be calcimined twice a year, no one shall sleep or eat in them, nor
+may they be attached to a dwelling-house. In bakeries the spraying of
+fluid from the mouth on the products of the bakery is prohibited, and
+in laundries the same rule applies to the sprinkling of clothes. In
+dairies workers are required to keep their clothes clean and wash their
+hands before milking. Always and everywhere spitting is forbidden and
+also the employment of persons with communicable diseases. To suppose
+that these rules are carried out to the letter, would be altogether too
+much to expect of human nature. That they act as a powerful deterrent
+is certainly true. The foreign dairies are the best, but one Chinese
+dairy enjoys the enviable reputation of never having been either fined
+or cautioned. The Municipal Slaughter House is kept strictly sanitary
+and cattle and carcasses are examined daily. Good meat is stamped with
+the words “Killed Municipal Slaughter House.” Inferior meat but free
+from disease is marked “2nd Quality.” No meat for foreign consumption
+is allowed to be brought into the Settlement unless it bears the
+Municipal stamp.
+
+Tuberculosis is the Chinaman’s Nemesis, and too often pursues him from
+the cradle to the grave. It is also frightfully common among the poor
+Eurasians who herd together under lamentable conditions. The only
+remedy for this prevailing malady seems to be to educate, educate,
+educate, and that is being done as thoroughly and effectively as
+possible. The Society of King’s Daughters recently did a fine thing.
+They planned a Tuberculosis Exhibit, which was held for a week or more
+in an empty down town store. Much of the exhibit was loaned and set
+up by the Young Men’s Christian Association that is itself carrying
+on a telling campaign against China’s “White Scourge.” Maps, charts,
+pictures, devices of all kinds for arresting the attention and teaching
+a lesson, were arranged attractively, but two things in particular
+produced a profound impression. One was a bell that every thirty-seven
+seconds clanged ominously. Over it hung a placard announcing in Chinese
+and English that every time the bell tolled some poor victim in China
+died of tuberculosis. The other design was more conspicuously placed
+in one of the large show windows and always attracted a crowd of
+absorbed, silent Chinese. The sight that held them spell-bound was a
+perfect model of a Chinese house, out of which stepped a Chinaman, who,
+after walking a few steps, fell into a Chinese coffin that instantly
+disappeared in the earth. This happened every eight seconds and each
+drop of the coffin represented a death from tuberculosis somewhere in
+the world.
+
+Before 1898 there was practically no Health Department and no health
+campaign. If progress at times seems slow, one has only to look back
+to realize what a marvellous change for the better has been wrought in
+a decade and a half. Perhaps more to the Health Department than to any
+other branch of the Municipal Government Shanghai owes its right to be
+called “The Model Settlement.” The group of Central Municipal Buildings
+covering an entire square in the heart of the city forms one of the
+finest plants of the kind to be found in the Far East.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+STREET RAMBLES
+
+
+“I have lived in China nearly twenty-five years, yet I never go on
+the street without seeing something new and interesting,” exclaimed a
+vivacious little missionary doctor to a group of fresh arrivals. Her
+remark was made about Peking, but the outdoor life in Shanghai has its
+own unique charm.
+
+To begin with, in the International Settlement there are no “streets”
+at all, so called; only roads. Some of the byways, to be sure, too
+narrow and short to be dignified as roads, go by the name of “lane,”
+and the city boasts a “Broadway,” or, to be exact, “Broadway Road.” It
+is unnecessary to explain that this lies in the district originally
+ceded to the Americans. The Shanghai Broadway makes no pretense of
+emulating in appearance or importance its western prototype, though
+quite a brisk trade is carried on in the modest shops near its lower
+end.
+
+The first permanent foreign settlement was along the Bund, beginning
+with the site occupied by the British consular offices and residence.
+The splendid Bund, bounded on one side by sightly bank and club,
+steamboat and insurance buildings, and on the other by the Whangpoo
+River, is the city’s pride and glory. It is hard to realize that this
+wide, white road, humming with life and swept by costly automobiles,
+was once nothing but a well-trodden tow-path bordering a marsh. Away
+to the south, across what until recently was an ill-smelling creek but
+is now being rapidly metamorphosed into a handsome boulevard, begins
+the French Bund, with its wharves and warehouses, and where it ends the
+Chinese Bund starts.
+
+The characteristic feature of the Chinese Bund is its boat population.
+For more than half a mile little boats called sampans, protected
+by a low arched covering of bamboo mats, line the shore and extend
+well out into the river. Each tiny sampan swarms with life as if it
+were an ant-hill. The occupants are permanent householders and their
+habitations are anchored. Many of them were originally famine refugees
+from the north. Most of the men earn a living as wharf coolies. The
+wives add a little to the income by gathering rags to make into shoe
+soles and by patching and darning old garments for coolies without
+families who pay a few cash in return. Planks set on stakes serve as
+footpaths to connect the boats with the shore, and little toddlers run
+about on the narrowest of them at will, yet rarely tumble into the
+water or soft mud below. Births, marriages, and funerals lend variety
+to the life of the boat people. Two or three empty coffins usually
+stand about on the wharf ready for an emergency, and are meanwhile
+useful as benches, especially for the women when they sew.
+
+The International Bund on its water side is unobstructed with
+buildings, except at the Customs jetty, and is laid out in grass plots
+which gradually widen near the Garden Bridge into the Public Gardens.
+This charming little park in the heart of the city, with its lawns,
+flowers, shade trees, and a band-stand where the celebrated Municipal
+Band plays in summer, is a favorite resting place for weary pedestrians
+and a rendezvous for parents and nurses with young children. Chinese
+are not admitted to the Gardens, except nurses with foreign children,
+unless dressed in foreign clothes or accompanied by a foreigner. This
+is to keep the grounds from being overrun by the coolie class. The
+Customs jetty has witnessed many a stirring scene. Trim launches carry
+outgoing passengers twelve miles down the river to the anchored ocean
+liners beyond the “bar” and bring them up the river on arrival. Its
+sheltering roof has caught the echo of sobs and laughter, tremulous
+good-byes and joyous welcomes.
+
+The river at this point is half a mile wide and presents an animated
+picture. Every variety of craft floats on its waters, from the busy
+sampan to the light-draught coasting vessel or man-of-war. Whether
+seen beneath the radiance of the noonday sun, or under a starlit sky,
+reflecting myriads of twinkling lights, it is a never-failing delight
+to resident and visitor alike.
+
+The most picturesque, as well as the leading business street in
+Shanghai is Nanking Road, or as the Chinese call it, “The Great Horse
+Road.” “Great,” however qualifies “Road” and not “Horse,” for while
+numerous horses travel over it, most of them are the small swift-footed
+Mongolian ponies, whose clattering little hoofs are heard early and
+late. Indeed the name “Great Horse Road” strikes one as rather out of
+date in these days of the ever-present automobile, of which there are
+already more than eight hundred in Shanghai. Nanking Road starts at
+the Bund with the Palace Hotel, and following the windings of a former
+creek, ends at the race course. For a short distance west of the Bund
+it is given up mainly to foreign stores, the largest and finest in
+the city. Then the street widens and becomes an avenue of high grade
+Chinese shops, many of them with the national flag afloat and all
+displaying aloft the characteristic vertical signboard in black and
+gold. The vista in either direction on a bright day is quite dazzling,
+and especially at night when the avenue from end to end is ablaze with
+electric lights. Then crowds of Chinese going to and from the theatres
+and tea-houses, or simply out for a stroll, jostle each other on the
+sidewalks and pour over into the road, where they narrowly escape being
+knocked down by rapidly moving vehicles. Conspicuous everywhere are
+the Chinese “Women of the Street,” or rather the girls and children,
+for nearly all are pitifully young. Bedecked and bejeweled, they stand
+sometimes in the bright glare, but oftener within the shadow of a
+closed doorway, or at the entrance to a lane, usually in groups under
+the care of an older woman who acts as “business agent.” A notable hour
+on Nanking Road is between five and six on Saturday afternoon, when it
+seems as if the whole city turns out to loaf or saunter in quest of
+pleasure. A babel of shrill voices rings in the ear, mingled with the
+shouts of ricsha coolies and the tooting of motor cars. It is a gay,
+panoramic scene, such as could hardly be duplicated anywhere else in
+China.
+
+A Britisher in Shanghai once made the remark, “There are two things
+an Englishman must have, a king and a race-course.” The Shanghai
+race-course, with the Public Recreation Grounds adjoining, covers about
+sixty-six acres in a part of the city where property is valued the
+highest. The land was bought up years ago. So much open space in that
+locality could scarcely be secured to-day at any price.
+
+Bubbling Well Road is a synonym for the patrician quarter of Shanghai.
+It is a continuation of Nanking Road and takes its name from the
+effervescent pool enclosed by a low cement wall at its terminus. Near
+by Bubbling Well is the foreign cemetery, a shady, restful spot. Every
+thirtieth of May the Americans gather within its gates for a national
+memorial service. They represent all creeds and callings, merchant and
+missionary, tourist and adventurer, aliens on a distant shore, drawn
+together by a common love for a common flag. The American corps of
+the Shanghai Volunteers and the “Regulars” from the American cruisers
+anchored in the river, march up from the Bund with bugle and fife and
+salute in front of the flower-strewn mounds. A few of these graves date
+back more than sixty years.
+
+Some of the handsomest residences on Bubbling Well Road are owned by
+wealthy Chinese. Pleasant afternoons and evenings automobiles by the
+score flash up and down this wide, smoothly-paved road and on to the
+delightful suburbs beyond, many of them crowded to overflowing with
+merry-making Chinese, women as well as men.
+
+In the French Concession, the avenue formerly called “Paul Brunat,”
+after the first French Consul, but since the outbreak of the war
+changed to Avenue Joffre, vies with Bubbling Well Road in the elegance
+of its residences, which some prefer because of their more varied style
+of architecture. Being a newer thoroughfare, this avenue lacks in a
+measure the abundant shade trees and fine old gardens which are among
+the chief attractions of Bubbling Well Road. It is frequently pointed
+out to strangers as one of the few long roads in Shanghai which is also
+a straight one, running most of its entire length of between two and
+three miles with scarcely a jog.
+
+The “tenderloin” district centres about Nanking and Foochow Roads.
+The latter is a narrow street with nothing at first sight to arrest
+the attention, but men shake their heads at the mention of it and
+women avoid it if possible. Its mark of distinction is the number and
+character of its tea-houses. They are entered directly from the street.
+A wide staircase leads to the restaurant which occupies the second
+story, the ground floor being used for business. Along the front of the
+building and on the side as well, if it happens to be on a corner, runs
+a narrow veranda, a much-sought-for gathering place in mild weather,
+where idlers can chat and sip their tea or wine while enjoying a view
+of all that is going on in the street below. The tea-houses, often
+richly furnished with carved black-wood from the south, are practically
+deserted till the latter part of the afternoon, when a few loungers
+make their appearance. But it is at night that the crowds pour in. Then
+the tables fill up, Chinese musicians rend the air with what to foreign
+ears seems a riot of discord and by nine or ten o’clock everything
+is in full swing. In and out among the square tables, filling the
+brilliantly lighted rooms, trail slowly little processions of young
+girls. Nearly all are pretty and very young. Clad in silk or satin,
+adorned with jewelry, their faces unnatural with paint and powder,
+they follow the lead of the woman in charge of each group. She stops
+often to draw attention ingratiatingly to her charges and expatiate on
+their good points. When one is chosen she leaves her to her fate and
+passes on to dispose of others. Multitudes of victims, innocent of any
+voluntary wrong, having been sold into this slavery when too young to
+resist and not uncommonly in babyhood, are kept up hour after hour in
+the close atmosphere of the tea-room awaiting the pleasure of their
+prospective seducers. Out on the street, by ricsha and on foot, women
+continue to hurry to the tea-houses with their living merchandise, and
+still they keep arriving till the night is far advanced and business at
+a stand-still.
+
+Opposite the Public Gardens, where Soochow Creek empties into the
+river, stand three consulates in close proximity, with their nation’s
+flag floating in the breeze from the flagpole. They represent Japan,
+America, and Germany, other Consulates occupying roomy mansions on
+Bubbling Well Road. The new Russian Consulate that is being built
+next to the German will soon be completed and add considerably to
+the sightliness of the river front. Across the street on the corner
+of Broadway stands the Astor House, the oldest hostelry in Shanghai.
+This district, once a part of the American Concession and now known as
+“Hongkew,” does not bear a very fair reputation, though some of the
+best families still reside within its boundaries. But nothing can be
+said in disparagement of Hongkew Market, by far the largest and best
+in the city. Housekeepers on Bubbling Well Road, miles distant, have
+been known on occasion to send their cooks to the Hongkew market and
+bewail the fact that they could not go every day. What Covent Garden
+Market is to London this market is to Shanghai. The saying, that one
+of the quickest ways of getting acquainted with a city is to visit its
+markets, is singularly applicable here. An hour or two spent in the
+early morning walking, or edging one’s way through the noisy square
+where all nationalities congregate, is worth an entire guide-book of
+ordinary information. The market covers a whole block, has cement
+floors and wooden pillars holding up the tiled roof, running water for
+keeping fresh the fish and vegetables, clean stalls, and very decent
+people in charge of them. The women are not as numerous as the men
+but they manage to make their presence felt, and discuss prices and
+provender in shrill voices that rise above the din and tumult of the
+multitudes. Vendors without stalls line the sidewalks, squatting close
+by their baskets, and between sales sip tea or gulp down hot rice and
+bean curd with well-worn chop-sticks. The money-changers’ tables,
+protected by a strong net-work of wire, dot the place here and there,
+for “small money” is always a necessity, the big heavy coppers and
+“cash” being most in evidence.
+
+Yangtsepoo Road, meaning Poplar-Tree-Shore Road, is a continuation of
+Broadway, and as it is chiefly a street of mills, stands rather low in
+the social scale. It runs parallel with the river and should have been
+a residential avenue, the most beautiful in Shanghai, but somehow the
+mills got there first and then there was no help for it, although the
+fresh breezes and fine outlook are lost on the tired mill hands shut up
+behind brick walls from dawn to dawn.
+
+One of the best known streets in the city and one of the longest,
+although it lays claim to no other distinction, is Szechuen Road.
+It starts at the Chinese city, changing at Soochow Creek to North
+Szechuen Road, then to North Szechuen Road Extension, and pursues its
+devious way northward far beyond Hongkew Public Park, which by the
+way is not in Hongkew at all. This park of forty-five acres is the
+largest in Shanghai, and a genuine godsend to foreigners remaining
+in the city during the summer. Those living in the neighbourhood
+seek it in the early morning and late afternoon for golf and tennis,
+securing the exercise so necessary to health in this Eastern climate,
+and from far and near people resort there in the evening to rest and
+listen to the band play. Along its northern end, outside the limits
+of the International Settlement, Szechuen Road winds back and forth
+like a corkscrew. Some say it follows an old buffalo path, but most
+agree that the road’s meanderings are due to the unwillingness of the
+original Chinese property owners to sell their land, since to do so
+might affect their “good luck.” Perhaps some old graves blocked the
+way, and albeit no one living cherished any sentiment regarding them,
+still they must not be removed for fear of offending the spirits of the
+dead. Or possibly the terrible dragon inhabiting the nether regions in
+this vicinity would resent an innovation like a paved road above his
+domains, and naturally it would never do to arouse his ire. Hence the
+road-builders were obliged to let the street follow the line it could
+and not the one of their preference. Apropos of the superstitious fear
+aroused in the minds of the common people by the building operations of
+foreigners, the case of the Methodist chapel in the French Concession
+is a good illustration. When this mission church was erected many
+years ago, the Chinese in the neighbourhood were thrown into a state
+of great consternation. What would their outraged tutelary deities say
+and do now? How could they escape the afflictions that unquestionably
+would be visited upon them by the evil spirits hovering about the
+foreign worship house? But necessity is the mother of invention, and
+the terrified residents at last hit upon a happy ruse to deceive the
+inimical spirits which seemed to be efficacious. Any one visiting that
+corner to-day may see on the roof of the house just across the road
+from the chapel two bottles with long necks pointing toward it. The
+bottles represent cannon which, as the most stupid spirit may guess,
+are likely to belch forth fire and destruction the moment that so much
+as a threatening glance is cast that way!
+
+Many of the most travelled thoroughfares in Shanghai are
+inconveniently narrow, and in addition have scarcely any sidewalk, so
+that it is necessary for pedestrians to use the road. Yet the early
+settlers who laid out the Foreign Settlement almost quarrelled among
+themselves over what seemed to some an altogether unnecessary width of
+twenty-five feet allowed for the streets. As for sidewalks they were
+apparently not taken into consideration at all. The Municipal Council
+has now decreed that whenever a building that abuts on the street is
+torn down, the new one, at whatever sacrifice, must be put back several
+feet. This law, which is strictly enforced, is gradually working a vast
+improvement in the appearance and comfort of the city. All the Shanghai
+streets inside the foreign settlements are paved. A large number of
+them are macadamized, though it has been found that in the purely
+Chinese districts, chip paving on a bed of concrete and tar is more
+suitable and economical. Road repairing is constantly going on, for as
+the soil is alluvial, the innumerable heavy wheelbarrows and trucks
+cause rapid deterioration. Several of the streets, notably the Bund and
+Nanking Road, have received what promises to be a permanent paving,
+consisting of wood and lithofelt blocks on a foundation of concrete. If
+the public funds were sufficient to treat all the streets in the same
+way it would be a boon to the city and a matter of rejoicing to the
+populace.
+
+It is surprising how muddy and disagreeable the streets become after
+only a few hours’ rain, while actual floods in the low-lying sections
+accompany a downpour, and this in spite of the excellent sewers. It
+is equally interesting to note how quickly the streets dry. Almost
+as soon as the rain stops the water-sprinkler is out laying the dust.
+The Municipal street sweepers are always busy. They wear for uniform a
+bright red cotton jacket showing below it their faded blue trousers,
+and a wide-brimmed straw hat with a broad red cotton band, both band
+and jacket stamped with three large letters, S.M.C. (Shanghai Municipal
+Council). Each one is furnished with a bamboo dustpan and a small reed
+broom with which he ploddingly sweeps up the detritus. This débris
+is not wasted. Indeed in China scarcely anything is thrown away, and
+besides, there is no place to throw it, since all the ground is sown
+with crops. The Foreign Municipality utilizes the street sweepings
+either for fertilization or in raising low land. And right here the
+creeks which intersect Shanghai prove their usefulness, for the refuse
+is dumped from zinc-lined carts onto native boats and poled along at
+little expense to the place where it is needed. Shanghai could hardly
+do without its tidal creeks, offensive as they often are when the tide
+is out.
+
+Shanghai is nothing if not a city of contrasts. Right among the elegant
+homes, club-houses, and private hotels on exclusive Bubbling Well
+Road squat the insignificant shops of “the butcher, the baker, the
+candlestick maker.” In front of its fashionable gardens pass fantastic
+idol processions, displaying as one of their prominent devices mammoth
+paper dragons, of variegated colours, whose opening and closing jaws
+and writhing scaly bodies, manipulated with cunning art by men carrying
+them, are gruesomely realistic. In the busiest section of Nanking Road
+an inconspicuous passageway leads a few yards back to a grimy Buddhist
+temple that seems as far apart from the hurrying crowds and bustle of
+street traffic outside as if it were on another planet. An occasional
+worshiper slips in to bow before the blackened altar, where red wax
+candles drip grease and incense wafers are forever smouldering. In a
+side room, gloomy as the entrance to Dante’s Inferno, are seated tiers
+of black idols streaked with gilding and paint. They are a repulsive
+sight and one turns with relief to the living shaven-headed priests in
+dull grey gowns lolling about the court.
+
+The most modernized Shanghai thoroughfares sometimes witness quaint
+scenes. The following was described by an eye-witness: An old Chinese
+woman, with all her winter padding on, tried to cross a down-town
+street through the maze of traffic. Ten yards or so from the pavement
+an electric tram car caught her full in the chest and propelled her
+neatly on to the further track, where another car caught her in
+the back. The second car pushed her staggering under the feet of a
+ricsha coolie drawing a Chinese cook home from market with a load of
+vegetables, a ham and two live ducks. By the time the old lady had
+disentangled a flapping duck from her elaborate headdress and the
+coolie had wiped the ham clean with his dirty sleeve, all the traffic
+of motor-cars, wheelbarrows, and broughams had been held up, and it
+took some minutes more of hard work to get the innocent cause of the
+trouble safely back to the spot from which she started.
+
+There is a law prohibiting beggars from invading the Foreign
+Settlement, but the law is lax and beggars--the maimed, the halt, and
+the blind--are all too numerous. Parents often mutilate their young
+children or twist their little bodies out of shape by confining them
+in a deep earthen vessel, intended to hold water, in order to make
+them successful beggars. Yet the blind eyes can many times see, and
+the poverty-stricken frequently have stowed away snug little sums of
+money, quite sufficient to keep them in comfort the rest of their
+lives. Begging in Shanghai is a profession, like any other, and there
+are beggars’ guilds and beggars’ camps where the tribes congregate.
+To watch them about five or six at night, trooping home to their mat
+sheds, with the day’s earnings securely stowed away on their dirty
+persons, is something to be remembered. Formerly there was a Beggar
+King, a regal sort of personage in spite of his rags, who with a band
+of associates made laws, adjudged cases, etc., but of late years the
+organization has been less complete. Foreigners as a rule do not make
+a practice of dispensing charity on the street. A certain benevolently
+minded individual, however, on arriving in Shanghai decided that it was
+his duty never to refuse to give alms. It soon fell out in consequence
+that he scarcely dared venture away from his own dooryard, and life
+became a burden until he had wrought a complete change in his habits.
+
+The majority of the Chinese people in the Foreign Settlement live in
+lanes that lead off at right angles from the highways. Only fifteen or
+twenty feet wide, they are not open to vehicle traffic, being paved
+with cement, and are squalid or measurably clean according to the
+locality and the community inhabiting them. The houses are almost
+precisely alike, except that some have two living rooms, one above the
+other, and some have four, with several very small ones at the back.
+In front is a tiny open court shut in by a cement wall reaching to the
+second story. Through a wide double door in this wall, which wall,
+while it protects, also keeps out light and air, the house is entered.
+The long line of connecting tiled roofs terminates at each end in the
+graceful, upturned gables the Chinese love so well. Crude handpainting
+and handcarved woodwork usually decorate the poorest of Chinese houses.
+The rental averages about fifteen dollars a month. Looking down one
+of these long alley-ways, that resemble good-sized cracks in the main
+thoroughfares, the effect is decidedly sombre, for the grey outside
+walls conceal the house fronts and the little courts, often made
+homelike and attractive with palms and flowering plants. It is the
+human element that saves from utter ugliness these populous alleys,
+which throb with life, but generally such a restless, high-pitched,
+uncontrolled life, that the better class of Chinese complain of the
+noise, and most foreigners would find them impossible places of
+residence.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+THE LURE OF THE SHOPS
+
+
+Once upon a time an American missionary came to China with ten pairs
+of boots, enough to last till the period of furlough. As he was going
+into the interior it was doubtless a wise provision, although leather
+deteriorates rapidly during the “rainy season.” Until quite recently,
+foreigners living away from the coast depended for goods of foreign
+manufacture altogether on the home market. Now they are more and more
+sending to Shanghai for supplies, and people in Shanghai seldom send
+abroad for anything. A lover of London once remarked enthusiastically,
+“It is a storehouse of treasures, for what it does not possess in
+the original it has in casts.” So one may say of Shanghai, “What it
+doesn’t import it copies.” And the Chinese are wonderful adepts at
+copying. Take a woman’s tailor, for instance. Show him a picture in a
+fashion book (many of them subscribe themselves for fashion books), and
+he will evolve something, which if not an exact reproduction, comes
+incredibly near it. Shanghai has four foreign department stores, all
+on Nanking Road, and all under English management. They are especially
+popular with the women. Then there are numerous lesser lights, of
+various nationalities, most of them located on or near Nanking Road,
+though Broadway has its share. An Anglo-American Walkover shoe store
+is a boon, especially to resident Yankees. Several Parisian shops
+display behind plate glass, the latest designs in gowns, hats and fine
+lingerie. A German drug store enjoys the reputation of being the only
+place in town where Parke, Davis & Co.’s drugs can be bought, while an
+English chemist’s shop is much frequented in summer for its ice-cream
+sodas, a recent innovation in Shanghai. Bianchi’s ice-cream is famous,
+and so are Sullivan’s home-made candies. At many a counter may be
+purchased Huyler’s and Cadbury’s chocolates, so carefully packed that
+they are not a whit the worse for their journey across the briny deep.
+Two piano stores do a lucrative business keeping pianos in tune, and
+selling, besides Steinways, Chickerings, and other makes, instruments
+made in their factories with special reference to withstanding the
+climate of China. The East Indian and Japanese shops always attract,
+except when the Japanese are boycotted by the Chinese because of
+strained relations. Some Japanese began recently to fold their tents,
+like the Arab, and prepare to creep quietly away, when confidence was
+partially restored and trade revived.
+
+[Illustration: SOME SHOPS ON NANKING ROAD]
+
+Living in Shanghai is proverbially high, yet it is chiefly so in
+comparison with other parts of China. The market is good the year
+around; many competent judges assert it is the best in the world.
+Chinese mutton and beef sell for eight or nine cents a pound. Pork and
+veal are a trifle more. Game is plentiful. Eggs rarely go above ten
+cents a dozen. They are considerably smaller though than hen’s eggs
+at home. Fish, as might be expected, is abundant. A small variety of
+oyster, that makes excellent stew, is sold in bulk, and a large oyster
+in the shell, measuring often several inches across and weighing over
+a pound, brings ten or twelve coppers apiece, about six cents. Nearly
+every variety of fruit and vegetable known to the Western market, and
+many kinds peculiar to the Orient, are found here. Bamboo sprouts and
+water chestnuts are favorites with most foreigners as well as the
+Chinese. Grapefruit is imported from San Francisco, but is generally
+not so well liked as the native pumelo, which it resembles. Mangoes are
+shipped from the Philippines, and from Japan, Australia, and America
+come apples, much superior to those grown in China. On the other hand
+Chinese oranges, and particularly the loose-skinned, Mandarin oranges,
+are delicious. The fruit most common in the autumn is the golden-red
+persimmon. Cheap and luscious, without a suggestion of pucker except
+when under-ripe, the tempting piles, that seem to have caught and held
+the sunshine, are without a rival during their season. All canned
+and bottled goods--vegetables, fruits, pickles, olives, syrups,
+extracts--being imported, are expensive, but as they are more or less
+in the line of luxuries most of them may be dispensed with if necessary.
+
+There is a canning factory in Shanghai, opened in 1907 by a Cantonese
+company. One would expect it to be Cantonese, for the southerners are
+the most wide-awake people in China. Besides making a variety of
+crackers, the factory turns out quantities of tinned foods. Among them
+are bamboo sprouts, shrimps’ eggs, spiced roast pork, chicken with
+chestnuts, frogs’ legs, native and foreign fruits, soups, and what
+appeals particularly to the palate of foreigners, the delicious candied
+ginger, for which Canton has a world-wide reputation.
+
+Drugs are costly, and constantly needed articles, such as picture wire,
+and hooks, are for some reason absurdly highpriced.
+
+“Sam Joe” on Broadway claims to be the leading Chinese grocer in the
+city. He is certainly one of the best known. Like other grocers he
+keeps no fresh vegetables and no fresh fruits except apples and lemons.
+His place is clean and inviting, and presided over by numerous clerks
+of low and high degree. Any one of these middle-aged men, of dignified
+mien and scholarly cast of countenance, will kindly deign to take an
+order, discuss the merit of goods, and even point them out if within
+sight. But when a piece of cheese is to be wrapped up, or a bottle
+taken down from the shelf, he waves his long-finger-nailed hand in
+a lordly manner to an underling, who hastens to perform the menial
+service. Sam Joe used to own an automobile, with “Sam Joe, Shanghai’s
+leading grocer,” prominent in large gilt letters on its back. It was
+a familiar object for some time on the streets, but its upkeep proved
+too great an expense, so the firm has reverted to the ordinary delivery
+wagon and horse. Still, a horse-drawn wagon is extraordinary enough
+in this city of man labor, and Sam Joe’s outfit is in advance of most
+Chinese grocers, who content themselves with box carts propelled by
+tricycles.
+
+On a bright morning nothing is more delightful than a leisurely stroll
+up and down Nanking Road for a study of the shops. Some are shut in
+behind a door and show windows, like foreign stores, and others after
+the manner of the general run of Chinese shops have the entire front
+open to the street. Occasionally, in addition to the regular street
+crossings, a slit between the buildings leads to a narrow lane or
+alley, without sidewalks, long, narrow, and fearsome, yet possessing
+a compelling fascination for the wanderer. The Nanking Road shops
+are almost uniformly two stories high, with frequently a tall, fancy
+cornice giving the effect of a third. The most striking are the large
+silver shops. The façades of several stand out boldly, ornamented
+with coloured stucco in relief. One is resplendent with a gorgeous
+peacock of heroic size and spreading tail. Another shows two mythical
+figures disporting themselves on either side of a huge vase of flowers
+of wondrous hues, while a third, more recently built of plain brick,
+is dotted over with electric bulbs. On gala occasions, these shops,
+as well as others able to afford it, are lighted up at night with
+elaborate electrical designs, making Nanking Road the most brilliantly
+illuminated street in the city. In addition, it is customary at the
+time of an opening or anniversary to decorate the entire façade with
+gay-coloured cotton cloth or silk that is twisted, puffed, puckered,
+and curled into rosettes and other fantastic designs. Often a light
+bamboo scaffolding is erected in front of the shop and the trimmings
+attached to it instead of to the walls. When the sun fades the
+decorations they are taken down, re-dyed, and put in place again.
+Close against the show windows of the unforeignized silver shops are
+glass shelves ranged one above another and loaded with silver. Many of
+the pieces are massive and richly embossed, Buddhas, vases, jewelry
+cases, tea-sets, besides less ornate small pieces such as wine cups and
+bonbon dishes, all of native design and manufacture. Inside the shop
+the foreigner meets with a surprise, for there are no show cases, and
+no sign of silver is visible except away at the back where a glimmer
+can be discerned behind a glass door protected by a wooden or wire
+lattice. Panel mirrors and carved blackwood chairs at the sides give a
+drawing-room effect which is enhanced by the leisurely manner in which
+the numerous clerks move about or lean idly upon the counter, as if
+their main purpose in life was to pose as useless adjuncts of the firm
+employing them. Yet in reality a paying business is carried on from day
+to day, though it may be conducted quietly and unostentatiously over
+tea-cups and with true Oriental deliberation.
+
+The favorite meat in China is pork, popularly known as the “Great
+Meat.” From the number of shops where cured hams are sold, often
+nothing at all but ham lining the walls and suspended from the ceiling,
+it would seem as if the people’s whole diet consisted of pork. The pork
+shops on Nanking Road are very clean. Sometimes one side of a shop is
+devoted to hams and the other to ducks and sweetmeats. Roast ducks are
+sold everywhere in Shanghai. The turned-back neck of the duck forms a
+loop by which the fowl is attached to a hook fastened to a bamboo rod
+several feet long, and this is hung in the front of the shop in full
+gaze of the passerby, where no intervening window dims the allurements
+of the savory delicacy. It surely does look good enough to eat, glossy,
+of a rich reddish brown colour, and done to a turn in the oven of a
+Chinese chef. Back a few steps from the street, in a dimly lighted
+room, the curious stranger, if tactfully polite, may witness the
+preparation of the fowl for the market. On one side of the contracted
+space are live ducks, in a pen, while near by the cook’s assistant is
+busily plucking dead ones. They are roasted on top of a Chinese stove
+under a huge iron basin, and then comes the painting, the grand finale
+in the process. A small quantity of red vegetable matter is added to
+sesame oil, and with this mixture the cook carefully smears the fowl,
+using a reed brush. The coating soon hardens like varnish when the duck
+is exposed to the air, and besides giving it an appetising appearance,
+keeps the flesh impervious to the dust from the road.
+
+Nothing captivates more than the bake shops where cooking is done close
+to the street. Chinese stoves are simplicity itself, a bed of charcoal
+on a foundation of brick or cement, and an iron grating through which
+the ashes fall to the floor. Large but shallow iron basins are placed
+over the red hot coals, and in them are fried or boiled all sorts of
+remarkable viands. It is a common saying that the best cooks in the
+world are the French and the Chinese, and it is easy to believe it.
+The way in which many a common fellow will roll and knead his dough,
+fashion it into some extraordinary shape with a dexterous flip and
+twist, then fry it to exactly the right shade of brown, and all without
+an instant’s thought or effort, proves him to be in his own line an
+artist of no mean order.
+
+Customers young and old frequent the shop, sometimes carrying bowls
+of their own which they get filled with nutritious food for a few
+coppers and take home to furnish, it may be, a meal for an entire
+family. Perhaps a woman drops into the shop with a nest of wooden
+trays. She says something to the shopkeeper, who begins laying into
+them wonderful little cakes, sticking into each one a wee cluster of
+artificial flowers. This choice collection of dainties is to form part
+of a wedding feast. The year round, at certain hours of the day, but
+especially in the early morning, women and children, provided with
+kettles, wend their way to the restaurants to buy hot water for tea.
+Hot water is cheaper than fuel, and besides to buy it saves trouble.
+
+Chinese candy shops never want for trade. Those on Nanking Road are
+much patronized by foreigners, for some kinds of Chinese candy fairly
+melt in the mouth. The only drawback to a full enjoyment of it is the
+realization that too often instead of being protected under glass it
+has lain for hours on an open counter exposed to dust, flies, and dirty
+hands.
+
+Fine teas from Hangchow, put up in pretty coloured paper boxes, are
+seen in the windows of tea shops, and beside them other fancy boxes
+containing small dried flowers. One or more dried rosebuds placed in a
+cup of tea impart a delicate flavor to the beverage and are said by
+the Chinese to aid digestion. They, however, are a luxury indulged in
+only by the well-to-do epicure, but this class is numerous.
+
+Silk shops are pre-eminently the most popular shops in Shanghai as silk
+is the commodity for which it is most celebrated. Many silk shops are
+found on the “Great Horse Road,” the largest and showiest being in a
+three-story building well down toward the Bund. But the two of special
+repute and reliability do a thriving business a block south of the
+busy thoroughfare. No goods are displayed in their windows as is the
+case with those on Nanking Road. The more conspicuous one has behind
+each sheet of plate glass a single potted plant on a stand. The other,
+across the road, disdains to indulge in even that much decoration. Its
+windows are the small, old-fashioned kind that fold in like blinds with
+little panes of glass, and up and down over each one stretch protecting
+iron bars. The reputation of the aristocratic house of “Laou Kai Fook”
+is too well established to need the help of advertisements. While
+neighbouring firms may boast of a business career of a few decades,
+this one points back proudly three quarters of a century to the date of
+its founding. Though nothing on the exterior of the shop attracts the
+eye, there is an abundance within to draw on the purse-strings. Laou
+Kai Fook’s clerks are gravely dignified but wide-awake. It was not one
+of them but an employee in a lesser shop who, when a would-be purchaser
+indicated a piece of silk in a showcase that she wished to see, after
+making a feeble and abortive effort to unlock the case, turned his long
+finger-nails out, remarking unconcernedly, “It won’t open,” and let
+the customer walk away. The shelves lining the walls of the silk shops
+from top to bottom are heaped with rolls of silk wrapped in light brown
+paper, the rolls lying crosswise on the shelves. From each roll depends
+a white paper tag marked with Chinese characters, and these tags, seen
+on every side, produce a curious effect but give to the uninitiated no
+clue to the wealth they represent. Some of the finest silks, with the
+paper coverings removed, are kept in showcases to decoy the unwary.
+
+The clerks in these stores, as in fact in most of the shops, are to
+all appearances greatly in excess of the number required. While some
+are kept busy, many seem to be paid merely to lounge about and tread
+on each other’s toes. They are keenly sensitive to the superiority of
+their high calling and will brook no slights apparent or unintentional.
+An American lady, new to China, was being waited on one day by a
+very youthful clerk and in the course of conversation innocently
+addressed him as “boy,” the usual form of address among the servant
+class. Instantly the young man drew himself up proudly and corrected
+her with grave displeasure, “I am not a ‘boy,’ I am Mr. Smith.” Two
+characteristics of the Shanghai silk shops of the better class are
+especially appreciated by foreign women. First, prices are fixed and
+uniform; no time need be wasted in bargaining. Second, if a sample
+needs to be matched the danger of failure is small. When roll after
+roll has been laid on the counter and the sample placed against them
+without success the clerk will be certain to observe politely, “We can
+dye a piece for you.” “How long will it take?” “Only three days if the
+sun shines. How many yards do you want?” “Four.” “We don’t usually dye
+less than ten yards, but we will dye four for you if you wish to have
+us.” In most cases the silk proves to be entirely satisfactory and no
+extra charge is made for the dyeing.
+
+Changes are going on continually all over the city. Day by day old
+buildings, rotten and unsanitary, are disappearing and modern ones
+rising in their place. It is to be feared that many of the ancient
+landmarks dear to the antiquarian will soon be gone. Last year an
+Englishman said to a friend, “I can take you to a street in Shanghai
+that I believe looks just as it did a thousand years ago.” But in a few
+weeks he wrote to his friend, “The street is gone. Every old building
+has been torn down and the rubbish cleared away.” On Nanking Road a
+handsome block has just been erected by the Chinese on a conspicuous
+site, bearing the ambitious title of “The New World,” written in gilt
+Chinese characters on its front. Soon a wealthy Cantonese company is
+to build a great department store on Nanking Road that in size and
+elegance promises to outrival all others. It will contain a theatre,
+restaurant, and tea-room, elevator and roof garden, accessories to
+which even the most select of the foreign department stores have not
+aspired.
+
+But Nanking Road does not possess a monopoly in interesting shops.
+Many of the most fascinating are the very small unpretentious ones on
+the side streets, for it is there that Chinese life and customs may be
+studied most intimately. The common people regard with good nature and
+tolerance the inquisitive stranger and rarely object to his advances.
+Pawn shops tell their own story and are discovered at almost every
+turn. They are known by a particular Chinese character painted in black
+on the white cement of the front wall or on the wooden screen just
+inside the entrance.
+
+[Illustration: Tang, a Pawn Shop.]
+
+Shanghai would not be Shanghai without its Money Exchange shops. Though
+perfectly respectable, they do business mostly on the unfashionable
+side streets. Nanking Road in the main scorns them. They do not lack
+patronage, for “small money” is necessary to every thrifty body. The
+Exchange Shops give silver for gold and paper money, and for one
+of the current silver Mexican dollars, the customer receives one
+hundred and thirty-eight or so coppers, or eleven dimes and several
+coppers according to whatever the exchange happens to be on the day in
+question. Shop bills amounting to less than a dollar can ordinarily be
+paid in “small money,” and as for car fare, a dollar’s worth of coppers
+goes much farther than the even hundred contained in a “big dollar.”
+The Exchange shops make their money by drawing money from the Exchange
+Banks at a little higher rate of exchange than they allow to their
+customers. It must be confessed though that the mysteries of Chinese
+currency are well nigh beyond the power of the ordinary human mind to
+fathom.
+
+Coffin shops are of necessity very numerous, and have open fronts
+directly on the street. The shopkeeper performs none of the duties of
+an undertaker. His sole business is to make and sell coffins. Chinese
+coffins are extremely large and heavy, and in a foreigner’s eyes
+ugly even to the point of gruesomeness. The costly ones are made of
+blackwood and camphor wood and their glossy tops and ends decorated
+with pictures done in coloured paint and gilt. The shopkeeper’s home is
+usually at the back of the premises, but the family find it agreeable
+to pass much of the day in the shop where the unfinished coffins that
+chance to be left standing about prove convenient in many ways. The
+wife may perch on one while she eats her bowl of rice, or the master
+himself drop down on another for his noonday nap, while the children
+frolic in and out around them like squirrels. But to a Chinese there
+is nothing objectionable in a coffin. As with the old Shanghai mother,
+whose son returning from a journey presented her with a coffin as the
+handsomest and most welcome gift he could offer, so it is generally
+felt that to have one’s coffin bought and set up in the house ready for
+use is a most desirable provision. In the meantime it is a convenient
+article of furniture to have at hand, and no harm is done if while
+waiting for the hour of decease the coffin is utilized as a clothes
+press or perhaps as a pantry.
+
+As one passes along the streets, in addition to the sounds most
+commonly heard, is often added the shrill falsetto of the cheap
+phonograph. The records usually are Chinese melodies in which the
+street crowds delight. Any shop wishing to draw attention to itself
+has only to set up an instrument and start it playing. Phonographs are
+commonly found in the better class barber shops, where they dispense
+music to the accompaniment of the strokes of the razor. The character
+of Chinese barber shops has changed considerably since the revolution
+of 1911. Before then customers sat on stools and the principal work of
+the tonsorial artist was shaving the forefront of heads and combing and
+braiding queues. Now foreign barbers’ chairs have taken the place of
+stools and the barber gives careful attention to clipping hair in the
+most approved fashion. There recently appeared outside a hairdresser’s
+shop the following unique announcement, “Hair done in foreign, Chinese,
+and civilised style.” Just what the “civilised” style of hairdressing
+might be in contradistinction to other modes, the interested public
+has not yet learned. But shopkeepers who aspire to the distinction
+of English signs above their doorways, frequently meet with serious
+difficulties in their struggles with a strange tongue. The results are
+often strikingly original,--for example, “Horeshueing Manufactured
+Any Kinds of Foreign and China Horeshueing. Price $2.00 each hoersh.”
+“The towels are weaving up to the different colors to sell.” “House
+panier and decorator for European and China.” “Mating Shop and House
+Furnishing.” “Gentleman and Ladys snots and bots.”
+
+The beautiful curio shops on Nanking Road entrance the eye and delight
+the heart, yet who would compare them for a moment in charm with the
+quaint old shops on Pig Alley? Pig Alley used to border on the moat
+around the Chinese city and was in truth an alley. Now the moat has
+been filled up and its site covered by a broad macadamized road, but
+the shops that gave it its reputation have not changed in character.
+The dust of years still clings to them, wrinkled crones continue to
+sip their tea in the corners, and old men, with skin as yellow as
+their brasses, smoke contentedly in the sunshine outside. Stacked on
+the shelves reaching to the ceiling are articles in bronze, brass, and
+china, some as valueless as old iron, but among the collection, choice
+bits, rare and ancient, worth almost their weight in gold. It takes
+time and patience to shop in Pig Alley, for prices must be haggled
+over, and perhaps several visits made before the coveted treasure is
+finally secured.
+
+In the shops of the Foreign Settlement it is estimated that more than
+twenty thousand boys are employed as apprentices. Their work-day is
+as long as the shop keeps open, which in many cases is from sixteen
+to nineteen hours out of the twenty-four. Pay is small or nothing at
+all, but the boys are given rice and lodging where they work. The
+large majority have no chance for play or study. They are bound out
+by their parents or guardians under much the same system as formerly
+prevailed in England. If badly treated, and little fellows unable to
+resist are often most cruelly beaten, the apprentice has no redress,
+and must bear it, run away, or take his own life, which he sometimes
+does, though usually he stays on, for the spirit of the Chinese is
+to endure hardship patiently. Not long ago the local Young Men’s
+Christian Association, through its Boys’ Department, made a valuable
+survey of the condition of Chinese boys in the Settlement. What added
+to the interest was the fact that the survey was conducted by boys,
+which, so far as is known, was the first time this has been done in
+any country. Volunteers were called for from among the Y.M.C.A. High
+School students, all Chinese of course, and twelve at once responded,
+promising to spend their vacation period in doing this work. Others
+were gradually added to the list, till finally over sixty were at
+work assisted by a Chinese teacher and several Chinese and foreign
+secretaries. No reward was held out to them, and their task was not an
+easy one. They were ridiculed and buffeted, but they kept bravely on,
+meeting every day at five o’clock to report progress and gather fresh
+courage over a social cup of tea. The facts and figures collated with
+so much labour will not be wasted. Definite plans are being laid for
+the betterment of the boy community, and they have already begun to
+materialize since the opening of the splendid new Y.M.C.A. building for
+boys’ work.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+HOUSEKEEPING PROBLEMS
+
+
+“Well, my Dear,” said Mr. Dunlap briskly, one bright spring morning,
+laying down on the breakfast table “The North China Daily News” which
+he had been intently perusing, “I have here a list of houses advertised
+for rent. Suppose we start out and look at some of them.” “Just the
+thing,” assented Mrs. Dunlap eagerly. “You call the ricshas and I’ll
+be ready in a minute.” “No, we will go in a carriage. It will take us
+around more quickly and cost no more for the time we are out. Just
+think,” he added, “of our being able to hire for a whole day a nice
+victoria and pony, with driver and footman, for less than a dollar and
+a half! Life in Shanghai certainly has its advantages.” “Don’t let the
+driver forget his French license,” called Mrs. Dunlap to her husband as
+he was hurrying away to make arrangements for the carriage. “That’s so.
+We may want to go into the French Concession.” “Yes, and we’d rather
+not be held up as the Blanks were.” Then both laughed merrily at the
+memory of the experience of their friends who went for a joy ride in
+celebration of their wedding anniversary, but they had hardly left
+the International Settlement before a policeman stopped the “mafoo,”
+and because he had no French license made him drive with the pair to
+a police station to get one and pay the fine of a dollar, rather an
+inglorious episode. The Dunlaps were gone all day and returned to their
+stopping place at night well-nigh exhausted. But the next morning they
+were out early again, this time to hunt up the office of a real estate
+company and tell the agent they had decided to take one of his houses.
+“Good, I will put your name right down on the list of applicants.
+There are only eleven ahead of you.” “Eleven ahead of us!” exclaimed
+Mrs. Dunlap in astonishment and dismay. “Why, we supposed the houses
+that were advertised in the paper had not been rented.” “And so they
+haven’t,” responded the agent cheerfully. “These are only possible
+tenants. You stand a good chance of getting the place. Last week I
+rented a house to the fifteenth party in a list of applicants. All the
+others, for one reason and another, had dropped their names.”
+
+The couple finally secured a house to their liking, quite new and
+somewhat out from the centre of the city. The rent being agreed on, the
+agent added, “You will pay six per cent taxes.” “How is that?” queried
+Mr. Dunlap. “I am not buying the property.” “No, but here in Shanghai
+the tenant pays the tax on the house, the landlord on the land. You
+are getting off cheap. If your house were within the limits of the
+‘Settlement’ you’d have to pay twelve per cent in taxes.” “Oh, then
+we are not in the Settlement? Somebody told me the road in front of
+the house was a Municipal Council road.” “That’s right. It is. A year
+or so ago the Council, after hard effort, obtained permission to lay
+that road through Chinese territory. It is a good road, too, isn’t it?
+A first class macadamized thoroughfare.” “That is most interesting,”
+agreed the Dunlaps. “But you say the land on which the house itself
+stands belongs to the Chinese?” “Yes, they refused to sell it, so the
+best the company could do was to rent it in perpetuity.” Mr. Dunlap
+turned to his wife with a smile, “Well, if we get into trouble, we can
+go out and sit in the road.” “Ha, ha, not a bad idea,” chuckled the
+agent. “But you will be well protected. The Settlement police patrol
+the road and Chinese police the territory around it. The Chinese have
+no desire to see foreigners’ houses looted, for this gets them into
+trouble.”
+
+As soon as the Dunlaps began moving into their new domicile, they found
+themselves greatly inconvenienced by the lack of closets, shelves,
+hooks, and drawers. The house in fact was a mere shell, with roof and
+walls and little else. However, there was running water, hot and cold,
+and this is a luxury rarely found outside of Shanghai. Indeed in the
+older parts of the Settlement hot water for baths is still bought at
+nearby shops and brought to the home in big wooden buckets suspended
+from carrying poles on the backs of coolies. Though the wires were laid
+for electric lights, there were no fixtures. This was an oversight
+on the part of the contractor that must be rectified at once, so Mr.
+Dunlap sought another interview with the agent. “We shall be glad to
+have the fixtures put in as soon as possible,” he urged, “as we are
+depending for light on two or three small kerosene lamps.” “But we
+don’t furnish such things.” “What?” “I mean they don’t go with the
+house.” “So I must buy them?” “Assuredly.” “Well, well, whoever heard
+of such a thing? But how about the stationary wash-basin for the
+bathroom, and the draining board for the kitchen, and the--,” “If you
+have them you get them yourself.” “You see it is like this,” continued
+the agent goodnaturedly, “Shanghai is very cosmopolitan, and all sorts
+of people settle here. Some tenants, when vacating a house, have been
+known to steal the locks off the doors, the chandeliers from the
+ceiling, and occasionally a stationary bathtub is cut loose and carried
+away in the dead of the night. Oh no, you wouldn’t do it,” smiling at
+Mr. Dunlap’s incredulous stare, “but such things happen oftener than
+you would think.” It was plain then to the Dunlaps that they must
+begin to furnish their house from the bottom up, or perhaps, to speak
+more accurately, from the top down. Therefore, their first business
+was to buy lumber, hire carpenters, and set them to work making pantry
+shelves, and supplying a few other immediate necessities. Soon the
+little back court resounded with the noise of hammer and saw.
+
+It was somewhat exasperating to the head of the house, who longed to
+expedite matters, to have the workmen stroll in about nine o’clock
+in the morning, or possibly not come at all, leave promptly at five,
+and spend anywhere from one to two hours and more in the enjoyment of
+the noon siesta. But scolding was of little avail. Shanghai workmen,
+particularly since the revolution of 1911 have assumed an easy,
+independent air all their own and must be borne with as patiently as
+may be.
+
+The next matter to which the family gave their attention was the
+buying of furniture. Friends advised them to get it at auction. As the
+population of Shanghai is a constantly shifting one, auction sales are
+a common incident of the city’s life. Homes are being broken up every
+day and parties moving out, perhaps after only a few months’ residence.
+The easiest, and really the most profitable method of disposing of
+household effects, which often are practically new, is by auction.
+Auction sales are very popular with all classes of society and usually
+draw an eager crowd, but the Dunlaps picked up only a few things in
+this way, for they found too much time was consumed in the process.
+Then they were referred to Peking Road. Now Peking Road at its eastern
+end, where it approaches the Bund, is a very high-toned, aristocratic
+street, but away toward the west its character changes, and instead of
+substantial brick office and apartment buildings, the road is lined on
+both sides with Chinese junk shops. Yet according to the dictionary
+definition of “junk,” that is not exactly the right word to apply to
+them either, for far more than mere junk is exposed to the gaze of the
+curious beholder in the wide open shop fronts, in the dark places at
+the rear, and in the dusty, musty, low-ceilinged rooms above approached
+by a ladder-like stairway. “Old Curiosity Shop” might appropriately be
+written over each one. Most of the goods have been bought up at auction
+and bear the marks of age in a greater or less degree, though some
+are new, but it is not the commonplace new things that attract the eye
+of the average foreigner, who is apt to exclaim at first glance, “What
+a lot of old trash!” Worming his way in gingerly fashion among the
+piled up closely-stacked stuff, the reward comes once and again in the
+discovery of a rare piece of old mahogany or teakwood, or a quaint hit
+of China or glass, which may be bought at a ridiculously low price. Of
+course, if the “find” is an article of furniture, some risk is run in
+carrying it home, and the very fastidious may eschew it altogether, but
+a good airing and repeated cleansing with disinfectants and soap and
+hot water, and if necessary, scraping and repolishing, generally render
+it perfectly harmless.
+
+However, a foreign house can not be furnished throughout from the shops
+on Peking Road, so after investing in a few small articles like coal
+buckets and shovels and tongs, Mr. and Mrs. Dunlap finally and firmly
+resolved to waste no more valuable time hunting for bargains, but to
+have all their furniture made to order. This sounds very luxurious and
+a bit extravagant. On the contrary it was the most economical thing
+that they could do, for they did not order from one of the high-priced
+English department stores on Nanking Road, but from a Chinese shop
+on a side street with an entrance and show windows that might have
+been passed many times without attracting the least notice. The place
+however had been highly recommended and the work in the end proved
+quite satisfactory. Mark the words “in the end,” for they are spoken
+advisedly, since the grand consummation did not occur till more than
+a year from the time the first order was given. Inside, the shop was
+found to be much more of an establishment than appeared from the
+street. It carried a considerable stock of ready-made furniture, but
+it was from the pictures in the firm’s imported books that the Dunlaps
+chose their models, then selected their wood, and finally, after
+considerable haranguing, came to an agreement on prices. Subsequently
+calls without number were made at the shop by Mr. and Mrs. Dunlap in
+a vain endeavour to hurry up the work. Sometimes they came upon the
+elderly head of the firm and his clerks eating their forenoon meal at
+a table near the centre of the showroom, for according to the usual
+custom, the clerks were boarded on the premises. But the entrance of a
+customer in no wise embarrassed them and he was always waited on with
+the politest attention. One by one the pieces ordered were brought to
+the house on a hand truck or wheelbarrow, some of the lighter articles
+being suspended from a carrying pole borne by coolies. After remaining
+a day or two, back they went, with few exceptions! Either the hat-rack
+was too short, or the clothes-press shelves were too long, or the
+bureau drawers wouldn’t open, or the locks didn’t fit. Always something
+was “_ch’a pu to_,” just a little wrong, a favorite expression in
+China which is used to excuse a multitude of faults. One much-doctored
+upholstered chair was carried to and fro so many times it had finally
+to be partially re-covered. But the dining table fared the worst. Once
+it fell off the cart in transit and was broken. Because the wood was
+not well seasoned, it kept splitting across the top and teetering
+disconcertingly on uneven legs. Four tables were made in succession
+before a satisfactory one was produced.
+
+While the patience of the Dunlaps was sorely taxed during this period
+of waiting, they could not help being deeply impressed with the
+unfailing good nature and courtesy of the firm, always regretful, ever
+ready for another trial, though the money loss was their own.
+
+Some of their work, too, was really a pronounced success, as in the
+case of the sectional bookcases which they patterned after one loaned
+them by Mr. Dunlap. When the two were set up side by side in the
+library it was next to impossible to tell them apart.
+
+The absolute confidence of the Chinese in the honour of foreigners was
+often remarked on in the family. Not for five months after work began
+and until several hundred dollars’ worth of goods had been delivered
+was any money asked for or expected. A dishonest person might easily
+have slipped out of town and left furniture and debt behind him.
+
+One noon, during the period of house-settling, when Mr. Dunlap returned
+from his office, he was surprised to see a bevy of men at work sodding
+the lawn, a matter he had not yet had time to consider. He was still
+more astonished when he learned that this was being done for him by the
+company of whom he rented his house. There was nothing personal about
+it. All the company’s property was being treated in the same way. But
+sod, it seems, could not easily be carried off, while lighting fixtures
+might!
+
+The Dunlaps did not find it necessary to go to the florist’s in search
+of plants to beautify the grounds, for street vendors brought them
+to their door. From the very morning they moved in these men fairly
+haunted the place. They carried the plants in round, slightly convex
+baskets, suspended by ropes from a bamboo pole slung across one
+shoulder. Every time Mrs. Dunlap appeared in sight there they were, an
+eager, smiling group of them, holding out their flowers and begging
+her to buy in their best _pidgin_ English. Mrs. Dunlap always shook
+her head saying, “By and by. Not now. I am too busy.” But one bright
+day, when the house-wife was unusually occupied with work indoors,
+an enterprising fellow actually took it upon himself to border the
+entire garden, and it was a good large one, with handsome plants of
+many varieties, and ended by placing on the veranda four mammoth
+potted palms. The effect was charming. Of course Mrs. Dunlap might
+have ordered the plants taken out of the ground, but what woman would?
+Instead she gladly paid a little less than the price asked, which was
+about six dollars. Afterward a neighbour told her that had she happened
+to have any second-hand clothing to offer the man, he would willingly
+have taken it in place of money. “Each year I replenish my garden with
+flowers in that way,” concluded the friend.
+
+The day the Dunlaps ate their first meal in their new home was a very
+happy one, but before that time two important matters had been attended
+to by Mr. Dunlap. These were putting in a first-class filter, and
+covering the floors of the store-room and pantry with zinc which was
+allowed to turn up around the walls for a foot and a half in order
+to guard against the encroachments of ubiquitous Shanghai rats. The
+Berkefeld filter is generally used in Shanghai and is supposed to
+preclude the necessity of boiling the drinking water. But as every one
+knows, the “candle” must be carefully washed in boiling water once a
+week, and as Mrs. Dunlap soon found she could not trust a servant to do
+this, who might or might not have the water really boiling, or handle
+the candle without breaking, she attended to it herself.
+
+Among her first callers were the “runners” from several Chinese grocery
+stores. The nearest secured her patronage. Each morning his man came to
+receive the day’s orders, and before noon the groceries were delivered
+in a neat box-tricycle. In addition a daily visit to the market was
+made by the cook, for the grocery stores in Shanghai carry neither
+meat nor fresh vegetables. “Just think, we no longer have to depend
+on tinned butter and milk!” exclaimed Mrs. Dunlap delightedly to her
+husband soon after their removal to the coast city, as her eyes turned
+with satisfaction to the neat pat of fresh Australian butter on her
+pretty Welsh butter dish. The dairies, the best being the European, are
+carefully inspected by the Municipal Health Department and deliver milk
+in sealed bottles to insure not being tampered with on the way from
+the dairy to their destination. Notwithstanding this, never a drop of
+milk or cream was used on the Dunlaps’ table that had not been scalded.
+Neither was lettuce indulged in, not even that grown in private
+gardens, nor any other uncooked vegetable. In view of the ravages of
+Oriental dysentery and kindred diseases, the family agreed that it
+was wise to obey the injunctions of foreign doctors and take no risks.
+Fresh fruit from which the skin could be removed was eaten freely
+in season, but was dipped in boiling water, or underwent a thorough
+washing in filtered water before it was set on the table. Strawberries
+were subjected to a special cleansing process under Mrs. Dunlap’s
+personal supervision. Placed in a colander, boiling water was poured
+over them three times, and lastly a solution of permanganate. Later on
+in her experience Mrs. Dunlap learned of a better and easier way of
+disinfecting the fruit, and that was to plunge it for an instant into
+boiling syrup, by which the flavor of the berry was retained and its
+appearance but little altered. Even after every reasonable precaution
+had been taken in the matter of food, the Dunlaps were made aware that
+through the carelessness of servants, and in other ways, they were
+constantly running serious risks. However, they concluded to do the
+best they could and then not worry.
+
+Another early caller to put in an appearance was the public laundryman.
+Shanghai houses are not built with the idea of doing washing at
+home, except perhaps a few of the small pieces. So it is sent out,
+and as to just what kind of places, one may possibly be happier
+not to inquire into too diligently. The public laundries in the
+International Settlement, it is true, are subject to inspection by
+the Health Department, but questionable habits are liable to continue
+notwithstanding. Take, for instance, a Chinese washerman’s manner
+of sprinkling clothes, which is to fill his mouth with water, then
+squirt it out through his closed teeth. It is bad enough when the spray
+falls on hosiery and underwear, but handkerchiefs, napkins--well, Mrs.
+Dunlap soon found that it was not well under such circumstances to give
+reins to her imagination. She certainly had no fault to find with the
+pricelist, paying barely one cent and a half apiece for everything,
+from a face cloth to the most elaborate white dress. As a rule the
+clothes were exquisitely laundered, even though the method employed did
+cause rapid deterioration.
+
+Although the process of setting their house in order was a most
+tedious one, at last Mr. and Mrs. Dunlap had progressed far enough to
+be comfortable and feel that they could turn their attention to other
+and more important matters. At first they were a little disturbed by
+having to look at the back courts of their neighbours’ houses across
+the street instead of onto their well-trimmed lawns, for it is usual
+in Shanghai to build so that all houses may face the south, from which
+the breeze comes. Then too, Mrs. Dunlap’s soul was somewhat tried by
+the lines of washing, innumerable as the sands on the sea-shore, hung
+out to dry on the vacant lots stretching away to the south. But it
+was at least a more agreeable sight than the coffins lying scattered
+about on the ground just beyond her east windows, left there, perhaps
+by perfect strangers to the Chinese landowner, to await a convenient
+time of burial. A little farther away, Mr. Dunlap passed every morning,
+in going to his office, a lot which evidently was a favorite spot for
+depositing the dead. Fresh coffins appeared each morning, most of them
+tiny ones. Often the baby was not given a coffin at all, but tied in
+a grass mat which was thrown carelessly on the ground. The bodies are
+supposed to be gathered up and carted away daily. One seems gradually
+to get hardened in China to things grown too familiar. The Dunlaps used
+often to marvel that their surroundings, depressing though they were,
+did not affect them more.
+
+Mrs. Dunlap’s daily routine began each morning after breakfast by
+“taking accounts” with the cook. The cook in China does the marketing,
+and he also gets his commission or “squeeze” as it is popularly called.
+That is, he buys a pound and half of meat and brings in a bill for
+two, or he charges his mistress a few coppers more a pound than he has
+paid. This squeezing business is perfectly understood by both parties,
+and providing it does not exceed certain bounds, nothing is said about
+it. Market prices are quoted each morning in one of the Shanghai
+dailies, and by consulting this and making an occasional visit herself
+to market, Mrs. Dunlap kept informed as to about what she ought to
+pay. Whenever the cook began to take undue advantage of her, she did
+not accuse him of it directly, but a conversation something like the
+following would ensue: “Ta Shih-fu (Great Assistant), you are paying
+too much for meat.” “Yes, so I told the butcher, but he won’t take
+less.” “Then go somewhere else.” Or, “One hundred and four eggs are too
+many to use in two days for our small family.” “It certainly is a great
+many but I had to put eighteen into a cake.” “You must use fewer.” “I
+will try.” Now Mrs. Dunlap knew, and the cook knew that she knew, that
+he had paid a moderate price for the meat and was charging her for
+eggs which he never bought or had disposed of himself. But through this
+indirect method of dealing with him, by no means original with her,
+she gained her end and saved the face of the Great Assistant. Had he
+suffered “loss of face” probably nothing would have been said by him
+at the time, but later he might have appeared before his mistress to
+announce sorrowfully that his uncle or great-aunt had just died and
+he must leave at once. Perhaps next day he would be found comfortably
+installed in a neighbouring kitchen. Occasionally a young housekeeper,
+new to China, undertakes to do her own marketing and even to dispense
+with a cook altogether. But after a few days, or at the most a few
+weeks, she usually gives up the trial she made so hopefully, realizing
+that as conditions are in China it is next to impossible for a foreign
+woman to do her own housework.
+
+Following the taking of accounts came giving out “stores” for the day.
+Housekeepers differ. Some keep nothing under lock and key. Others deal
+out what is needed in minutest measure, a cupful of rice, a half cup of
+sugar. Mrs. Dunlap found it expedient to follow a middle course, not
+putting temptation in the cook’s way by giving him free access to the
+stores, but at the same time showing that he was trusted by letting him
+have a fairly liberal quantity at a time. If the supplies disappeared
+too rapidly she dealt with him after the ordinary indirect fashion.
+Frequently she and her neighbors helped one another by “comparing
+notes.” “How long does a fifty pound bag of flour last you?” “How many
+pounds of sugar do you average in a week?”
+
+Mrs. Dunlap’s cook was an artist in his way. When the spirit moved
+him he sent his cakes, pies, and puddings to the table ornamented in
+a style that would do justice to a Fifth Avenue caterer. One day,
+however, he gave the family a surprise. A cake was served for dinner
+that had a most peculiar flavor. “I told the cook to use lemon filling,
+but there is no taste of lemon about this,” declared Mrs. Dunlap,
+critically sampling a bit of the cake. “No, and there _is_ a strong
+taste of onion,” said her husband. “Oh, impossible! But yes, there
+really is!” The cook was called in. “What did you make the filling of?”
+questioned Mrs. Dunlap. “Onions,” was the prompt reply. “Onions! Why, I
+told you to use lemon.” “No, the lady said onions, and I am an obedient
+cook. I always do just as the lady bids.” Then suddenly it dawned on
+the crest-fallen mistress that she _had_ ordered onion, the Chinese
+word for that pungent vegetable and for lemon being somewhat alike. But
+this was not quite as bad as the experiment of a friend’s cook, who,
+with no malice whatever, but the best of intentions, flavored the soup
+with kerosene oil, and on another occasion poured a liberal quantity
+of hair oil into the pudding. As to cleanliness or rather the lack of
+that admirable virtue in the moral make-up of many otherwise desirable
+chefs, without question the least said the better. But when a cook is
+discovered washing his waistcoat in the dishpan, or polishing the stove
+with a fine tea-towel, if a summary dismissal ensues, can any one blame
+the sorely-tried house-wife? Many a merry half hour the ladies of the
+neighbourhood spend over their teacups sharing experiences both amusing
+and tragic. The longer Mrs. Dunlap lived in China the more she realized
+that while the “servant problem” in the Orient is not solved, as many
+in Western lands seem to think it is, yet the excellencies of Chinese
+servants are many and pronounced. These are more noticeably away from
+the coast cities, and were more general before the recent revolution,
+and even before 1900, but the sterling good qualities of the better
+servants are still worthy of the highest praise. Where will more
+devoted, faithful service be found? Were the children sick at night,
+or was Mr. Dunlap leaving the city by a midnight boat or an early
+train, the servants were on duty, eager and willing without a word of
+complaint.
+
+One time the Dunlaps arrived home from a journey at midnight to find a
+hot supper awaiting them. It had been ready since seven o’clock when
+the family was expected, but by some occult process known only to the
+cook, the food had been kept from burning or drying up during the
+intervening hours. The men were blinking and heavy-eyed, but absolutely
+good-natured.
+
+It was a never failing comfort to Mrs. Dunlap to be able to announce
+the arrival of unexpected guests to the servants without the shadow
+of a fear of any unpleasantness. Indeed, the larger the number, the
+happier was the cook, for the more he had to buy the bigger his
+“squeeze.” Still a great amount of extra work was often involved,
+which was always taken as a matter of course. The “boy” delighted to
+decorate the dining table, and if left to his own devices a favorite
+diversion was to write on the tablecloth, with colored rice and flower
+petals, characters meaning love, happiness, long life, and peace.
+
+But it was when the Dunlaps gave their house-warming that the servants’
+virtues shone the brightest. To save time, the small cakes, toothsome
+and delicate, were bought at a foreign bakery. To save money, though
+there are caterers in Shanghai, the ice-cream was made at home.
+Freezers were borrowed from neighbors, and late in the afternoon a
+busy scene was enacted in the little courtyard. The cook had called in
+coolies from the street, and “boys” from the houses around, and all
+were soon grinding away as if for dear life. Ice can always be had in
+Shanghai. The Dunlaps often observed with interest that whenever the
+neighboring ponds were encrusted with ice, even half an inch thick,
+the Chinese cut it carefully away and stored it in nearby sheds. This
+broken ice sells for much less than the foreign artificial ice, which
+however comes in cakes and is much better. Mrs. Dunlap ventured to ask
+the cook if the cream would keep till a late hour. With a lordly wave
+of the hand the Great Assistant replied, “Leave that to me, Lady. Leave
+that to me.” And she knew she could.
+
+Meanwhile the boy had been given the responsibility in the dining-room.
+Mrs. Dunlap laid on the table extra silver. “Here are so many forks,
+so many spoons,” she explained. “Strange men will be in the kitchen
+this evening. The silver is in your care.” That was all, and she never
+gave it another thought. Had a piece been missing, it would shortly
+have been returned. How, and from where, who knows? The secret service
+system of Chinese servants is a mystery to foreigners.
+
+That night before going upstairs Mrs. Dunlap was respectfully requested
+to look at the silver, washed and neatly piled on the sideboard. The
+tired boy would not sleep until she had inspected it and declared it
+all right.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+SOMETHING ABOUT VEHICLES
+
+
+Let them be named decently and in order. First and foremost is the
+wheelbarrow. It does not take this rank because of its superior size,
+elegance, or even usefulness, but on account of its antiquity. To be
+sure, it can not lay claim to antedating the sedan-chair, but the
+dignified and exclusive sedan-chair has practically dropped out of
+Shanghai street life and hence will not be considered. The wheelbarrow
+on the contrary, instead of being relegated to the interior or less
+modern towns, creakily holds its own, and is not to be downed. Nor does
+any one want it to be, useful vehicle that it is, unless perchance some
+nervous invalids, or weary sleepers, whose morning rest is disturbed
+by the rising crescendo of the rasping, tormenting, unconquerable
+nuisance. The creak could be stopped with a few drops of oil--the
+easiest matter in the world, but the coolie loves that creak--he would
+not part with it for anything. It means business. It is the evidence
+of work being accomplished. Without it he would feel lost. Every
+wheelbarrow, the Chinese say, has its individual creak. People too
+far off to be recognized are identified in this way. “Friend Wong is
+coming,” says a man to his neighbor, “I hear his creak.” A Chinese
+wheelbarrow has this advantage over its foreign compeers, that instead
+of a small wheel at the end, it has a large one in the center. To be
+sure, the wheel rising up divides the wheelbarrow into halves, but
+makes it much easier to carry the weight. A stout woven rope band
+fastened to the handle-bars and passing back across the coolie’s
+shoulders helps greatly to steady the load.
+
+The Shanghai wheelbarrow is mostly used for freight, but because of its
+cheapness it is a favourite passenger vehicle with a certain class of
+Chinese, especially the women and children going to and from the mills.
+Often eight or ten crowd on, sitting sideways with their feet hanging
+down. Once eleven women and girls were seen on one, pushed along
+by a single coolie. A coolie ordinarily is able to manage anywhere
+from six hundred to a thousand pounds. He carries everything, from
+building-stone to goose feathers. When the cargo is heavy the poor
+fellow staggers like a drunken man, moving from side to side to balance
+his load. His veins stand out like whipcords and the perspiration pours
+off from him in streams. To keep from being blinded by it in summer he
+frequently has to wear a band forming artificial eyebrows across his
+forehead to catch and hold the water. All the time, breathless as he
+is, he usually keeps up his singing cry, partly from force of habit
+and partly to warn people that he is coming and to clear the road. But
+street-cars can’t turn out of the way, and some other vehicles won’t,
+so occasionally the coolie gets caught in a trap, the wheelbarrow
+loses its balance, and over it goes. With certain kinds of cargo no
+damage is done and the only inconvenience is the delay and extra
+lifting, but if the load is rice bags which burst open, or breakable
+merchandise, the coolie faces a bad situation. He earns, as a rule, a
+fair living wage for a poor man, but there is no surplus to cover the
+cost of accidents.
+
+[Illustration: HIGH, BLACK RICKSHAS OUTSIDE THE FOREIGN SETTLEMENT]
+
+Wheelbarrow coolies, though, are said to live longer and fare better
+than most ricsha coolies. This latter class is very shortlived as a
+rule. Their working years do not ordinarily extend beyond three, five,
+or at the most ten. One Shanghai ricsha coolie declared he had pulled a
+ricsha for twenty-four years, but this, if true, was most exceptional.
+At the present time there are between nine and ten thousand public
+ricshas in Shanghai, but probably a shifting population during the
+year of many times that number of coolies. Some one who has studied
+the subject estimates that the entire coolie population of Shanghai,
+including all classes, reaches as high as four hundred thousand. The
+average earnings of a ricsha coolie are seven coppers, about three or
+four cents, a day, and from this pittance he must support a family, and
+that too in a city noted over China for high cost of living. No wonder
+a doctor in charge of a mission hospital where many sick coolies are
+sent recently reported, “A large number of the cases brought in are in
+a state of collapse due to malnutrition and the bad hygienic conditions
+of their life superadded to the strenuous spasmodic strain they
+undergo.” Heart trouble and China’s inveterate foe, tuberculosis, carry
+off the majority. Perspiring freely, even in winter, after a hard run,
+then waiting, it may be an hour, for another “fare,” in the penetrating
+wind or chilling rain, with no extra covering for their thinly clad
+bodies, the coolies are in a condition to succumb readily to disease.
+Married men live in colonies in the outskirts of the city, in little
+straw or bamboo huts, for which they pay a rental of from fifteen to
+twenty cents a month. In cold weather the whole family crawls inside to
+keep warm, where the air is heavy with tobacco smoke and the fumes from
+the little charcoal fire over which the rice is cooking. Many a baby
+contracts eye disease that later leads to blindness. Unmarried ricsha
+coolies sleep wherever they can find shelter, ordinarily in the cheap
+tea-houses, often as many as fifty herding together in one small room.
+The conditions in these places beggar description.
+
+The coolies do not own their ricshas. They are the property of
+companies, some foreign, others Chinese, each owning anywhere from
+fifty to seven or eight hundred, while two large companies have in
+stock a thousand and twelve hundred, respectively. One of these
+companies manufactures its own ricshas, turning out a hundred a
+month. Women are employed to make the cushions for the back and seat.
+Several of the companies provide the men with uniforms. Generally it
+is only a coat, while the wearer’s ragged trousers show more ragged in
+contrast. In a single instance the clothes are washed every twenty-four
+hours in the company’s laundry and returned clean to the coolies. The
+Municipal Council has decreed that in the International Settlement
+ricsha coolies must be decently clad, but the rule is not strictly
+enforced. On the back of ricshas belonging to Chinese companies is
+written in Chinese the company’s name, which is generally rather poetic
+not to say moral in tone, such as “Able to Fly Co.,” “Everlasting
+Remembrance,” “Steadfast Righteousness.” One company’s ricshas exhibit
+above the license plate a small metal locomotive, highly suggestive
+of incomparable speed. A rubber-tired ricsha costs, when new, fifty
+or sixty dollars, and its rental per day is from thirty-five to forty
+cents. A coolie hiring a ricsha, after using it a few hours, or half
+a day, sublets it, and that man in turn often rents it to another, so
+that in the course of twenty-four hours, it is likely to pass through
+two, three, or perhaps four hands, consequently the number of ricsha
+coolies is naturally far in excess of the ricshas. Passengers pay
+either according to the time the ricsha is used, the regular tariff
+being twenty cents an hour (but if the poor fellow gets eight or ten
+cents he does well), or by the trip, say five cents for a run of a mile
+or a mile and a half. At night the coolie expects a trifle more, as he
+has to spend a cent to buy the candle that lights his paper lantern or
+tiny lamp. These are the prices for foreigners. Chinese as a rule give
+less. Ricshas are of two kinds, the high black ones and the low brown
+style. All the latter are furnished with rubber tires. Most of the
+high ones formerly were without them, and as they could be rented more
+cheaply in consequence, were much used by the poorer Chinese, but of
+late the Municipal Council has succeeded in banishing all such ricshas
+from the Settlement. Most of the worn-out ricshas are apparently
+bought up for use in the Chinese district, as it abounds in a multitude
+of rickety, ramshackle vehicles, probably purchased for a mere song.
+Many of them are pulled by young boys, scarcely more than children.
+
+Ricsha coolies running in the International Settlement must have a
+license from the Municipal Council. If they are to travel beyond the
+limits of the Settlement they require in addition a French and a
+Chinese license. The license, in the form of a tin plate, is slipped
+into a groove at the back of the ricsha. It is furnished to the coolies
+by the companies owning the ricshas who pay into the city treasury a
+dollar a month for each one. The coolie loses his license if he commits
+a misdemeanor. Often for a very slight one, like blocking the road,
+generally in his eagerness to secure a passenger, he has his license
+taken from him by a Sikh policeman. Then the poor fellow is sorely
+troubled, for he can do no business without his license, and it is
+sometimes several days, or weeks, before it is restored, on the payment
+of a fine of forty cents. Once a month the ricshas in the Settlement
+must have their licenses renewed and be officially inspected.
