THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1912. PAGE THREE INDUSTRIAL ADVANCE IN Some Features Worth the Attention of United States School Leaders. can educators Philippine edu cation is limiting a remark a bio advance. Indeed, according to L'LUllt LVfUiia IfmU'U III. UiU UllUt'U he Philippines that are well worth he careful attention of bcIioo! leaders It is in the fleld of industrial train- linor wnioripnn r nr ppr. urn miKinc (ft (Ur,t I., n,.H.,t.. It. no V.TiJf 11 111V l 14111 111 .L1 klllll I J J IV Of JUH" n iinimiriN m tiii i-minimm ncihhiin nt m1r rnmmiro fnvnrnhlv with tho TM..1. n.wl dittoes rnorts. hut. nrnmlKn fn rnirmotn with OtS. rti. 1 a i 11 1 XllV WI1U1C HhllMII Ul L11UC1U1UI1 111 if 1111 1 limine a r i in 1 mi t 110 nrinfi. ... r ! ..tii . 11 .11 1. ci n snw orn 'i 110 mnqi 11 nnnnnnr imsirv iMiiriir 1 md 11 vu h iinr iv-nnT. ' ii is 11 i:-isfn MiMi irr in r 11 r "Tho bureau of education at Manila iiiiuurui cimun n fi 1 prmnnpnr mnnns earning a livelihood." wrote Frank White, director f Philippine edu- itlnn. Ill iflin nficr Ihn pnnrcna liml 1 1 ri iiiiifiii n"iii inn finvtminnnnr h (Jin 1 in. i 11 iot n mnnrr t nn nrnniiPTS f tho fnmmis "limitM 1' lnt rnnrln uui niu icuA mi'ui ui uiu fjpeiiL'u uun uilUUIUI,!,) n IU1 JUUIICIU iiKiriiniR. inr ir. id rnncn ?m innr ere Is a real demand for the prod- . Ul LillUlUI IUU1U WUrivIIlUUHUip. I Regular Trade Schools. j iuu ai-jjuuis, uuru iut3 uuya speuu tuQ ; , . w ... UUk , 1 1 11 f rnn m 1 11 rn 1 1 1 1 rn In mil ti n nn ide at the Philippine School of Arts ( d TradpR In Miinlln. snhl for 9ftft nt ' it year's carnival. ! n tho "iris sonnnl; ninin snwinr nnri uscUecplng have generally formed e prescribed courses, but recently einaking and embroidery have been rodured. because they are arts ilch. besides possessing educational lue, furnish the girls with a remu UA.UUMwUHtH,. Whh.V. .t. t. A .T. A. fI T MJ fl KX W SHrflK hitelaw Reid Coming For Opening of $4,000,000 Building. rhe $4,000,000 new State Education Ildlng at Albany, X. Y., will be dedl- nrsiln v. Dpi- 1.1. 18 nnii 17. Dn Tnna- y afternoon the exercises will bo oned with an address by Chancellor hitelaw Held, who will return from igland for this purpose. )n that afternoon Dr. John Chrlsto er Schwab, librarian of Yale unlver y, will discuss libraries and Profea- nenry Fairfield Osboni, president the American Museum of Natural story, will read a paper on "Muse is." n Tuesday night elementary schools II bo discussed by Dr. William II. ixwell, New York city superintend r ni wi nn h nnn ir wimnm i n yan of St. Louis will talk on second- ..Imnln T 1 . 1 1Tn.. TTI Dkuuvrm. Ul . uuillico Ik. Ull sldeut of tho University of Wis isln, will Epcak on educational ex islon, and Dr. William Starr Myers Princeton will discuss private iooIs on Wednesday morning. f thn iirrnrnnnn darq nn Wftflnncnnv jsident Uutler of Columbia will talk universities. Professional schools 'I lm Inn 1 'itii ixf r nniiK. a ii'iidii fir aow nrr r i rr nrnci nnr tho CarnoRlo foundation. Canon II. nsley DTenson of Westminster ab- wlll read a paper on tho valuo of torlcal studies to tho higher learn- receruion wm uo civen uv tn irov. nr. rOL'Ollffl nnd ihn citntn nfllnlnta fvn dnesday evening. The dedicatory relses Thursday afternoon will ln do remarks by Chancellor Held. TO SEE IF SUM COOLS. lithsonian Institution to Make Tests on Mount Wilson. Vork has been begun on n forty t tower to surmount tho observatory tho Smithsonian Institution on unt Wilson, California, whero at ipts will bo made to ascertain ether tho sun Is growing cold, 'ho tower will bo built according to us drawn by Dr. D. a Abbot, dl tor of trolnr research of tho lnstltu- i, who is on mo way 10 tvusiuugiou m Algeria, whero another station measuring the sun's rays Is main- ICO. EDUCATION'S PHILIPPINES Children's Training Prepares Directly For Life They Are to Live. iterative occupation. There wcro al ready in the Philippines young women who had learned embroidery and lace making in tho convents muter tho Spanish regime. Furthermore, bocauw of their great natural aptitude for such work and because of their patience and delicacy of execution tho Fili pino women nro considered among tho most skillful workers in the world In these nrts, their products being clasBod by experts as even