classes, and the consulates into nine classes. It created five consuls-general-at-large to be inspectors of consulates, and abolished the fee system of compensation, except for consular agents. These agents are to receive half the fees they collect, up to $1,000 a year. Any consular officer receiving more than $1,000 a year must be an American citizen and is prohibited from engaging in business or practising as a lawyer. To carry out the provisions of the act of April 5, 1906, President Roosevelt on June 27, 1906, issued the following executive order: REGULATIONS GOVERNING APPOINTMENTS AND PROMOTIONS. "1. Vacancies in the office of consul-general and in the office of consul above class 8 shall be filled by promotion from the lower grades of the Consular Service, based upon ability and efficiency as shown in the service. filled: Vacancies in the office of consui of class 8 and of consul of class 9 shall be "(a) By promotion on the basis of ability and efficiency as shown in the service, of consular clerks, and of vice-consuls, deputy consuls and consular agents who shall have been appointed to such offices upon examination. (b) By new appointments of candidates who have passed a satisfactory examination for appointment as consul as hereafter provided. Persons in the service of the Department of State with salaries of $2,000 or upward shall be eligible for promotion, on the basis of ability and efficiency as shown in the service, to any grade of the Consular Service above class 8 of consuls. 3. 4. The Secretary of State, or such officer of the Department of State as the President shall designate, the chief of the Consular Bureau and the chief examiner of the Civil Service Commission, or some person whom said Commission shall designate, shall constitute a board of examiners for admission to the Consular Service. **B. It shall be the duty of the board of examiners to formulate rules for and hold examinations of applicants for admission to the Consular Service. "6. The scope and method of the examinations shall be determined by the board of examiners, but among the subjects shall be included at least one modern language other than English; the natural, industrial and commercial resources and the commerce of the United States, especially with reference to the possibilities of increasing and extending the trade of the United States with foreign countries; political economy; elements of international, commercial and maritime law. 7. Examination papers shall be rated on a scale of 100, and no person rated at less than 80 shall be eligible for certification. "8. No one shall be examined who is under twenty-one or over fifty years of age, or who is not a citizen of the United States, or who is not of good character and habits and physically and mentally qualified for the proper performance of consular work, or who has not been specially designated by the President for appointment to the Consular Service subject to examination. 9. Whenever a vacancy shall occur in the eighth or ninth class of consuls which the President may deem it expedient to fill, the Secretary of State shall inform the board of examiners, who shall certify to him the list of those persons eligible for appointment, accompanying the certificate with a detailed report showing the qualifications, as revealed by examination, of the persons so certified. If it be desired to fill a vacancy in a consulate in a country in which the United States exercises extra-territorial jurisdiction, the Secretary of State shall so inform the board of examiners, who shall include in the list of names certified by it only