+
+At the examining station opposite the Honkew Market, between three
+and four hundred gather every day. An English policeman is in charge.
+One by one the ricshas are brought before him, while he and a Chinese
+assistant shake, pull, and pound them to see if they are in good
+condition. If any part shows signs of weakness it is wrenched off, the
+license withheld, and the ricsha sent back to the company that owns
+it for repairs. The companies are represented on these occasions by
+Chinese foremen. Occasionally the foreman is a forewoman. A regular
+habitué is an old wizened creature, with bound feet and half blind, but
+as the foreign officer aptly describes her, “Keen as a razor when it
+comes to looking after the fifty ricshas placed in her care.” Accidents
+to ricshas are not infrequent on the crowded streets of Shanghai. The
+marvel is that they do not occur oftener. Nearly all coolies run with
+their heads down and their minds,--well, who can tell where a coolie’s
+mind may be wandering? It is doubtless dormant most of the time.
+Nearly all coolies come from the lowest stratum of society, and having
+nothing else to give in exchange for bread, or rather rice, sell their
+strength. The literal interpretation of the word “coolie” is “The man
+who sells his strength.”
+
+The ricsha coolie’s movements are erratic and impulsive. He seldom
+reasons. There are foreigners who will not risk their life in a ricsha
+and hair-breadth escapes occur nearly every day. An American lady
+was riding on one of the narrow, congested streets, when suddenly
+her coolie attempted to dash across the road between two electric
+cars approaching from opposite directions. He succeeded in clearing
+the track himself but the cars closed on the ricsha, crushing it to
+splinters. The woman with great presence of mind saved herself by
+grasping the front railing of one of the cars and holding to it until
+she could be drawn up. Another remarkable escape was that of a mother
+who, with her young baby, was riding on one of the quiet streets
+supposed to be perfectly safe. The coolie saw a man approaching on a
+bicycle, zigzaged several times in front of him, then utterly losing
+his nerve and wits, he dropped the shafts and ran away. The sudden stop
+and downward movement of the ricsha threw the baby out of its mother’s
+arms. The little thing fell, face down, on the hard macadamized road,
+and lay so still the mother feared the child was dead, but it proved to
+be only stunned, and except for some bad bruises, the next day seemed
+none the worse for its fall.
+
+The ordinary wear and tear of ricshas is made good by the owners, but
+damages due to accidents are often charged to the coolie, at least in
+part. The amount for which he is responsible depends on the company.
+One large firm exacts two and three dollars for a tire. These prices
+are ruinous for the coolie, who is obliged to borrow the money to pay
+the fine, and money lenders demand exorbitant rates of interest. The
+coolie who is unable to pay his debt has no recourse but to run away,
+commit suicide, or go to the Debtor’s Prison. In the latter case,
+unless he has more fortunate friends or relatives who come to his
+rescue he is likely to remain a prisoner indefinitely.
+
+It is interesting to see how quickly a fresh arrival from the West
+accustoms himself to ricsha riding. At first he is apt to inveigh
+against man-drawn vehicles, or if he gets into a ricsha, to sit
+lightly on the seat, with perhaps one foot hanging out at the side,
+with the idea of helping the coolie along, but presently he abandons
+himself to the enjoyment of the little, easy-running carriage, or
+as one enthusiastic woman described it “a grown-up’s perambulator,”
+and almost ceases to think of the puller as a human being. But let
+him stand on the Bund some day in the late afternoon and watch the
+stream of ricshas hurrying by. There is scarcely a coolie whose
+face is not drawn as if with pain, and many are actually contorted.
+Although a ricsha coolie’s life is far from a bed of roses, in his
+own happy-go-lucky way he does manage to get some pleasure out of it.
+One of the ricsha companies, with benevolent intentions, undertook to
+furnish free hot tea to its men at the company’s headquarters, but the
+plan didn’t work, for the reason that the coolies preferred to buy
+their own tea at a tea-house. Wretched as is the low-class tea-house,
+it is the coolies’ favorite gathering place, where, surrounded by their
+cronies, they can gossip, smoke, and gamble till necessity drives them
+forth to work again.
+
+The coolies who come to the city in winter from farms and return to
+them in the spring, may be called gentlemen of means compared with the
+others. A very few, the number is almost negligible, are able to make
+ricsha pulling a paying business, as in the case of the man who gave
+up the position of “boy” at six dollars a month in a private family to
+become a ricsha coolie, because he said he could make more money.
+
+Many articles are lost in the ricshas. A passenger gets out and hurries
+away, forgetting his bundle or umbrella, and unless he has thought to
+look at the number on the ricsha, that is the last he ever sees of it.
+Not always though. The narrow margin on which the poor coolie exists
+from day to day makes the exceptionally honest one stand out in all
+the brighter light. An elderly gentleman, carrying a very valuable
+package, left his ricsha with the package in it and went into a store.
+His business detained him some time and he finally returned home in a
+street car, entirely forgetting he had a ricsha waiting for him. After
+a considerable time the coolie, who had not observed the gentleman go
+away, went into the shop to look for him. A clerk said he had gone.
+Then was the coolie’s opportunity to run off with his prize. But no,
+in a moment he had brought in the package and laid it on the counter,
+asking anxiously how he could get it to the owner. As the gentleman
+was a regular customer at the shop, the clerk agreed to send it to his
+residence. That coolie not only received no reward for his honesty,
+since he slipped back into the crowd and it was impossible to identify
+him, but he lost time and fare as well. Another case was that of a lady
+who, in stepping from her ricsha, dropped a five dollar bill, which
+was discovered by the coolie after she had gone. Not being sure which
+house the lady had entered the coolie went from one to another until
+he found the owner of the money, to whom he restored it. It sometimes
+happens that dishonesty crops up where it is not looked for, and an
+unprincipled passenger, sad to relate, sometimes a foreigner, after
+using a ricsha for several hours, eludes his coolie and escapes the
+payment of fare by going into a shop or house and disappearing out
+another door.
+
+The ricsha is not indigenous to China. It was introduced from Japan
+as many as fifty years ago and promises to be seen on the streets of
+Shanghai for some time to come in spite of the increasing popularity of
+more modern conveyances.
+
+There is a Christian mission for the ricsha coolies. It was started
+four years ago by a Scotch business man on whose heart had been
+laid the spiritual needs of this neglected class. At two centres in
+thickly-populated coolie districts week-day and Sunday meetings are
+held in rented Chinese houses, besides Sunday-schools and day-schools
+for the children of the ricsha coolies and a weekly religious meeting
+for women. A native evangelist visits the men in their homes and in
+the tea-shops they are wont to frequent, a Bible woman goes among
+the women, hot rice and beds are given to the really destitute in
+cold weather, and the sick are sent to the hospital. At the special
+Christmas services held one year each coolie was presented with a
+cheap towel, to his great delight. But let it not be imagined that the
+coolie’s satisfaction was due to the fact that he could now remove a
+few layers of dirt from his hands and face. That consideration, if it
+entered his mind at all, was wholly secondary. The chief use of the
+towel was to wipe the sweat from his brow when running, so that he
+could see more clearly. The coolies’ incredulous amazement that any
+one should care for them was most touching. At first when they flocked
+to the Hall they would say to the evangelist, “Is this for _us_?” and
+at the close of the meeting, “We never heard anything like it!” There
+have been a number of very bright conversions among them. The work is
+supported by voluntary contributions, the coolies themselves, out of
+their extreme poverty, giving generously. The ambition of some is to
+raise enough money to build a church! It is a noble purpose but leagues
+beyond the possibilities of their meagre resources.
+
+Tramcars began running in the International Settlement in Shanghai
+in 1907. Six years later they were introduced on Chinese territory.
+No street in the Chinese city being wide enough for a car to pass
+through it, the intention is to surround the city with a track in
+place of the old moat, and it will not be long before the circle is
+complete. The cars are divided into two unequal sections, the larger
+one for third-class passengers and the smaller for first-class. Some
+foreigners travel third-class and many Chinese first-class. On one
+line in the Settlement, owing to the rude treatment accorded them in
+the third-class compartment by Chinese men, Chinese women are allowed
+to travel first-class for a third-class fare. Two notices stand out
+conspicuously in third-class cars. One prohibits spitting and is put
+up by the Municipal Health Department to guard against tuberculosis.
+The other warns passengers not to enter or leave while the cars are
+in motion. The warning is emphasized by a coloured picture of a man
+who has fallen in jumping off a car and is lying on the ground with
+the blood flowing from his wounds. Still, every year some Chinese are
+killed and many more injured in attempting, in their ignorance of
+physical laws, to imitate what they see foreigners do. Yet accidents
+do not deter them from using the cars, and during the busy hours of
+the day they fairly swarm into them. Nearly all the cars carry a
+trailer, and except for a few seats in front reserved for first-class
+passengers, that too is crowded with Chinese. Fares are rated according
+to the distance traveled. Both motorman and conductor are Chinese,
+and the latter understands just enough English to collect fares. But
+if a stranger in the city asks in English for general information
+he will rarely succeed in making himself understood. Railless cars,
+brought over from England, were introduced on one road in the autumn
+of 1914, but proved too heavy for the paving and were prohibited after
+a week or two. The following spring, the road foundation having been
+strengthened, a second trial of the cars was made, and this time with
+pronounced success. They soon became very popular. Underground and
+elevated cars have not yet made their appearance in Shanghai, but the
+son of one of its most prominent Chinese citizens has been spending
+some time in Paris learning to fly, so on his return in the near future
+almost anything may be expected to develop in this progressive corner
+of the Orient.
+
+Shanghai being one of the greatest shipping ports in the Far East,
+quantities of merchandise are handled daily. Besides wheelbarrows,
+and coolies who carry loads suspended by ropes from poles resting on
+their shoulders, men-drawn carts are constantly in requisition. Coolies
+take the place of horses and mules as beasts of burden. It is true
+that the foreign hotels and many foreign firms have their wagons and
+vans, nowadays they are oftener motor cars, but these vehicles of
+Western manufacture are far outnumbered by native hand-pulled carts.
+The carts are of the simplest design, several oblong planks nailed
+together and set on two wheels. Most of the loads have to be tied on
+with ropes, and no account is taken of weight. The coolies’ muscle
+is not spared. Three, four, or more coolies are stationed in front
+of the cart to pull, with often several at the back to push. Stout
+ropes fifteen or twenty feet long are fastened by one end to the cart
+and knotted at the other. Each coolie takes a rope, passes it over
+his shoulder, changing occasionally for relief from one to the other,
+and grasps the knot with both hands. If the load is extremely heavy,
+such as iron rods or building stone, the pullers even on level ground
+are obliged to stop frequently to rest and recover breath. But it is
+when crossing the arched bridges over Soochow Creek that the tug of
+war comes. The forward coolies bend almost double, while those at the
+rear push with might and main till their faces are congested and it
+seems as if they must burst every blood-vessel in their bodies. But
+perhaps the cart does not yield an inch. After a moment’s rest another
+effort is made. This time the coolies at the back grasp the wheels and
+at last succeed in turning them ever so little, while slowly, very,
+very slowly the cart is drawn up the incline. When the highest point
+of the bridge is reached, unless the road in front is clear, there
+is another pause. Then the coolies who have been pushing, pull back,
+assisted by some of the others, while the forward coolies rush ahead in
+the liveliest manner to keep from being hit by the cart. It impresses
+foreigners as a cruel way of getting work done and draws painfully
+on their sympathies, but if a sudden change were made to horse power,
+the carters would doubtless be the first ones to raise a hue and cry
+against it.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+A PEEP INTO THE SCHOOLROOM
+
+
+“How many schools for the Chinese, not counting missionary schools, are
+there in Shanghai?” The question was asked of a Y.M.C.A. secretary, who
+with others had just completed a canvass of the city with reference to
+its educational facilities. “It is not possible to tell exactly,” he
+replied, puckering his brow. “As nearly as we could find out, there
+are at least five hundred, probably more. Of course that list does not
+include the schools for girls. Miss Blank can tell you about them.” The
+Chairman of the Committee on the Investigation of Girls’ Schools was
+interviewed. She brought out her maps, charts, and reports, and spread
+them on the table. “It was such a difficult search,” she explained.
+“We discovered between thirty and forty boarding schools alone, but it
+is almost certain that does not include all. Some of them were hidden
+away in the queerest places.” “What a difference in the number of
+schools for girls compared with those for boys!” exclaimed her visitor.
+“Oh, well, you must remember we made no effort to tabulate the little
+day-schools. They seemed to be legion and met us at every turn.” The
+large majority of the schools enumerated were established after 1900,
+and very many sprang up at the time of the revolution in 1911, or
+quickly following it.
+
+[Illustration: ADVERTISING SINGER SEWING MACHINE PRODUCTS]
+
+From these statistics it might appear that the education of the
+children of Shanghai was fairly well provided for, but with no
+compulsory system, thousands that are employed in mills and factories,
+bound out as apprentices, thrust forth to beg or allowed to loaf, never
+cross the threshold of a schoolroom.
+
+The Municipality of the International Settlement supports four large
+public schools for Chinese boys (there are none for girls), the ground
+in each instance having been donated by philanthropic Chinese, and
+the native residents in the Settlement, who form the bulk of the
+population, paying their share of the taxes on the buildings.
+
+One of the handsomest buildings in the French Concession is a public
+school for Chinese boys.
+
+Private schools, or as they are termed “Gentry Schools,” are very
+popular with the Chinese. In Shanghai this class far outnumbers all
+others, and it is moreover an interesting fact that of the schools
+under government control very many were started by an individual or
+group of individuals as private enterprises. China is a nation that
+reverences learning above all else. Not a scrap of paper that has
+written or printed on it even a single “character” is willingly allowed
+to be blown about carelessly or trampled under foot. These precious
+bits, soiled and torn though they may be, are laboriously picked up
+by men or boys armed with tongs or pin-pointed sticks, who travel to
+and fro through the streets in search of them. The well-to-do hire
+proxies to perform this meritorious work. The paper is carried to the
+public ovens, where it is burned, and the ashes afterward thrown out
+in the river. The belief is millenniums old that heaven vouchsafes
+special blessings to those who show due regard for the sacred symbols
+of knowledge. It follows then quite naturally that to open and maintain
+a school ranks with the Chinese among the highest forms of service one
+can render to mankind.
+
+Since Western education has been introduced, many of China’s best
+young men have dedicated their lives and fortunes to popularizing it.
+Among the numerous examples that could be cited in Shanghai alone, the
+Akademio Utopia is one. Four years ago a group of ten zealous young men
+started a school in a small rented building. They had little capital,
+but each one agreed to devote twenty per cent of his income to meeting
+the running expenses. Several who had studied abroad gave also of their
+time and taught one or more classes. The principal was a graduate of
+Cornell University and the first Chinese student from that institution
+to be elected to Phi Beta Kappa. The current expenses were soon met,
+or nearly so, by the fees of the students, whose number quickly ran up
+to over a hundred, but when it became necessary to build, the young
+promoters again put their hands in their pockets, and out of their
+modest earnings gave most liberally. The principal’s father offered him
+financial help but in a spirit of manly independence he refused it,
+preferring to depend on his own and the school’s resources. The fine
+new building is finished and in use, though plain benches take the
+place of desks which will be added later, together with other needed
+furnishings, as the debt is gradually paid off.
+
+In the plebeian district of the Settlement, on a street little
+frequented by foreigners, is a boarding and day-school attended by five
+hundred and fifty boys. Unlike the former school, this one started
+full-fledged the year of the Boxer Rebellion, which witnessed the
+birth of so many new enterprises. The plant consists of three brick
+buildings, the middle one surmounted by a stately clock tower, and
+all connected by covered passageways. The main building is divided
+from front to back into parallel sections, with open courts between,
+though joined on the upper story by bridges. In this way good light
+and air are secured for each of the forty-six rooms. There is a
+laboratory, a science class-room with seats in amphitheatre style, a
+library containing both Chinese and English books, a hall dedicated
+to Confucius whose walls are hung with scrolls inscribed with
+quotations from the writings of the Sage and where the students gather
+semi-annually for worship, and finally a reception-room, having as its
+chief ornament a portrait of the founder of the school. The founder
+began life as a poor boatman. By careful saving of his earnings he was
+by and by able to open a small metal-ware shop. Possessed of great
+business sagacity, he rose step by step, gradually amassing wealth,
+until he became a millionaire. Though he never learned to read and
+write, this self-made man had ideals and gave liberally for the free
+education of the poor. When he was past sixty he conceived the idea of
+founding a school as the best and most lasting memorial of himself he
+could leave to the city. The plans were made and the building begun,
+though the philanthropist did not live to see it completed. A statue is
+soon to be erected in his honour by a company of Shanghai merchants.
+The founder’s sons built a beautiful little memorial temple to their
+father on the school area between the playground and the out-of-doors
+gymnasium, and thither they resort at stated intervals to prostrate
+themselves before the ancestral tablets, as the students do in front of
+the philanthropist’s portrait in the reception hall. But they have no
+love for learning and take no interest whatever in the school, which
+goes to prove that not all the conservatives lived in the past century
+nor that all of the progressives are confined to the new. The fees are
+kept low, board and tuition for the entire school year of ten months
+and a half costing less than twenty-four dollars. Fifty of the boys are
+charity pupils. English and French are taught, the latter by a graduate
+of the school, and there is a small industrial department. The course
+of study extends through eleven years and carries the student up to
+about the third year in a home High School.
+
+Close to the South Gate of the Chinese City, or where the South Gate
+formerly stood, is a plain red brick building called in English “The
+Shanghai High School.” The interior arrangement could not be simpler,
+a hall running through the middle, which is also a dining-room for
+the boarders, and class-rooms opening off from it on either side.
+Above are dormitories. In this building and three smaller ones on
+the grounds, five hundred boys, half of them boarders, whose ages
+average sixteen, are receiving a thorough education. A foreign educator
+remarked when visiting the school, “This shows what excellent work
+the Chinese can do with a very modest equipment, which, after all,
+answers in every way to their actual needs.” The story of this school
+is worth repeating. Thirteen years ago four progressive brothers banded
+together to help educate the youth of Shanghai. Not having sufficient
+money to purchase a suitable site and erect a building, they fitted up
+the family residence for a school, supporting it largely with their
+own funds. Three of the brothers are successful business men, and the
+fourth became the principal. He is a graduate of St. John’s University
+of the Protestant Episcopal Mission in Shanghai, a man in his early
+prime, of scholarly tastes and habits. Hardly had the doors of the
+school been opened when ninety boys flocked to it, and the number
+increased so rapidly that within a year or two it became necessary
+to look for more commodious quarters. The school in the meantime had
+received recognition from the local government and was given an annual
+grant-in-aid. The Chinese Municipality donated some of the public
+land for a site for the new plant, and in 1909 the present edifice
+was completed. Thirty teachers are employed, three of them being
+foreigners, and women. Speaking one day of the qualifications of his
+foreign teachers, reference was made by a friend to the fact that one
+of them had graduated with honour from the University of Edinburgh.
+“Yes,” said the principal smilingly, “I consider myself fortunate in
+securing her, but I always seek the very best for my school, for it is
+my purpose to maintain the highest standard.” And that he does maintain
+it was proved when several of his students on examination entered St.
+John’s University unconditioned, the first time a school under Chinese
+management had attained such distinction.
+
+Four years after the brothers started their venture, their three
+sisters launched a school for girls. This school, like the other, had
+a small beginning, but from the first was a pronounced success. Later,
+its promotors were also given public land on which to build, and what
+is more, bricks from the city wall, at that time in process of being
+torn down, were donated for building material. Can the imagination
+conjure up anything more strange and romantic than a part of the old
+storied walls metamorphosed into a school for Chinese girls? How the
+city fathers who planned those walls, to say nothing of Confucius
+himself, whose prophetic eye caught no vision of a liberally educated
+womanhood, would have shrunk in horror from such unseemly desecration!
+The sisters are all married, one being a widow, and with their families
+live in neat apartments in the rear of the school. They are well-to-do,
+and teach for love’s sake rather than for the money there is in it.
+Indeed, the school has not yet become self-supporting. One teacher is
+principal, another supervises the classes in embroidery, and the third
+manages the business. The one hundred and thirty bright-faced pupils,
+besides the common branches, are taught music, drawing, painting, and
+plain sewing. They receive regular instruction in physical training
+from a young Chinese woman who had her own education in Boston. The
+school has been honoured with medals from several expositions to which
+specimens of beautiful embroidery and drawings have been sent.
+
+Fifty years ago a baby girl destined for an unusual career was born
+in one of the patrician Chinese homes in Shanghai. She was reared in
+luxury and given the meagre education at home usually accorded by
+indulgent parents to girls in her position. Allowed by choice to remain
+unmarried, she eventually allied herself with a society of austere
+Buddhist religionists known as “vegetarians.” Years rolled by, till the
+girl, grown to womanhood, had passed her thirty-ninth birthday. She had
+long observed that her father was a liberal-minded man, and that his
+benefactions were frequently in aid of schools for girls, which were
+gradually becoming common. “If my father is interested in the education
+of girls,” she reasoned within herself, “why should I not open a school
+and he help _me_?” But when she mentioned the plan to her father he
+frowned upon it harshly, and her stepmother was even more violent in
+her opposition. Education might be condoned in others, but no daughter
+of theirs needed more than she had, and much less should she aspire to
+be a medium for encouraging it. Moreover, the father realized the young
+woman’s marked ability, and had plans of his own respecting the help
+she would by and by render him in the management of his estate. The
+more she was opposed, however, the stronger grew her purpose, until
+finally the controversy led to her being practically disinherited and
+driven from the parental roof. She had a little money with which she
+managed to open a small school, and then sold her jewels to keep it
+running. That was twelve years ago. Twice she has moved, the last time,
+in the spring of 1914, to a handsome new building she erected herself
+largely with the portion of her inheritance she was able to secure when
+her father died. There was a notable “opening” to which many Chinese
+guests and a few favored foreigners were invited. On the wall of the
+Assembly Room hung a large portrait of the principal’s father, for the
+flower of filial piety rarely dies in China, no matter how rough the
+winds that blow upon it. Chinese flags were draped over the platform
+and fluttered from pillar to post. In the side rooms the industrial
+work of the girls was on exhibition and a fine collation set forth.
+
+The building and grounds of this school are always kept neat and
+attractive, and no matter what hour of the day the unexpected visitor
+arrives, he is sure to find dormitories and hall, and even dining-room,
+kitchen, and laundry worthy of the closest inspection. The kindergarten
+building is slightly separated from the main one, and it would be hard
+to find anywhere a more perfect model of its kind. Mothers’ Meetings
+are held from time to time when practicable. Matters relating to the
+child’s moral, mental, and physical well-being are frankly discussed.
+
+“Commencement Day” is observed with great éclat. Last year, four
+“sweet girl graduates” sat on the platform, all dressed alike, in white
+Chinese silk made in Chinese style, white slippers with foreign heels,
+and tiny blue ribbon bows at the neck, and bands of narrow blue ribbon
+around their hair. The class colours were blue and white, and behind
+the girls hung their class banner, bearing on a white ground their
+motto “Excelsior” in blue letters. Each graduate had prepared an essay
+in English, but only one was read, “The Influence and Responsibility
+of the Young Women of China.” In thought and language it would have
+done credit to a school-girl in any land. The others wrote on, “The
+Need of Compulsory Education,” “The Evils of the Cigarette Habit,” and
+“The Advantages of an Education in China Over That Received Abroad.”
+Songs, piano solos, duets, and eight-handed pieces, recitations in
+French and English, and an eloquent address on “The Value of Education
+for Women,” by the Chinese Commissioner of Foreign Affairs, completed
+the programme, which throughout was of an exceptionally high order.
+Then came the closing scene as a delightful climax. Dr. Wu Ting Fang,
+former Minister to the United States, presented to each graduate a
+diploma tied with ribbon in approved Western style, which he received
+from the hand of the principal. It was hard to realize that the little
+woman standing beside Dr. Wu, so modest and retiring, in simple, dark
+Chinese dress, her hair combed straight back from her face in old-time
+Chinese fashion, was the promoter and controlling spirit of this most
+successful up-to-date school. She speaks no English and prefers to
+keep in the background as much as possible, yet hers is an unusual
+personality. Though not a professing Christian she is a believer in
+heart and is quite a regular attendant at a Protestant Episcopal
+Mission Church.
+
+Another popular school for girls is known generally as the “Suffragette
+School.” Like so many others, its existence began at the close of the
+recent revolution, and grew out of it. The exigencies of the revolution
+brought women into the public arena as they had never thought of
+figuring before. A few who had studied medicine went to the front as
+doctors and many more as Red Cross nurses. A large number acted as
+spies, secreted refugees, carried ammunition to the soldiers, and
+sacrificed property and life itself for their country. From various
+quarters there gathered in Shanghai a hundred or so school-girls, most
+of them runaways, fired with an all-consuming if misguided desire to
+aid their country, who donned uniforms, shouldered arms, drilled,
+and begged to be allowed to march at once to the firing-line, which
+fortunately for them they were not permitted to do. They were known as
+the “Amazons.” All these events, however, so stirred the patriotism
+of the women of Shanghai that a numerous company banded together to
+raise money for the revolution, which they did very successfully. When
+the fighting ceased, instead of disbanding they formed themselves
+into a permanent organization under the name of “The Chinese Woman’s
+Co-operative Association.” Its purpose was to protect the interests
+of women in general, and in particular to gain for them the right of
+suffrage.
+
+The society is still in existence, though greatly modified in tone and
+reduced in numbers by the elimination of the most rabid and troublesome
+spirits. Occasional meetings are held and men are frequently invited
+to address them, a woman occupying the chair. The principal work done
+by this Association since the revolution has been the founding and
+fostering of the Suffragette School, with the idea of inculcating
+advanced ideas in the minds of the young. At first the teachers, all
+of them women, worked without salary, and turned with disdain from men
+and marriage. While the curriculum includes Western studies, particular
+emphasis is laid on Chinese subjects, especially the writing of Chinese
+characters, which the pupils do exceedingly well. They are encouraged
+to make their clothes of Chinese cloth, use Chinese furnishings
+in their homes and preserve the old-time customs and the old-time
+beliefs; in short, to be Chinese to the backbone and independent of the
+foreigners’ supplies and the foreigners’ religion.
+
+The school has prospered better numerically than financially. An
+interested missionary was talking one day about the school to Miss C.,
+a recent graduate of Wellesley College and a relative of the principal.
+“You say the school is poor?” “Not poor in the quality of work done,
+but, O yes, very poor in money.” “What is the reason of that?” “Well,
+it hasn’t financial supporters. You see, right after the revolution
+so many women were enthusiastic about suffrage. But they are not now
+in the same way, and they don’t take as much interest in keeping up
+the school.” “What do you think makes them less interested in the
+question of suffrage?” “They don’t believe the time has come in China
+to push it. Other things they feel are at present more important and
+necessary.” “What is your personal opinion?” The bright eyes of the
+young woman rested an instant thoughtfully on her questioner, then came
+the decided reply, “I am sure we are not ready to vote yet, and it is a
+mistake to divert our thoughts from greater needs by thinking of it and
+working for it.”
+
+More and more as the New Learning is crowding out the old-time
+impractical methods, the desire grows to relate the work of the
+schools to the life of the people. Hitherto industrial training has
+received little attention in China, but the Republic has been gradually
+awakening to its importance, so that to-day schools of this kind are
+the ones that appeal most strongly to the popular mind and receive the
+readiest support from governmental and private sources. In Shanghai,
+commercial and industrial schools, or schools that have added these
+departments to their curricula, are constantly on the increase.
+
+The World’s Chinese Students’ Federation, with headquarters at
+Shanghai, is carrying on both day and evening schools which are largely
+attended. The teachers give their services free and are young men
+of independent means, or those who are able and willing to devote a
+portion of their time to this work. The principal is only twenty-one, a
+graduate of the Young Men’s Christian Association school and unusually
+gifted.
+
+The leading institution in Shanghai under Chinese auspices is the
+Government Institute of Technology. As in the case of so many other
+educational enterprises, this one received its initial impulse from
+an individual, a man high in government employ. It began in 1897 as a
+Normal School, then added Preparatory and Grammar School departments,
+and finally, under the skillful leadership of Dr. John C. Ferguson,
+developed into Nanyang College, still later adding courses in civil
+and electrical engineering, and changing its name to “The Government
+School of Technology.” The handsome buildings in the midst of spacious
+well-kept grounds, the complete equipment, fine corps of teachers,
+eight of whom are Americans, the standard of work maintained, and the
+character of the large student body, all combine to make this a school
+Shanghai may well be proud of. A few of the best students are sent each
+year to Europe and America for a period of practical training.
+
+The Mining and Railway College is not so large nor so old an
+institution, but in its way quite as remarkable. Its founder, who is
+also its president, is a young man in his early thirties, with a finely
+chiselled, scholarly face and gracious manner. When travelling abroad
+after finishing his education at Queen’s College in Hongkong, he became
+convinced that what China required more than almost anything else was
+trained engineers. So four years ago (many things happened in Shanghai
+four years ago), unaided, he started this school, giving himself and
+his money without reserve to the work. Already the students number
+two hundred and sixty, as promising a body of young men as one would
+wish to see. They come from nearly every province in the country and a
+few from Java. Five of the fifteen teachers have studied abroad, but
+only one is a foreigner, a Belgian who teaches mining and mineralogy.
+The entering students are put at once into English classes and it is
+remarkable what they accomplish in a single year. A specialty is made
+of chirography, “for,” says the president, “unless the boys learn to
+form their letters carefully, they will not draw well, and as engineers
+they must do that.”
+
+The School of Medicine and of Engineering, carried on by the Germans
+for Chinese students, is unique in its way. An eminent physicist in
+Shanghai has said that in his opinion it is the greatest institution
+in China. The school, its two departments being entirely distinct, is
+not missionary nor even philanthropic in character. This is simply a
+business enterprise fostered by the German government for business
+purposes. They give the best training in return for what, to the
+Chinese, are heavy fees, in order that these men may be prepared later
+to work in their employ. The teaching force is of the highest grade and
+the scientific equipment as perfect as the means provided can make it.
+
+[Illustration: MISS ZEE’S NEW SCHOOL BUILDING. KINDERGARTEN IN THE REAR]
+
+Perhaps of all the schools in Shanghai, the little day-schools
+appeal to one most because of their unfailing human interest and the
+possibilities stored up in them. They are of every kind and degree of
+excellence, or badness, according to the way they are looked at. On
+the whole, most of them seem to be doing good and even the poorest
+keep the children off the street. Often there are amusing features. In
+the Chinese city, on a signboard over a doorway appears the rather
+unusual announcement, “English taught from A. to L.” Just what is done
+with the remaining letters of the alphabet is not explained. On a
+side street the passerby reads again in large English letters, “Daily
+Progressive School.” In two poorly lighted, none too clean rooms of an
+old Chinese house, thirty or forty children bend over their roughly
+made desks, studying aloud in vociferous tones. The head teacher quiets
+them while he greets the chance visitor and points with pride to his
+foreign textbooks in geography and English. He too has ideals, and
+when reference is made to the name of the school, answers, “Yes, that
+is what I want to make it, ‘Daily Progressive.’” He adds that he has
+started two branches of his “Daily Progressive School” in other parts
+of Shanghai. Then comes the unexpected question, “Are you a Christian?”
+“I am a Christian,” naming the mission school where he received his
+education.
+
+Sometimes a little day-school is hidden away in the back room of a
+rambling old house, or in an inner apartment of a Buddhist temple,
+where the unsophisticated easily loses himself amid its labyrinthine
+windings. During the stormy iconoclastic days of the revolution,
+temples and ancestral halls were turned over wholesale by the
+provisional government to be used as schools, and though many have
+reverted to their original purposes, others, like Li Hung Chang’s
+Temple in Shanghai, are still kept as seats of learning. This memorial
+to the great statesman, built by public funds, was taken possession of
+five years ago by the trustees of Fuh-tan College, and now the bronze
+statue of the famous Li from its pedestal in the garden looks down each
+day on three hundred and fifty students hurrying to and fro through
+the numberless courts and passageways. Commencement exercises are held
+in the Hall of Ancestral Worship, where, on a raised platform against
+an ornate background, sits the Chinese President, an alumnus of Yale,
+surrounded by his faculty, all in collegiate cap and gown, making one
+of the curious anomalies common in these days of transition.
+
+From the Provincial Normal School, located in the Chinese city, thirty
+young men graduated last year and more than five hundred have gone
+out from its doors during the eleven years since it was opened. Such
+is the demand for teachers that long before the school-year closes
+every member of the graduating class has been spoken for. The alumni
+are scattered far and wide over the country. Near the Normal School
+is a large practice school of four hundred pupils. The students of
+the Normal School are taught music, clay-modelling, wood-carving,
+painting, drawing. They are ardent patriots and keenly resent any real
+or supposed indignity offered to their native land. Sometimes they
+express their patriotism in original ways, as they did not long ago,
+when feeling ran high because of the unreasonable demands made on
+China by Japan. The boys’ sleeping and study rooms open onto courts in
+the rambling structure, or rather a series of Chinese buildings which
+constitute the school plant. These rooms were cleared out and each one
+made the scene of some pictorial or material representation of the
+current political issue. Many of the exhibits were exceedingly clever,
+a few were most amusing, but all were strikingly illustrative of the
+animus of the student body and showed the kind of teachers that are
+being sent forth over China to instill their principles into the minds
+of the rising generation.
+
+It is significant of the spirit of the times that a young man in
+Shanghai a few months ago went to his father and begged to be given
+his portion of the family gambling money. With it he opened a school
+which has now one hundred and fifty pupils. The secretary of the
+Provincial Educational Association, recently back from an extended tour
+in America, requested a resident missionary to give him lessons in
+English. He was so impressed with the excellence of the American system
+that he decided to introduce the same methods into his own schools as
+rapidly as possible, and wanted a better knowledge of English that he
+might be qualified to select text-books and arrange courses of study.
+
+Last summer for the first time the Shanghai prefect fixed a uniform
+vacation period for the elementary schools extending through five
+weeks, from July 22d to August 25th. In sending out the notice the
+prefect added a clause to the effect that during two weeks of the
+vacation three hours a day must be spent by the pupils in reviewing
+their lessons.
+
+There are two flourishing Japanese schools in Shanghai. One is a large
+public school that is growing so rapidly a new building has been added
+to the group which suffices for six or seven hundred pupils. Boys
+and girls of all ages are accommodated under the same roof, but with
+the exception of the very little children in the kindergarten, they
+occupy separate rooms and have their recess at different hours. They
+make a pretty sight in their gay coloured garments flitting about in
+the sunshine like radiant butterflies during play hours, or pouring
+joyously out on the street at the close of school, some going off in
+ricshas accompanied by nurses, more on foot, while a lot of youngsters
+scramble onto the street cars, clutching their coppers in dirty little
+paws, each one carrying a school bag or books tied up in a square of
+cloth, and a little lunch box, while on every urchin’s head rests a
+smart military cap.
+
+The other school is a Japanese College with nearly three hundred
+students, strong of body, alert in mind, picked men all of them.
+They are sent from Japan by their respective prefectures to study
+in Shanghai for three years, every expense being met. The course
+includes commerce, engineering, and agriculture. During the fourteen
+years since the school opened, eight hundred have graduated, seventy
+receiving certificates last June. At the end of the second year’s work,
+seventy or eighty of the most promising students at the expense of
+the school, are sent far and wide over China to study the country and
+its condition, agricultural, mining, social, political. “When the men
+graduate from the college they return to Japan, do they not?” was asked
+of the president. “Oh, no,” came the emphatic reply, “they are expected
+to stay in China and help the Chinese develop their resources.”
+
+A group of schools in Shanghai which are not for the study of books,
+but, in their line, of great value, the public generally knows little
+about. These are the six Singer Sewing-Machine Schools for women and
+girls. The Singer Sewing-Machine made its advent in China a decade ago,
+and thus far it is without a rival. It “took” almost at once with the
+Chinese and is now found everywhere, even in the most unlooked for and
+absurdly out-of-the-way places. In 1910 Singer Sewing-Machine schools
+were started in Shanghai. At first they met with small success. Those
+for men were a signal failure and soon closed their doors. The few who
+ventured to enter the schools for women and girls had to be paid for
+coming, but the old conservatism seemed to die out with the revolution.
+The leading school now numbers fifty pupils. The period of training
+covers three, six, or twelve months according to the kind of work taken
+up, whether plain tailoring or fancy embroidery. The pupils come from
+widely scattered districts and it is the intention when they return
+to their village or town that they shall open a school of their own,
+and in this way introduce the machines throughout the country. There
+are already more than four hundred selling stations in China, each in
+charge of a Chinese agent. The machines are sold on the installment
+plan. “We consider ourselves missionaries in our way,” said the foreign
+representative of the company in Shanghai, “for is it not a charity to
+lighten the labour of these poor hard-working people by selling them
+our sewing-machines on easy terms?” The Singer Company subscribes
+liberally to all benevolences, and during the revolution, and the
+rebellion the following year, it loaned its machines free of charge
+to organizations engaged in making garments for the destitute. One
+effective way it has of advertising is to send men about the streets
+of Shanghai dressed fantastically in clothes made in its shops, while
+offering for sale small articles carried in portable show-cases.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+A WIZARD PUBLISHING HOUSE
+
+
+“The pen is mightier than the sword” has through the centuries been a
+working axiom in China, for soldiers stood at the foot of the social
+ladder, while scholars sat proudly on the top rung. Recent experiences,
+it is true, have somewhat altered the views of the people, though
+not reversed them. But the accompanying adage, “The printed page
+is mightier than the sword,” has not seemed to acquire popularity,
+despite the fact that printing from movable type was discovered in old
+China long before Gutenberg saw the light of day. Indeed, the “Peking
+Gazette,” whose lineal descendant still flourishes in the Capital,
+claims the honour of being the first newspaper ever published. It was
+printed from wooden blocks, some of which are still in existence, no
+one knows just how long ago, though tradition makes it as many as a
+thousand years. But for centuries the art was little used and even as
+late as the Chino-Japanese war in 1894 news travelled so slowly that
+people living only seventy-five miles from the coast had not even
+heard there was a war. Now, Shanghai alone, which is far in advance of
+other cities in this respect, publishes more than thirty newspapers
+and periodicals, twelve of them being dailies. Many of the sheets
+are illustrated, and as a proof that they are thoroughly abreast of
+the times, advertisements of well known patent medicines are given a
+prominent place!
+
+With the dawn of China’s “New Day,” and the increasing thirst for
+Western learning, an insistent cry was heard, not alone for newspapers,
+but for books, books, and plenty of them. Then to meet the need arose
+the Commercial Press. The story of the rapid growth and development of
+this great publishing house reads like a tale from the Arabian Nights.
+The idea was born in the minds of three young, wide-awake Chinese,
+all practical printers, and all of them Christians, the product of a
+Presbyterian Mission School in Shanghai. Work began in 1897 in a modest
+way with two small printing presses. The shop was a Chinese house
+in an alley off one of the main roads. These quarters were speedily
+outgrown, and after two moves the plant was finally lodged permanently
+in a group of fine brick buildings covering eight acres in the northern
+end of the city. To-day sixty modern presses, the very best to be had,
+are annually, in round figures, using up twenty-five thousand reams
+of foreign paper and thirty-four hundred reams of Chinese paper, the
+bulk of which is turned into school books and scattered far and wide
+over the land, from Manchuria to Thibet. The year after the revolution,
+although new machinery was bought, additional workmen taken on as fast
+as they could be found, and the presses kept running night and day, the
+enormous demand for books could not be met.
+
+[Illustration: CHINESE COMPOSING ROOM]
+
+From the first, the policy of the Commercial Press has been never
+to print any books that are antagonistic to the Christian religion,
+and to this purpose it has faithfully adhered. Indeed, the twenty or
+more heads of departments are either Christians or in sympathy with
+Christianity.
+
+The rules of this house governing the treatment of employees may
+not sound unusual to Western ears, but studied in comparison with
+conditions as they have been in China, and still are for the most part,
+their true worth is keenly realized. The Commercial Press employs about
+fourteen hundred men and four hundred women. Several of the boys are
+deaf mutes from a missionary institution in the north, and a number
+are from the Shanghai Reformatory, taken on by the company to give
+them a fresh start in life, with a hostel built especially for their
+accommodation. Most of the women work in the bindery, though they are
+found here and there throughout the establishment and some of the
+lighter machinery is operated by them. One is a forewoman and a few
+bright girls are studying to be bookkeepers. None are admitted under
+fourteen years of age, while the majority are much older. An innovation
+has lately been introduced, permitting women to work in the same
+room with men, although at different tables. It has proved a perfect
+success. All hands attend strictly to business and the new arrangement
+has distinct advantages over the old, as, in giving employees better
+light and air, since the rooms can be kept larger. The hours of labour
+are from 7:30 to 12 and from 1 to 5:30 o’clock. The bell rings for
+the women to leave five minutes before the men. “Ladies first, you
+see,” a member of the staff laughingly remarked to a visitor. When
+a woman expects to become a mother she is given two months off with
+full pay and five dollars in addition to meet extra expenses. Sundays
+are holidays. About one-eighth of the force are Christians and two
+Protestant churches are located in the neighborhood of the Works,
+which many of them attend. Wages are excellent with the addition of
+a bonus for special merit. There is a reserve fund for the benefit
+of the families of the deceased, and old, retired employees. Profit
+sharing is a part of the system and the head men in each department are
+shareholders in the company.
+
+A small hospital with accommodation for a score of patients, and with
+an immaculate dispensary and operating room, is another feature of
+this remarkable establishment. An attendant is always present, and a
+Chinese foreign-trained doctor visits the hospital every morning. The
+clinic is open to outsiders as well as employees and their families.
+All pay a fee of three Chinese coppers, about one cent, as it has
+been found necessary to charge something to keep the place from being
+overrun. Near the Commercial Press the management has built a number
+of small but comfortable houses, and these are rented, at a nominal
+rate, to employees who care to occupy them. A school is maintained for
+the children of employees, and a night-school and reading-room for
+apprentices. A kindergarten, for which the Commercial Press furnishes
+the premises and the Presbyterian Mission Press the teachers, is also
+close by. None of these schools are free, as parents are able to
+pay a little tuition and feel more self-respecting to do so. A tea
+garden, made attractive with shrubs, flowers, and seats scattered
+about on the well-kept lawn, furnishes a delightful resting-place for
+the clerks when off duty. The fire brigade is a most important factor
+in the concern. It is composed of twenty-six men, all employees, and
+is kept at a high grade of efficiency by frequent drills. A stone’s
+throw from the main building is the fire station, fitted up with bright
+hose wagons, ladders, buckets, torches for carrying safety oil lamps
+of brass, besides complete uniforms for the men, the burnished brass
+helmets being their special pride. The brigade stands ready to respond
+to a limited number of outside calls.
+
+Visitors to the press works are always cordially welcomed, and
+courteously shown over the establishment by a competent guide, whenever
+possible a member of the staff. So extensive is the plant it usually
+requires several hours for even a cursory tour of inspection. Two of
+the buildings are used for the printing plant and foundry, one for the
+Chinese bindery, another is reserved for the editorial department,
+Chinese and English, two are warehouses, one is a carpentry shop, and
+one, a long low building somewhat apart from the others, is devoted to
+photography and its various branches. The rooms are airy, clean, and
+cheerful, in marked contrast to most of the workshops in China. Each is
+connected by telephone with the main office, and light tracks are laid
+for carrying merchandise to and fro. Electric motors supply the motive
+power, while both gas and electricity are used for lighting purposes.
+
+Most of the printing presses are from England and America. Those for
+finer work, including the immense wonder-working machines in the colour
+printing department, are of German manufacture. The Commercial Press
+was the first firm to introduce three-colour printing into China. One
+is tempted to linger long beside these marvellous presses. As the blue,
+yellow, red, each in its turn, is added so quickly and easily to the
+maps, charts, pictures, and kindergarten scrolls, the visitor is almost
+persuaded that he is viewing an exhibition of the cunning art of a
+magician, rather than the automatic movements of an insensate piece of
+machinery. Here is laid before the eyes a gay picture of the landing
+of Columbus for a history of America in Chinese, and yonder an equally
+charming one of the child Raleigh for a history of England. Much is
+made of illustrations in the school books published by the Commercial
+Press. Their ethical readers for little folks are fascinating
+productions. Each page is a coloured picture, which teaches its own
+lesson. Children are represented on their way to school, saluting the
+teacher, reciting their lessons, giving alms to the poor, caring for
+the aged, the young, sick, and blind, dusting and sweeping the rooms,
+washing, brushing, mending, and folding clothes, brushing their teeth,
+eating, playing. Houses are pictured as clean and sanitary, living as
+wholesome and pure. Especial emphasis is placed on proper manners and
+morals, teaching sadly needed to-day in China, when there is such an
+alarming tendency to abandon all that was really admirable under the
+old régime, and adopt in an exaggerated form all that is bad from the
+West. In the First Year Primary books practically no reading matter
+is introduced, only a few Chinese characters to explain the text. The
+little ones scan them attentively, absorbing knowledge without being
+conscious of the fact. How different is this from the old way, when
+children were shut all day long in dark, close rooms, shouting aloud
+unmeaning phrases from the Chinese classics, while the teacher dozed in
+his chair!
+
+The newest addition to the plant is the installation of three “off-set”
+presses, the first in the Far East. An expert came out from America
+with them to set them up and instruct the Chinese workmen in their use.
+They are often kept busy through the twenty-four hours in turning out
+bonds and bank-notes by the millions for the Government.
+
+Too much praise can not be given to the work of the editorial
+department. The entire second floor and part of the third of a quiet,
+three-story building is devoted to it. At long, unpainted wooden
+tables, littered with books and papers, sit the hundred and fifty
+scholars, bending over their work. Above four thousand original books
+have already gone out from their busy workshop, besides countless
+others that have been translated and edited. Eight monthly magazines
+are published by the editorial staff, a general one, an educational,
+a political, student’s, child’s, short story, a woman’s magazine, and
+one entitled “The English Student,” of which twenty thousand copies
+are issued monthly. The newest publication is a magazine called “The
+English Weekly.” The aim of the last two is to help Chinese students in
+the study of English. The Woman’s Magazine is one of the most popular.
+A bright girl who has studied in America was speaking about it one
+day to a group of foreign friends. “Just think,” she said, “the last
+number contains recipes for cooking eggs in twelve different ways.” “Is
+that so unusual?” asked an interested listener. “Why, they were not
+for making foreign dishes, but cooking Chinese food! I never before
+heard of a printed Chinese food recipe. If Chinese women begin to learn
+about food values it will mean everything in their lives.” The Woman’s
+Magazine started its life two years ago with a man as editor-in-chief.
+This fall a young woman will take over that position. She is a recent
+graduate of Wellesley College and married to a Harvard alumnus. Modest
+and lovable, she graciously answered the questions of her foreign
+callers. “Yes,” she admitted, with a little apologetic laugh, “I am
+going to try to edit the magazine.” “There will be assistant editors
+of course?” “Oh, yes.” “Women?” “No, I believe they are all men.” This
+young wife is a beautiful housekeeper, and it is safe to assume her
+home and family will not be neglected on account of the outside work
+she is about to take up. Indeed, it is worthy of comment that no one is
+more pleased about it than the young husband himself.
+
+An interesting fact in connection with the editorial department of the
+Commercial Press is that most Western books are translated through the
+medium of the Japanese language, instead of directly from the English.
+This is because the present system of education in China is based on
+that of Japan, and scientific terms are more easily adapted from the
+Japanese. But Chinese students returning from abroad are strong in
+their feeling that this second-hand method of acquiring knowledge must
+soon give way to the more direct.
+
+Glancing about the editorial room with its scores of hard-working men,
+pouring out the best that is in them for the uplift and enlightenment
+of their country, it is impossible not to feel a strange stirring of
+the heart, and one is also thrilled when looking through the warehouses
+where room after room is filled with books stacked to the ceiling or
+packed in boxes to be shipped away. Some of the largest orders come
+from the most distant provinces. The aim of the publishing house is not
+to issue many handsome, expensive books, but to flood the land with
+cheap editions that shall be within the reach of all.
+
+Tiptoeing out of the editorial department, the visitor passes on
+to the English and Chinese composing rooms, which present a very
+different scene. There is a sort of mystery about Chinese type. That a
+“character” made up of a score or more of tiny individual strokes can
+be reproduced perfectly in a clean-cut piece of lead, seems nothing
+short of marvellous. Chinese type-setting is exceedingly complex. The
+cases are set on slanting frames, placed to form a triangle, within
+which stands the compositor. About six thousand characters are in
+ordinary use and a font of type weighs fifteen hundred pounds. An
+American woman is chief proof-reader for English text, assisted by a
+Portuguese and many Chinese. Behind the printing department is the
+foundry. Type-casting is a specialty and is done on a large scale.
+Indeed the market for a long time was so generally supplied from the
+Commercial Press that their sizes became the standard for all China.
+The matrices, kept in a fire-proof safe, are among the Company’s most
+valuable assets. A few modern automatic type-casters from Chicago
+are used, but they are far outnumbered by the old-style, hand-worked
+machines. The type cast from the old-style machines must be assorted,
+trimmed, and polished, all of which is done by women. “We are not
+always keen in making use of the latest machines,” explains the staff,
+“since labour is so cheap in China, and it is a blessing to the poor
+people to give work to as many as possible.”
+
+Nearly all of the smaller machinery used in the Commercial Press Works
+is made in their own foundry and carpentry shop, besides physical,
+physiological, and chemical apparatus for schools, tools for industrial
+work, and small reed organs. The job-printing department is strictly
+up to date and large returns are realized from it. Recently one of the
+heads of the company made a trip around the world in order to study the
+best and latest processes of printing. The two hundred copies of the
+English edition of “China’s Young Men,” the organ of the Young Men’s
+Christian Association, are sent out monthly from this press.
+
+No expense has been spared to make the equipment of the
+photo-engraving department as perfect as possible. It is provided with
+arc lamps and an acid-blasting etching machine, so that orders can be
+quickly filled irrespective of the weather. A fine photographic gallery
+is annexed whose chief furnishing is a new camera bought in London
+and making the fifth in use. The lens is able to produce pictures 32
+× 43 inches, and with a single exception is the largest in the world.
+The camera rests upon a handcar, which runs back and forth over a
+small track. For some years, one-fourth of the company’s stock was
+held by Japanese, but at the beginning of 1914 this was bought back,
+so that now the concern is wholly Chinese. This consummation of a
+long-anticipated hope was celebrated with great rejoicing.
+
+Several miles away from the works, on one of the busiest streets in a
+Chinese section of the International Settlement, stands the business
+house of the Commercial Press. The four-story building of reinforced
+concrete, ornamented with iron pillars, is quite new, having been built
+only six years ago at a cost of twenty thousand dollars. The fine show
+windows at once attract attention. Those on the right of the entrance
+are reserved for Chinese books and the ones on the left for English.
+Among the latter, besides standard works in literature, fiction,
+biography, and travel, are seen titles like the following: “Ready Made
+Speeches,” “Cooking,” “How the People Rule,” “Our Sick and How to Take
+Care of Them,” “Poultry and Profit,” “All about Railways,” “Railway
+Conquest of the World,” and a series under the general head, “Common
+Commodities of Commerce,” including tea, coffee, sugar, iron, oil,
+rubber. The sales rooms are on the ground floor. But many things are
+found there besides books and the usual appurtenances of a bookstore.
+In the apartments at the rear, in glass cases, are displayed samples
+of the many kinds of school apparatus manufactured at the works, also
+a large collection of stuffed birds from different countries, various
+forms of insect and animal life preserved in alcohol, besides what is
+of exceeding value to Chinese students, studies in rice, cotton, the
+silkworm, and other products, showing the progressive changes and best
+methods of their development and the uses to which they are and may be
+put. For the accommodation of customers who wish to look over the books
+at their leisure, numerous benches are scattered conveniently about,
+and the pleasant little reading room is always well patronized.
+
+The second and third stories are mainly devoted to offices, while a
+good part of the fourth is reserved for the dining-hall. According
+to the usual custom in China, the two hundred employees have their
+board furnished them as a part of their pay, and all who receive
+under ten dollars a month are given lodging as well, though not in
+the same building. A roof garden, where the clerks may gather for the
+noon rest, or enjoy the cool evening breezes in hot weather, is one
+of the attractions of the place. Perhaps the two most useful adjuncts
+are the elevator, which carries both freight and passengers, and the
+electric cash register and delivery system, the only one in China. The
+Commercial Press has over forty branch offices in China, the large
+branch in Peking being employed chiefly with work for the government.
+It has besides more than a thousand selling agencies in other countries
+where the Chinese have settled, and is the largest publishing house in
+the Orient.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE CHINESE CITY
+
+
+Many visitors to this busy port hurry on to richer fields of conquest
+with never a glimpse of the Chinese City, and some doubtless do not
+even know there is such a place. Yet not the International Settlement,
+nor the French Concession, but the Chinese City is the real Shanghai.
+The city is the nucleus north and south of whose storm-beaten walls
+the foreign settlements sprang up and without which they would not
+have been. The coming of the foreigner is of recent date, for few men
+from the West saw the spot, and certainly not one resided there till
+after Shanghai was opened as a treaty port in 1842. The city itself,
+though in the heyday of youth, compared with many other cities in
+China, still counts its age by centuries that creep close on to a
+millennium. The walls were not built until 1555, a year after the city
+had been sacked, burned to the ground, and left a howling wilderness
+by Japanese raiders. Gone now are the old walls, since the revolution,
+and the creaking gates that swung back and forth night and morning so
+many years on their rusty hinges, or if a vestige is left it is fast
+disappearing under the blows of pick-ax and hammer. But no, that is
+a mistake, for a halt has just been called in the work of demolition.
+The Chinese Town Council it is reported, is a house divided against
+itself, and some of its members strongly advocate the rebuilding of the
+walls for the sake of protection. A compromise has been effected by
+voting to allow the walls to remain down but letting the gates stand,
+or what is left of them, to serve as triumphal arches.
+
+[Illustration: THE ORIGINAL WILLOW PATTERN TEA HOUSE]
+
+Of course it is better that the old walls should go, more sanitary
+and more modern. The ill-smelling moat has been covered on the north
+and west by a splendid boulevard ninety feet wide. Trolley lines will
+by and by encircle the whole city, as they now run along two sides.
+Many of the streets in the outer circumference of the city are being
+widened, while those in the heart of it are receiving some attention,
+though improvement is difficult on account of property interests.
+Ramshackle rat-infested hovels, here, there, and yonder, have vanished
+from sight, and new tea-houses, and shops, glistening with fresh
+paint, are taking their places. Public nuisances are being attacked.
+A well-to-do family reports that since the pestilential creek back
+of their house has been filled in, their property has advanced in
+value hundreds of dollars. Street refuse is swept up and carried away
+each day. Meat is inspected. Pipes have been laid and running water
+introduced, so that one no longer hears the monotonous cry of the water
+carriers trotting along with a pole across their shoulders from which
+were suspended the overflowing buckets spilling water at every step.
+Electric lights have largely superseded little smoky kerosene lamps, or
+still more primitive pottery or tin lamps with a tiny wick swimming in
+vegetable oil.
+
+All this is just as it should be. The improvements are highly commended
+by every one, and yet, inconsistent beings that we are, why is it that
+with our rejoicing over the changes, our hearts likewise experience
+a pang of regret? What is there about things old and quaint, albeit
+noisome and repulsive, that things brand new somehow do not possess for
+us? So with the passing of the old walls and a modicum of the old dirt,
+a certain indefinable charm has slipped away too, never to return.
+Nevertheless the Chinese City continues to exist, although since the
+walls are down its boundaries are not so clearly defined, and enough
+of the ancient landmarks remain in the way of foul-smelling alleys,
+streets of gay shops, beggars and crowds, to satisfy most lovers of the
+haunting allurements of the Orient.
+
+The city is approximately three miles in circumference. There is no map
+of it beyond the merest outline, and neither a Murray nor a Baedeker to
+facilitate a tramp through its labyrinthian byways. But the stranger
+crossing its boundaries is not left coldly to his own devices, for
+the instant he appears in sight he is met by a chattering company of
+self-constituted guides. If perchance their services are declined, they
+still manage unobtrusively to shadow the Innocent Abroad and entice him
+to shops that are almost certain to loosen his purse-strings and where
+they propose to secure a fat commission on the purchases made.
+
+The shops in the Chinese City are the originals of the replicas in
+the Settlement, only that being the originals they are more bizarre
+and delightful. Like birds of a feather, shops doing the same kind of
+work, or selling the same kind of articles, are apt to flock together.
+For example, most of the furniture shops handling the beautiful red and
+black wood from the southern province of Kwangtung are found near the
+north gate, also the shops selling exquisitely carved ivory. Elsewhere
+are grouped the silversmiths, the jewelers with tempting displays of
+jade, amber, pearls, and precious stones, cloth and silk merchants,
+shoe and cap makers, dealers whose specialty is all kinds of fans;
+brass, pewter, and china shops, makers of coffins from the costly red
+and teak woods to the less expensive pine and ash--but the amazing
+variety of the shops is fairly bewildering and defies enumeration!
+
+There are no department stores in the city. Each tradesman confines
+himself strictly to his own line of goods. Not for his life would he
+dare encroach on the rights and privileges of another, for every trade
+has its guild which sees to it that the interests of its members are
+protected. Many of the guilds are wealthy and powerful, politically
+as well as commercially, like the silk merchants’ and silversmiths’
+guilds. They have their guild houses, all more or less elaborately
+fitted up with rooms for conferences and feasts, and attached to them
+are rows of long low buildings divided into small chambers, where,
+upon the payment of a rental, the coffins of deceased members may be
+deposited until a convenient time for burial.
+
+Certain shops sell nothing but funeral trappings, but instead of
+presenting a sombre appearance they are among the gayest in the
+city. Hung aloft to show off to the best advantage are elaborately
+embroidered crimson satin coverings for the coffin, and around on the
+shelves or under glass cases is apparel for the dead, very richly
+embroidered robes, slippers, and headgear, this latter in the shape
+of mitres and helmets, of remarkable design and ornamentation. There
+are also priests’ robes and white cotton raiment and sackcloth for the
+mourners. Other shops carry only the paper furnishings that are an
+essential part of a funeral ceremony. When the spirit of the deceased
+leaves the body and passes to the spirit world, according to Chinese
+superstition he requires for his comfort the same conveniences to which
+he was accustomed in life. Hence the dutiful elder son, in proportion
+to his financial ability, and often far beyond it, for Chinese funerals
+are fearfully costly, sees that his honoured parent is provided with
+them. The articles are made of coloured paper, the larger ones over
+a light framework of bamboo, and include every conceivable object,
+from a sedan chair to a teacup. These images are borne in the funeral
+procession through the streets and burned at the grave, the smoke
+being supposed to waft them through ether to the waiting spirit.
+They are such exact facsimiles of the real thing, especially in the
+case of small articles like vases, jewelry boxes, braziers, lamps,
+clocks, basins, that it is hard to believe they are false. One of the
+best imitations ever produced in a Shanghai city shop was that of
+a fur-lined Mandarin coat, so perfect in every detail as almost to
+deceive the Chinese themselves.
+
+A shopkeeper who always attracts custom is the portrait painter. He
+is an important personage and does business behind closed doors--that
+is, his shop is not open to the street as most are; but has a front
+partition with a door and show window. On the window is pasted a
+collection of small pictures of human heads cut from newspapers and
+magazines. Inside the shop quantities more are stored away. When a
+widow, it may be, wishes a likeness of her consort who left no pictured
+memorial behind him, or a youth perhaps craves a reminder of the
+grand-uncle he never saw, they find their way to one of these portrait
+shops. The shopkeeper spreads out before them an array of pictures, and
+after careful study a selection is made of a particular portrait which
+either bears some imaginary resemblance to the dear departed, or is
+what the sorrowing relatives would choose to have him look like. The
+shopkeeper then paints the head in life size and adds a body clothed
+in whatever style of garments may be mutually decided on. The finished
+portrait is finally hung on the wall of the family dwelling and pointed
+to with pride and affection as the face of the deceased ancestor.
+
+Drug shops are many and are invested with an air of quiet exclusiveness
+and semi-professionalism, which suffers but a slight declension when
+in hot weather the clerks, after the manner of most shopkeepers,
+divest themselves of their non-essential upper garments and pass the
+day stripped to the waist. Upon the shelves of the shop stand rows and
+rows of large pewter cannisters and blue and white china jars, innocent
+enough to look at and yet designed to arouse the curiosity of the
+beholder as to the nature and character of their contents. Below are
+quantities of drawers containing dried roots, herbs, bones, seaweed,
+chalk, things indescribable and inscrutable, drawn from the air above,
+the earth beneath, and the waters under the earth. In addition to drugs
+the shop frequently keeps on exhibition some special attractions,
+such as glass jars with snakes preserved in alcohol, dried alligator
+skins, corals and geological specimens. In filling prescriptions
+china bottles, coloured pasteboard boxes and squares of white paper
+are used. Sometimes a score or more of the paper squares are placed
+on the counter at once, and from the different drawers an interesting
+assortment of medicines is laid on them. Here is dried orange peel,
+said to be an unfailing remedy for loss of appetite, a yellow berry
+that removes phlegm, a dried beetle that in a solution of water makes
+the best kind of eyewash. The silkworm taken from the cocoon when eaten
+with rice greatly assists digestion, and so does a flat bug that from
+its appearance might be great-grandfather to the bedbug. The ladybug,
+or what resembles one, is a sure cure for liver complaint, and another
+insect if rubbed on wounds quickly heals them. Also in certain troubles
+it has been found that a little of the alcohol in which a serpent
+is preserved, if taken internally, proves particularly efficacious.
+On the wall at the back of the shop is painted a picture of the god
+of medicine, at whose shrine tapers are kept burning. Chinese shops
+carrying foreign drugs, some of them excellent shops, too, are not
+uncommon in the Settlement but are seldom to be seen in the Chinese
+City.
+
+The dentist, like his confreres in other countries, is ever in demand.
+Occasionally an aspiring, prosperous fellow is discovered doing
+business in a shop where the patient may balance himself on a stool,
+though still in full view of the curious street crowd, and tilting his
+head back, have the offending molar extracted without further ado. But
+ordinarily the professional outfit is limited to a small wooden table
+and what it will hold, set out in the street. Back of the weather-worn
+stand lounges the dentist, soiled and uncouth, keeping guard over his
+stock in trade, bottles of ointments, salves, a pair of forceps and
+other nondescript instruments, a few sets of teeth under a dust-covered
+glass case, and last but not least, piles of decayed teeth successfully
+extracted from tortured victims and kept as decoys to attract
+patronage. There are travelling dentists whose shop is a wheelbarrow
+which carries the dental equipment, with the inevitable pile of teeth
+conspicuous in the centre. They move from point to point, in inclement
+weather under cover of a mammoth coloured umbrella, and sound a gong to
+draw the ever-ready crowd.
+
+More common still are the peripatetic restaurants. The outfit of the
+manager of the Liliputian establishment is a model of convenience
+and compactness. A simple bamboo frame, easily borne by one man even
+with all the appurtenances, is divided into two sections. On one side
+in a pocket rests a clay stove, with a place underneath for holding
+the wood. On the other is a series of drawers of various sizes, in
+which the dough, sugar, and spices are kept. A little kneading board
+pulls out from a slit between the drawers, and on it the baker deftly
+fashions his cakes and meat pies, frying them in vegetable oil in
+a shallow iron basin, or if they are to be baked, plastering them
+against the inner sides of the clay stove above the fire. Despite the
+dirt, dust, and flies, even the ultra fastidious can not deny that the
+finished product is decidedly appetizing.
+
+Not a foot of valuable land in the Chinese City is wasted on sidewalks.
+Hence everybody and everything is right on the street, and the very
+narrow passages are badly congested. Rickety jinricshas, a few sedan
+chairs which are fast disappearing from Shanghai, burden-bearers and
+pedestrians hurry continually to and fro, shouting in shrill falsetto
+tones to one another to clear the way and running in imminent danger of
+colliding with the unwary and trampling on children. Yet not all the
+streets are mere alleyways. A few, but it must be admitted a very few,
+are wide enough to allow a carriage to pass through with comparative
+ease, and they seem in comparison like boulevards. Then there are
+others along which a carriage can manage to creep providing the driver
+is skillful and the people hug the sides of the roads or retire
+precipitately into the shops out of harm’s way, but this is too risky a
+venture to be indulged in often and is seldom permitted by the police.
+Once in a while it happens that a carriage gets wedged into a tight
+place where it can neither move forward, back out nor even find room to
+turn at right angles into a cross street. The only thing then is to
+unhitch the horse, lead him out, pull the carriage back, and finally
+lifting it up bodily, turn it around and harness the horse to it again.
+
+Not all the city is laid out in streets, for there are some open places
+and even flourishing vegetable gardens which quite suggest the country.
+That this is possible in so densely populated an area seems a marvel,
+and where and how the people are all hidden away is a puzzle. In the
+poorer sections, with the closing down of night they vanish as if by
+magic, except in hot weather when many camp on the streets, and in the
+morning the crowds swarm forth as mysteriously, like rats from their
+holes.
+
+The best known and most popular breathing spot in the city is that
+about the lake or pond, in whose centre on a small island rises
+the far-famed Willow Ware Tea-House, for the identical tea-house
+pictured on the much sought for willow-ware porcelain is located in
+the Chinese City. This to the average globe-trotter is the city’s
+chief attraction, but alas, never was the saying “Distance lends
+enchantment” more truly applicable, for while the pictures of the old
+tea-house are undeniably charming, with its graceful upturned gables
+and the zigzag bridges leading to it, made zigzag to ward off evil
+spirits who are said to travel in straight lines, yet seen near at
+hand how quickly the enchantment is dispelled! Filth, rottenness, and
+roistering are the main present-day characteristics of this tea-house
+of fair renown. Instead of reflecting the blue sky above, the water is
+covered with a thick vegetable scum, green and unwholesome. The shores
+around are made lively with a colony of small vendors whose wares are
+set on tables or spread out over the ground. They evidently reap a
+paying harvest from the sale of scrolls, pottery, towels, sheepskin
+coats, toys, and all manner of cheap foreign knickknacks which are
+much sought after by the people. Switches of long, jet black hair,
+especially plentiful since queues went out of fashion, are given places
+of prominence. Many doubtless are sent abroad to add beauty to the
+coiffures of dames of high degree.
+
+The business of the man who deals in rags must flourish like the green
+bay tree judging from the number engaged in it. What a sight is a
+rag-man’s shop, rags, rags everywhere, stuffed in baskets and bags,
+hanging from the walls, covering the floor in huge piebald bundles and
+mounds, germ-infected, poisonous, alive with vermin, gathered up and
+brought in from heaven knows where! Yet every day women and children
+spend long hours industriously picking them over and making them up
+into mops and the soles of Chinese shoes, for which they find a ready
+sale.
+
+Shanghai once boasted a supremely great citizen. He lived back in the
+sixteenth century, a veritable Chinese Maecenas. Besides being a man
+of letters and encouraging Western learning, he rose to the highest
+position in the empire, as Premier and Chancellor of the Privy Council.
+His name will be of little consequence to the outside world, but it
+is Siu Kuang-ki, should any one care to know it. He was converted to
+Christianity under the Jesuit Fathers, and lived a pure, consistent,
+devoted life, dying so poor in spite of large emoluments that his
+funeral expenses had to be paid from the public treasury. He built in
+the Chinese City the first Christian church ever seen in these parts.
+During the exigencies of later years it was converted into a temple
+sacred to the god of war, but was afterward redeemed and restored to
+its original use. This church is still standing, a striking edifice
+back a little from the noisy street, with a typical Chinese roof, and
+below it on the front outside wall, a beautiful gilded cross.
+
+The present war god’s temple is near the temple of Confucius, with its
+grass-grown court and deserted halls. Once a year, in the early dawn,
+the military governor of Shanghai and the city officials enter the
+sanctuary dedicated to the god of war and conduct a weird pageant-like
+ceremony in honour of two local military heroes. The tutelary deities
+of the Chinese City, black and repelling, occupy a large centrally
+located temple more frequented by worshippers than any other. The roomy
+outer court, like the temple court in Jerusalem, is given up to buying
+and selling, also to eating and drinking, gambling and fortune-telling,
+and there is no busier, noisier mart in all the city.
+
+The local official in the Chinese City is called the “Chih-hsien,”
+or District Magistrate, and is appointed from Peking. His official
+residence styled the Yamen, is a common, ordinary building, approached
+through several untidy courts lined with the low one-story quarters of
+the Yamen retainers and petty officials. Every day, in three small,
+bare rooms of the Yamen, court is held, the Chinese judges in their
+professional gowns looking distinctly out of keeping with their
+surroundings. To the left and back of the Yamen is the City Prison and
+adjoining it a much smaller one for women. Stories are afloat regarding
+the unsanitary condition of the prison and the treatment of prisoners
+that cause one to cringe and dread an investigation, but whatever may
+have been the state of affairs under the old régime, and the prison
+manager is frank to confess that things were very different ten years
+ago, there is now little to criticise and a great deal to commend. The
+grey brick buildings are in thoroughly good repair, the cells of the
+four hundred men and the fifty women prisoners, clean and fairly well
+lighted and ventilated, though, as the manager himself will hasten to
+tell the visitor, too crowded for health. A few carefully tended plants
+are growing in the centre of each of the courts, a praiseworthy effort
+to introduce a touch of the æsthetic. Industrial work on a considerable
+scale is carried on in the men’s prison, though the grant of money from
+the government is too small to keep all at work. Wooden and rattan
+furniture, towels, mats, shoes, and clothing are made. A very little
+industrial work is given the women in the way of cutting out and making
+garments, but from lack of funds to supply workrooms and material, most
+of the poor creatures are forced to pass their days in idleness. The
+wardens of the women’s prison are women. The discipline is excellent,
+yet not severe, the prisoners look well fed and well cared for, and the
+men especially, happy and contented. Provision is made to send sick
+prisoners to a Chinese hospital, where they receive the best of care.
+
+The Yamen, disappointing as it is in appearance, yet witnesses some
+stirring scenes, as when, not long ago, a quantity of opium and
+opium-smoking utensils were burned on the open ground in front of it in
+the presence of an interested throng of spectators. Not an opium den or
+shop exists in the Chinese City. Long ago they were effectually closed
+by order of the government.
+
+The city is well policed. There has been a wonderful shaking up of the
+dry bones in that department in recent years, particularly since the
+revolution. The Chief of Police is chosen on the recommendation of the
+local military governor by the provincial governor at Nanking, but the
+Chief of the Fire Department is the choice of the people, and affairs
+of the department are wholly under their control. All the seven hundred
+members of the Fire Brigade are volunteers and serve without pay. Of
+late the brigade has attained a high grade of efficiency, and in the
+engine stations scattered over the city may be seen a very creditable
+equipment of modern machinery including some small motor cars. They
+must of necessity be small in order to get through the narrow streets.
+At the central station between the east and south gates stands a
+splendid tower supporting a bell weighing 6,000 lbs. which sounds
+the fire alarm not only in the city itself, but in the surrounding
+territory included in the Chinese municipality. This tower is the work
+of Shanghai’s engineering genius Nicholas Tzu, who patterned it after a
+small model of the Eiffel tower, but with changes that adapted it more
+perfectly to its present use. At a recent large fire in the city, the
+chiefs of the International and French Fire Brigades were present and
+looked on, but their assistance was not asked for nor was it needed,
+though the Chinese firemen were obliged to fight valiantly for three
+hours before they got control of the flames.
+
+That the Chinese City is taking on thoroughly up-to-date airs will
+be generally conceded when it is known that strikes are becoming
+rather general. The latest one to break out was in the Dyers’ Union.
+The masses of the people in China dress in blue cotton. Indeed, so
+universally is it worn, that it might almost be called the national
+dress, consequently the business of dyeing is one of the most common
+and the Dyers’ Union is very strong. Since a Presidential mandate had
+gone forth that every labor union must be approved by the police,
+and as in this case the police interfered to put down the strike, it
+failed of its object. But a strike last winter was more successful. The
+women working in a silk filature mill within the Chinese precincts,
+though outside the Chinese City, were roused to fury by a reduction in
+their wages. Early one morning ninety or a hundred of them gathered at
+the mill gate and made such a clamour, pounding and shouting as only
+enraged Chinese women can, that the authorities, realizing that after
+all right was on the side of the strikers, were glad to effect a speedy
+and satisfactory compromise.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+CUSTOMS OLD AND NEW
+
+
+A student in a mission school for girls received an invitation from
+a young gentleman of her acquaintance to accompany him on a certain
+evening to a place of amusement. The note fell into the hands of the
+missionary in charge who sought an interview with the man. “It is
+against the rules of the school for our girls to go out unchaperoned,”
+she told him, “besides why do you make such a request? You know it is
+not Chinese custom.” “Ha, ha,” laughed the youth derisively, “perhaps
+it was not formerly, but now that we have a Republic we can do
+_anything_.”
+
+Great changes and grave dangers accompanied the birth of the republic,
+and nowhere are they as apparent as in Shanghai. Old things are passing
+away and the new order is not yet firmly established. Young women are
+particularly sensitive to the changed conditions. In their eagerness
+to imitate the ways of the West, the real meaning of which many do
+not fully understand, liberty and license are often confused. But the
+girls must not be judged too harshly, for while some are unblushingly
+bold, others are like imprisoned birds who, suddenly finding the cage
+door ajar, pant to try their wings in the open. It is scarcely to be
+wondered at if sometimes they fly too far afield and drop back weary
+and bruised. The better class of students who have studied abroad
+are helping to set matters right. They show how it is possible for
+friends of both sexes to meet on the tramcars, on the street, or in one
+another’s homes and chat together naturally and yet modestly. It was
+with great gusto that a young matron who had never been out of China
+but associated freely with those who had, told of a picnic enjoyed by
+the mixed choir of the Chinese church to which she belonged. “We went
+down the river in a launch, taking our supper with us.” “Wasn’t it hard
+to carry Chinese food in baskets?” “Oh, we had foreign food--cake and
+sandwiches. I made some peanut sandwiches and every one seemed to like
+them.” “Were the picnickers all married people?” “No, some were not,”
+was the laughing reply. A Wellesley graduate who had been absent eight
+years from her Shanghai home was asked on her return what impressed
+her most. “The way my sister-in-law goes about the streets alone and
+even shops in the big stores.” “Wouldn’t she have done that before you
+went to America?” “I should say not! But now she doesn’t seem to think
+anything of it.” “How about your mother, does she go out too?” “No,
+mother prefers to follow the old customs, but she makes no objection to
+what we do.”
+
+[Illustration: A MODERN CHEVALIER AND HIS HAPPY FAMILY]
+
+It is easy enough to view the social changes with fear and trembling
+and many of them are bad enough in their trend to justify any amount of
+anxiety, but there is a bright side and perhaps in deprecating the
+evil it has been too often overlooked. Nothing is more commendable than
+the loving comradeship that is growing up between husband and wife.
