yum 0 CLOUDS l!l SIGHT COLONEL GEORGE HARVEY SAYS COUNTRY ALL RIGHT. THE WRITER SEES HO CLOUD "t (Sr WU-. WE"3"" Census Returns Show Lure of City jcooo to MuHfyAWaC WASHINGTON. The census bureau has made public figures concern ing enough localities to indicate cer tain interesting trends in the growth Df American population. What stands out first is, of course, the general in crease in population all over the coun try. While this growth la perhaps more striking in the middle west, or even in the far west, the east is little behind those sections. Increases in city population rarely fall below 20 j per cent, for the last ten years. Often the increase is considerably in excess of 50 per cent. This growth has been expected, but ' there will probably be some surprise to find how far the growth of the cities exceeds that of the rural dis tricts. Here, save in a few localities, there is an increase, but generally it Is below ten per cent. Some spot in Illinois may mark the center of population for another ten years. It is worth while to emphasize Uncle Sam Watching Aeroplane Men THE experts in both the army and A the navy are watching with keen interest the development of the heavler-than-air craft. While the of ficials are not willing to say much pub licly about the possibilities of the use of airships In time of war, they are saying privately that the probability is that when the next great war comes the airship will play a more effective part than battleships, land batteries, or great masses of troops. The prediction is freely made by army and navy officials in private that not a dollar will ever be spent in forti fying for the protection of the Panama canal. They have arrived at this con clusion because they think they fore see that within a few years the airsliip will be brought to a stage of perfec tion that will enable It auicklv to de stroy any rortincatlon3 tnat might be erected along the route of the canal. Congress at the recent session de clined to appropriate money for the Coy Curls Are Coming in From China TW7 TAKE OFF THFrt CURLS QUICK I TELL YE -TA K 'FM off they crn FM IN CHINA VQG QH IT I ) ' VICE-CONSUL General Stuart J. Ful ler of Hongkong sheds light on a problem which has vexed the brain of man for many moons where all the hair comes from which goes to make up the wide expanse of coiffure which adorns the head of woman. Much as he would like to believe that all womankind has suddenly come Into the secret possessed by the Seven Sutherland Sisters, detached wisps, curls and occasional plaits, to say noth ing of startling variation in texture, has forced upon the most unobservant suspicion that she bedecks herself with a foreign product. Our represen tative at Hongkong clinches the evi dence with brutal statistics. He gives the following data of the quantities and value of hair shipped from that port in the last three 'ears: Overhauling the TIE treasury building is undergoing another overhauling, which this time costs $180,000. The renovators have been at work on tha Jreasurv building for a good many years. Not very much has been done to the inside cf the great pile of masonry, where the United States money is kept, but more or less work is all the time going on on the outside. All of the original sandstone or soft limestone that faced the outside of the building has been at last removed, and granite has been put In its place. The principal change that will now be made will be to eliminate the huge granite entrance steps on the Fifteenth street side. Several new passenger elevators will be installed. Lockers v I II be-furnlshed sufficient for all of the clerks; the money-handling divisions will be segregated on the ground floor; supplies will be shipped from the west entrance instead cf the 1 J fejLA mice: ( the word "may," because there is not available at this time much definite information on which to make specula tion as to where the center of popula tion will be. The remarkable increase In the pop ulation of Oklahoma must be taken into consideration in a speculation as to where the center of population is likely to "light." A fact worth bearing in mind is that the increases in popu lation in the east particularly have been In the larger cities. The center of population has moved almost due westward since 1790, when It was at a point 23 miles cast of Balti more. From 1730 to 1800 it moved almost due west to a point IS miles west of Baltimore. In the next ten years, from 1800 to 1810, it moved westward and slightly southward to a point about forty miles northwest by west of Washington. During the ten years between 1890 and 1900 the "center" moved west ward a little over 14 miles and south ward a little les3 than three miles, and halted at a point six miles southeast of Columbus, Ind. This movement be tween 1890 and 1900 was the smallest in 100 years. The "center" will have to travel something like 70 miles to get beyond the borders of Indiana this year. fortification of the canal. No public reason for this failure to make an ap propriation was ever announced, but it is now pretty well understood that the experts in both the war and navy .departments suggested that it would be well to defer action until the gov ernment understands better