Page:Ningpo to Shanghai.djvu/16

2. about three feet across and of similar depth, the number is uncountable. The absence of other material for manure is, of course, the apology; though, as such things are not met with in such profusion, or in such display in other parts of the province, the apology is a poor one. The land yields two crops annually&mdash;that of the autumn will be rice principally;&mdash;of the spring, Wheat, Grassicher (1) Beans, Tea and Clover. The latter is grown over the Paddy stumps, with which it is afterwards ploughed up and left to rot and enrich the soil. The Teas, Beans, and Bean seed of the Grassicher spoken of, are cultivated principally for the oil expressed from them. The leaves and sprouts of the latter are eaten as a vegetable. The region hereabout, however, is remarkable for the production of a medicinal bulb called undefined 貝母 (2) Growing as a grass, its blades resemble those of the carnation. It is planted in the fourth month of one year and remains until the fourth month of the year following, when it is taken up and sold to Druggets as a tonic for sixty cash a catty. During the year of its growth, Potatoes, Hemp or Cotton may be grown over it. A mow of land produces from two to five hundred Ching (3) of the bulb in a year. Rushes for mat making are grown here too, and Mulberry and Tallow trees flourish largely. From the berry of the latter the candles used in Chekiang are made. Coated with animal fat they burn well, though the clumsy bamboo wicks, swathed with cotton twist, emit a good deal of unpleasant smoke.

To reach Ning Kong jow, the stream has to be crossed three times, one of the bridges at a place called Seang-koh deo, with some 3,500 inhabitants, being rooofed over as at Kong Keo. About 5 lé (4) from Seang 'ko deo is another village called Dung-jehow with 100 families;&mdash;a family being estimated as consisting on the average of five souls. There may be other causes apart from the practice