+This might be expected among students who have lived abroad and are
+used to foreign ways, but it is by no means confined to that class.
+“You have a pretty home,” commented a foreign friend to a bride of a
+year. Her husband was the editor of a popular Chinese daily and neither
+of them had ever been away from their native land. The bride beamed
+with pleasure. “Your lace curtains are hung so tastefully,” continued
+the caller. “Wasn’t it hard to show your servant how to do it?” “My
+husband and I hung them. We worked evenings after he came home from
+the office,” replied the blushing little wife. A few months later,
+when an expectant mother, she displayed with shy satisfaction, an
+exquisitely dainty layette, each tiny garment made with her own hands
+after a foreign pattern. “What a fine baby!” exclaimed another friend
+to the jubilant parents of their firstborn. “It is a boy, isn’t it?”
+“No, a girl,” corrected the father, gazing with fond pride into the
+tiny face of the rosy mite, “but she cries a good deal. I was up with
+her for three or four hours last night and had to walk with her most of
+the time to keep her from disturbing my wife.” “I was very glad to see
+your wife at my party on Friday,” remarked an American lady to a busy
+Chinese secretary. “Yes, I got off early from the office and went home
+to take care of the children so she could go. I wouldn’t have had her
+miss that pleasure for anything. My Margaret is such a good wife.”
+
+When charming little Mrs. F. sailed for America to see a brother
+graduate at the University of California her husband was at the jetty
+looking after the baggage, and went with her on the launch down
+the river to where the ocean liner was anchored. Dr. Wu Ting Fang,
+ex-Minister to the United States and one of Shanghai’s best known
+citizens, meeting Dr. F. soon afterward, twitted him facetiously: “Oho,
+it used to be the custom in China for the husband to go away and the
+wife to stay at home with the family, and now it seems to be just the
+other way and the wife goes while the husband stays at home.” Dr. F.,
+who, with the help of his mother and sister, was caring for his three
+little ones in Mrs. F.’s absence, laughed goodnaturedly and explained
+that it was he who had urged this trip on his wife. Once when this same
+husband was presiding at a formal banquet, it was noticed by those near
+him that in the midst of the festivities he quietly left his place and
+passed down to the other end of the long table. Mrs. F., detained it
+may be by putting the children to bed, had just come in, and Dr. F.,
+not too engrossed in conversation to be watching for his wife, rose
+to draw out her chair and seat her in it with all the gallantry of a
+chevalier. The afternoon Mr. and Mrs. C. gave their “tea,” the young
+husband greeted the incoming guests at the door, while his wife, clad
+in soft white Chinese silk with a wreath of tiny pink rosebuds nestling
+against her black hair, presided over the tea-table with all the ease
+and grace of a society belle, and withal a sweet modesty which every
+society belle does not possess.
+
+Perhaps these incidents, trifling in themselves, will possess small
+significance for the reader who has never lived in China, but to those
+who have they are encouraging signs that the leaven is working which
+of a certainty will by and by raise women all over the land from
+the position of mere chattels whose chief business is the bearing
+of children to be the equals and companions of their husbands. Dr.
+Arthur H. Smith, an authority in things Chinese, said recently in
+conversation, “I believe that the reorganization of the life of women
+in China is the most important sociological and educational event of
+modern times.”
+
+Bound feet are becoming less and less the fashion in Shanghai. The
+increasing spread of physical training in all the schools is a great
+aid in favour of anti-footbinding, for the popular exercises can not
+well be taken on tiny feet. A medium course at present much in vogue is
+neither to let the feet alone nor bind them tightly, but by the use of
+comparatively loose bandages to prevent their growing too large. The
+little bound feet of old, common enough still in the interior, are in
+Shanghai generally looked upon with shame by the younger generation,
+who if they are so unfortunate as to own them, try to conceal their
+crippled members underneath long skirts or by wearing large shoes. It
+is not the women alone who frown upon bound feet. In many instances
+their husbands are equally opposed to them, men who a few years
+ago would have spurned a woman not swaying uncertainly on her much
+admired “Chinese Lilies.” A native teacher, supposed to be of the “old
+school,” was telling his foreign pupil of the recent death of his
+wife. “She fell down when crossing our courtyard and never regained
+consciousness.” “That was remarkable,” was the surprised answer. “How
+did she happen to fall?” “It was her small feet that did it. She lost
+her balance. But her feet were bound before I married her, or they
+never would have been bound.” “Then you disapprove of the custom and
+probably do not intend to bind the feet of your little daughters?”
+The man’s voice rose to an indignant pitch and with a vehemence quite
+unusual for a Chinese he ejaculated, “_I shall not!_”
+
+Young men back from years of study in America or Europe, and there are
+many such in Shanghai, wear foreign clothes and look well in them. Some
+indeed are quite dudish in their attire. Many older men of the upper
+class on state occasions array themselves in dress suits and high hats,
+but in private life they ordinarily lay aside the torturing starched
+shirt and choking collar and resume their loose, comfortable Chinese
+garments. Women students on returning to China usually drop back at
+once into native dress, wherein they show their good sense, for besides
+the comfort of this style, nothing becomes them quite so well. Some
+years ago two girls from the interior arrived in Shanghai on their way
+to study medicine in America. They were told that in order to attract
+less attention on shipboard it would be well at once to adopt foreign
+dress, so they did, corsets and all. The older one’s description of her
+sensations is most amusing. “I couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t eat. The
+food had no room to go down. I never felt so miserable.” “What did
+you do?” “I took the corsets off.” “How long had you worn them?” Mary
+held up a little forefinger, as she announced solemnly, “Just one awful
+day.”
+
+[Illustration: THE COFFIN IN A FUNERAL PROCESSION]
+
+The ultra-stylish dress of the “fast set” among young women in Shanghai
+is tight trousers, short tight jacket with short tight sleeves, and
+very high collars. To Western eyes this is neither pretty nor modest,
+and Chinese from the interior look upon it askance. Instead of bare
+heads, girls in winter are coming to wear, not hats, except those
+who have adopted foreign dress, but worsted caps, usually trimmed
+with coloured ribbon or artificial flowers. There is a shop on a busy
+street, called “Love Your Country Shop,” which deals largely in these
+fancy articles. Foreign shoes are also gradually taking the place of
+the cloth-soled, satin-topped Chinese shoes, and it is a wise change if
+women are to go much abroad in this city of heavy and frequent rains.
+
+The old-time wedding procession is no longer an every day sight in the
+International Settlement, though happily for lovers of the antique,
+still common about the Chinese City. Carriages have to a large extent
+superseded the gorgeous sedan chairs, draped with embroidered crimson
+satin, and pale pink silk the orthodox crimson satin wedding gown.
+Veils are much worn too, and occasionally a very up-to-date bride is
+decked out in a gown of white silk or satin made in the most extreme
+Western fashion. More often, however, there is a painfully inartistic
+combination of Chinese and foreign styles. Little Miss Y. invited her
+foreign friends to inspect her trousseau shortly before her marriage.
+Garment after garment, evolved from heavy brocaded satin, sheeny silks,
+and gauzy web-like stuffs, was unfolded before admiring eyes. Finally
+the grand climax was reached when the wedding gown was brought in. The
+marvelous embroidery on the delicate pink silk evoked “Ohs” and “Ahs”
+of rapture, accompanied by exclamations such as “A perfect dream,” “I
+never saw anything so beautiful!” But when a common pink net veil,
+cheap white imitation flowers and coarse white cotton gloves bought at
+a foreign department store and plainly regarded as the crowning touches
+to the outfit were laid beside the exquisite Chinese gown, there were
+inward groans from the disappointed visitors. Miss Y. wore on the third
+finger of her left hand a heavy ring set with diamonds and pearls. On
+her wedding day she would have her band of gold like a Western bride.
+“You are very fond of the gentleman, of course,” some one asked her.
+The bright eyes dropped quickly as the low answer came back, “I have
+seen him only once.” “Were you alone?” “No, my aunt was in the room.”
+Plainly then, notwithstanding her foreign finery, this was not one of
+the so-called present day “liberty girls.”
+
+The case of Miss W. was quite different. She and her fiancé had met
+and fallen in love in the good old-fashioned way. They were married
+by the bride’s father, an Episcopal clergyman, who, being tall and
+well-favoured, made a rather imposing figure in his priestly robe.
+After he had walked in and taken his place inside the chancel, a church
+warden to the strains of Lohengrin’s Wedding March ushered up the
+aisle with due ceremony the groom and best man. That done, they were
+left standing for fully ten minutes. The wedding march was played
+and re-played, the party at the altar shifted and turned while the
+audience craned their necks till they were sore in an effort to catch a
+glimpse of the incoming bride. What was the matter? Was she sick? Was
+she panic-stricken? Had an accident befallen the wedding dress? None
+of these calamities had overtaken the girl, who was dressed and ready
+to follow her fiancé into the church. But ancient marriage customs in
+China prescribe that a bride must be sent for again and again by the
+groom before, with tears and great reluctance, she is at last persuaded
+to leave her home. Although this was a modern wedding, it would not do
+to disregard wholly the time-honoured practice, hence a proper interval
+was allowed to elapse before the bride made her appearance. During the
+ceremony outbursts of laughter several times proceeded from the Chinese
+guests, many of whom had evidently never witnessed a Christian wedding
+and to whom the plighting of the troth and other passages were highly
+amusing. The bridal couple was not in the least disturbed by these
+demonstrations any more than when the warden from time to time stepped
+forward and taking one or the other by the arm, turned them around,
+or jerked them into proper position. Soon after the conclusion of the
+ceremony the bride retired and removed her veil, which was doubtless an
+uncomfortable if stylish appurtenance of which she was very glad to be
+rid.
+
+Sometimes embarrassing situations are created because the young people
+are attracted to modern ways while their forbears much prefer the
+old. This happened recently when a law student just back from America
+married the girl to whom he had been betrothed before he left home.
+The bride wore a white satin gown with slit hobble skirt and fish-tail
+train, veil, kid gloves, slippers, and carried a shower bouquet. All
+was as modern as it was possible to have it, but at the last moment
+the groom was thrown into a state of great perturbation because of the
+refusal of his parents and their old-fashioned friends to attend the
+wedding. In his desire to have every arrangement conform to Western
+ideas he had omitted to send conveyances for his relatives, according
+to immemorial Chinese custom, and they were so incensed by the omission
+they refused to stir from their homes, although abundantly able to hire
+carriages or sedan-chairs as they might prefer. At the last moment,
+with the greatest difficulty, a sufficient number of vehicles was found
+and hurried off to bring the families to the wedding, but so offended
+were they that it required the utmost persuasion to induce them to come.
+
+A Shanghai bride not long ago was taken to task by her friends for
+daring to show a glad countenance. “Don’t you know it is a bride’s duty
+to be sad and cry? Instead of that you look really happy,” they cried.
+“I _am_ happy, and why shouldn’t I look so?” she replied with fervour.
+But the high-water mark of self-assertion was reached when a Shanghai
+maid, the daughter of wealthy parents, declared that her acceptance of
+her suitor depended on whether he was willing to shave off his beard,
+to which demand he promptly and meekly acceded. Truly the order of
+things changeth in old China!
+
+Shanghai has something of which no other city in China can boast, and
+that is a Nuptial Hall. Contracting parties who wish a modern wedding
+but have not homes suited for it may rent this building. It contains
+a guest hall, banquet room, and bed chambers, all nicely furnished.
+Here the newly wedded pair can remain if they choose, for a few days of
+their honeymoon or arrange for automobile or carriage to take them away
+at once.
+
+Occasionally a clash occurs between customs past and present which
+results in tragedy. A while ago a youth and maiden, both teaching in a
+government school in Shanghai, fell deeply in love. The girl’s father
+heard of it but objected to his daughter’s marrying because she was the
+mainstay of the family, and he argued that filial duty required her to
+continue their support although perfectly competent to shoulder the
+burden himself. Taking her one day in a small boat to the middle of a
+deep stream near their home, he demanded of the girl that she give up
+her lover. When she loyally clung to him her inhuman parent threw her
+overboard and let her drown before his eyes. A few years ago a deed
+like this would have attracted little attention. “The girl belonged
+to her father and it is nobody’s business what he did to her,” would
+have been the popular verdict. But it is not so in Shanghai to-day. The
+papers were full of the awful crime, the broken-hearted lover carried
+the case to the Chinese Court, and so great a stir was made that no one
+will dare to repeat such an act, at least openly.
+
+It can not be said that Shanghai has progressed beyond the stage
+of polygamy. Under the old régime, for a man to take one or many
+“secondary wives,” as they were called, was a well-nigh universal
+practice, but it has died out among the younger, educated classes
+and before long will be forever relegated to the past in the treaty
+ports. The women themselves are rising up in defence of one another.
+An interesting instance is that of a man who left a young wife of
+six months in Shanghai and disappeared for several years. When he
+came back, bringing a new wife with him, he repudiated the first. Her
+condition was very pitiful. Being at last turned out on the street by
+her husband’s relatives after the death of her child, she went to learn
+tailoring in a Singer Sewing Machine shop. It was at this juncture
+that the Chinese Woman’s Co-operative Association, composed of some of
+the leading women in Shanghai, espoused her cause. They distributed
+broadcast a circular which read: “The legitimate wife of ---- is too
+poor to engage a lawyer. We therefore ask those who sympathize with
+her to come to her assistance and see that she has justice, otherwise
+our two hundred million sisters will ever remain under the yoke of the
+other sex.” This resulted in the case being carried into the court and
+a fine imposed on the offender of eighty days’ imprisonment, pitifully
+inadequate yet a move in the right direction, and a victory for the
+band of progressive women.
+
+Funeral ceremonies are undergoing a radical change in Shanghai though
+not so rapidly as marriage customs. Ancient observances are still held
+sacred by the majority, and through the streets trail the old-time
+funeral processions. Some are pathetic in their simplicity, a cheap
+unadorned coffin swinging from bamboo poles resting on the shoulders
+of coolies striding rapidly forward followed by a few mourners on
+wheelbarrows or in ricshas. Others are the long processions of the
+well-to-do, grotesquely spectacular. First come coolies in a straggling
+irregular line holding aloft tawdry banners and lanterns, after them
+priests, bands (often two, a Chinese and a foreign string band), paper
+images to be burned at the vault and trays of cooked food to be left
+there, the sedan-chair of the deceased and the carriage he may or may
+not have owned, quite empty save for a crayon portrait of him standing
+upright on the seat in the midst of wreaths of flowers and palm leaves,
+and finally the catafalque concealed under a crimson satin cover and
+surmounted by an imitation crane which is believed to carry heavenward
+the released spirit. Behind the coffin, borne by perspiring, hired
+coolies, the very lowest down in the social scale, for only such can be
+induced to act as pall-bearers, walk the adult sons as chief mourners.
+They are robed in white cotton with a strip of sackcloth as a head band
+or a sackcloth helmet. A sheet, spread out to form the three sides of a
+square and carried by coolies, furnishes a screen inside of which the
+men march. Following them in carriages are the widow, the daughters,
+and other relatives and friends. Even this is a strange mixture of old
+and present day usages, for formerly there were no carriages, no brass
+band, and above all no palm leaves, which in a non-Christian funeral
+are of course devoid of religious significance. Between the wholly
+modern funeral and one of this description there are varying degrees of
+transition. Often a hearse is used whose blackness is hidden under a
+wealth of bright blossoms covering sides as well as top, so that it has
+more the appearance of a gala trap than a conveyance for the dead. The
+Chinese have an inherent objection to sombre effects at a funeral, the
+mourners wearing white and the draperies being of the brightest colours.
+
+A curious incident occurred recently which is a striking illustration
+of the way in which old and new customs may be said to elbow one
+another in their struggle for supremacy. A tired foreigner trying to
+sleep was disturbed by a persistent clatter of metal instruments and
+medley of voices close by. Finally in desperation he got up and looked
+out on the street, determined to locate the noise and if possible put
+a stop to it. It was summer weather and through the open windows of
+a neighbouring Chinese house he found himself the half unconscious
+observer of a strange scene. On the bed lay an old woman, evidently
+very sick, while a Chinese doctor and several assistants were running
+about the room with Chinese rattles and whistles, frightening away the
+evil spirit that had caused the malady. At last he was chased to the
+court below, where a pause was made, and the impudent intruder politely
+asked what his wishes might be. Replying that he desired to visit a
+neighbouring village he was told he could go, whereupon the relieved
+family shut and bolted the outer door after paying the doctor a fat fee
+for his services. This all took place under the very shadow of a group
+of the most up-to-date Municipal hospitals in Shanghai.
+
+[Illustration: SCHOOL GIRLS IN GYMNASIUM DRILL]
+
+One of the hopeful signs of these later days in China is the changing
+attitude of the people toward physical exercise, for it means better
+health and better morals for the nation. Not long ago, really only a
+very few years, round shoulders were by every one highly commended,
+in the women as indicating modesty and in the men scholarly habits.
+A girl who held herself erect, with well developed chest, would have
+been set down at once as bold and forward, and not only that, but any
+kind of physical exertion was regarded by the upper classes, young
+and old alike, as coolie’s work and quite beneath their dignity. Some
+Chinese girls were watching a game of tennis for the first time,
+when one turned to her companion with a puzzled expression and the
+remark, “Can’t they get coolies to do that work for them?” Several
+Englishmen living in the western part of the city were in the habit
+of rising early every morning for a tramp in the country. The Chinese
+in the neighbourhood who saw them start out day after day were told
+the men walked for the pleasure of it, but they shook their heads
+incredulously, “We know they mean to worship at some secret shrine, for
+no one in his senses would work so hard if he didn’t have to” A couple
+of foreigners were crossing Garden Bridge when a troop of Chinese
+youths went rushing past with foot-balls tucked under their arms. Said
+the gentleman laughingly to his companion, “You wouldn’t have seen that
+a short time ago in Shanghai.” “Why? Because the boys were not playing
+ball?” “Yes, and neither would they have done such an unmannerly thing
+as to run. Just now they were so interested in the coming ball game
+they forgot all about appearances.”
+
+In the spring of 1915 Shanghai witnessed a unique spectacle, something
+that will go down in history, and deservedly, as one of the great
+events in the life of the city. It was the Second Far Eastern Olympiad,
+the first having been held the year before in Manila. The Municipal
+Council turned over Shanghai’s finest park for the games, and the
+Young Men’s Christian Association fitted it up with the necessary
+accessories. No one who was there will ever forget that week. Many
+foreigners were present, but they were almost lost among the crowds of
+Chinese, for this was a distinctly Chinese celebration, just as it was
+meant to be. The élite Chinese turned out as well as the common people,
+men and women, young and old. Wide-eyed and tense, they watched their
+countrymen contest with crack players from Japan and the Philippines,
+and cheered tremendously when again and again the Chinese “won out.” It
+was good to look upon these lusty youths, who instead of cultivating
+long finger nails and cramping their chests after the manner of the
+old-time Chinese scholars, were clad in gymnasium tights, vaulting,
+running, swimming, batting, while their sires and grandsires forgot
+themselves and their traditions so far as to urge them on with shouts
+of approval.
+
+Shortly afterward, under the auspices of the Young Women’s Christian
+Association, several hundred girls from mission and private schools
+gave a physical exhibition of their own. This was not open to the
+public, guests being admitted by ticket and only a few gentlemen
+invited. Some of the girls wore modified gymnasium suits, but most
+appeared in their ordinary school clothes. It was all-important that
+the conservatives should not be shocked, who were none too friendly
+to the idea of physical training for their daughters. Mothers,
+grandmothers, and aunts, their prejudice partly overcome by their
+curiosity, sat around in crowds on the borders of the grassy campus
+viewing the exercises, first with indifference, then interest, and at
+last, genuine enthusiasm. The leader was a young Chinese woman who
+received her training in Boston. These two events marked a new era in
+the physical development of Young China and the ravages of tuberculosis
+have received a check, while good, hard, honest work is understood, by
+athletes at least, as something not to be shunned as a disgrace.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+A TYPICAL SHANGHAI WEDDING
+
+
+It was the day before the wedding. Downstairs in the home of the fiancé
+all was bustle and excitement. The marriage dowry, that for weeks had
+been collecting, was being made ready to carry over to the house of the
+groom’s father. Articles large and small, useful, and ornamental were
+scattered everywhere.
+
+First, and most important of all, there was the trousseau. Each suit
+consisted of three pieces--trousers, skirt, and jacket--made of the
+same material. They were carefully folded and piled one on top of
+another in the regulation bridal trunks, which are moderate sized
+wooden boxes covered with glossy red or brown oilcloth. Though the
+family was greatly rushed, still as relatives and friends dropped in
+to watch the proceedings and offer congratulations, the more elaborate
+costumes were taken out with ill-concealed pride and held up for
+inspection. And they were worth seeing! Silks, brocaded satins, crêpes,
+gauzes, ranging in colour from the palest hues of pink, green, blue,
+and violet, down to rich crimson, dark grey, brown, and even black, lay
+together in bewildering profusion. Some were delicate as sea-foam,
+others handsome but quiet, while the splendidly embroidered ones might
+well have rejoiced the heart of a princess. The jewels were arranged to
+show off to the best advantage in numerous small glass-covered cases.
+They presented a dazzling array--bracelets, rings, buckles, necklaces,
+hair ornaments. Diamonds, rubies, pearls, sapphires, shone resplendent,
+but jade was the principal stone.
+
+The bride’s wardrobe, however, though of absorbing interest, was
+only one portion of her dowry. The rest of the outfit blocked the
+way in every direction. The usual sets of graded wooden tubs, pails,
+and chests with conspicuous brass locks occupied the entire side of
+one room. These were painted either a rich red or brown and highly
+polished. On the other side of the room the most conspicuous object was
+a couch or divan weighed down under a huge pile of quilts. No Chinese
+girl goes to her husband’s home without a collection of bed-coverings.
+Though differing greatly in number and elegance, always they are of
+bright colours and folded lengthwise with exquisite neatness. In this
+case most of the quilts were of the costliest materials, flowered
+silks, figured satins, with a few gay prints and soft cashmeres for
+summer use.
+
+In an adjoining apartment was a set of bedroom furniture in carved
+teakwood, wardrobe, table, chairs, and washstand. The ornate brass bed
+was of foreign make. The silk curtains and silver ornaments with which
+it was later to be hung, were temporarily reposing in one of the many
+chests. Embossed silver teasets of Chinese pattern, silver and ivory
+chopsticks, foreign glass finger bowls, gaudy native silver wine cups,
+bonbon dishes, jewelry cases, hand-painted scrolls, silk banners, later
+to be converted into gowns for the bride, these were but a few of the
+riches lavished on the girl sitting apart in an upper chamber, shy,
+half afraid, wholly expectant.
+
+The list of attractions on this great occasion would be incomplete
+were mention not made of the trays of edibles, fruits, fancy cakes,
+and confections of marvellous variety, intended as a gift from the
+bride’s parents to the family of the groom. On the evening of the
+wedding day the groom’s parents will return the compliment by sending
+to the bride’s home a sumptuous repast consisting of cakes, fruit,
+cooked fowls, fish, and one, possibly three or four, roasted pigs.
+After roasting the pig is coated over with sesame oil, which hardens
+when exposed to the air and imparts an appetizing gloss to the skin.
+The animal is carried through the streets by coolies in a red tray
+suspended from poles, to the admiration of all onlookers and the
+despair of the hungry. On arriving at its destination, the upper part
+of the head, and the tail, with a thin slice of meat attached to it,
+are cut away and returned to the donors. This is done to insure the
+uninterrupted bliss of the young couple, since the head and tail of the
+pig represent the beginning and end of happiness in the lives of the
+newly wed.
+
+It was no light contract to get such a generous marriage dowry conveyed
+safely from one home to the other. Early in the morning preparations
+began, yet by three in the afternoon the procession had not started.
+People were flying to and fro. Coolie bearers with long bamboo poles
+stood around in every one’s way, talking in loud shrill tones. In a
+side room sat a scholarly mandarin writing Chinese characters on slips
+of red paper. These were pasted vertically across each chest beside
+the lock and served the double purpose of announcing the name of the
+bride and adding to the safety of the contents of the chest in transit,
+since it could not be opened without tearing the paper. The quilts
+were fastened securely to the couch on which they lay by an ornamental
+network of red cord. Smaller articles, placed on box-shaped trays, were
+in like manner made secure from pilfering fingers. Red paper cards, red
+ribbon and flowers figured prominently as decorations. As one by one
+the pieces were made ready they were taken to the street and fastened
+by ropes to the coolies’ carrying poles. When the long procession was
+complete and awaiting the order to start, a gayer scene could scarcely
+be imagined. The bride’s entire dowry, excepting her trousseau, was in
+full view of curious eyes, that all spectators along the route might
+be duly impressed with the family wealth. Leading off were two closed
+carriages (a short time ago they would have been sedan chairs), in each
+of which sat in state two gentlemen “go-betweens,” whose particular
+mission at this time was to convey the cases containing the jewels to
+the home of the groom. But alas for human pride and ambition! Just at
+the critical moment, when the coachman had whipped the horses into
+action, the coolies raised the poles to their shoulders, and a tremor
+undulated down the whole line--a few drops of rain fell. Then such a
+scurrying of feet ensued as servants rushed into the house for pieces
+of oiled cloth to protect perishable treasures! So it was with eclipsed
+glory that the parade eventually started on its way, to the vast
+disappointment of all concerned.
+
+On the day of the wedding the centre of interest was transferred from
+the bride’s home to that of the groom. He lived in a three-story
+mansion, becoming the rank of his father, who was a high official
+holding a responsible government position. At the gate of the compound,
+or grounds, were stationed several Chinese policemen whose chief
+business was to keep the motley crowd outside from encroaching on the
+premises. But either they were unequal to their task, or what is more
+likely, condoned the intrusion of the ragamuffins, for more and more
+of the nondescript element drifted past the sentinels, till the yard
+in front was well filled. The arched gateway and main entrance to the
+dwelling were decorated with flowers and greens, while along the wide
+veranda was suspended a row of mammoth lanterns, gorgeous with crimson
+silk trimmings and tassels. At one end of the veranda hung strings of
+firecrackers, yards and yards in length, lending an added splash of
+colour to the picture. The house was built around the four sides of a
+glass-covered court, with galleries on the second and third stories
+from which the rooms opened. Two bands were stationed in the court,
+one Chinese and the other Filipino, the latter a contingent from the
+Municipal Band of the International Settlement. The contrast between
+them was ludicrous. The Filipinos in fresh uniforms with shining
+instruments sat erect before their leader and played with spirit. The
+ten or a dozen Chinese were of all ages, their rags showing beneath
+faded red jackets and in their hands a collection of indescribable
+instruments on which from time to time they blew, pounded and pulled,
+to the evident enjoyment of all the guests but the few suffering
+foreigners present. Beyond the court was the reception hall. As it
+was entirely open in front, its magnificence caught and held the gaze
+immediately on entering the front door. The walls were ablaze with
+crimson satin banners, while crimson satin covered the chairs and
+tables, every piece of it, like the banners, elegantly embroidered.
+Wedding decorations are rented for the occasion as it would cost a
+small fortune to buy them. The ground floor was mainly given up to the
+men, who sat around in the ante-rooms, in social groups, sipping tea
+and wine, and smoking.
+
+Upstairs the women of the family held court. As guests arrived they
+were conducted at once to the bridal chamber, a large bright room,
+decked out with the furniture and bric-a-brac sent over the day before
+from the bride’s home. The bed was the most striking object, for the
+white silken curtains were carefully hung, though almost hidden under a
+glittering assortment of quaint and rare ornaments in wrought silver,
+nearly all of them possessing some symbolical meaning. The carved
+teakwood table covered with a heavy white satin spread embroidered in
+peach blossoms, stood in the centre of the room. So many gifts had been
+sent by friends to swell the marriage dowry, that the bridal chamber
+and room back of it could scarcely contain them all. Frequently next
+to an exquisite bit of ivory or jade would repose a cheap glass vase
+or china matchbox that looked as if it might have come from a ten-cent
+store in America. In an adjoining apartment stood a table set in
+foreign style. The table-cloth was a strip of coarse cotton sheeting,
+and on it were placed fancy china dishes heaped with all manner of
+cakes, fruit, and confections. Even such accessories as knives and
+forks, and tiny napkins embroidered around the edge in deep blue were
+not lacking. In the centre was a spreading floral piece of remarkable
+design. To beguile the time while waiting for the coming of the bride,
+guests were invited to partake of the refreshments, which they did
+freely.
+
+The hours passed slowly by. One o’clock had been named in the
+invitations as the time of the wedding, but three struck and no bride.
+Four o’clock rolled around and still no signs of her. Indeed, not a
+Chinese guest expected her, for had the bride made her appearance
+promptly, she would have been committing a shocking and unpardonable
+breach of etiquette. Several times, according to custom, the bridegroom
+had sent his messengers to bring her, but without avail. The bridegroom
+must go himself. At last, late in the afternoon, the word passed
+around, amid a wild flurry of excitement, that he was about to set out.
+He left in a closed carriage drawn by a span of horses with coachman
+and footman. His two little sisters, flower-girls, in white foreign
+dresses, pink sashes and hair ribbons, followed in another carriage.
+The foreign band went too, on foot, while the Chinese musicians
+exerted themselves with commendable energy to keep up the flagging
+spirits of the waiting guests.
+
+The minutes dragged heavily till an hour had gone by. During the
+interval there were occasional breaks in the monotony. Coolies hurried
+in with belated wedding gifts, women servants of the bride arrived
+bearing additional jewel cases, and finally three men walked in,
+importantly. Two wore Chinese dress, the third one foreign clothes of
+the best modern cut. It was whispered around that he had come all the
+way from Peking to act as chief functionary at the ceremony. Presently
+the bridegroom’s carriage rolled into the compound. The excitement then
+rose to a tremendous pitch and every one who was not already crowding
+forward rushed to the entrance and the front verandas. Soon the glad
+shout arose on every side: “The bride is coming! The bride is coming!”
+First in through the gateway marched the Filipinos playing a stirring
+air. Close behind was the carriage of the flower girls, and then came
+the bride, riding alone. Her carriage on top had the appearance of
+a flower garden with its elaborate rainbow-coloured trimmings. The
+horses’ harness too was gaily decorated. But the poor animals were
+badly frightened when a match was set to the firecrackers and boom
+after boom rent the air. They reared and pranced, and though a footman
+held tightly to each bridle, it seemed for a moment or two as if the
+carriage with its precious burden would not succeed in getting safely
+inside the gate. By this time the policemen had abandoned all effort to
+control the street mob, and they poured into the compound, a gaping
+throng, in strange contrast to their brilliant surroundings.
+
+The little flower girls, carrying beautiful floral baskets, had
+tripped lightly to the ground, when an intimate woman friend of the
+bride’s family stepped forward to open the coach door for the bride.
+Not a glimpse had been had of her, for the blinds were closely drawn.
+Very slowly she dismounted as custom required, but had the poor child
+wished ever so much to hurry, she would have been too seriously
+hampered by her attire to do so. Delicate satin slippers encased her
+small though unbound feet. Her gown was of old rose satin, stiff with
+embroidery. Over her little shapely hands were drawn loose-fitting
+cotton gloves. Necklaces without number, of extraordinary design,
+nearly hid the waist of her dress in front, while quantities of gold
+and jade bracelets encircled her slender wrists. But the most amazing
+creation of all was the bride’s headgear. It was the time-honoured
+helmet, worn for centuries back in these parts by Chinese brides, but
+seldom seen nowadays in Shanghai. Studded with brilliants and coloured
+glass, and encircled with strings of bangles that fell around and
+almost concealed the girl’s face, the weight must have been enough
+to bow down, without any effort to appear modest, the head that had
+to sustain it. But, O, ye shades of a stereotyped past, what is this
+grand climax to the bride’s dress which now rivets the attention of the
+astonished beholder! Can it be? yes, it certainly is--a modern wedding
+veil of white net, gathered above the helmet in a tuft-like bunch and
+falling around the bride to her feet in billowy folds! The towering
+crown wavered uncertainly, as, guided by her chaperon, the girl moved
+deliberately toward the house.
+
+Just inside the door she was joined by the groom in a well fitting
+Tuxedo, but looking about as ill at ease as a man can. Keeping a good
+elbow’s distance apart, the bridal couple, followed, not preceded, by
+the flower girls and after them the groom’s relatives, walked across
+the court and on into the reception hall, where a girl was vigorously
+pounding out Mendelssohn’s Wedding March on a clanging piano. They
+stopped a few feet in front of an oblong table behind which stood the
+three men who had preceded the groom to the house. The bride and groom
+bowed low to each of the three dignitaries, beginning with the one in
+the centre, who was the little man in foreign clothes. This gentleman
+picked up a document written over with Chinese characters, and holding
+it in his two hands, read from it in a loud voice. After that he handed
+a ring to the groom, who placed it on the third finger of the left hand
+of the bride, over her cotton glove. This act was accompanied by formal
+bows from one party to the other. The bride then received a ring from
+her chaperon and timidly slipped it on the left hand little finger
+of the groom. More bowing ensued. At this juncture some little girls
+came forward, and facing the bride and groom, sang very sweetly, in
+English, “Jesus Bids us Shine,” a feature of the ceremony introduced
+by a Chinese Christian friend with the consent of the non-Christian
+families. At the conclusion of this number, bowing became the order
+of the programme. It took the place of the friendly congratulations
+offered to bridal couples in the West The bride and groom first saluted
+each other, then the gentlemen who officiated, afterward the parents of
+the groom, kneeling before them with their heads to the floor, in token
+of filial respect, and lastly the brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts,
+cousins, and friends generally. Each group was saluted three times,
+and bowed three times in return. Those older and higher in rank stood
+above the couple, but in the case of children the order was reversed.
+The last to be greeted was an aunt of the bride, the only member of her
+household that custom allowed to be present. This ceremony was very
+formal and occupied considerable time. While it lasted the chaperon was
+kept busy, since it was her duty to turn the bride around, and push her
+head forward at the proper time to bow.
+
+When all was at last over, strains from Mendelssohn were again struck
+up, the bride attempted to slip her hand in her husband’s arm, which
+in his embarrassment he allowed to hang limply by his side, and
+surrounded by a chattering, pushing crowd, the bridal pair ascended
+the uncarpeted stairs, soiled with the dust from many feet, and found
+their way to the bridal chamber. As the newly married always do, they
+sat for several minutes together on the edge of the bed, then the
+bridegroom made his escape to the rooms below, where, constraint cast
+aside, he entered heartily into the enjoyment of the hour. But no
+such good fortune awaited the bride. Her ordeal had just begun. She
+rose to her feet while her girl friends pressed close about her for
+the usual bantering. “Aren’t you stupid!” “What a hideous gown!” “How
+ridiculously you behave!” “Whoever saw such an ugly bride!” During
+this tirade not a muscle of the bride’s face quivered, and the lowered
+eyes were never once raised. But perspiration stood in beads on her
+forehead and the soft round cheeks were flushed and feverish, for the
+thoughtless, teasing crowd shut out the air, and besides, not a morsel
+of food or a drop of liquid had passed her lips that day.
+
+Seven o’clock brought a respite, for at that hour the wedding feast was
+declared ready, and the bride escorted by her chaperon returned to the
+reception hall where the tables were spread. One table was reserved
+especially for her, and there she was placed in solitary state facing
+the entire roomful of guests. Not so the groom, who occupied a side
+table in the midst of a group of friends. The bride’s wedding veil
+had been removed, but the helmet remained, having assumed meanwhile
+a somewhat tipsy air, as if the head underneath was too weary to
+hold it steady or in the merry-making it had been jarred out of its
+equilibrium. But no hand offered to adjust it, and least of all could
+the girl herself do so. She sat immovable, her eyes downcast, her face
+as impassive as a Buddha’s. Dish after dish of tempting Chinese food
+was put before her, to be taken away untouched. While others all over
+the room were eating and chattering happily, she continued mute and
+alone. A break came when the wine was served. Lifting one of the little
+silver wine cups in both hands the groom passed it to the chief guest,
+who received it in his two hands, and after taking a sip returned the
+cup to the groom. He presented it likewise to each of the principal
+guests, and last of all to his bride amid an outburst of merriment from
+the interested spectators. It was then the bride’s turn. Whatever may
+have been her inner feelings, she betrayed no sign of emotion as she
+stepped calmly from one to another with the cup and ended by placing
+it in the hands of the groom, while the guests cheered and laughed
+uproariously.
+
+With this ceremony the feast broke up but not the wedding festivities.
+They continued unabated till early morning. During the evening, four of
+the bride’s brothers came in, but they did not seek her out. The men,
+including the groom, stayed below to carouse and gamble. Upstairs the
+young friends of the bride gathered around her once more and prepared
+for a wild frolic. First, according to custom, they demanded a gift,
+whereupon one of her woman servants distributed boxes of Chinese
+confections among them, prepared for this purpose. After that she was
+put through a series of ridiculous performances for the amusement of
+her persecutors, such as crawling, hopping, skipping, crowing. When
+at last dawn streaked the sky and the house lights went out with the
+departing guests, is it a wonder that the exhausted little bride of
+eighteen sank down on the nearest couch and cried herself to sleep?
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+FOREIGN PHILANTHROPIES
+
+
+A bishop visiting in Shanghai said he should sometime like to write a
+book on the “cries” of China. It would make interesting reading. The
+cries are many and diverse. Most coolies, for example, whether on land
+or water, work to the accompaniment of a rhythmical chant, and though
+the poor fellows, carrying heavy burdens, fairly gasp in their effort
+to continue the vocal exercise while under the strain of physical
+exertion, they seem unable to proceed without it.
+
+In the early days, when foreigners first settled in Shanghai, it is
+related that house servants, as they carried food to and from the
+table, indulged in the usual monotonous sing-song till the distracted
+diners peremptorily put a stop to the habit.
+
+But of all the cries known to China, the most pitiful is the cry of the
+children, the sharp insistent wail of suffering childhood that ascends
+night and day all over this great land. Had Mrs. Browning visited the
+Far East she would surely have been impelled to pen another noble poem
+on the “Cry of the Children” whose pathos would have pierced the heart
+of the world. Many people believe slavery in China is a thing of the
+past, as a multitude imagine foot-binding is no longer practised. It is
+true that edicts from time to time have gone forth abolishing slavery,
+but they have not been enforced and old customs die hard. The most that
+can be said is that this hydra-headed monster no longer stalks abroad
+as openly and unchallenged as formerly, though that the evil exists no
+one who knows conditions can for a moment deny.
+
+Out from the centre of the noisy city, where the fields are green and
+the air pure and fresh, stands a substantial red brick building. The
+presiding genius is a sweet-faced, motherly woman in the garb of a
+Protestant Episcopal deaconess. “Is this the Slave Girls’ Refuge?” asks
+the visitor. “It is the Children’s Refuge.” Then, with a deprecatory
+smile, “We are leaving the word ‘slave’ out now because we want to do
+all we can to help the children forget their sad past.” The house is
+plain, not a dollar wasted on ornamentation, and filled to overflowing.
+Built to accommodate seventy-five, last year a hundred and fifty-six
+were crowded into it. Little cots line the upper verandas, and the
+superintendent’s bedroom is turned into a day nursery for the smallest
+tots. “You surely ought to have one spot you could call your very own,”
+exclaims the half indignant visitor. “I should find it restful and
+pleasant, but with my big family I can’t manage it,” and the ever ready
+smile again illumines the kind face.
+
+[Illustration: RESCUED CHILD JUST BROUGHT TO THE CHILDREN’S REFUGE]
+
+[Illustration: OLD MEN AT THE HOME OF THE LITTLE SISTERS OF THE POOR]
+
+This work, which is undenominational, was started by a band of
+Christian women after the upheaval of 1900, although the present
+building was not occupied till ten years later. Now, in so short a
+time, it has been outgrown, and the need for an addition is imperative.
+The children range in age from three to twenty, for some have been in
+the Home a long time and developed into useful assistants. Most of the
+little ones are rescued by the police, who take them to the Municipal
+Mixed Court, and from there they are turned over to the Refuge. And
+what eventually becomes of these waifs? A few are returned to parents
+from whom they have been stolen, others are adopted by families or
+mission schools, while a large number die, too weakened because of ill
+treatment to resist disease. Occasionally there is a simple wedding at
+the Refuge and a girl goes out from it to a home of her own. Shanghai
+is a great slave market. Children are sent and brought here from all
+over China, kidnappers having a large hand in the shameful trade.
+Parents frequently sell their own offspring, for there are many mouths
+to feed and rice is often very, very scarce. Only girls are slaves.
+They become the property, body, mind, and soul, of their owners, who
+may do with them as they like. Their pitiful little life stories are
+almost too harrowing to repeat. A baby of five had its flesh pinched
+with red-hot irons, another of six was tied to a post for days without
+food, having had hot needles run under her nails. One was three times
+buried alive. A mite three years old, nearly dead from neglect and
+starvation, weighed only ten pounds when brought to the Refuge. A
+doctor counted on the body of a bleeding child two hundred and forty
+cuts, burns, and bruises. One was brought in with an arm twisted out
+of shape and an eyelid nearly torn away. A little slave, after repeated
+beatings that almost crushed the life out of her, was thrown by her
+mistress on an ash-heap to die. When rescued and sent to the Refuge her
+mind seemed clouded. She took scarcely any notice of her surroundings,
+but if any one approached her the poor child shrieked in terror. “You
+are going to kill me! I know you are going to kill me!” “A few weeks
+later,” said the superintendent, tears filling her eyes as she told
+the story, “the little thing was following me around everywhere,
+repeating softly to herself, ‘Jesus loves me, Jesus loves me.’” How
+the superintendent with her great warm heart mothers her flock! The
+more marred, feeble, and wretched they are the more her love surrounds
+them. And it is most wonderful how these little bruised, neglected
+plants, blossom out under her tender care. Until recently she was the
+only foreigner in charge of the work. While so many others flit away
+in the fierce heat of summer for a breath of cool air, this faithful
+worker remains, season after season, at her post. “I can not leave the
+children,” she will urge. But she asks no one’s commiseration, for a
+happier heart is not to be found in China.
+
+There is a shelter called “The Home for Waifs and Strays” at quite
+the opposite side of Shanghai. It gathers in a somewhat different
+class of children, not many slaves, but outcasts, down to new-born
+infants picked up on the street by the police. Many of the children are
+mentally deficient and some suffer from incurable diseases. A devoted
+Christian woman is at the head of the Home, which receives its support
+from the Municipal Council, by whom the work was inaugurated several
+years ago.
+
+A new building has just been completed close to the Children’s Refuge,
+which so long stood entirely alone in the midst of cultivated fields.
+It is the home of the School for Blind Boys. No charity is more
+appealing in a country where diseased eyes, leading to partial or
+total blindness, are so fearfully common. The school opened its doors
+only three years ago in a rented house, yet the mental development of
+the boys has been most remarkable. There is certain to arise soon an
+insistent demand for blind teachers for the blind, and the purpose of
+the school is to give their boys a general education which will qualify
+them for that work. It also has a growing industrial department, and
+the Blind School, like the Children’s Refuge, is in part supported by
+the sale of its products. The plan is later to establish on the same
+site a similar school for girls.
+
+One of the best known institutions in Shanghai is the Door of Hope.
+As the name implies it is intended to succor girls bound by a slavery
+the most cruel of all. No other city in the country contains as many
+brothels as Shanghai. It is often called the Sodom of China, and is
+known to many of the native Christians away from the coast only as
+the Far Country of the Prodigal Son. Sadly enough, the presence of
+degenerate foreigners is largely responsible for the sin laid at the
+gates of the gay metropolis.
+
+It is safe to say that the majority of Chinese girls found in houses of
+ill-fame are there through no fault of their own. Kidnappers dispose
+in this way of many of the children they have stolen. Often parents,
+particularly in famine times, sell their little daughters, choosing in
+their ignorance such a fate for them rather than to see them die of
+starvation.
+
+The “Receiving Home” is in an alley-way just off Nanking Road, which
+is the Piccadilly of Shanghai. Several years ago a few philanthropic
+and influential Chinese gentlemen succeeded in securing from the
+International Municipality the passage of a law whereby a notice was
+placed in each brothel telling of the Receiving Home and how to reach
+it. Another law was passed at the same time prohibiting brothels from
+accepting girls under fourteen. Both of these statutes have gradually
+been allowed to become dead letters, and little or no attention is now
+paid to them. A rescued girl stays in the Receiving Home only over
+night, or until her case is brought up in the Mixed Court and she is
+committed to the Door of Hope. This building is in the outskirts of the
+city, far removed from the crowded, dangerous district with which the
+girls have grown too familiar. For obvious reasons, although all are
+under the same roof, it has been found wise to separate the first-year
+girls from those of the second year. This charity is supported by
+grants from the Municipal Council together with voluntary gifts and the
+sale of industrial work. The Door of Hope dolls are famed far and wide.
+The little wooden heads, beautifully carved, are the only parts of the
+dolls not made by the girls. Shanghai firms gladly donate in abundance
+bright-coloured scraps of silk, satin, and cotton cloth. The dolls
+are dressed to represent all grades and classes of society, and a set,
+consisting of sixteen, is of real value educationally.
+
+The first-year girls spend the morning in study and the afternoon in
+work. They begin by learning to make their own clothes, cloth shoes
+and all, then when the tailor’s trade has been thoroughly mastered,
+they are set to dressing dolls. For this work a slight compensation is
+given which acts as a spur and encouragement. The second-year girls
+are busy all day at their embroidery frames with a little schooling
+in the evening. They receive regular pay and are expected in the main
+to clothe themselves. The embroidery is exquisitely fine and dainty
+and there is a constant call for it, both in and out of Shanghai,
+especially from prospective brides and mothers. In the long, cheerful
+work-room, lined on both sides with windows, the sixty or more girls
+of the second year gather each morning at eight o’clock for prayers.
+Half an hour later, the embroidery frames are laid out on small tables,
+and materials unrolled to the accompaniment of happy chatter. When all
+is in readiness to begin, a sudden hush falls on the room, as some one
+points to the text for the day on a Scripture calendar hanging on the
+wall. This is repeated in concert, followed by a brief prayer from one
+of the girls. It is a sweet custom and seems to give just the right
+start to the day. The calendar is compiled annually by a Chinese woman
+living in Shanghai.
+
+It is not necessary to ask if the girls are happy. Their bright,
+contented faces show that. Few are inherently bad. Only once in a long
+while some one tires of the quiet routine and revolts or runs away.
+But it is natural that they should crave change and the sight of a face
+from the outside world is eagerly welcomed. Noticing this, a foreign
+lady living in the neighbourhood once asked the girls in relays to her
+home for afternoon tea. The day the first-year girls were present, one
+of them, pointing to the piano, turned to the missionary in charge with
+the question, “What is that black box?” It was explained to her that
+it was a musical instrument, and when later it was played upon, the
+delight of the girls was unbounded. An American visitor was so touched
+by the incident that she secured for the Door of Hope the gift of a
+splendid victrola which, being a thing of beauty, is likewise sure to
+prove a joy forever.
+
+Most of those who enter the Door of Hope, after a few months or a
+year, become earnest Christians, and sooner or later are married to
+Christian men. In China it is considered no disgrace to marry a fallen
+girl, provided she has changed her way of living. One girl who was
+recently married to a minister made such a favourable impression on her
+husband’s friend that he went to the Home begging that he be given a
+wife just like her. “But how are these poor girls for whom often a very
+large sum of money has been paid, rescued from their owners?” asks the
+puzzled caller. Ah, it is here that a ray of light streams through the
+darkness. There is a law in China, yes, and a very old law too, that no
+woman can be made to lead a life of shame against her will. If she has
+a chance to express herself in court, she may choose the better way,
+and no one is allowed to oppose her. The difficulty is to escape from
+bondage and secure the chance to voice a protest. Besides, many are too
+young to speak for themselves, like the baby of three, who the other
+day was carried to a brothel in the arms of her own father and offered
+for sale. The keepers prefer to buy very young children, as they cost
+little and can be used as singing girls during their early years.
+
+Five miles out from Shanghai, in a pleasant farming district, is the
+children’s branch of the Door of Hope. In this beautiful protected
+spot, a hundred and sixty little ones, snatched from the horrible pit
+in which they had been thrown, live happily together. With the blessed
+forgetfulness of childhood, the past soon fades into indistinctness,
+till it is well-nigh effaced from their memory. The cottage system is
+in vogue, and the big family is divided up into groups of about twenty.
+Each cottage has its house-mother, one of the older, trusted girls from
+the City Home, and all are under the care of two devoted foreigners.
+The hours are filled with house-work, studies, simple industries,
+gardening, play. If a girl shows special aptitude, she is sent in time
+to a mission school, where the curriculum is broader and better adapted
+to her largest development. As soon as the children are old enough,
+they are trained in evangelistic work, such as teaching in Ragged
+Sunday-Schools and holding village prayer meetings. Practically every
+one ripens into a genuine little Christian.
+
+Two of the most striking philanthropies in Shanghai are conducted by
+the Roman Catholics. If there is a class of society that draws on
+one’s sympathies even more than friendless children, it is friendless
+old people, since their capacity for conscious suffering is greater.
+A most admirable characteristic of the Chinese is their usually kind
+treatment of the aged. Filial piety shines its brightest in poverty
+stricken homes, where real sacrifice is required to provide for the
+parents, who are often much better able to care for themselves than
+their children are for them. But very many are left alone in the world
+without food or shelter, or money to buy a coffin in which they would
+so gladly lie down and die.
+
+The Catholic Home for indigent old people is popularly known by the
+name given to the Sisters of Charity in charge of it, “The Little
+Sisters of the Poor.” The capacious three-story building shelters a
+hundred and fifty old men and as many old women, which is all it will
+hold. But as fast as any die others are ready to take their places,
+for there is always a long waiting list. The only conditions of
+admission to the Home are that the applicant must be over sixty and
+wholly without means of support. Most of those taken in are seventy or
+more. One might easily imagine that a place like this, which gathers
+under its roof so many old people, whose lives for the most part
+have been spent in the midst of poverty and filth, and with never an
+idea of cleanly habits, would be anything but inviting. Yet it is a
+sort of Eden, not a speck of dirt on the well-scrubbed floors, not a
+bad or even a close smell in the big airy rooms, not a spot on the
+white bed curtains and pretty patch-work coverlids made by the old
+people from the scraps sent in from the shops. And as for the inmates
+enjoying themselves, why the faces of the dear old souls fairly radiate
+happiness! They are allowed tobacco and plenty of tea and chatter like
+magpies over their pipes and cups. In order not to make life under the
+new conditions terrifying for them, a weekly bath is not insisted on,
+but clean, neatly mended garments are donned every Sunday morning. When
+sick, the simple-minded folk are attended by old-fashioned Chinese
+medicine men, instead of foreign trained doctors whose new-fangled
+ways the patients would spurn. All who are able to work have regular
+duties, spinning, laundering, tailoring, nursing. The women’s quarters
+are on one side of the building, and the men’s on the other, with the
+chapel between them. “Yes,” says the Sister Superior, stopping a moment
+as she passes in front of the altar to kneel and make the sign of the
+Cross, “the chapel is in the centre, so you see it is God who divides
+and God who unites us.” Several of the Sisters are Chinese, and one
+round-faced novitiate works in the kitchen, where the shining brass
+and copper vessels call to mind “Father Lawrence” and his immaculate
+domain. No Chinese girl can enter as an “aspirant” to the privileges of
+sisterhood, unless she belongs to the third generation of Christians.
+
+Shanghai’s great show-place is the Catholic institution at Siccawei, a
+suburban village named after the Jesuit missionaries’ patron saint. No
+one coming to the city willingly leaves without seeing it, certainly
+not if the visitor is a woman. For the laces and embroideries made
+under the direction of the French Sisters are the very quintessence of
+artistic loveliness, and the salesroom is seldom empty.
+
+More than fifty years ago, at the close of the T’aiping Rebellion,
+the Jesuits, after many persecutions and vicissitudes, returned to
+Shanghai, from whence they had fled, and settled at Siccawei. There
+they began a small work, which has steadily grown till it has reached
+almost gigantic proportions. Clustered about the Cathedral, glaringly
+modern and capacious, whose tall spires are a landmark in all the
+country round, are the old church, a men’s college and theological
+seminary, observatory, museum, orphanages, schools, and industrial
+plants. The women’s and girls’ buildings are on one side of a tidal
+creek, and those of the men and boys on the other. Asked some question
+by a stranger about the boys’ work, the Sister addressed replied in a
+tone of finality, “I can’t tell you. I know no more about what is going
+on over there than you do.” Each Sister is assigned her own duties
+for which she is responsible, and gives herself to them exclusively.
+There are fifty Sisters, more than two-thirds of whom are Chinese. The
+spirituelle expression seen sometimes on the faces of these Chinese
+recluses, is most remarkable. The foreign Sisters are all French. No
+one can doubt their devotion. They take no vacation; they never go home
+on furlough. Several have been at their posts over forty years.
+
+It is a large household the Sisters have under their care, averaging
+in number seventeen hundred, but the work is so divided and runs
+with such systematic regularity that there is no suggestion of
+friction or confusion. First in order come the foundlings. Each day,
+tiny, new-born babes are brought into the Home, or often left at the
+gate in the darkness of the night. None are turned away. They are
+washed, dressed, laid in clean little cribs, and as soon as possible
+baptised with a Christian name in the chapel on the premises. Many
+are so frail when they enter, that a few brief hours or days end
+their troubled existence. Next are the day-schools of various grades
+for Catholic children, the large orphanage, and the boarding-school
+for non-Christian or pagan children, as the Sisters call them, with
+playground, dormitories, dining and school rooms entirely separate
+from the others. In a secluded corner of the grounds live the sixty
+unfortunates, who are either blind, crippled, or mentally deficient.
+Their chief occupation is spinning cotton by the aid of crude spinning
+wheels, something the dullest are found capable of learning to do.
+
+But it is through its industrial department that Siccawei is best
+known to the general public. Hundreds of women are employed in making
+lace and embroidery, most of them having been reared in the Home,
+and married from it to Catholic husbands whose earning capacity
+is insufficient for the family needs. A day nursery and school is
+maintained for the babies and young children of the employees. The work
+rooms are of enormous size and well lighted. In the centre of each
+one, on a raised platform, sits a Sister, overlooking the women. The
+proceeds from the sale of work are very large.
+
+The industrial plant for the men and boys, on the other side of
+the creek, is even more elaborate. It includes many departments,
+wood-carving, carpentry, shoemaking, work in iron and brass,
+glass-blowing, painting in oils and water colours, and a printing
+establishment. The genial Father in charge of the wood-carving and
+carpentering, is in his line a genius. Some of the work turned out
+under his supervision is wonderfully beautiful, and ranks among the
+finest specimens of Chinese art sent to the Panama Exposition. The
+youngest apprentices, lads of ten or twelve, begin their industrial
+training by making little coffins for the foundlings across the way.
+“Yes,” Father B. is in the habit of remarking, pointing to the boys
+with a smile, “they start in life where others leave off.” The Siccawei
+Mission is self-perpetuating within the limits of its own constituency.
+Growth comes through the ever inflowing stream of helpless humanity.
+But no effort is put forth, either by the missionaries or Chinese
+communicants, to reach the unevangelized masses. Formerly this work was
+subsidized from France, but it now depends for support wholly on the
+sale of its industries and voluntary contributions.
+
+All Shanghai philanthropies from time to time receive liberal donations
+from the Chinese themselves, many of whom understand and genuinely
+appreciate what is being done for their people. The recent founding of
+the Society of Organized Charities (Protestant) has aided greatly in
+carrying on systematic work in behalf of the deserving poor.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+CHINESE SUCCESSES IN SOCIAL SERVICE
+
+
+Several years ago a company of lepers numbering about forty, living
+in one of the southern provinces of China, were driven from their
+miserable shacks and burned alive. When the official by whose order
+the atrocious deed was committed was called to account for it, he
+excused himself by saying that since the lepers were public nuisances,
+mere cumberers of the ground, he decided that the sooner they were
+out of the way the better. Such was his idea of social service and
+he represents a class in China who regard calamities like famine,
+flood, and pestilence as heaven-sent blessings to relieve the land
+of its superfluous population. But to the educated youth, touched by
+the spirit of a common brotherhood, and to the better elements of an
+earlier generation the incident just related is as abhorrent as it can
+possibly be to a Westerner.
+
+Philanthropy of a certain kind is not new in China. Almsgiving for the
+sake of winning and storing up merit is centuries old. But galling
+poverty, the fierce struggle for existence, strange customs and
+superstitions, have all contributed to deaden the sensibilities and
+quench the naturally kind impulses of the heart. For example, to
+care for a man lying sick by the roadside means to the rank and file
+that the Good Samaritan brings down on his own head the ill-luck that
+followed the poor unfortunate, and to carry him into his house to die
+involves not only the obligation of paying for his coffin and burial,
+no small matter in China, but of answering to his relatives, if he
+has any, for his decease. Not long ago in the Chinese City a humble
+dwelling-house took fire and quickly burned to the ground. The family
+barely escaped with their lives, a mother with a new-born baby, and
+a troop of older children, one of them sick. The father was away,
+presumably at work. A missionary passing through the narrow street saw
+the poor things huddled together in a forlorn little group and her
+heart was stirred with pity. “Why don’t some of you take them home?”
+she asked of the crowd looking on. “Her husband is coming, we must wait
+for him,” they answered. An hour or two later, on returning, the lady
+found the family in the same spot, the woman weak and weary, pressing
+her infant to her breast. A cold rain was falling. “If you don’t give
+these people shelter I shall take them home with me,” she exclaimed
+indignantly to a bystander. “The husband will be here soon, we dare
+not interfere,” he said in tones of sharp decision. The next morning,
+unbelievable as it seems, the woman and her children were still on the
+street, unsheltered and uncared for. At once they were hurried to the
+mission hospital and tenderly nursed. Then, and not till then, did the
+real truth in the case come out. Had any one befriended these outcasts,
+the evil spirit that caused the destruction of their house, would in
+anger have entered the home of their benefactor and wrought disaster.
+Hence the only safe course, since they had incurred the displeasure
+of the gods, was to let them severely alone. Yet to offset this
+circumstance is the sweet story, and by no means an isolated case, of
+the old Chinese grandmother, who when a little foreign babe was rescued
+from drowning, but chilled to the marrow and ready to die, quickly
+opened her padded coat, and pressed it to her warm bosom, till it
+revived, thus saving its life.
+
+[Illustration: RESCUED KIDNAPPED CHILDREN AS THEY WERE PHOTOGRAPHED FOR
+ADVERTISEMENT IN THE CHINESE DAILY NEWSPAPERS]
+
+The recent revolution ushered in many innovations, but nothing that is
+destined to result in larger good to China than the practice of social
+service as understood in the West. The idea has met with a quick and
+enthusiastic response by the Chinese, Christians, and non-Christians
+alike, and is already yielding notable results in many places. “Why
+should we not do for ourselves what foreigners have so long been doing
+for us?” the leaders are asking one another, and hospitals, orphanages,
+model prisons, refuges, industrial plants, are rising up here, there,
+and yonder, till it is scarcely possible to open a newspaper without
+reading of some new project afloat. In progressive Shanghai social
+service is fast becoming a slogan. An unusual opportunity is afforded
+here of contrasting the old style of philanthropy with the new, and the
+study is valuable as well as interesting.
+
+The local Charitable Society that antedates all others has its
+headquarters, known as The Hall of United Benevolence, in the Chinese
+City. Its exact age is difficult to determine as no one seems to
+know. Some say it has as many as three hundred years to its credit. A
+managing board of ten men, with offices in a Chinese house of spacious
+dimensions, does the business of the Society, which is very wealthy,
+owning large tracts of public land. Its chief work is to donate lots
+to philanthropic institutions, furnish coffins to paupers, subsidize
+various existing charities, and dispense free of charge Chinese
+medicines. This Association is held in the highest regard by all
+classes of Chinese, and may be called the fountain-head from which most
+of the existing charities have sprung.
+
+One of the older philanthropies, started more than fifty years ago, is
+the Home for Widows in the Chinese City. It receives widows without
+money or relatives to support them, who have determined not to
+re-marry, a most praiseworthy resolve according to Chinese standards.
+The house-mother, an old woman of seventy, delights to tell that she
+has been an inmate of the Home for forty years, and certainly the
+bright-eyed, rosy-cheeked dame is as good an advertisement as the
+place could have. Widows with young children are allowed to keep their
+little ones with them till the girls are betrothed and the boys able
+to go out to work. In the meantime they are sent to day-schools in
+the city. A family of three hundred is crowded into the rambling old
+house, the gift of a former governor, which consists of a series of
+small courts shut in by low two-story buildings. Each woman has her
+own little room, or perhaps more than one if her family is large. The
+premises are fairly neat, but what troops of children swarm around,
+noisy and undisciplined, and as a Chinese caller once pointedly
+remarked, “How the women must quarrel!” Their salvation evidently lies
+in their industrial work, for while food and shelter are given them,
+the able-bodied are expected to provide their own and their children’s
+clothes. So they spend their days making articles which are sold and
+yield a slight revenue, chiefly Chinese shoes, idol money, and clothing.
+
+The Widows’ Home, despite its limitations, commands a degree of genuine
+respect, but not so the two Foundlings’ Homes that awaken only pity and
+almost fierce resentment. They are meant to do good, yet alas, what a
+travesty on the real thing! The institution inside of the Chinese City
+is the oldest philanthropy in Shanghai and dates back to 1710. From
+the Hall of United Benevolence that fosters it an occasional report
+goes forth telling about this work. The reports are written in the
+usual florid Chinese style, and after describing at length the virtuous
+motives of the founders and supporters, give the rules governing the
+organization. For instance the age of each child is registered, a note
+made of its appearance and condition, also “of the lines and fashion of
+its fingers, five senses and four limbs.” Wet nurses are made to draw
+lots for the babies in order to avoid partiality. Close to the street
+entrance is a perforated drawer in which the foundling is to be left.
+The one who brings the baby must rap on the door with a stick that
+hangs beside the drawer to announce its arrival. These and many more
+minute directions are recorded with painstaking elaboration.
+
+They read well, but what are the facts? It requires considerable
+tact and insistence for a visitor to gain access to the inner rooms
+of the Home, where the real life of the babies is dragged out. Two
+or three of the well-favoured will be brought in the arms of nurses
+to an outer court, but when permission is asked to go inside there
+is evident reluctance and many excuses are offered. Sometimes the
+only sure open sesame is the official card of the City Magistrate.
+Apparently no cruelty is practiced, but it is the gross ignorance and
+negligence of the caretakers that makes so pitiable the brief life of
+the babies, for most of them die after a few weeks or months. Each wet
+nurse is given the charge of two foundlings. The nurses may remain at
+the Home or if they prefer take the little ones to their own home, in
+which case they receive somewhat larger pay. If a sufficient number
+of wet nurses can not be secured, the foundlings, irrespective of
+age, whether a few days or several months old, are fed on rice water
+sweetened with coarse brown sugar. Scarcely any reach the Home in a
+normal condition. Diseased, weak, bruised, one coming with a terrible
+gash in its neck given with intent to kill, the death-knell of the puny
+things is generally sounded before birth. The rooms where they are
+kept are small, and as a rule almost devoid of light and air. In one
+of the Homes even through the heat of a Shanghai summer the babies not
+only sleep in stifling rooms but on beds surrounded by closely-woven
+cloth curtains. In the other Home they lie the long day through in
+bamboo cribs, their little bodies eaten with flies and poisoned with
+mosquitoes. The chorus of feeble wails that constantly arises pierces
+the visitor’s heart, as does the sight of the tiny skeleton-like limbs.
+With scarcely an exception the fifty babies in each of the Homes, and
+the far larger number that are put out to nurse, are girls. Just one
+thought comes as a slight comfort, that wretched as is the condition of
+the children they are certainly quite as well, or even perhaps better
+off, than they would be in their own homes. No wonder physicians in
+China say the mortality among children reaches as high as seventy or
+eighty per cent.
+
+In happy contrast to these Homes, is the Hospice of St. Joseph, which
+has gathered into its safe shelter nearly eleven hundred of Shanghai’s
+sick and poverty-stricken Chinese. But the story is too good not
+to be told from the beginning. Four years ago two Christian men,
+members of the Catholic Church, determined to found a philanthropic
+institution. One holds several highly responsible offices in the
+Chinese Municipality. The other is a successful business man. Many of
+the tramcars in the International Settlement, and all of those under
+Chinese control, were turned out from his foundry. His snug steamers
+ply the waters of the upper Yangtse as far as Chungking, conquerors at
+last, after many futile efforts, over the difficulties presented by
+the dangerous rapids. He subscribes for American journals on mechanics
+which he studies diligently through an interpreter, and after absorbing
+ideas gleaned from them, invents and adapts machinery for use in China.
+It is his desire to see Chinese farmers follow improved methods of
+agriculture, and to encourage them he occasionally presents a village
+with a modern threshing machine made in his foundry. His Sundays are
+frequently spent in evangelistic work in the country, and busy man that
+he is, he makes it a practice as often as possible to leave his work
+and go to the Arsenal to pray with condemned prisoners before they die.
+Recently the President honoured him with a medal rarely bestowed, and
+all who know him, Protestant and Catholic alike, pronounce him a “rare
+character.”
+
+The land for the Hospice was donated by the Charitable Society of the
+Hall of United Benevolences, and the Chinese Municipality gave bricks
+(those bricks seem to multiply miraculously!) from the old city wall
+for building material. The colony includes a men’s hospital, a women’s
+hospital, a home for boys, a refuge for girls, an asylum for the
+blind, a chapel, dispensaries, kitchens, quarters for the insane, for
+opium patients, and prisoners from the jail in the Chinese City. These
+buildings are already completed and others are projected. While the
+two founders direct the business affairs of the institution, they have
+given the care of it to twelve Sisters of Charity, four of whom are
+Europeans and the rest Chinese.
+
+The upkeep of such a great establishment, under the conditions that
+exist in China, is no small matter, but the next to impossible has been
+achieved and the management is well-nigh beyond criticism. The long,
+light airy wards, with every cot filled, are visited each morning by
+a foreign-trained Chinese physician, who donates his services. On the
+second floor of the men’s hospital is a beautiful white-tiled operating
+room, with all the latest equipment. There are industries, indoors or
+out, for those able to work. Children study half a day. Incurables and
+old people without support are kept on for life, but the strong and
+middle-aged are sent away from the institution as soon as they are well
+to make room for others. It is a joy in this land, where the insane
+have been so long neglected and maltreated, to find a retreat prepared
+for them where they receive the kindest consideration. The consequence
+is that many after a few months go home cured. Every cement-lined cell
+is protected in front by iron bars, so that the door can be left wide
+open, admitting light and air. A door at the back of each cell opens
+into a narrow corridor which leads to bathrooms with large earthen
+tubs and running water. Several of the cells are neatly padded to
+accommodate violent patients. This place and the prisoners’ wards next
+to it, as clean and wholesome as heart could wish, are in charge of a
+Christian young man of tried character.
+
+In addition to the Hospice, its two large-hearted founders have built,
+on a much frequented street, a three-story Evangelistic Hall. Said the
+elder one, “We want it to be a place where any passerby and especially
+strangers in the city, can stop a while and discuss the Christian
+doctrine.” There is a day school for boys in connection with it.
+
+Out in the neighbourhood of the old pagoda, set in the midst of
+blooming peach orchards, is a large orphanage for both boys and girls.
+This also is a Christian institution, but Protestant, and was started
+eleven years ago by a group of men, several of whom had studied in
+mission schools. The boys and girls are in separate though connecting
+compounds, and a happier, merrier lot of young folks it would be
+hard to find. Much is made of Bible Study, and industrial work among
+the boys is strongly emphasized. The sale of their rattan furniture,
+painted scrolls, cloth and hot-house flowers, especially at the time
+of their annual chrysanthemum show, goes a long way toward meeting the
+current expenses of the work.
+
+On the same road as the orphanage, but nearer town, is “The Shanghai
+Home for Poor Children.” This is not Christian, but it is one of
+the most interesting and best conducted institutions in the city. A
+few influential business men are its promoters, Chinese with high
+ideals and broad vision. There are in the Home about twenty girls
+and a hundred boys, many of them waifs picked up on the streets by
+the directors themselves. A peculiarity of this institution is that
+the children do not use beds but sleep on the floor in great breezy
+dormitories where there can be no question of well-inflated lungs. The
+school has a famous orchestra, and a picture that catches the eye at
+once, on the wall of the reception room, represents the band members,
+girls as well as boys, sitting with their instruments in their hands on
+the platform in the main hall. This Home is characterized by two unique
+features, one, that the old-time Chinese boxing and fencing are taught
+in the fine out-of-doors gymnasium, and the other, the prominence
+given to agriculture and horticulture as school branches. Indeed this
+seems to be the only school in Shanghai where agriculture is a study,
+with opportunity for practical work in the ample grounds around the
+institution. In connection with this charity it is worth recording
+that of the ten members on the Board of Directors five are women.
+However, they have not advanced quite far enough to join with the men
+in committee meetings but hold separate sessions. Or possibly it is the
+men, poor benighted creatures, who are to blame!
+
+It is impossible to lay too much emphasis on the value of industrial
+schools, and social service can be turned into no more beneficent
+channels than in starting and maintaining such schools. Until very
+recently industrial training was wholly neglected in China. Even now,
+if a Chinese educator is asked, “Are there any industrial schools in
+Shanghai?” he will answer, “None,” and yet there are at least two and
+one more soon to be opened. But these, it seems, are not classed as
+schools, since they admit only poor boys unable to pay tuition, and
+because the study of books is made secondary. The best industrial
+school was opened four years ago. Work is carried on in a single
+large building that is not divided into rooms, but from whose centre
+apartments branch off in different directions like the spokes of a
+wheel, all well supplied with windows, thus insuring plenty of fresh
+air and good ventilation even in the hottest weather. “How many boys
+have you?” was asked of the head teacher. “One hundred, and I wish I
+had room for five hundred!” came the reply with surprising earnestness.
+The boys range in age from very little fellows to lads of sixteen
+and eighteen. There are industries enough to suit the bent of each
+one. They include carpet-weaving, wicker work, soap-making, pottery,
+portrait painting, the manufacture of kindergarten toys, clothing made
+on sewing machines, and stockings on knitting machines. The boys work
+during the day and study in the evening. Their pride is in their brass
+band and they earn quite a bit of money for the school by playing at
+weddings and funerals. The third of an acre covered by the school plant
+was originally a cemetery, and how characteristic it is of China, that
+in order to secure the land one hundred and thirty-nine graves had to
+be removed!
+
+One of the commonest crimes in Shanghai is kidnapping. Chinese
+children, if they are healthy and attractive, need to be carefully
+guarded. Most of the kidnappers are women, and the nefarious business
+is so lucrative that a large number are engaged in it. Kidnappers grow
+bold as well as wily, picking up children at play on the street, or off
+on errands, and even beguiling or snatching them away from their very
+doors. Both boys and girls are stolen, though boys are greater prizes,
+being always in demand as apprentices and adopted sons in families that
+have not been blessed with an heir, for the master of a house who has
+no son to burn incense before his ancestral tablet after his death, and
+to worship at his grave, is of all men most miserable. Still, pretty
+little girls are always easily disposed of, either in brothels or in
+private homes as slaves or future daughters-in-law.
+
+Several years ago about thirty public-spirited Chinese gentlemen in
+Shanghai formed themselves into an Anti-Kidnapping Society and set
+to work in earnest to combat this evil. They hired skilled Chinese
+detectives to meet out-going and in-coming coast and river steamers
+and arrest all suspicious characters. Cunning as the kidnappers are,
+again and again they prove no match for the quickwitted detectives,
+who succeed in rescuing many children. The poor little victims are
+frequently concealed in baskets of clothing, or hidden away in boxes
+that ostensibly contain fruit or merchandise. Sometimes two or three
+will be found crouching together in a single box with only the tiniest
+holes for admitting air. The very young children are usually drugged,
+and older ones frightened into silence by the most terrible threats.
+Five miles out from Shanghai, convenient to the railroad yet in the
+midst of open country, has stood for years a large Buddhist temple.
+At the time of the revolution, when so many of the temples in China
+were abandoned, and put to other uses, this one was leased by the
+Anti-Kidnapping Society as a Home for rescued children. Stripped of its
+idols and incense burners, the smoke-blackened walls white-washed, the
+priests ejected, the old place that so long echoed the mumbled prayers
+of heathen devotees now resounds with the happy voices of between two
+and three hundred children. The girls, who are considerably in the
+minority, occupy the courts in the rear, large and pleasant however,
+and the boys those in front. The Worship Hall of the temple has been
+converted into a school and assembly room for the boys. Every day in
+the Chinese newspapers of Shanghai the Home is advertised, with a
+description and photographs of the children most recently rescued. In
+this way hundreds have been identified by their parents and returned
+to them. Unclaimed children are kept in the Home, being taught some
+kind of industrial work until they are able to go out and care for
+themselves. Ethics is a branch of the school curriculum, but the
+children are at liberty to accept whatever religious belief they will.
+
+The Chinese gentry in Shanghai maintain several free dispensaries.
+The largest of these, fronting on a crowded street, has in Chinese
+characters over one door the motto, “Loving to Save,” and above another
+“Heaven Bestows Perfect Happiness.” This charity is said to be half a
+century old and the building itself bears evidence of having endured
+that long. Every second day the dispensary is open, when patients
+by the hundred visit it. The dozen or so Chinese trained doctors in
+attendance are divided into two classes, those treating internal
+diseases and the others dealing with external troubles. They are
+separated like sheep from goats, sitting each at his own table, under
+covered corridors on opposite sides of a court. In the rear of the
+dispensary is a large workshop where coffins are made and given to the
+poor.
+
+Seven years ago, when plague raged, an isolation hospital was opened
+by a well-known Chinese philanthropist in the outskirts of the city.
+He succeeded in buying the house of a wealthy Chinaman, whose several
+wives and numerous offspring actually performed the unprecedented
+feat, for Chinese, of vacating the premises in two days. Wards have
+since been added to the main building, so that the hospital will
+now accommodate about a hundred. Through the efforts of this same
+philanthropist, aided by a distinguished foreigner, Dr. Timothy
+Richard, the China Branch of the Red Cross Society was established
+in 1904 with headquarters in Shanghai. Three Red Cross hospitals
+are operated in widely separated districts of the city, two of them
+intended to be used exclusively for cholera patients during the cholera
+season. One of these had its opening some months ago when the hospital
+was visited by many influential Chinese and a few foreign guests.
+Nothing could have illustrated more clearly the progress the people are
+making in the science of social service. The building is a thoroughly
+renovated old-fashioned Chinese mansion, with courts and rooms
+innumerable and the usual lovely carved woodwork, mural decorations
+and tiny squares of translucent glass set in quaint wooden screens,
+though most of these had been replaced by good-sized modern windows.
+The most fastidious Westerner could not have asked for cleaner wards,
+arranged for the various classes of patients, whiter examining and
+operating rooms for both men and women, or a more complete equipment,
+though the whole was on a somewhat diminutive scale. The question, it
+is true, would occasionally intrude itself, “How will this place look
+a month from now?” but it was followed by the reflection “What began
+best, can’t end worst,” and that a committee capable of initiating such
+a work could be trusted to supervise its upkeep. The corps of young
+men nurses wore a neat uniform of white with blue trimmings. The women
+nurses,--well, to be frank, there were none. “It is so difficult to
+find women nurses,” explained one of the doctors. “We must have them
+of course or we can’t open the women’s department.” The keen interest
+of the Chinese themselves in the hospital, evidenced by the numbers
+present and their painstaking inspection, was one of the most hopeful
+signs. An elderly gentleman, of a singularly refined and benevolent
+countenance, had come all the way from Nanking, half a day’s journey,
+to study the plant with a view to starting something similar in his own
+city.
