Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 309, 14 September 1911 — Page 10
PAGE TEN.
THE niOmiOITD PALLADIUZI AN1 CVU-SLEGHAU, THTTIISDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1011;
iGUfflDHO WAHTED -FOR JLOHE iriDIAIJ Survivor of Indian Tribe May Be Cared for by Former Ally. '
- WA8HINOTON, D. C, Sept 14. Uncle Sam is figuring on what he hall do with the lone survivor of the Yana . tribe of Indians, who 'was captured near Orville, Cal, recently. A report was received today from Chas.
IL. Davis, one of the agents of the bur- . . . ... a ' Jl .UAi
f the lone Yana be carea ior oy some ' rnamhar nf an Allied tribil. This. It
was stated, probably would be the !ourse adopted. "After a year or, two," said Mr. Davis, "he doubtless would be able to look after himself, become a member of the band and live as they do." j Mr. Davis reported that the Indian jwas being well treated by the , Unl-
Inow have him in charge. i ml - V a -w I 1
t ine lone iana,-mr. uavia ueuevc, lis the last of a group of four or five (Indians who for years past have lived Un the practically inaccessible haunts Wf canyons along the Featber river. Several years ago a party of surveyors, the report adds, evidently , (drove them from this seclusion, and In the attempt to find another hiding nla.ee all of them perished except the
Old man taken a few days ago. He is an expert, Mr. Davis says "in imitating the calls of wild animals, showing he has preserved the wiles of the savage tb allure the wild game to him." j The Yana tribe, according to Indian
touresu revurua, aiwna iu . tribe and of a distinct linguistic famiby. In 1864 neighboring California miners, annoyed at some depredations assartier all but fifty of the whole ibe, which then numbered about 3,k)00. In 1902 only six or seven remain- ,
folOB STORMS HOSPITAL CHIASSO. Switzerland. Sept. 14. KJiola Del Colle, a city with a population of twenty thousand. In the Italian province of Bart Delia Puglie, has,
according to official, advices received
(here, been the scene of excesses In t consequence of the cholera epidemic toow raging in Italy. , . The authorities, in an effort to jitamp out the infection ordered that all persona attacked by cholera should be taken to a hospital and that those 'who had been In contact with cholera " victims be isolated in a neighboring
building. The population. Incensed by .these measures and convinced that it was the intention of the authorities to kill 1L a.1 A - 1 A 1 . , Aa
u PAuems buq rido iuubc uuuer uw
.servatlon, stormed the hospital. A 'mall force of, carabineers, aided by a
few policemen, Attempted to control ithe crowds, but finally were forced to 'open the doors.
' c The rowd . rushed . into the buildllnr hrmifht nnt the cholera, natienta
and carried them In ghastly procesr
slon through the town. The thorough-
glares were nnea wun people wno acclaimed the cholera victims and shouttail ImnnutltlAni ditb Inat thai irmram.
tmenx.
NEW SCHOOLS FOR THE GIRLS
(Chicago Evening Post.) All those" Old Fogies who have insisted these many : years that "education ought to train girls to be good wives and mothers" may now relax a little their condemnation of the passing show. We are catching up with their Ideas. Here in Chicago we have
which open outward rather than those which, are blind alleys. ;
In all trades the girls Wave to start at the bottom of the ladder; in many trades they stay there, doing over and over again some one mechanical process which is not only exhausting but deadening as well. The ' Lucy L,
I Cnwlai filtrh ofhnnl lima tn fit ft a sHrla
after many years of discussion, open-, rather jfo occapatkm8 whicn
give the personality some chance to
develop.
There is demand ' for Intelligent craftsmen in photography, for example. This is one of the crafts which will be taught, at the school. Typesetting is another. Of course, millinery and dressmaking will be taught, as well as salesmanship. ' Then there
will be work with some .forms of specialized machinery, such'as that used
in making patterns for embroidery.
There are problems in. plenty ahead
of the. new school. As Mrs. Young said in her report to the board of ed
ucation this week, the conditions gov
erning woman's Invasion of industry are peculiar. If it Is hard to train boys for specific occupations, it is twice as hard to train girls. The conditions are rigid and in many cases onerous. And - the training must be done with one eye on the .girl's future home. If all such institutions have had their ups and downs we may at least find encouragement in the fact that the new school in Chicago seems to have ho illusions about its
task, no excessive .simplicity in its
conception of what lies before it. And it -seems certain to have, besides,
steady and cheerful public support.
ed in the public school system a
"technical high school : for girls," which offers free train.ng in all the branches that concern the , home as well as sound special training for a limited number of vocalists, those temporary occupations that the American girl consents to go into until she gets
married. This school, the plans for which have already attracted much favorable comment, is located in the old South Division High School building at 6th street and Wabash avenue, which has been radically remodeled and renovated for its new use. It will be known as the Lucy , L. Flower, Technical High School for Girls, and the diploma for its four years' course will, be just as handsome,' and perhaps even more significant, than that which goes to the girls in the other high schools. AH the girls, will be encouraged to take .the full four-year course, but for those who cannot, a two-year course is offered. Those who can spare the time merely to be trained for some specific vocation may be given what they need in courses of five, 10 and 15 months. But the' new high school Is not a trade school. There are a sccre or more trade schools in the city and the high school is as 'much broader than those as the college is .broader than the academy. Furthermore, the Lucy L. Flower is quite as much concerned in training girls for the home as in providing them with the equipment for some immediate vocation. In fact, the emphasis is on the former rather than the latter, which is one of several features which differ
entiate the Chicago experiment from its more famous. New York prototype, the Manhattan Trade School for Girls. In the New - York school most of the girls are studying stenography and typewriting. Chicago girls can get that in the ordinary high school, but those who go to our Technical High school will be equipped primarily, for the intelligent care of a home, and, secondarily,' for one or another of the crafts which in Chicago call for girls. The household arts and sciences will include, of course, cooking;' the study of family- budgets; the care of a household, including laundry operations; household chemistry and design, as applied to household decorations, dressmaking and millinery. While it is too early to say just what "culture" courses will be provided, it seems probable that the girls will be given work in English, American history, "applied civics,' physical culture, "applied mathematics" and music.