superior to thoso of tho French nnd the Swiss. The schools nre therefore working on mire ground In teaching laccmaklng and embroidery, and they havo ascer tained that the demand for tho kind of work their children can turn out Is practically unlimited. In an effort to Incroiiso the avallahlo mipply of teach ers for the work courxes In lacemak ing and embroidery have been offered In the Philippine Normal school slnco 1010 and also in the various vacation assemblies of teachers. Some Statistics. The first thing a Filipino girl docs in the sewing class in school is to mako for herself a complete outfit of cloth ing. This work she usually begins in the second grade, but sometimes In tho lirst or third. Armed with an em broidery frame and other apparatus (In most cases made by the boys in tho same school), she advances In pro Hclency through the various grades, hemming and embroidering cotton squares, flue linen, handkerchiefs, waists, and so on. The more expert girls turn out masterpieces In French net and embroidery. Iu lace they maka all varieties of "pillow lace," In eluding "torchon" (Spanish Ince), Mal tese, Ceylon or Indian, Irish crochet, etc. Uattenberg Is also made for lo cal use, but It Is not encouraged for export, because the Japanese can mnko It more cheaply. An Idea of tho extent of Industrial education in the Philippines may bo gained from tho fact that nearly 400, 000 school pupils are engaged In somo kind of Industrial work. For the past four years Industrial Instruction has been prescribed In tho primary course for both boys nnd girls, and the work is systematically carried on in an ad vanced stage In tho Intermediate schools. Twenty-six well equipped trade schools have been established In Manila and the various provinces. There Is a college of agriculture at Los Hanos, and n college of engineering has been added to tho University of the Philippines. The Filipinos take to tho educational program, industrial and otherwise, quickly and profitably, and the civil government finds its duties much less onerous now that the military invasion of the islands has been superseded by the educational. " J $4 J J J $ COUNTERFEITING FALLS OFF. Largely Because of Better Business, Chief Wilkie Admits. There has been a marked falling off In tho counterfeiting of money recent ly, but government officers charged with tho detection and suppression of this form of crirao are willing to con cede that tho Improved condition is not due entirely to their activity. John E. Wllklo, chief of the United States secret service, said that tho prosperous state of tho country was responsible mainly for the decreaso in tho amount of work thnt the agents of tho service nro called on to perform. "Whenever tho country is prosper ous crirao is less," said Chief Wilklo, "and this rule, which has been demon strated by years of experience, applies as much to counterfeiting as to other offenses against tho laws. Prosperity means that work is plentiful and em ployment easy to obtain. Many per sons of criminal tendoncles prefer to gat money honestly." The decreaso In counterfeiting bo camo noticeable about eighteen months ngo, according to Mr. Wllkle. Last year about -100 cases of counterfeiting were investigated, whllo this year there probably will bo less than 800, nn unusually small number. NEW GLACIAL PHENOMENON. Discovered at Fort Fredorick, Near Crown Point, N. Y. A phenomenon that Is thought to be of glacial origin has just been discov ered on Fort Frederick grounds near Crown Point, N. Y. It Is an IrainonBO cavity In a limestone formation that was apparently bored by tho forces of naturo centuries ago. The pit, which Is a hugo bowl in shape nnd fifteen feet in depth by nlno feet In diameter, wos first noticed by workmen In tho employ of Mrs. Frank S. Wltberbee, who gavo tho grounds to the state. Tho men wero excavutrag for a supposed secret tunnel from tho fort to Lako Champlaln when their at tention was drawn to tho pit. Amateur geologists and others who have seen the phenomenon nro certain that tho cavity was formed during tho glacial period. Tho fact that tho hole is entirely smooth and that at its bot tom rested a large granite bowlder until It wns blasted out Is proof, they say. that tt was not tho work of man. HOW TO tNGREASE WORLD'S FOOD Prof. De