+
+Time fails to tell of the fine modern hospital of the little Chinese
+woman doctor who received her training at a mission medical school in
+Canton, and about whom a whole chapter could be written. Unselfish
+to a fault, serving devotedly under the Red Cross Society during the
+revolution, pouring her money and her life out in kindred charities, no
+personal sacrifice is too great for the betterment of her people whose
+spiritual as well as physical needs lie as a burden on her heart.
+
+A minor charity but one by no means to be despised is that of
+furnishing on the street in summer free drinks, not of intoxicants,
+but of tea. The tea is poured hot into earthen jars which stand inside
+small booths. Beside the jar is a bamboo dipper, and any passerby may
+stop and quench his thirst. The tea stations are scattered at frequent
+intervals throughout the foreign settlements as well as the Chinese
+City, and are an inestimable boon, particularly to the hard-working
+coolies.
+
+Another charity that well illustrates the poverty of China is the
+conservation of waste rice. Rice is China’s staff of life. The servant
+calls his master to eat not by saying “Dinner is ready,” but “Rice is
+ready.” To waste rice is a sin; to save it, meritorious. As junks laden
+with rice from the country around are poled down the river and creeks
+to Shanghai, a few handfuls of the precious grain inevitably sift out
+from the bags onto the bank. This is picked up by benevolently minded
+persons, along with the mud in which it has fallen, and afterward
+laboriously separated and washed. Some hundreds of pounds in the course
+of a year are collected in this way and distributed to the poor. A
+number of local Chinese guilds during the coldest winter weather, are
+in the habit of feeding daily large numbers of the suffering poor, who
+line up at specified hours for their allotted portion; also generous
+sums of money are contributed annually by the Chinese and sent to the
+districts devastated by flood and famine to relieve the destitute.
+
+Perhaps the most significant event of the last year in Shanghai was
+the organization by young Chinese women of a Social Service League.
+The leaders are Christians, who in a tactful but persistent way, are
+sure to make their influence felt. Already as a beginning five free
+day-schools for the poor, with a total attendance of several hundred,
+have been started and others are expected to open soon. A Sunday School
+taught by volunteer workers is held in connection with each day-school.
+It is the plan to dot the city with these charity schools, which
+divide the day between the study of the Chinese language and manual
+training. The whole financial burden is met by the League members and
+their interested friends, while a few, ladies of high position, who
+heretofore have led self-centred lives, are giving several hours a week
+to teaching. The movement is attracting wide attention.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+THE ROMANCE AND PATHOS OF THE MILLS
+
+
+It was the close of a cold December afternoon, and a raw penetrating
+wind was blowing. In the mill district out Yangtsepoo way the road was
+alive with people. Women and little children, with a sprinkling of men,
+were hurrying along the dusky highway on foot and in wheelbarrows,
+for it was nearing six o’clock, the hour of the night shift. In front
+of one of the great cotton mills a crowd of shivering humanity had
+gathered waiting for the Sikh policemen to throw open the gates. Faces
+were blue and pinched, shoulders bent, and hands drawn up for warmth
+inside the padded cotton sleeves. Nearby, within a shallow niche in the
+brick wall stood a small, solemn-faced boy, perhaps seven years old. He
+looked like a young sentinel, straight as a ramrod, arms stretched down
+close to his body. When asked what he was doing he replied briefly,
+“Keeping warm,” and tried to hug a little closer the sheltering wall.
+Poor laddie, the whistle would soon blow calling him on duty to work
+without intermission amid pounding machinery and dizzily whirling
+spindles, until the welcome signal set him free at six o’clock in the
+morning.
+
+The story of cotton-growing in China is not a very old one. It began
+only a few hundred years back, some say in the eleventh, others in
+the thirteenth century, when the first cotton seeds were brought here
+from Chinese Turkestan. Strangely enough, it was a woman who gave the
+cultivation of cotton its initial impulse, for not until Lady Hwang,
+public-spirited and enterprising, took it upon herself to distribute
+cotton seeds among the farmers of the Yangtse Valley, was the plant
+grown to any extent. This valley is to-day the most flourishing cotton
+producing district in the country. Ninety per cent of China’s millions
+dress in cotton, a coarse, strong cloth, dyed blue. But what did the
+people wear in the long ago before the cotton plant had ever been heard
+of? Did peasant as well as prince array himself in silk and fine linen?
+What we do know is that the introduction of cotton was strenuously
+opposed by the silk and hemp growers. It is a curious fact that as
+early as 500 A.D. reference is found in Chinese books to “cotton
+robes,” though they were evidently regarded as rarities and were
+doubtless brought into the country by travellers, or as tribute for the
+august ruler of the Flowery Kingdom.
+
+[Illustration: ON THE WAY TO THE MILL]
+
+India gave China her first spinning wheel, and this same crude wheel,
+scarcely improved upon at all, is still seen, not only in the interior,
+but in many a home in and around metropolitan Shanghai. Multitudes
+of families too, as in the olden days, run their own simple hand
+loom. Time-honoured customs die slowly in China, but the southern
+provinces are the least conservative, and Canton is one of the most
+progressive of cities. So we are not surprised to find that about
+1870 a Cantonese company started a factory for spinning cotton by
+steam-operated machinery. When all was in readiness would the farmers
+trust their cotton to this wizard concern? Not a man of them! It
+was their firm conviction that by some occult process their dearly
+grown product would vanish from sight never to reappear. Thus the
+enterprise launched so hopefully was doomed to failure. Twenty years
+later, however, the experiment was tried again, and this time with
+success. Foreign capital too was attracted to the venture, and at the
+close of the Chino-Japanese war, when the new treaty gave assurance of
+protection, a number of foreign-owned mills were built. At first they
+were operated without profit if not at a positive loss. This was mainly
+due to the fact that on account of the sudden and greatly increased
+number of spindles the supply of cotton was not equal to the demand,
+which caused a rise in price. That is no longer true, and dividends
+now are often very large. Cotton, to a greater or less extent, is
+grown in every province in China, but the quality is inferior and the
+staple short. This is not because of an unfavourable soil and climate,
+especially in the lower central provinces, but is wholly due to the
+carelessness and ignorance of the farmers. They cultivate the farms in
+a haphazard fashion, or strictly speaking, pay no attention whatever to
+cultivation, allowing nature to run riot at her own sweet will. There
+is no reason why, with the introduction of scientific methods in seed
+selection and planting, China in a few years should not see a complete
+transformation in the character of her crops. Foreigners are planning
+to start an experimental farm in the neighbourhood of Shanghai, and
+hope each year to induce a few farmers from the interior to spend
+several months working on it and receiving practical instruction. It is
+estimated that within the last ten years the acreage devoted to cotton
+growing in China has increased one hundred per cent.
+
+Great as has been this advance, the end is not yet, and cotton fields
+will continue to multiply. “But where is the land to come from?” some
+one asks. “China’s millions must be fed, and surely the rice and wheat
+fields can not be sacrificed.” No, but the acres once aflame with the
+now prohibited poppy will be available, and then there are the burial
+lands. The amount of ground taken up by the mammoth mound-shaped and
+horse-shoe graves is enormous, but little by little it is yielding
+to the encroachments of Western civilization. At a recent medical
+conference in Shanghai, one of China’s most brilliant foreign-trained
+doctors, for sanitary and economic reasons dared advocate cremation,
+or at least confining the sepulchres of the dead to the hillsides
+and other untillable spots. Half of China’s cotton crop is exported
+annually to Japan. On the other hand she imports quantities of cotton
+from America. Foreign countries send many kinds of cotton cloth to
+China, where it is most popular, particularly the cotton prints. While
+Japan’s goods flood China’s markets, the Japanese markets are closed
+to the finished product from China. Yet it should be easily possible
+in the near future for China to supply her own needs, growing the best
+quality of cotton, and opening cotton mills all over the country.
+This would relieve the congested agricultural districts and furnish
+employment to many idle hands.
+
+What the cotton industry in China requires above everything else is the
+fostering care of the government. Until this is given there will be
+little advance in either quality or quantity of production. The most
+the central government has done thus far has been to give its tardy
+recognition to “The Cotton Anti-Adulteration Association” of Shanghai,
+and to place the testing of cotton against adulteration under a
+Commissioner of the Customs, which has led to most beneficial results.
+It is a pity that thus far the Chinese-owned mills have declined to
+join the Association. The greatest handicap to the native industry
+is heavy taxation. In Japan the raw material is imported and the
+finished product exported free of duty. In China not only is no such
+encouragement given, but internal taxes are levied as well, so that the
+farmer must pay to send his cotton down the river to the manufacturer,
+the manufacturer to return it in yarn and cloth to the merchant, and
+the merchant to pass it on to the country buyer.
+
+At present China has approximately forty cotton mills, nearly
+two-thirds of which are in and around Shanghai. Three in the city
+are owned and operated by the Japanese, several are the property of
+European companies, but the majority belong to the Chinese. The oldest
+cotton mill, started more than twenty-five years ago in Shanghai,
+was financed by China’s great statesman, Li Hung Chang. It is still
+running under Chinese management, though the original buildings were
+burned a few years ago. This mill is one of the largest, having sixty
+thousand spindles. The assistant superintendent is a bright young man
+who recently graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, where he
+specialized in sociology. He brings to his work high ideals which he
+hopes gradually to see realized. The next oldest mill is also Chinese.
+Its owner, Mr. C. C. Nieh, an unusual man, recently returned from a
+five months’ tour in the United States, where he made a careful and
+critical study of cotton growing and cotton mills. It is his purpose
+as quickly as possible to bring his mill up to the highest grade of
+efficiency. Indeed his American manager reports that his chief is
+anxious to advance more rapidly than the operatives can be trained
+to follow, and describes him as a “delightful man to work for.” The
+largest mill in Shanghai is under British management. It operates
+seventy thousand spindles and employs between five and six thousand
+hands. One of the newest mills, that represents the very latest thought
+in building and equipment, belongs to the Japanese. The brick walls
+are lined with cement, the floors are reinforced concrete, while the
+saw-tooth roofs, with glass on one side, admit an abundance of light.
+The machinery, the best made in England, is operated by electricity,
+all of the other mills in Shanghai, except Mr. Nieh’s, using steam. A
+peculiarity of this mill is that the majority of the employees are men
+and boys, female help being almost exclusively found in the other mills.
+
+A few years ago the Japanese mill owners in Shanghai did a good thing
+for themselves and for the Chinese in sending to Japan a hundred
+Chinese men and women to take a course of nine months’ instruction in
+the mills. Since their return, these trained workers have been used to
+teach the raw Chinese mill hands in Japanese employ.
+
+Wages in all the mills are about the same, and are good, as pay goes
+in China. Children receive from eleven to fifteen cents a day, women
+from fifteen to thirty-five according to their skill, and men fifteen
+to twenty dollars a month. This is reckoned in Mexican currency, which
+would yield less than one-half that amount in American money. Some of
+the mill people come from farms in the suburbs and are in comfortable
+circumstances. One or two members of a family may work in the mill, not
+so much from necessity as to be able to add a little to the general
+income. But others, and these far outnumber the more fortunate class,
+are the poorest of the poor, often unable to pay the “cash” or two
+required to ride in a wheelbarrow between the mill and their home
+which is frequently miles distant. A single instance may be given. A
+young girl supports a widowed mother and little brothers and sisters
+on two dollars and a half a month. She starts to the mill each morning
+at four o’clock, as it takes her two hours to walk there, and when
+her day’s work is over, at six in the evening, she is two hours more
+walking home. Many a time when the moon is shining the child mistakes
+its bright light for dawn and sets out at three or earlier. The walk
+is not so bad in pleasant weather, lonely only until she joins crowds
+of other mill folk moving in the same direction. But what of the chill
+days in winter, with a bleak wind blowing, rain falling, and roads
+treacherously slippery with mud? It is hardest for the women who have
+bound feet, women too poor to pay for a seat on a wheelbarrow with
+five or six others. Yonder comes a group uncertainly picking their way
+along in the blinding mist. One poor soul at last reaches the gate of
+the mill and drops all in a heap on the cold wet ground to wait for the
+blowing of the whistle. “Have you come far?” is asked of her pityingly.
+Half fearfully, half defiantly, as if braced for a reprimand, she
+struggles to her feet and answers, “From Honkew,” a distance of nearly
+three miles. A fleeting smile is by and by coaxed into her pale face,
+but she is tired, so very tired, and a long twelve hours of unremittent
+labour lies before her. Let us hope she is one who works at a loom, for
+then she can have a seat on a narrow bench. The women and children who
+watch the spindles must stand the long night through.
+
+The employees carry their lunch in a small round basket, all of uniform
+size. The basket is half filled with cold boiled rice, and set in the
+midst of it is sure to be a little bowl containing a few mouthfuls
+of bean curd, salt fish or some other simple relish. Before eating,
+the food is warmed by pouring boiling water into the basket and
+allowing the water to filter through the rice and out at the bottom.
+Hot water is also furnished in the mills for tea. In the new Japanese
+mill tea itself is given the hands. “Not the best kind,” says the
+superintendent, “but nevertheless, tea.” This mill has rough dining
+halls for its employees, and allows a half hour at noon and the same
+at midnight for eating. Another mill gives fifteen minutes at noon
+and at midnight. An Englishwoman living in the neighbourhood says she
+always awakens at night when the great engines stop their throbbing and
+thinks with tender pity of the wan-faced women and wide-eyed little
+children toiling across the way while she rests in her comfortable
+bed. In most of the mills no intermission whatever is granted for rest
+or food, and the people eat whenever they are hungriest, snatching a
+morsel now and then as they tend their looms or watch their reels and
+spindles. Formerly mothers brought their nursing babies to the mills,
+and laid them at their feet while they worked, but this is no longer
+permitted in the large mills. Some relative, it may be a grandmother,
+carries the little one to the mother to nurse twice a day, in the
+middle of the morning and again in the afternoon. Mothers who work at
+night often draw from the breast before they leave home sufficient milk
+to last the baby until they return in the morning.
+
+All of the mills run their spinning department through the twenty-four
+hours, but weaving can not be done as well at night, so the looms shut
+down. One mill makes its day fourteen hours long. “And these little
+children must stand and work all those hours?” asked a visitor of the
+manager. “Yes,” and with a slight shrug of the shoulder, “rather hard
+on them, isn’t it?” “But then you know how it is in the Chinese shops,”
+he added, “they keep their apprentices at work often eighteen and
+twenty hours on a stretch.”
+
+The best mills no longer employ very young children, that is tots
+of five and six. This is not so much in the interest of the children
+as because the little ones are found to be more of a hindrance than
+a help. But parents try to smuggle them in past the keen-eyed Sikh
+policemen at the gate, who are kept busy at the times of shift driving
+them out.
+
+The hiring of women and girls is generally committed to Chinese
+forewomen, who are responsible for keeping their full quota at
+work. These women are usually shrewd and business-like, with a full
+appreciation of the dignity of their position. One recently entered
+the first class compartment of a tramcar. She wore the loose blue
+gown, apron, and head cloth of the working people and when the Chinese
+conductor came by he addressed her gruffly. “Old woman, you belong
+in the third class. Get out of here.” “Why should I get out?” she
+responded with spirit, “I have money to pay for a seat in the first
+class.” The conductor changed his tone and manner at once, recognizing
+a dominant personality behind the coarse clothes. “Pardon me, Madame,”
+he said and meekly took the proffered coppers. The mills as a rule
+give four holidays a month, though they are not always Sundays. Some
+employees object to Sunday as a holiday as they say it brings bad luck.
+
+The Chinese for so many centuries have been an agricultural race that
+they do not take as kindly to mechanical labour as the Japanese, who
+have long had industrial training in the schools and make at first
+steadier, more dependable mill hands. Yet these patient, plodding
+people, with almost unlimited endurance, are capable of being trained
+to do the highest grade of work. The improvement of their material
+condition is a crying need. Said the superintendent of one of the
+foreign-owned mills: “I have been in this work in Shanghai now for
+twenty years, and I hope I may not leave for home till I have seen the
+employees in the mills better housed, fed, clothed, and educated. But
+employers can not do this until the Chinese government enables them
+to compete on better terms than at present with others in the cotton
+market.” Mr. Nieh is making practical application of his philanthropic
+principles in an effort to divide the twenty-four hours into three
+shifts instead of two, and as fast as possible to dispense with child
+labour, so that the boys may be free to enter the public school
+which is being built on land donated by him near his mill. This same
+generous-hearted man, who recently accepted the Christian faith, is
+also planning for a girls’ school, a day nursery, and a hospital in the
+mill district. Several years ago he and his wife, also a Christian,
+threw open their beautiful private garden as a playground for street
+children. When remonstrated with by their friends they replied
+smilingly, “We feel it is selfish to enjoy it alone.” The recently
+organized “Mill Owners Association of Shanghai” it is expected will
+pave the way for concerted action in relation to needed reforms.
+
+Although cotton is an exotic in China proper, silk is a native product.
+More than four thousand years ago, in the dim, semi-prehistoric days,
+China alone of all the countries in the world, understood the art
+of sericulture. Again it was a woman to whom she was indebted, for
+tradition has it that as early as 2600 B.C. the wife of the great
+emperor Hwang-ti experimented with silk-worms and finally discovered
+a way of unwinding the silk from the cocoons much in the same manner
+that it is done now. This was a precious secret and China guarded it
+jealously. But during the fifth century of the Christian era it leaked
+out, as secrets often will, and lo, it was a woman who divulged it,
+which is not as surprising a happening as might be. It fell out that
+the Prince of Khotan in Chinese Turkestan wedded a Chinese princess,
+and when the bride was being conducted to her new home, so the story
+goes, she managed to carry with her, concealed in her headgear and at
+the risk of her life, some seeds of the mulberry plant and eggs of the
+silk-worm. Thus sericulture became known in Central Asia and later in
+Europe. It is an interesting coincidence that while it was Khotan that
+learned the art of silk manufacture from China, it was also Khotan that
+furnished China with her first cotton seeds several centuries later. So
+the debt was paid back in part.
+
+Though China shared with the rest of the world the secret of
+sericulture, yet up to within fifty years she possessed half the
+world’s trade in silk. Then Japan outstripped her in the race and now
+leads in silk production and export. It is generally admitted that this
+would not have happened had the Chinese Government realized the value
+of the silk industry sufficiently to foster it, abolish undue taxation,
+and introduce scientific methods of sericulture. As it is, under
+favouring conditions she may regain what she has lost, for the finest
+cocoons are found in China, with a tenacity far beyond that of any
+others. While there is not a province where silk-worms are not raised,
+broadly speaking two-thirds of the silk produced in China comes from
+the Yangtse valley and the country north of it, and the other third
+from the south. Filature steam mills are of recent date. During long
+centuries it was on crude hand reels that the delicate thread was spun,
+and equally crude hand looms wove it into the exquisite fabrics so dear
+to the heart of womankind. Even now there are no silk looms in China
+run by machinery. All the weaving is done on hand looms. Their familiar
+thud, thud is heard everywhere. As the traveller stops to look into one
+of the small, smoke-blackened shops, where half a dozen people it may
+be are busy with their shuttles, he marvels that textiles so rare and
+beautiful can come forth from such an environment. Usually a city is
+celebrated for some one kind of silk, or a province perhaps for two or
+three hundred varieties.
+
+It was not till 1882 that an unsuccessful attempt was made to start
+a steam silk filature mill. Ten years later a few were in operation,
+most of them under Chinese management. As in the case of cotton mills,
+foreign capital was not invested largely in silk filatures till the
+close of the war between China and Japan. By 1901 there were 28 mills
+in Shanghai, the number being about the same to-day. The largest mill
+in this early period employed 90 men, 630 women and 385 children. It
+requires considerably less capital to launch a silk filature mill
+than a cotton mill, but it is a more precarious venture. Cocoons must
+be ordered at the time the eggs are hatched and put in cold storage,
+but it is impossible to foretell what the market will be when they
+are delivered nearly a year afterward. It is most desirable that the
+filature mills be maintained, as their silk brings two or three times
+the price of that spun on hand-looms, and the greater part of the gain
+goes in wages to the employees.
+
+Industrial conditions, in some respects, are rather better in the silk
+filatures than in the cotton mills. The mills close down at night, not
+for humanitarian reasons, however, but because the work can not be done
+well after dark. Sundays are usually holidays. In some of the mills
+work continues every other Sunday. Fifteen minutes are allowed in the
+morning for breakfast and an hour at noon for dinner and rest. In at
+least one of the Chinese mills mothers keep their nursing babies with
+them, the tiny things lying all day on the floor at the mother’s feet.
+They seldom cry. It seems as if they knew by instinct that they must
+not. The lesson of patient endurance is learned early in China.
+
+The first work in a silk filature mill is sorting the cocoons, throwing
+out the worthless ones, and separating the perfect from the inferior.
+This is an easy but monotonous task and is given to women. Slipping
+the wound silk off the reels, testing, weighing, and twisting it into
+beautiful shapes for shipment requires more skill, and brings somewhat
+higher wages. Most of this, too, is woman’s work.
+
+The pathos of a silk filature mill centres in the reeling room. Steam
+pipes for supplying boiling water keep it at a high temperature the
+year around, while in the fierce heat of July and August, the place,
+as one foreign manager expressed it, “is a veritable Gehenna.” Only
+when the breeze is not strong enough to break the silken, web-like
+threads can the windows be left open. Down the length of the long
+apartment sit rows of women, and in front of them, with a wire frame
+between, stand rows of little girls. Each child controls a stationary
+copper basin half filled with boiling water. It is her business to
+soften the cocoons by swashing them around in the water, using a small
+reed brush. After the threads are sufficiently loosened, the bunch of
+cocoons is handed over to the woman opposite, who also has in front of
+her a shallower copper basin filled with boiling water. Dexterously she
+picks up a thread from each cocoon and fastens it to the frame. Then
+by working a treadle it is spun out and out and finally passes above
+and back of her, where it is wound onto the reel, which is enclosed
+on three sides by a wooden case to keep it from the dust. Quickly and
+deftly the women splice the almost invisible threads when they break,
+keeping often as many as six spinning at the same time. When at night
+the silk is taken off the reel, any shortness in weight or imperfection
+in the thread means a fine for the one who has wound it. Women and
+children grow very skilful in keeping their hands out of the water, yet
+they are loose-skinned and parboiled, for fingers must of necessity be
+continually dipped in. Then, too, the Chinese women overseers, passing
+constantly up and down the lines, occasionally punish a child’s
+inefficiency, or supposed laziness, by thrusting the little hand into
+the bubbling caldron. The hours are long, from five thirty in the
+morning to five or six at night, and it is not strange if, as the day
+wanes, youthful senses are dulled and energy flags. The children, most
+of them, are such slips of girls and some scarcely more than babies.
+Faces are blanched by the continuous moist heat, and the little slim
+bodies, even in winter, are often wet with perspiration. Robbed of
+their birthright of schooling and play, not the youngest among them
+knows the sweet luxury of laying her tired head on mother’s breast in
+sleep. An American lady living in the vicinity of a silk filature mill
+was aroused morning after morning about half past four o’clock by the
+shrill cries of a child. One day she slipped out on her veranda to
+discover the cause of the trouble, and saw a little girl being dragged
+along the ground by one arm to the mill. Frightened perhaps by the
+sternness of the overseer, or half sick from the confinement, she was
+trying to escape from bondage. But her parents were inexorable, for in
+over-populated, underfed China,
+
+ “‘Children’ must work and women must weep,
+ For there’s little to earn and many to keep.”
+
+One European mill has for its manager a kind-hearted Italian, who says
+he understands sericulture from A to Z, having learned to care for
+silk-worms when a little lad in his native land. He has introduced
+several humane features, one of them being stools for the children to
+sit on while at work, the only mill in the city that has them. Fines
+collected from the employees the management allows him to use in buying
+medicine for the sick, coffins for the dead, and in paying for beds in
+the hospital. “Do the people ever faint in this great heat?” a visitor
+asked. “Oh, yes.” “And drop dead?” “No, they have never done that. If
+we see they are getting too bad we send them home in a ricsha.”
+
+None of the silk from the filature mills is kept in China. It is all
+exported, most of it to Lyons, France, and to New York. Waste silk,
+which is made principally from defective cocoons, is one of the paying
+by-products of the industry. The only waste silk filature mill in China
+is in Shanghai. The silk it turns out is coarse in quality and does not
+keep its lustre but can be utilized in many ways, as for sewing silk,
+and in making cords, tassels, Chinese caps, carpets, and portières.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+A PAGE FROM THE STORY OF PROTESTANT MISSIONS
+
+
+Late in the autumn of 1842 as the setting sun was illumining the
+western sky, a vessel very different from the surrounding Chinese junks
+steamed slowly up the Woosung river toward Shanghai. On board were the
+new British Consul and his suite and the Consul’s interpreter, the
+Rev. Walter H. Medhurst, D.D. But the missionary had other and more
+important business, for with his colleague, William Lockhart, M.D., a
+younger man, he came as the first ambassador of the Great King to the
+Yangtse valley. Eight years before he had called at this port, when
+cruising up and down the coast, and distributed thousands of Testaments
+and tracts among the friendly natives. Indeed Dr. Medhurst was already
+a veteran of twenty-seven years’ service, while Dr. Lockhart had landed
+in Canton in 1839, being the second medical missionary sent to China.
+Both men were commissioned by the historic London Missionary Society,
+which gave to China its first Protestant Missionary, Robert Morrison,
+in 1807.
+
+[Illustration: CHINESE BOY SCOUTS]
+
+While the Consular party was proposing toasts to the greatness
+of the Shanghai to be, the missionaries were thinking hopefully and
+prayerfully of the task awaiting them in proclaiming the Kingdom of
+Christ to this people. For a while, on that memorable day, it was
+impossible to see the city because of the intervening masts on the
+numberless junks lying at anchor, but presently, as the little steamer
+approached the shore, it was found to be thronged with Chinese who had
+gathered to watch and ridicule the strange “fire-wheel ship” of the
+“foreign devils.”
+
+The following weeks sped quickly by, and before the year closed, a
+little chapel and a small hospital had opened their doors inside
+the Chinese city. It is easy enough to state the bald fact, but
+what mountains of difficulty were climbed, what dangers faced and
+discouragements overcome before that much was accomplished, is told
+only in part in the sacredly guarded mission records, yellow and worn
+with age. Happily, ludicrous episodes were not lacking. Dr. Medhurst
+in particular was blessed with a saving sense of humour which eased
+many an otherwise hard jolt on the rough road he and his colleague were
+obliged to travel.
+
+As time passed other missionaries were sent out from home to reinforce
+the pioneers, and women’s voices and children’s sweet laughter made
+homelike the mission premises. Then suddenly a war-cloud appeared in
+the sky, and almost before its presence was realized, it had burst and
+the T’aiping Rebellion was raging in all its fury. Grave dangers now
+threatened the little foreign community, officials and merchants as
+well as missionaries. It was during this period that a fair-haired,
+handsome youth made his appearance in Shanghai, and although not a
+member of the London Mission sought a home among their missionaries. He
+was Hudson Taylor, destined to become the founder of the China Inland
+Mission. The story of his early years in China, as told in his recently
+published biography, makes one of the most captivating chapters in
+the history of Shanghai. From it we are interested to learn that this
+sensitive, shrinking young man did not at first adopt from choice the
+Chinese dress and mode of living, afterward a distinguishing mark of
+China Inland Missionaries, but because he was driven to it through
+scarcity of funds.
+
+The present headquarters of the China Inland Mission are conveniently
+located in the down-town district. They include business offices,
+a rest house for travelling missionaries, and a chapel where both
+Chinese and English services are held, although the Mission, as it has
+done from the beginning, confines its actual work to the interior.
+The buildings form a square around a spacious, secluded compound
+that seems as far apart from the turmoil of the street as if it were
+miles distant. In the spring of 1915, at the Jubilee celebration of
+the founding of the Mission, tea was served on the beautiful lawn,
+and following it a large company of friends gathered in the chapel
+to listen to the reading of reports and papers of thrilling interest
+relating to the experiences of the past fifty years.
+
+While the T’aiping Rebellion was still in full swing, the London
+missionaries performed a courageous act. Having succeeded in purchasing
+a large tract of land at some distance from the foreign Settlement
+and the Chinese City, they at once effected the transfer of their
+work and took possession of the new property. When the British
+Consul learned of it he shook his head dubiously, affirming frankly
+that if the missionaries were rash enough to risk living in that
+exposed place, he could not undertake to furnish them protection. But
+unaffrighted they stayed on, and presently a hospital, a chapel, and a
+few dwelling houses arose amidst the rice fields. Events proved that
+the missionaries builded better than they knew, for the plot that at
+first seemed so far away and out of reach of the very people the work
+was intended to benefit is now in the heart of one of the most thickly
+populated Chinese districts of the International Settlement.
+
+The mission chapel bears the marks of age and is shortly to be torn
+down and replaced by a more commodious one, but will the tablets
+back of the chancel, to the memory of the brave missionary veterans,
+ever seem quite so appropriate on any other walls? At the Christian
+Endeavour meeting held in the chapel every Wednesday afternoon may
+usually be seen a little white-haired lady of over ninety, the oldest
+Chinese Christian in Shanghai and some say in all China. Though
+exceedingly deaf, Mrs. Lai Sun’s memory is unimpaired and her mind as
+alert as a woman half her age. She delights to see her friends and
+entertain them with stories of her romantic life, how in her earlier
+years she visited America with her parents, dined at the White House
+as the guest of President and Mrs. Grant and was made much of at a time
+when Chinese women were a rarity in the Occident. But her favourite
+topic is her student days in Miss Aldersey’s school in Ningpo, Miss
+Aldersey being not only the first single woman to enter China as a
+missionary, in 1843, but the first one to open a school for Chinese
+girls. Mrs. Lai Sun is without question the only living pupil of that
+far-famed school.
+
+The chapel built so long ago by Dr. Medhurst in the Chinese city is
+still standing, sandwiched in between a book shop on one side and
+a shop selling funeral supplies on the other. Its years exceed the
+allotted age of man, and if bricks could speak, many a tale this pile
+could relate of fires and floods, famines and pestilence, riots and
+rebellions. While destruction was rife and changes taking place all
+around, the little chapel, within whose walls was proclaimed daily
+the Evangel of Peace, remained intact as if it possessed a charmed
+existence.
+
+It is rather singular that to-day there is not a single hospital
+foreign or Chinese, in the populous Chinese City. The small plant
+started so long ago by Dr. Medhurst was transferred, in 1861, with the
+other activities of the Mission, to the new site, now known as Shantung
+Road, where a great medical work is carried on. Accident cases are
+especially numerous in the roomy wards, where an empty bed is rarely
+seen, and hundreds attend the daily clinic.
+
+In the centre of another crowded district is beautiful St. Elizabeth’s
+Hospital of the American Episcopal Mission. This hospital, which is
+for women only, receives patients from the Municipal Prison, and when
+one looks about the cheerful, sunny wards, it ceases to be a wonder
+that the poor creatures often make a feint of illness in order to be
+kept on a little longer where they are so happy and comfortable.
+
+One other woman’s hospital is located near the western entrance to
+the Chinese City. Thirty-five years ago a large-hearted American,
+Margaret Williamson, had a vision of helpless sufferers in China,
+and in dying left money for a hospital which bears her name. While
+waiting for the building to be completed, the doctor and trained nurse
+just out from home opened a dispensary in a small rented house in the
+disease-infected Chinese city. They toiled on day after day through all
+the unaccustomed heat of July and August. “Some friend ought to have
+warned us of the danger of it,” one of them, years afterward, smilingly
+told a caller. “How did the Chinese feel about the hospital? Were the
+women afraid to go to it?” “Oh, not at all. We were always full. In
+fact it was necessary to keep enlarging our borders as fast as we could
+get the money.” The sweet face in its frame of snow-white hair broke
+into a reminiscent smile, and the listener knew something interesting
+was coming. “We used to have most amusing clinic experiences. Patients
+many times would persist in taking internally what was meant for
+external application. It was necessary to be careful and give nothing
+strong enough to do any great harm either way. Then, too, the women
+would get so excited and jealous over the medicines. If one patient
+received something and another did not, the latter felt unhappy. It did
+no good to explain to her that she wasn’t in need of that particular
+medicine. She wanted it just the same. I remember one time the doctor
+had ordered a large dose of castor oil for a patient. Her companion
+saw it and begged for some too. She was so persistent that I finally
+asked the doctor if I should give it to her. “Yes, do,” said she. “It
+can’t hurt her and the experience may do her good.” The clinics are
+very large. On a winter’s afternoon an unexpected visitor found one
+young doctor in sole charge, her colleague having been taken sick.
+She that day treated two hundred and forty-seven dispensary patients
+besides caring for the wards and performing three difficult operations.
+“I shall not stay a minute,” declared the caller when the last woman
+had departed, “you must rest.” “Oh, do sit down a little while. I need
+to get my mind off my work,” urged the doctor. Just then the friend,
+noticing the exhausted look on the wan face before her, remarked
+impulsively, “I wish I could take you home with me and put you to
+bed and give you a little mothering.” “Don’t speak to me like that,”
+cried the younger woman almost sharply, while a few hot tears forced
+themselves into her eyes. “I shall break down and cry if you do, and I
+mustn’t; I mustn’t!” This hospital belongs to that pioneer in the field
+of woman’s work for women, The Woman’s Union Missionary Society of
+America.
+
+The glory of the Presbyterian Mission is its Press. In 1843, that
+year of momentous happenings in the Far East, it was first set up in
+Macao, a Portuguese settlement near Canton and of chief interest to
+Protestants because on its tropical shores Robert Morrison, the first
+Protestant missionary to China, was laid to rest. Soon afterward the
+Press was brought north to Ningpo, and in 1860 was moved to Shanghai.
+With it came Mr. Gamble, whose name was William and not John, but if
+ever a man was “sent of God” to do an all-important work, he was one.
+A native of Ireland, from an old Protestant family that had the honour
+of giving many ministers to the Presbyterian Church, he migrated to
+America in his youth and got his training as a printer in a publishing
+house in Philadelphia and later in the Bible House, New York. Mr.
+Gamble spent only eleven years in China and nine of them in Shanghai,
+but in that brief period he accomplished a monumental work. With a
+prophet’s eye he foresaw the future development of the city when few
+believed in it and urged the removal of the Press to this metropolitan
+centre, influenced “by his desire to plant the Gospel in the heart
+of China with the minimum of effort and the maximum of results.” His
+energy, industry, and inventive genius gave a great impulse to printing
+throughout the country, not only in connection with the mission press
+but the secular press as well. This was so universally recognized that
+when he died years later in America every one realized the truth of
+the eulogy pronounced at his funeral: “For a century to come not a
+Bible, Christian or scientific book in China or Japan but will bear the
+impress of Mr. Gamble’s hand.”
+
+The Presbyterian Press justly claims to be the oldest in China,
+although the London Mission Press, established by Robert Morrison in
+Malacca in 1818, was removed to Hongkong, at very nearly the same
+time. The Presbyterian Press was the first to introduce movable
+Chinese type in China, and for a long time remained the sole source
+of supply. During the fifty-seven years since the plant was set up in
+Shanghai it has changed homes several times and is now housed in new,
+completely equipped quarters which would have delighted the aspiring
+soul of William Gamble. A dozen power presses are kept busy from Monday
+morning till Saturday night turning out vast quantities of Christian
+literature, veritable “Leaves of Healing,” which find their way the
+year through to the remotest corners of this needy, sin-cursed land and
+whose uplifting influence far outreaches all human reckoning.
+
+Among the Chinese publications which are working a quiet transformation
+in the lives of the people are two popular monthly magazines, “The
+Woman’s Messenger” and “Happy Childhood.” The very artistic cover of a
+recent Christmas number of “Happy Childhood” was designed by one of the
+pupils in a Girls’ Baptist Mission Boarding School.
+
+The spiritual interests of the large force of Press employees are
+not forgotten. In two chapels Sunday and week-day services are held.
+There are day schools and a kindergarten for the children of the men,
+the wife of one of the Presbyterian missionaries devoting much of her
+time to evangelistic work among the women. Every morning prayers
+are conducted by the missionary in charge, attended by most of the
+employees, at least half of whom are Christians. Many give touching
+and convincing proof of the sincerity of their profession. The case of
+Elder Loo is an illustration and refutes the oft-repeated assertion
+that no Chinese can handle money without some of it clinging to his
+palm. For twenty years all the Press’s money excepting checks passed
+through Mr. Loo’s hands. He died one night very suddenly. It was
+with considerable anxiety that the foreign manager the next morning
+opened the accountant’s safe and examined his books, but they balanced
+exactly. In a corner of the safe were found stowed away several bad
+dollars that had been palmed off on Mr. Loo, but which he had quietly
+made good out of his own meagre funds.
+
+“Where did you receive your education?” The question was asked of a
+bright young Chinese matron into whose pretty home a foreign friend had
+just been introduced. “In McTyeire School,” came the smiling answer.
+This reply, in response to similar inquiries, is given so often in
+Shanghai that a newcomer, unfamiliar with local mission work, is sure
+soon to ask another question: “What and where, pray, is this famous
+institution?” Every resident knows, or nearly every one. Those who do
+not are half ashamed to confess it, for to be uninformed about McTyeire
+Girls’ School is to be ignorant indeed. Its capacious buildings are
+kept full, too full, even though the younger pupils have just been
+transferred to rented Chinese houses across the road, the Assembly
+Hall converted into dormitories and every available foot of space
+utilized to the best advantage.[2] Pleasant recitation rooms open
+from either side of the school corridors and a peep inside shows well
+organized classes hard at work, in algebra, drawing, physics, sewing,
+domestic science. What an immaculate place is the domestic science
+kitchen, with snowy tables, muslin window curtains, shining stove, and
+artistically arranged enamel pots and pans! No wonder the cooking class
+covers itself with laurels. The missionary in charge modestly disclaims
+the credit, but adds, “I do mean that my girls shall learn two
+important lessons, to keep themselves tidy and to clean up when their
+work is done,” items that it would do no harm to emphasize in other
+countries than China. The music rooms are upstairs. An invitation to a
+musicale is something to rejoice over. Last year one of the graduates
+in music gave a recital, all her own, and acquitted herself most
+creditably. Two years ago Commencement week opened with Baccalaureate
+Sunday, a distinct innovation in the history of Girls’ Schools in
+China, but a custom other mission schools are beginning to follow.
+
+[2] Since writing the above a splendid piece of property covering
+about fifteen acres, with a three-story brick mansion on it built by
+a wealthy deceased Chinese, has been purchased, and the congestion
+is relieved now that the High School pupils have removed to the new
+quarters.
+
+[Illustration: CORNER STONE OF BOYS’ BUILDING, Y. M. C. A.]
+
+It is doubtful whether any department of work in McTyeire School is
+yielding more abundant fruit than the “Annex,” a school for married
+women and girls too old or backward to enter the regular classes.
+Last term among the many interested pupils was the wife of the
+socialist leader of Shanghai, the mother of five young children. The
+patriarchal system of family life common in China makes it possible
+for a mother to leave her children for lengthy periods, as there are
+usually plenty of women relatives ready to assume the care of them in
+her absence. Any pupil in the Annex ambitious to pursue a complete
+course of study is admitted to the regular school classes as soon as
+she can be prepared for them.
+
+Above the mantel in the parlour of the Missionary Home, adjoining the
+main building, hangs the portrait of a noble-faced woman. It is Laura
+Haygood, the first principal, who “being dead yet speaketh.” She was
+sent to China in 1884 by the Woman’s Board of the Methodist Episcopal
+Church, South, and for eight memorable years prayed and toiled, much of
+the time weighed down by great physical weakness. Then came the glad
+realization of her cherished hopes in the opening of this girls’ school
+named for a bishop of the denomination.
+
+The highest grade of scholarship is the goal, but the building up
+of Christian character and training for service have always had
+first place. “I want to save my people,” sobbed a girl in a burst of
+confidence to her foreign teacher. “As soon as I finish here I mean
+to go as a missionary to my native place and teach and try to save
+that place.” This is the spirit that prevails among the Christians.
+Every week Bible students and teachers go out to hold services for
+the street children in the neighbourhood. Last winter evangelistic
+meetings were held in the school chapel. “I wish you could see how our
+Christian girls work for their unconverted friends,” said one of the
+missionaries. “They have their sweetest and holiest times in their own
+little prayer-meetings, led by themselves. The passionate earnestness
+of their prayers and testimonies would move any heart.”
+
+It was the beautiful month of May and invitations were out for a great
+celebration at St. John’s University of the Protestant Episcopal
+Mission. Early in the afternoon guests began to arrive, for the
+first number on the programme was the military drill, set for two
+o’clock, something no one wanted to miss. Promptly at the hour the
+students in trim uniforms assembled on the parade-ground and lined
+up for inspection. The tactics over, and enthusiastically applauded,
+every one hurried to the Assembly Hall to listen to speeches in
+English and Chinese, and witness the crowning event of the day,
+which was the presentation to the President, Dr. F. L. Hawks Pott,
+for the University, of a generous gift of money from the alumni
+in commemoration of this twenty-fifth anniversary of Dr. Pott’s
+incumbency. An alumni supper followed, and then, as evening shadows
+fell, the spacious grounds were transformed into a sort of fairyland
+by the soft light from countless Chinese lanterns, hung in graceful
+festoons from tree to tree and building to building. Fireworks brought
+to a close a notable anniversary that will not soon be forgotten by the
+people of Shanghai.
+
+St. John’s University and campus, covering forty-nine acres, is
+undeniably the most charmingly picturesque spot in the city. It lies
+five miles out from the centre of the town in the suburb of Jessfield.
+A more ideal location could not have been found, and the wonder is that
+when the larger part of the property was bought as early as 1878, the
+bishop who made the purchase had the foresight to choose so well.
+
+Like most great enterprises, the University had a small beginning and
+developed gradually, through successive stages. The work really started
+back in 1845 with some little day schools for boys, for it must be
+remembered that while the London Mission pioneers were the vanguard
+of the missionaries to enter Shanghai, they were soon reinforced
+from America by the Protestant Episcopalians, the Presbyterians and
+the Southern Baptists. The day schools grew into successful boarding
+schools, chief among them one for older boys,--seventy youths so poor
+that tuition, board, and clothing were furnished them free of charge.
+Soon a call came for an English department and it was added. By and by
+a few ambitious students begged for college work, and finally, in 1906,
+by an act of Congress at Washington, D. C., St. John’s was formally
+incorporated as a University and empowered to grant degrees. Her
+alumni are now privileged to enter institutions in Europe and America
+for post-graduate work without examination, and she has the honour of
+sending more students abroad than any other mission college in China.
+Including all departments the student body numbers over five hundred,
+whose fees make the work in large measure practically self-supporting.
+
+A five-story brick building was opened last year in one of the
+busiest sections of the down-town district, not in itself a singular
+occurrence, but in this case of unusual purport, for it is the
+headquarters of the Chinese Boys’ Branch of the Young Men’s Christian
+Association. This is the only building of its kind in the Far East,
+and it is certain that nowhere in the world is the kind of work it
+stands for more needed than in Shanghai, where the boy problem is one
+of the gravest. Figures are often dry reading, but in this connection
+a few will tell in a nut-shell a story of remarkable progress. The
+Boys’ Branch was started less than three years ago, and now what
+does the first report record? Seven hundred members, five hundred in
+the schools, three hundred voluntary members of Bible classes, one
+hundred regular boarders, two hundred at meals each day, and forty
+scouts, the scoutmaster being one of the Chinese secretaries. In the
+city are altogether no less than five hundred Chinese scouts. The
+organization among the Chinese is quite new but it may be called a
+“howling success,” the boys taking to it like ducks to water, and it is
+doing much for them in numberless ways. The Y.M.C.A. boy scout, who is
+taught reverence toward God, kindness to women, children, the aged, and
+animals, truth, honesty, courage, faithfulness without pay, loyalty and
+obedience to all in authority, and who stands for clean thought, clean
+speech, and clean habits, is bound to grow up into the kind of man
+that China has dire need of to-day. The new Boys’ Building is finely
+equipped from top to bottom and connects with the local headquarters of
+the Y.M.C.A., which fronts on Szechuan Road.
+
+The National offices are likewise in Shanghai but in rented quarters.
+An eligible building site has been secured, and as soon as money is
+a little less scarce the work of construction will begin. The local
+headquarters is a centre of ceaseless activity, with day and evening
+schools offering all kinds of practical courses, gymnasium and swimming
+classes, athletic and reading clubs, “movies,” lectures, socials, Bible
+classes, and evangelistic meetings. A busier hive can not be imagined.
+It was the Y.M.C.A. that led in the Mott and Eddy Evangelistic
+Campaigns, it has inaugurated a health movement in the interest of
+sanitation and the prevention of disease, it has attacked the problem
+of social service which it is stressing by every available means,
+and it brought to China the Olympic Games with their rejuvenating,
+health-giving influences. Through its remarkable scientific lecture
+department it is reaching men that could not be approached in any other
+way. In short, the Association is a “live wire” and a tremendous force
+for good.
+
+The Sunday Service League was organized by the Y.M.C.A. for the
+benefit of the large body of students from abroad who so easily slip
+their moorings and go adrift on their return to China. There is a
+well-attended five o’clock service in English for them on Sunday
+afternoons which is often addressed by notable speakers passing
+through Shanghai. Excellent music is furnished by the Chinese Glee
+Club, composed of both men and women. The Returned Students Club
+was a spontaneous outgrowth of the Sunday Service League. It holds
+occasional socials during the winter in the parlours of one of the
+foreign hotels, where music, conversation, a few simple games, and
+light refreshments make a most enjoyable evening. The gentlemen, all
+of whom wear foreign clothes, represent almost every profession and
+calling. With scarcely an exception the women appear in Chinese dress;
+wherein they show their good taste and good sense, for nothing becomes
+them half so well. Most of them are happy young wives and mothers,
+but there is sure to be a generous sprinkling of unmarried teachers,
+specializing it may be in English, music, elocution, physical training,
+or kindergarten work, with perhaps a doctor or two, a charming company
+in short, such as only Shanghai can bring together.
+
+The Young Women’s Christian Association is a younger organization in
+China than the Young Men’s Christian Association, but it is doing on
+a somewhat smaller scale the same efficient work. The first secretary
+was sent to China in 1903 expressly to labour among the mill hands. It
+was later felt, however, that this plan of campaign was too slow, and
+that to win the upper and middle classes, make Christian leaders of
+them, and then send them out to evangelize the multitudes, would yield
+larger and more lasting fruitage. So this is the course being followed
+now, and the outcome abundantly proves its wisdom. The consummation of
+a long-cherished hope has been realized in the opening of a National
+Normal School in Shanghai for Physical Training. The school is under
+the direction of a foreign secretary of large experience, assisted by
+a Chinese secretary, a graduate of Wellesley College who received her
+professional training in Boston. One result of the interest aroused by
+the work of the Normal School is the recent organization of a Young
+Woman’s Athletic Association, with a charter membership of twenty-six.
+Wonderful indeed!
+
+The school classes are always popular, especially with young married
+women who have been deprived of early school advantages. Besides
+teaching from books there are classes in embroidery, plain sewing,
+stenography, and cooking. Chinese girls are delighted to understand a
+little about foreign cooking, especially if they are the wives of young
+men who have been educated abroad, and it is a proud moment for them
+when they are able to serve their husbands with some of the dishes the
+latter have learned to relish during their residence in the Occident.
+The first class in Scientific Chinese Cooking has just been started,
+with a most gratifying show of interest.
+
+The strongest emphasis is laid on student work not only in mission
+schools, but as fast as opportunity offers, in private and government
+schools as well. Many hundreds are converted and baptized annually
+as a result of the evangelistic meetings conducted by the student
+secretary. Six summer conferences were held last year with a far
+larger attendance, and more encouraging manifestation of genuine
+heart-awakening than was ever known before. The force of secretaries
+for this vast field numbers in all thirty-three, eight Chinese, three
+English, one Australian, one Swedish, and twenty American. The remark
+is often heard regarding the staff, “What unusual young women!” And it
+is true. Deeply and genuinely spiritual, broadly cultured, resourceful,
+of wide vision and keen insight, they are pushing forward with
+unwavering devotion a unique and regenerative work in China that but
+for them would in large measure be left undone.
+
+
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes:
+
+ Italics are shown thus: _sloping_.
+
+ Variations in spelling and hyphenation are retained.
+
+ Perceived typographical errors have been changed.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77783 ***
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+ The Gateway to China | Project Gutenberg
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+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77783 ***</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="cover">
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h1>THE GATEWAY TO CHINA</h1>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f1">
+<img src="images/fig1.jpg" alt="press">
+<p class="caption">MR. BAO ON LEFT, ONE OF THE THREE FOUNDERS<br>
+OF THE COMMERCIAL PRESS, WITH OTHER<br>
+MEMBERS OF THE STAFF</p>
+<p class="caption">(See chapter “<i>A Wizard Publishing House</i>”)</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p class="c sp">
+<span class="xlarge">THE</span></p>
+
+<p class="c sp">
+<span class="xxlarge lsp">GATEWAY TO CHINA</span></p>
+<br>
+
+<p class="c sp large">
+PICTURES OF SHANGHAI</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p class="c less">
+BY</p>
+<br>
+
+<p class="c sp">
+<span class="up">MARY NINDE GAMEWELL</span><br>
+<span class="less">Author of “We Two Alone in Europe”</span></p>
+<br>
+<p class="c">
+<i>ILLUSTRATED</i></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter1">
+<img src="images/fig2.jpg" alt="decoration">
+</div>
+
+<p class="c sp p2">
+<span class="smcap">New York</span> <span class="smcap pad">Chicago</span> <span class="smcap">Toronto</span></p>
+
+<p class="c sp large">
+Fleming H. Revell Company</p>
+
+<p class="c sp">
+<span class="smcap">London <span class="pad">and</span> Edinburgh</span><br>
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="c sp">
+Copyright, 1916, by<br>
+FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY</p>
+
+<p class="sp p2 padl">
+New York: 158 Fifth Avenue<br>
+Chicago: 17 N. Wabash Ave.<br>
+Toronto: 25 Richmond St., W.<br>
+London: 21 Paternoster Square<br>
+Edinburgh: 100 Princes Street
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="c sp p4"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>
+TO MY HUSBAND</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="ph2">PREFACE</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">S</span>HANGHAI is a little world, where all China in
+miniature may be studied at close range. Thither
+drift Chinese from every province in the country, who
+for the most part in the new environment follow their
+age-long customs and cherish their inherited traditions.
+But the city is also remarkable for its rapid and constant
+changes. A member of a local book-firm declared
+not long since, “We have never tried to publish a guide
+to Shanghai because in six months it would be out of
+date.” To an Occidental the chief fascination of this
+busy metropolis lies in the curious commingling of
+things old and new, practices ancient and modern,
+which meet one at every turn. More strikingly than
+any other city in the Far East, Shanghai represents
+the Orient in transition. To catch and portray some
+of these shifting scenes, the following “Pictures”
+have been drawn, with the hope that they may stimulate
+interest in China and awaken a new love and admiration
+for the Chinese people. It need hardly be
+explained that no attempt has been made at a complete
+study of the subjects described. This is particularly
+true of the last chapter, where several phases of
+missionary activity have been touched upon by way of
+illustration, while societies and organizations doing an
+equally valuable work have not been mentioned. The
+history of the Christian Literature Society, for example,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>
+reads like a romance and it is a well-established
+fact that its books had much to do in shaping the radical
+policy of the late Emperor Kuang Hsü and the
+liberals of that period, which eventuated in the dawn
+of progress and a New China. To all friends, Chinese
+and foreign, whose suggestions and criticisms have
+helped make possible this little book, warmest thanks
+are extended.</p>
+
+<p class="r large">
+M. N. G.</p>
+
+<p class="l">
+<span class="smcap">Methodist Episcopal Mission,<br>
+<span class="pad2">Shanghai, China.</span></span>
+</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span></p>
+
+<p class="ph2">CONTENTS</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<table class="larger">
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c1">I.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Evolution of a City</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">13</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c2">II.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Civic Features</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">20</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c3">III.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Street Rambles</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">42</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c4">IV.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Lure of the Shops</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">57</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c5">V.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Housekeeping Problems</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">73</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c6">VI.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Something About Vehicles</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">91</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c7">VII.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Peep into the Schoolroom</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">106</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c8">VIII.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Wizard Publishing House</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">127</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c9">IX.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Chinese City</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">140</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c10">X.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Customs Old and New</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">155</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c11">XI.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Typical Shanghai Wedding</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">172</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c12">XII.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Foreign Philanthropies</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">185</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#c13">XIII.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Chinese Successes in Social Service</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">199</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt"><a href="#c14">XIV.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Romance and Pathos of the<br>
+Mills</span></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">217</td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt"><a href="#c15">XV.</a></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Page from the Story of Protestant<br>
+Missions</span></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">234</td></tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span></p>
+
+<p class="ph2">ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
+</div>
+
+<table>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Mr. Bao on Left, One of the Three Founders<br>
+of the Commercial Press, with Other Members<br>
+of the Staff</td>
+ <td class="tdrb"><a href="#f1"><i>Title</i></a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chinese Policemen Drawn up for Inspection</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f3">20</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Some Shops on Nanking Road</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f5">58</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">High, Black Rickshas Outside the Foreign Settlement&#160;</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f7">92</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Advertising Singer Sewing Machine Products</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f8">106</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Miss Zee’s New School Building. Kindergarten<br>
+in the Rear</td>
+ <td class="tdrb"><a href="#f9">120</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chinese Composing Room</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f10">128</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">The Original Willow Pattern Tea House</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f11">140</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">A Modern Chevalier and His Happy Family</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f12">156</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">The Coffin in a Funeral Procession</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f13">160</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">School Girls in Gymnasium Drill</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f14">168</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Rescued Child Just Brought to the Children’s<br>
+Refuge—Old Men at the Home of the Little<br>
+Sisters of the Poor</td>
+ <td class="tdrb"><a href="#f15">186</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Rescued Kidnapped Children as They Were<br>
+Photographed for Advertisement in the<br>
+Chinese Daily Newspapers</td>
+ <td class="tdrb"><a href="#f16">200</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">On the Way to the Mill</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f17">218</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chinese Boy Scouts</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f18">234</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Corner Stone of Boys’ Building, Y. M. C. A.</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#f19">244</a></td></tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c1">I</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">EVOLUTION OF A CITY</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">F</span>ROM time immemorial the Yangtsekiang has
+deposited at its mouth quantities of silt borne
+downward from the far West on its mighty
+yellow tide. Little by little, water gave place to mud
+flats, and mud flats to green fields. On this alluvium
+a handful of fisher-folk settled a thousand or so years
+ago, and from their straggling village gradually evolved
+the Shanghai of today. Shanghai means “Mart on
+the Sea,” but the city is now sixty miles inland. The
+Whangpoo River, a branch of the Yangtse, that flows
+past it, has during the past fifty years narrowed one-third,
+and only by constant dredging is the channel
+kept open.</p>
+
+<p>For many years the obscure fishing-station gave no
+promise of its future greatness; but all things come
+to them that wait, and Shanghai’s prosperity began
+when an official in charge of shipping and customs
+was stationed there in 1075. Five hundred years later,
+the place had blossomed out into a kind of Oriental
+Athens, celebrated for its musicians, poets, prose
+writers, and statesmen. It gave birth, also, to women
+of repute, praised far and wide as models of virtue
+and filial piety. The city, like human beings, had its
+vicissitudes. Again and again, it was infested by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
+Chinese and Japanese pirates, swept by typhoons, inundated
+by torrential rains. Although in the latitude
+of Savannah, Georgia, one piercingly cold winter it was
+almost buried under snow, the river covered with ice,
+and men and animals frozen to death.</p>
+
+<p>At the beginning of the nineteenth century Shanghai’s
+population was estimated at over half a million,
+and her star was in the ascendant. A forest of masts
+from a thousand quaint junks, each gaily painted to
+represent a fish, with staring eyes—for how, say
+Chinese mariners, can a ship see where to go without
+eyes?—thronged the anchorage. Shanghai was the
+busy seaport for the central provinces reached by the
+Yangtse and for points up and down the coast. Long
+before ever a foreigner settled within her borders her
+commercial possibilities had been largely realized and
+her position as “Queen of the Sea” assured.</p>
+
+<p>In 1842 occurred the great epoch in her history,
+when with four other cities she was forced by Great
+Britain to throw open her gates as a treaty port. The
+first Occidentals to reside within the city were the
+British Consul and his suite. The most pressing business
+that confronted the resident British was to secure
+land for a permanent foreign settlement. They soon
+discovered that it was one thing to select the site but
+quite another to get it. The territory chosen lay to
+the north and west of the Chinese City and for the
+most part consisted of cultivated fields, dotted here and
+yonder with a village, and always and everywhere
+graves, rising in pyramidal grass-grown mounds. As
+usual, the chief difficulty was over the graves, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
+the purchasers agreed should remain undisturbed.
+When finally the British were in complete possession
+of the land, they decided the struggle had been even
+more severe and nerve-racking than the capture of the
+City. The French followed close on the heels of the
+British, demanding from the Chinese a concession of
+their own, something that the Americans a little later,
+with less friction and noise, simply quietly appropriated.</p>
+
+<p>In 1848, five years after the opening of the Settlement,
+it is recorded that the foreign population numbered
+over one hundred, including a few women.
+How imagination takes wings to itself and pictures
+the conditions under which the community lived at that
+time! There were no hill resorts to flee to for a
+refreshing breeze in summer, no electric fans to temper
+the heat, no ice-cooled drinks, no screens to
+shut out the flies and mosquitoes. A stroll on the
+street was robbed of its pleasure by lack of sanitation,
+and a ramble even in the near suburbs almost unendurable
+because of the excrement used on the fields as
+a fertilizer. Cholera, plague, and other Oriental
+diseases waxed rampant, and in the first foreign cemetery
+many a tiny mound watered with tears wrung from
+aching hearts, told an eloquent story of young lives
+sacrificed to make possible the Shanghai of to-day.</p>
+
+<p>An outstanding event in the history of Shanghai was
+the investment of the city in the early 60’s by the
+T’aiping rebels, those fanatical hordes that for fourteen
+years kept the country in a ferment, and well-nigh
+overthrew the Manchu dynasty. As the excited<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>
+rebels advanced from the west the populace around
+fled before them to Shanghai. In the original Land
+Regulations drawn up by the foreigners Chinese were
+forbidden to reside in the Settlement. The panic-stricken
+refugees, however, could not be restrained.
+They camped first on the outskirts, but soon afterward
+pushed in and overran the Settlement without let or
+hindrance. Shacks were built to house them. They
+went up by the hundreds, like mushrooms, in a night,
+and real estate speculators reaped a rich harvest, for
+often the refugees were people of wealth and paid handsome
+rentals. Many of these same speculators, who,
+carried away by their good fortune, continued to build
+at a mad rate, suffered heavy losses, and some even
+bankruptcy, when at the close of the Rebellion the
+crowds began emptying out as fast as they had poured
+in. One reason for the wholesale exodus of the Chinese
+was their dislike of the sanitary regulations at that time
+in force in the Settlement, and they were in great fear
+lest the foreigners might gain sufficient control over the
+Chinese officials to put the same hated rules into operation
+in the interior cities. Though so many refugees
+returned to their homes just as soon as it was
+safe to do so, large numbers remained, enjoying the
+protection offered them in the Settlement. Efforts were
+made from time to time to eject them, but without
+avail, while others gradually drifted into this desirable
+haven. Thus began what Shanghai has ever since continued
+to be, an asylum for the lawless from all parts
+of China. The class of respectable unfortunates is
+also numerous. A Chinese “Who’s Who” for Shanghai,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
+if accurately compiled, would astonish the
+reader with its list of half-forgotten, erstwhile famous
+personages, deposed officials, bankrupt aristocrats, antiquated
+scholars, men who figured prominently in the
+affairs of the world, but, having lost “face,” favor, and
+fortune, find the cosmopolitan metropolis a safe retreat
+in which to end their days.</p>
+
+<p>“First things” always possess a peculiar interest,
+and of these Shanghai can lay claim to her full share.
+The first railroad ever laid in China ran between Shanghai
+and the forts at Woosung, twelve miles distant,
+where the Whangpoo River joins the Yangtse. The
+two men sent out to survey the line had a hard time
+of it and one of them was nearly killed by the infuriated
+people, who declared he should not desecrate
+the graves of their ancestors that lay in the path of
+the proposed road. This line was completed in 1876,
+but it was destined to a short existence. The stealing
+of window-glass and the blue silk window curtains by
+Chinese passengers, unable to comprehend their utility
+except as a means to fill their pockets with coveted cash,
+was a small matter. The road roused the deep-seated
+resentment of all classes, and from the first was doomed.
+The grand finalé came when a group of Shanghai officials
+perfunctorily inspected the entire line from their
+sedan-chairs, scorning to stoop to the indignity of riding
+on the train, and gravely pronounced it a menace.
+Soon after this the rails were tom up and it was long
+before others were laid in their places. But the world
+moved even under the reign of the Manchus, and before
+their sun had set the shriek of the locomotive was heard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>
+many times every day between Shanghai and Woosung,
+while in the “most pro-foreign city in the world”
+sedan-chairs are almost as great a novelty as trains were
+formerly.</p>
+
+<p>It seems strange that it should have been during the
+stressful period of the T’aiping Rebellion that one of
+the greatest boons China ever fell heir to was conferred
+on the distracted nation. That was the inauguration
+in Shanghai of the Imperial Maritime Customs, called
+by one writer “the most telling Western leaven ever
+introduced into China.” The story of the Customs
+service under the Chinese is one long, tiresome record
+of failure, graft, and loss, and it was not till 1854,
+when the management was assumed by foreigners,
+whose probity became at once the wonder and delight
+of the natives, that a change was effected. Guided
+through half a century by the master hand of Sir Robert
+Hart, to whom must also be given much of the credit
+of the National Chinese Postal System established during
+his incumbency, the work has gone on growing
+steadily and yielding an increasing revenue. It is
+eminently fitting that a statue of Sir Robert in characteristic
+pose, should recently have been unveiled in
+the Bund Park close by the Custom House.</p>
+
+<p>Shanghai has not yet reached the zenith of her prosperity.
+The Customs receipts last year were larger
+than ever before. Twenty and more vessels bound for
+as many different ports often leave her docks in a single
+day. Never was there as much building in progress,
+especially of Chinese houses. The Western traveller
+who looks out upon the wide Bund, flanked by handsome<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>
+foreign buildings, with automobiles and carriages
+speeding to and fro, almost wonders whether he is not
+arriving at a European capital instead of a city in
+China. The native population has grown to over a
+million. Of the twenty-one thousand resident foreigners,
+including Japanese and East Indians, about
+five thousand are British and fifteen hundred Americans.
+The city is a political theatre where plots are
+hatched and reforms initiated. It is the national
+headquarters of missionary work, the chief seat of
+commerce, the home of progress, in short the nerve-centre
+of China whose influence reaches out to the remotest
+corners of the land. Shanghai faces problems
+and dangers peculiar to the Orient, but her future is
+bright with the promise of boundless development.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c2">II</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">CIVIC FEATURES</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">“T</span>HE quaintest little republic in the world”
+is what Shanghai is often called. Certainly
+there is no city like it in China. Within
+its present limits are peoples from many countries,
+eighteen having consular representation, and all living,
+in the main, amicably together under a polyglot governing
+body whose members are elected by popular vote.
+The working out of the present system of autonomy
+was a difficult task. The city fathers long ago fought
+their way through more than one bitter controversy, for
+there were many minds as well as many nationalities.
+The Land and Municipal Regulations now in use are
+practically the same as those adopted back in 1869.
+Ten years after Shanghai became a treaty port the
+French withdrew from the union and set up a government
+of their own. The others formed themselves into
+the “International Settlement,” latterly known as the
+“Model Settlement.” Truth compels the admission,
+however, that it is not in all respects as worthy a
+“model” as its wellwishers would like to see it. Still
+it has admirable features, and as self-respecting a metropolis
+as Hongkong was urged by one of her citizens
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>in a recent appeal to wake up and emulate the example
+of stirring, progressive Shanghai.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f3">
+<img src="images/fig3.jpg" alt="police">
+<p class="caption">CHINESE POLICEMEN DRAWN UP FOR INSPECTION</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The centre around which everything political revolves
+is the Municipal Council. The consuls of the International
+Settlement each spring call a meeting of the
+rate-payers or electors. Any foreigner who owns or
+rents property of a fixed value possesses the right of
+franchise. The rate-payers elect the members of the
+Municipal Council, and that done they retire from the
+public gaze till the following year, unless convened for
+special business. The Council holds weekly sessions.
+Its nine members are unsalaried business men. Chinese
+are not eligible to membership, but Japanese are,
+though as a matter of fact there never had been a Japanese
+member, greatly to this people’s displeasure, until
+a year ago, when one succeeded in getting elected. Judicial
+authority is vested in the consuls. Each consul
+arbitrates for his own nationals except in the cases of
+the three countries having fully organized law courts
+with resident judges. These are England, America,
+and Germany. The English court was established years
+ago; the American held its first session in 1907. The
+Chinese are extremely sore on the subject of extraterritoriality.
+That it does not exist in Japan only adds
+to their grief and mortification. Since the New Law
+Codes have been framed the nation is more insistent
+than ever that this thorn in its flesh shall be removed
+and foreign courts abolished. But the new laws are
+not widely operative, and until the old methods of
+bribery and torture are forever relegated to the past
+the Treaty Powers will continue to claim exclusive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
+rights over their subjects, and the subjects to demand
+protection.</p>
+
+<p>A unique institution peculiar to Shanghai, indeed,
+as some one has called it, “the most unique institution
+ever dedicated to justice,” is the Mixed Court. In
+the early days, when Chinese were made prisoners in
+the International Settlement, they were turned over to
+the Chinese City officials for trial and punishment, but
+justice was rare, and cruel or unduly lenient treatment
+the rule. To protect the Chinese, and insure fair dealing
+in those cases in which foreigners were involved,
+as well as to try the cases of foreigners having no consular
+representation, the Mixed Court was established
+in 1865. It has not proved a wholly satisfactory solution
+of the difficulty, for the law in force is the Chinese
+law, and the foreign assessor, an Englishman, American,
+or German, according to the day of the week, who
+occupies a seat on the judicial bench beside the Chinese
+judge, ranks as little more than a figurehead, acting
+merely in an advisory capacity. Practically though,
+it must be said, and this is particularly true since 1911,
+he is coming to be the real power behind the throne,
+and to exercise pretty much of a controlling influence.
+At the time of the revolution the management of the
+Mixed Court passed from the hands of the Chinese
+to the control of the Municipal Council. The change
+was effected quietly, so that while the Chinese were well
+aware of what was going on they could appear not to
+know, and thus save their “face.” If only “face”
+can be preserved facts are of small moment.</p>
+
+<p>A morning spent in visiting the Mixed Court<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>
+is to most people an experience of absorbing interest,
+as it throws innumerable side-lights on
+Chinese life and character. At half-past nine
+each morning, the hour of opening court, the
+foreign assessor and the Chinese judge walk in
+and take their seats, each flanked by his interpreters and
+clerks of solemn mein. The witnesses, Chinese and
+foreign, assemble on opposite sides of the room, the
+prisoners, most of them poor forlorn specimens of humanity,
+file into the docket closely guarded by Sikh
+and Chinese policemen, with an English sergeant-at-arms
+on duty near by, while in the hall, around the
+door and pressing as far inside as they dare, gathers
+the curious, motley crowd of onlookers, many of them
+relatives and friends of the prisoners, but stolidly immobile
+during all the proceedings. Is there another
+place in the world where such a variety of cases is
+heard as at the Shanghai Mixed Court, cases civil and
+criminal, tragic, pathetic and comic? Some are intricate
+enough to tax the wisdom of a Solomon, and
+some are simple as a child’s play. An old couple appeared
+one morning to petition for a divorce. Their
+faces wore such a kindly expression, they seemed so
+at peace with mankind in general and each other in
+particular, that the judge was puzzled. “Have you
+quarreled?” he asked. “Oh, no.” “Don’t you live
+happily together?” “We are most happy and that is
+why we are here,” hastily explained the old woman.
+Then the whole story was poured out. An evil omen
+had convinced them that in the future they would
+quarrel frightfully, separate, and die apart of broken<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
+hearts, so in order to avert such a calamity they had
+determined to take time by the forelock and part company
+while they were still good friends. A few words
+of advice and assurance set matters all right, and it
+was not long before the aged lovers, for that is what
+they really were, passed smilingly out of the courtroom,
+hand in hand, to return to their humble home.
+No executions take place in the Settlement. Prisoners
+sentenced to capital punishment are handed over to
+the Chinese authorities, and here again “face” is considered,
+for while the death sentence has actually been
+passed the court in the Chinese City is allowed to assume
+that it has not, and proceed as if the prisoner was
+condemned on its own initiative.</p>
+
+<p>The building occupied by the Mixed Court
+is bounded on the right by the Woman’s Prison
+and on the left by the Debtor’s Prison. Under
+the Chinese regime discipline was practically nil
+and affairs were left largely to run themselves. Inmates
+of the Debtor’s Prison might smoke opium and gamble
+to their heart’s content, provided they could get the
+money, while dancing-girls furnished them entertainment.
+In the woman’s prison conditions were even
+worse. The top floor was set apart as a rendezvous for
+the young children of the prisoners, wretched, neglected
+little ones, exposed to every kind of evil influence.
+Their mothers in the cells below did pretty much as
+they liked. One of their tricks was to thrust their
+hands between the iron rods at the windows, and tear
+away by main force the corrugated iron screen so that
+they could chatter noisily with the people in the street<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>
+below, and by letting down a string draw up food or
+anything else their friends were minded to tie on the
+end. The wardresses (the only man about the place
+is the gatekeeper) were deceitful, faithless, open to
+bribes, in fact little better than the women behind the
+bars.</p>
+
+<p>But marked changes have taken place during the
+past few years. As soon as the foreign municipality
+assumed control, a prerogative by the way likely any
+time to revert to the Chinese, who are considerably
+nettled over their loss of authority, the young children
+were removed from their pernicious environment and
+placed in a Home under the care of a Christian woman.
+The Municipal Council supports this Home. The
+whole staff of wardresses was dismissed and their places
+filled by others who were strictly watched till their
+faithfulness was proved. The filthy building underwent
+a thorough cleaning, repainting, and calcimining.
+Baths, laundries, and doctors’ examining rooms were
+added to the plant and the prisoners required to exercise
+an hour daily in the sunny, cement-paved court,
+which has resulted in a marked improvement in the
+health record. The chief lack now is industrial work
+for the women, who have absolutely no employment except
+scrubbing the corridors and washing their own
+clothes. The sole break in the dull monotony of their
+lives comes when the gentle, sweet-faced missionary
+from the Door of Hope visits the prison with her Chinese
+Bible woman, going from cell to cell to sing, read,
+and pray. Four women are confined in a cell, which is
+fairly well lighted and sufficiently large. The Chinese<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
+beds are entirely devoid of bedding even in the coldest
+weather, the padded garments of the prisoners being
+expected to suffice. Nursing babies up to four or five
+months old are allowed to stay with their mothers.
+Most of the women are convicted for kidnapping, and
+the sentences do not extend at the longest beyond
+eight or ten years.</p>
+
+<p>The Debtor’s Prison is officially known as the
+“House of Detention.” Its prisoners are not chained,
+may walk about freely, smoke, play games provided they
+are not games of chance, and at certain hours each day
+are allowed to see their friends in a small room at one
+side. On a winter’s day, when the windows and door
+of this room are shut, the contracted space packed with
+people, and the air heavy enough with tobacco smoke
+to cut with a knife, it is almost as much as a foreigner’s
+life is worth to take even a hasty peep inside. The
+prisoners provide their own bedding and food, with
+the exception of rice, and on the whole appear to enjoy
+themselves and to be in no hurry for their release,
+though some have hidden away quite enough money to
+pay their debt if they cared to, and others have relatives
+or friends who could easily pay it for them. Recently
+two men were set at liberty by the court on the
+presumption that they were really unable to meet their
+obligation, one after seven years’ imprisonment and the
+other five. The Municipal jail for men is several miles
+away, in a more open part of the city. Its massive,
+gray brick walls shut in between eleven and twelve
+hundred prisoners, all of them Chinese, for foreign
+prisoners are lodged temporarily in small prisons connected<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>
+with their consulates, or, when the consulate has
+no prison, in the British jail. The discipline and upkeep
+of the jail are about perfect. The superintendent
+is a Christian who arranges for regular Sunday services
+for the prisoners, the Young Men’s Christian Association
+having general charge.</p>
+
+<p>Industrial work of various kinds, including tailoring,
+mat weaving, and carpentering, is carried forward
+on a large scale, and a considerable amount of the city’s
+road-paving and repairing is done by the prisoners.
+Short terms in jail are rather welcomed than otherwise
+by many of the men, for they mean to them shelter,
+good food, warm blankets, and a chance to learn a
+trade under the most favourable conditions. Indeed,
+it has come to pass that many habitual offenders are
+in the habit of flocking to Shanghai as soon as the cold
+weather sets in with the express purpose of putting
+up at the jail for the winter. A specific instance occurred
+a while ago when a Chinese walked into one
+of the police stations and cheerfully announced that
+he wanted to be arrested. “My belong velly bad man,”
+he said, “velly bad man.” Not being able to give
+any special reason why he should be arrested at that
+particular time, he was told to go about his business.
+But he insisted. He was “velly bad,” and wanted to
+be arrested, and it was with a look of pained surprise
+that he made his way out of the station. As he walked
+down the street, thinking with dismay of the cold
+weather ahead, a happy inspiration struck him. He
+went in search of a policeman, and having found one,
+proceeded to beat him. He did his work thoroughly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
+was quickly arrested by another policeman, and taken
+to the nearest police station, beaming with satisfaction.
+The problem of his winter’s lodging had been solved.
+A moot question for some time past has been the
+advisability of reviving the practice of flogging with
+the bamboo. Many officials, Chinese as well as foreign,
+contend that this punishment as formerly administered
+by the Mixed Court, was thoroughly humane, and that
+as it has real terror for the Chinese nothing begins
+to be so effective in preventing crime, which has of late
+been greatly on the increase.</p>
+
+<p>Formerly there was no Reformatory, and young boys
+convicted of no worse crime than petty stealing were
+often confined in the same cell with hardened criminals.
+It was the present superintendent who agitated the need
+of a separate building for the boys under sixteen,
+and finally a great three-story warehouse was purchased
+and fitted up for this purpose by the Municipal Council.
+Some of the lads are as young as nine. “The
+longer I live in China and the more I see of its poverty-stricken
+multitudes the less I blame any one for stealing,”
+exclaimed a Y.M.C.A. visitor at the Reformatory.