such persons as have passed the examination provided for in this order, and who also have passed an examination in the fundamental principles of the common law, the rules of evidence and the trial of civil and criminal cases. The list of names which the board of examiners shall certify shall be sent to the President for his information. "10. No promotion shall be made except for efficiency, as shown by the work that the officer has accomplished, the ability, promptness and diligence displayed by him in the performance of all his official duties, his conduct and his fitness for the Consular Service. 11. It shall be the duty of the board of examiners to formulate rules for and hold examinations of persons designated for appointment as consular clerk, and of such persons designated for appointment as vice-consul, deputy consul and consular agent, as shall desire to become eligible for promotion. The scope and method of such examination shall be determined by the board of examiners, but it shall include the same subjects herein before prescribed for the examination of consuls. Any vice-consul, deputy consul or consular agent now in the service, upon passing such an examination, shall become eligible for promotion, as if appointed upon such examination. 12. In designations for appointment subject to examination and in appointments after examination, due regard will be had to the rule, that as between candidates of equal merit, appointments should be so made as to secure proportional representation of all the states and territories in the Consular Service; and neither in the designation for examination or certification or appointment will the political affiliations of the candidate be considered.' On November 10, 1905, President Roosevelt issued the following executive order regulating appointments to secretaryships of embassy or legation: "It is hereby ordered that vacancies in the office of secretary of embassy or legation shail hereafter be filled: (a) By transfer or promotion from some branch of the Foreign Service, or (b) By the appointment of a person who, having furnished satisfactory evidence of character, responsibility and capacity, and being thereupon selected by the President for examination, is found upon such examination to be qualified for the position." CONSULAR CLERKS. Yokohama. Place. Rome.. Bari... London. Name. Charles W. Wood. Whence appointed. Vermont George H. Seidmore.................. Wisconsin St. Leger A. Touhay....... District of Columbia. Richard Westacott...... Massachusetts Madrid....26.3. Paris.......444 1945 Berlin......CALSOM St. Gall.... I TEDAT Naples...* «ST ***. Havana................................. Washington. Circuit. California California Maddin Summers...................... Tennessee District of Columbia.. Compensation. PRINCIPAL JUDICIAL OFFICERS, JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT. (Salary of Chief Justice, $13,000; of each Associate Justice, $12,500.) Justices. 4. MELVILLE W. FULLER, Illinois, Chief Justice.................................. 1. OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, Massachusetts....... 2 RUFUS W. PECKHAM, New York. 3. WILLIAM R. DAY, Ohio.. EDWARD D. WHITE, Louisiana................... & JOHN M. HARLAN, Kentucky 7. WILLIAM H. MOODY, Massachusetts.............................................. & DAVID J. BREWER, Kansas. 