52 THE BUREAU OF SCIENCE^ 



distillates and charcoals, tan barks, tanning cutch and tanned 

 hides, paper made from local fibers, fruit products, essences, 

 oils and beverages, information with regard to Philippine water 

 supply from sanitary and commercial standpoints, Philippine 

 coals, their analyses and results of physical and chemical tests, 

 cement and concrete, limestone and lime from local resources, 

 sand-lime bricks, tile, clay products and polished artificial mar- 

 bles made from Philippine raw materials, various products from 

 leaves — for example, roselle — and nipa palm and its products ; 

 (2) Philippine mineral resources and geology, including ores, 

 coal, corals, fossils, and shells, models of Philippine processes and 

 of gold production by years, relief maps, geologic maps, minera- 

 logic maps, charts showing economic mineral products by years 

 and distribution, and photographs; (3) Philippine ethnology, 

 portraying the culture, social life, ceremonies, industries, and 

 occupations of people in the Philippines, including everything 

 from small ornaments, cloths, and garments to weaving looms, 

 household utensiles, tools, agricultural implements, fishing boats, 

 and even models of their houses, and miscellaneous industries, 

 such as fish, silk, hemp, rope, basket, and hat making; (4) Phil- 

 ippine economic fishery products and resources, including food 

 and game fishes, window and button shells, tortoise shell, and 

 sponges; (5) Mounted Philippine botanical specimens; (6) an 

 exhibit of the Philippine Journal of Science; and (7) scientific 

 photographic collection and colored transparencies portraying 

 the various types of Philippine tropical diseases and illustrating 

 the Philippine Islands. The exhibit was shipped to San Fran- 

 cisco on November 7 and 15, 1914. 



PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION FILMS 



The Bureau of Science has made over 10,000 feet of moving 

 picture films of industrial, commercial, and scenic subjects in 

 the Philippine Islands for the Philippine Board of the Panama- 

 Pacific International Exposition to be held in San Francisco 

 February to December, 1915. The subjects are : 



Sugar: Cane planting, cultivating, cutting, transporting to mill, native 

 evaporating plant, modern mill, sacking, and shipping 



Abaca (Manila hemp) : Transplanting, cultivating, felling, stripping, dry- 

 ing, pressing and baling, transporting, classifying, and loading for 

 transportation. 



Coconuts and coconut products: A coconut grove, gathering, transporting 

 in small boats and rafts, husking and opening coconuts, drying copra 

 (coconut meat partly dried), sacking, shipping, Filipino method of 

 making coconut oil, and modern oil mill. 



Minor industries: Pillow^ lace making in Bilibid Prison, paper flower 

 making in Concordia Convent, match factory, nipa alcohol distillery, etc. 