+The boys do industrial work in the morning and
+in the afternoon study, drill, and play. The fire drill is
+fine, but the military drill is the boys’ delight. Those
+best trained take turns in acting as drill-master. They
+give the orders in English and the company responds
+with a vim. Insubordination is punished by obliging
+the offender to scrub the wooden floors with sand, sometimes
+for a whole day. They are kept beautifully
+white. “You should see the kitchen!” said a frequent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
+caller to a new comer. “It is so clean you could
+eat off the floor!” Several Christian Chinese business
+men in Shanghai have an understanding with the superintendent
+that they will receive a limited number of
+boys sent out from the reformatory, give them employment
+and a chance to begin life anew.</p>
+
+<p>One of the first things that impressed itself on the
+early foreign settlers in Shanghai was the need of an
+adequate police force. In the beginning it was limited
+to a handful of Chinese watchmen under the joint
+jurisdiction of the Chinese and foreigners. An amusing
+story of those days is that the police were
+in the habit of lining up for inspection in their own
+nondescript garments, but wearing foreign military
+caps and carrying in place of rifles closed Chinese
+umbrellas of oiled paper! Now the city is well guarded
+by 230 English policemen, 450 Sikh Indians, and over a
+thousand Chinese. The picturesque red turbans of the
+Sikhs are conspicuous everywhere. These men are
+harsh but efficient preservers of the peace. The Chinese
+are afraid of them. There is one especially tall Sikh
+of whom his foreign superior says, “He is the only
+man that I am absolutely certain will carry out my
+orders in my absence as if I were present.” One of
+his duties is to punish Chinese police delinquents by
+putting them through a severe physical drill half an
+hour long in summer and an hour in winter. “It looks
+easy enough,” a foreign lady remarked, as she watched
+the men, “Why, I exercise harder than that when I
+play tennis.” “Oh no, you don’t bring into action
+every muscle in this way,” smiled the head officer.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
+“These men are glad enough to lie down and rest after
+their stunt is finished. I had one man that fainted,
+but he was abnormal.” What makes this punishment
+especially objectionable to the Chinese is that it is administered
+by a Sikh. If an English officer were
+over them it would not hurt half so much. The work
+of a policeman attracts the Chinese and there is never
+any lack of recruits. The course of training lasts three
+months. Scientific wrestling appeals to the novice
+strongly and he soon acquires real skill. The officers
+have a unique method of putting a stop to fighting
+among the men. The combatants are given boxing
+gloves, forbidden to bite or kick, two favorite forms
+of attack with them, and then made to fight until they
+are thoroughly tired out. One such experience usually
+works a cure for all time.</p>
+
+<p>Chinese barracks are clean and severely plain.
+“We carry on a constant warfare against bedbugs,”
+says the foreign sergeant. “I do not
+allow a hook or nail in the walls, except the bracket
+back of each bed for holding the rifle, and that I
+wouldn’t permit up again, for vermin hide in the corners.”
+Every Saturday the planks on which the men
+sleep are scrubbed with sand and water. The sand soon
+works into the pores of the wood where bugs are apt
+to lodge, so it acts both as a cleanser and an insect
+preventive. When a man goes home to spend a day,
+as he is sometimes allowed to do, the barracks on his
+return must undergo a special cleaning, for he is sure
+to bring back a fresh relay of bugs. The past year
+an innovation has been introduced in furnishing the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>
+Chinese police with rifles, a convincing proof of their
+general faithfulness and the trust reposed in them. They
+are not permitted to take the rifles to their homes, but
+when going off duty leave them at the police stations.</p>
+
+<p>The Sikh recruiting station is on the same grounds
+with the Chinese but in a separate yard. The
+chief embarrassment in connection with the Sikhs is
+their food. They are East Indians and can not eat
+what the Chinese do. Caste rules are inflexible and
+time must be given them to prepare food in their own
+way no matter how greatly the staff is inconvenienced.
+The Sikhs are stern disciplinarians, but in character no
+more dependable than most of the Chinese, nor in some
+cases as much so. A Sikh watchman patrolling an
+outlying district rang one evening the doorbell of a
+foreigner’s house. “It is raining,” he remarked
+blandly. “Can I have a chair and sit on your veranda?”
+It was observed afterward that he frequently
+camped on the veranda when it was <i>not</i> raining. The
+Sikhs are not required to learn Chinese, but they are
+encouraged to do so by being promoted and given
+higher salaries when they can speak it. Chinese is
+demanded of European policemen. They of course constitute
+the backbone of the staff. The Municipal Department
+supports a hospital, one of the cleanest and
+best in the city, for Chinese policemen; it is also used
+for prisoners from the Municipal Jail. Women prisoners
+when sick are sent to a woman’s mission hospital.</p>
+
+<p>In case of riot or other emergency Shanghai would
+not need to rely wholly on the police force, for it has
+a dependable Volunteer Corps, at present 1,300 strong.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
+As long ago as 1853 the Volunteer Corps was organized,
+and ever since the T’aiping Rebellion, when the
+members rendered such valiant service, there has
+been occasion time and again to turn to them
+for help. Their most recent laurels were won during
+the Rebellion in the summer of 1913, when Shanghai
+was the centre of the war zone. To watch the
+Corps at drill or on parade, so many sturdy young
+men among the older ones in the ranks, gives foreign
+residents an exhilarating sense of security, and
+warms their hearts with a glow of honest pride in their
+defenders. Among the many nationalities represented
+in the Volunteer Corps is a strong Chinese contingent,
+and it causes a still further quickening of the pulse
+to learn from the commanding officer that whenever the
+Chinese Volunteers have been called into action their
+efficiency and loyalty have been in the highest degree
+commendable. During the past year a Volunteer Motor
+Car Company was added to the force. It started
+with eighteen private cars and men to run them, but
+in case of need practically all the private as well as
+public cars in the city would be placed at the disposal
+of the Volunteers.</p>
+
+<p>The Shanghai Fire Department dates back to 1866.
+The three chief officers are employees of the Municipal
+Council, but all the members of the four companies are
+volunteers. There are three fire stations and three
+watch towers, besides a one-thousand-gallon fire float
+moored at one of the jetties on the Bund. Three motor
+vehicles are in use and the purpose is to abolish horses
+as rapidly as possible. In a cosmopolitan city like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
+Shanghai, where all sorts of buildings crowd upon one
+another in the densely populated districts, fires are
+constantly breaking out, but the Fire Brigade handles
+them so well that destructive ones are rare.</p>
+
+<p>“Why is it your letters always come to me with a
+two-cent United States stamp on them?” wrote a bright
+American club woman to a friend in Shanghai. Her perplexity
+is not surprising, since even certain government
+departments in Washington have been known to send to
+Shanghai franked envelopes bearing five-cent stamps.
+The independence of the “Little Republic,” albeit on
+Chinese soil, is emphasized by its having six foreign
+postoffices—British, American, German, French, Russian,
+and Japanese. Three countries—Great Britain,
+America, and Germany—have legalized the domestic
+rate of postage to and from Shanghai. But home letters
+forwarded from Shanghai to interior points require
+the usual foreign postage of five cents, and parcels
+from abroad sent inland must be rewrapped, restamped,
+and go through the Chinese postoffice.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> As these pages go to press arrangements are being made for an
+International Parcel Post.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>It is a pity that China failed to improve her
+flood-tide of opportunity in 1878, when she was
+formally invited to join the International Postal
+Union, in the hope that it would encourage her to
+establish a national postoffice. But with a short-sighted
+policy she declined to do so, and it was
+not till September 1st, 1914, that this privilege was
+finally embraced. Though for years a national postoffice
+was urged upon the people and often seemed about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
+to materialize through the efforts of progressive statesmen
+like Li Hung Chang, yet it did not really make
+its appearance till 1896. Up to that time mail was
+distributed from local stations under local control, and
+as means of rapid transit were very few, much of it was
+delivered by couriers. There are still many courier
+routes in the interior where railroads and steamers
+do not penetrate, but the couriers, often on foot, sometimes
+on mule or horseback, waste no time in getting
+over the ground, not infrequently travelling between
+eighty and ninety miles a day, and this in spite of
+unspeakably bad roads, to say nothing of brigands,
+floods, and a few other minor difficulties! Shanghai is
+the largest distributing centre in China, and in the substantial
+red brick Chinese postoffice, just across the
+road from the British postoffice, an enormous business
+is carried on. All heads of departments are foreigners.
+Periodically the Chinese voice a protest, declaring that
+as the Chinese staff has now received sufficient training,
+it is prepared to fill unaided the most responsible positions.
+But sagacious Chinese politicians are loth to release
+the foreigners, realizing that a change at the present
+time would inevitably entail a grave risk. It is
+rather interesting that the newest and handsomest postoffice
+building in Shanghai is the Japanese. There
+are no foreign postmen except Japanese. Chinese postmen
+in neat green livery cover their route on bicycles.
+There are six deliveries a day in the business districts
+and three and four in the residential. One family was
+so disturbed by the postman bringing mail at ten o’clock
+or later at night, and insistently ringing the door-bell<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>
+until it was answered, that they requested him to defer
+delivering the late mail until morning, but he continued
+to call whenever he had letters, evidently impressed that
+the postoffice rules were inflexible and must no more
+be broken than the laws of the Medes and Persians.</p>
+
+<p>Probably the most interesting of any branch of the
+foreign Municipal government is the Health Department.
+Eighteen years ago when the doctor in charge
+settled in Shanghai and started a campaign against
+disease, he was not building on another man’s foundation,
+for nothing like it had ever been attempted. A
+member of the staff has aptly called the Municipal
+laboratory “the brain of the department.” It is certainly
+kept busy in a thousand ways. People from
+all over China, for one thing, turn to it for the Pasteur
+treatment. But its chief work centres about plague prevention.
+Plague is the bane of the Orient, and plague,
+it was discovered in 1908, is transmitted to human beings
+through fleas that carry the poison from infected
+rats. Then to prevent plague, rats must be exterminated,
+no easy matter in a city like Shanghai. The campaign
+began in this way. The city was divided into districts,
+the districts into sub-districts and sub-districts into
+blocks, and a map made of the whole. A raid on
+rats followed. Every one caught, dead or alive, was
+taken to the laboratory and an examination made. A
+black-headed pin was stuck in the map over the spot
+where each plague-infected rat was found. A red
+headed pin on the map indicated a human death from
+plague. In this way it was soon learned what parts
+of the city were specially invaded by the pests. To<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>
+kill the rats, however, amounted to little, for others soon
+appeared to take their places. Something more radical
+needed to be done. After the Municipal Council had
+passed rules calling for the rat-proofing of houses, a
+more difficult task confronted the officers of the Health
+Department in getting the rules enforced. They were
+needed badly enough for foreign houses, but were
+drawn up especially for Chinese dwellings where often
+four and five families are crowded like sardines into
+one small building. At first the Chinese strenuously
+opposed and ridiculed the rules but later came to regard
+them more favorably. The people are terrorized
+at the outbreak of plague, and when a few years ago
+Shanghai was threatened with a bad epidemic, they
+were ready for the time being to submit to anything
+that promised to stamp it out and prevent another visitation.
+The rules demand that there shall be no open
+space underneath the ground floor, and by laying three
+inches of tar chips on six inches of concrete, it is impossible
+for rats to enter the house from below. The
+health officers also urge upon householders, although not
+included in the rules, that walls be made solid and the
+upper story left without a ceiling, showing simply the
+bare rafters. Many old houses as well as new ones are
+treated in this way. Sometimes a whole block of old
+houses is rat-proofed at one time. While the work
+goes on the people turn out of their homes and camp in
+the street in front of them, cooking their meals over
+little charcoal fires, and squatting patiently about till
+they can go back. But education is a slow process and
+opposition still continues. The ideal worked toward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
+is the one already reached in Manila and held up as
+an example, “<i>No hollow spaces whatever accessible
+to rats.</i>” With the most careful economy it costs the
+Health Department two cents to catch each rat, yet
+whenever notified by a foreign or Chinese tenant it is
+prepared to send its employees with traps to rid the
+premises. Stationary garbage receptacles of concrete,
+with spring lids, that are fire and rat proof, have been
+placed in large numbers all over the city. Several
+times a day they are emptied through an opening below
+and the contents carried off in municipal carts. The
+receptacles are liked by the Chinese, who seldom now
+throw their garbage on the ground.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/fig4.jpg" alt="plague">
+<p class="caption sans">DISTRIBUTION OF PLAGUE 1914</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The danger from contagious diseases is not so easily
+controlled. There is no law requiring small-pox, cholera,
+or even plague patients to go to the Chinese Isolation
+Hospital. Moral suasion is the only influence that can
+be brought to bear on them, and it is not always sufficiently
+powerful. But a vigorous campaign in the interest
+of the prevention of disease is continually in progress.
+Every month, and every day of the month, printed
+circulars are scattered broadcast. They are written in
+both English and Chinese, and relate to sanitation, hygiene,
+the danger of promiscuous spitting, of flies and
+mosquitoes, the need of removing stagnant water and
+rat-proofing houses. In the autumn and winter notices
+are posted on electric light and telephone poles calling
+the attention of passers-by to free vaccination for Chinese
+at any one of the sixteen branch offices of the health
+department. Health lectures are given weekly at the
+health offices, and not only that but heed is paid to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
+old proverb: “If the hill will not come to Mahomet,
+Mahomet will go to the hill.” Although the lectures,
+which are of a popular character, usually draw a large,
+attentive crowd, trained Chinese employees lecture in
+schools, tea-shops, and other places where the people
+are wont to gather. They carry around a dinner bell
+which they ring to attract an audience, and they soon
+have it. When the lectures first began the people did
+not understand their intent, and they aroused almost
+fierce opposition. But the Chief of the Department, a
+physician of great tact and urbanity, sent invitations
+to some of the leading business men and officials to
+meet him at a specified time and place when he addressed
+them in person explaining the character of his
+campaign. After that there was no further trouble. A
+large force of coolies is employed to fight mosquitoes.
+They work in pairs in districts assigned to them. Their
+duty is to gather up old tins, bottles, and broken
+crockery, warn residents against leaving about their
+premises tubs, empty flower-pots, and other vessels capable
+of holding rain-water, obliterating shallow pools
+and slushy places by means of scratch drains or filling
+them up with house ashes, and sprinkling kerosene oil
+on stagnant water that can not be drawn off. The
+coolies are inspired to faithfulness by frequent and unannounced
+inspection of their work.</p>
+
+<p>Among the many business houses regularly inspected
+by the Health Department are dairies, laundries, tea,
+fruit, and meat shops, restaurants and bakeries. Licenses
+prohibit in tea-shops the hawking of fresh food
+stuffs on the premises; dairies, bakeries, and laundries<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
+must be calcimined twice a year, no one shall sleep or eat
+in them, nor may they be attached to a dwelling-house.
+In bakeries the spraying of fluid from the mouth on the
+products of the bakery is prohibited, and in laundries
+the same rule applies to the sprinkling of clothes. In
+dairies workers are required to keep their clothes clean
+and wash their hands before milking. Always and
+everywhere spitting is forbidden and also the employment
+of persons with communicable diseases. To suppose
+that these rules are carried out to the letter, would
+be altogether too much to expect of human nature. That
+they act as a powerful deterrent is certainly true. The
+foreign dairies are the best, but one Chinese dairy enjoys
+the enviable reputation of never having been either
+fined or cautioned. The Municipal Slaughter House
+is kept strictly sanitary and cattle and carcasses are
+examined daily. Good meat is stamped with the words
+“Killed Municipal Slaughter House.” Inferior meat
+but free from disease is marked “2nd Quality.” No
+meat for foreign consumption is allowed to be brought
+into the Settlement unless it bears the Municipal stamp.</p>
+
+<p>Tuberculosis is the Chinaman’s Nemesis, and too
+often pursues him from the cradle to the grave. It is
+also frightfully common among the poor Eurasians who
+herd together under lamentable conditions. The only
+remedy for this prevailing malady seems to be to educate,
+educate, educate, and that is being done as thoroughly
+and effectively as possible. The Society of
+King’s Daughters recently did a fine thing. They
+planned a Tuberculosis Exhibit, which was held for
+a week or more in an empty down town store. Much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
+of the exhibit was loaned and set up by the Young
+Men’s Christian Association that is itself carrying on
+a telling campaign against China’s “White Scourge.”
+Maps, charts, pictures, devices of all kinds for arresting
+the attention and teaching a lesson, were arranged
+attractively, but two things in particular produced a
+profound impression. One was a bell that every thirty-seven
+seconds clanged ominously. Over it hung a placard
+announcing in Chinese and English that every
+time the bell tolled some poor victim in China died of
+tuberculosis. The other design was more conspicuously
+placed in one of the large show windows and
+always attracted a crowd of absorbed, silent Chinese.
+The sight that held them spell-bound was a perfect
+model of a Chinese house, out of which stepped a
+Chinaman, who, after walking a few steps, fell into
+a Chinese coffin that instantly disappeared in the earth.
+This happened every eight seconds and each drop of the
+coffin represented a death from tuberculosis somewhere
+in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Before 1898 there was practically no Health Department
+and no health campaign. If progress at times
+seems slow, one has only to look back to realize what
+a marvellous change for the better has been wrought
+in a decade and a half. Perhaps more to the Health
+Department than to any other branch of the Municipal
+Government Shanghai owes its right to be called
+“The Model Settlement.” The group of Central
+Municipal Buildings covering an entire square in the
+heart of the city forms one of the finest plants of the
+kind to be found in the Far East.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c3">III</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">STREET RAMBLES</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap1">“I</span> HAVE lived in China nearly twenty-five years,
+yet I never go on the street without seeing
+something new and interesting,” exclaimed a
+vivacious little missionary doctor to a group of fresh arrivals.
+Her remark was made about Peking, but the
+outdoor life in Shanghai has its own unique charm.</p>
+
+<p>To begin with, in the International Settlement there
+are no “streets” at all, so called; only roads. Some
+of the byways, to be sure, too narrow and short to be
+dignified as roads, go by the name of “lane,” and the
+city boasts a “Broadway,” or, to be exact, “Broadway
+Road.” It is unnecessary to explain that this lies in
+the district originally ceded to the Americans. The
+Shanghai Broadway makes no pretense of emulating in
+appearance or importance its western prototype, though
+quite a brisk trade is carried on in the modest shops
+near its lower end.</p>
+
+<p>The first permanent foreign settlement was along the
+Bund, beginning with the site occupied by the British
+consular offices and residence. The splendid Bund,
+bounded on one side by sightly bank and club, steamboat
+and insurance buildings, and on the other by the
+Whangpoo River, is the city’s pride and glory. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
+is hard to realize that this wide, white road, humming
+with life and swept by costly automobiles, was once
+nothing but a well-trodden tow-path bordering a marsh.
+Away to the south, across what until recently was an
+ill-smelling creek but is now being rapidly metamorphosed
+into a handsome boulevard, begins the French
+Bund, with its wharves and warehouses, and where it
+ends the Chinese Bund starts.</p>
+
+<p>The characteristic feature of the Chinese Bund is its
+boat population. For more than half a mile little boats
+called sampans, protected by a low arched covering of
+bamboo mats, line the shore and extend well out into the
+river. Each tiny sampan swarms with life as if it
+were an ant-hill. The occupants are permanent householders
+and their habitations are anchored. Many of
+them were originally famine refugees from the north.
+Most of the men earn a living as wharf coolies. The
+wives add a little to the income by gathering rags
+to make into shoe soles and by patching and darning
+old garments for coolies without families who pay a
+few cash in return. Planks set on stakes serve as
+footpaths to connect the boats with the shore, and little
+toddlers run about on the narrowest of them at will,
+yet rarely tumble into the water or soft mud below.
+Births, marriages, and funerals lend variety to the life
+of the boat people. Two or three empty coffins usually
+stand about on the wharf ready for an emergency,
+and are meanwhile useful as benches, especially for
+the women when they sew.</p>
+
+<p>The International Bund on its water side is unobstructed
+with buildings, except at the Customs jetty,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>
+and is laid out in grass plots which gradually widen
+near the Garden Bridge into the Public Gardens. This
+charming little park in the heart of the city, with its
+lawns, flowers, shade trees, and a band-stand where the
+celebrated Municipal Band plays in summer, is a favorite
+resting place for weary pedestrians and a rendezvous
+for parents and nurses with young children.
+Chinese are not admitted to the Gardens, except nurses
+with foreign children, unless dressed in foreign clothes
+or accompanied by a foreigner. This is to keep the
+grounds from being overrun by the coolie class. The
+Customs jetty has witnessed many a stirring scene.
+Trim launches carry outgoing passengers twelve miles
+down the river to the anchored ocean liners beyond the
+“bar” and bring them up the river on arrival. Its
+sheltering roof has caught the echo of sobs and laughter,
+tremulous good-byes and joyous welcomes.</p>
+
+<p>The river at this point is half a mile wide and presents
+an animated picture. Every variety of craft floats
+on its waters, from the busy sampan to the light-draught
+coasting vessel or man-of-war. Whether seen beneath
+the radiance of the noonday sun, or under a starlit sky,
+reflecting myriads of twinkling lights, it is a never-failing
+delight to resident and visitor alike.</p>
+
+<p>The most picturesque, as well as the leading business
+street in Shanghai is Nanking Road, or as the Chinese
+call it, “The Great Horse Road.” “Great,” however
+qualifies “Road” and not “Horse,” for while numerous
+horses travel over it, most of them are the small
+swift-footed Mongolian ponies, whose clattering little
+hoofs are heard early and late. Indeed the name<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>
+“Great Horse Road” strikes one as rather out of date
+in these days of the ever-present automobile, of which
+there are already more than eight hundred in Shanghai.
+Nanking Road starts at the Bund with the Palace
+Hotel, and following the windings of a former creek,
+ends at the race course. For a short distance west of
+the Bund it is given up mainly to foreign stores, the
+largest and finest in the city. Then the street widens
+and becomes an avenue of high grade Chinese shops,
+many of them with the national flag afloat and all displaying
+aloft the characteristic vertical signboard in
+black and gold. The vista in either direction on a
+bright day is quite dazzling, and especially at night
+when the avenue from end to end is ablaze with electric
+lights. Then crowds of Chinese going to and from
+the theatres and tea-houses, or simply out for a stroll,
+jostle each other on the sidewalks and pour over into
+the road, where they narrowly escape being knocked
+down by rapidly moving vehicles. Conspicuous everywhere
+are the Chinese “Women of the Street,” or
+rather the girls and children, for nearly all are pitifully
+young. Bedecked and bejeweled, they stand sometimes
+in the bright glare, but oftener within the shadow
+of a closed doorway, or at the entrance to a lane, usually
+in groups under the care of an older woman who acts
+as “business agent.” A notable hour on Nanking
+Road is between five and six on Saturday afternoon,
+when it seems as if the whole city turns out to loaf
+or saunter in quest of pleasure. A babel of shrill voices
+rings in the ear, mingled with the shouts of ricsha
+coolies and the tooting of motor cars. It is a gay,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>
+panoramic scene, such as could hardly be duplicated
+anywhere else in China.</p>
+
+<p>A Britisher in Shanghai once made the remark,
+“There are two things an Englishman must have, a
+king and a race-course.” The Shanghai race-course,
+with the Public Recreation Grounds adjoining, covers
+about sixty-six acres in a part of the city where property
+is valued the highest. The land was bought up
+years ago. So much open space in that locality could
+scarcely be secured to-day at any price.</p>
+
+<p>Bubbling Well Road is a synonym for the patrician
+quarter of Shanghai. It is a continuation of Nanking
+Road and takes its name from the effervescent pool
+enclosed by a low cement wall at its terminus. Near
+by Bubbling Well is the foreign cemetery, a shady,
+restful spot. Every thirtieth of May the Americans
+gather within its gates for a national memorial service.
+They represent all creeds and callings, merchant and
+missionary, tourist and adventurer, aliens on a distant
+shore, drawn together by a common love for a common
+flag. The American corps of the Shanghai Volunteers
+and the “Regulars” from the American cruisers
+anchored in the river, march up from the Bund with
+bugle and fife and salute in front of the flower-strewn
+mounds. A few of these graves date back more than
+sixty years.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the handsomest residences on Bubbling Well
+Road are owned by wealthy Chinese. Pleasant afternoons
+and evenings automobiles by the score flash up
+and down this wide, smoothly-paved road and on to
+the delightful suburbs beyond, many of them crowded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>
+to overflowing with merry-making Chinese, women as
+well as men.</p>
+
+<p>In the French Concession, the avenue formerly called
+“Paul Brunat,” after the first French Consul, but since
+the outbreak of the war changed to Avenue Joffre, vies
+with Bubbling Well Road in the elegance of its residences,
+which some prefer because of their more varied
+style of architecture. Being a newer thoroughfare,
+this avenue lacks in a measure the abundant shade trees
+and fine old gardens which are among the chief attractions
+of Bubbling Well Road. It is frequently pointed
+out to strangers as one of the few long roads in
+Shanghai which is also a straight one, running most of
+its entire length of between two and three miles with
+scarcely a jog.</p>
+
+<p>The “tenderloin” district centres about Nanking
+and Foochow Roads. The latter is a narrow street with
+nothing at first sight to arrest the attention, but men
+shake their heads at the mention of it and women avoid
+it if possible. Its mark of distinction is the number
+and character of its tea-houses. They are entered
+directly from the street. A wide staircase leads to the
+restaurant which occupies the second story, the ground
+floor being used for business. Along the front of the
+building and on the side as well, if it happens to be
+on a corner, runs a narrow veranda, a much-sought-for
+gathering place in mild weather, where idlers can
+chat and sip their tea or wine while enjoying a view
+of all that is going on in the street below. The tea-houses,
+often richly furnished with carved black-wood
+from the south, are practically deserted till the latter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>
+part of the afternoon, when a few loungers make their
+appearance. But it is at night that the crowds pour
+in. Then the tables fill up, Chinese musicians rend
+the air with what to foreign ears seems a riot of discord
+and by nine or ten o’clock everything is in full
+swing. In and out among the square tables, filling the
+brilliantly lighted rooms, trail slowly little processions
+of young girls. Nearly all are pretty and very young.
+Clad in silk or satin, adorned with jewelry, their faces
+unnatural with paint and powder, they follow the lead
+of the woman in charge of each group. She stops often
+to draw attention ingratiatingly to her charges and expatiate
+on their good points. When one is chosen she
+leaves her to her fate and passes on to dispose of others.
+Multitudes of victims, innocent of any voluntary wrong,
+having been sold into this slavery when too young to
+resist and not uncommonly in babyhood, are kept up
+hour after hour in the close atmosphere of the tea-room
+awaiting the pleasure of their prospective seducers. Out
+on the street, by ricsha and on foot, women continue
+to hurry to the tea-houses with their living merchandise,
+and still they keep arriving till the night is far advanced
+and business at a stand-still.</p>
+
+<p>Opposite the Public Gardens, where Soochow Creek
+empties into the river, stand three consulates in close
+proximity, with their nation’s flag floating in the breeze
+from the flagpole. They represent Japan, America,
+and Germany, other Consulates occupying roomy mansions
+on Bubbling Well Road. The new Russian Consulate
+that is being built next to the German will soon
+be completed and add considerably to the sightliness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
+of the river front. Across the street on the corner of
+Broadway stands the Astor House, the oldest hostelry
+in Shanghai. This district, once a part of the American
+Concession and now known as “Hongkew,” does not
+bear a very fair reputation, though some of the best
+families still reside within its boundaries. But nothing
+can be said in disparagement of Hongkew Market,
+by far the largest and best in the city. Housekeepers on
+Bubbling Well Road, miles distant, have been known
+on occasion to send their cooks to the Hongkew market
+and bewail the fact that they could not go every day.
+What Covent Garden Market is to London this market
+is to Shanghai. The saying, that one of the quickest
+ways of getting acquainted with a city is to visit its
+markets, is singularly applicable here. An hour or two
+spent in the early morning walking, or edging one’s
+way through the noisy square where all nationalities
+congregate, is worth an entire guide-book of ordinary
+information. The market covers a whole block, has
+cement floors and wooden pillars holding up the tiled
+roof, running water for keeping fresh the fish and vegetables,
+clean stalls, and very decent people in charge
+of them. The women are not as numerous as the men
+but they manage to make their presence felt, and discuss
+prices and provender in shrill voices that rise
+above the din and tumult of the multitudes. Vendors
+without stalls line the sidewalks, squatting close by
+their baskets, and between sales sip tea or gulp down
+hot rice and bean curd with well-worn chop-sticks. The
+money-changers’ tables, protected by a strong net-work
+of wire, dot the place here and there, for “small<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
+money” is always a necessity, the big heavy coppers and
+“cash” being most in evidence.</p>
+
+<p>Yangtsepoo Road, meaning Poplar-Tree-Shore Road,
+is a continuation of Broadway, and as it is chiefly a
+street of mills, stands rather low in the social scale. It
+runs parallel with the river and should have been a
+residential avenue, the most beautiful in Shanghai, but
+somehow the mills got there first and then there was
+no help for it, although the fresh breezes and fine outlook
+are lost on the tired mill hands shut up behind
+brick walls from dawn to dawn.</p>
+
+<p>One of the best known streets in the city and one of
+the longest, although it lays claim to no other distinction,
+is Szechuen Road. It starts at the Chinese city,
+changing at Soochow Creek to North Szechuen Road,
+then to North Szechuen Road Extension, and pursues
+its devious way northward far beyond Hongkew Public
+Park, which by the way is not in Hongkew at all. This
+park of forty-five acres is the largest in Shanghai, and
+a genuine godsend to foreigners remaining in the city
+during the summer. Those living in the neighbourhood
+seek it in the early morning and late afternoon for golf
+and tennis, securing the exercise so necessary to health
+in this Eastern climate, and from far and near people
+resort there in the evening to rest and listen to the band
+play. Along its northern end, outside the limits of
+the International Settlement, Szechuen Road winds
+back and forth like a corkscrew. Some say it follows
+an old buffalo path, but most agree that the road’s meanderings
+are due to the unwillingness of the original
+Chinese property owners to sell their land, since to do<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
+so might affect their “good luck.” Perhaps some old
+graves blocked the way, and albeit no one living cherished
+any sentiment regarding them, still they must
+not be removed for fear of offending the spirits of the
+dead. Or possibly the terrible dragon inhabiting the
+nether regions in this vicinity would resent an innovation
+like a paved road above his domains, and naturally
+it would never do to arouse his ire. Hence the road-builders
+were obliged to let the street follow the line
+it could and not the one of their preference. Apropos
+of the superstitious fear aroused in the minds of the
+common people by the building operations of foreigners,
+the case of the Methodist chapel in the French Concession
+is a good illustration. When this mission church
+was erected many years ago, the Chinese in the neighbourhood
+were thrown into a state of great consternation.
+What would their outraged tutelary deities say
+and do now? How could they escape the afflictions
+that unquestionably would be visited upon them by the
+evil spirits hovering about the foreign worship house?
+But necessity is the mother of invention, and the terrified
+residents at last hit upon a happy ruse to deceive the
+inimical spirits which seemed to be efficacious. Any
+one visiting that corner to-day may see on the roof of
+the house just across the road from the chapel two
+bottles with long necks pointing toward it. The bottles
+represent cannon which, as the most stupid spirit may
+guess, are likely to belch forth fire and destruction the
+moment that so much as a threatening glance is cast
+that way!</p>
+
+<p>Many of the most travelled thoroughfares in Shanghai<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
+are inconveniently narrow, and in addition have
+scarcely any sidewalk, so that it is necessary for pedestrians
+to use the road. Yet the early settlers who laid
+out the Foreign Settlement almost quarrelled among
+themselves over what seemed to some an altogether
+unnecessary width of twenty-five feet allowed for the
+streets. As for sidewalks they were apparently not
+taken into consideration at all. The Municipal Council
+has now decreed that whenever a building that abuts
+on the street is torn down, the new one, at whatever
+sacrifice, must be put back several feet. This law,
+which is strictly enforced, is gradually working a vast
+improvement in the appearance and comfort of the city.
+All the Shanghai streets inside the foreign settlements
+are paved. A large number of them are macadamized,
+though it has been found that in the purely Chinese
+districts, chip paving on a bed of concrete and tar is
+more suitable and economical. Road repairing is constantly
+going on, for as the soil is alluvial, the innumerable
+heavy wheelbarrows and trucks cause rapid deterioration.
+Several of the streets, notably the Bund and
+Nanking Road, have received what promises to be a
+permanent paving, consisting of wood and lithofelt
+blocks on a foundation of concrete. If the public funds
+were sufficient to treat all the streets in the same way it
+would be a boon to the city and a matter of rejoicing
+to the populace.</p>
+
+<p>It is surprising how muddy and disagreeable the
+streets become after only a few hours’ rain, while actual
+floods in the low-lying sections accompany a downpour,
+and this in spite of the excellent sewers. It is equally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
+interesting to note how quickly the streets dry. Almost
+as soon as the rain stops the water-sprinkler is out laying
+the dust. The Municipal street sweepers are always
+busy. They wear for uniform a bright red cotton
+jacket showing below it their faded blue trousers, and a
+wide-brimmed straw hat with a broad red cotton band,
+both band and jacket stamped with three large letters,
+S.M.C. (Shanghai Municipal Council). Each one is
+furnished with a bamboo dustpan and a small reed
+broom with which he ploddingly sweeps up the detritus.
+This débris is not wasted. Indeed in China scarcely
+anything is thrown away, and besides, there is no place
+to throw it, since all the ground is sown with crops.
+The Foreign Municipality utilizes the street sweepings
+either for fertilization or in raising low land. And
+right here the creeks which intersect Shanghai prove
+their usefulness, for the refuse is dumped from zinc-lined
+carts onto native boats and poled along at little
+expense to the place where it is needed. Shanghai could
+hardly do without its tidal creeks, offensive as they
+often are when the tide is out.</p>
+
+<p>Shanghai is nothing if not a city of contrasts. Right
+among the elegant homes, club-houses, and private hotels
+on exclusive Bubbling Well Road squat the insignificant
+shops of “the butcher, the baker, the candlestick
+maker.” In front of its fashionable gardens pass fantastic
+idol processions, displaying as one of their prominent
+devices mammoth paper dragons, of variegated
+colours, whose opening and closing jaws and writhing
+scaly bodies, manipulated with cunning art by men
+carrying them, are gruesomely realistic. In the busiest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
+section of Nanking Road an inconspicuous passageway
+leads a few yards back to a grimy Buddhist temple that
+seems as far apart from the hurrying crowds and bustle
+of street traffic outside as if it were on another planet.
+An occasional worshiper slips in to bow before the
+blackened altar, where red wax candles drip grease and
+incense wafers are forever smouldering. In a side room,
+gloomy as the entrance to Dante’s Inferno, are seated
+tiers of black idols streaked with gilding and paint.
+They are a repulsive sight and one turns with relief to
+the living shaven-headed priests in dull grey gowns
+lolling about the court.</p>
+
+<p>The most modernized Shanghai thoroughfares sometimes
+witness quaint scenes. The following was described
+by an eye-witness: An old Chinese woman,
+with all her winter padding on, tried to cross a down-town
+street through the maze of traffic. Ten yards
+or so from the pavement an electric tram car caught
+her full in the chest and propelled her neatly on to
+the further track, where another car caught her in the
+back. The second car pushed her staggering under the
+feet of a ricsha coolie drawing a Chinese cook home
+from market with a load of vegetables, a ham and two
+live ducks. By the time the old lady had disentangled
+a flapping duck from her elaborate headdress and the
+coolie had wiped the ham clean with his dirty sleeve,
+all the traffic of motor-cars, wheelbarrows, and broughams
+had been held up, and it took some minutes more
+of hard work to get the innocent cause of the trouble
+safely back to the spot from which she started.</p>
+
+<p>There is a law prohibiting beggars from invading<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
+the Foreign Settlement, but the law is lax and beggars—the
+maimed, the halt, and the blind—are all too numerous.
+Parents often mutilate their young children or
+twist their little bodies out of shape by confining them
+in a deep earthen vessel, intended to hold water, in
+order to make them successful beggars. Yet the blind
+eyes can many times see, and the poverty-stricken frequently
+have stowed away snug little sums of money,
+quite sufficient to keep them in comfort the rest of their
+lives. Begging in Shanghai is a profession, like any
+other, and there are beggars’ guilds and beggars’ camps
+where the tribes congregate. To watch them about five
+or six at night, trooping home to their mat sheds, with
+the day’s earnings securely stowed away on their dirty
+persons, is something to be remembered. Formerly
+there was a Beggar King, a regal sort of personage
+in spite of his rags, who with a band of associates made
+laws, adjudged cases, etc., but of late years the organization
+has been less complete. Foreigners as a rule
+do not make a practice of dispensing charity on the
+street. A certain benevolently minded individual, however,
+on arriving in Shanghai decided that it was his
+duty never to refuse to give alms. It soon fell out
+in consequence that he scarcely dared venture away
+from his own dooryard, and life became a burden until
+he had wrought a complete change in his habits.</p>
+
+<p>The majority of the Chinese people in the Foreign
+Settlement live in lanes that lead off at right angles
+from the highways. Only fifteen or twenty feet wide,
+they are not open to vehicle traffic, being paved with
+cement, and are squalid or measurably clean according<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
+to the locality and the community inhabiting them.
+The houses are almost precisely alike, except that some
+have two living rooms, one above the other, and some
+have four, with several very small ones at the back.
+In front is a tiny open court shut in by a cement wall
+reaching to the second story. Through a wide double
+door in this wall, which wall, while it protects, also
+keeps out light and air, the house is entered. The long
+line of connecting tiled roofs terminates at each end
+in the graceful, upturned gables the Chinese love so
+well. Crude handpainting and handcarved woodwork
+usually decorate the poorest of Chinese houses. The
+rental averages about fifteen dollars a month. Looking
+down one of these long alley-ways, that resemble
+good-sized cracks in the main thoroughfares, the effect
+is decidedly sombre, for the grey outside walls conceal
+the house fronts and the little courts, often made homelike
+and attractive with palms and flowering plants.
+It is the human element that saves from utter ugliness
+these populous alleys, which throb with life, but generally
+such a restless, high-pitched, uncontrolled life,
+that the better class of Chinese complain of the noise,
+and most foreigners would find them impossible places
+of residence.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c4">IV</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">THE LURE OF THE SHOPS</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">O</span>NCE upon a time an American missionary came
+to China with ten pairs of boots, enough to
+last till the period of furlough. As he was
+going into the interior it was doubtless a wise provision,
+although leather deteriorates rapidly during the
+“rainy season.” Until quite recently, foreigners living
+away from the coast depended for goods of foreign
+manufacture altogether on the home market. Now
+they are more and more sending to Shanghai for supplies,
+and people in Shanghai seldom send abroad for
+anything. A lover of London once remarked enthusiastically,
+“It is a storehouse of treasures, for what it
+does not possess in the original it has in casts.” So
+one may say of Shanghai, “What it doesn’t import it
+copies.” And the Chinese are wonderful adepts at
+copying. Take a woman’s tailor, for instance. Show
+him a picture in a fashion book (many of them subscribe
+themselves for fashion books), and he will evolve
+something, which if not an exact reproduction, comes
+incredibly near it. Shanghai has four foreign department
+stores, all on Nanking Road, and all under English
+management. They are especially popular with
+the women. Then there are numerous lesser lights, of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
+various nationalities, most of them located on or near
+Nanking Road, though Broadway has its share. An
+Anglo-American Walkover shoe store is a boon, especially
+to resident Yankees. Several Parisian shops display
+behind plate glass, the latest designs in gowns,
+hats and fine lingerie. A German drug store enjoys
+the reputation of being the only place in town where
+Parke, Davis &amp; Co.’s drugs can be bought, while an English
+chemist’s shop is much frequented in summer for
+its ice-cream sodas, a recent innovation in Shanghai.
+Bianchi’s ice-cream is famous, and so are Sullivan’s
+home-made candies. At many a counter may be purchased
+Huyler’s and Cadbury’s chocolates, so carefully
+packed that they are not a whit the worse for their
+journey across the briny deep. Two piano stores do
+a lucrative business keeping pianos in tune, and selling,
+besides Steinways, Chickerings, and other makes,
+instruments made in their factories with special reference
+to withstanding the climate of China. The
+East Indian and Japanese shops always attract, except
+when the Japanese are boycotted by the Chinese because
+of strained relations. Some Japanese began recently
+to fold their tents, like the Arab, and prepare
+to creep quietly away, when confidence was partially
+restored and trade revived.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f5">
+<img src="images/fig5.jpg" alt="shops">
+<p class="caption">SOME SHOPS ON NANKING ROAD</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Living in Shanghai is proverbially high, yet it is
+chiefly so in comparison with other parts of China.
+The market is good the year around; many competent
+judges assert it is the best in the world. Chinese mutton
+and beef sell for eight or nine cents a pound. Pork
+and veal are a trifle more. Game is plentiful. Eggs
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>rarely go above ten cents a dozen. They are considerably
+smaller though than hen’s eggs at home. Fish,
+as might be expected, is abundant. A small variety of
+oyster, that makes excellent stew, is sold in bulk, and a
+large oyster in the shell, measuring often several inches
+across and weighing over a pound, brings ten or twelve
+coppers apiece, about six cents. Nearly every variety
+of fruit and vegetable known to the Western market,
+and many kinds peculiar to the Orient, are found here.
+Bamboo sprouts and water chestnuts are favorites with
+most foreigners as well as the Chinese. Grapefruit is
+imported from San Francisco, but is generally not so
+well liked as the native pumelo, which it resembles.
+Mangoes are shipped from the Philippines, and from
+Japan, Australia, and America come apples, much superior
+to those grown in China. On the other hand
+Chinese oranges, and particularly the loose-skinned,
+Mandarin oranges, are delicious. The fruit most common
+in the autumn is the golden-red persimmon. Cheap
+and luscious, without a suggestion of pucker except
+when under-ripe, the tempting piles, that seem to have
+caught and held the sunshine, are without a rival during
+their season. All canned and bottled goods—vegetables,
+fruits, pickles, olives, syrups, extracts—being imported,
+are expensive, but as they are more or less in
+the line of luxuries most of them may be dispensed
+with if necessary.</p>
+
+<p>There is a canning factory in Shanghai, opened in
+1907 by a Cantonese company. One would expect it to
+be Cantonese, for the southerners are the most wide-awake
+people in China. Besides making a variety of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
+crackers, the factory turns out quantities of tinned
+foods. Among them are bamboo sprouts, shrimps’ eggs,
+spiced roast pork, chicken with chestnuts, frogs’ legs,
+native and foreign fruits, soups, and what appeals
+particularly to the palate of foreigners, the delicious
+candied ginger, for which Canton has a world-wide
+reputation.</p>
+
+<p>Drugs are costly, and constantly needed articles, such
+as picture wire, and hooks, are for some reason absurdly
+highpriced.</p>
+
+<p>“Sam Joe” on Broadway claims to be the leading
+Chinese grocer in the city. He is certainly one of the
+best known. Like other grocers he keeps no fresh vegetables
+and no fresh fruits except apples and lemons.
+His place is clean and inviting, and presided over
+by numerous clerks of low and high degree. Any one
+of these middle-aged men, of dignified mien and scholarly
+cast of countenance, will kindly deign to take an
+order, discuss the merit of goods, and even point them
+out if within sight. But when a piece of cheese is to
+be wrapped up, or a bottle taken down from the shelf,
+he waves his long-finger-nailed hand in a lordly manner
+to an underling, who hastens to perform the menial
+service. Sam Joe used to own an automobile, with
+“Sam Joe, Shanghai’s leading grocer,” prominent in
+large gilt letters on its back. It was a familiar object
+for some time on the streets, but its upkeep proved too
+great an expense, so the firm has reverted to the ordinary
+delivery wagon and horse. Still, a horse-drawn wagon
+is extraordinary enough in this city of man labor, and
+Sam Joe’s outfit is in advance of most Chinese grocers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
+who content themselves with box carts propelled by tricycles.</p>
+
+<p>On a bright morning nothing is more delightful than
+a leisurely stroll up and down Nanking Road for a
+study of the shops. Some are shut in behind a door
+and show windows, like foreign stores, and others after
+the manner of the general run of Chinese shops have
+the entire front open to the street. Occasionally, in addition
+to the regular street crossings, a slit between
+the buildings leads to a narrow lane or alley, without
+sidewalks, long, narrow, and fearsome, yet possessing a
+compelling fascination for the wanderer. The Nanking
+Road shops are almost uniformly two stories high, with
+frequently a tall, fancy cornice giving the effect of a
+third. The most striking are the large silver shops.
+The façades of several stand out boldly, ornamented
+with coloured stucco in relief. One is resplendent with
+a gorgeous peacock of heroic size and spreading tail.
+Another shows two mythical figures disporting themselves
+on either side of a huge vase of flowers of wondrous
+hues, while a third, more recently built of plain
+brick, is dotted over with electric bulbs. On gala occasions,
+these shops, as well as others able to afford it,
+are lighted up at night with elaborate electrical designs,
+making Nanking Road the most brilliantly illuminated
+street in the city. In addition, it is customary
+at the time of an opening or anniversary to
+decorate the entire façade with gay-coloured cotton
+cloth or silk that is twisted, puffed, puckered, and
+curled into rosettes and other fantastic designs. Often
+a light bamboo scaffolding is erected in front of the shop<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
+and the trimmings attached to it instead of to the walls.
+When the sun fades the decorations they are taken down,
+re-dyed, and put in place again. Close against the show
+windows of the unforeignized silver shops are glass
+shelves ranged one above another and loaded with silver.
+Many of the pieces are massive and richly embossed,
+Buddhas, vases, jewelry cases, tea-sets, besides
+less ornate small pieces such as wine cups and bonbon
+dishes, all of native design and manufacture. Inside the
+shop the foreigner meets with a surprise, for there are
+no show cases, and no sign of silver is visible except
+away at the back where a glimmer can be discerned
+behind a glass door protected by a wooden or wire
+lattice. Panel mirrors and carved blackwood chairs at
+the sides give a drawing-room effect which is enhanced
+by the leisurely manner in which the numerous clerks
+move about or lean idly upon the counter, as if their
+main purpose in life was to pose as useless adjuncts
+of the firm employing them. Yet in reality a paying
+business is carried on from day to day, though it may be
+conducted quietly and unostentatiously over tea-cups
+and with true Oriental deliberation.</p>
+
+<p>The favorite meat in China is pork, popularly known
+as the “Great Meat.” From the number of shops where
+cured hams are sold, often nothing at all but ham lining
+the walls and suspended from the ceiling, it would
+seem as if the people’s whole diet consisted of pork.
+The pork shops on Nanking Road are very clean. Sometimes
+one side of a shop is devoted to hams and the
+other to ducks and sweetmeats. Roast ducks are sold
+everywhere in Shanghai. The turned-back neck of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
+the duck forms a loop by which the fowl is attached
+to a hook fastened to a bamboo rod several feet long,
+and this is hung in the front of the shop in full gaze
+of the passerby, where no intervening window dims
+the allurements of the savory delicacy. It surely does
+look good enough to eat, glossy, of a rich reddish brown
+colour, and done to a turn in the oven of a Chinese
+chef. Back a few steps from the street, in a dimly
+lighted room, the curious stranger, if tactfully polite,
+may witness the preparation of the fowl for the market.
+On one side of the contracted space are live ducks, in
+a pen, while near by the cook’s assistant is busily plucking
+dead ones. They are roasted on top of a Chinese
+stove under a huge iron basin, and then comes the
+painting, the grand finale in the process. A small
+quantity of red vegetable matter is added to sesame
+oil, and with this mixture the cook carefully smears
+the fowl, using a reed brush. The coating soon
+hardens like varnish when the duck is exposed to the
+air, and besides giving it an appetising appearance,
+keeps the flesh impervious to the dust from the road.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing captivates more than the bake shops where
+cooking is done close to the street. Chinese stoves are
+simplicity itself, a bed of charcoal on a foundation of
+brick or cement, and an iron grating through which
+the ashes fall to the floor. Large but shallow iron basins
+are placed over the red hot coals, and in them are fried
+or boiled all sorts of remarkable viands. It is a common
+saying that the best cooks in the world are the
+French and the Chinese, and it is easy to believe it.
+The way in which many a common fellow will roll<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>
+and knead his dough, fashion it into some extraordinary
+shape with a dexterous flip and twist, then fry it to exactly
+the right shade of brown, and all without an instant’s
+thought or effort, proves him to be in his own
+line an artist of no mean order.</p>
+
+<p>Customers young and old frequent the shop, sometimes
+carrying bowls of their own which they get filled
+with nutritious food for a few coppers and take home
+to furnish, it may be, a meal for an entire family.
+Perhaps a woman drops into the shop with a nest of
+wooden trays. She says something to the shopkeeper,
+who begins laying into them wonderful little cakes,
+sticking into each one a wee cluster of artificial flowers.
+This choice collection of dainties is to form part of a
+wedding feast. The year round, at certain hours of
+the day, but especially in the early morning, women
+and children, provided with kettles, wend their way to
+the restaurants to buy hot water for tea. Hot water
+is cheaper than fuel, and besides to buy it saves trouble.</p>
+
+<p>Chinese candy shops never want for trade. Those
+on Nanking Road are much patronized by foreigners,
+for some kinds of Chinese candy fairly melt in the
+mouth. The only drawback to a full enjoyment of it
+is the realization that too often instead of being protected
+under glass it has lain for hours on an open
+counter exposed to dust, flies, and dirty hands.</p>
+
+<p>Fine teas from Hangchow, put up in pretty coloured
+paper boxes, are seen in the windows of tea shops, and
+beside them other fancy boxes containing small dried
+flowers. One or more dried rosebuds placed in a cup
+of tea impart a delicate flavor to the beverage and are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
+said by the Chinese to aid digestion. They, however,
+are a luxury indulged in only by the well-to-do epicure,
+but this class is numerous.</p>
+
+<p>Silk shops are pre-eminently the most popular shops
+in Shanghai as silk is the commodity for which it is
+most celebrated. Many silk shops are found on the
+“Great Horse Road,” the largest and showiest being
+in a three-story building well down toward the Bund.
+But the two of special repute and reliability do a thriving
+business a block south of the busy thoroughfare.
+No goods are displayed in their windows as is the case
+with those on Nanking Road. The more conspicuous
+one has behind each sheet of plate glass a single potted
+plant on a stand. The other, across the road, disdains
+to indulge in even that much decoration. Its windows
+are the small, old-fashioned kind that fold in like blinds
+with little panes of glass, and up and down over each
+one stretch protecting iron bars. The reputation of the
+aristocratic house of “Laou Kai Fook” is too well
+established to need the help of advertisements. While
+neighbouring firms may boast of a business career of a
+few decades, this one points back proudly three quarters
+of a century to the date of its founding. Though nothing
+on the exterior of the shop attracts the eye, there
+is an abundance within to draw on the purse-strings.
+Laou Kai Fook’s clerks are gravely dignified but wide-awake.
+It was not one of them but an employee in a
+lesser shop who, when a would-be purchaser indicated a
+piece of silk in a showcase that she wished to see, after
+making a feeble and abortive effort to unlock the case,
+turned his long finger-nails out, remarking unconcernedly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
+“It won’t open,” and let the customer walk away.
+The shelves lining the walls of the silk shops from top
+to bottom are heaped with rolls of silk wrapped in light
+brown paper, the rolls lying crosswise on the shelves.
+From each roll depends a white paper tag marked with
+Chinese characters, and these tags, seen on every side,
+produce a curious effect but give to the uninitiated no
+clue to the wealth they represent. Some of the finest
+silks, with the paper coverings removed, are kept in
+showcases to decoy the unwary.</p>
+
+<p>The clerks in these stores, as in fact in most of the
+shops, are to all appearances greatly in excess of the
+number required. While some are kept busy, many
+seem to be paid merely to lounge about and tread on
+each other’s toes. They are keenly sensitive to the
+superiority of their high calling and will brook no
+slights apparent or unintentional. An American lady,
+new to China, was being waited on one day by a very
+youthful clerk and in the course of conversation innocently
+addressed him as “boy,” the usual form of
+address among the servant class. Instantly the young
+man drew himself up proudly and corrected her with
+grave displeasure, “I am not a ‘boy,’ I am Mr.
+Smith.” Two characteristics of the Shanghai silk
+shops of the better class are especially appreciated
+by foreign women. First, prices are fixed and
+uniform; no time need be wasted in bargaining. Second,
+if a sample needs to be matched the danger of failure
+is small. When roll after roll has been laid on the
+counter and the sample placed against them without
+success the clerk will be certain to observe politely,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>
+“We can dye a piece for you.” “How long will it
+take?” “Only three days if the sun shines. How
+many yards do you want?” “Four.” “We don’t
+usually dye less than ten yards, but we will dye four
+for you if you wish to have us.” In most cases the
+silk proves to be entirely satisfactory and no extra
+charge is made for the dyeing.</p>
+
+<p>Changes are going on continually all over the city.
+Day by day old buildings, rotten and unsanitary, are
+disappearing and modern ones rising in their place.
+It is to be feared that many of the ancient landmarks
+dear to the antiquarian will soon be gone. Last year
+an Englishman said to a friend, “I can take you to a
+street in Shanghai that I believe looks just as it did a
+thousand years ago.” But in a few weeks he wrote to
+his friend, “The street is gone. Every old building
+has been torn down and the rubbish cleared away.”
+On Nanking Road a handsome block has just been
+erected by the Chinese on a conspicuous site, bearing
+the ambitious title of “The New World,” written in
+gilt Chinese characters on its front. Soon a wealthy
+Cantonese company is to build a great department store
+on Nanking Road that in size and elegance promises
+to outrival all others. It will contain a theatre, restaurant,
+and tea-room, elevator and roof garden, accessories
+to which even the most select of the foreign
+department stores have not aspired.</p>
+
+<p>But Nanking Road does not possess a monopoly in interesting
+shops. Many of the most fascinating are the
+very small unpretentious ones on the side streets, for it
+is there that Chinese life and customs may be studied<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
+most intimately. The common people regard with
+good nature and tolerance the inquisitive stranger and
+rarely object to his advances. Pawn shops tell their
+own story and are discovered at almost every turn.
+They are known by a particular Chinese character
+painted in black on the white cement of the front
+wall or on the wooden screen just inside the entrance.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/fig6.jpg" alt="pawn">
+<p class="caption">Tang, a Pawn Shop.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Shanghai would not be Shanghai without its Money
+Exchange shops. Though perfectly respectable, they do
+business mostly on the unfashionable side streets.
+Nanking Road in the main scorns them. They do not
+lack patronage, for “small money” is necessary to
+every thrifty body. The Exchange Shops give silver
+for gold and paper money, and for one of the current
+silver Mexican dollars, the customer receives one hundred
+and thirty-eight or so coppers, or eleven dimes and
+several coppers according to whatever the exchange happens
+to be on the day in question. Shop bills amounting
+to less than a dollar can ordinarily be paid in
+“small money,” and as for car fare, a dollar’s worth
+of coppers goes much farther than the even hundred
+contained in a “big dollar.” The Exchange shops<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
+make their money by drawing money from the Exchange
+Banks at a little higher rate of exchange than
+they allow to their customers. It must be confessed
+though that the mysteries of Chinese currency are well
+nigh beyond the power of the ordinary human mind to
+fathom.</p>
+
+<p>Coffin shops are of necessity very numerous, and
+have open fronts directly on the street. The shopkeeper
+performs none of the duties of an undertaker.
+His sole business is to make and sell coffins. Chinese
+coffins are extremely large and heavy, and in a foreigner’s
+eyes ugly even to the point of gruesomeness.
+The costly ones are made of blackwood and camphor
+wood and their glossy tops and ends decorated with
+pictures done in coloured paint and gilt. The shopkeeper’s
+home is usually at the back of the premises,
+but the family find it agreeable to pass much of the
+day in the shop where the unfinished coffins that chance
+to be left standing about prove convenient in many
+ways. The wife may perch on one while she eats her
+bowl of rice, or the master himself drop down on another
+for his noonday nap, while the children frolic
+in and out around them like squirrels. But to a Chinese
+there is nothing objectionable in a coffin. As with the
+old Shanghai mother, whose son returning from a journey
+presented her with a coffin as the handsomest and
+most welcome gift he could offer, so it is generally felt
+that to have one’s coffin bought and set up in the house
+ready for use is a most desirable provision. In the
+meantime it is a convenient article of furniture to have
+at hand, and no harm is done if while waiting for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
+the hour of decease the coffin is utilized as a clothes
+press or perhaps as a pantry.</p>
+
+<p>As one passes along the streets, in addition to the
+sounds most commonly heard, is often added the shrill
+falsetto of the cheap phonograph. The records usually
+are Chinese melodies in which the street crowds delight.
+Any shop wishing to draw attention to itself
+has only to set up an instrument and start it playing.
+Phonographs are commonly found in the better class
+barber shops, where they dispense music to the accompaniment
+of the strokes of the razor. The character
+of Chinese barber shops has changed considerably since
+the revolution of 1911. Before then customers sat on
+stools and the principal work of the tonsorial artist
+was shaving the forefront of heads and combing and
+braiding queues. Now foreign barbers’ chairs have
+taken the place of stools and the barber gives careful
+attention to clipping hair in the most approved fashion.
+There recently appeared outside a hairdresser’s shop the
+following unique announcement, “Hair done in foreign,
+Chinese, and civilised style.” Just what the “civilised”
+style of hairdressing might be in contradistinction
+to other modes, the interested public has not yet
+learned. But shopkeepers who aspire to the distinction
+of English signs above their doorways, frequently
+meet with serious difficulties in their struggles with a
+strange tongue. The results are often strikingly
+original,—for example, “Horeshueing Manufactured
+Any Kinds of Foreign and China Horeshueing. Price
+$2.00 each hoersh.” “The towels are weaving up to
+the different colors to sell.” “House panier and decorator<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>
+for European and China.” “Mating Shop and
+House Furnishing.” “Gentleman and Ladys snots and
+bots.”</p>
+
+<p>The beautiful curio shops on Nanking Road entrance
+the eye and delight the heart, yet who would
+compare them for a moment in charm with the quaint
+old shops on Pig Alley? Pig Alley used to border
+on the moat around the Chinese city and was in truth
+an alley. Now the moat has been filled up and its site
+covered by a broad macadamized road, but the shops
+that gave it its reputation have not changed in character.
+The dust of years still clings to them, wrinkled
+crones continue to sip their tea in the corners, and old
+men, with skin as yellow as their brasses, smoke contentedly
+in the sunshine outside. Stacked on the shelves
+reaching to the ceiling are articles in bronze, brass,
+and china, some as valueless as old iron, but among the
+collection, choice bits, rare and ancient, worth almost
+their weight in gold. It takes time and patience to
+shop in Pig Alley, for prices must be haggled over, and
+perhaps several visits made before the coveted treasure
+is finally secured.</p>
+
+<p>In the shops of the Foreign Settlement it is estimated
+that more than twenty thousand boys are employed as
+apprentices. Their work-day is as long as the shop
+keeps open, which in many cases is from sixteen to
+nineteen hours out of the twenty-four. Pay is small
+or nothing at all, but the boys are given rice and lodging
+where they work. The large majority have no
+chance for play or study. They are bound out by their
+parents or guardians under much the same system as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
+formerly prevailed in England. If badly treated, and
+little fellows unable to resist are often most cruelly
+beaten, the apprentice has no redress, and must bear
+it, run away, or take his own life, which he sometimes
+does, though usually he stays on, for the spirit of the
+Chinese is to endure hardship patiently. Not long ago
+the local Young Men’s Christian Association, through
+its Boys’ Department, made a valuable survey of the
+condition of Chinese boys in the Settlement. What
+added to the interest was the fact that the survey was
+conducted by boys, which, so far as is known, was the
+first time this has been done in any country. Volunteers
+were called for from among the Y.M.C.A. High
+School students, all Chinese of course, and twelve at
+once responded, promising to spend their vacation period
+in doing this work. Others were gradually added
+to the list, till finally over sixty were at work assisted
+by a Chinese teacher and several Chinese and foreign
+secretaries. No reward was held out to them, and their
+task was not an easy one. They were ridiculed and
+buffeted, but they kept bravely on, meeting every day
+at five o’clock to report progress and gather fresh courage
+over a social cup of tea. The facts and figures
+collated with so much labour will not be wasted. Definite
+plans are being laid for the betterment of the boy
+community, and they have already begun to materialize
+since the opening of the splendid new Y.M.C.A. building
+for boys’ work.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c5">V</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">HOUSEKEEPING PROBLEMS</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">“W</span>ELL, my Dear,” said Mr. Dunlap
+briskly, one bright spring morning, laying
+down on the breakfast table “The
+North China Daily News” which he had been intently
+perusing, “I have here a list of houses advertised for
+rent. Suppose we start out and look at some of them.”
+“Just the thing,” assented Mrs. Dunlap eagerly. “You
+call the ricshas and I’ll be ready in a minute.” “No,
+we will go in a carriage. It will take us around more
+quickly and cost no more for the time we are out. Just
+think,” he added, “of our being able to hire for a whole
+day a nice victoria and pony, with driver and footman,
+for less than a dollar and a half! Life in Shanghai
+certainly has its advantages.” “Don’t let the driver
+forget his French license,” called Mrs. Dunlap to her
+husband as he was hurrying away to make arrangements
+for the carriage. “That’s so. We may want to
+go into the French Concession.” “Yes, and we’d
+rather not be held up as the Blanks were.” Then both
+laughed merrily at the memory of the experience of
+their friends who went for a joy ride in celebration
+of their wedding anniversary, but they had hardly left
+the International Settlement before a policeman stopped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
+the “mafoo,” and because he had no French license
+made him drive with the pair to a police station to
+get one and pay the fine of a dollar, rather an inglorious
+episode. The Dunlaps were gone all day and returned
+to their stopping place at night well-nigh exhausted.
+But the next morning they were out early again, this
+time to hunt up the office of a real estate company and
+tell the agent they had decided to take one of his houses.
+“Good, I will put your name right down on the list of
+applicants. There are only eleven ahead of you.”
+“Eleven ahead of us!” exclaimed Mrs. Dunlap in
+astonishment and dismay. “Why, we supposed the
+houses that were advertised in the paper had not been
+rented.” “And so they haven’t,” responded the agent
+cheerfully. “These are only possible tenants. You
+stand a good chance of getting the place. Last week I
+rented a house to the fifteenth party in a list of applicants.
+All the others, for one reason and another,
+had dropped their names.”</p>
+
+<p>The couple finally secured a house to their liking,
+quite new and somewhat out from the centre of the
+city. The rent being agreed on, the agent added, “You
+will pay six per cent taxes.” “How is that?” queried
+Mr. Dunlap. “I am not buying the property.” “No,
+but here in Shanghai the tenant pays the tax on the
+house, the landlord on the land. You are getting off
+cheap. If your house were within the limits of the
+‘Settlement’ you’d have to pay twelve per cent in
+taxes.” “Oh, then we are not in the Settlement?
+Somebody told me the road in front of the house was
+a Municipal Council road.” “That’s right. It is. A<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>
+year or so ago the Council, after hard effort, obtained
+permission to lay that road through Chinese territory.
+It is a good road, too, isn’t it? A first class macadamized
+thoroughfare.” “That is most interesting,” agreed
+the Dunlaps. “But you say the land on which the house
+itself stands belongs to the Chinese?” “Yes, they refused
+to sell it, so the best the company could do was to
+rent it in perpetuity.” Mr. Dunlap turned to his wife
+with a smile, “Well, if we get into trouble, we can go
+out and sit in the road.” “Ha, ha, not a bad idea,”
+chuckled the agent. “But you will be well protected.
+The Settlement police patrol the road and Chinese
+police the territory around it. The Chinese have no
+desire to see foreigners’ houses looted, for this gets
+them into trouble.”</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the Dunlaps began moving into their new
+domicile, they found themselves greatly inconvenienced
+by the lack of closets, shelves, hooks, and drawers. The
+house in fact was a mere shell, with roof and walls and
+little else. However, there was running water, hot and
+cold, and this is a luxury rarely found outside of
+Shanghai. Indeed in the older parts of the Settlement
+hot water for baths is still bought at nearby
+shops and brought to the home in big wooden buckets
+suspended from carrying poles on the backs of coolies.
+Though the wires were laid for electric lights, there were
+no fixtures. This was an oversight on the part of the
+contractor that must be rectified at once, so Mr. Dunlap
+sought another interview with the agent. “We
+shall be glad to have the fixtures put in as soon as possible,”
+he urged, “as we are depending for light on two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
+or three small kerosene lamps.” “But we don’t furnish
+such things.” “What?” “I mean they don’t go with
+the house.” “So I must buy them?” “Assuredly.”
+“Well, well, whoever heard of such a thing? But how
+about the stationary wash-basin for the bathroom, and
+the draining board for the kitchen, and the—,” “If
+you have them you get them yourself.” “You see it is
+like this,” continued the agent goodnaturedly, “Shanghai
+is very cosmopolitan, and all sorts of people settle
+here. Some tenants, when vacating a house, have been
+known to steal the locks off the doors, the chandeliers
+from the ceiling, and occasionally a stationary bathtub
+is cut loose and carried away in the dead of the night.
+Oh no, you wouldn’t do it,” smiling at Mr. Dunlap’s
+incredulous stare, “but such things happen oftener than
+you would think.” It was plain then to the Dunlaps
+that they must begin to furnish their house from the
+bottom up, or perhaps, to speak more accurately, from
+the top down. Therefore, their first business was to
+buy lumber, hire carpenters, and set them to work making
+pantry shelves, and supplying a few other immediate
+necessities. Soon the little back court resounded
+with the noise of hammer and saw.</p>
+
+<p>It was somewhat exasperating to the head of the
+house, who longed to expedite matters, to have the
+workmen stroll in about nine o’clock in the morning,
+or possibly not come at all, leave promptly at five, and
+spend anywhere from one to two hours and more in the
+enjoyment of the noon siesta. But scolding was of little
+avail. Shanghai workmen, particularly since the revolution
+of 1911 have assumed an easy, independent air<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>
+all their own and must be borne with as patiently as
+may be.</p>
+
+<p>The next matter to which the family gave their
+attention was the buying of furniture. Friends
+advised them to get it at auction. As the population of
+Shanghai is a constantly shifting one, auction sales
+are a common incident of the city’s life. Homes are
+being broken up every day and parties moving out,
+perhaps after only a few months’ residence. The easiest,
+and really the most profitable method of disposing
+of household effects, which often are practically
+new, is by auction. Auction sales are very popular
+with all classes of society and usually draw an eager
+crowd, but the Dunlaps picked up only a few things
+in this way, for they found too much time was consumed
+in the process. Then they were referred to
+Peking Road. Now Peking Road at its eastern end,
+where it approaches the Bund, is a very high-toned,
+aristocratic street, but away toward the west its character
+changes, and instead of substantial brick office
+and apartment buildings, the road is lined on both sides
+with Chinese junk shops. Yet according to the dictionary
+definition of “junk,” that is not exactly the
+right word to apply to them either, for far more than
+mere junk is exposed to the gaze of the curious beholder
+in the wide open shop fronts, in the dark places
+at the rear, and in the dusty, musty, low-ceilinged rooms
+above approached by a ladder-like stairway. “Old
+Curiosity Shop” might appropriately be written over
+each one. Most of the goods have been bought up at
+auction and bear the marks of age in a greater or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
+less degree, though some are new, but it is not the commonplace
+new things that attract the eye of the average
+foreigner, who is apt to exclaim at first glance,
+“What a lot of old trash!” Worming his way in gingerly
+fashion among the piled up closely-stacked stuff,
+the reward comes once and again in the discovery of a
+rare piece of old mahogany or teakwood, or a quaint
+hit of China or glass, which may be bought at a ridiculously
+low price. Of course, if the “find” is an article
+of furniture, some risk is run in carrying it home, and
+the very fastidious may eschew it altogether, but a
+good airing and repeated cleansing with disinfectants
+and soap and hot water, and if necessary, scraping and
+repolishing, generally render it perfectly harmless.</p>
+
+<p>However, a foreign house can not be furnished
+throughout from the shops on Peking Road, so after investing
+in a few small articles like coal buckets and
+shovels and tongs, Mr. and Mrs. Dunlap finally and
+firmly resolved to waste no more valuable time hunting
+for bargains, but to have all their furniture made to
+order. This sounds very luxurious and a bit extravagant.
+On the contrary it was the most economical thing
+that they could do, for they did not order from one of
+the high-priced English department stores on Nanking
+Road, but from a Chinese shop on a side street with an
+entrance and show windows that might have been passed
+many times without attracting the least notice. The
+place however had been highly recommended and the
+work in the end proved quite satisfactory. Mark the
+words “in the end,” for they are spoken advisedly,
+since the grand consummation did not occur till more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
+than a year from the time the first order was given.
+Inside, the shop was found to be much more of an establishment
+than appeared from the street. It carried
+a considerable stock of ready-made furniture, but it was
+from the pictures in the firm’s imported books that the
+Dunlaps chose their models, then selected their wood,
+and finally, after considerable haranguing, came to an
+agreement on prices. Subsequently calls without number
+were made at the shop by Mr. and Mrs. Dunlap
+in a vain endeavour to hurry up the work. Sometimes
+they came upon the elderly head of the firm and his
+clerks eating their forenoon meal at a table near the
+centre of the showroom, for according to the usual custom,
+the clerks were boarded on the premises. But
+the entrance of a customer in no wise embarrassed them
+and he was always waited on with the politest attention.
+One by one the pieces ordered were brought to the
+house on a hand truck or wheelbarrow, some of the
+lighter articles being suspended from a carrying pole
+borne by coolies. After remaining a day or two, back
+they went, with few exceptions! Either the hat-rack
+was too short, or the clothes-press shelves were too long,
+or the bureau drawers wouldn’t open, or the locks didn’t
+fit. Always something was “<i>ch’a pu to</i>,” just a little
+wrong, a favorite expression in China which is used to
+excuse a multitude of faults. One much-doctored upholstered
+chair was carried to and fro so many times it
+had finally to be partially re-covered. But the dining
+table fared the worst. Once it fell off the cart in transit
+and was broken. Because the wood was not well
+seasoned, it kept splitting across the top and teetering<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
+disconcertingly on uneven legs. Four tables were made
+in succession before a satisfactory one was produced.</p>
+
+<p>While the patience of the Dunlaps was sorely taxed
+during this period of waiting, they could not help being
+deeply impressed with the unfailing good nature
+and courtesy of the firm, always regretful, ever ready
+for another trial, though the money loss was their own.</p>
+
+<p>Some of their work, too, was really a pronounced
+success, as in the case of the sectional bookcases which
+they patterned after one loaned them by Mr. Dunlap.
+When the two were set up side by side in the library it
+was next to impossible to tell them apart.</p>
+
+<p>The absolute confidence of the Chinese in the honour
+of foreigners was often remarked on in the family.
+Not for five months after work began and until several
+hundred dollars’ worth of goods had been delivered was
+any money asked for or expected. A dishonest person
+might easily have slipped out of town and left furniture
+and debt behind him.</p>
+
+<p>One noon, during the period of house-settling, when
+Mr. Dunlap returned from his office, he was surprised
+to see a bevy of men at work sodding the lawn, a matter
+he had not yet had time to consider. He was still
+more astonished when he learned that this was being
+done for him by the company of whom he rented his
+house. There was nothing personal about it. All the
+company’s property was being treated in the same way.
+But sod, it seems, could not easily be carried off, while
+lighting fixtures might!</p>
+
+<p>The Dunlaps did not find it necessary to go to the
+florist’s in search of plants to beautify the grounds, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
+street vendors brought them to their door. From the
+very morning they moved in these men fairly haunted
+the place. They carried the plants in round, slightly
+convex baskets, suspended by ropes from a bamboo pole
+slung across one shoulder. Every time Mrs. Dunlap
+appeared in sight there they were, an eager, smiling
+group of them, holding out their flowers and begging
+her to buy in their best <i>pidgin</i> English. Mrs. Dunlap
+always shook her head saying, “By and by. Not now.
+I am too busy.” But one bright day, when the house-wife
+was unusually occupied with work indoors, an
+enterprising fellow actually took it upon himself to border
+the entire garden, and it was a good large one,
+with handsome plants of many varieties, and ended by
+placing on the veranda four mammoth potted palms.
+The effect was charming. Of course Mrs. Dunlap
+might have ordered the plants taken out of the ground,
+but what woman would? Instead she gladly paid a
+little less than the price asked, which was about six
+dollars. Afterward a neighbour told her that had she
+happened to have any second-hand clothing to offer
+the man, he would willingly have taken it in place of
+money. “Each year I replenish my garden with
+flowers in that way,” concluded the friend.</p>
+
+<p>The day the Dunlaps ate their first meal in their
+new home was a very happy one, but before that time
+two important matters had been attended to by Mr.
+Dunlap. These were putting in a first-class filter, and
+covering the floors of the store-room and pantry with
+zinc which was allowed to turn up around the walls
+for a foot and a half in order to guard against the encroachments<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
+of ubiquitous Shanghai rats. The Berkefeld
+filter is generally used in Shanghai and is supposed
+to preclude the necessity of boiling the drinking
+water. But as every one knows, the “candle” must
+be carefully washed in boiling water once a week, and
+as Mrs. Dunlap soon found she could not trust a servant
+to do this, who might or might not have the water
+really boiling, or handle the candle without breaking,
+she attended to it herself.</p>
+
+<p>Among her first callers were the “runners” from
+several Chinese grocery stores. The nearest secured
+her patronage. Each morning his man came to receive
+the day’s orders, and before noon the groceries
+were delivered in a neat box-tricycle. In addition a
+daily visit to the market was made by the cook, for the
+grocery stores in Shanghai carry neither meat nor fresh
+vegetables. “Just think, we no longer have to depend
+on tinned butter and milk!” exclaimed Mrs. Dunlap
+delightedly to her husband soon after their removal to
+the coast city, as her eyes turned with satisfaction to
+the neat pat of fresh Australian butter on her pretty
+Welsh butter dish. The dairies, the best being the
+European, are carefully inspected by the Municipal
+Health Department and deliver milk in sealed bottles
+to insure not being tampered with on the way from
+the dairy to their destination. Notwithstanding this,
+never a drop of milk or cream was used on the Dunlaps’
+table that had not been scalded. Neither was lettuce
+indulged in, not even that grown in private gardens,
+nor any other uncooked vegetable. In view of
+the ravages of Oriental dysentery and kindred diseases,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>
+the family agreed that it was wise to obey the injunctions
+of foreign doctors and take no risks. Fresh
+fruit from which the skin could be removed was eaten
+freely in season, but was dipped in boiling water, or
+underwent a thorough washing in filtered water before
+it was set on the table. Strawberries were subjected to
+a special cleansing process under Mrs. Dunlap’s personal
+supervision. Placed in a colander, boiling water
+was poured over them three times, and lastly a solution
+of permanganate. Later on in her experience Mrs.
+Dunlap learned of a better and easier way of disinfecting
+the fruit, and that was to plunge it for an instant
+into boiling syrup, by which the flavor of the berry
+was retained and its appearance but little altered. Even
+after every reasonable precaution had been taken in
+the matter of food, the Dunlaps were made aware that
+through the carelessness of servants, and in other ways,
+they were constantly running serious risks. However,
+they concluded to do the best they could and then not
+worry.</p>
+
+<p>Another early caller to put in an appearance was
+the public laundryman. Shanghai houses are not built
+with the idea of doing washing at home, except perhaps
+a few of the small pieces. So it is sent out, and as to
+just what kind of places, one may possibly be happier
+not to inquire into too diligently. The public laundries
+in the International Settlement, it is true, are subject
+to inspection by the Health Department, but questionable
+habits are liable to continue notwithstanding.