9. JOSEPH M'KENNA, California. Reporter of the Supreme Court-Charles Henry Butler (1962), New York, $4,500. Clerk James H. McKenney (1880), District of Columbia, $6,000. Marshall—J. M. Wright (1888), Kentucky, $3,500. UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGES. (Annual salary, $7,000.) L Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island; Le Baron B. Colt, Rhode Island; William L. Putnam, Maine; Francis C. Lowell, Massachusetts. IL Connecticut, New York and Vermont; William J. Wallace, E. Henry Lacombe and Alfred C. Coxe, New York; William K. Townsend, Connecticut. IIL Delaware, New Jersey and Pennsylvania; George M. Dallas and Joseph Buffington, Pennsylvania; George Gray, Delaware. IV. Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and W. Virginia; Nathan Goff, West Virginia; Jeter C. Pritchard, North Carolina. V. Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisi ana, Mississippi and Texas; Don A. Pardee, Louisiana; Andrew P. McCormick, Texas; David D. Shelby, Alabama. VL Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee; Horace H. Lurton, Tennessee; John K, Richards, Ohio; Henry F. Severns, Michigan. VIL Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin; Francis E. Baker, Indiana; James G. Jenkins and William H. Seaman, Wisconsin; Peter S. Grosscup and Christian C. Kohlsaat, Illinois. VIII. Arkansas, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming, New Mexico; Oklahoma and Indlan Territories; Walter H. Sanborn, Minnesota; Willis Van Devanter, Wyoming; William C. Hook, Kansas; Elmer B. Adams, Missouri. IX. California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon and Washington, and territories of Alaska, Arizona and Hawaii; William W. Morrow and Erskine M. Ross, California; William B. Gilbert, Oregon. Arkansas (E. D.) Jacob Trieber, Little Rock; (W. D.) J. H. Rogers, Fort Smith. California-(N. D.) J. J. De Haven, San Francisco; (S. D.) Olin Wellborn, Los Angeles. Colorado-Robert E. Lewis, Denver, Connecticut-Jas, P. Platt, Hartford. Delaware-E. G. Bradford, Wilmington. Florida-(N. D.) Charles Swayne, Pensacola; (S. D.) J. W. Locke, Jacksonville. Georgia (N. D.) W. T. Newman, Atlanta; (S. D.) Emory Speer, Macon. Hawaii-Sanford B. Dole, Honolulu, Idaho -James H. Beatty, Boise City. Illinois-(N. D.) Solomon H. Bethea and Kenesaw M. Landis, Chicago; (E. D.) Francis M. Wright, Urbana; (S. D.) J. O. Humphrey, Springfield. Indiana-Albert B. Anderson, Indianap olis. Iowa (N. D.) Henry T. Reed, Cresco; (S. D.) Smith McPherson, Red Oak, Kansas John C. Pollock, Topeka. Kentucky-(E. D.) A. M. J. Cochran, Maysville; (W. D.) Walter Evans, Louisville. Louisiana (E. D.) Charles Parlange, New Orleans; (W. D.) Aleck Boarman, Shreveport. Maine-Clarence Hale, Portland. Maryland-Thomas J. Morris, Baltimore. Massachusetts-Frederick Dodge, Bog ton. Michigan (E, D.) Hy. H. Swan, Detroit (W. D.) Loyal E. Knappen, Grand Rapids, Minnesota-William Lochren, Minneapolis; Page Morris, Duluth ton. New Jersey-William M. Lanning, Trenton; Joseph Cross, Elizabeth. New York-(N. D.) George W. Ray, Norwich; (S. D.) George B. Adams, George C. Holt and Charles M. Hough, New York City; (E. D.) T. I. Chatfield, Brooklyn; (W. D.) John R. Hazel, Buñаio. North Carolina-(E. D.) T. R. Purnell, Raleigh; (W. D.) J. E. Boyd, Greensboro. North Dakota-Charles F. Amidon, Fargo. C. Ohio (N. D.) A. J. Ricks and Robert W. Taylo Cleveland; (S. D.) A. Thompson, Cincinnati. Oregon-Charles E. Wolverton, Portland. Pennsylvania-(E. D.) John B. McPherson and James B. Holland, Philadelphia; (M. D.) Robert W. Archbald, Scranton; (W. D.) Nathaniel Ewing, Pittsburg. Porto Rico-Bernard S. Rodey, Juan. San Rhode Island-A. L Brown, Providence. South Carolina-William H. Brawley, Charleston. South Dakota-J. E. Carland, Sioux Falls. Tennessee-(E. and M. D.) Charles D. Clark, Chattanooga; (W. D.) John