The Omaha Bee. NEWS SECTION PAGES ONE TO EIGHT UNDAY V7TATHER FOItfCAST. For Nebraska Generally fair. For Iowa Oenerally fair. For weather report see page 3. VOL. XL-No. 2(5. OMAHA SUNDAY MOliNINU, DKCKMKKU U, UM SKVKX SFXTIOX-FOKTY -VUVK P.UJKS. SINdLK COPY F1VK CKNTS. HOG PBICES TAKE AN UPWARD TURN Opening Saturday Morning Thirty Cents Per Hundred Above the Friday Close. CHICAGO PACKERS ARE PANICKY Armour ana &win lane .Lverytning; Telegram. )--ktnr rtrsewater. editor of in Sight. The Ire, arrived In Washington today to I attend the ann'ial dinner of the Gridiron Iclub. While In New York. Mr. Ro?ewater SEE A SHORTAGE IN THE CROP jhad an Interview with Colonel Roosevelt at the Oisfook offices rn a multiple Ity of I. ti o rr tt xt . siibjwn, which for want of a better and Are of the Opinion the Top Has Not mor. nniUtn m,,ht nf. clBpa Been Reached, NINE-DOLLAR HOG IS EXPECTED' Claim that Ietllne prnl Arllele. Ago Una Ended and that llenee forth Ment Will lie an K-fc CHICAGO, Pec. 10.-(SpeoIal Telegram.) The hog market at the Unlcn Stock yards Jumped almost out of rlpht to'lay and It U declared that pork wtll go to a higher figure. The market opened up 30 cent higher than It cloned Friday, end the big packers were, buying frantically. The. Jump today means that hogs are now It a hundred higher than they were two weeks ago, and that unless more hogs be. gln coming Into the big packing centers of the country In a short time, the market will go much higher. Wise buyers at the yards declared today that hogs might go to 9. It la said that the packers and buyers havo Just awakened to the fact that the country Is not full of hogs, as has been confidently supposed, and that there la nowhere near the supply that there should be. Armour and Swift were the heavy buyers today and they did not seem to care how much they had to pay for hogs. Just so as they K"t hold of enough of them to keep their killing repartments busy. Most of them they bought in the cars and rushed to the killing pens as fast ax possible. Mean time pork on the butchers' block was mov ing up right along with the hog market, and butchera were predicting that pork would be aa expensive aa beefsteak, unless something happened to change the hi h prices. I.na Rise In Omaha. The Chicago hog market yesterday quoted bast grades of packing hogs at 17.70 to $7.60, with a total rise In price for the day of from 10 to 15 cents, and the local market was no't far behind with a total Increase In prices for the week of IS to 40 cents fo rthe week. The beat grades yesterday brought from S7.80 to $7-6) at South Omaha, with receipts moderate. Total receipts for the week at South Omaha were not far behind a week ago and were slightly ahead of the same period a year ago, giving dealers here the im pression that the market Is normal here for thla season aa regards. supply. . KIDNAPED CHILD RECOVERED Olrl at Kd Dtuk, K, J., , Abd'ieted i llama, Lincoln; steward, E, E. Bennatt Seven Weeks lg Found In Yard ' Lincoln; pathologist, L. B. Ptllsbury, Lln l Ham raroniclsui ' I coin. RED BANK. N. J.. Dec 10. Four-year-cld Mary Pettllo Is at her home today after a disappearance since October ' 2 last. The child disappeared on that date. Her father believed she was kidnaped. The police were notified, but no clue was forth coming. Frank Petlllo, the child's lather, was entering the yard of his home early last night, when he saw what looked like a bundle behind the fence. Investigation showed It to be his daughter, apparently dead. He brought the body into the house. There he discovered she was alive. This morning he notified the poUce. Petlllo is fairly weTl-to-do and demands for money from Black Handera have bean made on him recently. COCKRELL WILL BE RETIRED Mlseoarlaa Will Not Be Meappolnted Member of Commerce Com mission. WASHINGTON. Dec. 10-The report which has been current for some time that President Taft would not reappoint former Senator Francis M. Cockrell of Missouri as a member of the Interstate Commeroe commission took more definite form today when the president told a delegation of Missouri congressmen, who called In Mr. Cockrell'a behalf, that he was afraid the hard work before the commission would prove too much of a strain on a man of Mr. Cockrelle age. Mr. Cockrell's term expires December 81. If he were reap pointed It would be for a term of