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Rh teachers and to-day he is considered not only an officient engineer but also one of the best English speaking Chinese orators in the country. In 1904, Mr. Nieh gathered together his influential friends and purchased the Heng Foong Cotton Mill in Yangtszepoo. The mill, which had 15,000 spindles, was being run at a loss. To reorganise the plant was indeed an uphill fight, but Mr. Nieh, after persistent hard labor, succeeded in showing a profit on the balance sheet by the end of the sixth year of its reorganization. To-day the Heng Foong Cotton Mill is giving employment to 1,500 people and is capitalised at Tls. 1,500,000 The mill maintains ten scholarships in the Technical College, Nantungchow, two in France and two in the United States and a few in England. It also maintains a school within the mill, administered by two superintendents educated in Japan. Mr. Nieh was Vice-President of the Chinese Commercial Commission to the United States in 1915 as a return visit to the Pacific Commercial Commission. During his visit in America, he extended an invitation to most of the cotton experts he met to visit China and give her their technical advices. As a result of his efforts, several of them actually visited China, among them was Mr. Griffin. For the work of improving Chinese cotton industry, Mr. Nieh initated the idea of securing the co-operation of the agricultural department of the University of Nanking. Mr. Nieh has been interested in many other cotton mills such as the Dah Sung of Nantungchow, the Dah Sung of Chungming Inland, and the Anglo-Chinese Cotton Mill of Shanghai. His relation to them has been established through his being either their promoter or their director. He is also a Committee man of the Cotton Mill Owners' Association organized by foreigners, in Shanghai. In 1918 Mr. Nieh organized the Chinese Cotton Mill Owners' Association in Shanghai and was made its first President, and was responsible for the organization of the Cotton Improvement Committee. In 1919 he organized the Great China Cotton Mill of which he is still the general manager. Mr. Nieh is an ardent advocate for the establishment of Vocational Educational Schools and was one of the founders of the Vocational Educational School, West Gate, which has proved to be a great success, attracting students from all parts of the country. In 1920 Mr. Nieh organized a larger school of the same nature. It was equipped with a complete cotton mill, foundry and workship. He became a southern Methodist in 1914 together with Mrs. Nieh. Mr. Nieh has been connected with the Y. M. C. A. for about 18 years, serving on various committees and as director for the last eight years. He is also treasurer-director of the National Committee, Y. M. C. A. Among other offices, Mr. Nieh holds the presidency of the Chinese Cotton Mill Owners' Association. He was first chairman of the Society for Constructive Endeavor and a member of the A. B. C. Club. He is also a Member of the Chinese Advisory Council, the medium between the Chinese rate-payers and the Municipal authorities in Shanghai. Mr. Nieh translated a book on telegraphy in 1901. Mr. Nieh was awarded by the Peking government the Third Class Paokuang Chiaho in February 1920. He was appointed in January 1923 a Member of the Commission for the Raising of Educational Sinking Funds.