what to expect of the airship. Officials in the army and navy de partments are greatly impressed with the performances of Glenn Curtiss with his aeroplane at Atlantic City re cently. Those performances were not under the auspices of either the war department or the navy department, but agents of each of the fighting arms were present, and were deeply im pressed with what Curtiss was able to do. They have reported to their re spective departments that from a height that would have protected him reasonably well from a fire directed at him from either land or water, he dropped small articles on boats and on objects on land with remarkable pre cision. Some of the experts from the de partments who saw the Curtiss per formances came back firmly convinced that if war should come on tomorrow the aeroplane would be able to do de structive work. Ypar. Pounds. Value. 1907 6R.132 $ 14,8S0 1908 207.2S3 92,209 lSOJ, 445,733 327,559 Note how the price has soared. In 1907 hair was worth only about twenty-five cents a pound, wholesale, and we imported only 5G.132 pounds of it, while in 1909 we brought in 445,733 pounds, with the price at something more than seventy cents. Such a rate of growth in face of so rapid an in crease in price is almost unprecedent ed in other lines of commerce and is another illustration that woman wants what she wants when she wants it and is going to have it expense be hanged! Our diplomatic representative leaves us in the dark as to what woman in China is doing for hair. If the trade keeps on, the will certainly be bald in course of time. He pays a compli ment, however, to the geniu3 of the Chinese artist by remarking that "Chi nese hair is treated at home in various ways so as to match almost any tex ture desired," leaving us to conclude that the diversity of color not infre quently noted on the same head is due to lack of circumspection on the part of American women. Treasury Building Fifteenth street; frieze windows will be placed on 'the third floor, and a general adjustment of bureaus and divisions will be made to facilitate the work. The treasury department has been seriously overcrowded for a num ber of years. One of the very first im provements was the elimination from the building of the branch priuu office, with its combustible inks, oils, etc. With the great Fifteenth street steps removed, a fine entrance at grade will be provided for the em ployes, and a count will be kept of the people entering and leaving the build ing, which at the present time seems to be impossible. At the present time the employes are obliged to carry their clothing, hats, rubbers, umbrel las and everything of that character into their working rooms, so that lock ers are imperative. It will certainly be $180,000 mighty well expended, for in the present condition of the treas ury department it is impossible to keep It clean or to run it on business ike methods with departments of the various bureaus widely separated, so ciiit the chief of one of these spends most of his time traversing the corri dors in his attempt to keep track of hla clerk3 and of his work. Their Minds in President and Great Warrior Who Thought Alike, Garfield, After Political Victory, and the Duke of Wellington, After f Waterloo, Used the Same Words. "There were many Btrange coinci dences in connection with my associa tion with President Garfield as a mem ber of his cabinet," said Garfield's postmaster general, Thomas L. James, recently. "But I sometimes think that the most interesting of them occurred during an afternoon I spent wtth Glad stone at his country home at Hawar den. "I went to the national Republican cosvention of 1880, held in Chicago, as a spectator. My personal impression was that either Blaine or John Sher man would b nominated for presi dent. I did not see how It was pos sible for Senator Conkling and the others who were leading the battle In favor of Grant's third nomination to succeed. When I, heard General Gar field's magnificent address. In which he placed John Sherman In nomination- for the presidency, It seemed to me that in all the United States you could find no Republican more worthy of the nomination and election than Garfield himself. That, however, was only a passing thought, although, after Garfield was nominated, I re called the vivid impression he made upon me by his address. "Within a few hours after his nom ination, Garfield's friend, Mr. Henry, whom Garfield afterwards appointed United States marshal for the District of Columbia, called upon me, and asked me If it would be convenient for me In the course of an hour or two to call upon General Garfield. "'Has he asked to see me?' I ven tured to say. " Yes ; in fact, I have come directly from him to you, was the reply. J "Of course, I felt highly honored by the invitation, and in the course of half an hour was heartily received by Garfield. He had apartments in tho old Grand Pacific hotel. He led me to the eofa after I had congratulated him, sat down by my side, and en tered upon a very chatty and cordial Afraid of "Innocents Abroad" Why Its Publishers First Accept ed Twain's Work. Readers and Directors of Company Rejected It, but President Bliss Was Sure Public Would Like Book. The late Charles Dudley