E. McCall, Memphis. Texas-(N. D.) Edward R. Meek, Fort Worth; (S. D.) Waller T. Burns, Houston; (E. D.) David E. Bryant, Sherman; (W. D.) Thomas S. Maxey, Austin. Utah-John A. Marshall, Salt Lake City. Vermont-James L. Martin, Brattleboro. Virginia-(E. D.) Edmund Waddill, jr., Richmond; (W. D.) Henry C. McDowell, Lynchburg. Washington-(W. Cornelius H. Hanford, Seattle; (E. D.) Edward Whitson, Spokane. D.) West Virginia-(N. D.) Alston G. Dayton, Philippi; (S. D.) Benjamin F. Keller, Bramwell. Wisconsin-(E. D.) Joseph V. Quarles, Milwaukee; (W. D.) Arthur L. Sanborn, Madison. Wyoming-John A. Riner, Cheyenne. UNITED STATES JUDGES IN TERRITORIES AND FEDERAL DISTRICT. Alaska-First Division, Royal A. Gunnison, Juneau; Second Division, Alfred S. Moore, Nome; Third Division, James Wickersham, Eagle City. Annual salary, $5,000. Arizona-Chief Justice, Edward Kent, Phoenix. Associate Justices-Fletcher M. Doan, Tombstone; R. E. Sloan, Prescott; John H. Campbell, Tucson; Frederick S. Nave, Solomonville. Annual salary $3,000. Hawaii-Supreme Court-Chief Justice, W. F. Frear. Associate Justices-Alfred S. Hartwell and Arthur A. Wilder, Honolulu. Annual salary of Chief Justice, $5,500; of Associates, $5,000. Circuit Judges-First Circuit, John T. DeBolt, Alex. Lindsay, jr., and W. J. Robinson, Honolulu; Second Circuit, A. N. Kepoikai, Walluku; Third Circuit, John T. Mat thewman, Kailua; Fourth Circuit, Charles F. Parsons. Hilo; Fifth Circuit, J. Hardy, Lihue. Annual salary, $3,000. Indian Territory-Judges District Courts -(N. D.) J. A. Gill and Luman F. Parker, jr., Vinita; (W. D.) Wm. R. Lawrence and Louis Sulzbacher, Muskogee; (C. D.) W. H. H. Clayton and Thomas C. Humphrey, South McAlester; (S. D.) H. Townsend and Joseph T. Dickerson, Ardmore. Annual salary, $5,000. New Mexico-Chief Justice, W. J. Mills, Las Vegas. Associate Justices J. R. Mo Fie, Santa Fé; F. W. Parker, Las Cruces; W. H. Pope, Roswell; Edward A. Mann, Alamogordo; Ira A. Abbott, Albuquerque. Annual salary, $3,000. Oklahoma-Chief Justice, J. H. Burford, Guthrie. Associate Justices-C. F. Irwin, El Reno; B. F. Burwell, Oklahoma City; Bayard T. Hainer, Perry; J. L. Pancoast, Alva; Milton C. Garber, Enid; F. E. Gillette, Anadarko. Annual salary, $3,000. Porto Rico--Chief Justice, José Severo Quinones, San Juan. Associate JusticesAdolph Grant Wolf, San Juan; José C. Hernandez, José M. Figueras and James H. McLeary, San Juan. Annual salary of Chief Justice, $5,000; of Associate Jus tices, $4,500. UNITED STATES COURT OF CLAIMS. Chief Justice-Stanton J. Peelle, Indiana. Associate Justices-C. B. Howry, Mississippi; Fenton W. Booth, Illinois; George W. Atkinson, West Virginia; Samuel S. Barney, Wisconsin. Annual salary of Chief Justice, $6,500; of Associate Justices, $6,000. COURT OF APPEALS, D. C. Chief Justice-Seth Shepard, D. C. Associate Justices-Louis E. McComas, Maryland; Charles H. Robb, Vermont. Annual salary of Chief Justice, $7,500; of Associates, $7,000. SUPREME COURT, D. C. Chief Justice-Harry M. Clabaugh, Maryland. Associate Justices-Job Barnard, D. C.; T. H. Anderson, Ohio; Ashley M. Gould, Maryland; Wendell F. Stafford, Vermont; Daniel Thew Wright, Ohio. Annual salary, $6,000. UNITED STATES COURT FOR CHINA. Judge-Lebbeus R. Wilfley, Missouri, $8,000; District Attorney, Arthur Bassett, Missouri, $4,000; Marshal, O. R. Leonard, Michigan, $3,000. U. S. DISTRICT ATTORNEYS. (Salaries range from $3,000 to $10,000, according to relative importance of posts.) Alabama-(N. D.) 0. R. Hundley, Birmingham; (M. D.) Erastus J. Parsons, Montgomery; (S. D.) William H. Armbrecht, Mobile. Alaska-First District, John J. Boyce, Juneau; Second, Henry