seven years. The Missouri delegation was headed by Representative Lioya, wno ineu spokesman. as I IVC STOCK RATE SUSPENDED Uii- w Adraaeo riled by Northwestern I Olher Hailroada Held I n Until April Tea. n4 W 4 SinNfiTOV, Dec. 10. A freight tariff filed with the Interstate Commerce com- mlsoion by the Chicago & Northwestern Railway company and participated in V' 110 other carriers Increasing the ratra on the shipment of lle stock between th. Missouri and Mississippi rivers was sus- pendrd today by order of the commission on the ground that the proposed rates ftp- peared unreasonable The new rates who to have become effective today, but by th terms of tho erder they are supm.la un til April 10. l'.Ul. BRITISH ELECTION RETURNS CoalltlonUt Msie Lead of Korty ftevra, with Kearly Five) Hun dred Member P.terted. LONDON. Dec. 10.-In the election re turns so far complete tonight the govern ment coalition has a lend over the opposi tion of forty-seven seats tn the new parlia ment. - The atato of the parties this evening is: Government coalition: Libers la. 178; na tionalists, independent nationalists, 7; labor members. SJ. Totnl r.l. Oppottlon: Unionists, r:arthiuake la t aha. HAVANA. IV-c. . .ntUo, Cuba, capi tal of the province of that name. shaken at o'vlock tonlht by a heavy iUi.UaW sin.cn. There waa great alarm among the Inhabitsin's. but so far no dam age baa beeu rofortod. Editor of The Bee Visits in New York; Calls on Roosevelt Lunches with Jude Alton B. Parker. Head of Legislative Department of Civic Federation. Fr"m a Stiff Correspondent.) V A tilll vnTrtv Ti r t- in fcn..i.! an "Political Reiiospert and Prospect." Mr. TtoTWatpr al.'o hnd a most Interest Ins Interview with Mr. Hnwland. editor of the Outlook, who showed Mr. P.isewater " ja beautiful volume of prep clipping, car- of a Few Week: toon- pictures and comment on Colonel Hi osevelt's w estern trip during the last ca-npnlgn. This volume treats the Omaha daillta mmt liberally, the matter colic ted roveilnic ni'iny pmtes. While traveling In gunh an atmosphere, Mr. Honewater In order to make the con trast as nhqrr as possible had luncheon with Alton H. Parker and the special com mittee on state orgnlzatlrn for promotion of uniform state lea1lntlon. Mr. Porker bj ing piej-Hcnt of the legislative branch of tho civic fe-lerntlnn. The editor of The Bee is chalrn an of the Nebraska council of the civic ftileratlon. Represent itlv Klnkald today Introduced a bill to appropriate 8r.O0.O0O for the re survey of the public lands In the state of Nebraska. This survey Is necessary'to en able homeitetrters to know whete their lire run. In erecting fences and making Im provements generally. Should this bill be enacted It would enable the corps of sur veyors now enraged In field work In Ne braska to be Increased at least fourfold. Repiwentatrva Hubbard of Sioux City will leave Washington tomorrow to spend a few weeks In Iowa. Attorney General Mullen and Special Counsel Albert, representing the state of Nebraska In tho bank guaranty cases, left Washington last night, as did John L.. Web ster of counsel for the banks. The following army orders have been Is sued: Captain James D. Fife, Medical corps, upon arrival at Pan Francisco will proceed to Fort Slocum, N. Y., for duty. Leaves of absent e: Captain Morton O. Battle, Const Artillery corps, time extended fifteen days: Captain Rrtbert J. Maxey, Twenty-fourth Infantry, three months. Gov.-Elect Aldrich Announces More Appointments Dr. John Hay Will Be Superintenden of Asylum at Lincoln Dr. S. R. Jones Penitentiary Physician. DAVID CITY, Dec, 10. (Special Tele gram. Governor-elect Aldrlch announced this, morning that he would moke, the fol lowing appointments: IJncoln Asylum Superintendent. Dr. John Hsy, Lincoln; first physician. Dr. Wll- Hastings Asylum Superintendent, Dr. William Kern, Hastings; steward, George James. Hastings. - Norfolk Asylum Superintendent, Dr. An. drew Johnson, Omaha; steward, W. J. Gutxmer, Columbua Bookkeeper at Beatrice School T. E. Stewart, Beatrice. Industrial School at Kearney Assistant superlntedent, Fred 8.' Wallace, Ravenna, Penitentiary Physician, Dr. L. B. Jonus, Amherst. Deputy Oil Inspectors Second district, Lawrence Donohue, Omaha; Third district. F. R. Neia, Nellgh; Sixth district, F. A. Wlsner, Lexington. Assistant Deputy Fire Warden John N. Trouton, South