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x = } RAILROAD LEGISLATION. i RESPLENDENT DIPLOMATS, _| Inquisition and is conferred for distin- STATUE OF SACAJAWEA. gushed civic and- religious 7 Sees Grand Display of Jewels at Presi- Minine dh sag go oe ae Story of the Indian Maiden Who Pilot- HOW THE RATE MAKING QUES- dent’sReceptiontoForeign | 22uc) ornamented several of the| ¢dLewisand Clark—Result of TION STANDS BEFORE POUTOSSESATIVOR, |Latin diplomats: The Italian ambassa- | . are CONGRESS TODAY. President Roosevelt's reception to the ‘gor, Mayer des Plamches, who also| Mrs. Eva Emery Dye, of Oregon : a ee oe wears it, is absent. It is Italy’s most | City, Ore., wrote a book on a very old January 4 one © he most cherished military decoration. The/..», but she treated it in another : R liant functions the White House : a Co : rina. | adsect, but . ey ¥ ee Se ee | i pe er res nted. : , vise. Santee in 10s ty Keg = way. This book, “The Conquest,” was What is it that you most want or most vali ta your We? to get? Foraker Bill and the Elkins Bill Al-/ The foreign diplomats end the'r sec- | VI of Portugal, is a famous decoration, | the history of the Lewis and Clark ex: Ian’ it rood health pr something you must ve & rs ternatives. retaries and attaches, in rainbow-hued The monarch’s crest adorns the centre | pedition, with which every school What would you give to avoid a day’s sickness, after the sickness had come? 4 After its usual little flurry of ped _ their a oR with oy by the Portuguese crown child is familiar, but she brought out «An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a neues of Cure.” ‘ ness before Christmas, followed by the | gold, silve« enameled anc ewelleu jewels. a most refreshing incident showing If you will read the health page in Maxwell’s Homemaker Magazine every month, ¥ holiday period, Congress is now ready | grand cr their gold hilted swords, \ Founded by Pope Gregory XVI. the invaluable ree Bova rendered the for ong rear, and follow its teachings, you will mever need to be sick er to pay a # to settle down to the serious work of | sashes, and gay © od chap- Th is expedition by one woman. Whee sald that be worth to you? ye the session. Probable debate looms | eau, were resplendent living pictures e Grand Cross of Saint Gregory A number of women of Portland Wouldn't it be worth ten dollars ? ay up large on the Panama Canal ques- of chivalry’s romantic age. | the Great, worn by several diplomats, | Ore, banded together under the name QF course it woula. & tion, the railroad rate issue and the) Courteous, yet dign'fied, these repre- IXve — in 1861 by Pope Gregory | of the Woman's Club, felt in duty Weil vou can save $0.90 by reading Maxwell's Homemaker Magasine for one year, \ tariff. Of these the railroad question | ontatives ‘of knighthood’s gallan- |* VI. It is conferred for politicc! Set | hound to honor the memory of that The Magazine will cost you just ten centa. No more—No less rs is undoubtedly the most important, at) 3.4 gentleness charmed the vast | ‘{°eS Without religious distinction, The | one woman, Sacajawea. Mrs. Dye was hf least it is the newest subject; and assemblage with their speech and great pontiff’s vignette in gold is in the elected president of a Sacajawea ¢ while no legislation may be desired manners. centre. It was prominent among . the Statue Association. With woman's wit y on the other issues, if a railroad rate French: ts tae eoade te that clan | Latin orders. The Order of Charles III they found various methods to acquire © bill is to be passed, as is the an- ani cel Darna Rit ane ae of Spain, founded in 1771, by that mon-/the necessary $7,000 to erect the nounced desire of the leaders and the posit epeak oi the Cathe tenines pet jarch, is worn by King Aifonso XIII, | statue. Even with all the money pro COOKING President, practically unlimited de bate | oeay ees cpp? : ul EB ul others of the royal blood and distin- cured the association found itself in will ensue. It has been stated that / “ie others of continentul Europe, guished statesmen, It has been con-/a quandary until Mrs. Henry Waldo a the House would likely act promptly, | The White House echoed the speech | ferred on several European diplomats | Coe, through the generosity of her ‘ as it did last year, but it is something of nearly all civilized nations, The | an was one of the most beautiful seen | husband, came to the rescue with the ki iq of a problem as to what will be the diplomatic corps’ unfailing apprecia- at the White House. Cipriauo Castro, | copper for the casting. And this lat : And Then About Cooking. procedure in the Senate, The Inter-|tion of the ladies, their clever bon | Venezuela's turbulent President, lav-|ter gift was by no means inconsider You've heard the old saying: state Commerce Commission rate Dill | ishly dispenses