men could understand well enough to take orders they were even better shop hands than the average in Scotland and England. An educated Chinese booking clerk at the Soochow railway station in Kiangsu province was receiving a salary of $10.75, gold, per month. We had inquired the way to the Elizabeth Blake hospital and he volunteered to escort us and did so, the distance being over a mile. He would accept no compensation, and yet I was an entire stranger, without introduction of any kind.
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Fig. 62.—A sewing circle in the open air and sunshine, Shanghai.
Everywhere we went in China, the laboring people
appeared generally happy and contented if they have
something to do, and showed clearly that they were well
nourished. The industrial classes are thoroughly organized,
having had their guilds or labor unions for centuries and
it is not at all uncommon for a laborer who is known to