THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 15, 19U 5-B One of the World's Biggest Banana- Plantations (Copyright, 1S12. by Frank O. Carpenter.) HAKi-ST'TKm.A Panama.-I am 1 1 writing this In the center of I j I one of the biggest banana 1- I nlonta f1rT-i o nr no t K hill on which I am sitting Is 300 feet high and It com mands a view of more than 15,000 acres of the greenest of green. The green 1 all made up of bananas and the fields stretch as far as I can 'see to the west. Beyond them is another plantation of 3a,000 acres more. The twa plantations belong to the big banana trust, known as the United Fruit company, and they are only a part of the mighty estate which this company owns In Central and South America and in the islands of the Carib bean sea. It has taken up about the best banana lands of these sections and it annually ships" bananas by the hun dreds .of millions. From its farms come something like three-fourths of all th bananas we use, and it is due to it good business methods that we are' able to buy this fruit much cheaper than the apples we raise In our own back yards. Bananas from Panama are sold in New Tork, Washington and Chicago at from 15 to 20' cents, a dozen. Whereas apples of equal excellence from Oregon, New Tork or Virginia bring 2 cents and upward apiece, A Sea of Bananas. But as to the extent of the banana business and the part that this fruit has in the American stomach, I shall write later. Let me give you a view of the great banana sea as it is spread out below me. At my right are the mountains, the upper end of the Andes, which at this golnt are about as high as the Blue Ridglrand of much the same color. They slope down to the green and bound what, as I look, seems a, vast sea of green bushes. Now turn and look to the left. The sea -of green extends for fifteen miles in that direction without a break, and it is the same at the front and the back. Almost as far as you can see there is green everywhere, except here and there where one of the high trees of the Jungle was too big for cutting. Now take your glass and look more closely at the plantations below you. Tho green is not solid. You can see that it is divided up into great fk-ids or each of which contains about 1,000 acres, and that there are narrow lines of rail roads running through it, with wagon roads here and there. These roads were built to get out the bananas. There are 170 miles of railways on, this banana plantation and they run through the farms like the veins of one's body, reach ing all parts. . The roads are about three feet wide. With a glass you can see the steel track? shining out of the green. On some of the roads are cars loaded with x green bunches and on the trunk line which crosses, the estate are piles if bananas corded up for the trains. Hott Banana Are Handled Now take a look at that train which is approaching the hill. See, It has stopped and is taking on fruit The gang of Ja maica negroes Is. transferring the piles to the cars. They handle the fruit very carefully. The cars have been lind with leaves to prevent bruising the bananas as the train goes Oyer the rails. Eacfi bunch is lifted up lijto the air and passed from hand to hand to the men on the train. There is no throwing or dropping the bunches. Each is raised as tenderly as though if were a baby and is laid softly down on the car. The bunches are packed Just so .and the men know Just how many carloads it will take for the steamer which is to, carry them to the United states. I am told that 10 car losds will be shipped off today. The trains will carry them down to the port and the bananas wjll go from the cars on endless belts of canvas right Into the steamers. They are put in cold storage, and remain there until they begin to fly out ort similar carriers into the cold storage cars at New Orleans or ' New Tork. These bananas will, go to New Orleans or to Mobile, from where thej; wilj fly to the chief cities of the &iis tlssippl valley and the lands farther west. The United Fruit Company H to supply our wh6le country. It has . It divided Into sections and there Is a port for, each section. I am told that the bananas from Port Limon. Costs,' Rica, which lies sixty miles away up the coast, all go to New York and Boston, and that those of Jamaica are shipped largely to Europe. The European business is extending anil the fruit company Is trying, to educatt the people to eating bananas. They hay dona this in the United States and have bullt'up an immense market For som time they have had to send fruit to Site siP - ' 9P J,wOT JSK fcgv, frrMv m j i pi, IVK.Vc il i l'J r-' , sfrW Aj"v 1 - VIrTl HkVPL' 'Clj 1 HIIIM II iWllill Will Mi llllli ffTr IT b? . .. .. fmm . ,, f m we a f-';vi i' V tv A ?. ft f K ' i" mfizm I I I Health is the foundation of all good looks. The wise woman realizes this and takes precautions to preserve; her health and strength through the pe riod of child bearing. She remains a pretty mother by avoiding as far as possible, the suffering and dangers of such occasions. This every woman may do through, the use of. Mother's Friend, a remedy that has been so Ions in use, and accomplished so much good, that It is in no sense an experi ment, but a preparation which always produces the best results. It is for external application and so penetrating In its nature as to thoroughly lubricate every muscle, nervo and tendon in volved during the period before baby comes. ' It aids nature by expanding the skin and tissues, relieves tender ness and soreness, and perfectly pre 'pares the system for natural and safe motherhood. Mother's Friend has been used . and endorsed by thousands of mothers, and Its uso will prove a com fort and benefit aRy- A to any woman in CTIrttTA need of such a . J5 VA remedy. Mother's JrLlQYW Frind is sold at I yvwY drug stores. Write for free book for expectant mothers, which contains much valuable information. ISflDFlELD SECUlATOft CO., AtUaia, Ga. MM J Color your SUMMER LORITE and it will las! uou till Ihesnow flies -. 