Home Geography for Primary Grades eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about Home Geography for Primary Grades.

Home Geography for Primary Grades eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about Home Geography for Primary Grades.

[Illustration:  “IT IS THE BUSINESS OF THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE.”]

Have you ever seen the ocean, or eaten any of its fish?

Name some fishes found in fresh water.

Name some kinds of fishes found in waters near where you live.  How may they be caught?

LESSON XLIV.

MORE ABOUT WHAT PEOPLE ARE DOING.

In the city or town we shall find many of the people busy about something else than the occupations we have learned.  What do you suppose it is?

If you go about the city, you will see large buildings several stories high, with long rows of windows, and great smoking chimneys.  These are mills or factories, full of machines in motion doing their work almost like human beings.

The people who work in them make almost everything that is needed for our use.  Wheat is changed into flour; cotton, into thread, fine muslins, and pretty calicoes; leather, into boots and shoes; iron and steel, into plows, stoves; and cutlery; lumber, into wagons, carriages, and all kinds of furniture.  Other articles which we must not forget are elegant jewelry, all sorts of ornaments for parlors, and beautiful toys which you admire so much.

[Illustration:  “BUSY MILLS AND FACTORIES.”]

It would take a long time to name a small part of the things made in the busy mills and factories; but think of the articles used in your home, and you may be sure they are manufactured articles.  You see, manufacturing gives work to many thousands of persons.

What is cutlery?  Name some articles of cutlery.

We need many things which we do not produce.  Other people need things which they do not produce.  How can each obtain what he needs?  By exchanging one thing for another.  This exchange of goods, or buying and selling them for money; gives rise to another occupation called trade, or commerce.  So many people spend their time buying and selling grain, vegetables, clothing, boots and shoes, or in sending them to places where they are needed.

On all the large rivers and lakes you may see boats going up and down, carrying goods from one part of the country to another.

Can you think how goods are carried from place to place where there are no rivers?  In countries where few people live, goods are often carried in wagons and on the backs of animals.

I wonder how many people have to work to get food and clothing for us.  Make a list of all the occupations you can think of.  Perhaps you can think of other occupations we have not named.  Is dressmaking an occupation?  Teaching?  Which occupation would you prefer?  Why?

If you think, perhaps you can tell why men do different kinds of work.  What people do to make a living, depends very much upon the place they live in.  For men almost always do that kind of work that pays them best for their labor.

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Home Geography for Primary Grades from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.