Omaha. Fish Warden W. J. O'Brien. South Bend. Fire Inspector Fred J. Buck, Wlsner. Assistant Game Warden Isaac King, Su perior. Dr. Williams, Stewart and King are dem ocrats. Governor-elect Aldrlch In announc ing his appointments said that he had con sulted Dr. Coulter and Dr. Young of Omaha, Dr. S. C. Beatty and Dr. Thomas E. Green, all distinguished alienists, re garding the professional and personal qualifications of candidates for offices in the usylumn for the insane, and that men selected are well qualified to fill positions to which they will be appointed. GERMAN SOCIALISTS WARNED Chancellor Bays Radicals Will Be Held Responetble for Excesses Resaltlnar from TearhlnsTS. BERLIN, Dec. 10. Discussing Interna tional politics In the Reichstag today. Chancellor Von Bethmann-HoMweg. wsrned the more radical of the exponents of oclallam that they would be he! count for eiicesses resulting fr Id to ac- from their Uuclilngs. ARGUMENTS IN FLEGE TRIAL Murder Case Will Go to the Jury Thls Afternoon at Tkree O'clock. j ., poNCA. Dec. 10. (Special Telegram.) Tne Btate and defense In the Flege murder tJ,(aI regte(i their cases last night at jj.piock. Arguments are in progress today $n(1 the ce wm g0 to the Jury this after- .lt 3 0-clock. Crew of Wre :ked Steamer Marooned Thirty.-Two Hours OSWEGO. N. T., Dec. I Marooned for thirty-two hours on the bleak shores of the Galloup island, the crew of the steamer John Sharplesa was rescued today by the steamer Hinkley of this city. The John Sharp!es, with twenty-one men and ere woman aboard, and bound from" Ogdi nsbuig for Chicaso, laden with 70.000 bushels of corn as overtaken yes terday by a snowstorm on Its last trip this season. The gale drove the stemor upon the rocky shores of the islands la 1 1 deit! of night. When the vessel struck giant waves broke over It and flooded the boiler room, extin guishing the fires and leaving the vessel GRAND JURY LEAK IN LAND1S COURT? Charles F. De Woody Charged with "Tipping Off Federal Lccrets by Attorney John F. B. own. WOMAN FAILS TO BRING EVIDENCE j Witness Savs She Fears Documents Would Be "Exposed." ALLEGES PERSONAL EXPERIENCE Mrs. Aileen Christopher Tells of Her self Receiving Information. INQUIRY IS ORDERED AT ONCE Head of llnreno of Investigation of Department of Justice Accused of Cilvlnar Information to Tlrlek Trnst. CHICAGO. Dec. 10. Charges that secrets of the federal grand Jury room were being "tipped off" to Interested parties, made before Judge Kenesaw M. Indls of the United States district court, caused him to suspend a case he was hearing and de mand that the charges be sustained at once. The man accused of being tho "tip ster," is Charles F. DeWoody, division su perlntendant of the bureau of Investigation of the Department of Justice. The accusation was made by John F. Brown, counsel of Mrs. Aileen Christopher, a witness against the alleged brick trust. She was in court to show why she had refused to bring certain evidence and docu ments before the grand Jury aa required by the United States district attorney. Her answer, by ner attorney, was mn nt feared the evidence wourd be exposed to the persons interested, and DeWoody was the man she accused. Mrs. Christopher testified that DeWoody came to her at Portage, Wis., to get cer tain Information and, while there, told her of the secret Information the RTand Jury had obtained, which later resulted In the Indictment of former Cashier Fitsgerald of the federal sub-treasury on charges of the theft of 8173,000. Judge Londis directed that this be stricken from the record. Attorney Brown said: "The reason we feared to give the grand Jury this information was that other testimony before the grand Jury had been tipped off to the Brick trust by the head of hie department making the investigation." United States District Attorney Edwin Sims asked if he was the department head referreed to. Mr. Brown assured him he was not and amplified his first statement by saying: De Woody Demands Inquiry. "It Is not your department, Mr. Slma; it la the Investigating department whose head I referred to." DeWoody eyrang to his feet and de clared: "I am the head of the Investigating de partment, seemingly - "referred - to; your honor, and I wish to say I court the fullest Investigation of the charges." "Yes," continued Attorney Brown, "Mr. DeWoody is -the department head I ' referred- to. I-will show, the court he not only exposed the secrets I have referred to, but other secrets of the grand Jury room, those pertaining to the Fltxgerald case and other matters." Attorney Brown also announced he had a letter from Attorney General Wlckcr sham, advising him not to give the evi dence to the grand Jury, but J edge Landls said such instructions had no weight In his court. Charles DeWoody has been in charge of the Chicago division of the bureau of Investigation of the Department of Justice about five weeks. Engineers Are Ready to Strike Ultimatum to Be Presented Monday Backed by Ninety-Five Per cent of Men. CHICAGO, Dee. 10. The Brotherhood of Railroad Engineers will present its strike ultimatum to the Railroad Man agers' association on Monday, backed by the approval of more than 95 per cent of the 83,000 engineers who are members, according to Warren S. Stone, president of the brotherhood, today. After months of negotiations the de mands of the engineers now are some 7 per cent higher than the railroad man agers are willing to grant. If the de mands are not acceded to a strike that will close the throttle of every railroad locomotive west, south and north of Chi cago, may be called within five hours, it was intimated. OKLAHOMA CAPITAL ROW ENDS Senate Committee Announces that rttlsens of Oklahoma City Have Met Conditions. OKLAHOMA CITY. Dec. 10. -Adjustment f the capital location row In Oklahoma eems to be in eight. For several days he matter has been held up pending the T'trnlshlng of a heavy guarantee by the .'tizens of Oklahoma City. Today the senate committee on capital location re- 'urted that at this morning's session satis- ! 'actory assurance from the citizens had j -en received and that the committee would be ready to report on the bills Monday. The senate adjourned until Mon- day. helpless. Mrs. Frank Russell, wife of the first mate, who was aboard as a passen ger, was at first greatly alarmed, but dis played fortitude during the trying hours that followed. The hatches were secured and hand lamps lighted to keep the crew from freezing. They remalntd In the cabin all night, hoping that by the following day the seas aould have abated and that they would be a'ulo to secure shelter. Thla condition continued until early this morning when the lifeboat was manned a.id a party. Including Mrs. Russell, was taken ashore. As the boat was returning for a second load the Hinckley waa sighted. . K V S A. ' ; III i In in II l! ' MT 3ALL FALL GRIDIRON CLUB DINNER Quips and Jests at Expense of Poli ticians in Capital. MISS DEMOCRACY REIGNING QUEEN She Appears in Band Wagon in Full . Regalia, aud the Democrats -As Introduced One' by One to Meet Tbelr Fate. WASHINGTON, Dee. 10.-Polltlcs, past, present and future, was the dominant note at the . annual fall dinner of the Gridiron club tonight President Taft was there with members of his cabinet; vice President Sherman; senators and repre sentatives In congress; latent presidential possibilities; newly-elected governors of states and men of mark In various posi tions and of all shades of political belief and ambassadors and ministers plenipo tentiary of foreign countries who were numbered among the club's guests heard with wonder the good natured grilling ad ministered by the newspaper men to their victims. With tableaux and comedy sketch and topical song, in clever speech and moving picture, the incidents of the last campaign were recalled and grim fore cast made of the future. And right wittily and with many a acln tlllatlng thrust of oratory did the objects of this attention retort upon their tor mentors. Forgotten for the moment were party differences; victor and vanquished Joined hand and glove in repeumg me attack of their critics. Cannon's Fate. Clearing the way for the incoming democ racy, "Uncle joe cannon w ewcyv u.u. and in a skit embodying a parody upon the Mikado he was sentenced to decapita tion. It was left to him to select his exe cution. Vlvtor Muraoca, ne o'xiwm too hasty" while ha feared Senator La Follotte would talk him to aeam. man he selected as of strong arm and sure an old friend, was "Ko Ko" Long- worth. Just in the nick of t'me President Taft in the person of the Mikado, stayed the iand of the executioner and commuted "Uncle Joe's" eentence to staying in con gress, as a helplesa minority and to