Warner, who collaborated with Mark Twain in writing "The Gilded Age," In which the immortal Colonel Mulberry Sell ers was introduced to the world, told me thi3 story of how the book that gave Mark Twain a permanent place among American humorists came to be accepted by its first publishers. "Out of a series of newspaper letters that he wrote while touring the Orient Mark Twain built his book, 'Innocents Abroad,' " said Mr. Warner, whose fame as a humorist of the re fined type lives after him. "The book completed, It looked for a time as though its author would be unable to find a publisher for It. Finally probably In a sort of desperation, but I do not know for a certainty how he came to do it Mark Twain submitted the manuscript to a -firm of Hartford, Conn., publishers, whose productions were sold exclusively by subscription; and looking back on it now it does seem the height of audacity for a com paratively unknown author of books to contemplate having a book of the extraordinary character of 'Innocents Abroad sold by subscription. "Well, in the course of time the manuscript of 'Innocents Abroad' was carefully studied by the salaried read ers of the corporation and then re ported upon very unfavorably a cir cumstance probably due to the fact that the work was along entirely orig inal lines; and in addition, I have al ways suspected that a great deal of its humor was not appreciated by the readers. "With their report to the board of directors the readers turned over the manuscript of the book. There fol lowed a lively discussion among the directors as to the propriety of ac cepting or rejecting the manuscript upon the report of the readers. Some of the directors criticised severely certain things in the book, and .all, bo far as I have been able to learn,1 were at one period in great doubt about th w?dom of either accepting or reject Ik.j it, 'but finally, by a practically unanimous opinion the board decide! a)t to publish the bock. "The president of the company at that time was a Mr. Bliss, a quiet yjan whose face never revealed the real sense of humor that its owner possessed, though It did stamp Lim as Same Groove conversation. He was perfectly nat ural In his demeanor. He seemed to be unaffected by his triumph, and I even thought I detected a hint of eith er weariness or sadness in his tone or manner. , "By and by I felt that it wad time for me to go, and as I prepared to take my leave I congratulated Garfield once more. He took my hand In his, and this tim there was a sad note In his voice as he said: 'I am now dis covering that next to the hour of de feat, the saddest hour is that of vic tory. I pondered long over that strange remark, but I know now that in the moment of victory there often cornea an overwhelming sense of the responsibilities it carries. "Some years later I was visiting in England and was invited wtth my family and one or two American friends to a tea and lawn party at Hawarden. It was then that I first Retort That Remark Vigorous That Put'f Quietus on New York Senator. Cold, Caustic Rebuke Received by the Now Yorker . When He Was Gloating' Over His Defeat of Arthur. When Roscoe Conkling and Thomas C. Piatt broke with President Garfield and resigned from the senate of the United State, they expected Vice President Chester A. Arthur, who also hailed from New York, to join with them in attempting to persuade the New York state legislature to re-elect them as senators, as their state's in dorsement of their opposition to Presi dent Garfield. General Arthur, how ever, felt that he could not with pro priety take any part in the attempt of the ex-senators to seek vindication; in fact, he did not interfere in their behalf In the slightest way, and so there began the Conkllng-Platt ani mosity towards , the vice-president which was intensified after General Arthur became president. It was intense political hatred of his old-time associate that caused a keen business man. He waited until his directors had agreed to reject Mark Twain'a manuscript, and then delivered a little speech. "'Well, gentlemen,' he said, 'you have all had an opportunity to ex press your opinion aa to whether or not our company should publish this work, and your collective decision, based upon your individual views, seems to be decidedly against the publication of it. Now that you have had your opportunity to publish thi3 book, and have rejected it, I want to say to you that I shall immediately enter into negotiations with Mark Twain for the purpose of publishing the book on my own personal account. The humor of it is new, I'll admit, but I am positive that it will be cordially welcomed by the American people for this reason, if for no other. To me the . reading of the manuscript has been a delight. I am willing to risk a considerable amount of my per sonal means to publish it, for I am satisfied that it will prove a most profitable venture for me. That is all, gentlemen.' "For a few moments after Presi dent Bliss finished speaking there wa3 considerable embarrassment in that directors' meeting," continued Mr. Warner. "Then one of the board spoke up. 