in timber for fuel about 80,000 rupees monthly are
paid. On quarrying and carting granite, and in
building, about 30,000 rupees a month are spent; on
the carriage of materials from the railway about 15,000
rupees, and probably from 5,000 to 10,000 rupees on
local products such as straw, grain, oil, mats, bamboos,
tiles,
etc. Now, if we take no account of
the last two items, and deduct 10,000 rupees from
the second and third, we shall have a fair estimate
of three lakhs of rupees a month as the amount spent
on the Kolar gold field in wages, which, taking the
rupee at par (and I think I am justified in doing
so, as for expenditure in India by labourers it goes
about as far as it ever did), amounts to L360,000
a year. And this great sum is earned by people
who either have land and work for occasional periods
of the year on the mines, or by labourers, who, when
they have saved enough money from their wages (which
they could do with ease in a year), will acquire and
cultivate a small holding. A large proportion
of this sum of L360,000 a year—probably
two-thirds of it—goes to improving the status
and condition of the agricultural and labouring classes,
and I need hardly add that this not only leads to
an improvement of the resources of the State, but
enables the people the better to contend with famine
and times of scarcity, and thus still further improves
the financial condition of the Government. And
it is largely in consequence of the great sums brought
into Mysore by the planters and the gold companies
that the revenues of Mysore are in such a nourishing
condition, and that year after year the annual budget
presents an appearance more and more favourable.
And here this question naturally arises. What
can the Government of Mysore do to stimulate the employment
of labour in mining, and thus still further strengthen
the financial position of the State? I am prepared
to show that it can do much to stimulate the opening
of new mines, and also to encourage many of those
now in existence which have not as yet been able to
pay dividends.
The reader will see by a glance at the map that the
auriferous tracts of Mysore (to which I shall presently
more particularly allude) are of great extent, and,
judging from the report of the geological surveyor
employed by the Government, and especially from the
existence of numerous old native workings, there is
no reason why prizes even greater than the best of
those already obtained should not exist. Now one
of the greatest obstacles in the way of rapid progress
lies in the fact that before mining can be got fairly
under weigh much preliminary work has to be done, and
the shareholders have therefore a long time to wait
before any paying return can be obtained. But
if the preliminary work, such as the providing of
water, the collection of building materials, and the
making of roads, etc., were carried out before
a company was formed, mining could be begun at once,
and results rapidly arrived at, and the frittering