being chained to his seat during the debate on the house rules. The catchy chorus or tne Mlkado'a song ran: My smile Is still serene, As Plainly may oe scon. No matter how they may jump tne irau and batter tne oiu macmii, fr I am aulte content. To do the work that'e meant. For a big American presiaent, American president. A furious cracking of whips and clank ing of chains, and roars of "Oeddap" and (Continued on Page Two.) For Christmas. . The want ad pages arc particularly in teresting to Christ mas shoppers. Before you start out on your shopping tour today look over the column "For Christ mas" on the first Want Ad page.. There you will find a large number of Omaha merchants who are offering suggestions of things which they have suitable for Christmas pres ents. Many little things out of the ordinary are mentioned there. IqujC. J j - Coming and Going in Omaha M 11,1 II. . J t.rt iUTJt.TT!L IH. VST S:---rZ.Y- t ?-.---. if ViP OIT Events of the weeK, as Viewed oy luc Grain Elevator at Beaver City . Struck by Meteor Building Containing- Two Thousand Bushels of Grain Set Fire by Heav- . enly Visitor and Destroyed. BEAVER CITT, Neb., Dec. 10. (Special Telegram.) The large grain elevator which Is owned by C." M? Linn of Hum boldt, Neb., burned here last night, and was an entire loss together with 1,100 bushels of corn and 800 bushels of wheat. The elevator waa situated so far from the water mains that the department was un able to get but one stream of water to It, and could not get the fire under con trol. . Mrs. A. C. Hardin and Mrs. W. E. Hor ton, who live short distances from the elevator site, both claim that It was struck by a meteor.' They were looking in the direction of the building a moment before the fire, when a luminous ball shot down out of the sky, striking the cupola, and instantly the elevator burst Into flames seemingly from the top to the bottom. As aoon as the ruins have cooled a search will be made for the heavenly wanderer. Writ of Habeas Corpus for Porter Charlton aanwnnBBB m Case Will Come Up for Argument Be fore Judge Rellstab in Federal Court December 19. TRENTON, N. J.. Dec. 10. Jude Rell stab in the United States circuit court to day granted a writ of habeas corpus In the case of Porter Charlton, who la ac cused of having killed his wife, Mary Scott Castle Charlton, In Italy. The court also granted a writ of certiorari for the bring ing of the case before him on December 19. The application in Charlton's behalf was made by his father, Paul Charlton. The purpose of the proceedings was to prevent the extradition of Charlton to Italy for trial. The petition aeta up that the treaty be tween Italy and the United Statea for the mutual extradition of persona charged with certain crimes, under the construction placed upon it by the Italian government, does not extend to those persons who are citizens of the asylum country. It Is also claimed that there was no legal proof of Porter Charlton's crime, and Judge Blair of the Hudson county court, sitting as a federal examining magistrate, refused to hear testimony that had been offered to estabUsh the fact that Porter Charlton at the time he killed hie wife waa Insane. The argument on the granting of the writ of certiorari will take place before Judge Rellstab on December 19. Mean whtle Charlton will remain In custody in Hudson county. Justice Harlan Completes Tnirty-Three Years on Bench WASHINGTON, Dec. .-John Marshall Harlan, presiding Justice of the supreme court of the United States, today la do ing wt-at only three other men have done in the history of the court. He la celebrat ing the close of thirty-three years service on that bench. On December 10, UTT. Justice Harlan took his place tn the bench of the supreme court. He was thon years of age. Not only have all the men who were on the bench during the first years of his service pulsed away, but Justice Harlan'e ser vice Is now twice as long as that of any other member of the present court. Of the alxty-two men who have eat on thla PAgDE ROTOTTDA CHURCH BAZAARS x.ce t Arlist. I HIGH PRICE FROM HIGH LIVING Adam Bede Says There Are More Chauffeurs Than Sherman Had Men. WORDS OF PRAISE FOR TAFT Saya Me la tne Wisest Man to Bit In the President's Chair In Many Ymr To Few People j ! . Tota. ' "President Taft is ona of the wisest men who have been In office in thla country