<h2><SPAN name="topic12" id="topic12"></SPAN>IN CHINA TOWN</h2>
<p>If you are a tourist, making your first visit to San Francisco,
you will inquire at once for Chinatown, the settlement of the
Celestial Kingdom, dropped down, as it were, in the very heart of a
big city; a locality where you are as far removed from anything
American as if you were in Hongkong or Foochow. Chinatown is only
about two blocks wide by eight blocks long; yet in this small area
from ten to fifteen thousand Chinese live, and cling with all the
tenacity of the race to their Oriental customs and native dress.
They are as clean as a new pin about their person, but how they can
keep so immaculate amid such careless and not over-clean
surroundings is a mystery not to be solved by a white man.</p>
<p>For a few dollars a guide will conduct a party through
Chinatown, and point out all the places of interest; but we
preferred to act for ourselves in this capacity, and saunter from
place to place as our fancy dictated. Stores of all kinds line both
sides of Grant Avenue, formerly called Dupont, where all kinds of
Chinese merchandise are displayed in profusion. At one place we
stopped to examine some most exquisite ivory carvings, as delicate
in tracery as frost on a window pane. Next we lingered before a
shop where the women of our party went into raptures over the
exquisite gowns and the beautiful needlework displayed. Here are
shown padded silks of the most delicate shades, on which deft
fingers have embroidered the ever-present Chinese stork and cherry
blossoms, as realistic as if painted with an artist's brush.</p>
<p>That peculiar building just across the way is the Kow Nan Low
Restaurant, resplendent with dragons and lanterns of every shape
and size suspended above and about the doorway.</p>
<p>If you are fond of chop suey, or bird's-nest pudding, and are
not too fastidious as to its ingredients, you may enjoy a dinner
fit for a mandarin.</p>
<p>We stop before a barber shop and watch the queer process of
shaving the head and braiding the queue. The barber does not invite
inspection, as the curtains are partly drawn, but we peep over the
top and look with interest at the queer process of tonsorial
achievement, much to the disgust of the barber and his customer, if
the expression on their faces can be taken as an index of their
thoughts.</p>
<p>Then to the drug store, the market, the shoeshop, and a dozen
other places, to finally bring up where all the tourists
do—at the "Marshall Field's" of Chinatown, Sing Fat's, a
truly marvelous place, where one can spend hours looking over the
countless objects of interest.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/103.jpg" target="blank" name="image103" id="image103"> <ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src="images/103.jpg" alt="A CHINESE SHOEMAKER" /></SPAN>A CHINESE SHOEMAKER</div>
<p>One of the pleasures of Chinatown is to see the children of rich
and poor on the street, dressed in their Oriental costumes, looking
like tiny yellow flowers, as they pick their way daintily along the
walk, or are carried in the arms of the happy father—never
the mother. If you would make the father smile, show an interest in
the boy he is carrying so proudly.</p>
<p>To gamble is a Chinaman's second nature. Games of fan-tan and
pie-gow are constantly in operation; and the police either tolerate
or are powerless to stop them. Tong wars are of frequent
occurrence, crime and its punishment being so mixed up that an
outsider cannot unravel them. The San Francisco police have
struggled with the question, but have finally left the Chinese to
settle their own affairs after their own fashion. Opium dens
flourish as a matter of course, for opium and Chinese are
synonymous words. You can tell an opium fiend as far as you can see
him; his face looks like wet parchment stretched over a skull and
dried, making a truly gruesome sight. Every ship that comes into
the bay from the Orient is searched for opium, and quantities of it
are found hidden away under the planking, or in other places less
likely to be detected by the sharp-eyed officials. When found it is
at once confiscated.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/105.jpg" target="blank" name="image105" id="image105"> <ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src="images/105.jpg" alt="IN CHINATOWN" /></SPAN>IN CHINATOWN</div>
<p>The Chinese are an extremely superstitious people, and it is
very difficult to get a photograph of them, for they flee from the
camera man as from the wrath to come. When you think you are about
to get a good picture, and are ready to press the button, he either
covers his face, or turns his back to you. The writer was
congratulating himself on the picture he was about to take of four
Chinese women in their native costumes, and was just going to make
the exposure, when four Chinamen who were watching him deliberately
stepped in front of the camera, completely spoiling the negative.
The younger generation, and especially the girls, will occasionally
pose for you, and a truly picturesque group they make in their
queer mannish dress of bright colors, as they laugh and chatter in
their odd but musical jargon.</p>
<p>A few years ago you could not persuade a Chinaman to talk into a
telephone, for, as one of them said, "No can see talkee him,"
meaning he could not see the speaker. Another said, "Debil talkee,
me no likee him," but now this is all changed. Some there are who
still cling to their old superstitions, but they are few. The march
of commerce levels all prejudices, and the telephone is an
established fact in Chinatown. They have their own exchange, a
small building built in Chinese style, and their own operators.
Even the San Francisco telephone book has one section devoted to
them, and printed in Chinese characters. And so civilization goes
marching on, the old order changeth, and even the Chinaman must of
necessity conform to our ways.</p>
<p>But the Chinatown of to-day is not the Chinatown existent before
the great disaster of 1906. It has changed, and that for the
better, better both for the city and the Chinaman.</p>
<p>Mr. Arnold Genthe, in his Old Chinatown, says: "I think we first
glimpsed the real man through our gradual understanding of his
honesty. American merchants learned that none need ever ask a note
of a Chinaman in any commercial transaction; his word was his
bond." And while they still have their joss houses, worship their
idols, gamble, and smoke opium, they are their own worst enemies;
they do not bother the white men, and are generally considered a
law unto themselves.</p>
<p>As we pass on down Grant Avenue we meet a crowd gathered around
a bulletin board, where hundreds of red and yellow posters are
displayed. All are excited, chattering like magpies, as they
discuss the latest bulletin of a Tong war, or some other notice of
equal interest; and here we leave them, and Chinatown also, passing
over the line out of the precincts of the Celestial, and into our
own "God's country."</p>
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<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/topic13.png" target="blank"><ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src= "images/topic13.png" alt="In a Glass-bottom Boat" /></SPAN></div>
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