25 al all Druq and Depl stares. Carpentertbrton Co Boslon Europe at a loss, but the business is now beginning to pay, and It will eventually be of great value. In the Banana Plantations. But let us go down and take a" r dt through this vast banana plantation.' Wi have special cars and can stop where we please. We , pass 'for miles through nothing but bananas. The 'trees eprom from the ground and rise to the height of a two-story house. Each is composea of broad ribbon-like leaves eight or nint Inches wide. The leaves sprout from tht base of the plant, around which the) form a short trunk and then go out In a most graceful curve, bending over so that their ends rustle and wave in thi breeze. . Now we have left the cars and are walking through the fruit forest. HO dark it is. The leaves are so thick ann so many that they keep out the sun. Ou every side pfus the view is the same. There are stalks and trunks of bananas as far as we can sse, and we wondet what we should do If we should get lost, and whether we should not go round anij round in a Circle, as men have been known to act when lost in the wilder ness. '. Haw the Trees took. Now take a close look at the plants, This is . nef" Ejocaa , del Toro. and the bananas grow nowhere aiore luxuriantly than here. The trees at. the. base are ik big around as the th'gh of President Taft and the topmost leaves are. Jwenty or thirty feet from the ground. Tht bananas are of great size, and tht bunches or stems are bigger than those of other parts of the world. Each stem Is known as a hand, and the Individual bananas are called fingers. In mans places a bunch of eight or nine hands is fairly good yield, but here the averagt Is eleven or twelve, and some of the bunches 'have as many as seventeen hands, each containing ten or twelve fngers, as the bananas are called. The bunches range all the way from 2f0 to 300 bananas, and this means the yield of one plant. Th banana plan) The banana plant yields Only one crop ef fruit. As soon as the bunch is cut off the stem is cut down and other plants sprout up from the tootsi There is no such thing as planting the banana from the seed. If bananas ever had seed! ?.'iy havajong slnfe disappeared from the lack of use. All the plants now grow, from suckers or sprouts, and they come up so readily that an estate will yield a con tinuous harvest from year to year with out replanting. On some spots banana trees have reproduced their Wnd for fifty years, without replanting, and at the end the yield was quite, as great as at first. . Cntttna; the Frnlt. Now, let us stop and watch .them cut ting fruit. This requires skill The bananas must not fall on the ground, as the slightest bruise will make them unfit for shipping. The cutting is dona by negroes, who are skilled in the busi ness. They use long lancet with sharp steel blades, and cut half way through the stem at one stroke. This makes tlrs bunch Jail and the cutter catches It as It gently drops down. He now cuts off the rest of the stem and the bunch is handed to the men who carry It off to the cars. I suppose It makes your mouth water to think of eating a banana fresh from the tree. Such a banana rs-ould surely cause colic. The fruit ripens best by be ing cut green, and on all these thousand acres t cannot see a single yellow banapa. It Is only at the ports that I have been able to get frult to eat The green bananas will keep two or three weeks after cutting, and If cut at Just the right time they taste better by being allowed to ripen on the way, to the markets. i Six Thousand Workmen. Many people think that .there is but lit tle labor In raising bananas. There was never a greater mistake. When tho United-. Fruit company took up these thousands of acres they were covered with a Jungle as dense as that on the slopes of the Himalaya mountains. Th9 ground was covered with ml&hty trees, some of which were 150 feet high. Theso trees were1 bound together with vines and jianas, which were matted together and formed a network of woven vegetation. There were palms of a score of varieties, and the mass of green was so dense thai you could only cut your way thrpugh with a knife and an ax. All of this Jungle had to b cut down and turned over.' The big trees, some of which were aa large around as a flour barrel, and some had even the diamter of a hogshead, were left to rot where they fell. After the land was cleared and burned over, the plants had to be set out at 300 hills to the acre. They had to be kept clean of weeds, and this notwithstanding that nature here is so generous that If the land is left free for six months it will be all Jungle again. And then some of the land)! were swampy- and they had to be ditched. The rainfall here is ten