for years," said J. Adam Bede, ex-congressman from Minnesota, and well known aa one of the readiest speakers and qulckeat Wltted men of the session In which he took part. Mr. Bede was in Omaha between trains. He Is enjoying a lecture tour and Is going from here through Iowa, and then down to Washington to "see some of the boye In the government" ,' -My upholstered friend, aa I call the president, accomplished more in the way of legislation in the first few months of his tour than many presidents have done In all their service. He Is not a politician. He wouldn't go across the street and kick a yelow dog to be re-elected and he makes no effort to keep himself advertised. As far as advertisement is concerned, you know, very few papers print the whole truth from Washington; they confine them selves to what is in keeping with their own business Interests. The Bee la one of the papers that prints the truth without re gard to policy. Some papera are big enough to do that. Taft Works Qoletly. 'But Mr. Taft doesn't caU In a bunch of newspaper men and get them worked into a fury before he wanta to do something. He goes about it quietly, and consequently, he gets little notice for it. "The present high price, that have caused the present political situation, are the very natural result or mgn living. There are more automobile chauffeurs In thla country now than there were soldiers In Sherman's army. The men who are acting aa unneces sary servants might Just as well be off fighting somewhere aa to be engaged in that. During a war we do a little de struction, but what ' does the damage is that we withdraw so many men from active work. Well, luxurloua living doea the same thing and has the same effect It caui high prices. Naturally, the fact that the production of gold ia doubling every ten years or so, also affects prices, but luxur lee are the moat important cause. "The high prices came at the time of the tariff revision, so every one decided that the tariff revision waa the cause of it, and the party In power had to Buffer. Some men thought they would merely hurt the leaders, but they succeeded tn defeat ing the party. Vote Waa Very light. "We probably got the lightest vote this year that has been registered in years. In all the states you will find that the success ful candidates received only a small num- (Contlnued on Second Page.) bench, Justice Harlan haa been an asso ciate of twenty-six. The three members of the court whose services exceeded that of Justice Harlan were Chief Justice John Marshall, Justice Stephen J. Field and Justice Joseph Story. Both Marshall and Field served more than thirty-four years. Several months more than T7 yeara of age. Justice Harlan waa performing today his proportion of the work of the court. Besides disposing of the business incum bent upon him as senior associate Justice during the vacancy In the chief Justiceship, Justice Harlan haa written six of the thirty-three opinions announced by the court thla term NATION NUMBERS 101,100000 SOULS Continental United States, Within Own Borders, Has Nintty-One Million Inhabitants. TWENTY-ONE PER CENT INCREASE Growth of Country Greater Than Anticipated by Statisticians. WIDE DISPARITY AMONG STATES Five Per Cent Decrease to One Hun dred and Twenty Increase. IMMIGRATION IS PRIME CAUSE (roup of Western Commonwealths fthoiv (Intra IlanalnK from Thirty Per Cent I nwards Tin Marked Hush to the titles. , . WASHINGTON. Pec. 10-ln the Unite,! States and all Its possessions, the stars and stripes protect 101.1i).O0O souls. This Is the official estl'vato of the United State Bureau of the Census, announced today, In con nection with the population statistics for the rountry, ax enumerated In the thir teenth decennial census. It Includfs tho rhlllprtnos, Samoa. Guam, Hawaii. Alaska and the Panima canal xone. Within Its borders on the North American continent, exclusive of Alaska, the United ' States has a population of 91,7t.2t;! inhabi tants. In the last ten years the statea of rhe union had an Increase of population of 15,577,M1. which amounts to SI per cent over the WO figures. Since the first census was taken in 1790, tho country has grown twenty-five times as large, the population then having been 3.920. 