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Ch. 7: Question of Labour

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60               TEE QUESTION OF LABOUR
a rule, local labourers will belong to one or other of the following clans or tribes: Naikers, Burgurs, or Korumbers; the immigrants will be Canarese, Moplahs, Wuddurs, and Balkaras.
The first—Naikers—are jungle men, who can scarcely be induced to work, and then only very spasmodically.
Burgurs are local cultivators, who will sometimes come and do a few days' work, when not engaged at their own villages. They also can scarcely be depended upon.
The Korumbers make the best foresters; but like all such roving tribes, they are an unsatisfac­tory class to deal with; and will never do manual work, if they can possibly help it. They are not usually cultivators of the soil, but are invaluable on account of their thorough knowledge of the country. Their observation, in truth, is so keen that they can tell the position of every outcrop of quartz in the place. The Korumbers have always been gold-miners in a desultory sort of a way; washing in river-beds, breaking up boulders in their search for the precious metal, working singly or in small parties, in the method I shall describe in the next chapter. They are consequently most useful in prospecting over jungle-covered country.
The principal source of the labour supply is Mysore. From it come large gangs of Canarese coolies, who are hardy and intelligent workmen,
Ch. 7: Question of Labour Page of 99 Ch. 7: Question of Labour
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