Inches a month, or 72lw are 170 zailcs o nilroad on. (fas Jxznajza. pl&iUfioii 120 inches a. year, and the banana tree wUl nof grow .with itseet In tho water, In some other banana plantations the land Is so dry that Irrigation Is needed, but here the rainfall I Just right.. In planning the plantations, roads and rail roads were, built. Farmhouses and homes for the men tvera put up at every few miles, and blacksmith's shops, stores and offices erected. Altogether it takes about 6,000 men to wprk these plantations, and the commun ity has to be houred, eared for and ruled How the Labor la Handled, The most of (lie men who work on (his banana estate are Jamaica negroes, who were brought here for the purpose. They live in little shacks scattered here and there along the railroad and they go out from ihem to their labor. The officials and foreman are whites, and the respons ible parts of the work are done by Americans sent here from th United States. These men are the best of their kind and they receive excellent wages. The negroes '. are- paid about the same that the Jamaclans-receive on the Pan ama' ca.nal, and their labor is about as efficient. ' " A great deal of .work is don by th piece, and the man gets so much for clearing, so much for planting and clean ing and so much for picking the fruit. As it is now, it 'costs about $20 per acre to clear the land,' and the managers can tell you Just how much every plant costs. They have cost" sheets like those of a great factory and can tell to the tenth of a cent the outlay spent on each bunch of bajanas and where every cent goes. It Is only by such methods that bananas can be sold at the prices they bring in the states and still give a profit. The whole business is on the petty economies, which In the aggregate mean a saving of hundreds of thousands of dollars. ' Not a Whittling Baslnesa. As I walked through tha fields and watched the great green bunches bein cut by the hundreds and carrlfd off to the cars I asked one of the foremen If there would not bo big money for an American to come here and start a rival fruit trust, and whether a man with a small amount Of money could not en gage in the business at a profit. He re plied: "It might teem so If you did not know the facts. The truth Is this is no whit tling business. Tou have got to have a big capital, and enough to take- care of all kinds of accidents. Sometimes a disease will wipe out a plantation, and again a storm blows up and we loss the whole crop. Just a few months ago we had a hurricane hero which destroyed 18'J.OOO bunches of bananas in the space of five minutes. That happens every now and then, and If the property was that at a small farmer it Would mean" total ruin. - A big concern like this can stand it on account of the profit it receives from its other plantations. Aa It is now, there are many small plantations, but they sell their bananas to us. We pay them 28 cents a bunch, and at that they can do very well. Nevertheless the total product of such men about here Is only 2.C00 bunches a 'ek. which is a bagatelle in comparison with the 100,000 bunches we ship during that time. At to a rival trust, that might succeed, but it needs good lands and a fleet of ship and also good marketing facilities in the United States. Oar Bis; Banana Baslnesa. One hundred thousand bunches a week. "The men utter these words as thougn they meant nothing. Nevertheless, they were astounding to me. Havs you any Idea what 100.000 bunches a weak means? It means 6,300,000 bunches of bananas a year, for the banana business goes on all the year through. A single bunch con tains 150 bananas, and from this place alone they are sending forth something like 7iV,0(io,000 per' annum. We" have 10ft,nOO.Wi people In ' the United fitat 'S. Including Alaska and the Philippine Islands. These plantations could glvn every one of us seven bananas anil have 50,000,000 to spare. It ' could give thirty five to every family. But this la only one of the estates of the ITnlted Fruit company.5 The banana trust has scores of others,, snd It Ships from Cofeta Rica almost double aa many bananas as from here. It ships a vast deal from Cartagena, and It Is building up In Guatemala big plantations, which I hope to visit within the next lew months. The. business 's Increasing and the demand for bananas is Increasing as well. The United States is now using 60,000.000 bunches of bananas every twelve months, or about WW.OOQ.OOO fingers,-, per annum. You can now get a good banana for a cent or twa almost anywhere In our country, and- the business has to be big in order to pay. , ..... I am told that ! P" WH- It pays not only the capitalists who handle It, but also , the countries where the ba nanas are grown. It Is one of. the chief sourefs of revenue of the treasuries of Panama, Costa rtlca, Honduras and Guatemala, and It Is giving the working men of the West India Islands wages beyond what they can obtain anywhere else. Indeed, much of the development which Is now going on this part of the world com8 from the banana, and the future of these ro'tntries Is bright through the Increase of the consumption of bananas abroad. Their use la grow ing by leaps and bounds in the United States, and they are now making their way into the thickly populated coun tries of Europe as well, FRANK O. CARPENTER. 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