+Take, for instance, a Chinese washerman’s manner of
+sprinkling clothes, which is to fill his mouth with water,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
+then squirt it out through his closed teeth. It is bad
+enough when the spray falls on hosiery and underwear,
+but handkerchiefs, napkins—well, Mrs. Dunlap soon
+found that it was not well under such circumstances
+to give reins to her imagination. She certainly had no
+fault to find with the pricelist, paying barely one cent
+and a half apiece for everything, from a face cloth
+to the most elaborate white dress. As a rule the clothes
+were exquisitely laundered, even though the method
+employed did cause rapid deterioration.</p>
+
+<p>Although the process of setting their house in order
+was a most tedious one, at last Mr. and Mrs. Dunlap
+had progressed far enough to be comfortable and feel
+that they could turn their attention to other and more
+important matters. At first they were a little disturbed
+by having to look at the back courts of their neighbours’
+houses across the street instead of onto their well-trimmed
+lawns, for it is usual in Shanghai to build so
+that all houses may face the south, from which the
+breeze comes. Then too, Mrs. Dunlap’s soul was somewhat
+tried by the lines of washing, innumerable as the
+sands on the sea-shore, hung out to dry on the vacant
+lots stretching away to the south. But it was at least
+a more agreeable sight than the coffins lying scattered
+about on the ground just beyond her east windows, left
+there, perhaps by perfect strangers to the Chinese landowner,
+to await a convenient time of burial. A little
+farther away, Mr. Dunlap passed every morning, in
+going to his office, a lot which evidently was a favorite
+spot for depositing the dead. Fresh coffins appeared
+each morning, most of them tiny ones. Often the baby<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>
+was not given a coffin at all, but tied in a grass mat
+which was thrown carelessly on the ground. The bodies
+are supposed to be gathered up and carted away daily.
+One seems gradually to get hardened in China to things
+grown too familiar. The Dunlaps used often to marvel
+that their surroundings, depressing though they were,
+did not affect them more.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Dunlap’s daily routine began each morning
+after breakfast by “taking accounts” with the cook.
+The cook in China does the marketing, and he also gets
+his commission or “squeeze” as it is popularly called.
+That is, he buys a pound and half of meat and brings
+in a bill for two, or he charges his mistress a few coppers
+more a pound than he has paid. This squeezing
+business is perfectly understood by both parties, and
+providing it does not exceed certain bounds, nothing
+is said about it. Market prices are quoted each morning
+in one of the Shanghai dailies, and by consulting
+this and making an occasional visit herself to market,
+Mrs. Dunlap kept informed as to about what she ought
+to pay. Whenever the cook began to take undue advantage
+of her, she did not accuse him of it directly,
+but a conversation something like the following would
+ensue: “Ta Shih-fu (Great Assistant), you are paying
+too much for meat.” “Yes, so I told the butcher, but
+he won’t take less.” “Then go somewhere else.” Or,
+“One hundred and four eggs are too many to use in
+two days for our small family.” “It certainly is a
+great many but I had to put eighteen into a cake.”
+“You must use fewer.” “I will try.” Now Mrs.
+Dunlap knew, and the cook knew that she knew, that he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
+had paid a moderate price for the meat and was charging
+her for eggs which he never bought or had disposed
+of himself. But through this indirect method of dealing
+with him, by no means original with her, she gained
+her end and saved the face of the Great Assistant. Had
+he suffered “loss of face” probably nothing would have
+been said by him at the time, but later he might have
+appeared before his mistress to announce sorrowfully
+that his uncle or great-aunt had just died and he must
+leave at once. Perhaps next day he would be found
+comfortably installed in a neighbouring kitchen. Occasionally
+a young housekeeper, new to China, undertakes
+to do her own marketing and even to dispense
+with a cook altogether. But after a few days, or at
+the most a few weeks, she usually gives up the trial she
+made so hopefully, realizing that as conditions are in
+China it is next to impossible for a foreign woman to
+do her own housework.</p>
+
+<p>Following the taking of accounts came giving out
+“stores” for the day. Housekeepers differ. Some
+keep nothing under lock and key. Others deal out what
+is needed in minutest measure, a cupful of rice, a half
+cup of sugar. Mrs. Dunlap found it expedient to follow
+a middle course, not putting temptation in the
+cook’s way by giving him free access to the stores,
+but at the same time showing that he was trusted by
+letting him have a fairly liberal quantity at a time. If
+the supplies disappeared too rapidly she dealt with
+him after the ordinary indirect fashion. Frequently
+she and her neighbors helped one another by “comparing
+notes.” “How long does a fifty pound bag of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
+flour last you?” “How many pounds of sugar do you
+average in a week?”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Dunlap’s cook was an artist in his way. When
+the spirit moved him he sent his cakes, pies, and puddings
+to the table ornamented in a style that would do
+justice to a Fifth Avenue caterer. One day, however,
+he gave the family a surprise. A cake was served for
+dinner that had a most peculiar flavor. “I told the
+cook to use lemon filling, but there is no taste of lemon
+about this,” declared Mrs. Dunlap, critically sampling
+a bit of the cake. “No, and there <i>is</i> a strong taste of
+onion,” said her husband. “Oh, impossible! But yes,
+there really is!” The cook was called in. “What
+did you make the filling of?” questioned Mrs. Dunlap.
+“Onions,” was the prompt reply. “Onions! Why,
+I told you to use lemon.” “No, the lady said onions,
+and I am an obedient cook. I always do just as the
+lady bids.” Then suddenly it dawned on the crest-fallen
+mistress that she <i>had</i> ordered onion, the Chinese
+word for that pungent vegetable and for lemon being
+somewhat alike. But this was not quite as bad as the
+experiment of a friend’s cook, who, with no malice
+whatever, but the best of intentions, flavored the soup
+with kerosene oil, and on another occasion poured a
+liberal quantity of hair oil into the pudding. As to
+cleanliness or rather the lack of that admirable virtue
+in the moral make-up of many otherwise desirable
+chefs, without question the least said the better. But
+when a cook is discovered washing his waistcoat in
+the dishpan, or polishing the stove with a fine tea-towel,
+if a summary dismissal ensues, can any one blame the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
+sorely-tried house-wife? Many a merry half hour the
+ladies of the neighbourhood spend over their teacups
+sharing experiences both amusing and tragic. The
+longer Mrs. Dunlap lived in China the more she realized
+that while the “servant problem” in the Orient is
+not solved, as many in Western lands seem to think it
+is, yet the excellencies of Chinese servants are many
+and pronounced. These are more noticeably away from
+the coast cities, and were more general before the recent
+revolution, and even before 1900, but the sterling good
+qualities of the better servants are still worthy of the
+highest praise. Where will more devoted, faithful service
+be found? Were the children sick at night, or was
+Mr. Dunlap leaving the city by a midnight boat or an
+early train, the servants were on duty, eager and willing
+without a word of complaint.</p>
+
+<p>One time the Dunlaps arrived home from a journey
+at midnight to find a hot supper awaiting them. It
+had been ready since seven o’clock when the family
+was expected, but by some occult process known only
+to the cook, the food had been kept from burning or
+drying up during the intervening hours. The men
+were blinking and heavy-eyed, but absolutely good-natured.</p>
+
+<p>It was a never failing comfort to Mrs. Dunlap to be
+able to announce the arrival of unexpected guests to
+the servants without the shadow of a fear of any unpleasantness.
+Indeed, the larger the number, the happier
+was the cook, for the more he had to buy the bigger
+his “squeeze.” Still a great amount of extra work
+was often involved, which was always taken as a matter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
+of course. The “boy” delighted to decorate the
+dining table, and if left to his own devices a favorite
+diversion was to write on the tablecloth, with colored
+rice and flower petals, characters meaning love, happiness,
+long life, and peace.</p>
+
+<p>But it was when the Dunlaps gave their house-warming
+that the servants’ virtues shone the brightest. To
+save time, the small cakes, toothsome and delicate, were
+bought at a foreign bakery. To save money, though
+there are caterers in Shanghai, the ice-cream was made
+at home. Freezers were borrowed from neighbors, and
+late in the afternoon a busy scene was enacted in the
+little courtyard. The cook had called in coolies from
+the street, and “boys” from the houses around, and
+all were soon grinding away as if for dear life. Ice
+can always be had in Shanghai. The Dunlaps often
+observed with interest that whenever the neighboring
+ponds were encrusted with ice, even half an inch thick,
+the Chinese cut it carefully away and stored it in nearby
+sheds. This broken ice sells for much less than the foreign
+artificial ice, which however comes in cakes and
+is much better. Mrs. Dunlap ventured to ask the cook
+if the cream would keep till a late hour. With a lordly
+wave of the hand the Great Assistant replied, “Leave
+that to me, Lady. Leave that to me.” And she knew
+she could.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the boy had been given the responsibility
+in the dining-room. Mrs. Dunlap laid on the table extra
+silver. “Here are so many forks, so many spoons,”
+she explained. “Strange men will be in the kitchen
+this evening. The silver is in your care.” That was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>
+all, and she never gave it another thought. Had a
+piece been missing, it would shortly have been returned.
+How, and from where, who knows? The secret service
+system of Chinese servants is a mystery to foreigners.</p>
+
+<p>That night before going upstairs Mrs. Dunlap was
+respectfully requested to look at the silver, washed and
+neatly piled on the sideboard. The tired boy would not
+sleep until she had inspected it and declared it all right.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c6">VI</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">SOMETHING ABOUT VEHICLES</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">L</span>ET them be named decently and in order. First
+and foremost is the wheelbarrow. It does not
+take this rank because of its superior size, elegance,
+or even usefulness, but on account of its antiquity.
+To be sure, it can not lay claim to antedating
+the sedan-chair, but the dignified and exclusive sedan-chair
+has practically dropped out of Shanghai street
+life and hence will not be considered. The wheelbarrow
+on the contrary, instead of being relegated to the
+interior or less modern towns, creakily holds its own,
+and is not to be downed. Nor does any one want it
+to be, useful vehicle that it is, unless perchance some
+nervous invalids, or weary sleepers, whose morning rest
+is disturbed by the rising crescendo of the rasping, tormenting,
+unconquerable nuisance. The creak could be
+stopped with a few drops of oil—the easiest matter in
+the world, but the coolie loves that creak—he would
+not part with it for anything. It means business. It is
+the evidence of work being accomplished. Without it
+he would feel lost. Every wheelbarrow, the Chinese
+say, has its individual creak. People too far off to be
+recognized are identified in this way. “Friend Wong
+is coming,” says a man to his neighbor, “I hear his
+creak.” A Chinese wheelbarrow has this advantage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
+over its foreign compeers, that instead of a small wheel
+at the end, it has a large one in the center. To be
+sure, the wheel rising up divides the wheelbarrow into
+halves, but makes it much easier to carry the weight.
+A stout woven rope band fastened to the handle-bars
+and passing back across the coolie’s shoulders helps
+greatly to steady the load.</p>
+
+<p>The Shanghai wheelbarrow is mostly used for
+freight, but because of its cheapness it is a favourite
+passenger vehicle with a certain class of Chinese,
+especially the women and children going to and
+from the mills. Often eight or ten crowd on,
+sitting sideways with their feet hanging down. Once
+eleven women and girls were seen on one, pushed along
+by a single coolie. A coolie ordinarily is able to manage
+anywhere from six hundred to a thousand pounds.
+He carries everything, from building-stone to goose
+feathers. When the cargo is heavy the poor fellow
+staggers like a drunken man, moving from side to side
+to balance his load. His veins stand out like whipcords
+and the perspiration pours off from him in
+streams. To keep from being blinded by it in summer
+he frequently has to wear a band forming artificial eyebrows
+across his forehead to catch and hold the water.
+All the time, breathless as he is, he usually keeps up his
+singing cry, partly from force of habit and partly to
+warn people that he is coming and to clear the road.
+But street-cars can’t turn out of the way, and some
+other vehicles won’t, so occasionally the coolie gets
+caught in a trap, the wheelbarrow loses its balance,
+and over it goes. With certain kinds of cargo no damage
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>is done and the only inconvenience is the delay
+and extra lifting, but if the load is rice bags which
+burst open, or breakable merchandise, the coolie faces a
+bad situation. He earns, as a rule, a fair living wage
+for a poor man, but there is no surplus to cover the
+cost of accidents.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f7">
+<img src="images/fig7.jpg" alt="rickshas">
+<p class="caption">HIGH, BLACK RICKSHAS OUTSIDE THE FOREIGN SETTLEMENT</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Wheelbarrow coolies, though, are said to live longer
+and fare better than most ricsha coolies. This latter
+class is very shortlived as a rule. Their working years
+do not ordinarily extend beyond three, five, or at the
+most ten. One Shanghai ricsha coolie declared he had
+pulled a ricsha for twenty-four years, but this, if true,
+was most exceptional. At the present time there are
+between nine and ten thousand public ricshas in Shanghai,
+but probably a shifting population during the year
+of many times that number of coolies. Some one who
+has studied the subject estimates that the entire coolie
+population of Shanghai, including all classes, reaches
+as high as four hundred thousand. The average earnings
+of a ricsha coolie are seven coppers, about three
+or four cents, a day, and from this pittance he must
+support a family, and that too in a city noted over
+China for high cost of living. No wonder a doctor
+in charge of a mission hospital where many sick
+coolies are sent recently reported, “A large number
+of the cases brought in are in a state of collapse due
+to malnutrition and the bad hygienic conditions of
+their life superadded to the strenuous spasmodic
+strain they undergo.” Heart trouble and China’s inveterate
+foe, tuberculosis, carry off the majority.
+Perspiring freely, even in winter, after a hard run,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
+then waiting, it may be an hour, for another “fare,”
+in the penetrating wind or chilling rain, with no
+extra covering for their thinly clad bodies, the coolies
+are in a condition to succumb readily to disease. Married
+men live in colonies in the outskirts of the city,
+in little straw or bamboo huts, for which they pay a
+rental of from fifteen to twenty cents a month. In cold
+weather the whole family crawls inside to keep warm,
+where the air is heavy with tobacco smoke and the
+fumes from the little charcoal fire over which the rice
+is cooking. Many a baby contracts eye disease that
+later leads to blindness. Unmarried ricsha coolies sleep
+wherever they can find shelter, ordinarily in the cheap
+tea-houses, often as many as fifty herding together in
+one small room. The conditions in these places beggar
+description.</p>
+
+<p>The coolies do not own their ricshas. They
+are the property of companies, some foreign, others Chinese,
+each owning anywhere from fifty to seven or eight
+hundred, while two large companies have in stock a
+thousand and twelve hundred, respectively. One of
+these companies manufactures its own ricshas, turning
+out a hundred a month. Women are employed to make
+the cushions for the back and seat. Several of the
+companies provide the men with uniforms. Generally
+it is only a coat, while the wearer’s ragged trousers
+show more ragged in contrast. In a single instance the
+clothes are washed every twenty-four hours in the company’s
+laundry and returned clean to the coolies. The
+Municipal Council has decreed that in the International
+Settlement ricsha coolies must be decently clad,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
+but the rule is not strictly enforced. On the back of
+ricshas belonging to Chinese companies is written in
+Chinese the company’s name, which is generally rather
+poetic not to say moral in tone, such as “Able to Fly
+Co.,” “Everlasting Remembrance,” “Steadfast Righteousness.”
+One company’s ricshas exhibit above the
+license plate a small metal locomotive, highly suggestive
+of incomparable speed. A rubber-tired ricsha
+costs, when new, fifty or sixty dollars, and its rental
+per day is from thirty-five to forty cents. A coolie hiring
+a ricsha, after using it a few hours, or half a day,
+sublets it, and that man in turn often rents it to
+another, so that in the course of twenty-four hours, it
+is likely to pass through two, three, or perhaps four
+hands, consequently the number of ricsha coolies is
+naturally far in excess of the ricshas. Passengers pay
+either according to the time the ricsha is used, the regular
+tariff being twenty cents an hour (but if the poor
+fellow gets eight or ten cents he does well), or by
+the trip, say five cents for a run of a mile or a mile and
+a half. At night the coolie expects a trifle more, as
+he has to spend a cent to buy the candle that lights
+his paper lantern or tiny lamp. These are the prices
+for foreigners. Chinese as a rule give less. Ricshas
+are of two kinds, the high black ones and the low
+brown style. All the latter are furnished with rubber
+tires. Most of the high ones formerly were without
+them, and as they could be rented more cheaply in consequence,
+were much used by the poorer Chinese, but
+of late the Municipal Council has succeeded in banishing
+all such ricshas from the Settlement. Most of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
+worn-out ricshas are apparently bought up for use in
+the Chinese district, as it abounds in a multitude of
+rickety, ramshackle vehicles, probably purchased for a
+mere song. Many of them are pulled by young boys,
+scarcely more than children.</p>
+
+<p>Ricsha coolies running in the International Settlement
+must have a license from the Municipal Council.
+If they are to travel beyond the limits of the Settlement
+they require in addition a French and a Chinese
+license. The license, in the form of a tin plate, is
+slipped into a groove at the back of the ricsha. It is
+furnished to the coolies by the companies owning the
+ricshas who pay into the city treasury a dollar a month
+for each one. The coolie loses his license if he commits
+a misdemeanor. Often for a very slight one, like blocking
+the road, generally in his eagerness to secure a
+passenger, he has his license taken from him by a Sikh
+policeman. Then the poor fellow is sorely troubled,
+for he can do no business without his license, and
+it is sometimes several days, or weeks, before it is
+restored, on the payment of a fine of forty cents. Once
+a month the ricshas in the Settlement must have their
+licenses renewed and be officially inspected.</p>
+
+<p>At the examining station opposite the Honkew Market,
+between three and four hundred gather every day.
+An English policeman is in charge. One by one the
+ricshas are brought before him, while he and a Chinese
+assistant shake, pull, and pound them to see if they
+are in good condition. If any part shows signs of
+weakness it is wrenched off, the license withheld, and
+the ricsha sent back to the company that owns it for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>
+repairs. The companies are represented on these occasions
+by Chinese foremen. Occasionally the foreman
+is a forewoman. A regular habitué is an old wizened
+creature, with bound feet and half blind, but as the
+foreign officer aptly describes her, “Keen as a razor
+when it comes to looking after the fifty ricshas placed
+in her care.” Accidents to ricshas are not infrequent
+on the crowded streets of Shanghai. The marvel is that
+they do not occur oftener. Nearly all coolies run with
+their heads down and their minds,—well, who can tell
+where a coolie’s mind may be wandering? It is doubtless
+dormant most of the time. Nearly all coolies come
+from the lowest stratum of society, and having nothing
+else to give in exchange for bread, or rather rice, sell
+their strength. The literal interpretation of the word
+“coolie” is “The man who sells his strength.”</p>
+
+<p>The ricsha coolie’s movements are erratic and impulsive.
+He seldom reasons. There are foreigners who
+will not risk their life in a ricsha and hair-breadth
+escapes occur nearly every day. An American lady
+was riding on one of the narrow, congested streets,
+when suddenly her coolie attempted to dash across the
+road between two electric cars approaching from opposite
+directions. He succeeded in clearing the track
+himself but the cars closed on the ricsha, crushing it
+to splinters. The woman with great presence of mind
+saved herself by grasping the front railing of one of
+the cars and holding to it until she could be drawn
+up. Another remarkable escape was that of a mother
+who, with her young baby, was riding on one of the
+quiet streets supposed to be perfectly safe. The coolie<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
+saw a man approaching on a bicycle, zigzaged several
+times in front of him, then utterly losing his nerve and
+wits, he dropped the shafts and ran away. The sudden
+stop and downward movement of the ricsha threw
+the baby out of its mother’s arms. The little thing
+fell, face down, on the hard macadamized road, and
+lay so still the mother feared the child was dead, but
+it proved to be only stunned, and except for some bad
+bruises, the next day seemed none the worse for its fall.</p>
+
+<p>The ordinary wear and tear of ricshas is made good
+by the owners, but damages due to accidents are often
+charged to the coolie, at least in part. The amount
+for which he is responsible depends on the company.
+One large firm exacts two and three dollars for a tire.
+These prices are ruinous for the coolie, who is obliged
+to borrow the money to pay the fine, and money lenders
+demand exorbitant rates of interest. The coolie who
+is unable to pay his debt has no recourse but to run
+away, commit suicide, or go to the Debtor’s Prison.
+In the latter case, unless he has more fortunate friends
+or relatives who come to his rescue he is likely to remain
+a prisoner indefinitely.</p>
+
+<p>It is interesting to see how quickly a fresh arrival
+from the West accustoms himself to ricsha riding. At
+first he is apt to inveigh against man-drawn vehicles,
+or if he gets into a ricsha, to sit lightly on the seat,
+with perhaps one foot hanging out at the side, with
+the idea of helping the coolie along, but presently he
+abandons himself to the enjoyment of the little, easy-running
+carriage, or as one enthusiastic woman described
+it “a grown-up’s perambulator,” and almost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>
+ceases to think of the puller as a human being. But
+let him stand on the Bund some day in the late afternoon
+and watch the stream of ricshas hurrying by.
+There is scarcely a coolie whose face is not drawn as
+if with pain, and many are actually contorted. Although
+a ricsha coolie’s life is far from a bed of roses,
+in his own happy-go-lucky way he does manage to get
+some pleasure out of it. One of the ricsha companies,
+with benevolent intentions, undertook to furnish free
+hot tea to its men at the company’s headquarters, but
+the plan didn’t work, for the reason that the coolies
+preferred to buy their own tea at a tea-house.
+Wretched as is the low-class tea-house, it is the coolies’
+favorite gathering place, where, surrounded by their
+cronies, they can gossip, smoke, and gamble till necessity
+drives them forth to work again.</p>
+
+<p>The coolies who come to the city in winter from
+farms and return to them in the spring, may be called
+gentlemen of means compared with the others. A
+very few, the number is almost negligible, are able
+to make ricsha pulling a paying business, as in the
+case of the man who gave up the position of “boy” at
+six dollars a month in a private family to become a
+ricsha coolie, because he said he could make more
+money.</p>
+
+<p>Many articles are lost in the ricshas. A passenger
+gets out and hurries away, forgetting his bundle or
+umbrella, and unless he has thought to look at the number
+on the ricsha, that is the last he ever sees of it.
+Not always though. The narrow margin on which
+the poor coolie exists from day to day makes the exceptionally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
+honest one stand out in all the brighter
+light. An elderly gentleman, carrying a very valuable
+package, left his ricsha with the package in it and went
+into a store. His business detained him some time
+and he finally returned home in a street car, entirely
+forgetting he had a ricsha waiting for him. After a
+considerable time the coolie, who had not observed the
+gentleman go away, went into the shop to look for him.
+A clerk said he had gone. Then was the coolie’s opportunity
+to run off with his prize. But no, in a moment
+he had brought in the package and laid it on the
+counter, asking anxiously how he could get it to the
+owner. As the gentleman was a regular customer at
+the shop, the clerk agreed to send it to his residence.
+That coolie not only received no reward for his honesty,
+since he slipped back into the crowd and it was
+impossible to identify him, but he lost time and fare
+as well. Another case was that of a lady who, in
+stepping from her ricsha, dropped a five dollar bill,
+which was discovered by the coolie after she had gone.
+Not being sure which house the lady had entered the
+coolie went from one to another until he found the
+owner of the money, to whom he restored it. It sometimes
+happens that dishonesty crops up where it is not
+looked for, and an unprincipled passenger, sad to relate,
+sometimes a foreigner, after using a ricsha for
+several hours, eludes his coolie and escapes the payment
+of fare by going into a shop or house and disappearing
+out another door.</p>
+
+<p>The ricsha is not indigenous to China. It was introduced
+from Japan as many as fifty years ago and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
+promises to be seen on the streets of Shanghai for some
+time to come in spite of the increasing popularity of
+more modern conveyances.</p>
+
+<p>There is a Christian mission for the ricsha coolies.
+It was started four years ago by a Scotch business man
+on whose heart had been laid the spiritual needs of
+this neglected class. At two centres in thickly-populated
+coolie districts week-day and Sunday meetings
+are held in rented Chinese houses, besides Sunday-schools
+and day-schools for the children of the ricsha
+coolies and a weekly religious meeting for women. A
+native evangelist visits the men in their homes and
+in the tea-shops they are wont to frequent, a Bible
+woman goes among the women, hot rice and beds are
+given to the really destitute in cold weather, and the
+sick are sent to the hospital. At the special Christmas
+services held one year each coolie was presented with
+a cheap towel, to his great delight. But let it not be
+imagined that the coolie’s satisfaction was due to the
+fact that he could now remove a few layers of dirt
+from his hands and face. That consideration, if it
+entered his mind at all, was wholly secondary. The
+chief use of the towel was to wipe the sweat from
+his brow when running, so that he could see more
+clearly. The coolies’ incredulous amazement that any
+one should care for them was most touching. At first
+when they flocked to the Hall they would say to the
+evangelist, “Is this for <i>us</i>?” and at the close of the
+meeting, “We never heard anything like it!” There
+have been a number of very bright conversions among
+them. The work is supported by voluntary contributions,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
+the coolies themselves, out of their extreme poverty,
+giving generously. The ambition of some is to
+raise enough money to build a church! It is a noble
+purpose but leagues beyond the possibilities of their
+meagre resources.</p>
+
+<p>Tramcars began running in the International Settlement
+in Shanghai in 1907. Six years later they were
+introduced on Chinese territory. No street in the
+Chinese city being wide enough for a car to pass
+through it, the intention is to surround the city with
+a track in place of the old moat, and it will not be long
+before the circle is complete. The cars are divided
+into two unequal sections, the larger one for third-class
+passengers and the smaller for first-class. Some foreigners
+travel third-class and many Chinese first-class.
+On one line in the Settlement, owing to the rude treatment
+accorded them in the third-class compartment by
+Chinese men, Chinese women are allowed to travel
+first-class for a third-class fare. Two notices stand out
+conspicuously in third-class cars. One prohibits spitting
+and is put up by the Municipal Health Department
+to guard against tuberculosis. The other warns
+passengers not to enter or leave while the cars are in
+motion. The warning is emphasized by a coloured
+picture of a man who has fallen in jumping off a car
+and is lying on the ground with the blood flowing from
+his wounds. Still, every year some Chinese are killed
+and many more injured in attempting, in their ignorance
+of physical laws, to imitate what they see foreigners
+do. Yet accidents do not deter them from using
+the cars, and during the busy hours of the day they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
+fairly swarm into them. Nearly all the cars carry
+a trailer, and except for a few seats in front reserved
+for first-class passengers, that too is crowded with
+Chinese. Fares are rated according to the distance
+traveled. Both motorman and conductor are Chinese,
+and the latter understands just enough English to collect
+fares. But if a stranger in the city asks in English
+for general information he will rarely succeed in making
+himself understood. Railless cars, brought over
+from England, were introduced on one road in the
+autumn of 1914, but proved too heavy for the paving
+and were prohibited after a week or two. The following
+spring, the road foundation having been
+strengthened, a second trial of the cars was made, and
+this time with pronounced success. They soon became
+very popular. Underground and elevated cars have
+not yet made their appearance in Shanghai, but the
+son of one of its most prominent Chinese citizens has
+been spending some time in Paris learning to fly, so on
+his return in the near future almost anything may be
+expected to develop in this progressive corner of the
+Orient.</p>
+
+<p>Shanghai being one of the greatest shipping ports
+in the Far East, quantities of merchandise are handled
+daily. Besides wheelbarrows, and coolies who carry
+loads suspended by ropes from poles resting on their
+shoulders, men-drawn carts are constantly in requisition.
+Coolies take the place of horses and mules as
+beasts of burden. It is true that the foreign hotels and
+many foreign firms have their wagons and vans, nowadays
+they are oftener motor cars, but these vehicles<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
+of Western manufacture are far outnumbered by native
+hand-pulled carts. The carts are of the simplest
+design, several oblong planks nailed together and set
+on two wheels. Most of the loads have to be tied on
+with ropes, and no account is taken of weight. The
+coolies’ muscle is not spared. Three, four, or more
+coolies are stationed in front of the cart to pull, with
+often several at the back to push. Stout ropes fifteen
+or twenty feet long are fastened by one end to the cart
+and knotted at the other. Each coolie takes a rope,
+passes it over his shoulder, changing occasionally for relief
+from one to the other, and grasps the knot with
+both hands. If the load is extremely heavy, such as
+iron rods or building stone, the pullers even on level
+ground are obliged to stop frequently to rest and recover
+breath. But it is when crossing the arched
+bridges over Soochow Creek that the tug of war comes.
+The forward coolies bend almost double, while those
+at the rear push with might and main till their faces
+are congested and it seems as if they must burst every
+blood-vessel in their bodies. But perhaps the cart does
+not yield an inch. After a moment’s rest another effort
+is made. This time the coolies at the back grasp
+the wheels and at last succeed in turning them ever so
+little, while slowly, very, very slowly the cart is drawn
+up the incline. When the highest point of the bridge
+is reached, unless the road in front is clear, there is
+another pause. Then the coolies who have been pushing,
+pull back, assisted by some of the others, while
+the forward coolies rush ahead in the liveliest manner
+to keep from being hit by the cart. It impresses foreigners<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>
+as a cruel way of getting work done and draws
+painfully on their sympathies, but if a sudden change
+were made to horse power, the carters would doubtless
+be the first ones to raise a hue and cry against it.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c7">VII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">A PEEP INTO THE SCHOOLROOM</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">“H</span>OW many schools for the Chinese, not counting
+missionary schools, are there in Shanghai?”
+The question was asked of a Y.M.C.A.
+secretary, who with others had just completed
+a canvass of the city with reference to its educational
+facilities. “It is not possible to tell exactly,”
+he replied, puckering his brow. “As nearly as we
+could find out, there are at least five hundred, probably
+more. Of course that list does not include the
+schools for girls. Miss Blank can tell you about
+them.” The Chairman of the Committee on the
+Investigation of Girls’ Schools was interviewed. She
+brought out her maps, charts, and reports, and spread
+them on the table. “It was such a difficult search,”
+she explained. “We discovered between thirty and
+forty boarding schools alone, but it is almost certain
+that does not include all. Some of them were hidden
+away in the queerest places.” “What a difference in
+the number of schools for girls compared with those
+for boys!” exclaimed her visitor. “Oh, well, you must
+remember we made no effort to tabulate the little day-schools.
+They seemed to be legion and met us at every
+turn.” The large majority of the schools enumerated
+were established after 1900, and very many sprang<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
+up at the time of the revolution in 1911, or quickly following
+it.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f8">
+<img src="images/fig8.jpg" alt="singer">
+<p class="caption">ADVERTISING SINGER SEWING MACHINE PRODUCTS</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>From these statistics it might appear that the education
+of the children of Shanghai was fairly well provided
+for, but with no compulsory system, thousands
+that are employed in mills and factories, bound out as
+apprentices, thrust forth to beg or allowed to loaf, never
+cross the threshold of a schoolroom.</p>
+
+<p>The Municipality of the International Settlement
+supports four large public schools for Chinese boys
+(there are none for girls), the ground in each instance
+having been donated by philanthropic Chinese, and the
+native residents in the Settlement, who form the bulk
+of the population, paying their share of the taxes on
+the buildings.</p>
+
+<p>One of the handsomest buildings in the French Concession
+is a public school for Chinese boys.</p>
+
+<p>Private schools, or as they are termed “Gentry
+Schools,” are very popular with the Chinese. In
+Shanghai this class far outnumbers all others, and it is
+moreover an interesting fact that of the schools under
+government control very many were started by an individual
+or group of individuals as private enterprises.
+China is a nation that reverences learning above all
+else. Not a scrap of paper that has written or printed
+on it even a single “character” is willingly allowed
+to be blown about carelessly or trampled under foot.
+These precious bits, soiled and torn though they may be,
+are laboriously picked up by men or boys armed with
+tongs or pin-pointed sticks, who travel to and fro through
+the streets in search of them. The well-to-do hire<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>
+proxies to perform this meritorious work. The paper
+is carried to the public ovens, where it is burned, and
+the ashes afterward thrown out in the river. The belief
+is millenniums old that heaven vouchsafes special
+blessings to those who show due regard for the sacred
+symbols of knowledge. It follows then quite naturally
+that to open and maintain a school ranks with the
+Chinese among the highest forms of service one can
+render to mankind.</p>
+
+<p>Since Western education has been introduced, many
+of China’s best young men have dedicated their lives
+and fortunes to popularizing it. Among the numerous
+examples that could be cited in Shanghai alone, the
+Akademio Utopia is one. Four years ago a group
+of ten zealous young men started a school in a small
+rented building. They had little capital, but each
+one agreed to devote twenty per cent of his income
+to meeting the running expenses. Several who had
+studied abroad gave also of their time and taught one
+or more classes. The principal was a graduate of
+Cornell University and the first Chinese student from
+that institution to be elected to Phi Beta Kappa. The
+current expenses were soon met, or nearly so, by the
+fees of the students, whose number quickly ran up to
+over a hundred, but when it became necessary to build,
+the young promoters again put their hands in their
+pockets, and out of their modest earnings gave most
+liberally. The principal’s father offered him financial
+help but in a spirit of manly independence he refused
+it, preferring to depend on his own and the school’s resources.
+The fine new building is finished and in use,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>
+though plain benches take the place of desks which
+will be added later, together with other needed furnishings,
+as the debt is gradually paid off.</p>
+
+<p>In the plebeian district of the Settlement, on a street
+little frequented by foreigners, is a boarding and day-school
+attended by five hundred and fifty boys. Unlike
+the former school, this one started full-fledged the
+year of the Boxer Rebellion, which witnessed the birth
+of so many new enterprises. The plant consists of
+three brick buildings, the middle one surmounted by
+a stately clock tower, and all connected by covered
+passageways. The main building is divided from front
+to back into parallel sections, with open courts between,
+though joined on the upper story by bridges.
+In this way good light and air are secured for each
+of the forty-six rooms. There is a laboratory, a science
+class-room with seats in amphitheatre style, a
+library containing both Chinese and English books, a
+hall dedicated to Confucius whose walls are hung with
+scrolls inscribed with quotations from the writings of
+the Sage and where the students gather semi-annually
+for worship, and finally a reception-room, having as
+its chief ornament a portrait of the founder of the
+school. The founder began life as a poor boatman.
+By careful saving of his earnings he was by and by
+able to open a small metal-ware shop. Possessed of
+great business sagacity, he rose step by step, gradually
+amassing wealth, until he became a millionaire.
+Though he never learned to read and write, this self-made
+man had ideals and gave liberally for the free
+education of the poor. When he was past sixty he conceived<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>
+the idea of founding a school as the best and
+most lasting memorial of himself he could leave to the
+city. The plans were made and the building begun,
+though the philanthropist did not live to see it completed.
+A statue is soon to be erected in his honour
+by a company of Shanghai merchants. The founder’s
+sons built a beautiful little memorial temple to their
+father on the school area between the playground and
+the out-of-doors gymnasium, and thither they resort at
+stated intervals to prostrate themselves before the ancestral
+tablets, as the students do in front of the philanthropist’s
+portrait in the reception hall. But they
+have no love for learning and take no interest whatever
+in the school, which goes to prove that not all the conservatives
+lived in the past century nor that all of the
+progressives are confined to the new. The fees are
+kept low, board and tuition for the entire school year of
+ten months and a half costing less than twenty-four
+dollars. Fifty of the boys are charity pupils. English
+and French are taught, the latter by a graduate
+of the school, and there is a small industrial department.
+The course of study extends through eleven
+years and carries the student up to about the third year
+in a home High School.</p>
+
+<p>Close to the South Gate of the Chinese City, or where
+the South Gate formerly stood, is a plain red brick
+building called in English “The Shanghai High
+School.” The interior arrangement could not be simpler,
+a hall running through the middle, which is also
+a dining-room for the boarders, and class-rooms opening
+off from it on either side. Above are dormitories.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
+In this building and three smaller ones on the grounds,
+five hundred boys, half of them boarders, whose ages
+average sixteen, are receiving a thorough education.
+A foreign educator remarked when visiting the school,
+“This shows what excellent work the Chinese can do
+with a very modest equipment, which, after all, answers
+in every way to their actual needs.” The story
+of this school is worth repeating. Thirteen years ago
+four progressive brothers banded together to help educate
+the youth of Shanghai. Not having sufficient
+money to purchase a suitable site and erect a building,
+they fitted up the family residence for a school, supporting
+it largely with their own funds. Three of the
+brothers are successful business men, and the fourth
+became the principal. He is a graduate of St. John’s
+University of the Protestant Episcopal Mission in
+Shanghai, a man in his early prime, of scholarly tastes
+and habits. Hardly had the doors of the school been
+opened when ninety boys flocked to it, and the number
+increased so rapidly that within a year or two it became
+necessary to look for more commodious quarters.
+The school in the meantime had received recognition
+from the local government and was given an annual
+grant-in-aid. The Chinese Municipality donated some
+of the public land for a site for the new plant, and
+in 1909 the present edifice was completed. Thirty
+teachers are employed, three of them being foreigners,
+and women. Speaking one day of the qualifications of
+his foreign teachers, reference was made by a friend
+to the fact that one of them had graduated with honour
+from the University of Edinburgh. “Yes,” said the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span>
+principal smilingly, “I consider myself fortunate in
+securing her, but I always seek the very best for my
+school, for it is my purpose to maintain the highest
+standard.” And that he does maintain it was proved
+when several of his students on examination entered
+St. John’s University unconditioned, the first time a
+school under Chinese management had attained such
+distinction.</p>
+
+<p>Four years after the brothers started their venture,
+their three sisters launched a school for girls.
+This school, like the other, had a small beginning, but
+from the first was a pronounced success. Later, its
+promotors were also given public land on which to
+build, and what is more, bricks from the city wall,
+at that time in process of being torn down, were donated
+for building material. Can the imagination conjure
+up anything more strange and romantic than a
+part of the old storied walls metamorphosed into a
+school for Chinese girls? How the city fathers who
+planned those walls, to say nothing of Confucius himself,
+whose prophetic eye caught no vision of a liberally
+educated womanhood, would have shrunk in horror
+from such unseemly desecration! The sisters are all
+married, one being a widow, and with their families
+live in neat apartments in the rear of the school. They
+are well-to-do, and teach for love’s sake rather than for
+the money there is in it. Indeed, the school has not
+yet become self-supporting. One teacher is principal,
+another supervises the classes in embroidery, and
+the third manages the business. The one hundred
+and thirty bright-faced pupils, besides the common<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
+branches, are taught music, drawing, painting, and
+plain sewing. They receive regular instruction in physical
+training from a young Chinese woman who had
+her own education in Boston. The school has been
+honoured with medals from several expositions to which
+specimens of beautiful embroidery and drawings have
+been sent.</p>
+
+<p>Fifty years ago a baby girl destined for an unusual
+career was born in one of the patrician Chinese homes
+in Shanghai. She was reared in luxury and given the
+meagre education at home usually accorded by indulgent
+parents to girls in her position. Allowed by choice
+to remain unmarried, she eventually allied herself with
+a society of austere Buddhist religionists known as
+“vegetarians.” Years rolled by, till the girl, grown
+to womanhood, had passed her thirty-ninth birthday.
+She had long observed that her father was a liberal-minded
+man, and that his benefactions were frequently
+in aid of schools for girls, which were gradually becoming
+common. “If my father is interested in the
+education of girls,” she reasoned within herself, “why
+should I not open a school and he help <i>me</i>?” But
+when she mentioned the plan to her father he frowned
+upon it harshly, and her stepmother was even more
+violent in her opposition. Education might be condoned
+in others, but no daughter of theirs needed more
+than she had, and much less should she aspire to be a
+medium for encouraging it. Moreover, the father realized
+the young woman’s marked ability, and had plans
+of his own respecting the help she would by and by
+render him in the management of his estate. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
+more she was opposed, however, the stronger grew her
+purpose, until finally the controversy led to her being
+practically disinherited and driven from the parental
+roof. She had a little money with which she managed
+to open a small school, and then sold her jewels
+to keep it running. That was twelve years ago. Twice
+she has moved, the last time, in the spring of 1914,
+to a handsome new building she erected herself largely
+with the portion of her inheritance she was able to
+secure when her father died. There was a notable
+“opening” to which many Chinese guests and a few
+favored foreigners were invited. On the wall of the
+Assembly Room hung a large portrait of the principal’s
+father, for the flower of filial piety rarely dies
+in China, no matter how rough the winds that blow
+upon it. Chinese flags were draped over the platform
+and fluttered from pillar to post. In the side rooms
+the industrial work of the girls was on exhibition and
+a fine collation set forth.</p>
+
+<p>The building and grounds of this school are always
+kept neat and attractive, and no matter what
+hour of the day the unexpected visitor arrives, he is
+sure to find dormitories and hall, and even dining-room,
+kitchen, and laundry worthy of the closest inspection.
+The kindergarten building is slightly separated
+from the main one, and it would be hard to find
+anywhere a more perfect model of its kind. Mothers’
+Meetings are held from time to time when practicable.
+Matters relating to the child’s moral, mental, and physical
+well-being are frankly discussed.</p>
+
+<p>“Commencement Day” is observed with great éclat.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>
+Last year, four “sweet girl graduates” sat on the platform,
+all dressed alike, in white Chinese silk made in
+Chinese style, white slippers with foreign heels, and
+tiny blue ribbon bows at the neck, and bands of narrow
+blue ribbon around their hair. The class colours
+were blue and white, and behind the girls hung their
+class banner, bearing on a white ground their motto
+“Excelsior” in blue letters. Each graduate had prepared
+an essay in English, but only one was read,
+“The Influence and Responsibility of the Young
+Women of China.” In thought and language it would
+have done credit to a school-girl in any land. The
+others wrote on, “The Need of Compulsory Education,”
+“The Evils of the Cigarette Habit,” and “The
+Advantages of an Education in China Over That Received
+Abroad.” Songs, piano solos, duets, and eight-handed
+pieces, recitations in French and English, and
+an eloquent address on “The Value of Education for
+Women,” by the Chinese Commissioner of Foreign Affairs,
+completed the programme, which throughout was
+of an exceptionally high order. Then came the closing
+scene as a delightful climax. Dr. Wu Ting Fang,
+former Minister to the United States, presented to
+each graduate a diploma tied with ribbon in approved
+Western style, which he received from the hand of the
+principal. It was hard to realize that the little woman
+standing beside Dr. Wu, so modest and retiring, in
+simple, dark Chinese dress, her hair combed straight
+back from her face in old-time Chinese fashion, was the
+promoter and controlling spirit of this most successful
+up-to-date school. She speaks no English and prefers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
+to keep in the background as much as possible, yet
+hers is an unusual personality. Though not a professing
+Christian she is a believer in heart and is quite a regular
+attendant at a Protestant Episcopal Mission
+Church.</p>
+
+<p>Another popular school for girls is known generally
+as the “Suffragette School.” Like so many others, its
+existence began at the close of the recent revolution, and
+grew out of it. The exigencies of the revolution
+brought women into the public arena as they had never
+thought of figuring before. A few who had studied
+medicine went to the front as doctors and many more
+as Red Cross nurses. A large number acted as spies,
+secreted refugees, carried ammunition to the soldiers,
+and sacrificed property and life itself for their country.
+From various quarters there gathered in Shanghai a
+hundred or so school-girls, most of them runaways,
+fired with an all-consuming if misguided desire to aid
+their country, who donned uniforms, shouldered arms,
+drilled, and begged to be allowed to march at once to
+the firing-line, which fortunately for them they were
+not permitted to do. They were known as the “Amazons.”
+All these events, however, so stirred the patriotism
+of the women of Shanghai that a numerous company
+banded together to raise money for the revolution,
+which they did very successfully. When the fighting
+ceased, instead of disbanding they formed themselves
+into a permanent organization under the name of “The
+Chinese Woman’s Co-operative Association.” Its purpose
+was to protect the interests of women in general,
+and in particular to gain for them the right of suffrage.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span></p>
+
+<p>The society is still in existence, though greatly modified
+in tone and reduced in numbers by the elimination
+of the most rabid and troublesome spirits. Occasional
+meetings are held and men are frequently invited to address
+them, a woman occupying the chair. The principal
+work done by this Association since the revolution
+has been the founding and fostering of the Suffragette
+School, with the idea of inculcating advanced
+ideas in the minds of the young. At first the teachers,
+all of them women, worked without salary, and turned
+with disdain from men and marriage. While the curriculum
+includes Western studies, particular emphasis
+is laid on Chinese subjects, especially
+the writing of Chinese characters, which the
+pupils do exceedingly well. They are encouraged to
+make their clothes of Chinese cloth, use Chinese furnishings
+in their homes and preserve the old-time customs
+and the old-time beliefs; in short, to be Chinese to
+the backbone and independent of the foreigners’ supplies
+and the foreigners’ religion.</p>
+
+<p>The school has prospered better numerically than
+financially. An interested missionary was talking one
+day about the school to Miss C., a recent graduate of
+Wellesley College and a relative of the principal. “You
+say the school is poor?” “Not poor in the quality of
+work done, but, O yes, very poor in money.” “What
+is the reason of that?” “Well, it hasn’t financial supporters.
+You see, right after the revolution so many
+women were enthusiastic about suffrage. But they are
+not now in the same way, and they don’t take as much
+interest in keeping up the school.” “What do you think<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
+makes them less interested in the question of suffrage?”
+“They don’t believe the time has come in China to push
+it. Other things they feel are at present more important
+and necessary.” “What is your personal opinion?”
+The bright eyes of the young woman rested
+an instant thoughtfully on her questioner, then came
+the decided reply, “I am sure we are not ready to
+vote yet, and it is a mistake to divert our thoughts from
+greater needs by thinking of it and working for it.”</p>
+
+<p>More and more as the New Learning is crowding
+out the old-time impractical methods, the desire grows
+to relate the work of the schools to the life of the people.
+Hitherto industrial training has received little
+attention in China, but the Republic has been gradually
+awakening to its importance, so that to-day schools of
+this kind are the ones that appeal most strongly to the
+popular mind and receive the readiest support from
+governmental and private sources. In Shanghai, commercial
+and industrial schools, or schools that have
+added these departments to their curricula, are constantly
+on the increase.</p>
+
+<p>The World’s Chinese Students’ Federation, with
+headquarters at Shanghai, is carrying on both day and
+evening schools which are largely attended. The
+teachers give their services free and are young men
+of independent means, or those who are able and willing
+to devote a portion of their time to this work. The
+principal is only twenty-one, a graduate of the Young
+Men’s Christian Association school and unusually
+gifted.</p>
+
+<p>The leading institution in Shanghai under Chinese<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>
+auspices is the Government Institute of Technology.
+As in the case of so many other educational enterprises,
+this one received its initial impulse from an
+individual, a man high in government employ. It
+began in 1897 as a Normal School, then added Preparatory
+and Grammar School departments, and finally, under
+the skillful leadership of Dr. John C. Ferguson,
+developed into Nanyang College, still later adding
+courses in civil and electrical engineering, and changing
+its name to “The Government School of Technology.”
+The handsome buildings in the midst of spacious
+well-kept grounds, the complete equipment, fine
+corps of teachers, eight of whom are Americans, the
+standard of work maintained, and the character of the
+large student body, all combine to make this a school
+Shanghai may well be proud of. A few of the best
+students are sent each year to Europe and America
+for a period of practical training.</p>
+
+<p>The Mining and Railway College is not so large
+nor so old an institution, but in its way quite as remarkable.
+Its founder, who is also its president, is a
+young man in his early thirties, with a finely chiselled,
+scholarly face and gracious manner. When travelling
+abroad after finishing his education at Queen’s College
+in Hongkong, he became convinced that what China required
+more than almost anything else was trained engineers.
+So four years ago (many things happened in
+Shanghai four years ago), unaided, he started this
+school, giving himself and his money without reserve
+to the work. Already the students number two hundred
+and sixty, as promising a body of young men as one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>
+would wish to see. They come from nearly every province
+in the country and a few from Java. Five of the
+fifteen teachers have studied abroad, but only one is a
+foreigner, a Belgian who teaches mining and mineralogy.
+The entering students are put at once into English
+classes and it is remarkable what they accomplish
+in a single year. A specialty is made of chirography,
+“for,” says the president, “unless the boys learn to
+form their letters carefully, they will not draw well,
+and as engineers they must do that.”</p>
+
+<p>The School of Medicine and of Engineering, carried
+on by the Germans for Chinese students, is unique
+in its way. An eminent physicist in Shanghai has said
+that in his opinion it is the greatest institution in
+China. The school, its two departments being entirely
+distinct, is not missionary nor even philanthropic in
+character. This is simply a business enterprise fostered
+by the German government for business purposes.
+They give the best training in return for what, to the
+Chinese, are heavy fees, in order that these men may
+be prepared later to work in their employ. The teaching
+force is of the highest grade and the scientific equipment
+as perfect as the means provided can make it.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f9">
+<img src="images/fig9.jpg" alt="school">
+<p class="caption">MISS ZEE’S NEW SCHOOL BUILDING. &#160;&#160; KINDERGARTEN IN THE REAR</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Perhaps of all the schools in Shanghai, the little day-schools
+appeal to one most because of their unfailing
+human interest and the possibilities stored up in them.
+They are of every kind and degree of excellence, or
+badness, according to the way they are looked at. On
+the whole, most of them seem to be doing good and
+even the poorest keep the children off the street. Often
+there are amusing features. In the Chinese city, on a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
+signboard over a doorway appears the rather unusual
+announcement, “English taught from A. to L.” Just
+what is done with the remaining letters of the alphabet
+is not explained. On a side street the passerby reads
+again in large English letters, “Daily Progressive
+School.” In two poorly lighted, none too clean rooms
+of an old Chinese house, thirty or forty children bend
+over their roughly made desks, studying aloud in vociferous
+tones. The head teacher quiets them while he
+greets the chance visitor and points with pride to his
+foreign textbooks in geography and English. He too
+has ideals, and when reference is made to the name of
+the school, answers, “Yes, that is what I want to make
+it, ‘Daily Progressive.’” He adds that he has started
+two branches of his “Daily Progressive School” in
+other parts of Shanghai. Then comes the unexpected
+question, “Are you a Christian?” “I am a Christian,”
+naming the mission school where he received his
+education.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes a little day-school is hidden away in the
+back room of a rambling old house, or in an inner
+apartment of a Buddhist temple, where the unsophisticated
+easily loses himself amid its labyrinthine windings.
+During the stormy iconoclastic days of the revolution,
+temples and ancestral halls were turned over
+wholesale by the provisional government to be used as
+schools, and though many have reverted to their original
+purposes, others, like Li Hung Chang’s Temple in
+Shanghai, are still kept as seats of learning. This
+memorial to the great statesman, built by public funds,
+was taken possession of five years ago by the trustees<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
+of Fuh-tan College, and now the bronze statue of the
+famous Li from its pedestal in the garden looks down
+each day on three hundred and fifty students hurrying
+to and fro through the numberless courts and passageways.
+Commencement exercises are held in the
+Hall of Ancestral Worship, where, on a raised platform
+against an ornate background, sits the Chinese
+President, an alumnus of Yale, surrounded by his faculty,
+all in collegiate cap and gown, making one of the
+curious anomalies common in these days of transition.</p>
+
+<p>From the Provincial Normal School, located in the
+Chinese city, thirty young men graduated last year and
+more than five hundred have gone out from its doors
+during the eleven years since it was opened. Such is
+the demand for teachers that long before the school-year
+closes every member of the graduating class has
+been spoken for. The alumni are scattered far and
+wide over the country. Near the Normal School is
+a large practice school of four hundred pupils. The
+students of the Normal School are taught music,
+clay-modelling, wood-carving, painting, drawing. They
+are ardent patriots and keenly resent any real or
+supposed indignity offered to their native land. Sometimes
+they express their patriotism in original ways,
+as they did not long ago, when feeling ran high
+because of the unreasonable demands made on China
+by Japan. The boys’ sleeping and study rooms open
+onto courts in the rambling structure, or rather a
+series of Chinese buildings which constitute the school
+plant. These rooms were cleared out and each one
+made the scene of some pictorial or material representation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span>
+of the current political issue. Many of the
+exhibits were exceedingly clever, a few were most
+amusing, but all were strikingly illustrative of the
+animus of the student body and showed the kind of
+teachers that are being sent forth over China to instill
+their principles into the minds of the rising
+generation.</p>
+
+<p>It is significant of the spirit of the times that a
+young man in Shanghai a few months ago went to his
+father and begged to be given his portion of the family
+gambling money. With it he opened a school which
+has now one hundred and fifty pupils. The secretary
+of the Provincial Educational Association, recently
+back from an extended tour in America, requested a
+resident missionary to give him lessons in English. He
+was so impressed with the excellence of the American
+system that he decided to introduce the same methods
+into his own schools as rapidly as possible, and wanted a
+better knowledge of English that he might be qualified
+to select text-books and arrange courses of study.</p>
+
+<p>Last summer for the first time the Shanghai prefect
+fixed a uniform vacation period for the elementary
+schools extending through five weeks, from July 22d to
+August 25th. In sending out the notice the prefect
+added a clause to the effect that during two weeks of
+the vacation three hours a day must be spent by the
+pupils in reviewing their lessons.</p>
+
+<p>There are two flourishing Japanese schools in Shanghai.
+One is a large public school that is growing so
+rapidly a new building has been added to the group
+which suffices for six or seven hundred pupils. Boys<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
+and girls of all ages are accommodated under the same
+roof, but with the exception of the very little children
+in the kindergarten, they occupy separate rooms and
+have their recess at different hours. They make a
+pretty sight in their gay coloured garments flitting
+about in the sunshine like radiant butterflies during
+play hours, or pouring joyously out on the street at
+the close of school, some going off in ricshas accompanied
+by nurses, more on foot, while a lot of youngsters
+scramble onto the street cars, clutching their coppers
+in dirty little paws, each one carrying a school
+bag or books tied up in a square of cloth, and a little
+lunch box, while on every urchin’s head rests a smart
+military cap.</p>
+
+<p>The other school is a Japanese College with nearly
+three hundred students, strong of body, alert in mind,
+picked men all of them. They are sent from Japan
+by their respective prefectures to study in Shanghai
+for three years, every expense being met. The course
+includes commerce, engineering, and agriculture. During
+the fourteen years since the school opened, eight
+hundred have graduated, seventy receiving certificates
+last June. At the end of the second year’s work, seventy
+or eighty of the most promising students at the
+expense of the school, are sent far and wide over China
+to study the country and its condition, agricultural,
+mining, social, political. “When the men graduate
+from the college they return to Japan, do they not?”
+was asked of the president. “Oh, no,” came the emphatic
+reply, “they are expected to stay in China and
+help the Chinese develop their resources.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span></p>
+
+<p>A group of schools in Shanghai which are not for
+the study of books, but, in their line, of great value, the
+public generally knows little about. These are the six
+Singer Sewing-Machine Schools for women and girls.
+The Singer Sewing-Machine made its advent in China
+a decade ago, and thus far it is without a rival. It
+“took” almost at once with the Chinese and is now
+found everywhere, even in the most unlooked for and
+absurdly out-of-the-way places. In 1910 Singer Sewing-Machine
+schools were started in Shanghai. At
+first they met with small success. Those for men
+were a signal failure and soon closed their doors.
+The few who ventured to enter the schools for
+women and girls had to be paid for coming, but the
+old conservatism seemed to die out with the revolution.
+The leading school now numbers fifty pupils.
+The period of training covers three, six, or twelve
+months according to the kind of work taken up, whether
+plain tailoring or fancy embroidery. The pupils come
+from widely scattered districts and it is the intention
+when they return to their village or town that they
+shall open a school of their own, and in this way introduce
+the machines throughout the country. There are
+already more than four hundred selling stations in
+China, each in charge of a Chinese agent. The machines
+are sold on the installment plan. “We consider
+ourselves missionaries in our way,” said the foreign
+representative of the company in Shanghai, “for is it
+not a charity to lighten the labour of these poor hard-working
+people by selling them our sewing-machines
+on easy terms?” The Singer Company subscribes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>
+liberally to all benevolences, and during the revolution,
+and the rebellion the following year, it loaned its
+machines free of charge to organizations engaged in
+making garments for the destitute. One effective way
+it has of advertising is to send men about the streets
+of Shanghai dressed fantastically in clothes made in
+its shops, while offering for sale small articles carried
+in portable show-cases.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c8">VIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">A WIZARD PUBLISHING HOUSE</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">“T</span>HE pen is mightier than the sword” has
+through the centuries been a working axiom
+in China, for soldiers stood at the foot of
+the social ladder, while scholars sat proudly on the top
+rung. Recent experiences, it is true, have somewhat
+altered the views of the people, though not reversed
+them. But the accompanying adage, “The printed
+page is mightier than the sword,” has not seemed to
+acquire popularity, despite the fact that printing from
+movable type was discovered in old China long before
+Gutenberg saw the light of day. Indeed, the “Peking
+Gazette,” whose lineal descendant still flourishes in the
+Capital, claims the honour of being the first newspaper
+ever published. It was printed from wooden blocks,
+some of which are still in existence, no one knows just
+how long ago, though tradition makes it as many as a
+thousand years. But for centuries the art was little
+used and even as late as the Chino-Japanese war in 1894
+news travelled so slowly that people living only seventy-five
+miles from the coast had not even heard there was a
+war. Now, Shanghai alone, which is far in advance of
+other cities in this respect, publishes more than thirty
+newspapers and periodicals, twelve of them being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>
+dailies. Many of the sheets are illustrated, and as a
+proof that they are thoroughly abreast of the times,
+advertisements of well known patent medicines are
+given a prominent place!</p>
+
+<p>With the dawn of China’s “New Day,” and the increasing
+thirst for Western learning, an insistent cry
+was heard, not alone for newspapers, but for books,
+books, and plenty of them. Then to meet the need
+arose the Commercial Press. The story of the rapid
+growth and development of this great publishing house
+reads like a tale from the Arabian Nights. The idea
+was born in the minds of three young, wide-awake
+Chinese, all practical printers, and all of them Christians,
+the product of a Presbyterian Mission School in
+Shanghai. Work began in 1897 in a modest way
+with two small printing presses. The shop was a
+Chinese house in an alley off one of the main
+roads. These quarters were speedily outgrown, and
+after two moves the plant was finally lodged permanently
+in a group of fine brick buildings covering
+eight acres in the northern end of the
+city. To-day sixty modern presses, the very best
+to be had, are annually, in round figures, using up
+twenty-five thousand reams of foreign paper and thirty-four
+hundred reams of Chinese paper, the bulk of
+which is turned into school books and scattered far and
+wide over the land, from Manchuria to Thibet. The
+year after the revolution, although new machinery was
+bought, additional workmen taken on as fast as they
+could be found, and the presses kept running night and
+day, the enormous demand for books could not be met.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f10">
+<img src="images/fig10.jpg" alt="composing">
+<p class="caption">CHINESE COMPOSING ROOM</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span></p>
+
+<p>From the first, the policy of the Commercial Press
+has been never to print any books that are antagonistic
+to the Christian religion, and to this purpose it has
+faithfully adhered. Indeed, the twenty or more heads
+of departments are either Christians or in sympathy
+with Christianity.</p>
+
+<p>The rules of this house governing the treatment of employees
+may not sound unusual to Western ears, but
+studied in comparison with conditions as they have
+been in China, and still are for the most part, their
+true worth is keenly realized. The Commercial Press
+employs about fourteen hundred men and four hundred
+women. Several of the boys are deaf mutes from a
+missionary institution in the north, and a number are
+from the Shanghai Reformatory, taken on by the company
+to give them a fresh start in life, with a hostel
+built especially for their accommodation. Most of
+the women work in the bindery, though they are found
+here and there throughout the establishment and some
+of the lighter machinery is operated by them. One
+is a forewoman and a few bright girls are studying
+to be bookkeepers. None are admitted under fourteen
+years of age, while the majority are much older. An
+innovation has lately been introduced, permitting
+women to work in the same room with men, although
+at different tables. It has proved a perfect success.
+All hands attend strictly to business and the new arrangement
+has distinct advantages over the old, as, in
+giving employees better light and air, since the rooms
+can be kept larger. The hours of labour are from 7:30
+to 12 and from 1 to 5:30 o’clock. The bell rings for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>
+the women to leave five minutes before the men.
+“Ladies first, you see,” a member of the staff laughingly
+remarked to a visitor. When a woman expects
+to become a mother she is given two months off with
+full pay and five dollars in addition to meet extra expenses.
+Sundays are holidays. About one-eighth of
+the force are Christians and two Protestant churches
+are located in the neighborhood of the Works, which
+many of them attend. Wages are excellent with the
+addition of a bonus for special merit. There is a reserve
+fund for the benefit of the families of the deceased,
+and old, retired employees. Profit sharing is
+a part of the system and the head men in each department
+are shareholders in the company.</p>
+
+<p>A small hospital with accommodation for a score of
+patients, and with an immaculate dispensary and operating
+room, is another feature of this remarkable establishment.
+An attendant is always present, and a Chinese
+foreign-trained doctor visits the hospital every
+morning. The clinic is open to outsiders as well as employees
+and their families. All pay a fee of three Chinese
+coppers, about one cent, as it has been found necessary
+to charge something to keep the place from being
+overrun. Near the Commercial Press the management
+has built a number of small but comfortable houses, and
+these are rented, at a nominal rate, to employees who
+care to occupy them. A school is maintained for the
+children of employees, and a night-school and reading-room
+for apprentices. A kindergarten, for which the
+Commercial Press furnishes the premises and the Presbyterian
+Mission Press the teachers, is also close by.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>
+None of these schools are free, as parents are able to
+pay a little tuition and feel more self-respecting to do
+so. A tea garden, made attractive with shrubs, flowers,
+and seats scattered about on the well-kept lawn, furnishes
+a delightful resting-place for the clerks when off
+duty. The fire brigade is a most important factor in
+the concern. It is composed of twenty-six men, all employees,
+and is kept at a high grade of efficiency by frequent
+drills. A stone’s throw from the main building
+is the fire station, fitted up with bright hose wagons,
+ladders, buckets, torches for carrying safety oil lamps
+of brass, besides complete uniforms for the men, the
+burnished brass helmets being their special pride. The
+brigade stands ready to respond to a limited number
+of outside calls.</p>
+
+<p>Visitors to the press works are always cordially welcomed,
+and courteously shown over the establishment
+by a competent guide, whenever possible a member
+of the staff. So extensive is the plant it usually
+requires several hours for even a cursory tour
+of inspection. Two of the buildings are used for the
+printing plant and foundry, one for the Chinese bindery,
+another is reserved for the editorial department,
+Chinese and English, two are warehouses, one is a carpentry
+shop, and one, a long low building somewhat
+apart from the others, is devoted to photography and
+its various branches. The rooms are airy, clean, and
+cheerful, in marked contrast to most of the workshops
+in China. Each is connected by telephone with the
+main office, and light tracks are laid for carrying merchandise
+to and fro. Electric motors supply the motive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>
+power, while both gas and electricity are used for
+lighting purposes.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the printing presses are from England and
+America. Those for finer work, including the immense
+wonder-working machines in the colour printing
+department, are of German manufacture. The
+Commercial Press was the first firm to introduce three-colour
+printing into China. One is tempted to linger
+long beside these marvellous presses. As the blue, yellow,
+red, each in its turn, is added so quickly and easily
+to the maps, charts, pictures, and kindergarten scrolls,
+the visitor is almost persuaded that he is viewing an exhibition
+of the cunning art of a magician, rather than the
+automatic movements of an insensate piece of machinery.
+Here is laid before the eyes a gay picture of the
+landing of Columbus for a history of America in Chinese,
+and yonder an equally charming one of the child
+Raleigh for a history of England. Much is made of illustrations
+in the school books published by the Commercial
+Press. Their ethical readers for little folks are fascinating
+productions. Each page is a coloured picture,
+which teaches its own lesson. Children are represented
+on their way to school, saluting the teacher, reciting
+their lessons, giving alms to the poor, caring for the
+aged, the young, sick, and blind, dusting and sweeping
+the rooms, washing, brushing, mending, and folding
+clothes, brushing their teeth, eating, playing. Houses
+are pictured as clean and sanitary, living as wholesome
+and pure. Especial emphasis is placed on proper manners
+and morals, teaching sadly needed to-day in China,
+when there is such an alarming tendency to abandon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
+all that was really admirable under the old régime, and
+adopt in an exaggerated form all that is bad from the
+West. In the First Year Primary books practically
+no reading matter is introduced, only a few Chinese
+characters to explain the text. The little ones scan
+them attentively, absorbing knowledge without being
+conscious of the fact. How different is this from the
+old way, when children were shut all day long in dark,
+close rooms, shouting aloud unmeaning phrases from
+the Chinese classics, while the teacher dozed in his
+chair!</p>
+
+<p>The newest addition to the plant is the installation
+of three “off-set” presses, the first in the Far
+East. An expert came out from America with them
+to set them up and instruct the Chinese workmen in
+their use. They are often kept busy through the twenty-four
+hours in turning out bonds and bank-notes by
+the millions for the Government.</p>
+
+<p>Too much praise can not be given to the work of the
+editorial department. The entire second floor and part
+of the third of a quiet, three-story building is devoted
+to it. At long, unpainted wooden tables, littered with
+books and papers, sit the hundred and fifty scholars,
+bending over their work. Above four thousand original
+books have already gone out from their busy workshop,
+besides countless others that have been translated
+and edited. Eight monthly magazines are published by
+the editorial staff, a general one, an educational, a
+political, student’s, child’s, short story, a woman’s
+magazine, and one entitled “The English Student,” of
+which twenty thousand copies are issued monthly. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span>
+newest publication is a magazine called “The English
+Weekly.” The aim of the last two is to help Chinese
+students in the study of English. The Woman’s Magazine
+is one of the most popular. A bright girl who
+has studied in America was speaking about it one day
+to a group of foreign friends. “Just think,” she
+said, “the last number contains recipes for cooking
+eggs in twelve different ways.” “Is that so unusual?”
+asked an interested listener. “Why, they were not
+for making foreign dishes, but cooking Chinese food!
+I never before heard of a printed Chinese food recipe.
+If Chinese women begin to learn about food values
+it will mean everything in their lives.” The Woman’s
+Magazine started its life two years ago with a man as
+editor-in-chief. This fall a young woman will take
+over that position. She is a recent graduate of Wellesley
+College and married to a Harvard alumnus.
+Modest and lovable, she graciously answered the questions
+of her foreign callers. “Yes,” she admitted, with
+a little apologetic laugh, “I am going to try to edit the
+magazine.” “There will be assistant editors of
+course?” “Oh, yes.” “Women?” “No, I believe
+they are all men.” This young wife is a beautiful
+housekeeper, and it is safe to assume her home and
+family will not be neglected on account of the outside
+work she is about to take up. Indeed, it is worthy of
+comment that no one is more pleased about it than the
+young husband himself.</p>
+
+<p>An interesting fact in connection with the editorial
+department of the Commercial Press is that most
+Western books are translated through the medium of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
+Japanese language, instead of directly from the English.
+This is because the present system of education in
+China is based on that of Japan, and scientific terms
+are more easily adapted from the Japanese. But Chinese
+students returning from abroad are strong in
+their feeling that this second-hand method of acquiring
+knowledge must soon give way to the more
+direct.</p>
+
+<p>Glancing about the editorial room with its scores of
+hard-working men, pouring out the best that is in them
+for the uplift and enlightenment of their country, it is
+impossible not to feel a strange stirring of the heart,
+and one is also thrilled when looking through the warehouses
+where room after room is filled with books
+stacked to the ceiling or packed in boxes to be shipped
+away. Some of the largest orders come from the most
+distant provinces. The aim of the publishing house is
+not to issue many handsome, expensive books, but to
+flood the land with cheap editions that shall be within
+the reach of all.</p>
+
+<p>Tiptoeing out of the editorial department, the visitor
+passes on to the English and Chinese composing rooms,
+which present a very different scene. There is a sort
+of mystery about Chinese type. That a “character”
+made up of a score or more of tiny individual strokes
+can be reproduced perfectly in a clean-cut piece of lead,
+seems nothing short of marvellous. Chinese type-setting
+is exceedingly complex. The cases are set on
+slanting frames, placed to form a triangle, within
+which stands the compositor. About six thousand
+characters are in ordinary use and a font of type<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>
+weighs fifteen hundred pounds. An American woman
+is chief proof-reader for English text, assisted by a
+Portuguese and many Chinese. Behind the printing
+department is the foundry. Type-casting is a specialty
+and is done on a large scale. Indeed the market for a
+long time was so generally supplied from the Commercial
+Press that their sizes became the standard for
+all China. The matrices, kept in a fire-proof safe, are
+among the Company’s most valuable assets. A few
+modern automatic type-casters from Chicago are used,
+but they are far outnumbered by the old-style, hand-worked
+machines. The type cast from the old-style
+machines must be assorted, trimmed, and polished, all
+of which is done by women. “We are not always keen
+in making use of the latest machines,” explains the
+staff, “since labour is so cheap in China, and it is a
+blessing to the poor people to give work to as many as
+possible.”</p>
+
+<p>Nearly all of the smaller machinery used in the
+Commercial Press Works is made in their own foundry
+and carpentry shop, besides physical, physiological,
+and chemical apparatus for schools, tools for industrial
+work, and small reed organs. The job-printing
+department is strictly up to date and large returns
+are realized from it. Recently one of the heads of the
+company made a trip around the world in order to
+study the best and latest processes of printing. The
+two hundred copies of the English edition of “China’s
+Young Men,” the organ of the Young Men’s Christian
+Association, are sent out monthly from this press.</p>
+
+<p>No expense has been spared to make the equipment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>
+of the photo-engraving department as perfect as possible.
+It is provided with arc lamps and an acid-blasting
+etching machine, so that orders can be quickly filled
+irrespective of the weather. A fine photographic gallery
+is annexed whose chief furnishing is a new camera
+bought in London and making the fifth in use. The
+lens is able to produce pictures 32 × 43 inches, and
+with a single exception is the largest in the world.
+The camera rests upon a handcar, which runs back
+and forth over a small track. For some years, one-fourth
+of the company’s stock was held by Japanese,
+but at the beginning of 1914 this was bought back,
+so that now the concern is wholly Chinese. This consummation
+of a long-anticipated hope was celebrated
+with great rejoicing.</p>
+
+<p>Several miles away from the works, on one of the
+busiest streets in a Chinese section of the International
+Settlement, stands the business house of the Commercial
+Press. The four-story building of reinforced
+concrete, ornamented with iron pillars, is quite new,
+having been built only six years ago at a cost of twenty
+thousand dollars. The fine show windows at once attract
+attention. Those on the right of the entrance are
+reserved for Chinese books and the ones on the left for
+English. Among the latter, besides standard works
+in literature, fiction, biography, and travel, are seen
+titles like the following: “Ready Made Speeches,”
+“Cooking,” “How the People Rule,” “Our Sick and
+How to Take Care of Them,” “Poultry and Profit,”
+“All about Railways,” “Railway Conquest of the
+World,” and a series under the general head, “Common<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>
+Commodities of Commerce,” including tea, coffee,
+sugar, iron, oil, rubber. The sales rooms are on the
+ground floor. But many things are found there besides
+books and the usual appurtenances of a bookstore. In
+the apartments at the rear, in glass cases, are displayed
+samples of the many kinds of school apparatus manufactured
+at the works, also a large collection of stuffed
+birds from different countries, various forms of insect
+and animal life preserved in alcohol, besides what is of
+exceeding value to Chinese students, studies in rice,
+cotton, the silkworm, and other products, showing the
+progressive changes and best methods of their development
+and the uses to which they are and may be put.
+For the accommodation of customers who wish to look
+over the books at their leisure, numerous benches are
+scattered conveniently about, and the pleasant little
+reading room is always well patronized.</p>
+
+<p>The second and third stories are mainly devoted to
+offices, while a good part of the fourth is reserved for the
+dining-hall. According to the usual custom in China,
+the two hundred employees have their board furnished
+them as a part of their pay, and all who receive under
+ten dollars a month are given lodging as well, though not
+in the same building. A roof garden, where the clerks
+may gather for the noon rest, or enjoy the cool evening
+breezes in hot weather, is one of the attractions
+of the place. Perhaps the two most useful adjuncts
+are the elevator, which carries both freight and passengers,
+and the electric cash register and delivery system,
+the only one in China. The Commercial Press
+has over forty branch offices in China, the large branch<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>
+in Peking being employed chiefly with work for the
+government. It has besides more than a thousand selling
+agencies in other countries where the Chinese have
+settled, and is the largest publishing house in the
+Orient.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c9">IX</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">THE CHINESE CITY</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">M</span>ANY visitors to this busy port hurry on to
+richer fields of conquest with never a glimpse
+of the Chinese City, and some doubtless do not
+even know there is such a place. Yet not the International
+Settlement, nor the French Concession, but the
+Chinese City is the real Shanghai. The city is the
+nucleus north and south of whose storm-beaten walls
+the foreign settlements sprang up and without which
+they would not have been. The coming of the foreigner
+is of recent date, for few men from the West saw the
+spot, and certainly not one resided there till after
+Shanghai was opened as a treaty port in 1842. The
+city itself, though in the heyday of youth, compared
+with many other cities in China, still counts its age by
+centuries that creep close on to a millennium. The
+walls were not built until 1555, a year after the city
+had been sacked, burned to the ground, and left a howling
+wilderness by Japanese raiders. Gone now are the
+old walls, since the revolution, and the creaking gates
+that swung back and forth night and morning so many
+years on their rusty hinges, or if a vestige is left it is
+fast disappearing under the blows of pick-ax and hammer.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>But no, that is a mistake, for a halt has just been
+called in the work of demolition. The Chinese Town
+Council it is reported, is a house divided against itself,
+and some of its members strongly advocate the rebuilding
+of the walls for the sake of protection. A compromise
+has been effected by voting to allow the walls to
+remain down but letting the gates stand, or what is
+left of them, to serve as triumphal arches.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f11">
+<img src="images/fig11.jpg" alt="willow">
+<p class="caption">THE ORIGINAL WILLOW PATTERN TEA HOUSE</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Of course it is better that the old walls should go,
+more sanitary and more modern. The ill-smelling moat
+has been covered on the north and west by a splendid
+boulevard ninety feet wide. Trolley lines will by and by
+encircle the whole city, as they now run along two sides.