the famous order of | able, for ii means nearly ten tons of cone [and conte the food , ; ) appears to have taken the place of the Simon Bolivar, the Liberator, worn by | pure copper, not to speak of the ex- pg Kader thee vihapre ; ye nigh 2 Good Cooking Contributes to Good Health, Esch-Townsend Dill of last session. Technically there is to be no Adminis- | tration bill, which designation was ac | corded the Esch-Townsend measure, | { but with the members of the Inter state Commerce Commission in hearty accord with the President, it is un-| derstood that the Commission's bill | contains the basis of the Administra- ‘ tion’s demands, t On the other hand, the Foraker rate bill and the Elkins bill are the prin- cipal alternative measures before Congress. | The issues, then, would be thus joined, and the two houses would | likely struggle with it for a large por tion of the session, with the probabil- ity that in the end a compromise would be reached. This contemplates some modifications of the President's * measure, which will not necessarily mean defeat for him or give him cause | ~ for embarrassment. It is conceded, | even by those who are avowedly sup- porting President Roosevelt's railroad Tate policy, that he is too stanch a Don Augusto Pulido, Venezuela's dip- lomat. Conferred Upon Admiral Walker. This order was instituted by that country’s Congress in 1825, and is the only South American chivalric order. It was conferred on Rear Admiral John G Walker, late of the Panama Canal Commission, Venezuela's crest and a vignette of the great Liberator ornaments the centre with the motto | “Libertad.” Honduras, only order is “Santa Rosa,” created by her Congresg in | 1868 to commemorate the regeneration jof Honduras, “The Order of Glory,” founded by Achmed Bey, of Tunis, in 1837, is be- stowed by France for distinguished valor and patriotism. It adorned sev-. eral of the attaches, A beautiful relic of Spanish judicial distinction is seen in the two raised shields on the cross representing the scales of Justic> and Spain’s coat of arms, surmounted by penses for smelting and shipping the ore across the continent. Gs ishenpeere ayes sl aaldigh tilt di And after all it was but fitting that te, and health en both,” this statue should-be erected, for had it tion waiting on bad cooking ? not been for Sacajawea, the Lewis and Clark expedition would never have lived to bring under the American flag An jon ng Department in Maxwell's Homemaker Magazine is an aid to the Good Health Department. Good Cooking and Good Health! They're The Gold Dust Twins that make the werk of life easy and lead us on through heppy and useful years to a hale and hearty cold age. Sit right down—NOW—and send your dime, or five two-cent stamps, so as to get this magazine ONE WHOLE YEAR FOR TEN CENTS, The Good Health and Good Cooking Departments in Maxwell's Homemaker Mavazine are not edited with a pair of scissors. hey are edited with a set of bfains, backed up: by a life-time of s.uc } and experience, And what it has to tell din a plain, straightforward way that everybody can Pr nd end know just to do to enjoy Good Cooking and Good Health, your cription, write your mame and post office address so wre it will be entered right, and send with it one Dime or MAXWELL’S HOMIMAKER MAGAZINE, 14C9 FISHIR BUILDING, CHICACO. partisan to embroil his party in dan- her crown. It is worn by that coun- a gerous strife on the verge of a general try’s great jurists, one of whom was Congressional clection that will be P nt at the diplomatic reception, 8 fraught with unusual importance to The orders of Europe, Asia, Africa other policies which the President and Sonth America date from the uSIC is the only absoe heartily desires should be carried out as Administration measures backed by @ practically solid Republican support. Tariff revision, or “readjustment” is one of those policies which is said to be close to the Presidential heart, earliest days ot kaighthood to tie ly treatment eo present time. They are beautifully Free Toteuneriiececence or rug ; habits, It is th ewels and enamels, ors . in ev P le The coats of arms, sovereign crests : TATED will treat ‘any grog user Free ‘as ade R OWN HOME 1 bie? Aft ste, until Cured, Write to-day. and mottoes of the respective countries f UPOG State kind and quantity of drug used. 4 wonderful offer to every lover of m : whether a beginner or an advanced player, = and a new and practical assertion of ; ” the Monroe Doctrine, particularly p nln nto Beh pe Pe oy onan Dr. Waterman, Suite B, 14 Lexington. Av.,N.Y, with relation to such threatening DIPLOMATIC DECORATIONS OF SPAIN Vienna and Berlin, are cate seen = muddles as that in Santo Domingo, is AND PORTUGAL, this countr. < Facts and Fan. : 'y except at the reception of Ninety-six lessons sald yr noe on mots, brilliant repartee and