'Why,' he said, 'if the president of this company Is of that opinion and sees a fair profit in the publishing of this work, I think tho company ought to publish it' " 'It is- just as you say, gentlemen,' said the president. "So they decided to publish 'Inno cents Abroad and entered into the necessary negotiations with Mark Twain. Everybody knows what the re sult was. It was the bit of the time. It sold like hot cakes, and I have al ways believed it to bo true that Mark Twain's royalty in the first two or three years after its publication ag gregated $100,000." (Copyright. 1910. by E. J. Edward3.) Conclusive. The girl with the blonde hair and the dark girl with the dimple were making various purchases preparatory to their summer vacation. When It came to bathing suits there was a disagreement. The girl with the blonde hair wanted to select a de cidedly abbreviated costume, and the dark girl with the dimple was trying j to aissuacie ner. "You are not tall enough to wear it," remonstrated the dark girl. "Don't you know a skirt that end 3 above the knee3 makes a g'.rl look shorter?" "I know it makes the men look longer," Insinuated tho little blende. And that settled the matter. met Gladstone. He took me through the park, pointed out Its beauties, es pecially the great trees, talked tariff for a while, and then asked me to tell him something about General Gar field something of his personal char acteristics and whether it was true that Garflejd was all his mature life a student of the classics Virgil, Homer and the other great writers of an tiquity.. "Mr. Gladstone was immensely In terested when I told him of Garfield's habit of reading a page of some classic every morning while he dressed. Then, some association of ideas bring ing the incident to mind, I repeated what Garfield had said to me la Chi cago when I congratulated him ,the second time upon his nomination for the presidency. "Gladstone was clearly startled. He stepped for an instant in his walk and turned his great, unfathomablo eyes upon me. 'Did he say that? ho ex claimed. 'Why, that was exactly what the Duke of Wellington said after Wa terloo!"' (Copyright, 1910. by E. J. Edwards.) Silenced Plait Thomas C. Piatt, at the, Chicago Re publican national convention of 1S84, to support James G. Blaine for the presidential nomination, though Blaine, also, was an old-time political enemy. Nevertheless between the two, Piatt preferred to see the nom ination go to Blaine, and because of Piatt's support and political cunning Blaine triumphed over Arthur. Piatt always contemplated with great satisfaction the part ho played in defeating Arthur at Chicago. On the evening of the day that he brought about this, defeat he was In great good humor, and be did not hesitate to show it to the politicians who crowded about him as he sat upon one of the benches in the lobby of tho Grand Pa cifl hotel. In the midst of the congratulations that were being showered upon ' him on the successful outcome of the big politics that he had played, Senator Piatt suddenly spied General Howard Carroll of New York city passing through the lobby. For years General Carroll had been an intimate personal and political friend of President Ar thur's. Piatt knew it, and he aleo knew that General Carroll was great ly depressed by the defeat of Arthur in the convention; nevertheless, Piatt hailed him, and the general walked J over to where the "easy boss" was holding court. "Howard," said the senator with a manner that clearly showed the vin dictive pleasure he was taking In his triumph, and in a voice loud enough for all to hear, "I think I have at last succeeded in ending the career of your elaborately dressed friend in Washington." There was no need for Piatt to specify further; everyone In the group knew of General Arthur's penchant for immaculate dress. But as the presi dent's friend , stood there, apparently alone in a circle of political enemies, and not daring to trust himself to make reply, a voice close by spolA up. "Senator Piatt," it said, and the tones were clear and defiant, "you for get that General Arthur is president; you forgot that you cannot erase his name from the list of presidents. And I tell you now, In your hour of tri umph, that as time goes on he will stand higher and higher in the es teem of the American people, and his memory will be respected long after the name of Tom Piatt has been for gotten." It was the retort vigorous, and, de livered with calculated coldness, it struck Thomas Collier Piatt silent, in the hour of his triumph, with his po litical cronies and adulators grouped about him. (Copyright, 110, by E. J. Edwards.) Putting It Politely. After yachting, Lord Brassey's fa vorite recreation Is cricket. On the magnificent grounds surrounding his beautiful Sussex seat matches are frequently held during the season. Of one of these fights his lordship once told a capital story. It appears that there was a scarcity of available talent, with the result that it was necessary to secure one' of . Lord Brassey's footmen as umpire. In due course, his lordship himself went In, and, a local bowler was put on. The second ball he stopped with his leg, and the cry was raised "How's that?" It was the footman who had to an swer, and turning to his master, he exclaimed in a half apologetic tone: "I'm afraid I must say, 'Not at home, your