214. slightly larger than the present population of Texas. The growth of the country was greater than has been anticipated by the exrert etatlclons, who have closely watched the progress of the country's population. Statistics of the population of the four states, announcement of which was with held until the country's total population was announced, follow: Georgia. 2,fiO.l21, nn Increase of 392.790, or 17.7 per cent over 2.216.S31 In 1100, when the Increase over 190 was 378,978, cr 20. per cent Montana, 376,053, an Increase of 132.724. or M.5 per cent over S43.329 In l!i00, when the Increase over 1890 was 100,405. or 70.3 per cent. Washington, 1.141.M0, an Increase of 623 887, or 120.4 per cent over 518,103 In 1900, when the increase over 1SK0 was 1C0.S71, or 5.0 per cent. Wisconsin. 2,333,800, sn Increase of 264, SIS. or 12.7 rer cent over 2,069,012 In 19.0. whn tho Increase over 1S90 waa 375,712, or tZ.t per cent. The number of persons in the military and naval section of the United States " stationed abroad and on naval vessels Is K6.60R. Dnrand Hives Rrnaona. , In a statement explaining the Increase of the population of the continental Vlilted State to ' M.72,2e0. Director Durand at tributes the growth largely to greater net aaaiuona through linmlgraUon. He finds ' a wider disparity in the growth of the dif ferent statea in the last decade than for auy other. The range is from a decrease of 8.1 per cent in Iowa, to an Increase of 120 per cent in Washington. The country," he eaya. "is plainly marked off in broad groups of statea. so- cording to the dlfferenoe in the increase. The statea showing the loveat Increase, falling below 10 per cent, are, five In the great central section of the country. Iowa. Missouri, Kentucky, Indiana and Tennessee; cne tnree northern New Enkland states, Maryland and Delaware. "The statea ehowing the next highest In crease, between 10 and 20 per cent Ha adjacent to those showing the liwest and Include, In the middle weat, Ohio, Michi gan, Wisconsin, Illinois. Minnesota, Ne braska and Kansas and on the other hand a great belt of southern statea, irginla. North Carolina, South Carolina. Alabama and Mississippi. "States which ahow an Inorease from 20 to 30 per cent are, for the most part, the great manufacturing statea, Including Mas sachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut New York, Pennsylvania and Weat Virginia. The only other states increasing between 20 and 30 per cent are Arkansas and Texas. Ktatea Showing- Largreat Galna. The atates which ahow an increase x,' litni wnn me exception of New Jersey and Florlad, all in the west and make up a belt comprising one-third of the area of the United States. South Da kota, Utah and Colorado had increases between 30 and 660 per cent, while North Dakota, Wyoming, Oregon, Nevada. Call-, fornla. New Mexico and .Arixona increased; between 50 and 100 per cent; and Oklahoma, Idaho and Washington, more than 100 per cent "The Increase In the ten yeara. 1900 to 1910, waa greater than In the previous decade in . twenty-alx of the forty-nine sttaea, fifteen of these being west of the Mississippi river. , "The greatest change in growth is found In the three Paclflo coast statea and Ne vada and New Mexico, all of which grew faster in the last ten years than in the. one preceding. Population by Divisions. "The population of the nine geographic divisions is: , New England 6,fcM.l Middle Atlantic 19 315 sstj K.ast North Central ..ia,'i6i),'ii2l West North Central ll.tkf7.9Jl South Atlantlo lj i(n Kast South Central 8,40,il West South Central 7M M4 Mountain X33 M7 Pacific '. 4.1W.80I "The population of the northern section Is 66,767,115; southern section, 29,339,330; weatern . section, . 825, 821. "The per cents of Increase from 1900 to 1910 in tlve geographic divisions are; New England 17.J Middle Atlantic 25 0 Kaat North Central H West North Central 13.6 South Atlantic tg.fj Kast South Central 11.4 ' West South (Vnlrai 91 r Mountain f Pacific 7g.5 "The Increase waa 17.7 per cent In the northern aectlon, 19.8 per cent In the south ern section and 6.S ptr cent in the western section, "The fact that the Increaae for the coun try as a whole was greater from 10 to 1910 than In the preceding decade was due entirely to the added growth In the middle Atlantic, mountain and Pacific divisions. In all six of the other divisions, the In crease In the last decade was less than In the prevloua one." Mr. Durand expresses the opinion that r