Vries Tells of Experi ments In Mutation of Plants, MADE DAISIES GROW BIGGER. Dean of Botanists Belicvos Vhoat and Rice Can Also Be Intensified to Feed Futuro Generations Ho Is to Explore the Wilds of Southern Florida. Professor Ilugo do Vrles, director ot the Amsterdam Itotanlcal garden and the recognized dean of botanists, re cently lectured nt the New York Ilo tanlcal gardens on his observations and experiments In tho mutation of plants. Many scientists ntteiided tho lecture and lauded Professor de Vries as "tho successor to Darwin nnd a Rivat benefactor to the nations." Dr. de Vrles, a man of about sixty years, does not mind being culled a successor to Darwin, whoso work ho bus adapted. He would deny, how ever, that ho hnd not gone further than D.irwin in his understanding of plant life. It was exactly the divergence between Darwin's conclusions and his own conclusions tltat constituted tho subject matter of Dr. de Vrles' lecture. Darwin, It Is recalled, explained tho origin of new species by the theory of gradual variation. Dr. do Vrles, on the other hand, while he admits that thero arc no cud of gradual variations in plant life, adds that new species also como Into being by "leaps and bounds" In n single day, ns It were. The Best Illustrations. The Iwst Illustrations of tho muta tion of plants Dr. de Vries noted in such flowers ns the foxglove, daisy, evening primrose nnd marigold. In his own experiments, starting with nn or dinary single daisy and keeping all tho seed and planting it. he noticed second j ear daisies having twice as many petals as they had the first year and at the exxpense of a diminishing center. Continuing the selection of tho seed from the exceptional specimens In each daisy patch, he, grew wlthlu four years a daisy which had no center seed pods whatever and which had increased Its petals or ray flowers during that time from 21 to 200. Needless to say, the now flower did not resemble tho or dinary daisy nt nil, and it remained In tact as a distinct species of flora. This illustration was evidence, Pro fessor do Vries maintained, of the ne cessity of increasing the yields of all plants, so that the Increasing popula tion of tho future might not want His optimism in tho development of plan.t life extends to wheat nnd rice and tho other grain, nlthough ho said ho was not yet experimenting In those fields. Not Rivaling Burbank. "Dr. do Vrles is not rlvnling our own Hurbank," said Dr. W. A. Murrlll, director of tho New York botanical gardens. "He stands supremo In his own lino of endeavor, nis experi ments are purely theoretical. Burbank tries to develop the biggest plums and the biggest potatoes, but De Vries tries to mako two petals grow whero but ono grew before. Ho is paving tho way for tho bigger Burbanks of tho futuro. "Our experimental stations, you know, are practical, and they seek practical results In the culture of food stuffs. But some day that lino of ex perimental work will bo exhausted and scientists will ask for something new. Then somo ono will apply, In a practical way, tho principles which Professor do Vrles Is now laying down. The secret of tho futuro Is to bo ablo to repeat exactly by agriculture the mutations as observed now In nature. That Is the work of science, and that Is whero the new nnd bigger Burbanks will have their future." Tho speclnl occasion which brought Dr. do Vrlos to this country nt this tlmo is tho opening of tlio great Itlco Industrial Institute In Houston, Tex., in October. Ho also expects to visit a county in Alabama whore n variety of especially largo evening primroses has long been a great attraction. Later ho will join an exploring expedi tion to bo sent by tho Now York bo tanical gardens to the wilds of south ern Florida. INDIANS TO GIVE PAGEANT. Carlisle to Celebrate 160th Anniversary of League of Amity, Superintendent Friedman has an nounced that tho Carlisle (Pa.) Indian school will eclcbrato the ono hundred nnd sixtieth anniversary of the Leaguo of Amity In October with a pageant Part of tho celebration will represent tho first Important Indian council be tween tho natives of this country nnd tho whlto man in 1752. A procession made up of descendants of tribes of tho original participants will add much histcr to tlio occasion. Some of tho costumes and scones! from tho