Scientific American Supplement, No. 613, October 1, 1887 by Various
page 57 of 148 (38%)
page 57 of 148 (38%)
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regards spinning and weaving, in the first of these branches of cotton
manufacture the Japanese have largely had recourse to the aid of foreign machinery, but it is still to a much greater extent a domestic industry, or at best carried on like weaving in the establishments of cotton traders, in which a number of workers, varying from 20 to 100 or more, each with his own spinning wheel, are collected together. Consul Longford says the spinning wheel used in Japan differs in no respect from that used in the country 300 years ago or (except that bamboo forms an integral part of the materials of which it is made) from that used in England prior to the invention of the jenny. The cost of one of the wheels is about 9d., it will last for five or six years, and with it a woman of ordinary skill can spin about 1 lb. of yarn in a day of ten hours, earning thereby about 2d. There are at present in various parts of Japan, in all, 21 spinning factories worked by foreign machinery. Of four of these there is no information, but of the remainder, one has 120 spindles; eleven, 2,000 spindles; two, 3,000 spindles; two, 4,000 spindles; and one, 18,000 spindles.--_Journal Soc. of Arts._ * * * * * [Continued from SUPPLEMENT, No. 612, page 9774.] CENTRIFUGAL EXTRACTORS. By ROBERT F. GIBSON. |
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