A LAND OF GREAT INDUSTRIES - BRAZIL
You could take a map of the whole
United States, lay it down on Brazil and still have
room for England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Denmark
and Switzerland left. Walk around Brazil and
you have traveled a distance equal to two-thirds of
a journey around the globe. If every man, woman
and child in the United States were placed in Matto
Grasso, the state in Brazil where Roosevelt discovered
the “River of Doubt,” in 1914, that state
would not have as many people to the square mile as
England has at this moment. If all the people
on earth were placed in Brazil the population of that
country would not be as dense as that of Belgium today.
Brazil could produce enough rubber
to supply the whole world with automobile tires for
generations and never have to plant another rubber
tree to do it, that is, of course, if all her rubber
forests could be utilized. From a single Brazilian
port is shipped one-fourth of all the coffee used
in the whole world. In a single Brazilian state
there are ten thousand coffee plantations that have
more than fifty thousand trees each and six hundred
of them have more than one hundred thousand trees
each.
Brazil might be called the “jewel
box” of the world. Her diamond fields rival
those of South Africa. Her mines produced a single
stone that sold for fifteen million dollars.
One writer says: “Of all the fabulous tales
related of bonanza princes the palm for extravagance
belongs to the early mining days of Brazil, when horses
were shod with gold, when lawyers supported their
pleadings before judges with gifts of what appeared
at first sight to be oranges and bananas, but proved
to be solid gold imitations, when guests were entertained
at dinner with pebbles of gold in their soup and when
nuggets were the most convenient medium of exchange
in the money market.”
Would you like to go nutting?
Brazil has the greatest groves on earth. Some
of these nut trees grow to a height of a hundred and
fifty feet and have a girth of twenty feet, fifty
feet up from the ground. A single tree is said
to produce as many as three tons of nuts during a season.
In the trees of Brazil are found sixteen hundred species
of birds. There are parrots galore and sixty-five
varieties of woodpeckers have been catalogued.
One family of birds in Brazil are said to be devout
Christians as they never work but six days in the week.
One would naturally suppose that in
Brazil the weather would be extremely hot as the equator
runs across the great Amazon valley. But the
nights are cool and sunstroke is unknown. Frost
can be seen in the highlands at certain times in the
year. While fevers rage in parts of the land,
yet most of the country is conducive to good health.
The very dangerous parts of the Amazon valley are
limited to certain parts of the country.
Some years ago at a contest in Paris
between twelve hundred children the first prize for
healthy appearance was given to a boy born in Manaos
of Amazonian parents. This city is in the very
heart of the jungle in the Amazon valley. There
is one authenticated case of a man in this valley
who lived to be one hundred and forty-five years old.
In the dense forests of the uplands
of Brazil there are people who are living in the stone
age of culture. They are practically wild tribes
who know nothing about the use of metal, in fact,
they know but little about civilization. They
are said to be ignorant of common food such as bananas
and rice. They seem to have no idea of a supreme
being, believe in a soul that goes wandering about
after death.
In some parts of Brazil rice is cultivated
quite extensively and it makes a cheap food.
It is said that in one place a man from Louisiana is
running an experimental rice farm showing the Brazilian
farmers how to cultivate Japanese rice. Rather
strange, isn’t it, that United States farmers
should be teaching the Brazilian farmers Japanese agriculture?
A peculiar thing about the land of
Brazil is the absence of earth worms. In our
country these worms improve the physical condition
of the soil but there this lack is made up by the
multiplied millions of ants that burrow down deep
into the earth. In our country, too, the chemical
changes of winter help prepare the soil for the coming
crops, but in Brazil there is no winter season when
the land “sleeps” and it does not seem
to be necessary.
While in the great rubber industry
of Brazil the trees grow and produce with but little
if any cultivation, this is not true of the coffee
trees. They have to be cultivated and carefully
looked after. Insect pests that are so destructive
to coffee trees in many countries, are almost absent
in Brazil and this fact has not a little to do with
making this the greatest coffee country in the world.
In the state of Sao Paulo almost the entire energies
of the people are absorbed in the coffee industry.
This state is a little larger than
Colorado and is the most powerful state of the twenty
that make up the United States of Brazil. The
name of the capital is the same as that of the state
and the city of Sao Paulo is about as large as Saint
Paul, Minnesota. It is noted for its beauty and
industry. The climate is delightful, always cool,
but never freezing cold. With more than one hundred
elementary schools besides numerous high schools and
colleges it is perhaps the greatest educational center
of the country. Near this city is the largest
coffee plantation in the world. It contains something
like eight million trees and takes about eight thousand
people to run it. This one plantation produces
twenty million pounds of coffee annually and there
are thirty railroad stations upon it.
A well kept coffee tree is about twelve
feet high when full grown. The leaves are a shiny
green, a little like holly. The trees bloom in
September and fill the air with fragrance. As
the white blossoms fade the berries begin to form.
May is the harvest time. Harvest hands come in
large numbers as they do in Kansas or the Dakotas during
the wheat harvest. Workmen are paid according
to the amount they gather and some of them gather
fifty pounds a day.