+Many of the streets in the outer circumference of the
+city are being widened, while those in the heart of it are
+receiving some attention, though improvement is difficult
+on account of property interests. Ramshackle rat-infested
+hovels, here, there, and yonder, have vanished
+from sight, and new tea-houses, and shops, glistening
+with fresh paint, are taking their places. Public nuisances
+are being attacked. A well-to-do family reports
+that since the pestilential creek back of their house has
+been filled in, their property has advanced in value hundreds
+of dollars. Street refuse is swept up and carried
+away each day. Meat is inspected. Pipes have been
+laid and running water introduced, so that one no
+longer hears the monotonous cry of the water carriers
+trotting along with a pole across their shoulders from
+which were suspended the overflowing buckets spilling
+water at every step. Electric lights have largely superseded
+little smoky kerosene lamps, or still more primitive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>
+pottery or tin lamps with a tiny wick swimming in
+vegetable oil.</p>
+
+<p>All this is just as it should be. The improvements
+are highly commended by every one, and yet, inconsistent
+beings that we are, why is it that with our
+rejoicing over the changes, our hearts likewise experience
+a pang of regret? What is there about things
+old and quaint, albeit noisome and repulsive, that things
+brand new somehow do not possess for us? So with
+the passing of the old walls and a modicum of the
+old dirt, a certain indefinable charm has slipped away
+too, never to return. Nevertheless the Chinese City
+continues to exist, although since the walls are down
+its boundaries are not so clearly defined, and enough of
+the ancient landmarks remain in the way of foul-smelling
+alleys, streets of gay shops, beggars and crowds, to
+satisfy most lovers of the haunting allurements of the
+Orient.</p>
+
+<p>The city is approximately three miles in circumference.
+There is no map of it beyond the merest outline,
+and neither a Murray nor a Baedeker to facilitate
+a tramp through its labyrinthian byways. But the
+stranger crossing its boundaries is not left coldly to his
+own devices, for the instant he appears in sight he is
+met by a chattering company of self-constituted guides.
+If perchance their services are declined, they still manage
+unobtrusively to shadow the Innocent Abroad and
+entice him to shops that are almost certain to loosen his
+purse-strings and where they propose to secure a fat
+commission on the purchases made.</p>
+
+<p>The shops in the Chinese City are the originals of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span>
+the replicas in the Settlement, only that being the
+originals they are more bizarre and delightful. Like
+birds of a feather, shops doing the same kind of work,
+or selling the same kind of articles, are apt to flock
+together. For example, most of the furniture shops
+handling the beautiful red and black wood from the
+southern province of Kwangtung are found near the
+north gate, also the shops selling exquisitely carved
+ivory. Elsewhere are grouped the silversmiths, the
+jewelers with tempting displays of jade, amber, pearls,
+and precious stones, cloth and silk merchants, shoe and
+cap makers, dealers whose specialty is all kinds of
+fans; brass, pewter, and china shops, makers of coffins
+from the costly red and teak woods to the less expensive
+pine and ash—but the amazing variety of the
+shops is fairly bewildering and defies enumeration!</p>
+
+<p>There are no department stores in the city. Each
+tradesman confines himself strictly to his own line of
+goods. Not for his life would he dare encroach on the
+rights and privileges of another, for every trade has
+its guild which sees to it that the interests of its members
+are protected. Many of the guilds are wealthy
+and powerful, politically as well as commercially, like
+the silk merchants’ and silversmiths’ guilds. They have
+their guild houses, all more or less elaborately fitted up
+with rooms for conferences and feasts, and attached to
+them are rows of long low buildings divided into small
+chambers, where, upon the payment of a rental, the
+coffins of deceased members may be deposited until a
+convenient time for burial.</p>
+
+<p>Certain shops sell nothing but funeral trappings, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>
+instead of presenting a sombre appearance they are
+among the gayest in the city. Hung aloft to show off to
+the best advantage are elaborately embroidered crimson
+satin coverings for the coffin, and around on the shelves
+or under glass cases is apparel for the dead, very
+richly embroidered robes, slippers, and headgear, this
+latter in the shape of mitres and helmets, of remarkable
+design and ornamentation. There are also priests’ robes
+and white cotton raiment and sackcloth for the
+mourners. Other shops carry only the paper furnishings
+that are an essential part of a funeral ceremony.
+When the spirit of the deceased leaves the body and
+passes to the spirit world, according to Chinese superstition
+he requires for his comfort the same conveniences
+to which he was accustomed in life. Hence the dutiful
+elder son, in proportion to his financial ability, and often
+far beyond it, for Chinese funerals are fearfully costly,
+sees that his honoured parent is provided with them.
+The articles are made of coloured paper, the larger ones
+over a light framework of bamboo, and include every
+conceivable object, from a sedan chair to a teacup.
+These images are borne in the funeral procession
+through the streets and burned at the grave, the smoke
+being supposed to waft them through ether to the waiting
+spirit. They are such exact facsimiles of the real
+thing, especially in the case of small articles like vases,
+jewelry boxes, braziers, lamps, clocks, basins, that it is
+hard to believe they are false. One of the best imitations
+ever produced in a Shanghai city shop was that
+of a fur-lined Mandarin coat, so perfect in every detail
+as almost to deceive the Chinese themselves.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span></p>
+
+<p>A shopkeeper who always attracts custom is the portrait
+painter. He is an important personage and does
+business behind closed doors—that is, his shop is not
+open to the street as most are; but has a front partition
+with a door and show window. On the window is
+pasted a collection of small pictures of human heads cut
+from newspapers and magazines. Inside the shop
+quantities more are stored away. When a widow, it
+may be, wishes a likeness of her consort who left no
+pictured memorial behind him, or a youth perhaps
+craves a reminder of the grand-uncle he never saw,
+they find their way to one of these portrait shops. The
+shopkeeper spreads out before them an array of pictures,
+and after careful study a selection is made of a
+particular portrait which either bears some imaginary
+resemblance to the dear departed, or is what the sorrowing
+relatives would choose to have him look like. The
+shopkeeper then paints the head in life size and adds
+a body clothed in whatever style of garments may be
+mutually decided on. The finished portrait is finally
+hung on the wall of the family dwelling and pointed to
+with pride and affection as the face of the deceased
+ancestor.</p>
+
+<p>Drug shops are many and are invested with an air
+of quiet exclusiveness and semi-professionalism, which
+suffers but a slight declension when in hot weather the
+clerks, after the manner of most shopkeepers, divest
+themselves of their non-essential upper garments and
+pass the day stripped to the waist. Upon the shelves
+of the shop stand rows and rows of large pewter cannisters
+and blue and white china jars, innocent enough<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>
+to look at and yet designed to arouse the curiosity of
+the beholder as to the nature and character of their
+contents. Below are quantities of drawers containing
+dried roots, herbs, bones, seaweed, chalk, things indescribable
+and inscrutable, drawn from the air above,
+the earth beneath, and the waters under the earth. In
+addition to drugs the shop frequently keeps on exhibition
+some special attractions, such as glass jars with
+snakes preserved in alcohol, dried alligator skins, corals
+and geological specimens. In filling prescriptions
+china bottles, coloured pasteboard boxes and squares
+of white paper are used. Sometimes a score or more of
+the paper squares are placed on the counter at once,
+and from the different drawers an interesting assortment
+of medicines is laid on them. Here is dried
+orange peel, said to be an unfailing remedy for loss
+of appetite, a yellow berry that removes phlegm, a
+dried beetle that in a solution of water makes the best
+kind of eyewash. The silkworm taken from the cocoon
+when eaten with rice greatly assists digestion, and so
+does a flat bug that from its appearance might be great-grandfather
+to the bedbug. The ladybug, or what
+resembles one, is a sure cure for liver complaint, and
+another insect if rubbed on wounds quickly heals them.
+Also in certain troubles it has been found that a little
+of the alcohol in which a serpent is preserved, if taken
+internally, proves particularly efficacious. On the wall
+at the back of the shop is painted a picture of the
+god of medicine, at whose shrine tapers are kept burning.
+Chinese shops carrying foreign drugs, some of
+them excellent shops, too, are not uncommon in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>
+Settlement but are seldom to be seen in the Chinese
+City.</p>
+
+<p>The dentist, like his confreres in other countries, is
+ever in demand. Occasionally an aspiring, prosperous
+fellow is discovered doing business in a shop where
+the patient may balance himself on a stool, though still
+in full view of the curious street crowd, and tilting
+his head back, have the offending molar extracted without
+further ado. But ordinarily the professional outfit
+is limited to a small wooden table and what it will
+hold, set out in the street. Back of the weather-worn
+stand lounges the dentist, soiled and uncouth, keeping
+guard over his stock in trade, bottles of ointments,
+salves, a pair of forceps and other nondescript instruments,
+a few sets of teeth under a dust-covered glass
+case, and last but not least, piles of decayed teeth successfully
+extracted from tortured victims and kept as
+decoys to attract patronage. There are travelling dentists
+whose shop is a wheelbarrow which carries the
+dental equipment, with the inevitable pile of teeth conspicuous
+in the centre. They move from point to point,
+in inclement weather under cover of a mammoth coloured
+umbrella, and sound a gong to draw the ever-ready
+crowd.</p>
+
+<p>More common still are the peripatetic restaurants.
+The outfit of the manager of the Liliputian establishment
+is a model of convenience and compactness. A
+simple bamboo frame, easily borne by one man even
+with all the appurtenances, is divided into two sections.
+On one side in a pocket rests a clay stove, with a place
+underneath for holding the wood. On the other is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>
+series of drawers of various sizes, in which the dough,
+sugar, and spices are kept. A little kneading board
+pulls out from a slit between the drawers, and on it
+the baker deftly fashions his cakes and meat pies, frying
+them in vegetable oil in a shallow iron basin, or if
+they are to be baked, plastering them against the inner
+sides of the clay stove above the fire. Despite the dirt,
+dust, and flies, even the ultra fastidious can not deny
+that the finished product is decidedly appetizing.</p>
+
+<p>Not a foot of valuable land in the Chinese City is
+wasted on sidewalks. Hence everybody and everything
+is right on the street, and the very narrow passages
+are badly congested. Rickety jinricshas, a few sedan
+chairs which are fast disappearing from Shanghai,
+burden-bearers and pedestrians hurry continually to
+and fro, shouting in shrill falsetto tones to one another
+to clear the way and running in imminent danger of
+colliding with the unwary and trampling on children.
+Yet not all the streets are mere alleyways. A few,
+but it must be admitted a very few, are wide enough to
+allow a carriage to pass through with comparative ease,
+and they seem in comparison like boulevards. Then
+there are others along which a carriage can manage
+to creep providing the driver is skillful and the people
+hug the sides of the roads or retire precipitately into
+the shops out of harm’s way, but this is too risky a venture
+to be indulged in often and is seldom permitted
+by the police. Once in a while it happens that a carriage
+gets wedged into a tight place where it can
+neither move forward, back out nor even find room to
+turn at right angles into a cross street. The only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>
+thing then is to unhitch the horse, lead him out, pull
+the carriage back, and finally lifting it up bodily, turn
+it around and harness the horse to it again.</p>
+
+<p>Not all the city is laid out in streets, for there are
+some open places and even flourishing vegetable gardens
+which quite suggest the country. That this is possible
+in so densely populated an area seems a marvel, and
+where and how the people are all hidden away is a
+puzzle. In the poorer sections, with the closing down
+of night they vanish as if by magic, except in hot
+weather when many camp on the streets, and in the
+morning the crowds swarm forth as mysteriously, like
+rats from their holes.</p>
+
+<p>The best known and most popular breathing spot
+in the city is that about the lake or pond, in whose
+centre on a small island rises the far-famed Willow
+Ware Tea-House, for the identical tea-house pictured
+on the much sought for willow-ware porcelain is located
+in the Chinese City. This to the average globe-trotter
+is the city’s chief attraction, but alas, never was the
+saying “Distance lends enchantment” more truly applicable,
+for while the pictures of the old tea-house
+are undeniably charming, with its graceful upturned
+gables and the zigzag bridges leading to it, made zigzag
+to ward off evil spirits who are said to travel
+in straight lines, yet seen near at hand how quickly
+the enchantment is dispelled! Filth, rottenness, and
+roistering are the main present-day characteristics of
+this tea-house of fair renown. Instead of reflecting
+the blue sky above, the water is covered with a thick
+vegetable scum, green and unwholesome. The shores<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>
+around are made lively with a colony of small vendors
+whose wares are set on tables or spread out over the
+ground. They evidently reap a paying harvest from
+the sale of scrolls, pottery, towels, sheepskin coats,
+toys, and all manner of cheap foreign knickknacks
+which are much sought after by the people. Switches
+of long, jet black hair, especially plentiful since queues
+went out of fashion, are given places of prominence.
+Many doubtless are sent abroad to add beauty to the
+coiffures of dames of high degree.</p>
+
+<p>The business of the man who deals in rags must flourish
+like the green bay tree judging from the number
+engaged in it. What a sight is a rag-man’s shop, rags,
+rags everywhere, stuffed in baskets and bags, hanging
+from the walls, covering the floor in huge piebald
+bundles and mounds, germ-infected, poisonous, alive
+with vermin, gathered up and brought in from heaven
+knows where! Yet every day women and children
+spend long hours industriously picking them over and
+making them up into mops and the soles of Chinese
+shoes, for which they find a ready sale.</p>
+
+<p>Shanghai once boasted a supremely great citizen.
+He lived back in the sixteenth century, a veritable
+Chinese Maecenas. Besides being a man of letters
+and encouraging Western learning, he rose to the highest
+position in the empire, as Premier and Chancellor
+of the Privy Council. His name will be of little consequence
+to the outside world, but it is Siu Kuang-ki,
+should any one care to know it. He was converted to
+Christianity under the Jesuit Fathers, and lived a
+pure, consistent, devoted life, dying so poor in spite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
+of large emoluments that his funeral expenses had to
+be paid from the public treasury. He built in the
+Chinese City the first Christian church ever seen in
+these parts. During the exigencies of later years it was
+converted into a temple sacred to the god of war, but
+was afterward redeemed and restored to its original
+use. This church is still standing, a striking edifice
+back a little from the noisy street, with a typical Chinese
+roof, and below it on the front outside wall, a
+beautiful gilded cross.</p>
+
+<p>The present war god’s temple is near the temple of
+Confucius, with its grass-grown court and deserted halls.
+Once a year, in the early dawn, the military governor
+of Shanghai and the city officials enter the sanctuary
+dedicated to the god of war and conduct a weird
+pageant-like ceremony in honour of two local military
+heroes. The tutelary deities of the Chinese City, black
+and repelling, occupy a large centrally located temple
+more frequented by worshippers than any other. The
+roomy outer court, like the temple court in Jerusalem,
+is given up to buying and selling, also to eating and
+drinking, gambling and fortune-telling, and there is no
+busier, noisier mart in all the city.</p>
+
+<p>The local official in the Chinese City is called the
+“Chih-hsien,” or District Magistrate, and is appointed
+from Peking. His official residence styled the Yamen,
+is a common, ordinary building, approached through
+several untidy courts lined with the low one-story quarters
+of the Yamen retainers and petty officials. Every
+day, in three small, bare rooms of the Yamen, court is
+held, the Chinese judges in their professional gowns<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>
+looking distinctly out of keeping with their surroundings.
+To the left and back of the Yamen is the City
+Prison and adjoining it a much smaller one for women.
+Stories are afloat regarding the unsanitary condition
+of the prison and the treatment of prisoners that cause
+one to cringe and dread an investigation, but whatever
+may have been the state of affairs under the old régime,
+and the prison manager is frank to confess that
+things were very different ten years ago, there is now
+little to criticise and a great deal to commend. The
+grey brick buildings are in thoroughly good repair,
+the cells of the four hundred men and the fifty women
+prisoners, clean and fairly well lighted and ventilated,
+though, as the manager himself will hasten to tell the
+visitor, too crowded for health. A few carefully tended
+plants are growing in the centre of each of the courts,
+a praiseworthy effort to introduce a touch of the æsthetic.
+Industrial work on a considerable scale is carried
+on in the men’s prison, though the grant of money
+from the government is too small to keep all at work.
+Wooden and rattan furniture, towels, mats, shoes, and
+clothing are made. A very little industrial work is
+given the women in the way of cutting out and making
+garments, but from lack of funds to supply workrooms
+and material, most of the poor creatures are forced to
+pass their days in idleness. The wardens of the women’s
+prison are women. The discipline is excellent, yet not
+severe, the prisoners look well fed and well cared for,
+and the men especially, happy and contented. Provision
+is made to send sick prisoners to a Chinese hospital,
+where they receive the best of care.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span></p>
+
+<p>The Yamen, disappointing as it is in appearance,
+yet witnesses some stirring scenes, as when, not long
+ago, a quantity of opium and opium-smoking utensils
+were burned on the open ground in front of it in the
+presence of an interested throng of spectators. Not
+an opium den or shop exists in the Chinese City. Long
+ago they were effectually closed by order of the government.</p>
+
+<p>The city is well policed. There has been a wonderful
+shaking up of the dry bones in that department in
+recent years, particularly since the revolution. The
+Chief of Police is chosen on the recommendation of
+the local military governor by the provincial governor
+at Nanking, but the Chief of the Fire Department is
+the choice of the people, and affairs of the department
+are wholly under their control. All the seven
+hundred members of the Fire Brigade are volunteers
+and serve without pay. Of late the brigade has attained
+a high grade of efficiency, and in the engine stations
+scattered over the city may be seen a very creditable
+equipment of modern machinery including some
+small motor cars. They must of necessity be small
+in order to get through the narrow streets. At the
+central station between the east and south gates stands
+a splendid tower supporting a bell weighing 6,000 lbs.
+which sounds the fire alarm not only in the city itself,
+but in the surrounding territory included in the Chinese
+municipality. This tower is the work of Shanghai’s
+engineering genius Nicholas Tzu, who patterned it
+after a small model of the Eiffel tower, but with
+changes that adapted it more perfectly to its present<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>
+use. At a recent large fire in the city, the chiefs of the
+International and French Fire Brigades were present
+and looked on, but their assistance was not asked for
+nor was it needed, though the Chinese firemen were
+obliged to fight valiantly for three hours before they
+got control of the flames.</p>
+
+<p>That the Chinese City is taking on thoroughly up-to-date
+airs will be generally conceded when it is known
+that strikes are becoming rather general. The latest
+one to break out was in the Dyers’ Union. The masses
+of the people in China dress in blue cotton. Indeed,
+so universally is it worn, that it might almost be called
+the national dress, consequently the business of dyeing
+is one of the most common and the Dyers’ Union is
+very strong. Since a Presidential mandate had gone
+forth that every labor union must be approved by the
+police, and as in this case the police interfered to put
+down the strike, it failed of its object. But a strike
+last winter was more successful. The women working
+in a silk filature mill within the Chinese precincts,
+though outside the Chinese City, were roused to fury
+by a reduction in their wages. Early one morning
+ninety or a hundred of them gathered at the mill gate
+and made such a clamour, pounding and shouting as
+only enraged Chinese women can, that the authorities,
+realizing that after all right was on the side of the
+strikers, were glad to effect a speedy and satisfactory
+compromise.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c10">X</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">CUSTOMS OLD AND NEW</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap1">A</span> STUDENT in a mission school for girls received
+an invitation from a young gentleman
+of her acquaintance to accompany him on a certain
+evening to a place of amusement. The note fell
+into the hands of the missionary in charge who sought
+an interview with the man. “It is against the rules
+of the school for our girls to go out unchaperoned,”
+she told him, “besides why do you make such a request?
+You know it is not Chinese custom.” “Ha,
+ha,” laughed the youth derisively, “perhaps it was not
+formerly, but now that we have a Republic we can do
+<i>anything</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>Great changes and grave dangers accompanied the
+birth of the republic, and nowhere are they as apparent
+as in Shanghai. Old things are passing away
+and the new order is not yet firmly established. Young
+women are particularly sensitive to the changed conditions.
+In their eagerness to imitate the ways of
+the West, the real meaning of which many do not fully
+understand, liberty and license are often confused. But
+the girls must not be judged too harshly, for while
+some are unblushingly bold, others are like imprisoned
+birds who, suddenly finding the cage door ajar, pant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>
+to try their wings in the open. It is scarcely to be
+wondered at if sometimes they fly too far afield and
+drop back weary and bruised. The better class of
+students who have studied abroad are helping to set
+matters right. They show how it is possible for friends
+of both sexes to meet on the tramcars, on the street,
+or in one another’s homes and chat together naturally
+and yet modestly. It was with great gusto that a young
+matron who had never been out of China but associated
+freely with those who had, told of a picnic enjoyed
+by the mixed choir of the Chinese church to
+which she belonged. “We went down the river in a
+launch, taking our supper with us.” “Wasn’t it hard
+to carry Chinese food in baskets?” “Oh, we had
+foreign food—cake and sandwiches. I made some peanut
+sandwiches and every one seemed to like them.”
+“Were the picnickers all married people?” “No, some
+were not,” was the laughing reply. A Wellesley graduate
+who had been absent eight years from her Shanghai
+home was asked on her return what impressed her
+most. “The way my sister-in-law goes about the streets
+alone and even shops in the big stores.” “Wouldn’t
+she have done that before you went to America?” “I
+should say not! But now she doesn’t seem to think
+anything of it.” “How about your mother, does she
+go out too?” “No, mother prefers to follow the old
+customs, but she makes no objection to what we do.”</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f12">
+<img src="images/fig12.jpg" alt="family">
+<p class="caption">A MODERN CHEVALIER AND HIS HAPPY FAMILY</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It is easy enough to view the social changes with
+fear and trembling and many of them are bad enough
+in their trend to justify any amount of anxiety, but
+there is a bright side and perhaps in deprecating the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
+evil it has been too often overlooked. Nothing is more
+commendable than the loving comradeship that is growing
+up between husband and wife. This might be expected
+among students who have lived abroad and are
+used to foreign ways, but it is by no means confined
+to that class. “You have a pretty home,” commented
+a foreign friend to a bride of a year. Her husband was
+the editor of a popular Chinese daily and neither of
+them had ever been away from their native land. The
+bride beamed with pleasure. “Your lace curtains are
+hung so tastefully,” continued the caller. “Wasn’t it
+hard to show your servant how to do it?” “My husband
+and I hung them. We worked evenings after
+he came home from the office,” replied the blushing
+little wife. A few months later, when an expectant
+mother, she displayed with shy satisfaction, an exquisitely
+dainty layette, each tiny garment made with
+her own hands after a foreign pattern. “What a fine
+baby!” exclaimed another friend to the jubilant parents
+of their firstborn. “It is a boy, isn’t it?” “No,
+a girl,” corrected the father, gazing with fond pride
+into the tiny face of the rosy mite, “but she cries a
+good deal. I was up with her for three or four hours
+last night and had to walk with her most of the time
+to keep her from disturbing my wife.” “I was very
+glad to see your wife at my party on Friday,” remarked
+an American lady to a busy Chinese secretary. “Yes,
+I got off early from the office and went home to take
+care of the children so she could go. I wouldn’t have
+had her miss that pleasure for anything. My Margaret
+is such a good wife.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span></p>
+
+<p>When charming little Mrs. F. sailed for America to
+see a brother graduate at the University of California
+her husband was at the jetty looking after the baggage,
+and went with her on the launch down the river to where
+the ocean liner was anchored. Dr. Wu Ting Fang, ex-Minister
+to the United States and one of Shanghai’s best
+known citizens, meeting Dr. F. soon afterward, twitted
+him facetiously: “Oho, it used to be the custom in
+China for the husband to go away and the wife to stay at
+home with the family, and now it seems to be just the
+other way and the wife goes while the husband stays
+at home.” Dr. F., who, with the help of his mother and
+sister, was caring for his three little ones in Mrs. F.’s
+absence, laughed goodnaturedly and explained that it
+was he who had urged this trip on his wife. Once
+when this same husband was presiding at a formal
+banquet, it was noticed by those near him that in the
+midst of the festivities he quietly left his place and
+passed down to the other end of the long table. Mrs.
+F., detained it may be by putting the children to bed,
+had just come in, and Dr. F., not too engrossed in
+conversation to be watching for his wife, rose to draw
+out her chair and seat her in it with all the gallantry
+of a chevalier. The afternoon Mr. and Mrs. C. gave
+their “tea,” the young husband greeted the incoming
+guests at the door, while his wife, clad in soft white
+Chinese silk with a wreath of tiny pink rosebuds nestling
+against her black hair, presided over the tea-table
+with all the ease and grace of a society belle, and withal
+a sweet modesty which every society belle does not
+possess.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span></p>
+
+<p>Perhaps these incidents, trifling in themselves,
+will possess small significance for the reader who has
+never lived in China, but to those who have they are
+encouraging signs that the leaven is working which of
+a certainty will by and by raise women all over the
+land from the position of mere chattels whose chief
+business is the bearing of children to be the equals and
+companions of their husbands. Dr. Arthur H. Smith,
+an authority in things Chinese, said recently in conversation,
+“I believe that the reorganization of the
+life of women in China is the most important sociological
+and educational event of modern times.”</p>
+
+<p>Bound feet are becoming less and less the fashion
+in Shanghai. The increasing spread of physical training
+in all the schools is a great aid in favour of anti-footbinding,
+for the popular exercises can not well be
+taken on tiny feet. A medium course at present much
+in vogue is neither to let the feet alone nor bind them
+tightly, but by the use of comparatively loose bandages
+to prevent their growing too large. The little bound
+feet of old, common enough still in the interior, are
+in Shanghai generally looked upon with shame by the
+younger generation, who if they are so unfortunate
+as to own them, try to conceal their crippled members
+underneath long skirts or by wearing large shoes.
+It is not the women alone who frown upon bound feet.
+In many instances their husbands are equally opposed
+to them, men who a few years ago would have spurned
+a woman not swaying uncertainly on her much admired
+“Chinese Lilies.” A native teacher, supposed
+to be of the “old school,” was telling his foreign pupil<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>
+of the recent death of his wife. “She fell down when
+crossing our courtyard and never regained consciousness.”
+“That was remarkable,” was the surprised
+answer. “How did she happen to fall?” “It was
+her small feet that did it. She lost her balance. But
+her feet were bound before I married her, or they never
+would have been bound.” “Then you disapprove of
+the custom and probably do not intend to bind the feet
+of your little daughters?” The man’s voice rose to
+an indignant pitch and with a vehemence quite unusual
+for a Chinese he ejaculated, “<i>I shall not!</i>”</p>
+
+<p>Young men back from years of study in America or
+Europe, and there are many such in Shanghai, wear
+foreign clothes and look well in them. Some indeed
+are quite dudish in their attire. Many older men of
+the upper class on state occasions array themselves
+in dress suits and high hats, but in private life they
+ordinarily lay aside the torturing starched shirt and
+choking collar and resume their loose, comfortable Chinese
+garments. Women students on returning to China
+usually drop back at once into native dress, wherein
+they show their good sense, for besides the comfort
+of this style, nothing becomes them quite so well. Some
+years ago two girls from the interior arrived in Shanghai
+on their way to study medicine in America. They
+were told that in order to attract less attention
+on shipboard it would be well at once to adopt foreign
+dress, so they did, corsets and all. The older one’s
+description of her sensations is most amusing. “I
+couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t eat. The food had no
+room to go down. I never felt so miserable.” “What<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>
+did you do?” “I took the corsets off.” “How long
+had you worn them?” Mary held up a little forefinger,
+as she announced solemnly, “Just one awful
+day.”</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f13">
+<img src="images/fig13.jpg" alt="procession">
+<p class="caption">THE COFFIN IN A FUNERAL PROCESSION</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The ultra-stylish dress of the “fast set” among
+young women in Shanghai is tight trousers, short tight
+jacket with short tight sleeves, and very high collars.
+To Western eyes this is neither pretty nor modest, and
+Chinese from the interior look upon it askance. Instead
+of bare heads, girls in winter are coming to wear,
+not hats, except those who have adopted foreign dress,
+but worsted caps, usually trimmed with coloured ribbon
+or artificial flowers. There is a shop on a busy
+street, called “Love Your Country Shop,” which deals
+largely in these fancy articles. Foreign shoes are also
+gradually taking the place of the cloth-soled, satin-topped
+Chinese shoes, and it is a wise change if women
+are to go much abroad in this city of heavy and frequent
+rains.</p>
+
+<p>The old-time wedding procession is no longer an
+every day sight in the International Settlement, though
+happily for lovers of the antique, still common about
+the Chinese City. Carriages have to a large extent
+superseded the gorgeous sedan chairs, draped with embroidered
+crimson satin, and pale pink silk the orthodox
+crimson satin wedding gown. Veils are much worn
+too, and occasionally a very up-to-date bride is decked
+out in a gown of white silk or satin made in the most
+extreme Western fashion. More often, however, there
+is a painfully inartistic combination of Chinese and
+foreign styles. Little Miss Y. invited her foreign<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>
+friends to inspect her trousseau shortly before her marriage.
+Garment after garment, evolved from heavy
+brocaded satin, sheeny silks, and gauzy web-like stuffs,
+was unfolded before admiring eyes. Finally the grand
+climax was reached when the wedding gown was
+brought in. The marvelous embroidery on the delicate
+pink silk evoked “Ohs” and “Ahs” of rapture, accompanied
+by exclamations such as “A perfect
+dream,” “I never saw anything so beautiful!” But
+when a common pink net veil, cheap white imitation
+flowers and coarse white cotton gloves bought at a foreign
+department store and plainly regarded as the
+crowning touches to the outfit were laid beside the
+exquisite Chinese gown, there were inward groans
+from the disappointed visitors. Miss Y. wore on the
+third finger of her left hand a heavy ring set with diamonds
+and pearls. On her wedding day she would
+have her band of gold like a Western bride. “You are
+very fond of the gentleman, of course,” some one asked
+her. The bright eyes dropped quickly as the low answer
+came back, “I have seen him only once.” “Were
+you alone?” “No, my aunt was in the room.” Plainly
+then, notwithstanding her foreign finery, this was not
+one of the so-called present day “liberty girls.”</p>
+
+<p>The case of Miss W. was quite different. She and her
+fiancé had met and fallen in love in the good old-fashioned
+way. They were married by the bride’s father,
+an Episcopal clergyman, who, being tall and well-favoured,
+made a rather imposing figure in his priestly
+robe. After he had walked in and taken his place inside
+the chancel, a church warden to the strains of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>
+Lohengrin’s Wedding March ushered up the aisle with
+due ceremony the groom and best man. That done,
+they were left standing for fully ten minutes. The
+wedding march was played and re-played, the party
+at the altar shifted and turned while the audience
+craned their necks till they were sore in an effort to
+catch a glimpse of the incoming bride. What was
+the matter? Was she sick? Was she panic-stricken?
+Had an accident befallen the wedding dress? None
+of these calamities had overtaken the girl, who was
+dressed and ready to follow her fiancé into the church.
+But ancient marriage customs in China prescribe that
+a bride must be sent for again and again by the groom
+before, with tears and great reluctance, she is at last
+persuaded to leave her home. Although this was a
+modern wedding, it would not do to disregard wholly
+the time-honoured practice, hence a proper interval was
+allowed to elapse before the bride made her appearance.
+During the ceremony outbursts of laughter several
+times proceeded from the Chinese guests, many of
+whom had evidently never witnessed a Christian wedding
+and to whom the plighting of the troth and other
+passages were highly amusing. The bridal couple was
+not in the least disturbed by these demonstrations any
+more than when the warden from time to time stepped
+forward and taking one or the other by the arm,
+turned them around, or jerked them into proper position.
+Soon after the conclusion of the ceremony the
+bride retired and removed her veil, which was doubtless
+an uncomfortable if stylish appurtenance of which she
+was very glad to be rid.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span></p>
+
+<p>Sometimes embarrassing situations are created because
+the young people are attracted to modern ways
+while their forbears much prefer the old. This happened
+recently when a law student just back from
+America married the girl to whom he had been betrothed
+before he left home. The bride wore a white
+satin gown with slit hobble skirt and fish-tail train,
+veil, kid gloves, slippers, and carried a shower bouquet.
+All was as modern as it was possible to have it,
+but at the last moment the groom was thrown into a
+state of great perturbation because of the refusal of
+his parents and their old-fashioned friends to attend the
+wedding. In his desire to have every arrangement conform
+to Western ideas he had omitted to send conveyances
+for his relatives, according to immemorial Chinese
+custom, and they were so incensed by the omission
+they refused to stir from their homes, although abundantly
+able to hire carriages or sedan-chairs as they
+might prefer. At the last moment, with the greatest
+difficulty, a sufficient number of vehicles was found
+and hurried off to bring the families to the wedding,
+but so offended were they that it required the utmost
+persuasion to induce them to come.</p>
+
+<p>A Shanghai bride not long ago was taken to task
+by her friends for daring to show a glad countenance.
+“Don’t you know it is a bride’s duty to be sad and
+cry? Instead of that you look really happy,” they
+cried. “I <i>am</i> happy, and why shouldn’t I look so?”
+she replied with fervour. But the high-water mark of
+self-assertion was reached when a Shanghai maid, the
+daughter of wealthy parents, declared that her acceptance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
+of her suitor depended on whether he was willing
+to shave off his beard, to which demand he promptly
+and meekly acceded. Truly the order of things
+changeth in old China!</p>
+
+<p>Shanghai has something of which no other city in
+China can boast, and that is a Nuptial Hall. Contracting
+parties who wish a modern wedding but have
+not homes suited for it may rent this building. It
+contains a guest hall, banquet room, and bed chambers,
+all nicely furnished. Here the newly wedded pair
+can remain if they choose, for a few days of their
+honeymoon or arrange for automobile or carriage to
+take them away at once.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally a clash occurs between customs past and
+present which results in tragedy. A while ago a youth
+and maiden, both teaching in a government school in
+Shanghai, fell deeply in love. The girl’s father heard
+of it but objected to his daughter’s marrying because
+she was the mainstay of the family, and he argued that
+filial duty required her to continue their support although
+perfectly competent to shoulder the burden himself.
+Taking her one day in a small boat to the middle
+of a deep stream near their home, he demanded of the
+girl that she give up her lover. When she loyally clung
+to him her inhuman parent threw her overboard and
+let her drown before his eyes. A few years ago a deed
+like this would have attracted little attention. “The
+girl belonged to her father and it is nobody’s business
+what he did to her,” would have been the popular
+verdict. But it is not so in Shanghai to-day. The
+papers were full of the awful crime, the broken-hearted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>
+lover carried the case to the Chinese Court, and so
+great a stir was made that no one will dare to repeat
+such an act, at least openly.</p>
+
+<p>It can not be said that Shanghai has progressed beyond
+the stage of polygamy. Under the old régime, for
+a man to take one or many “secondary wives,” as they
+were called, was a well-nigh universal practice, but it
+has died out among the younger, educated classes and
+before long will be forever relegated to the past in the
+treaty ports. The women themselves are rising up in
+defence of one another. An interesting instance is
+that of a man who left a young wife of six months in
+Shanghai and disappeared for several years. When
+he came back, bringing a new wife with him, he repudiated
+the first. Her condition was very pitiful.
+Being at last turned out on the street by her husband’s
+relatives after the death of her child, she went to learn
+tailoring in a Singer Sewing Machine shop. It was at
+this juncture that the Chinese Woman’s Co-operative
+Association, composed of some of the leading women
+in Shanghai, espoused her cause. They distributed
+broadcast a circular which read: “The legitimate wife
+of —— is too poor to engage a lawyer. We therefore
+ask those who sympathize with her to come to her
+assistance and see that she has justice, otherwise our
+two hundred million sisters will ever remain under
+the yoke of the other sex.” This resulted in the case
+being carried into the court and a fine imposed on the
+offender of eighty days’ imprisonment, pitifully inadequate
+yet a move in the right direction, and a victory
+for the band of progressive women.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span></p>
+
+<p>Funeral ceremonies are undergoing a radical change
+in Shanghai though not so rapidly as marriage customs.
+Ancient observances are still held sacred by the
+majority, and through the streets trail the old-time funeral
+processions. Some are pathetic in their simplicity,
+a cheap unadorned coffin swinging from bamboo poles
+resting on the shoulders of coolies striding rapidly forward
+followed by a few mourners on wheelbarrows or
+in ricshas. Others are the long processions of the well-to-do,
+grotesquely spectacular. First come coolies in a
+straggling irregular line holding aloft tawdry banners
+and lanterns, after them priests, bands (often two, a
+Chinese and a foreign string band), paper images to
+be burned at the vault and trays of cooked food to be
+left there, the sedan-chair of the deceased and the carriage
+he may or may not have owned, quite empty save
+for a crayon portrait of him standing upright on the
+seat in the midst of wreaths of flowers and palm leaves,
+and finally the catafalque concealed under a crimson
+satin cover and surmounted by an imitation crane
+which is believed to carry heavenward the released
+spirit. Behind the coffin, borne by perspiring, hired
+coolies, the very lowest down in the social scale, for
+only such can be induced to act as pall-bearers, walk the
+adult sons as chief mourners. They are robed in white
+cotton with a strip of sackcloth as a head band or a
+sackcloth helmet. A sheet, spread out to form the
+three sides of a square and carried by coolies, furnishes
+a screen inside of which the men march. Following
+them in carriages are the widow, the daughters,
+and other relatives and friends. Even this is a strange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>
+mixture of old and present day usages, for formerly
+there were no carriages, no brass band, and above all no
+palm leaves, which in a non-Christian funeral are of
+course devoid of religious significance. Between the
+wholly modern funeral and one of this description
+there are varying degrees of transition. Often a hearse
+is used whose blackness is hidden under a wealth of
+bright blossoms covering sides as well as top, so that
+it has more the appearance of a gala trap than a conveyance
+for the dead. The Chinese have an inherent
+objection to sombre effects at a funeral, the mourners
+wearing white and the draperies being of the brightest
+colours.</p>
+
+<p>A curious incident occurred recently which is a striking
+illustration of the way in which old and new customs
+may be said to elbow one another in their struggle
+for supremacy. A tired foreigner trying to sleep was
+disturbed by a persistent clatter of metal instruments
+and medley of voices close by. Finally in desperation
+he got up and looked out on the street, determined to
+locate the noise and if possible put a stop to it. It was
+summer weather and through the open windows of a
+neighbouring Chinese house he found himself the half
+unconscious observer of a strange scene. On the bed
+lay an old woman, evidently very sick, while a Chinese
+doctor and several assistants were running about
+the room with Chinese rattles and whistles, frightening
+away the evil spirit that had caused the malady. At
+last he was chased to the court below, where a pause
+was made, and the impudent intruder politely asked
+what his wishes might be. Replying that he desired
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>to visit a neighbouring village he was told he could go,
+whereupon the relieved family shut and bolted the
+outer door after paying the doctor a fat fee for his
+services. This all took place under the very shadow
+of a group of the most up-to-date Municipal hospitals
+in Shanghai.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f14">
+<img src="images/fig14.jpg" alt="drill">
+<p class="caption">SCHOOL GIRLS IN GYMNASIUM DRILL</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>One of the hopeful signs of these later days in China
+is the changing attitude of the people toward physical
+exercise, for it means better health and better morals
+for the nation. Not long ago, really only a very few
+years, round shoulders were by every one highly
+commended, in the women as indicating modesty and
+in the men scholarly habits. A girl who held herself
+erect, with well developed chest, would have been set
+down at once as bold and forward, and not only that,
+but any kind of physical exertion was regarded by the
+upper classes, young and old alike, as coolie’s work
+and quite beneath their dignity. Some Chinese girls
+were watching a game of tennis for the first time, when
+one turned to her companion with a puzzled expression
+and the remark, “Can’t they get coolies to do that work
+for them?” Several Englishmen living in the western
+part of the city were in the habit of rising early every
+morning for a tramp in the country. The Chinese
+in the neighbourhood who saw them start out day after
+day were told the men walked for the pleasure of it,
+but they shook their heads incredulously, “We know
+they mean to worship at some secret shrine, for no one
+in his senses would work so hard if he didn’t have
+to” A couple of foreigners were crossing Garden
+Bridge when a troop of Chinese youths went rushing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>
+past with foot-balls tucked under their arms. Said the
+gentleman laughingly to his companion, “You wouldn’t
+have seen that a short time ago in Shanghai.” “Why?
+Because the boys were not playing ball?” “Yes, and
+neither would they have done such an unmannerly
+thing as to run. Just now they were so interested in
+the coming ball game they forgot all about appearances.”</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of 1915 Shanghai witnessed a unique
+spectacle, something that will go down in history, and
+deservedly, as one of the great events in the life of
+the city. It was the Second Far Eastern Olympiad,
+the first having been held the year before in Manila.
+The Municipal Council turned over Shanghai’s
+finest park for the games, and the Young Men’s
+Christian Association fitted it up with the necessary
+accessories. No one who was there will ever forget
+that week. Many foreigners were present, but they
+were almost lost among the crowds of Chinese, for this
+was a distinctly Chinese celebration, just as it was
+meant to be. The élite Chinese turned out as well as
+the common people, men and women, young and old.
+Wide-eyed and tense, they watched their countrymen
+contest with crack players from Japan and the Philippines,
+and cheered tremendously when again and again
+the Chinese “won out.” It was good to look upon
+these lusty youths, who instead of cultivating long
+finger nails and cramping their chests after the manner
+of the old-time Chinese scholars, were clad in gymnasium
+tights, vaulting, running, swimming, batting,
+while their sires and grandsires forgot themselves and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>
+their traditions so far as to urge them on with shouts
+of approval.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly afterward, under the auspices of the Young
+Women’s Christian Association, several hundred girls
+from mission and private schools gave a physical exhibition
+of their own. This was not open to the public,
+guests being admitted by ticket and only a few
+gentlemen invited. Some of the girls wore modified
+gymnasium suits, but most appeared in their ordinary
+school clothes. It was all-important that the conservatives
+should not be shocked, who were none too friendly
+to the idea of physical training for their daughters.
+Mothers, grandmothers, and aunts, their prejudice partly
+overcome by their curiosity, sat around in crowds on
+the borders of the grassy campus viewing the exercises,
+first with indifference, then interest, and at last, genuine
+enthusiasm. The leader was a young Chinese woman
+who received her training in Boston. These two events
+marked a new era in the physical development of Young
+China and the ravages of tuberculosis have received a
+check, while good, hard, honest work is understood, by
+athletes at least, as something not to be shunned as
+a disgrace.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c11">XI</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">A TYPICAL SHANGHAI WEDDING</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>T was the day before the wedding. Downstairs
+in the home of the fiancé all was bustle and excitement.
+The marriage dowry, that for weeks
+had been collecting, was being made ready to carry
+over to the house of the groom’s father. Articles large
+and small, useful, and ornamental were scattered everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>First, and most important of all, there was the trousseau.
+Each suit consisted of three pieces—trousers,
+skirt, and jacket—made of the same material. They
+were carefully folded and piled one on top of another
+in the regulation bridal trunks, which are moderate
+sized wooden boxes covered with glossy red or brown
+oilcloth. Though the family was greatly rushed, still
+as relatives and friends dropped in to watch the proceedings
+and offer congratulations, the more elaborate
+costumes were taken out with ill-concealed pride and
+held up for inspection. And they were worth seeing!
+Silks, brocaded satins, crêpes, gauzes, ranging in colour
+from the palest hues of pink, green, blue, and violet,
+down to rich crimson, dark grey, brown, and even black,
+lay together in bewildering profusion. Some were delicate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>
+as sea-foam, others handsome but quiet, while the
+splendidly embroidered ones might well have rejoiced
+the heart of a princess. The jewels were arranged
+to show off to the best advantage in numerous
+small glass-covered cases. They presented a dazzling
+array—bracelets, rings, buckles, necklaces, hair ornaments.
+Diamonds, rubies, pearls, sapphires, shone resplendent,
+but jade was the principal stone.</p>
+
+<p>The bride’s wardrobe, however, though of absorbing
+interest, was only one portion of her dowry. The rest
+of the outfit blocked the way in every direction. The
+usual sets of graded wooden tubs, pails, and chests
+with conspicuous brass locks occupied the entire side
+of one room. These were painted either a rich red or
+brown and highly polished. On the other side of the
+room the most conspicuous object was a couch or divan
+weighed down under a huge pile of quilts. No Chinese
+girl goes to her husband’s home without a collection
+of bed-coverings. Though differing greatly in number
+and elegance, always they are of bright colours and
+folded lengthwise with exquisite neatness. In this case
+most of the quilts were of the costliest materials, flowered
+silks, figured satins, with a few gay prints and soft
+cashmeres for summer use.</p>
+
+<p>In an adjoining apartment was a set of bedroom
+furniture in carved teakwood, wardrobe, table, chairs,
+and washstand. The ornate brass bed was of foreign
+make. The silk curtains and silver ornaments with
+which it was later to be hung, were temporarily reposing
+in one of the many chests. Embossed silver
+teasets of Chinese pattern, silver and ivory chopsticks,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>
+foreign glass finger bowls, gaudy native silver wine
+cups, bonbon dishes, jewelry cases, hand-painted
+scrolls, silk banners, later to be converted into gowns
+for the bride, these were but a few of the riches lavished
+on the girl sitting apart in an upper chamber, shy, half
+afraid, wholly expectant.</p>
+
+<p>The list of attractions on this great occasion would
+be incomplete were mention not made of the trays of
+edibles, fruits, fancy cakes, and confections of marvellous
+variety, intended as a gift from the bride’s parents
+to the family of the groom. On the evening of
+the wedding day the groom’s parents will return the
+compliment by sending to the bride’s home a sumptuous
+repast consisting of cakes, fruit, cooked fowls, fish,
+and one, possibly three or four, roasted pigs. After
+roasting the pig is coated over with sesame oil, which
+hardens when exposed to the air and imparts an appetizing
+gloss to the skin. The animal is carried
+through the streets by coolies in a red tray suspended
+from poles, to the admiration of all onlookers and the
+despair of the hungry. On arriving at its destination,
+the upper part of the head, and the tail, with a thin
+slice of meat attached to it, are cut away and returned
+to the donors. This is done to insure the uninterrupted
+bliss of the young couple, since the head and tail of
+the pig represent the beginning and end of happiness in
+the lives of the newly wed.</p>
+
+<p>It was no light contract to get such a generous marriage
+dowry conveyed safely from one home to the
+other. Early in the morning preparations began, yet
+by three in the afternoon the procession had not started.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span>
+People were flying to and fro. Coolie bearers with long
+bamboo poles stood around in every one’s way, talking
+in loud shrill tones. In a side room sat a scholarly
+mandarin writing Chinese characters on slips of red
+paper. These were pasted vertically across each chest
+beside the lock and served the double purpose of announcing
+the name of the bride and adding to the safety
+of the contents of the chest in transit, since it could
+not be opened without tearing the paper. The quilts
+were fastened securely to the couch on which they lay
+by an ornamental network of red cord. Smaller
+articles, placed on box-shaped trays, were in like manner
+made secure from pilfering fingers. Red paper
+cards, red ribbon and flowers figured prominently as
+decorations. As one by one the pieces were made ready
+they were taken to the street and fastened by ropes
+to the coolies’ carrying poles. When the long procession
+was complete and awaiting the order to start, a
+gayer scene could scarcely be imagined. The bride’s
+entire dowry, excepting her trousseau, was in full view
+of curious eyes, that all spectators along the route might
+be duly impressed with the family wealth. Leading
+off were two closed carriages (a short time ago they
+would have been sedan chairs), in each of which sat
+in state two gentlemen “go-betweens,” whose particular
+mission at this time was to convey the cases containing
+the jewels to the home of the groom. But alas for
+human pride and ambition! Just at the critical moment,
+when the coachman had whipped the horses into
+action, the coolies raised the poles to their shoulders,
+and a tremor undulated down the whole line—a few<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>
+drops of rain fell. Then such a scurrying of feet ensued
+as servants rushed into the house for pieces of
+oiled cloth to protect perishable treasures! So it was
+with eclipsed glory that the parade eventually started
+on its way, to the vast disappointment of all concerned.</p>
+
+<p>On the day of the wedding the centre of interest was
+transferred from the bride’s home to that of the groom.
+He lived in a three-story mansion, becoming the rank
+of his father, who was a high official holding a responsible
+government position. At the gate of the compound,
+or grounds, were stationed several Chinese
+policemen whose chief business was to keep the motley
+crowd outside from encroaching on the premises. But
+either they were unequal to their task, or what is more
+likely, condoned the intrusion of the ragamuffins, for
+more and more of the nondescript element drifted past
+the sentinels, till the yard in front was well filled. The
+arched gateway and main entrance to the dwelling were
+decorated with flowers and greens, while along the wide
+veranda was suspended a row of mammoth lanterns,
+gorgeous with crimson silk trimmings and tassels. At
+one end of the veranda hung strings of firecrackers,
+yards and yards in length, lending an added splash of
+colour to the picture. The house was built around the
+four sides of a glass-covered court, with galleries on
+the second and third stories from which the rooms
+opened. Two bands were stationed in the court, one
+Chinese and the other Filipino, the latter a contingent
+from the Municipal Band of the International Settlement.
+The contrast between them was ludicrous.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>
+The Filipinos in fresh uniforms with shining instruments
+sat erect before their leader and played with
+spirit. The ten or a dozen Chinese were of all ages,
+their rags showing beneath faded red jackets and in
+their hands a collection of indescribable instruments on
+which from time to time they blew, pounded and pulled,
+to the evident enjoyment of all the guests but the few
+suffering foreigners present. Beyond the court was the
+reception hall. As it was entirely open in front, its
+magnificence caught and held the gaze immediately
+on entering the front door. The walls were ablaze with
+crimson satin banners, while crimson satin covered the
+chairs and tables, every piece of it, like the banners, elegantly
+embroidered. Wedding decorations are rented
+for the occasion as it would cost a small fortune to
+buy them. The ground floor was mainly given up to
+the men, who sat around in the ante-rooms, in social
+groups, sipping tea and wine, and smoking.</p>
+
+<p>Upstairs the women of the family held court. As
+guests arrived they were conducted at once to the bridal
+chamber, a large bright room, decked out with the furniture
+and bric-a-brac sent over the day before from the
+bride’s home. The bed was the most striking object, for
+the white silken curtains were carefully hung, though almost
+hidden under a glittering assortment of quaint
+and rare ornaments in wrought silver, nearly all of
+them possessing some symbolical meaning. The carved
+teakwood table covered with a heavy white satin
+spread embroidered in peach blossoms, stood in the
+centre of the room. So many gifts had been sent by
+friends to swell the marriage dowry, that the bridal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>
+chamber and room back of it could scarcely contain
+them all. Frequently next to an exquisite bit of ivory
+or jade would repose a cheap glass vase or china matchbox
+that looked as if it might have come from a ten-cent
+store in America. In an adjoining apartment stood a
+table set in foreign style. The table-cloth was a strip
+of coarse cotton sheeting, and on it were placed fancy
+china dishes heaped with all manner of cakes, fruit, and
+confections. Even such accessories as knives and forks,
+and tiny napkins embroidered around the edge in deep
+blue were not lacking. In the centre was a spreading
+floral piece of remarkable design. To beguile the time
+while waiting for the coming of the bride, guests were
+invited to partake of the refreshments, which they did
+freely.</p>
+
+<p>The hours passed slowly by. One o’clock had been
+named in the invitations as the time of the wedding,
+but three struck and no bride. Four o’clock rolled
+around and still no signs of her. Indeed, not a Chinese
+guest expected her, for had the bride made her appearance
+promptly, she would have been committing a
+shocking and unpardonable breach of etiquette. Several
+times, according to custom, the bridegroom had
+sent his messengers to bring her, but without avail.
+The bridegroom must go himself. At last, late in the
+afternoon, the word passed around, amid a wild flurry
+of excitement, that he was about to set out. He left in
+a closed carriage drawn by a span of horses with coachman
+and footman. His two little sisters, flower-girls,
+in white foreign dresses, pink sashes and hair ribbons,
+followed in another carriage. The foreign band went<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
+too, on foot, while the Chinese musicians exerted themselves
+with commendable energy to keep up the flagging
+spirits of the waiting guests.</p>
+
+<p>The minutes dragged heavily till an hour had gone by.
+During the interval there were occasional breaks in the
+monotony. Coolies hurried in with belated wedding
+gifts, women servants of the bride arrived bearing additional
+jewel cases, and finally three men walked in, importantly.
+Two wore Chinese dress, the third one foreign
+clothes of the best modern cut. It was whispered
+around that he had come all the way from Peking to act
+as chief functionary at the ceremony. Presently the
+bridegroom’s carriage rolled into the compound. The
+excitement then rose to a tremendous pitch and every one
+who was not already crowding forward rushed to the entrance
+and the front verandas. Soon the glad shout arose
+on every side: “The bride is coming! The bride is coming!”
+First in through the gateway marched the Filipinos
+playing a stirring air. Close behind was the carriage
+of the flower girls, and then came the bride, riding
+alone. Her carriage on top had the appearance of a
+flower garden with its elaborate rainbow-coloured trimmings.
+The horses’ harness too was gaily decorated. But
+the poor animals were badly frightened when a match
+was set to the firecrackers and boom after boom rent the
+air. They reared and pranced, and though a footman
+held tightly to each bridle, it seemed for a moment or
+two as if the carriage with its precious burden would
+not succeed in getting safely inside the gate. By this
+time the policemen had abandoned all effort to control
+the street mob, and they poured into the compound, a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
+gaping throng, in strange contrast to their brilliant surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>The little flower girls, carrying beautiful floral
+baskets, had tripped lightly to the ground, when an
+intimate woman friend of the bride’s family stepped
+forward to open the coach door for the bride. Not a
+glimpse had been had of her, for the blinds were closely
+drawn. Very slowly she dismounted as custom required,
+but had the poor child wished ever so much to
+hurry, she would have been too seriously hampered by
+her attire to do so. Delicate satin slippers encased her
+small though unbound feet. Her gown was of old rose
+satin, stiff with embroidery. Over her little shapely
+hands were drawn loose-fitting cotton gloves. Necklaces
+without number, of extraordinary design, nearly
+hid the waist of her dress in front, while quantities
+of gold and jade bracelets encircled her slender wrists.
+But the most amazing creation of all was the bride’s
+headgear. It was the time-honoured helmet, worn for
+centuries back in these parts by Chinese brides, but
+seldom seen nowadays in Shanghai. Studded with
+brilliants and coloured glass, and encircled with
+strings of bangles that fell around and almost concealed
+the girl’s face, the weight must have been enough
+to bow down, without any effort to appear modest, the
+head that had to sustain it. But, O, ye shades of a
+stereotyped past, what is this grand climax to the
+bride’s dress which now rivets the attention of the
+astonished beholder! Can it be? yes, it certainly is—a
+modern wedding veil of white net, gathered above
+the helmet in a tuft-like bunch and falling around the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
+bride to her feet in billowy folds! The towering crown
+wavered uncertainly, as, guided by her chaperon, the
+girl moved deliberately toward the house.</p>
+
+<p>Just inside the door she was joined by the groom in a
+well fitting Tuxedo, but looking about as ill at ease as a
+man can. Keeping a good elbow’s distance apart, the
+bridal couple, followed, not preceded, by the flower girls
+and after them the groom’s relatives, walked across the
+court and on into the reception hall, where a girl was
+vigorously pounding out Mendelssohn’s Wedding
+March on a clanging piano. They stopped a few feet
+in front of an oblong table behind which stood the
+three men who had preceded the groom to the house.
+The bride and groom bowed low to each of the three
+dignitaries, beginning with the one in the centre, who
+was the little man in foreign clothes. This gentleman
+picked up a document written over with Chinese characters,
+and holding it in his two hands, read from it
+in a loud voice. After that he handed a ring to the
+groom, who placed it on the third finger of the left
+hand of the bride, over her cotton glove. This act was
+accompanied by formal bows from one party to the
+other. The bride then received a ring from her chaperon
+and timidly slipped it on the left hand little
+finger of the groom. More bowing ensued. At this
+juncture some little girls came forward, and facing
+the bride and groom, sang very sweetly, in English,
+“Jesus Bids us Shine,” a feature of the ceremony introduced
+by a Chinese Christian friend with the consent
+of the non-Christian families. At the conclusion
+of this number, bowing became the order of the programme.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>
+It took the place of the friendly congratulations
+offered to bridal couples in the West The bride
+and groom first saluted each other, then the gentlemen
+who officiated, afterward the parents of the groom,
+kneeling before them with their heads to the floor, in
+token of filial respect, and lastly the brothers, sisters,
+uncles, aunts, cousins, and friends generally. Each
+group was saluted three times, and bowed three times
+in return. Those older and higher in rank stood above
+the couple, but in the case of children the order was
+reversed. The last to be greeted was an aunt of the
+bride, the only member of her household that custom
+allowed to be present. This ceremony was very formal
+and occupied considerable time. While it lasted the
+chaperon was kept busy, since it was her duty to turn
+the bride around, and push her head forward at the
+proper time to bow.</p>
+
+<p>When all was at last over, strains from Mendelssohn
+were again struck up, the bride attempted to
+slip her hand in her husband’s arm, which in his
+embarrassment he allowed to hang limply by his
+side, and surrounded by a chattering, pushing crowd,
+the bridal pair ascended the uncarpeted stairs,
+soiled with the dust from many feet, and found their
+way to the bridal chamber. As the newly married
+always do, they sat for several minutes together on
+the edge of the bed, then the bridegroom made his
+escape to the rooms below, where, constraint cast aside,
+he entered heartily into the enjoyment of the hour.
+But no such good fortune awaited the bride. Her
+ordeal had just begun. She rose to her feet while her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>
+girl friends pressed close about her for the usual bantering.
+“Aren’t you stupid!” “What a hideous
+gown!” “How ridiculously you behave!” “Whoever
+saw such an ugly bride!” During this tirade not
+a muscle of the bride’s face quivered, and the lowered
+eyes were never once raised. But perspiration stood
+in beads on her forehead and the soft round cheeks were
+flushed and feverish, for the thoughtless, teasing crowd
+shut out the air, and besides, not a morsel of food or a
+drop of liquid had passed her lips that day.</p>
+
+<p>Seven o’clock brought a respite, for at that hour the
+wedding feast was declared ready, and the bride escorted
+by her chaperon returned to the reception hall where the
+tables were spread. One table was reserved especially
+for her, and there she was placed in solitary state facing
+the entire roomful of guests. Not so the groom, who
+occupied a side table in the midst of a group of friends.
+The bride’s wedding veil had been removed, but the helmet
+remained, having assumed meanwhile a somewhat
+tipsy air, as if the head underneath was too weary to
+hold it steady or in the merry-making it had been jarred
+out of its equilibrium. But no hand offered to adjust
+it, and least of all could the girl herself do so. She
+sat immovable, her eyes downcast, her face as impassive
+as a Buddha’s. Dish after dish of tempting Chinese
+food was put before her, to be taken away untouched.
+While others all over the room were eating and chattering
+happily, she continued mute and alone. A break
+came when the wine was served. Lifting one of the
+little silver wine cups in both hands the groom passed
+it to the chief guest, who received it in his two hands,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
+and after taking a sip returned the cup to the groom.
+He presented it likewise to each of the principal guests,
+and last of all to his bride amid an outburst of merriment
+from the interested spectators. It was then the
+bride’s turn. Whatever may have been her inner feelings,
+she betrayed no sign of emotion as she stepped
+calmly from one to another with the cup and ended
+by placing it in the hands of the groom, while the
+guests cheered and laughed uproariously.</p>
+
+<p>With this ceremony the feast broke up but not the
+wedding festivities. They continued unabated till early
+morning. During the evening, four of the bride’s
+brothers came in, but they did not seek her out. The
+men, including the groom, stayed below to carouse and
+gamble. Upstairs the young friends of the bride gathered
+around her once more and prepared for a wild
+frolic. First, according to custom, they demanded a
+gift, whereupon one of her woman servants distributed
+boxes of Chinese confections among them, prepared for
+this purpose. After that she was put through a series of
+ridiculous performances for the amusement of her persecutors,
+such as crawling, hopping, skipping, crowing.
+When at last dawn streaked the sky and the house lights
+went out with the departing guests, is it a wonder that
+the exhausted little bride of eighteen sank down on
+the nearest couch and cried herself to sleep?</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c12">XII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">FOREIGN PHILANTHROPIES</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap1">A</span> BISHOP visiting in Shanghai said he should
+sometime like to write a book on the “cries” of
+China. It would make interesting reading. The
+cries are many and diverse. Most coolies, for example,
+whether on land or water, work to the accompaniment
+of a rhythmical chant, and though the poor fellows,
+carrying heavy burdens, fairly gasp in their effort to
+continue the vocal exercise while under the strain of
+physical exertion, they seem unable to proceed without
+it.</p>
+
+<p>In the early days, when foreigners first settled in
+Shanghai, it is related that house servants, as they
+carried food to and from the table, indulged in the
+usual monotonous sing-song till the distracted diners
+peremptorily put a stop to the habit.</p>
+
+<p>But of all the cries known to China, the most pitiful
+is the cry of the children, the sharp insistent wail
+of suffering childhood that ascends night and day all
+over this great land. Had Mrs. Browning visited the
+Far East she would surely have been impelled to pen
+another noble poem on the “Cry of the Children”
+whose pathos would have pierced the heart of the
+world. Many people believe slavery in China is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>
+thing of the past, as a multitude imagine foot-binding
+is no longer practised. It is true that edicts from time
+to time have gone forth abolishing slavery, but they
+have not been enforced and old customs die hard. The
+most that can be said is that this hydra-headed monster
+no longer stalks abroad as openly and unchallenged as
+formerly, though that the evil exists no one who knows
+conditions can for a moment deny.</p>
+
+<p>Out from the centre of the noisy city, where the
+fields are green and the air pure and fresh, stands a
+substantial red brick building. The presiding genius
+is a sweet-faced, motherly woman in the garb of a Protestant
+Episcopal deaconess. “Is this the Slave Girls’
+Refuge?” asks the visitor. “It is the Children’s Refuge.”
+Then, with a deprecatory smile, “We are leaving
+the word ‘slave’ out now because we want to do
+all we can to help the children forget their sad past.”
+The house is plain, not a dollar wasted on ornamentation,
+and filled to overflowing. Built to accommodate
+seventy-five, last year a hundred and fifty-six were
+crowded into it. Little cots line the upper verandas,
+and the superintendent’s bedroom is turned into a day
+nursery for the smallest tots. “You surely ought to
+have one spot you could call your very own,” exclaims
+the half indignant visitor. “I should find it restful
+and pleasant, but with my big family I can’t manage
+it,” and the ever ready smile again illumines the
+kind face.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f15">
+<img src="images/fig15.jpg" alt="refuge">
+<p class="caption">RESCUED CHILD JUST BROUGHT TO
+THE CHILDREN’S REFUGE</p>
+<p class="caption">OLD MEN AT THE HOME OF THE LITTLE
+SISTERS OF THE POOR</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>This work, which is undenominational, was started
+by a band of Christian women after the upheaval of
+1900, although the present building was not occupied
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>till ten years later. Now, in so short a time, it has
+been outgrown, and the need for an addition is imperative.
+The children range in age from three to
+twenty, for some have been in the Home a long time
+and developed into useful assistants. Most of the little
+ones are rescued by the police, who take them to the
+Municipal Mixed Court, and from there they are turned
+over to the Refuge. And what eventually becomes
+of these waifs? A few are returned to parents from
+whom they have been stolen, others are adopted by
+families or mission schools, while a large number die,
+too weakened because of ill treatment to resist disease.
+Occasionally there is a simple wedding at the Refuge
+and a girl goes out from it to a home of her own.
+Shanghai is a great slave market. Children are sent
+and brought here from all over China, kidnappers having
+a large hand in the shameful trade. Parents frequently
+sell their own offspring, for there are many
+mouths to feed and rice is often very, very scarce.
+Only girls are slaves. They become the property, body,
+mind, and soul, of their owners, who may do with them
+as they like. Their pitiful little life stories are almost
+too harrowing to repeat. A baby of five had its flesh
+pinched with red-hot irons, another of six was tied to
+a post for days without food, having had hot needles
+run under her nails. One was three times buried
+alive. A mite three years old, nearly dead from neglect
+and starvation, weighed only ten pounds when
+brought to the Refuge. A doctor counted on the body
+of a bleeding child two hundred and forty cuts, burns,
+and bruises. One was brought in with an arm twisted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>
+out of shape and an eyelid nearly torn away. A little
+slave, after repeated beatings that almost crushed the
+life out of her, was thrown by her mistress on an ash-heap
+to die. When rescued and sent to the Refuge her
+mind seemed clouded. She took scarcely any notice
+of her surroundings, but if any one approached her
+the poor child shrieked in terror. “You are going to
+kill me! I know you are going to kill me!” “A
+few weeks later,” said the superintendent, tears filling
+her eyes as she told the story, “the little thing was
+following me around everywhere, repeating softly to
+herself, ‘Jesus loves me, Jesus loves me.’” How the
+superintendent with her great warm heart mothers her
+flock! The more marred, feeble, and wretched they
+are the more her love surrounds them. And it is most
+wonderful how these little bruised, neglected plants,
+blossom out under her tender care. Until recently she
+was the only foreigner in charge of the work. While
+so many others flit away in the fierce heat of summer
+for a breath of cool air, this faithful worker remains,
+season after season, at her post. “I can not leave the
+children,” she will urge. But she asks no one’s commiseration,
+for a happier heart is not to be found
+in China.</p>
+
+<p>There is a shelter called “The Home for Waifs and
+Strays” at quite the opposite side of Shanghai. It
+gathers in a somewhat different class of children, not
+many slaves, but outcasts, down to new-born infants
+picked up on the street by the police. Many of the
+children are mentally deficient and some suffer from
+incurable diseases. A devoted Christian woman is at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
+the head of the Home, which receives its support from
+the Municipal Council, by whom the work was inaugurated
+several years ago.</p>
+
+<p>A new building has just been completed close to the
+Children’s Refuge, which so long stood entirely alone in
+the midst of cultivated fields. It is the home of the
+School for Blind Boys. No charity is more appealing in
+a country where diseased eyes, leading to partial or total
+blindness, are so fearfully common. The school opened
+its doors only three years ago in a rented house, yet
+the mental development of the boys has been most remarkable.
+There is certain to arise soon an insistent
+demand for blind teachers for the blind, and the purpose
+of the school is to give their boys a general education
+which will qualify them for that work. It also has
+a growing industrial department, and the Blind School,
+like the Children’s Refuge, is in part supported by the
+sale of its products. The plan is later to establish on
+the same site a similar school for girls.</p>
+
+<p>One of the best known institutions in Shanghai is
+the Door of Hope. As the name implies it is intended
+to succor girls bound by a slavery the most cruel of
+all. No other city in the country contains as many
+brothels as Shanghai. It is often called the Sodom
+of China, and is known to many of the native Christians
+away from the coast only as the Far Country
+of the Prodigal Son. Sadly enough, the presence of
+degenerate foreigners is largely responsible for the sin
+laid at the gates of the gay metropolis.</p>
+
+<p>It is safe to say that the majority of Chinese girls
+found in houses of ill-fame are there through no fault<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>
+of their own. Kidnappers dispose in this way of many
+of the children they have stolen. Often parents, particularly
+in famine times, sell their little daughters,
+choosing in their ignorance such a fate for them rather
+than to see them die of starvation.</p>
+
+<p>The “Receiving Home” is in an alley-way just off
+Nanking Road, which is the Piccadilly of Shanghai.
+Several years ago a few philanthropic and influential
+Chinese gentlemen succeeded in securing from the International
+Municipality the passage of a law whereby
+a notice was placed in each brothel telling of the Receiving
+Home and how to reach it. Another law was
+passed at the same time prohibiting brothels from accepting
+girls under fourteen. Both of these statutes
+have gradually been allowed to become dead letters,
+and little or no attention is now paid to them. A rescued
+girl stays in the Receiving Home only over night,
+or until her case is brought up in the Mixed Court
+and she is committed to the Door of Hope. This
+building is in the outskirts of the city, far removed
+from the crowded, dangerous district with which the
+girls have grown too familiar. For obvious reasons,
+although all are under the same roof, it has been found
+wise to separate the first-year girls from those of the
+second year. This charity is supported by grants from
+the Municipal Council together with voluntary gifts
+and the sale of industrial work. The Door of Hope
+dolls are famed far and wide. The little wooden heads,
+beautifully carved, are the only parts of the dolls not
+made by the girls. Shanghai firms gladly donate in
+abundance bright-coloured scraps of silk, satin, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span>
+cotton cloth. The dolls are dressed to represent all
+grades and classes of society, and a set, consisting of
+sixteen, is of real value educationally.</p>
+
+<p>The first-year girls spend the morning in study and
+the afternoon in work. They begin by learning to make
+their own clothes, cloth shoes and all, then when the
+tailor’s trade has been thoroughly mastered, they are set
+to dressing dolls. For this work a slight compensation is
+given which acts as a spur and encouragement. The
+second-year girls are busy all day at their embroidery
+frames with a little schooling in the evening. They receive
+regular pay and are expected in the main to clothe
+themselves. The embroidery is exquisitely fine and
+dainty and there is a constant call for it, both in and
+out of Shanghai, especially from prospective brides
+and mothers. In the long, cheerful work-room, lined
+on both sides with windows, the sixty or more girls
+of the second year gather each morning at eight o’clock
+for prayers. Half an hour later, the embroidery frames
+are laid out on small tables, and materials unrolled to
+the accompaniment of happy chatter. When all is in
+readiness to begin, a sudden hush falls on the room, as
+some one points to the text for the day on a Scripture
+calendar hanging on the wall. This is repeated in concert,
+followed by a brief prayer from one of the girls.
+It is a sweet custom and seems to give just the right
+start to the day. The calendar is compiled annually
+by a Chinese woman living in Shanghai.</p>
+
+<p>It is not necessary to ask if the girls are happy. Their
+bright, contented faces show that. Few are inherently
+bad. Only once in a long while some one tires of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>
+quiet routine and revolts or runs away. But it is
+natural that they should crave change and the sight of a
+face from the outside world is eagerly welcomed. Noticing
+this, a foreign lady living in the neighbourhood
+once asked the girls in relays to her home for afternoon
+tea. The day the first-year girls were present, one
+of them, pointing to the piano, turned to the missionary
+in charge with the question, “What is that black box?”
+It was explained to her that it was a musical instrument,
+and when later it was played upon, the delight
+of the girls was unbounded. An American visitor
+was so touched by the incident that she secured for the
+Door of Hope the gift of a splendid victrola which,
+being a thing of beauty, is likewise sure to prove a
+joy forever.</p>
+
+<p>Most of those who enter the Door of Hope, after
+a few months or a year, become earnest Christians,
+and sooner or later are married to Christian men. In
+China it is considered no disgrace to marry a fallen
+girl, provided she has changed her way of living.
+One girl who was recently married to a minister
+made such a favourable impression on her husband’s
+friend that he went to the Home begging that he
+be given a wife just like her. “But how are these
+poor girls for whom often a very large sum of money
+has been paid, rescued from their owners?” asks the
+puzzled caller. Ah, it is here that a ray of light streams
+through the darkness. There is a law in China, yes,
+and a very old law too, that no woman can be made
+to lead a life of shame against her will. If she has a
+chance to express herself in court, she may choose the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>
+better way, and no one is allowed to oppose her. The
+difficulty is to escape from bondage and secure the
+chance to voice a protest. Besides, many are too young
+to speak for themselves, like the baby of three, who
+the other day was carried to a brothel in the arms of
+her own father and offered for sale. The keepers prefer
+to buy very young children, as they cost little and can
+be used as singing girls during their early years.</p>
+
+<p>Five miles out from Shanghai, in a pleasant farming
+district, is the children’s branch of the Door of Hope.
+In this beautiful protected spot, a hundred and sixty
+little ones, snatched from the horrible pit in which they
+had been thrown, live happily together. With the
+blessed forgetfulness of childhood, the past soon fades
+into indistinctness, till it is well-nigh effaced from
+their memory. The cottage system is in vogue, and the
+big family is divided up into groups of about twenty.
+Each cottage has its house-mother, one of the older,
+trusted girls from the City Home, and all are under
+the care of two devoted foreigners. The hours are
+filled with house-work, studies, simple industries, gardening,
+play. If a girl shows special aptitude, she is
+sent in time to a mission school, where the curriculum
+is broader and better adapted to her largest development.
+As soon as the children are old enough, they are
+trained in evangelistic work, such as teaching in
+Ragged Sunday-Schools and holding village prayer
+meetings. Practically every one ripens into a genuine
+little Christian.</p>
+
+<p>Two of the most striking philanthropies in Shanghai
+are conducted by the Roman Catholics. If there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
+is a class of society that draws on one’s sympathies
+even more than friendless children, it is friendless old
+people, since their capacity for conscious suffering is
+greater. A most admirable characteristic of the Chinese
+is their usually kind treatment of the aged. Filial
+piety shines its brightest in poverty stricken homes,
+where real sacrifice is required to provide for the parents,
+who are often much better able to care for themselves
+than their children are for them. But very
+many are left alone in the world without food or shelter,
+or money to buy a coffin in which they would so
+gladly lie down and die.</p>
+
+<p>The Catholic Home for indigent old people is popularly
+known by the name given to the Sisters of Charity
+in charge of it, “The Little Sisters of the
+Poor.” The capacious three-story building shelters a
+hundred and fifty old men and as many old women,
+which is all it will hold. But as fast as any die
+others are ready to take their places, for there is always
+a long waiting list. The only conditions of admission
+to the Home are that the applicant must be
+over sixty and wholly without means of support. Most
+of those taken in are seventy or more. One might
+easily imagine that a place like this, which gathers
+under its roof so many old people, whose lives for the
+most part have been spent in the midst of poverty and
+filth, and with never an idea of cleanly habits, would
+be anything but inviting. Yet it is a sort of Eden,
+not a speck of dirt on the well-scrubbed floors, not a
+bad or even a close smell in the big airy rooms, not a
+spot on the white bed curtains and pretty patch-work<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>
+coverlids made by the old people from the scraps sent
+in from the shops. And as for the inmates enjoying
+themselves, why the faces of the dear old souls fairly
+radiate happiness! They are allowed tobacco and
+plenty of tea and chatter like magpies over their pipes
+and cups. In order not to make life under the new
+conditions terrifying for them, a weekly bath is not
+insisted on, but clean, neatly mended garments are
+donned every Sunday morning. When sick, the simple-minded
+folk are attended by old-fashioned Chinese
+medicine men, instead of foreign trained doctors whose
+new-fangled ways the patients would spurn. All who
+are able to work have regular duties, spinning, laundering,
+tailoring, nursing. The women’s quarters are on
+one side of the building, and the men’s on the other,
+with the chapel between them. “Yes,” says the Sister
+Superior, stopping a moment as she passes in front
+of the altar to kneel and make the sign of the Cross,
+“the chapel is in the centre, so you see it is God who
+divides and God who unites us.” Several of the Sisters
+are Chinese, and one round-faced novitiate works
+in the kitchen, where the shining brass and copper vessels
+call to mind “Father Lawrence” and his immaculate
+domain. No Chinese girl can enter as an
+“aspirant” to the privileges of sisterhood, unless she
+belongs to the third generation of Christians.</p>
+
+<p>Shanghai’s great show-place is the Catholic institution
+at Siccawei, a suburban village named after the
+Jesuit missionaries’ patron saint. No one coming to
+the city willingly leaves without seeing it, certainly
+not if the visitor is a woman. For the laces and embroideries<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>
+made under the direction of the French
+Sisters are the very quintessence of artistic loveliness,
+and the salesroom is seldom empty.</p>
+
+<p>More than fifty years ago, at the close of the
+T’aiping Rebellion, the Jesuits, after many persecutions
+and vicissitudes, returned to Shanghai, from
+whence they had fled, and settled at Siccawei. There
+they began a small work, which has steadily grown till
+it has reached almost gigantic proportions. Clustered
+about the Cathedral, glaringly modern and capacious,
+whose tall spires are a landmark in all the country
+round, are the old church, a men’s college and theological
+seminary, observatory, museum, orphanages,
+schools, and industrial plants. The women’s and girls’
+buildings are on one side of a tidal creek, and those of
+the men and boys on the other. Asked some question
+by a stranger about the boys’ work, the Sister addressed
+replied in a tone of finality, “I can’t tell you.