strong, |the President and on occasions when “He that 1s diligent in business desire sore vg Hrsg 7 oe roteste Mrom Shippers, loften amusing accent, appeal to the |the diplomatic corps are officially shall stand before Kings,” quoted the | 3anjo, Comet or Mandolin will be atv pie A rather peculiar development of! fair sex and make their society much | Present at state functions, The aver- etern father to his wayward son. |to make our home study courses for Ps 4 the railroad question is the action of | sought. age diameter of the grand crosses seen «Well, dad,” said the young hopeful, | struments known in your locattty, Yeu pie _ “I'd rather sit bel ind aces.” Beautiful Cleopatra gazed moodily out of the window. “Oh, Great Queen,” faltered the slave, “knowest thou then the number of days thou hast yet to spend here?” ' great numbers of large shippers who| ocial intrigue was exhausted in the | in this artiele is three to four inches $ theoretically are the very men who efforts to secure invitations to this|and thelr weight from two to four should favor stringent rate legislation, | never-to-be-forgotten reception, ounces. The regal splendor of the dip- L but who are vigorously expressing| Ampitious mothers with eligible | lomats, taken as a whole, adornea with ty themselves as adverse to radical ac- daughters were especially eager to | these brilliant decorations on uniforms on. Since Congress met, great num-|have their fair ones adorn the galaxy |Of gold and silver braid and buttons € bers of letters and protests have been | o¢ beautiful women and gallant men, | Wa8 beyond words, paling into insig- one lesson weckly, and yeur only expense dur ing the time you take the ae will be the cost of postage and tho music you will us y which is small, Write at once. It will meaw much to you to get our free booklet, It wit place you under no obligation whatever to us if you never write sgain, You ond your friends MRS. EVA EMERY DYE. that vast and rich country drained by the Columbia River. rt received from shippers all over the/ ‘the beauty and brilliancy of the dip. | Bificance the modest attire of our own | Sacajawea, when but thirteen years] “No,” responded Cleopatra, “bring | shaud Loew at york, Hund Z country, declaring that they are ad- ihe D> democratic officia " old, was stolen from her people—the j me an adder and let me figure it out.” | pupils write: rsh I bad known of your lomats’ gold and jewelled grand crosses l_ “full dress” attire, Busshonesahd became wslave to the school before.” “Have learned niare’ in? ov term in my home. w: Dr. Oliver gives an account of a than in chive terms with private” Genk geo cherry stone on which was carved 124 | &t & great deal less ex; se." headg, so distinctly that the naked eye | °,thorough and complete," verse to giving the rate-making power Is best seen at this- receptl H to the Interstate Commerce Commis- " vo ae Paris Statae of F Dakotas. They treated her well, how: are given illustrations of some of the ‘ranklin. ever, and at the age of eighteen they sion, or to ther political tribunal. ta coming 1 decorations which delighted the eyes! The two hundredth anniversary of] sold ‘her to a French fur-trader, Char- The protests coming from shippers to ‘ members of Congress are very ef-| ° President Roosevelt's guests, tlt of Benjamin Franklin on the | boneau, who made her his wife, prom: | could distinguish’ those belonging to rt od tow { fective, since the shippers are usually The Order of St. Stanislaus, of January has brought to light | ising that he would, in time, take her|the popes and kings by their mitres , ae Geek mene ne il among the most influential men in Congressional districts. the regard with which that philosopher h mista: . on sae ; r to her own people. Shortly after this}and crowns. It was bought in Prus- Spore, fully perruaded £ PP nly APO — Rory 1 is and statesman is esteemed, not only by| the Lewis and Clark expedition, with | sia for $15,000.00. . | | made po mistaks in beceming your pupil." [ t Pho situation is full of possible Americans, but by foreigners as well.|its motley band, came along, maling We hav established seven ‘- ‘amo 5 , iS years—have + complexities and changes, the only |Siiujtte, ‘mous Polish Order of St./The memory of Franklin, as first min-| their winter quarters in that section} A Gascon officer on hearing of the seventy» Don't sry you cuvoy Inna nate te Stanislaus, founded in 1765 in honor of | ister of bei a er of the United States to France, is r apparent developments thus far being | Poland's patron saint by Stanislaus much revered in the capital oe that be lordheg a ; an ee boastful exploits of a prince who ur free booklet and tution offer a less radical public view of railroad Augustus Peniatowski. In 1815 Em- it ll be sent by return mail f < claimed to have killed six men with/y. § 'scHOOL