lordship." "Not at home?" cried Lord Brassey. "What do you mean?" "Well. then, if you will have it." the butler made answer, "I mean you are hout" Hcuce of Smacks. Cupid passed a railroad station and removed his bat "Know anybody in there?" asked his friend. Hymen. "No, but that place is a great insti tution. Mere kissiug goes on in there tinder the excuse of boarding depart- I ing trains than anywhere else in the J world.' Striking Article In North American Review That Is Attracting Wide Attention. The attention of business and pro fessional men In all portions of the country has been attracted to a strik ingly strong article by Col. George Harvey in the September Issue of the North American Review in which the writer takes a view of the greatest hopefulness for the future of America and Americans. The article is en titled "A Plea for the Conservation of Common Sense," and It is meeting with the cordial approval of business men of all shades of political opinion throughout the entire country. In part, Colonel Harvey ays: "Unquestionably a! ' Spirit of unrest dominates the land. But, If it1 be true that fundamentally the condition of the country is sound, must we necessarily succumb to despondency, abandon effort looking to retrieval and cringe like cravens before clouds that only threaten? Rather ought we not to analyze conditions, search for causes, find the root of the dis tress, which even now exists only In men's ml'fids and then, after the American fiJlion, apply such rem edies as BcC.b most likely to produce beneficent results? Capital and Labor Not Antagonistic. "The Link that connects labor with capital is not broken but we may not deny that it is less cohesive than it should be or than conditions war rant. Financially, the country is stronger than ever before in Its his tory. Reoovery from a panic so severe as that of three years ago was never before so prompt and compara tively complete. The masses are practically free from debt. Money is held by the banks in abundance and rates are low. "Why, then, does capital pausa upon the threshold of investment? The answer, we believe, to be plain. It awaits adjustment of the relations of government to business. The sole problem consists of determining how govrnment can maintain an even balance between aggregations of interests, on the one hand, and the wrhole people, on the other, protect ing the latter against extortion and saving the former from mad assaults. "The solution 13 not easy to find for the simple reason that the situ ation is without precedent. But is not progress being made along sane and cautious lines? Conserve Common Sense. "Is not tho present, as we have seen, - exceptionally secure? What, then, of preparations for the future? Patriotism is the basis of our insti tutions. And patriotism in the minds of our youth is no longer linked solely with fireworks and deeds of daring. It Is taught In our schools. A new course has been added a course in loyalty. Methodically, our children learn how to vote, how to conduct primaries, conventions and elections, how to discriminate between qualifica tions of candidates and, finally, how to govern as well as serve. They are taught to despise bribery and all forms of corruption and fraud as treason. Their creed, which they are made to know by heart, is not com plex. It is simple, but comprehen sive, no less beautiful in diction than lofty in aspiration. These are the pledges which are graven upon their memories: "As it is cowardly for a soldier to run away from battle, so it is coward ly for any citizen not to contribute his share to the well-being of his country. America is my own dear land; sh nourishes me, andf I will love her and do my duty to her, whose child, servant andivil soldier I am. ' "As the health and happiness of my' body depend upon each muscle and nerve and drop of blood doing its work in its place, so the health and happiness of my country depend upon each citizen doing his work In his place. f 1 "These young citizens are our hostages to fortune. Can we not safely assume that the principles ani mating their lives augur well for the permanency of the Republic? When before have the foundation stones of continuance been laid with such care and promise of durability? "The future, then, is bright And the present? But one thing is need ful. No present movement is more laudable than that which looks to conservation of natural resources. But' let us never forget that the great est Inherent resource of the Amer ican people is Common Sense: Let that be conserved and applied with out cessation, and soon it will be. found that all the ills of which M-e complain but know not of are only such as attend upon the growing pains of a great and blessed country. He Knows the Game. According to the Metropolitan Meg azine, Fire Chief John Conway of Jer sey City, h. solved the baseball ex cuse question by the posting of the following printed notice on hia desk at fire headquarters: "All requests for leave cf absence owing to grandmothers' funerals, lame back, house cleaning, moving, sore throat,' headache, brainstorm, cousins wedding, g-ineral imlif position, ctc. must be hnr.ded to the chief not later than ten o'c.'ock cn the morning of the ;aine."