After two years of general work the
girls may enter upon the vocational courses. Here is where the school faces its biggest problem. It is not
a "trade school," interested primarily
in "feeding' girls into a trade. It is interested first and last In the girls.
and the aim of the board of education
is to train the girls for those vocations
GOLDEN JUBILEE OF
CATHOLIC BISHOP.
The Ntitmtg Flower. Prfume of the nutmeg flower is said by asm naturalists to have an intoxl catlag effect on small birds.
At Richmond, Arlington Hotel, Wed
nesday, Sept. 20 and Until Noon. 21st.
j' . z .... .
All persons, Mate or Female, suffer-
ktaa from loss of Expelling Forces. Prc
papstng. : Fissures. Fistulas. Catarrh.
unnamaaon. Ulceration. Constipation. Bleeding, Blind or Itching Piles, are
kindly requested to call and see roe. tto Excrninotton No Operation
(National News Association)
OGDENSBURG, N. Y., Sept, 14. In
the presence of the largest and most
notable gathering of dignitaries of the Roman Catholic church that ever as
sembled in this city, the celebration of
the sacredotal jubilee of the Rt. Rev
Henry Gabriels, bishop of Ogdens-
burg, began today with a pontifical
high mass . of. thanksgiving. Among
the eminent prelates in attendance
were Most Rev. Dipmede Falconio,
apostle delegate to the United States; Archbishop Farley of New York; Arch
bishop Gauthier of Ottawa, and sev
eral bishops. " '
Bishop Gabriels is a native . of Bel
gium and received his education in
that country. Soon after his ordina
tion to the priesthood in 1861 he came to the United States. For nearly
thirty years he was attached to St
Joseph's Seminary at Troy, and for twenty years he was president of the institution. In 1892 he severed his
connection with the seminary upon his
appointment as bishop of Ogdensburg,
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1ATI0IIAL
MUSEUM
Smithsonian Institute Re
ceives Fourteen Hundred Skins of Beasts
WASHINGTON. Sept. 14. Fourteen
hundred skins or beasts and birds, spoils of the 'spectacular hunt which
PauJ D. Rainy, New York millionaire.
is making in Africa, have reached the
Smithsonian institution. .
This is only the first shipment of
trophies of the hunt that Mr. Ralney
will send to the National Museum. Eleven big zinc lined crates were used
to bring the three hundred large skins and four hundred small skins of birds and the seven hundred skins of birds
of all colors and sizes. ' The most pre
cious of the skins are those of two
dozen' lions and of a zebra that were
killed in British East Africa.
t "Mr., Ralney is conducting the most extraordinary hunt for big game that
any living man ever undertook Gerritt S. Miller, curator of animals of the Na
tional Museum, said, in telling of the
Ralney trophies that hare reached him. "He is fond of photography and has with his a complete . moving picture apparatus and a skilled photographer. All the lions, as well as the zebra, which by the way can put up a
stiff fight, were run down by dogs and photographed in their desperate fight for life before being killed. The pictures will be unique and valuable. "Mr. Rainey has a pack of selected bearhounds, the best in Mississippi and Alabama, and a pack of small, wiry terriers. The bearhounds were put on the trail of the lions and ran them down, Mr. Rainey and his party following on horses. .When the lion stood at bay the hounds were called off and the little terriers were sent in to worry the lion. Moving pictures at close range, too close for the
comfort of any timid person, were taken of the lion before a bullet was sent to a vital spot. "Edmund Heller, an expert naturalist and' taxidermist of the Smithsonian Institution, who was with Colonel Roosevelt on his African expedition, is with Mr. Ralney. Heller is
preparing, all tne specimens whicn
fall to the guns of the Rainey party. When Mr, Rainey arranged for his expedition' he invited the Smithsonian Institution to send a man along as his guest who could prepare and save the prospective trophies which he gave to the museum. The only expense the
institution has la Mr. Heller's salary. His traveling and living expenses are
bofne by Mr. Rainey. Mr. Rainey will
be more than contented with the moving pictures of the chases and the death scenes of many African lions and other big game." -
VISIT TO HAWAII BY PACIFIC FLEET
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.. Sept. 14. Four warships of the Pacific Coast fleet, the California, West Virginia, South Dakota and Colorado, are to sail tomorrow on a cruise to the Hawaiian Islands. The four cruisers will be accompanied on the trip by eight torpedo boat destroyers. The entire fleet will return ; to San Pedro about the first of November for target practice.
1 PRESIDENT TAFTS VACATION IS OVER:
Optional-New Association) BEVERLY, Mass, Sept 14. Presl-l dent Taft'a vacation. ends today, so far as his stay at his summer homo here Is concerned. : Tomorrow morning, accompanied by his secretary and the ever-present secret , service offi
cers, he will motor into Boston and in
the evening will depart from that city on his 13,000-mile tour to the Pacific coast and back to Washington. : I
I hardly know so true a work of a little mind as the servile Imitation of another. GreviUe. - -
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