+I know no more about what is going on over there than
+you do.” Each Sister is assigned her own duties for
+which she is responsible, and gives herself to them
+exclusively. There are fifty Sisters, more than two-thirds
+of whom are Chinese. The spirituelle expression
+seen sometimes on the faces of these Chinese recluses,
+is most remarkable. The foreign Sisters are all
+French. No one can doubt their devotion. They take
+no vacation; they never go home on furlough. Several
+have been at their posts over forty years.</p>
+
+<p>It is a large household the Sisters have under their
+care, averaging in number seventeen hundred, but the
+work is so divided and runs with such systematic regularity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>
+that there is no suggestion of friction or confusion.
+First in order come the foundlings. Each day,
+tiny, new-born babes are brought into the Home, or often
+left at the gate in the darkness of the night. None
+are turned away. They are washed, dressed, laid in
+clean little cribs, and as soon as possible baptised with
+a Christian name in the chapel on the premises. Many
+are so frail when they enter, that a few brief hours or
+days end their troubled existence. Next are the day-schools
+of various grades for Catholic children, the
+large orphanage, and the boarding-school for non-Christian
+or pagan children, as the Sisters call them, with
+playground, dormitories, dining and school rooms entirely
+separate from the others. In a secluded corner
+of the grounds live the sixty unfortunates, who are
+either blind, crippled, or mentally deficient. Their
+chief occupation is spinning cotton by the aid of crude
+spinning wheels, something the dullest are found capable
+of learning to do.</p>
+
+<p>But it is through its industrial department that Siccawei
+is best known to the general public. Hundreds
+of women are employed in making lace and embroidery,
+most of them having been reared in the Home, and
+married from it to Catholic husbands whose earning
+capacity is insufficient for the family needs. A day
+nursery and school is maintained for the babies and
+young children of the employees. The work rooms
+are of enormous size and well lighted. In the centre
+of each one, on a raised platform, sits a Sister,
+overlooking the women. The proceeds from the sale of
+work are very large.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span></p>
+
+<p>The industrial plant for the men and boys, on the other
+side of the creek, is even more elaborate. It includes
+many departments, wood-carving, carpentry, shoemaking,
+work in iron and brass, glass-blowing, painting in
+oils and water colours, and a printing establishment.
+The genial Father in charge of the wood-carving and
+carpentering, is in his line a genius. Some of the work
+turned out under his supervision is wonderfully beautiful,
+and ranks among the finest specimens of Chinese
+art sent to the Panama Exposition. The youngest
+apprentices, lads of ten or twelve, begin their industrial
+training by making little coffins for the foundlings
+across the way. “Yes,” Father B. is in the
+habit of remarking, pointing to the boys with a smile,
+“they start in life where others leave off.” The Siccawei
+Mission is self-perpetuating within the limits of
+its own constituency. Growth comes through the ever
+inflowing stream of helpless humanity. But no effort
+is put forth, either by the missionaries or Chinese communicants,
+to reach the unevangelized masses. Formerly
+this work was subsidized from France, but it now
+depends for support wholly on the sale of its industries
+and voluntary contributions.</p>
+
+<p>All Shanghai philanthropies from time to time receive
+liberal donations from the Chinese themselves,
+many of whom understand and genuinely appreciate
+what is being done for their people. The recent founding
+of the Society of Organized Charities (Protestant)
+has aided greatly in carrying on systematic work in
+behalf of the deserving poor.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c13">XIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">CHINESE SUCCESSES IN SOCIAL SERVICE</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">S</span>EVERAL years ago a company of lepers numbering
+about forty, living in one of the southern
+provinces of China, were driven from their miserable
+shacks and burned alive. When the official by
+whose order the atrocious deed was committed was
+called to account for it, he excused himself by saying
+that since the lepers were public nuisances, mere cumberers
+of the ground, he decided that the sooner they
+were out of the way the better. Such was his idea of
+social service and he represents a class in China who
+regard calamities like famine, flood, and pestilence as
+heaven-sent blessings to relieve the land of its superfluous
+population. But to the educated youth, touched
+by the spirit of a common brotherhood, and to the
+better elements of an earlier generation the incident
+just related is as abhorrent as it can possibly be to a
+Westerner.</p>
+
+<p>Philanthropy of a certain kind is not new in China.
+Almsgiving for the sake of winning and storing up
+merit is centuries old. But galling poverty, the fierce
+struggle for existence, strange customs and superstitions,
+have all contributed to deaden the sensibilities
+and quench the naturally kind impulses of the heart.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>
+For example, to care for a man lying sick by the
+roadside means to the rank and file that the Good
+Samaritan brings down on his own head the ill-luck
+that followed the poor unfortunate, and to carry
+him into his house to die involves not only the obligation
+of paying for his coffin and burial, no small matter
+in China, but of answering to his relatives, if he has
+any, for his decease. Not long ago in the Chinese City
+a humble dwelling-house took fire and quickly burned
+to the ground. The family barely escaped with their
+lives, a mother with a new-born baby, and a troop of
+older children, one of them sick. The father was away,
+presumably at work. A missionary passing through
+the narrow street saw the poor things huddled together
+in a forlorn little group and her heart was stirred with
+pity. “Why don’t some of you take them home?” she
+asked of the crowd looking on. “Her husband is coming,
+we must wait for him,” they answered. An hour
+or two later, on returning, the lady found the family
+in the same spot, the woman weak and weary, pressing
+her infant to her breast. A cold rain was falling. “If
+you don’t give these people shelter I shall take them
+home with me,” she exclaimed indignantly to a bystander.
+“The husband will be here soon, we dare
+not interfere,” he said in tones of sharp decision. The
+next morning, unbelievable as it seems, the woman and
+her children were still on the street, unsheltered and
+uncared for. At once they were hurried to the mission
+hospital and tenderly nursed. Then, and not till then,
+did the real truth in the case come out. Had any
+one befriended these outcasts, the evil spirit that caused<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>
+the destruction of their house, would in anger have entered
+the home of their benefactor and wrought disaster.
+Hence the only safe course, since they had incurred
+the displeasure of the gods, was to let them
+severely alone. Yet to offset this circumstance is the
+sweet story, and by no means an isolated case, of the
+old Chinese grandmother, who when a little foreign babe
+was rescued from drowning, but chilled to the marrow
+and ready to die, quickly opened her padded coat, and
+pressed it to her warm bosom, till it revived, thus saving
+its life.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f16">
+<img src="images/fig16.jpg" alt="rescued">
+<p class="caption">RESCUED KIDNAPPED CHILDREN AS THEY WERE PHOTOGRAPHED<br>
+FOR ADVERTISEMENT IN THE CHINESE DAILY<br>
+NEWSPAPERS</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The recent revolution ushered in many innovations,
+but nothing that is destined to result in larger good to
+China than the practice of social service as understood
+in the West. The idea has met with a quick and enthusiastic
+response by the Chinese, Christians, and non-Christians
+alike, and is already yielding notable results
+in many places. “Why should we not do for
+ourselves what foreigners have so long been doing for
+us?” the leaders are asking one another, and hospitals,
+orphanages, model prisons, refuges, industrial
+plants, are rising up here, there, and yonder, till it is
+scarcely possible to open a newspaper without reading
+of some new project afloat. In progressive Shanghai
+social service is fast becoming a slogan. An unusual
+opportunity is afforded here of contrasting the old style
+of philanthropy with the new, and the study is valuable
+as well as interesting.</p>
+
+<p>The local Charitable Society that antedates all others
+has its headquarters, known as The Hall of United
+Benevolence, in the Chinese City. Its exact age is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>
+difficult to determine as no one seems to know.
+Some say it has as many as three hundred years to its
+credit. A managing board of ten men, with offices in
+a Chinese house of spacious dimensions, does the business
+of the Society, which is very wealthy, owning large
+tracts of public land. Its chief work is to donate lots
+to philanthropic institutions, furnish coffins to paupers,
+subsidize various existing charities, and dispense free
+of charge Chinese medicines. This Association is held
+in the highest regard by all classes of Chinese, and may
+be called the fountain-head from which most of the
+existing charities have sprung.</p>
+
+<p>One of the older philanthropies, started more than
+fifty years ago, is the Home for Widows in the Chinese
+City. It receives widows without money or relatives
+to support them, who have determined not to re-marry,
+a most praiseworthy resolve according to Chinese standards.
+The house-mother, an old woman of seventy,
+delights to tell that she has been an inmate of the Home
+for forty years, and certainly the bright-eyed, rosy-cheeked
+dame is as good an advertisement as the place
+could have. Widows with young children are allowed
+to keep their little ones with them till the girls are betrothed
+and the boys able to go out to work. In the
+meantime they are sent to day-schools in the city. A
+family of three hundred is crowded into the rambling
+old house, the gift of a former governor, which consists
+of a series of small courts shut in by low two-story
+buildings. Each woman has her own little room,
+or perhaps more than one if her family is large. The
+premises are fairly neat, but what troops of children<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>
+swarm around, noisy and undisciplined, and as a Chinese
+caller once pointedly remarked, “How the women
+must quarrel!” Their salvation evidently lies in their
+industrial work, for while food and shelter are given
+them, the able-bodied are expected to provide their own
+and their children’s clothes. So they spend their days
+making articles which are sold and yield a slight revenue,
+chiefly Chinese shoes, idol money, and clothing.</p>
+
+<p>The Widows’ Home, despite its limitations, commands
+a degree of genuine respect, but not so the two
+Foundlings’ Homes that awaken only pity and almost
+fierce resentment. They are meant to do good, yet
+alas, what a travesty on the real thing! The institution
+inside of the Chinese City is the oldest philanthropy
+in Shanghai and dates back to 1710. From the Hall
+of United Benevolence that fosters it an occasional report
+goes forth telling about this work. The reports
+are written in the usual florid Chinese style, and after
+describing at length the virtuous motives of the
+founders and supporters, give the rules governing the
+organization. For instance the age of each child is
+registered, a note made of its appearance and condition,
+also “of the lines and fashion of its fingers, five
+senses and four limbs.” Wet nurses are made to draw
+lots for the babies in order to avoid partiality. Close
+to the street entrance is a perforated drawer in which
+the foundling is to be left. The one who brings the
+baby must rap on the door with a stick that hangs beside
+the drawer to announce its arrival. These and
+many more minute directions are recorded with painstaking
+elaboration.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span></p>
+
+<p>They read well, but what are the facts? It requires
+considerable tact and insistence for a visitor
+to gain access to the inner rooms of the Home, where
+the real life of the babies is dragged out. Two or
+three of the well-favoured will be brought in the arms
+of nurses to an outer court, but when permission is
+asked to go inside there is evident reluctance and many
+excuses are offered. Sometimes the only sure open
+sesame is the official card of the City Magistrate. Apparently
+no cruelty is practiced, but it is the gross ignorance
+and negligence of the caretakers that makes so
+pitiable the brief life of the babies, for most of them
+die after a few weeks or months. Each wet nurse is
+given the charge of two foundlings. The nurses may
+remain at the Home or if they prefer take the little
+ones to their own home, in which case they receive somewhat
+larger pay. If a sufficient number of wet nurses
+can not be secured, the foundlings, irrespective of age,
+whether a few days or several months old, are fed on
+rice water sweetened with coarse brown sugar. Scarcely
+any reach the Home in a normal condition. Diseased,
+weak, bruised, one coming with a terrible gash in its
+neck given with intent to kill, the death-knell of the
+puny things is generally sounded before birth. The
+rooms where they are kept are small, and as a rule almost
+devoid of light and air. In one of the Homes even
+through the heat of a Shanghai summer the babies not
+only sleep in stifling rooms but on beds surrounded by
+closely-woven cloth curtains. In the other Home they lie
+the long day through in bamboo cribs, their little bodies
+eaten with flies and poisoned with mosquitoes. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>
+chorus of feeble wails that constantly arises pierces the
+visitor’s heart, as does the sight of the tiny skeleton-like
+limbs. With scarcely an exception the fifty babies
+in each of the Homes, and the far larger number that
+are put out to nurse, are girls. Just one thought comes
+as a slight comfort, that wretched as is the condition
+of the children they are certainly quite as well, or
+even perhaps better off, than they would be in their
+own homes. No wonder physicians in China say the
+mortality among children reaches as high as seventy
+or eighty per cent.</p>
+
+<p>In happy contrast to these Homes, is the Hospice
+of St. Joseph, which has gathered into its safe shelter
+nearly eleven hundred of Shanghai’s sick and poverty-stricken
+Chinese. But the story is too good not to be
+told from the beginning. Four years ago two Christian
+men, members of the Catholic Church, determined
+to found a philanthropic institution. One holds several
+highly responsible offices in the Chinese Municipality.
+The other is a successful business man. Many of the
+tramcars in the International Settlement, and all of
+those under Chinese control, were turned out from his
+foundry. His snug steamers ply the waters of the
+upper Yangtse as far as Chungking, conquerors at
+last, after many futile efforts, over the difficulties presented
+by the dangerous rapids. He subscribes for
+American journals on mechanics which he studies diligently
+through an interpreter, and after absorbing ideas
+gleaned from them, invents and adapts machinery for
+use in China. It is his desire to see Chinese farmers follow
+improved methods of agriculture, and to encourage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>
+them he occasionally presents a village with a modern
+threshing machine made in his foundry. His Sundays
+are frequently spent in evangelistic work in the country,
+and busy man that he is, he makes it a practice as
+often as possible to leave his work and go to the Arsenal
+to pray with condemned prisoners before they die. Recently
+the President honoured him with a medal rarely
+bestowed, and all who know him, Protestant and Catholic
+alike, pronounce him a “rare character.”</p>
+
+<p>The land for the Hospice was donated by the Charitable
+Society of the Hall of United Benevolences, and the
+Chinese Municipality gave bricks (those bricks seem to
+multiply miraculously!) from the old city wall for
+building material. The colony includes a men’s hospital,
+a women’s hospital, a home for boys, a refuge
+for girls, an asylum for the blind, a chapel, dispensaries,
+kitchens, quarters for the insane, for opium patients,
+and prisoners from the jail in the Chinese City. These
+buildings are already completed and others are projected.
+While the two founders direct the business affairs
+of the institution, they have given the care of it
+to twelve Sisters of Charity, four of whom are Europeans
+and the rest Chinese.</p>
+
+<p>The upkeep of such a great establishment, under the
+conditions that exist in China, is no small matter, but
+the next to impossible has been achieved and the management
+is well-nigh beyond criticism. The long, light
+airy wards, with every cot filled, are visited each morning
+by a foreign-trained Chinese physician, who donates
+his services. On the second floor of the men’s hospital
+is a beautiful white-tiled operating room, with all the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>
+latest equipment. There are industries, indoors or out,
+for those able to work. Children study half a day. Incurables
+and old people without support are kept on for
+life, but the strong and middle-aged are sent away from
+the institution as soon as they are well to make room
+for others. It is a joy in this land, where the insane
+have been so long neglected and maltreated, to find
+a retreat prepared for them where they receive the
+kindest consideration. The consequence is that many
+after a few months go home cured. Every cement-lined
+cell is protected in front by iron bars, so that
+the door can be left wide open, admitting light and air.
+A door at the back of each cell opens into a narrow
+corridor which leads to bathrooms with large earthen
+tubs and running water. Several of the cells are neatly
+padded to accommodate violent patients. This place
+and the prisoners’ wards next to it, as clean and wholesome
+as heart could wish, are in charge of a Christian
+young man of tried character.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to the Hospice, its two large-hearted
+founders have built, on a much frequented street, a
+three-story Evangelistic Hall. Said the elder one, “We
+want it to be a place where any passerby and especially
+strangers in the city, can stop a while and discuss the
+Christian doctrine.” There is a day school for boys
+in connection with it.</p>
+
+<p>Out in the neighbourhood of the old pagoda, set in the
+midst of blooming peach orchards, is a large orphanage
+for both boys and girls. This also is a Christian
+institution, but Protestant, and was started eleven years
+ago by a group of men, several of whom had studied<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span>
+in mission schools. The boys and girls are in separate
+though connecting compounds, and a happier, merrier
+lot of young folks it would be hard to find. Much
+is made of Bible Study, and industrial work among the
+boys is strongly emphasized. The sale of their rattan
+furniture, painted scrolls, cloth and hot-house flowers,
+especially at the time of their annual chrysanthemum
+show, goes a long way toward meeting the current expenses
+of the work.</p>
+
+<p>On the same road as the orphanage, but nearer town,
+is “The Shanghai Home for Poor Children.” This is
+not Christian, but it is one of the most interesting and
+best conducted institutions in the city. A few influential
+business men are its promoters, Chinese with high
+ideals and broad vision. There are in the Home about
+twenty girls and a hundred boys, many of them waifs
+picked up on the streets by the directors themselves.
+A peculiarity of this institution is that the children
+do not use beds but sleep on the floor in great breezy
+dormitories where there can be no question of well-inflated
+lungs. The school has a famous orchestra,
+and a picture that catches the eye at once, on the wall
+of the reception room, represents the band members,
+girls as well as boys, sitting with their instruments in
+their hands on the platform in the main hall. This
+Home is characterized by two unique features, one, that
+the old-time Chinese boxing and fencing are taught
+in the fine out-of-doors gymnasium, and the other,
+the prominence given to agriculture and horticulture
+as school branches. Indeed this seems to be the only
+school in Shanghai where agriculture is a study, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>
+opportunity for practical work in the ample grounds
+around the institution. In connection with this charity
+it is worth recording that of the ten members on the
+Board of Directors five are women. However, they
+have not advanced quite far enough to join with the
+men in committee meetings but hold separate sessions.
+Or possibly it is the men, poor benighted creatures,
+who are to blame!</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to lay too much emphasis on the
+value of industrial schools, and social service can be
+turned into no more beneficent channels than in starting
+and maintaining such schools. Until very recently industrial
+training was wholly neglected in China. Even
+now, if a Chinese educator is asked, “Are there any
+industrial schools in Shanghai?” he will answer,
+“None,” and yet there are at least two and one more
+soon to be opened. But these, it seems, are not classed
+as schools, since they admit only poor boys unable
+to pay tuition, and because the study of books is made
+secondary. The best industrial school was opened four
+years ago. Work is carried on in a single large building
+that is not divided into rooms, but from whose centre
+apartments branch off in different directions like
+the spokes of a wheel, all well supplied with windows,
+thus insuring plenty of fresh air and good ventilation
+even in the hottest weather. “How many boys have
+you?” was asked of the head teacher. “One hundred,
+and I wish I had room for five hundred!” came the
+reply with surprising earnestness. The boys range in
+age from very little fellows to lads of sixteen and
+eighteen. There are industries enough to suit the bent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>
+of each one. They include carpet-weaving, wicker
+work, soap-making, pottery, portrait painting, the
+manufacture of kindergarten toys, clothing made on
+sewing machines, and stockings on knitting machines.
+The boys work during the day and study in the evening.
+Their pride is in their brass band and they earn
+quite a bit of money for the school by playing at weddings
+and funerals. The third of an acre covered by
+the school plant was originally a cemetery, and how
+characteristic it is of China, that in order to secure
+the land one hundred and thirty-nine graves had to be
+removed!</p>
+
+<p>One of the commonest crimes in Shanghai is kidnapping.
+Chinese children, if they are healthy and attractive,
+need to be carefully guarded. Most of the kidnappers
+are women, and the nefarious business is so
+lucrative that a large number are engaged in it. Kidnappers
+grow bold as well as wily, picking up children
+at play on the street, or off on errands, and even beguiling
+or snatching them away from their very doors.
+Both boys and girls are stolen, though boys are greater
+prizes, being always in demand as apprentices and
+adopted sons in families that have not been blessed
+with an heir, for the master of a house who has no son
+to burn incense before his ancestral tablet after his
+death, and to worship at his grave, is of all men most
+miserable. Still, pretty little girls are always easily
+disposed of, either in brothels or in private homes as
+slaves or future daughters-in-law.</p>
+
+<p>Several years ago about thirty public-spirited Chinese
+gentlemen in Shanghai formed themselves into an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>
+Anti-Kidnapping Society and set to work in earnest
+to combat this evil. They hired skilled Chinese detectives
+to meet out-going and in-coming coast and river
+steamers and arrest all suspicious characters. Cunning
+as the kidnappers are, again and again they prove
+no match for the quickwitted detectives, who succeed
+in rescuing many children. The poor little victims are
+frequently concealed in baskets of clothing, or hidden
+away in boxes that ostensibly contain fruit or merchandise.
+Sometimes two or three will be found
+crouching together in a single box with only the tiniest
+holes for admitting air. The very young children are
+usually drugged, and older ones frightened into silence
+by the most terrible threats. Five miles out from
+Shanghai, convenient to the railroad yet in the midst
+of open country, has stood for years a large Buddhist
+temple. At the time of the revolution, when so many
+of the temples in China were abandoned, and put to
+other uses, this one was leased by the Anti-Kidnapping
+Society as a Home for rescued children. Stripped of
+its idols and incense burners, the smoke-blackened
+walls white-washed, the priests ejected, the old place
+that so long echoed the mumbled prayers of heathen
+devotees now resounds with the happy voices of between
+two and three hundred children. The girls, who
+are considerably in the minority, occupy the courts in
+the rear, large and pleasant however, and the boys
+those in front. The Worship Hall of the temple has
+been converted into a school and assembly room for
+the boys. Every day in the Chinese newspapers of
+Shanghai the Home is advertised, with a description<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>
+and photographs of the children most recently rescued.
+In this way hundreds have been identified by their parents
+and returned to them. Unclaimed children are
+kept in the Home, being taught some kind of industrial
+work until they are able to go out and care for themselves.
+Ethics is a branch of the school curriculum, but
+the children are at liberty to accept whatever religious
+belief they will.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese gentry in Shanghai maintain several
+free dispensaries. The largest of these, fronting on a
+crowded street, has in Chinese characters over one door
+the motto, “Loving to Save,” and above another
+“Heaven Bestows Perfect Happiness.” This charity is
+said to be half a century old and the building itself
+bears evidence of having endured that long. Every
+second day the dispensary is open, when patients by
+the hundred visit it. The dozen or so Chinese trained
+doctors in attendance are divided into two classes, those
+treating internal diseases and the others dealing with
+external troubles. They are separated like sheep from
+goats, sitting each at his own table, under covered corridors
+on opposite sides of a court. In the rear of the
+dispensary is a large workshop where coffins are made
+and given to the poor.</p>
+
+<p>Seven years ago, when plague raged, an isolation
+hospital was opened by a well-known Chinese philanthropist
+in the outskirts of the city. He succeeded in
+buying the house of a wealthy Chinaman, whose several
+wives and numerous offspring actually performed the
+unprecedented feat, for Chinese, of vacating the premises
+in two days. Wards have since been added to the main<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>
+building, so that the hospital will now accommodate
+about a hundred. Through the efforts of this same
+philanthropist, aided by a distinguished foreigner, Dr.
+Timothy Richard, the China Branch of the Red Cross
+Society was established in 1904 with headquarters in
+Shanghai. Three Red Cross hospitals are operated in
+widely separated districts of the city, two of them intended
+to be used exclusively for cholera patients during
+the cholera season. One of these had its opening some
+months ago when the hospital was visited by many
+influential Chinese and a few foreign guests. Nothing
+could have illustrated more clearly the progress
+the people are making in the science of social service.
+The building is a thoroughly renovated old-fashioned
+Chinese mansion, with courts and rooms innumerable
+and the usual lovely carved woodwork, mural decorations
+and tiny squares of translucent glass set in quaint
+wooden screens, though most of these had been replaced
+by good-sized modern windows. The most fastidious
+Westerner could not have asked for cleaner
+wards, arranged for the various classes of patients,
+whiter examining and operating rooms for both men
+and women, or a more complete equipment, though the
+whole was on a somewhat diminutive scale. The question,
+it is true, would occasionally intrude itself, “How
+will this place look a month from now?” but it was
+followed by the reflection “What began best, can’t end
+worst,” and that a committee capable of initiating such
+a work could be trusted to supervise its upkeep. The
+corps of young men nurses wore a neat uniform of
+white with blue trimmings. The women nurses,—well,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>
+to be frank, there were none. “It is so difficult
+to find women nurses,” explained one of the doctors.
+“We must have them of course or we can’t open the
+women’s department.” The keen interest of the Chinese
+themselves in the hospital, evidenced by the numbers
+present and their painstaking inspection, was one
+of the most hopeful signs. An elderly gentleman, of a
+singularly refined and benevolent countenance, had
+come all the way from Nanking, half a day’s journey,
+to study the plant with a view to starting something
+similar in his own city.</p>
+
+<p>Time fails to tell of the fine modern hospital of
+the little Chinese woman doctor who received her training
+at a mission medical school in Canton, and about
+whom a whole chapter could be written. Unselfish to
+a fault, serving devotedly under the Red Cross Society
+during the revolution, pouring her money and her life
+out in kindred charities, no personal sacrifice is too
+great for the betterment of her people whose spiritual
+as well as physical needs lie as a burden on her heart.</p>
+
+<p>A minor charity but one by no means to be despised
+is that of furnishing on the street in summer free
+drinks, not of intoxicants, but of tea. The tea is
+poured hot into earthen jars which stand inside small
+booths. Beside the jar is a bamboo dipper, and any
+passerby may stop and quench his thirst. The tea
+stations are scattered at frequent intervals throughout
+the foreign settlements as well as the Chinese City, and
+are an inestimable boon, particularly to the hard-working
+coolies.</p>
+
+<p>Another charity that well illustrates the poverty of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>
+China is the conservation of waste rice. Rice is China’s
+staff of life. The servant calls his master to eat not
+by saying “Dinner is ready,” but “Rice is ready.”
+To waste rice is a sin; to save it, meritorious. As
+junks laden with rice from the country around are
+poled down the river and creeks to Shanghai, a few
+handfuls of the precious grain inevitably sift out from
+the bags onto the bank. This is picked up by benevolently
+minded persons, along with the mud in which it
+has fallen, and afterward laboriously separated and
+washed. Some hundreds of pounds in the course of
+a year are collected in this way and distributed to the
+poor. A number of local Chinese guilds during the
+coldest winter weather, are in the habit of feeding daily
+large numbers of the suffering poor, who line up at
+specified hours for their allotted portion; also generous
+sums of money are contributed annually by the Chinese
+and sent to the districts devastated by flood and famine
+to relieve the destitute.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the most significant event of the last year in
+Shanghai was the organization by young Chinese women
+of a Social Service League. The leaders are Christians,
+who in a tactful but persistent way, are sure to make
+their influence felt. Already as a beginning five free
+day-schools for the poor, with a total attendance of several
+hundred, have been started and others are expected
+to open soon. A Sunday School taught by volunteer
+workers is held in connection with each day-school. It is
+the plan to dot the city with these charity schools, which
+divide the day between the study of the Chinese language
+and manual training. The whole financial burden is met<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>
+by the League members and their interested friends,
+while a few, ladies of high position, who heretofore have
+led self-centred lives, are giving several hours a week to
+teaching. The movement is attracting wide attention.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c14">XIV</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">THE ROMANCE AND PATHOS OF THE MILLS</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>T was the close of a cold December afternoon, and
+a raw penetrating wind was blowing. In the mill
+district out Yangtsepoo way the road was alive
+with people. Women and little children, with a sprinkling
+of men, were hurrying along the dusky highway
+on foot and in wheelbarrows, for it was nearing six
+o’clock, the hour of the night shift. In front of one
+of the great cotton mills a crowd of shivering humanity
+had gathered waiting for the Sikh policemen to throw
+open the gates. Faces were blue and pinched, shoulders
+bent, and hands drawn up for warmth inside the padded
+cotton sleeves. Nearby, within a shallow niche in the
+brick wall stood a small, solemn-faced boy, perhaps
+seven years old. He looked like a young sentinel,
+straight as a ramrod, arms stretched down close to his
+body. When asked what he was doing he replied
+briefly, “Keeping warm,” and tried to hug a little
+closer the sheltering wall. Poor laddie, the whistle
+would soon blow calling him on duty to work without
+intermission amid pounding machinery and dizzily
+whirling spindles, until the welcome signal set him free
+at six o’clock in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>The story of cotton-growing in China is not a very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>
+old one. It began only a few hundred years back, some
+say in the eleventh, others in the thirteenth century,
+when the first cotton seeds were brought here from Chinese
+Turkestan. Strangely enough, it was a woman
+who gave the cultivation of cotton its initial impulse,
+for not until Lady Hwang, public-spirited and enterprising,
+took it upon herself to distribute cotton seeds
+among the farmers of the Yangtse Valley, was the
+plant grown to any extent. This valley is to-day the
+most flourishing cotton producing district in the country.
+Ninety per cent of China’s millions dress in cotton,
+a coarse, strong cloth, dyed blue. But what did
+the people wear in the long ago before the cotton plant
+had ever been heard of? Did peasant as well as prince
+array himself in silk and fine linen? What we do
+know is that the introduction of cotton was strenuously
+opposed by the silk and hemp growers. It is a curious
+fact that as early as 500 A.D. reference is found in
+Chinese books to “cotton robes,” though they were evidently
+regarded as rarities and were doubtless brought
+into the country by travellers, or as tribute for the august
+ruler of the Flowery Kingdom.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f17">
+<img src="images/fig17.jpg" alt="mill">
+<p class="caption">ON THE WAY TO THE MILL</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>India gave China her first spinning wheel, and this
+same crude wheel, scarcely improved upon at all, is still
+seen, not only in the interior, but in many a home in and
+around metropolitan Shanghai. Multitudes of families
+too, as in the olden days, run their own simple hand
+loom. Time-honoured customs die slowly in China, but
+the southern provinces are the least conservative, and
+Canton is one of the most progressive of cities. So we
+are not surprised to find that about 1870 a Cantonese<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span>
+company started a factory for spinning cotton by steam-operated
+machinery. When all was in readiness would
+the farmers trust their cotton to this wizard concern?
+Not a man of them! It was their firm conviction that
+by some occult process their dearly grown product
+would vanish from sight never to reappear. Thus the
+enterprise launched so hopefully was doomed to failure.
+Twenty years later, however, the experiment was tried
+again, and this time with success. Foreign capital too
+was attracted to the venture, and at the close of the
+Chino-Japanese war, when the new treaty gave assurance
+of protection, a number of foreign-owned mills
+were built. At first they were operated without profit
+if not at a positive loss. This was mainly due to the
+fact that on account of the sudden and greatly increased
+number of spindles the supply of cotton was not equal
+to the demand, which caused a rise in price. That is
+no longer true, and dividends now are often very large.
+Cotton, to a greater or less extent, is grown in every
+province in China, but the quality is inferior and the
+staple short. This is not because of an unfavourable
+soil and climate, especially in the lower central provinces,
+but is wholly due to the carelessness and ignorance
+of the farmers. They cultivate the farms in a haphazard
+fashion, or strictly speaking, pay no attention
+whatever to cultivation, allowing nature to run riot at
+her own sweet will. There is no reason why, with the
+introduction of scientific methods in seed selection and
+planting, China in a few years should not see a complete
+transformation in the character of her crops.
+Foreigners are planning to start an experimental farm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>
+in the neighbourhood of Shanghai, and hope each year
+to induce a few farmers from the interior to spend several
+months working on it and receiving practical instruction.
+It is estimated that within the last ten years
+the acreage devoted to cotton growing in China has increased
+one hundred per cent.</p>
+
+<p>Great as has been this advance, the end is not yet, and
+cotton fields will continue to multiply. “But where is
+the land to come from?” some one asks. “China’s millions
+must be fed, and surely the rice and wheat fields can
+not be sacrificed.” No, but the acres once aflame with the
+now prohibited poppy will be available, and then there
+are the burial lands. The amount of ground taken up
+by the mammoth mound-shaped and horse-shoe graves
+is enormous, but little by little it is yielding to the
+encroachments of Western civilization. At a recent
+medical conference in Shanghai, one of China’s most
+brilliant foreign-trained doctors, for sanitary and economic
+reasons dared advocate cremation, or at least
+confining the sepulchres of the dead to the hillsides
+and other untillable spots. Half of China’s cotton crop
+is exported annually to Japan. On the other hand she
+imports quantities of cotton from America. Foreign
+countries send many kinds of cotton cloth to China,
+where it is most popular, particularly the cotton prints.
+While Japan’s goods flood China’s markets, the Japanese
+markets are closed to the finished product from
+China. Yet it should be easily possible in the near
+future for China to supply her own needs, growing
+the best quality of cotton, and opening cotton mills all
+over the country. This would relieve the congested<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
+agricultural districts and furnish employment to many
+idle hands.</p>
+
+<p>What the cotton industry in China requires above
+everything else is the fostering care of the government.
+Until this is given there will be little advance in either
+quality or quantity of production. The most the central
+government has done thus far has been to give its
+tardy recognition to “The Cotton Anti-Adulteration
+Association” of Shanghai, and to place the testing of
+cotton against adulteration under a Commissioner of
+the Customs, which has led to most beneficial results.
+It is a pity that thus far the Chinese-owned mills have
+declined to join the Association. The greatest handicap
+to the native industry is heavy taxation. In Japan
+the raw material is imported and the finished product
+exported free of duty. In China not only is no such
+encouragement given, but internal taxes are levied as
+well, so that the farmer must pay to send his cotton
+down the river to the manufacturer, the manufacturer
+to return it in yarn and cloth to the merchant, and
+the merchant to pass it on to the country buyer.</p>
+
+<p>At present China has approximately forty cotton
+mills, nearly two-thirds of which are in and around
+Shanghai. Three in the city are owned and operated
+by the Japanese, several are the property of European
+companies, but the majority belong to the Chinese.
+The oldest cotton mill, started more than twenty-five
+years ago in Shanghai, was financed by China’s great
+statesman, Li Hung Chang. It is still running under
+Chinese management, though the original buildings
+were burned a few years ago. This mill is one of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>
+largest, having sixty thousand spindles. The assistant
+superintendent is a bright young man who recently
+graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, where
+he specialized in sociology. He brings to his work high
+ideals which he hopes gradually to see realized. The
+next oldest mill is also Chinese. Its owner, Mr. C. C.
+Nieh, an unusual man, recently returned from a five
+months’ tour in the United States, where he made a
+careful and critical study of cotton growing and cotton
+mills. It is his purpose as quickly as possible
+to bring his mill up to the highest grade of efficiency.
+Indeed his American manager reports that his chief
+is anxious to advance more rapidly than the operatives
+can be trained to follow, and describes him as a “delightful
+man to work for.” The largest mill in Shanghai
+is under British management. It operates seventy
+thousand spindles and employs between five and six
+thousand hands. One of the newest mills, that represents
+the very latest thought in building and equipment,
+belongs to the Japanese. The brick walls are
+lined with cement, the floors are reinforced concrete,
+while the saw-tooth roofs, with glass on one side, admit
+an abundance of light. The machinery, the best made
+in England, is operated by electricity, all of the other
+mills in Shanghai, except Mr. Nieh’s, using steam. A
+peculiarity of this mill is that the majority of the
+employees are men and boys, female help being almost
+exclusively found in the other mills.</p>
+
+<p>A few years ago the Japanese mill owners in Shanghai
+did a good thing for themselves and for the Chinese
+in sending to Japan a hundred Chinese men and women<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>
+to take a course of nine months’ instruction in the mills.
+Since their return, these trained workers have been used
+to teach the raw Chinese mill hands in Japanese
+employ.</p>
+
+<p>Wages in all the mills are about the same, and are
+good, as pay goes in China. Children receive from
+eleven to fifteen cents a day, women from fifteen to
+thirty-five according to their skill, and men fifteen to
+twenty dollars a month. This is reckoned in Mexican
+currency, which would yield less than one-half that
+amount in American money. Some of the mill people
+come from farms in the suburbs and are in comfortable
+circumstances. One or two members of a family may
+work in the mill, not so much from necessity as to be
+able to add a little to the general income. But others,
+and these far outnumber the more fortunate class,
+are the poorest of the poor, often unable to pay the
+“cash” or two required to ride in a wheelbarrow between
+the mill and their home which is frequently miles
+distant. A single instance may be given. A young
+girl supports a widowed mother and little brothers and
+sisters on two dollars and a half a month. She starts
+to the mill each morning at four o’clock, as it takes her
+two hours to walk there, and when her day’s work is
+over, at six in the evening, she is two hours more
+walking home. Many a time when the moon is shining
+the child mistakes its bright light for dawn and
+sets out at three or earlier. The walk is not so bad in
+pleasant weather, lonely only until she joins crowds of
+other mill folk moving in the same direction. But
+what of the chill days in winter, with a bleak wind<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>
+blowing, rain falling, and roads treacherously slippery
+with mud? It is hardest for the women who have
+bound feet, women too poor to pay for a seat on a wheelbarrow
+with five or six others. Yonder comes a group
+uncertainly picking their way along in the blinding
+mist. One poor soul at last reaches the gate of the
+mill and drops all in a heap on the cold wet ground to
+wait for the blowing of the whistle. “Have you come
+far?” is asked of her pityingly. Half fearfully, half
+defiantly, as if braced for a reprimand, she struggles
+to her feet and answers, “From Honkew,” a distance
+of nearly three miles. A fleeting smile is by and by
+coaxed into her pale face, but she is tired, so very tired,
+and a long twelve hours of unremittent labour lies before
+her. Let us hope she is one who works at a loom,
+for then she can have a seat on a narrow bench. The
+women and children who watch the spindles must stand
+the long night through.</p>
+
+<p>The employees carry their lunch in a small round
+basket, all of uniform size. The basket is half filled
+with cold boiled rice, and set in the midst of it
+is sure to be a little bowl containing a few mouthfuls
+of bean curd, salt fish or some other simple
+relish. Before eating, the food is warmed by pouring
+boiling water into the basket and allowing the
+water to filter through the rice and out at the bottom.
+Hot water is also furnished in the mills for tea. In
+the new Japanese mill tea itself is given the hands.
+“Not the best kind,” says the superintendent, “but
+nevertheless, tea.” This mill has rough dining halls
+for its employees, and allows a half hour at noon and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>
+the same at midnight for eating. Another mill gives
+fifteen minutes at noon and at midnight. An Englishwoman
+living in the neighbourhood says she always
+awakens at night when the great engines stop their
+throbbing and thinks with tender pity of the wan-faced
+women and wide-eyed little children toiling across the
+way while she rests in her comfortable bed. In most
+of the mills no intermission whatever is granted for
+rest or food, and the people eat whenever they are
+hungriest, snatching a morsel now and then as they
+tend their looms or watch their reels and spindles.
+Formerly mothers brought their nursing babies to the
+mills, and laid them at their feet while they worked,
+but this is no longer permitted in the large mills. Some
+relative, it may be a grandmother, carries the little
+one to the mother to nurse twice a day, in the middle
+of the morning and again in the afternoon. Mothers
+who work at night often draw from the breast before
+they leave home sufficient milk to last the baby until
+they return in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>All of the mills run their spinning department
+through the twenty-four hours, but weaving can not be
+done as well at night, so the looms shut down. One
+mill makes its day fourteen hours long. “And these
+little children must stand and work all those hours?”
+asked a visitor of the manager. “Yes,” and with a
+slight shrug of the shoulder, “rather hard on them,
+isn’t it?” “But then you know how it is in the Chinese
+shops,” he added, “they keep their apprentices at
+work often eighteen and twenty hours on a stretch.”</p>
+
+<p>The best mills no longer employ very young children,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>
+that is tots of five and six. This is not so much
+in the interest of the children as because the little ones
+are found to be more of a hindrance than a help. But
+parents try to smuggle them in past the keen-eyed Sikh
+policemen at the gate, who are kept busy at the times
+of shift driving them out.</p>
+
+<p>The hiring of women and girls is generally committed
+to Chinese forewomen, who are responsible for
+keeping their full quota at work. These women are
+usually shrewd and business-like, with a full appreciation
+of the dignity of their position. One recently entered
+the first class compartment of a tramcar. She
+wore the loose blue gown, apron, and head cloth of the
+working people and when the Chinese conductor came by
+he addressed her gruffly. “Old woman, you belong
+in the third class. Get out of here.” “Why should I
+get out?” she responded with spirit, “I have money
+to pay for a seat in the first class.” The conductor
+changed his tone and manner at once, recognizing a
+dominant personality behind the coarse clothes. “Pardon
+me, Madame,” he said and meekly took the proffered
+coppers. The mills as a rule give four holidays
+a month, though they are not always Sundays. Some
+employees object to Sunday as a holiday as they say it
+brings bad luck.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese for so many centuries have been an
+agricultural race that they do not take as kindly to
+mechanical labour as the Japanese, who have long had
+industrial training in the schools and make at first
+steadier, more dependable mill hands. Yet these patient,
+plodding people, with almost unlimited endurance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>
+are capable of being trained to do the highest
+grade of work. The improvement of their material
+condition is a crying need. Said the superintendent
+of one of the foreign-owned mills: “I have been in
+this work in Shanghai now for twenty years, and I
+hope I may not leave for home till I have seen the employees
+in the mills better housed, fed, clothed, and
+educated. But employers can not do this until the
+Chinese government enables them to compete on better
+terms than at present with others in the cotton
+market.” Mr. Nieh is making practical application
+of his philanthropic principles in an effort to divide
+the twenty-four hours into three shifts instead of two,
+and as fast as possible to dispense with child labour, so
+that the boys may be free to enter the public school
+which is being built on land donated by him near his
+mill. This same generous-hearted man, who recently
+accepted the Christian faith, is also planning for a
+girls’ school, a day nursery, and a hospital in the mill
+district. Several years ago he and his wife, also a
+Christian, threw open their beautiful private garden
+as a playground for street children. When remonstrated
+with by their friends they replied smilingly,
+“We feel it is selfish to enjoy it alone.” The recently
+organized “Mill Owners Association of Shanghai” it
+is expected will pave the way for concerted action in
+relation to needed reforms.</p>
+
+<p>Although cotton is an exotic in China proper, silk is
+a native product. More than four thousand years ago,
+in the dim, semi-prehistoric days, China alone of all
+the countries in the world, understood the art of sericulture.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>
+Again it was a woman to whom she was indebted,
+for tradition has it that as early as 2600 B.C. the
+wife of the great emperor Hwang-ti experimented with
+silk-worms and finally discovered a way of unwinding
+the silk from the cocoons much in the same manner that
+it is done now. This was a precious secret and China
+guarded it jealously. But during the fifth century of
+the Christian era it leaked out, as secrets often will,
+and lo, it was a woman who divulged it, which is not
+as surprising a happening as might be. It fell out that
+the Prince of Khotan in Chinese Turkestan wedded
+a Chinese princess, and when the bride was being conducted
+to her new home, so the story goes, she managed
+to carry with her, concealed in her headgear and at
+the risk of her life, some seeds of the mulberry plant
+and eggs of the silk-worm. Thus sericulture became
+known in Central Asia and later in Europe. It is an
+interesting coincidence that while it was Khotan that
+learned the art of silk manufacture from China, it was
+also Khotan that furnished China with her first cotton
+seeds several centuries later. So the debt was paid
+back in part.</p>
+
+<p>Though China shared with the rest of the world
+the secret of sericulture, yet up to within fifty years
+she possessed half the world’s trade in silk. Then
+Japan outstripped her in the race and now leads in
+silk production and export. It is generally admitted
+that this would not have happened had the Chinese
+Government realized the value of the silk industry sufficiently
+to foster it, abolish undue taxation, and introduce
+scientific methods of sericulture. As it is, under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>
+favouring conditions she may regain what she has lost,
+for the finest cocoons are found in China, with a tenacity
+far beyond that of any others. While there is
+not a province where silk-worms are not raised, broadly
+speaking two-thirds of the silk produced in China
+comes from the Yangtse valley and the country north
+of it, and the other third from the south. Filature
+steam mills are of recent date. During long centuries
+it was on crude hand reels that the delicate thread
+was spun, and equally crude hand looms wove it into
+the exquisite fabrics so dear to the heart of womankind.
+Even now there are no silk looms in China run by machinery.
+All the weaving is done on hand looms. Their
+familiar thud, thud is heard everywhere. As the
+traveller stops to look into one of the small, smoke-blackened
+shops, where half a dozen people it may be
+are busy with their shuttles, he marvels that textiles
+so rare and beautiful can come forth from such an environment.
+Usually a city is celebrated for some one
+kind of silk, or a province perhaps for two or three
+hundred varieties.</p>
+
+<p>It was not till 1882 that an unsuccessful attempt
+was made to start a steam silk filature mill. Ten
+years later a few were in operation, most of them
+under Chinese management. As in the case of cotton
+mills, foreign capital was not invested largely
+in silk filatures till the close of the war between
+China and Japan. By 1901 there were 28 mills in
+Shanghai, the number being about the same to-day.
+The largest mill in this early period employed 90 men,
+630 women and 385 children. It requires considerably<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>
+less capital to launch a silk filature mill than a cotton
+mill, but it is a more precarious venture. Cocoons
+must be ordered at the time the eggs are hatched and
+put in cold storage, but it is impossible to foretell what
+the market will be when they are delivered nearly a
+year afterward. It is most desirable that the filature
+mills be maintained, as their silk brings two or three
+times the price of that spun on hand-looms, and the
+greater part of the gain goes in wages to the employees.</p>
+
+<p>Industrial conditions, in some respects, are rather
+better in the silk filatures than in the cotton mills. The
+mills close down at night, not for humanitarian reasons,
+however, but because the work can not be done well
+after dark. Sundays are usually holidays. In some
+of the mills work continues every other Sunday. Fifteen
+minutes are allowed in the morning for breakfast
+and an hour at noon for dinner and rest. In at least
+one of the Chinese mills mothers keep their nursing
+babies with them, the tiny things lying all day on the
+floor at the mother’s feet. They seldom cry. It seems
+as if they knew by instinct that they must not. The
+lesson of patient endurance is learned early in China.</p>
+
+<p>The first work in a silk filature mill is sorting the
+cocoons, throwing out the worthless ones, and separating
+the perfect from the inferior. This is an easy but
+monotonous task and is given to women. Slipping the
+wound silk off the reels, testing, weighing, and twisting
+it into beautiful shapes for shipment requires more
+skill, and brings somewhat higher wages. Most of
+this, too, is woman’s work.</p>
+
+<p>The pathos of a silk filature mill centres in the reeling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>
+room. Steam pipes for supplying boiling water
+keep it at a high temperature the year around, while
+in the fierce heat of July and August, the place, as one
+foreign manager expressed it, “is a veritable Gehenna.”
+Only when the breeze is not strong enough
+to break the silken, web-like threads can the windows
+be left open. Down the length of the long apartment
+sit rows of women, and in front of them, with a wire
+frame between, stand rows of little girls. Each child
+controls a stationary copper basin half filled with boiling
+water. It is her business to soften the cocoons by
+swashing them around in the water, using a small reed
+brush. After the threads are sufficiently loosened, the
+bunch of cocoons is handed over to the woman opposite,
+who also has in front of her a shallower copper basin
+filled with boiling water. Dexterously she picks up a
+thread from each cocoon and fastens it to the frame.
+Then by working a treadle it is spun out and out and
+finally passes above and back of her, where it is wound
+onto the reel, which is enclosed on three sides by a
+wooden case to keep it from the dust. Quickly and
+deftly the women splice the almost invisible threads
+when they break, keeping often as many as six spinning
+at the same time. When at night the silk is taken off
+the reel, any shortness in weight or imperfection in
+the thread means a fine for the one who has wound
+it. Women and children grow very skilful in keeping
+their hands out of the water, yet they are loose-skinned
+and parboiled, for fingers must of necessity
+be continually dipped in. Then, too, the Chinese women
+overseers, passing constantly up and down the lines, occasionally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>
+punish a child’s inefficiency, or supposed
+laziness, by thrusting the little hand into the bubbling
+caldron. The hours are long, from five thirty in the
+morning to five or six at night, and it is not strange
+if, as the day wanes, youthful senses are dulled and
+energy flags. The children, most of them, are such
+slips of girls and some scarcely more than babies. Faces
+are blanched by the continuous moist heat, and the
+little slim bodies, even in winter, are often wet with
+perspiration. Robbed of their birthright of schooling
+and play, not the youngest among them knows the sweet
+luxury of laying her tired head on mother’s breast in
+sleep. An American lady living in the vicinity
+of a silk filature mill was aroused morning after morning
+about half past four o’clock by the shrill cries of a
+child. One day she slipped out on her veranda to discover
+the cause of the trouble, and saw a little girl being
+dragged along the ground by one arm to the mill.
+Frightened perhaps by the sternness of the overseer, or
+half sick from the confinement, she was trying to escape
+from bondage. But her parents were inexorable, for
+in over-populated, underfed China,</p>
+
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“‘Children’ must work and women must weep,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">For there’s little to earn and many to keep.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>One European mill has for its manager a kind-hearted
+Italian, who says he understands sericulture
+from A to Z, having learned to care for silk-worms
+when a little lad in his native land. He has introduced
+several humane features, one of them being stools for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>
+the children to sit on while at work, the only mill in
+the city that has them. Fines collected from the employees
+the management allows him to use in buying
+medicine for the sick, coffins for the dead, and in paying
+for beds in the hospital. “Do the people ever
+faint in this great heat?” a visitor asked. “Oh, yes.”
+“And drop dead?” “No, they have never done that.
+If we see they are getting too bad we send them home in
+a ricsha.”</p>
+
+<p>None of the silk from the filature mills is kept in
+China. It is all exported, most of it to Lyons, France,
+and to New York. Waste silk, which is made principally
+from defective cocoons, is one of the paying by-products
+of the industry. The only waste silk filature
+mill in China is in Shanghai. The silk it turns out
+is coarse in quality and does not keep its lustre but can
+be utilized in many ways, as for sewing silk, and in
+making cords, tassels, Chinese caps, carpets, and
+portières.</p>
+<hr class="full x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="c15">XV</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="ph2">A PAGE FROM THE STORY OF PROTESTANT<br>
+MISSIONS</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">L</span>ATE in the autumn of 1842 as the setting sun
+was illumining the western sky, a vessel very
+different from the surrounding Chinese junks
+steamed slowly up the Woosung river toward Shanghai.
+On board were the new British Consul and his suite
+and the Consul’s interpreter, the Rev. Walter H. Medhurst,
+D.D. But the missionary had other and more
+important business, for with his colleague, William
+Lockhart, M.D., a younger man, he came as the first
+ambassador of the Great King to the Yangtse valley.
+Eight years before he had called at this port, when
+cruising up and down the coast, and distributed thousands
+of Testaments and tracts among the friendly natives.
+Indeed Dr. Medhurst was already a veteran of
+twenty-seven years’ service, while Dr. Lockhart had
+landed in Canton in 1839, being the second medical
+missionary sent to China. Both men were commissioned
+by the historic London Missionary Society,
+which gave to China its first Protestant Missionary,
+Robert Morrison, in 1807.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f18">
+<img src="images/fig18.jpg" alt="scouts">
+<p class="caption">CHINESE BOY SCOUTS</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>While the Consular party was proposing toasts to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span>
+greatness of the Shanghai to be, the missionaries were
+thinking hopefully and prayerfully of the task awaiting
+them in proclaiming the Kingdom of Christ to this
+people. For a while, on that memorable day, it was
+impossible to see the city because of the intervening
+masts on the numberless junks lying at anchor, but
+presently, as the little steamer approached the shore,
+it was found to be thronged with Chinese who had
+gathered to watch and ridicule the strange “fire-wheel
+ship” of the “foreign devils.”</p>
+
+<p>The following weeks sped quickly by, and before
+the year closed, a little chapel and a small hospital
+had opened their doors inside the Chinese city. It
+is easy enough to state the bald fact, but what mountains
+of difficulty were climbed, what dangers faced
+and discouragements overcome before that much was
+accomplished, is told only in part in the sacredly
+guarded mission records, yellow and worn with age.
+Happily, ludicrous episodes were not lacking. Dr.
+Medhurst in particular was blessed with a saving sense
+of humour which eased many an otherwise hard jolt
+on the rough road he and his colleague were obliged
+to travel.</p>
+
+<p>As time passed other missionaries were sent out
+from home to reinforce the pioneers, and women’s
+voices and children’s sweet laughter made homelike the
+mission premises. Then suddenly a war-cloud appeared
+in the sky, and almost before its presence was
+realized, it had burst and the T’aiping Rebellion was
+raging in all its fury. Grave dangers now threatened
+the little foreign community, officials and merchants as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span>
+well as missionaries. It was during this period that a
+fair-haired, handsome youth made his appearance in
+Shanghai, and although not a member of the London
+Mission sought a home among their missionaries. He
+was Hudson Taylor, destined to become the founder
+of the China Inland Mission. The story of his early
+years in China, as told in his recently published biography,
+makes one of the most captivating chapters in
+the history of Shanghai. From it we are interested
+to learn that this sensitive, shrinking young man did
+not at first adopt from choice the Chinese dress and
+mode of living, afterward a distinguishing mark of
+China Inland Missionaries, but because he was driven
+to it through scarcity of funds.</p>
+
+<p>The present headquarters of the China Inland Mission
+are conveniently located in the down-town district.
+They include business offices, a rest house for
+travelling missionaries, and a chapel where both Chinese
+and English services are held, although the
+Mission, as it has done from the beginning, confines its
+actual work to the interior. The buildings form a
+square around a spacious, secluded compound that
+seems as far apart from the turmoil of the street as if
+it were miles distant. In the spring of 1915, at the
+Jubilee celebration of the founding of the Mission,
+tea was served on the beautiful lawn, and following
+it a large company of friends gathered in the chapel
+to listen to the reading of reports and papers of thrilling
+interest relating to the experiences of the past fifty
+years.</p>
+
+<p>While the T’aiping Rebellion was still in full swing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span>
+the London missionaries performed a courageous act.
+Having succeeded in purchasing a large tract of land at
+some distance from the foreign Settlement and the Chinese
+City, they at once effected the transfer of their
+work and took possession of the new property. When the
+British Consul learned of it he shook his head dubiously,
+affirming frankly that if the missionaries were
+rash enough to risk living in that exposed place, he
+could not undertake to furnish them protection. But
+unaffrighted they stayed on, and presently a hospital,
+a chapel, and a few dwelling houses arose amidst the
+rice fields. Events proved that the missionaries builded
+better than they knew, for the plot that at first seemed
+so far away and out of reach of the very people the
+work was intended to benefit is now in the heart of
+one of the most thickly populated Chinese districts of
+the International Settlement.</p>
+
+<p>The mission chapel bears the marks of age and is
+shortly to be torn down and replaced by a more commodious
+one, but will the tablets back of the chancel,
+to the memory of the brave missionary veterans, ever
+seem quite so appropriate on any other walls? At the
+Christian Endeavour meeting held in the chapel every
+Wednesday afternoon may usually be seen a little
+white-haired lady of over ninety, the oldest Chinese
+Christian in Shanghai and some say in all China.
+Though exceedingly deaf, Mrs. Lai Sun’s memory is unimpaired
+and her mind as alert as a woman half her age.
+She delights to see her friends and entertain them
+with stories of her romantic life, how in her earlier years
+she visited America with her parents, dined at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span>
+White House as the guest of President and Mrs. Grant
+and was made much of at a time when Chinese women
+were a rarity in the Occident. But her favourite
+topic is her student days in Miss Aldersey’s school
+in Ningpo, Miss Aldersey being not only the first single
+woman to enter China as a missionary, in 1843, but
+the first one to open a school for Chinese girls. Mrs.
+Lai Sun is without question the only living pupil of
+that far-famed school.</p>
+
+<p>The chapel built so long ago by Dr. Medhurst in
+the Chinese city is still standing, sandwiched in between
+a book shop on one side and a shop selling funeral
+supplies on the other. Its years exceed the allotted
+age of man, and if bricks could speak, many a tale
+this pile could relate of fires and floods, famines and
+pestilence, riots and rebellions. While destruction was
+rife and changes taking place all around, the little
+chapel, within whose walls was proclaimed daily the
+Evangel of Peace, remained intact as if it possessed
+a charmed existence.</p>
+
+<p>It is rather singular that to-day there is not a single
+hospital foreign or Chinese, in the populous Chinese
+City. The small plant started so long ago by Dr. Medhurst
+was transferred, in 1861, with the other activities
+of the Mission, to the new site, now known as
+Shantung Road, where a great medical work is carried
+on. Accident cases are especially numerous in the
+roomy wards, where an empty bed is rarely seen, and
+hundreds attend the daily clinic.</p>
+
+<p>In the centre of another crowded district is beautiful
+St. Elizabeth’s Hospital of the American Episcopal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span>
+Mission. This hospital, which is for women only,
+receives patients from the Municipal Prison, and when
+one looks about the cheerful, sunny wards, it ceases
+to be a wonder that the poor creatures often make a
+feint of illness in order to be kept on a little longer
+where they are so happy and comfortable.</p>
+
+<p>One other woman’s hospital is located near the western
+entrance to the Chinese City. Thirty-five years
+ago a large-hearted American, Margaret Williamson,
+had a vision of helpless sufferers in China, and in
+dying left money for a hospital which bears her name.
+While waiting for the building to be completed, the
+doctor and trained nurse just out from home opened a
+dispensary in a small rented house in the disease-infected
+Chinese city. They toiled on day after day
+through all the unaccustomed heat of July and
+August. “Some friend ought to have warned us of
+the danger of it,” one of them, years afterward, smilingly
+told a caller. “How did the Chinese feel about
+the hospital? Were the women afraid to go to it?”
+“Oh, not at all. We were always full. In fact it
+was necessary to keep enlarging our borders as fast as
+we could get the money.” The sweet face in its frame
+of snow-white hair broke into a reminiscent smile, and
+the listener knew something interesting was coming.
+“We used to have most amusing clinic experiences.
+Patients many times would persist in taking internally
+what was meant for external application. It was necessary
+to be careful and give nothing strong enough
+to do any great harm either way. Then, too, the
+women would get so excited and jealous over the medicines.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>
+If one patient received something and another
+did not, the latter felt unhappy. It did no good
+to explain to her that she wasn’t in need of that particular
+medicine. She wanted it just the same. I
+remember one time the doctor had ordered a large dose
+of castor oil for a patient. Her companion saw it and
+begged for some too. She was so persistent that I
+finally asked the doctor if I should give it to her. “Yes,
+do,” said she. “It can’t hurt her and the experience
+may do her good.” The clinics are very large. On a
+winter’s afternoon an unexpected visitor found one
+young doctor in sole charge, her colleague having been
+taken sick. She that day treated two hundred and
+forty-seven dispensary patients besides caring for the
+wards and performing three difficult operations. “I
+shall not stay a minute,” declared the caller when the
+last woman had departed, “you must rest.” “Oh, do
+sit down a little while. I need to get my mind off my
+work,” urged the doctor. Just then the friend, noticing
+the exhausted look on the wan face before her, remarked
+impulsively, “I wish I could take you home
+with me and put you to bed and give you a little mothering.”
+“Don’t speak to me like that,” cried the
+younger woman almost sharply, while a few hot tears
+forced themselves into her eyes. “I shall break down
+and cry if you do, and I mustn’t; I mustn’t!” This
+hospital belongs to that pioneer in the field of woman’s
+work for women, The Woman’s Union Missionary Society
+of America.</p>
+
+<p>The glory of the Presbyterian Mission is its Press.
+In 1843, that year of momentous happenings in the Far<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>
+East, it was first set up in Macao, a Portuguese settlement
+near Canton and of chief interest to Protestants
+because on its tropical shores Robert Morrison,
+the first Protestant missionary to China, was laid to rest.
+Soon afterward the Press was brought north to Ningpo,
+and in 1860 was moved to Shanghai. With it came
+Mr. Gamble, whose name was William and not John,
+but if ever a man was “sent of God” to do an all-important
+work, he was one. A native of Ireland,
+from an old Protestant family that had the honour
+of giving many ministers to the Presbyterian Church,
+he migrated to America in his youth and got his training
+as a printer in a publishing house in Philadelphia
+and later in the Bible House, New York. Mr. Gamble
+spent only eleven years in China and nine of them in
+Shanghai, but in that brief period he accomplished a
+monumental work. With a prophet’s eye he foresaw
+the future development of the city when few believed
+in it and urged the removal of the Press to this metropolitan
+centre, influenced “by his desire to plant the
+Gospel in the heart of China with the minimum of
+effort and the maximum of results.” His energy, industry,
+and inventive genius gave a great impulse to
+printing throughout the country, not only in connection
+with the mission press but the secular press as well.
+This was so universally recognized that when he died
+years later in America every one realized the truth of
+the eulogy pronounced at his funeral: “For a century
+to come not a Bible, Christian or scientific book in
+China or Japan but will bear the impress of Mr. Gamble’s
+hand.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span></p>
+
+<p>The Presbyterian Press justly claims to be the
+oldest in China, although the London Mission Press,
+established by Robert Morrison in Malacca in 1818,
+was removed to Hongkong, at very nearly the same
+time. The Presbyterian Press was the first to introduce
+movable Chinese type in China, and for a
+long time remained the sole source of supply. During
+the fifty-seven years since the plant was set up in Shanghai
+it has changed homes several times and is now
+housed in new, completely equipped quarters which
+would have delighted the aspiring soul of William
+Gamble. A dozen power presses are kept busy from
+Monday morning till Saturday night turning out vast
+quantities of Christian literature, veritable “Leaves of
+Healing,” which find their way the year through to
+the remotest corners of this needy, sin-cursed land and
+whose uplifting influence far outreaches all human
+reckoning.</p>
+
+<p>Among the Chinese publications which are working
+a quiet transformation in the lives of the people are
+two popular monthly magazines, “The Woman’s
+Messenger” and “Happy Childhood.” The very artistic
+cover of a recent Christmas number of “Happy
+Childhood” was designed by one of the pupils in a
+Girls’ Baptist Mission Boarding School.</p>
+
+<p>The spiritual interests of the large force of Press
+employees are not forgotten. In two chapels Sunday
+and week-day services are held. There are day schools
+and a kindergarten for the children of the men, the
+wife of one of the Presbyterian missionaries devoting
+much of her time to evangelistic work among the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span>
+women. Every morning prayers are conducted by the
+missionary in charge, attended by most of the employees,
+at least half of whom are Christians. Many
+give touching and convincing proof of the sincerity of
+their profession. The case of Elder Loo is an illustration
+and refutes the oft-repeated assertion that no Chinese
+can handle money without some of it clinging to
+his palm. For twenty years all the Press’s money excepting
+checks passed through Mr. Loo’s hands. He
+died one night very suddenly. It was with considerable
+anxiety that the foreign manager the next morning
+opened the accountant’s safe and examined his
+books, but they balanced exactly. In a corner of the
+safe were found stowed away several bad dollars
+that had been palmed off on Mr. Loo, but which
+he had quietly made good out of his own meagre
+funds.</p>
+
+<p>“Where did you receive your education?” The
+question was asked of a bright young Chinese matron
+into whose pretty home a foreign friend had just been
+introduced. “In McTyeire School,” came the smiling
+answer. This reply, in response to similar inquiries,
+is given so often in Shanghai that a newcomer, unfamiliar
+with local mission work, is sure soon to ask
+another question: “What and where, pray, is this famous
+institution?” Every resident knows, or nearly
+every one. Those who do not are half ashamed to confess
+it, for to be uninformed about McTyeire Girls’
+School is to be ignorant indeed. Its capacious buildings
+are kept full, too full, even though the younger
+pupils have just been transferred to rented Chinese<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>
+houses across the road, the Assembly Hall converted
+into dormitories and every available foot of space utilized
+to the best advantage.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> Pleasant recitation rooms
+open from either side of the school corridors and a
+peep inside shows well organized classes hard at work,
+in algebra, drawing, physics, sewing, domestic science.
+What an immaculate place is the domestic science
+kitchen, with snowy tables, muslin window curtains,
+shining stove, and artistically arranged enamel pots and
+pans! No wonder the cooking class covers itself with
+laurels. The missionary in charge modestly disclaims
+the credit, but adds, “I do mean that my girls shall
+learn two important lessons, to keep themselves tidy
+and to clean up when their work is done,” items that
+it would do no harm to emphasize in other countries
+than China. The music rooms are upstairs. An invitation
+to a musicale is something to rejoice over.
+Last year one of the graduates in music gave a recital,
+all her own, and acquitted herself most creditably. Two
+years ago Commencement week opened with Baccalaureate
+Sunday, a distinct innovation in the history
+of Girls’ Schools in China, but a custom other
+mission schools are beginning to follow.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> Since writing the above a splendid piece of property covering
+about fifteen acres, with a three-story brick mansion on it built by a
+wealthy deceased Chinese, has been purchased, and the congestion
+is relieved now that the High School pupils have removed to the new
+quarters.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" id="f19">
+<img src="images/fig19.jpg" alt="stone">
+<p class="caption">CORNER STONE OF BOYS’ BUILDING, Y. M. C. A.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It is doubtful whether any department of work in
+McTyeire School is yielding more abundant fruit than
+the “Annex,” a school for married women and girls
+too old or backward to enter the regular classes. Last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>
+term among the many interested pupils was the wife
+of the socialist leader of Shanghai, the mother of five
+young children. The patriarchal system of family life
+common in China makes it possible for a mother to
+leave her children for lengthy periods, as there are
+usually plenty of women relatives ready to assume the
+care of them in her absence. Any pupil in the Annex
+ambitious to pursue a complete course of study is admitted
+to the regular school classes as soon as she can
+be prepared for them.</p>
+
+<p>Above the mantel in the parlour of the Missionary
+Home, adjoining the main building, hangs the portrait
+of a noble-faced woman. It is Laura Haygood, the first
+principal, who “being dead yet speaketh.” She was
+sent to China in 1884 by the Woman’s Board of the
+Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and for eight
+memorable years prayed and toiled, much of the time
+weighed down by great physical weakness. Then came
+the glad realization of her cherished hopes in the opening
+of this girls’ school named for a bishop of the
+denomination.</p>
+
+<p>The highest grade of scholarship is the goal, but the
+building up of Christian character and training for
+service have always had first place. “I want to save
+my people,” sobbed a girl in a burst of confidence
+to her foreign teacher. “As soon as I finish here I
+mean to go as a missionary to my native place and teach
+and try to save that place.” This is the spirit that
+prevails among the Christians. Every week Bible students
+and teachers go out to hold services for the street
+children in the neighbourhood. Last winter evangelistic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>
+meetings were held in the school chapel. “I wish you
+could see how our Christian girls work for their unconverted
+friends,” said one of the missionaries. “They
+have their sweetest and holiest times in their own little
+prayer-meetings, led by themselves. The passionate
+earnestness of their prayers and testimonies would move
+any heart.”</p>
+
+<p>It was the beautiful month of May and invitations
+were out for a great celebration at St. John’s University
+of the Protestant Episcopal Mission. Early in the afternoon
+guests began to arrive, for the first number
+on the programme was the military drill, set for two
+o’clock, something no one wanted to miss. Promptly
+at the hour the students in trim uniforms assembled
+on the parade-ground and lined up for inspection. The
+tactics over, and enthusiastically applauded, every one
+hurried to the Assembly Hall to listen to speeches in
+English and Chinese, and witness the crowning event
+of the day, which was the presentation to the President,
+Dr. F. L. Hawks Pott, for the University, of a generous
+gift of money from the alumni in commemoration
+of this twenty-fifth anniversary of Dr. Pott’s incumbency.
+An alumni supper followed, and then, as evening
+shadows fell, the spacious grounds were transformed
+into a sort of fairyland by the soft light from countless
+Chinese lanterns, hung in graceful festoons from tree
+to tree and building to building. Fireworks brought to
+a close a notable anniversary that will not soon be forgotten
+by the people of Shanghai.</p>
+
+<p>St. John’s University and campus, covering forty-nine
+acres, is undeniably the most charmingly picturesque<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>
+spot in the city. It lies five miles out from
+the centre of the town in the suburb of Jessfield. A
+more ideal location could not have been found, and
+the wonder is that when the larger part of the property
+was bought as early as 1878, the bishop who made the
+purchase had the foresight to choose so well.</p>
+
+<p>Like most great enterprises, the University had a
+small beginning and developed gradually, through successive
+stages. The work really started back in 1845
+with some little day schools for boys, for it must be
+remembered that while the London Mission pioneers
+were the vanguard of the missionaries to enter Shanghai,
+they were soon reinforced from America by the Protestant
+Episcopalians, the Presbyterians and the Southern
+Baptists. The day schools grew into successful boarding
+schools, chief among them one for older boys,—seventy
+youths so poor that tuition, board, and clothing were
+furnished them free of charge. Soon a call came for an
+English department and it was added. By and by a few
+ambitious students begged for college work, and finally,
+in 1906, by an act of Congress at Washington, D. C.,
+St. John’s was formally incorporated as a University
+and empowered to grant degrees. Her alumni are now
+privileged to enter institutions in Europe and America
+for post-graduate work without examination, and she
+has the honour of sending more students abroad than
+any other mission college in China. Including all departments
+the student body numbers over five hundred,
+whose fees make the work in large measure practically
+self-supporting.</p>
+
+<p>A five-story brick building was opened last year in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span>
+one of the busiest sections of the down-town district,
+not in itself a singular occurrence, but in this case
+of unusual purport, for it is the headquarters of the
+Chinese Boys’ Branch of the Young Men’s Christian
+Association. This is the only building of its kind in
+the Far East, and it is certain that nowhere in the
+world is the kind of work it stands for more needed
+than in Shanghai, where the boy problem is one of
+the gravest. Figures are often dry reading, but in this
+connection a few will tell in a nut-shell a story of remarkable
+progress. The Boys’ Branch was started less
+than three years ago, and now what does the first report
+record? Seven hundred members, five hundred in the
+schools, three hundred voluntary members of Bible
+classes, one hundred regular boarders, two hundred at
+meals each day, and forty scouts, the scoutmaster being
+one of the Chinese secretaries. In the city are altogether
+no less than five hundred Chinese scouts. The
+organization among the Chinese is quite new but it may
+be called a “howling success,” the boys taking to it like
+ducks to water, and it is doing much for them in numberless
+ways. The Y.M.C.A. boy scout, who is taught
+reverence toward God, kindness to women, children, the
+aged, and animals, truth, honesty, courage, faithfulness
+without pay, loyalty and obedience to all in authority,
+and who stands for clean thought, clean speech, and
+clean habits, is bound to grow up into the kind of man
+that China has dire need of to-day. The new Boys’
+Building is finely equipped from top to bottom and
+connects with the local headquarters of the Y.M.C.A.,
+which fronts on Szechuan Road.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span></p>
+
+<p>The National offices are likewise in Shanghai but in
+rented quarters. An eligible building site has been secured,
+and as soon as money is a little less scarce the
+work of construction will begin. The local headquarters
+is a centre of ceaseless activity, with day and evening
+schools offering all kinds of practical courses, gymnasium
+and swimming classes, athletic and reading clubs,
+“movies,” lectures, socials, Bible classes, and evangelistic
+meetings. A busier hive can not be imagined. It
+was the Y.M.C.A. that led in the Mott and Eddy Evangelistic
+Campaigns, it has inaugurated a health movement
+in the interest of sanitation and the prevention
+of disease, it has attacked the problem of social service
+which it is stressing by every available means, and
+it brought to China the Olympic Games with their rejuvenating,
+health-giving influences. Through its remarkable
+scientific lecture department it is reaching men
+that could not be approached in any other way. In
+short, the Association is a “live wire” and a tremendous
+force for good.</p>
+
+<p>The Sunday Service League was organized by the
+Y.M.C.A. for the benefit of the large body of students
+from abroad who so easily slip their moorings and go
+adrift on their return to China. There is a well-attended
+five o’clock service in English for them on Sunday
+afternoons which is often addressed by notable
+speakers passing through Shanghai. Excellent music
+is furnished by the Chinese Glee Club, composed of
+both men and women. The Returned Students Club
+was a spontaneous outgrowth of the Sunday Service
+League. It holds occasional socials during the winter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>
+in the parlours of one of the foreign hotels, where music,
+conversation, a few simple games, and light refreshments
+make a most enjoyable evening. The gentlemen,
+all of whom wear foreign clothes, represent almost every
+profession and calling. With scarcely an exception
+the women appear in Chinese dress; wherein they show
+their good taste and good sense, for nothing becomes
+them half so well. Most of them are happy young
+wives and mothers, but there is sure to be a generous
+sprinkling of unmarried teachers, specializing it may
+be in English, music, elocution, physical training, or
+kindergarten work, with perhaps a doctor or two, a
+charming company in short, such as only Shanghai can
+bring together.</p>
+
+<p>The Young Women’s Christian Association is a
+younger organization in China than the Young Men’s
+Christian Association, but it is doing on a somewhat
+smaller scale the same efficient work. The first secretary
+was sent to China in 1903 expressly to labour
+among the mill hands. It was later felt, however, that
+this plan of campaign was too slow, and that to win
+the upper and middle classes, make Christian leaders
+of them, and then send them out to evangelize the multitudes,
+would yield larger and more lasting fruitage.
+So this is the course being followed now, and the outcome
+abundantly proves its wisdom. The consummation
+of a long-cherished hope has been realized in the
+opening of a National Normal School in Shanghai for
+Physical Training. The school is under the direction
+of a foreign secretary of large experience, assisted by
+a Chinese secretary, a graduate of Wellesley College<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span>
+who received her professional training in Boston. One
+result of the interest aroused by the work of the Normal
+School is the recent organization of a Young Woman’s
+Athletic Association, with a charter membership of
+twenty-six. Wonderful indeed!</p>
+
+<p>The school classes are always popular, especially
+with young married women who have been deprived
+of early school advantages. Besides teaching from
+books there are classes in embroidery, plain sewing,
+stenography, and cooking. Chinese girls are delighted
+to understand a little about foreign cooking, especially
+if they are the wives of young men who have been
+educated abroad, and it is a proud moment for them
+when they are able to serve their husbands with some
+of the dishes the latter have learned to relish during
+their residence in the Occident. The first class in
+Scientific Chinese Cooking has just been started, with
+a most gratifying show of interest.</p>
+
+<p>The strongest emphasis is laid on student work not
+only in mission schools, but as fast as opportunity offers,
+in private and government schools as well. Many
+hundreds are converted and baptized annually as a result
+of the evangelistic meetings conducted by the
+student secretary. Six summer conferences were held
+last year with a far larger attendance, and more encouraging
+manifestation of genuine heart-awakening
+than was ever known before. The force of secretaries
+for this vast field numbers in all thirty-three, eight
+Chinese, three English, one Australian, one Swedish,
+and twenty American. The remark is often heard regarding
+the staff, “What unusual young women!” And<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span>
+it is true. Deeply and genuinely spiritual, broadly cultured,
+resourceful, of wide vision and keen insight, they
+are pushing forward with unwavering devotion a unique
+and regenerative work in China that but for them would
+in large measure be left undone.</p>
+
+
+<p class="c sp more p4">PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full">
+
+<div class="transnote">
+
+<p class="c">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
+
+<p>Variations in spelling and hyphenation are retained.</p>
+
+<p>Perceived typographical errors have been changed.</p>
+
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77783 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This book, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #77783
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77783)