OF NUS ree, Acdrem atters, which is being reflected in country, and it is quite fitting that the guide, and Charboneau learning of | his hans : MUSIC, 15 Union Square tn wi Peror Alexander confirmed the order, | first statue to him in a foreign clime| this, told his wife that by guiding the Ce Me te ioe eee P| £ the more conservative attitude on the and Tsar Nicholas, in 1831 ited ‘ $31, it| should be unveiled in Paris part of the thoughtful Members of : torr oe uni s e in Paris. party she would have a chance to find | which I si j with the Russian orders, Russian} As early as May 23 last Mr. John H. her own people. She offered her serv- Nice ad eat ant ono = | © bet buadreds ofr from eight years of age te Congress and Senators. There seems to be a growing recognition of the ro bd excluded =n the order. | Harjes, at present the resident mem-| ices to the pioneers, which were ac fact that the subject is one full of . Tiarhed ho idl paths oot pire: cia t a of br rot ana cepted; Charboneau was hired as intricate and complex conditions | * ce} jes o., formulated an offer to 8 | cook, We h bi Which make final action inadvisable |from its popularity. ; oficials of a bronze statue of Franklin. | "During the winter, while the party | hited with Kicdllog eda a oat | iatly suited 12 aries eked 888 8p e order decorates Russia's most| While it was originally intended that | was making preparations for moving |}ixe hue met him and a ceauateal oon every farmer to make more out prod BOOKS—BOOKS Walking down town this morning, without a very full understanding of |,” what the practical effect of any pro- | ‘istinguished soldiers and statesmen, | the gift to Paris of the statue should | forward next spring, Sacajawea gave versation ensued, when suddenly, with | Write for our catalogue, posed legislation would be, not only birth toa boy baby; yet, not to be de-| 4 ano flourish, the darkey took from the| upon transportation interests, but up- tterred in her hope of again being cart & lores tiibe oe fare ee aed 4 WEBB PUBLISHING on the hundreds of thousands of peo- united to her people, and with her ling and handed it to h ut : ind: St, Past Stine. CO. ple throughout the country who con- baby on her back, she led the party | ociSeq it wih & wunuoes er. ‘i e re e Democrats to Support President. \ f | waters of the Columbia, apron and departed, while I murmured, There has been such a stampede of oir ae “aes ae pcg “a dark transaction resulting in light Democratic Representatives and Sen- tribe from which the Western heroine M a dead tree may have its graft.” ° ators to the support of “any rate bill L ined been stolee, deer owe gd which the President may want” on } deavored to persuade her egg the ground that any rate bill is good : with them, Sacajawea had given her Democratic doctrine, that many of the word 10 guide ths tnen 40 toe a President's political advisers are Ootan and she was aot t be Porivonrs ‘warning him that he may be in the from keeping her promise, eo position of having to dodge an alliance | | } the story which Mrs. Dye has set forth ‘with the Democrats, which is exactly in “The Conquest.” All the what the President does not want. i book {g full of little inci Php ne the While it is generally believed that : bravery of the an guide, how she AMERICAN CROWN the House will promptly pass the . % paved tha wom ceatkiiation “ot *Administration” bill, yet Speaker the binds — ‘eae In @annon said not long ago that while z | isthe’ tha teakae of Whou A geo @# was impossible to say what Con- esther, Sire Dye brings aut tuto the would do, he felt convinced that 4 light the % of Lewis nal S e' House would not again pass the : th ! A, +8 thay sive Seats Commerce "Commlesion Wl te, | jawea the credit for having saved ‘sa green soap, consistency of paste, a perfect gauch more radical measure and in ee wa ph wy Eon apcattags Rg yelp GE waecher this 4 oie made ice tase siti And so this country now gives recog-| polished surface. Made from pure vepatabs ae sompromion or whether the Pres- nition to her services through the | oils TE Jour Gealer dove not carry American Géent will insist that a commission , . Crown pg hogy lage Ryctrn —_— eee neon ue Coven of woman; Miss Alice Cooper, of Den-| supplied. Put up in 124 95 and 50 Ib paila, this plenary power of constitu- ver, was the designer; Mrs. Dye and ‘tonal ernment—legislative, judic , * i a a cavenive—to s'mateer ot some Bor oman friends procured the tends) James S. Kirk & Company To connection with the foreign ‘and gran this firm. — ee CHICAGO, ILL, * & | ene mee meee wel mx “A CLOSE SHAVE” class inolip sending ty eet aan in “with n ‘ Ldcariostoerd Outfits, $2.25 to $18.00 NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY SAVE TIME AND MONEY. FREE OFFER $200 in prizes for the best written story Subject: “A Close Shave?’ di 2 i BF i F