historical pageant of Phila delphia will bo loaned by Dr. Ober holtzer for tho occasion, nnd It is ex pected that tho affair will bo ono of tho most interesting historic events that havo ever been given In America, New Powders No Better Than Old. Experiments having demonstrated that tho now powders used in tho French navy wero no bettor than tho old ones, the battleships of tho third battleship squadron and the first squadron recently recelvod orders to put them ashore. The Problem of Cotantry Life By CHARLES STELZLE RURAL decay is ono o tho most stnggerlng problems In American na tional life. In tho matter of population alono it calls for serious at tention. Tho percentage of rurnl population in the United Stntcs has been steadily decreasing as follows: In 1SS0 there lived in the country 70.G per cent of the total population; in 1S00, C3.D per cent; in 1000, G9.5 per cent; in 1010, C3.7 per cent Tho loss of rural population Is duo to economic, social and educational causes. Hcllglon and religious Institutions nlso play an lmportnnt part In tho problem. Wo hear much these dnys about the "country life movement." Let It bo noted that this Is a different proposition from the "back to the land" movement It may bo said broadly that tho first was Inaugurated for the pur- 10SS OF POPULATE IN mME Percentages of counties losing population from I900tol910 27. d T- 00 u 2&-t 3G.I 38.5 -t3 -tO.0 G09 OL7 71.7 8 2 -2 2 b t -g 8 o .5 --S $ - I i 1 1 j 1 1 poso of benefiting the country, the second for the purpose of benefiting the city. Unquestionably more will come of the former than of the latter, for the movement to Improve tho conditions of farm life is In harmony with a normal desire, while the effort to transplant the city man to tlio country is in violation of natural law. Just ns the city must work out Its own salvation, so the oun try will bo compelled to solve its own problems. It must be quite apparent that good farm laud and profitable farming will not settle the most vital iies tlons In tho country. Principally, tho leaders In this movement tell us. there must be a higher idealism among country people. They must have higher standards of education, of social life, of the moral well being in each com munity. Tho country Hfo commission appointed by the president said in its report, "Any consideration of tho problem of rural life that leaves out of ac count the function and the possibilities of the church nnd of related institu tions would bo grossly inadequate, because from tho purely so ciological point of view tho church is fundamentally a necessary Institution In country life." E2 B El B El El E3 B B B B B B B B B B CONTAINS B I dres I jjoiiiing b recei B B B B B B B B B s I ITIZEN PU HONESDALE, B SECOND NOW READY THE REMAINING 30 LESSONS. to si Wan nfie H2KX2iSE223! pf of 6 of Notico of Audit: Notice Is hereby given that Homer Orceno, an auditor duly appointed by the Orphans' Court of Wayno county to pass upon exceptions filed to tho account of W. S. Harvey, administrator of the above named estate, will attend to tho du ties of his appointment at his office In tho borough of Honesdalc, Mon day, Sept. 23, 1912, .at 10 o'clock a. m. HOMER GREENE, Auditor. August 28. 1012. 70w3 t::::u:::2:;:::::n;:::::i:j5:n:::::::::Tu:n:ni H WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS 9 m your family you of course call a reliable physician. Don't stop at that ; linve his prescriptions put up at a reliable pharmacy, even if it is a little farther from your home than some other store. You can find no more reliable store than ours. It would be im- possible for more care to be taken m the selection of drugs, etc., or in tne compounding. Proserin g tions brought here, either night ft or day, will be promptly and accurately compounded by a S competent registered pharmacist U and the prices will be most rea- H sonnble, g O. T, CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, S Onp. D. & II. Station, Monf.sdale. Pa. H t; a ;::;t;::;;::;t::;n;:::::;:::;n:::;:r:::;;;u:na I MARTIN CAUFJELD S Designer and Man ufacturer of ARTISTIC a 8 8 a H i t: MEMORIALS Office and Works; 1036 MAIN ST. HONESDALE, PA. EJ E3 B B B B B B B B B B B B B B upon El B B B B B El E3 PA. B UDITOU'S NOTICE. Estate Frederick Dlorolf. B El B B E3 E2 any e r mis WINIPANV 7 PJ