M. Hoyt, Nome; Third, N, V. Harlan, Fairbanks. Arizona-J. L. B. Alexander, Tucson. Arkansas-(E. D.) W. G. Whipple, Little Rock; (W. D.) J. K. Barnes, Fort Smith. California-(N. D.) Robert T. Devlin, San Francisco; (S. D.) Oscar Lawler, Los Angeles. Colorado-Earl M. Cranston, Denver. Connecticut-F. H. Parker, Hartford, Delaware-John P. Nields, Wilmington. District of Columbia-Daniel W. Baker, Washington, Florida-(N. D.) William B. Sheppard, Pensacola; S. D.) John M. Cheney, Jack sonville. Georgia-(N, D.) Farish C. Tate, Atlanta; (S. D.) Marion Erwin, Macon. Hawaii-Robert W. Breckens, Honolulu. Illinois-(N. D.) Edwin W. Sims, Chicago; (E. D.) William E. Trautmann, Danville; (S. D.) William A. Northcott, Springfield. Indiana-J. B. Kealing, Indianapolis. Indian Territory-(N. D.) Wade I. Stanfield, Vinita; (C. D.) Thomas B. Latham, South McAlester; (W. D.) Will lam M. Mellette, Muskogee; (S. D.) George R. Walker, Ardmore. Iowa-(N. D.) H. G. McMillan, Cedar Rapids; (S. D.) Lewis Miles, Corydon. Kansas-Henry J. Bono, Topeka. Kentucky (E. D.) J. H. Tinsley, Covington; (W. D.) George Du Relle, Louisville. Louisiana (E. D.) W. W. Howe, NewOrleans; (W. D.) M. C. Elstner, Shreveport. Maine Robert T. Whitehouse, Portland. Maryland-John C. Rose, Baltimore. Massachusetts-Asa P. French, Boston. Michigan (E. D.) Frank H. Watson, Detroit; (W. D.) G. G. Covell, Grand Rapids. Minnesota-Charles C. Houpt, St. Paul. Mississippi (N. D.) William D. Frazee, Oxford; (S. D.) Robert C. Lee, Jackson. Missouri-(E. D.) D. P. Dyer, St. Louis; (W. D.) A. S. Van Valkenburgh, Kansas City. Montana-Carl Rasch, Helena. Nebraska-Charles A. Goss, Omaha. Nevada--Samuel Platt, Carson City. New Hampshire C. J. Hamblett, Concord. New Jersey-J. B. Vreeland, Newark. New Mexico-W. H. H. Llewellyn, Las Cruces. New York-(N. D.) G. B. Curtiss, Binghamton; (S. D.) H. L. Stimson, New York City; (E. D.) William J. Youngs, Brooklyn; (W. D.) Lyman M. Bass, Buffalo. North Carolina (E. D.) Harry Skinner, Raleigh; (W. D.) A. E. Holton, Winston. North Dakota-P. H. Rourke, Fargo. Ohio (N. D.) John J. Sullivan, Cleveland; (S. D.) Sherman T. McPherson, Cincinnati. Oklahoma-John Embry, Guthrie. Oregon-William C. Bristol, Portland. Pennsylvania-(E. D.) J. Whittaker Thompson, Philadelphia; (M. D.) S. J. M. McCarrell, Harrisburg; (W. D.) John W. Dunkle, Pittsburg., Porto Rico-J. R. F. Savage, San Juan. Rhode Island-C. A. Wilson, Providence. South Carolina-Ernest F. Cochran, Charleston. South Dakota-J. D. Elliott, Sioux Falls, Tennessee (E. D.) J. R. Penland, Knoxville; (M. D.) A. M. Tillman, Nashville; (W. D.) George Randolph, Memphis. Texas (N. D.) W. H. Atwell, Dallas; (S. D.) M. C. McLemore, Galveston; (E. D.) James W. Ownby, Paris; (W. D.) Charles A. Boynton, Waco. Utah-Hiram E. Booth, Salt Lake City. Vermont-Alexander Dunnett, St. Johns van, Seattle; (EL D.) A. George Avery, Spokane. West Virginia (N. D.) Reese Blizzard. Parkersburg; (S. D.) Elliott Northcott, Huntington. Wisconsin-(E. D.) Henry K. Butterfield, Milwaukee; (W. D.) William G. Wheeler, Madison. Wyoming-Timothy F. Burke, Cheyenne. UNITED STATES MARSHALS. (Salaries range from $2,000 to $5,000, according to relative importance of posts.) Alabama-(N. D.) Pope M. Long. Birmingham; (M. D.) James H. Judkins, Montgomery; (S. D.) Gilbert B. Deans, Mobile. Alaska-(First Division), James M. Shoup, Juneau; (Second Division) Thomas C. Powell, Nome; (Third Division) George G. Perry, Fairbanks, Arizona-Benjamin F. Daniels, Tucson. Arkansas-(E. D.) Harmon L. Remmel, Little Rock; (W. D.) John Frank Mayes, Fort Smith. California-(N. D.) Charles T. Elliott, San