The coffee berries are first stripped
from the tree then raked and piled into baskets.
Next they are run through a machine that takes the
bean out of the covering, then into tanks of water
where they are thoroughly washed and then comes the
drying process. It used to take weeks to get
the coffee beans well dried and men had to watch and
keep stirring the piles continually, but quite recently
a new process was discovered by which they are dried
by steam.
After the coffee beans are thoroughly
dried they are run through rollers that break the
skin covering and great ventilators blow the chaff
away. Then the beans are poured into a gigantic
sieve with different sized holes which are chutes
in reality and from which endless streams of coffee
graded according to size run into a large room.
At each stream stand women who pick out imperfect
or damaged grains. The coffee is then sacked
and is ready for shipment. The ordinary bag of
coffee weighs about one hundred and twenty pounds.
Santo is the great coffee port and here can be seen
ships from every civilized land taking on cargoes of
coffee. If it is well kept coffee gets better
with age, so it can be piled in great warehouses for
months or even years and not deteriorate. Nearly
a dozen million bags of coffee are shipped from Santo
annually and as we are the greatest coffee drinkers
in the world about half of the entire crop comes to
us.
Formerly many of the coffee plantations
were worked by slaves. Negroes were brought from
South Africa, as they were brought to work in the
cotton fields in the south in anti-slavery days.
In the year 1888 Brazil freed her slaves and the sudden
freeing of a half million slaves almost demoralized
the coffee and sugar industries of the country.
Many of these negroes thought that freedom meant that
they would never have to work any more and they became
loafers and often criminals. Of course thousands
of them drifted to the great centers of population
and Brazil has had and is still having her share of
race troubles.
Many of the workers on the coffee
plantations at present are Italians. They come
in large numbers to work on these estates. Each
family is given a certain number of trees to look
after; sometimes a single family will take care of
several thousand trees. They have to do a lot
of hoeing and weeding. The soil is almost red
and these workmen take on largely the color of the
soil as their faces and clothes are stained with red
dust and water. Families are furnished houses
to live in and they live their own lives as if they
were in their home country.
After coffee and rubber comes sugar.
For many years Brazil furnished more sugar than any
other country; now there are a half dozen countries
ahead of her in the production of sugar. This
is largely accounted for, not so much because of inability
to produce, as because of the antiquated methods in
use. There are places in the country where it
is said that the same variety of sugar has been grown
for two hundred years and that without any attempt
on the part of the planters to restore the soil.
One of the first things ever exported
from Brazil was tobacco. This weed has been grown
there ever since the country was discovered. Modern
methods of culture are now being used so more of it
will be produced than ever. They say, too, that
Brazil produces as fine a quality of tobacco as Cuba.
Cotton is also produced in large quantities.
The Brazilians are an interesting
people. I like them. They are always courteous
and polite. Men often tip their hats to each other
and kiss each other’s hands. In Rio de
Janeiro nearly everyone is well dressed. The
women are good looking. The Brazil people are
more friendly than any other South American people.
The language, except among the Italians and other
foreigners, is largely Portuguese while in practically
all other South American countries the people speak
Spanish.
Although Brazil has millions of acres
of the best timber in the world I never saw a wooden
building in their great capital city. In Rio,
nearly every automobile factory in the United States
is represented. In this land of rubber they have
no manufacturing plants to utilize it. Wages
for common laborers are low and yet the people only
work part of the time. In coaling a ship the
men will work like beavers for a couple of hours and
then sit down and smoke and talk as long and no urging
them to work seems to do any good. One can make
a living there with half the work it takes here and
that is all they care for.
The Brazilians have some odd customs.
People always carry their burdens on their heads.
Baskets as large as barrels are carried in this way
without a bit of trouble. They say that four men
will carry a heavy piano on their heads but I never
saw them moving one. On almost every street there
are venders of sweetmeats, vegetables, brooms, baskets
and furniture. I saw one vender with two dozen
brooms, a dozen mops, two chairs, and a lot of other
truck on his head. He had the chairs hooked on
the brooms, baskets on the chairs and a lot of other
stuff piled up so that he looked like a moving express
wagon.
Streets in Brazilian cities are often
named for days or months. I noticed one of the
prominent streets in Rio named “13th of September,”
another “15th of November.” Rio de
Janeiro means “River of January.”
I never saw a chimney in the city, yet the streets
and many of the houses are washed every night.
Everything is shining. They seem to have a wonderful
appreciation of beauty and never in any other city
in the world have I seen more beautiful or artistic
shop windows.
Everybody seemed to be in a good humor.
Policemen are small of stature, but they direct the
street traffic in a most wonderful way. Everybody
smiles and there is no loud talking, or drunkenness.
The national drink is coffee and there are coffee
shops with tables and cups everywhere. Men often
drink a cup or two of coffee a dozen times a day.
There are hundreds of coffee shops in Rio. Of
course, liquor is sold in many places, but it is mostly
drunk by foreigners. I never saw a Brazilian
drinking liquor in their capital city.