Francisco; (S. D.) Leo V. Youngworth, Los Angeles. Colorado-Dewey C. Bailey, Denver. Connecticut-Edson S. Bishop, Hartford. Delaware-William R. Flinn, Wilming ton. District of Columbia-Aulick Palmer, Washington. Florida--(N. D.) Thomas F. McGourin, Pensacola; (S. D.) John F. Horr, Jacksonville. Georgia (N. D.) Walter H. Johnson, Atlanta; (S. D.) George F. White, Macon. Hawaii-E. R. Hendry, Honolulu. Idaho-Ruel Rounds, Boisé. Illinois (N. D.) Luman T. Hoy, Chicago; (E. D.) Charles P. Hitch, Danville; (S. D.) Leon A. Townsend, Springfield. Indiana-Henry C. Pettit, Indianapolis. Indian Territory-(N. D.) William H. Darrough, Vinita; (W. D.) Leo E. Bennett, Muskogee; (C. D.) George K. Pritchard, South McAlester; (S. D.) Grosvenor A. Porter, Ardmore. Iowa--(N. D.) Edward Knott, Dubuque; (S. D.) George M. Christian, Des Moines. Kansas-William H. Mackey, jr., To Mississippi-(N. D.) James A. Toler, Oxford (S. D.) Edgar S. Wilson, Jackson. Missouri (E. D.) William L. Morsey, St. Louis; (W. D.) Edwin R. Durham, Kansas City. Montana-A. W. Merrifield, Helena. Nebraska-William P. Warner, Omaha. Nevada-Robert Grimmon, Carson City. New Hampshire-Eugene P. Nute, Con New Mexico-Creighton M. Foraker, AH South Dakota-Seth buquerque. New York-(N. D.) Clinton D. Mac Dougall, Auburn; (S. D.) William Henkel, New York City; (E. D.) Charles J. Haubert, Brooklyn; (W. D.) William R. Compton, Elmira. North Carolina-(E. D.) Claudius Dockery, Raleigh; James M. Millikan, Greensboro. North Dakota-James F. Shea, Fargo. Ohio -(N. D.) Frank M. Chandler, Cleveland; (S. D.) Eugene L. Lewis, Cincinnati. Oklahoma-John R. Abernathy, Guthrie. Oregon-Charles J. Reed, Portland. Pennsylvania-(E. D.) John B. Robinson, Philadelphia; (M. D.) Charles B. Witmer, Scranton; (W. D.) Stephen P. Stone, Pittsburg. Porto Rico-H. S. Hubbard, San Juan. Duncan Adams, Falls. Bullock, Sioux Tennessee (E. D.) William A. Dunlap, Knoxville; (M. D.) John W. Overall, Nashville; (W. D.) Frank S. Elgin, Memphis. Texas (N. D.) George H. Green; Dallas; (8. D.) C. G. Brewster, Galveston; (E. D.) Andrew J. Houston, Paris; (W. D.) Eugene Nolte, San Antonio. land. Utah-William Spry, Salt Lake City. Vermont-Horace Ward Bailey, RutVirginia--(E. D.) Morgan Treat, Richmond; (W. D.) S. Brown Allen, Harrisonburg. Washington-(W. D.) Charles B. Hopkins, Tacoma; (E. D.) George H. Baker, Spokane. West Virginia-(N. D.) Charles D. EL liott, Parkersburg; (S. D.) Frank H. Tyree, Huntington. Wisconsin-(E. D.) Thomas B. Reid, Milwaukee; (W. D.) Charles Lewiston, Madison. Wyoming Frank A. Hudsell, Cheyenne. THE FIFTY-NINTH CONGRESS. THE SENATE. CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS, of Indiana, Vice-President and President CHARLES G. BENNETT, of New York, Secretary, $5,000, Term exp. ALABAMA. Home P. O. 1907 John T. Morgan (D.)...Selma. 1909 Edm. W. Pettus (D.)...Selma. ARKANSAS, 1907 James H. Berry (D.).... Bentonville. 1909 Jas. P. Clarke (D.)..... Little Rock. CALIFORNIA. 1909 Geo. C. Perkins (R.)...Oakland. COLORADO. 1907 Thos. M. Patterson (D.). Denver. CONNECTICUT. 1909 F. B. Brandegee (R.).. New-London. 1911 M. G. Bulkeley (R.)....Hartford. DELAWARE. 1907 J. Frank Allee (R.)....Dover. FLORIDA. 1909 S. B. Mallory (D.)......Pensacola. 1911 Jas. P. Taliaferro (D.)..Jacksonville. GEORGIA. 1907 A. O. Bacon (D.)...... Mason. 1909 Alex. S. Clay (D.)......Marietta. IDAHO. 1907 Fred. T. Dubois (D.)...Boise City. 1909 W. B. Heyburn (R.).... Wallace. ILLINOIS. 1907 Shelby M. Cullom (R.).. Springfield. 1909 Albert J. Hopkins (R.). Aurora. INDIANA. 1909 James A. Hemenway (B.). Booneville. 1911 A. J. Beveridge (R.).... Indianapolis. IOWA. 1907 J. P. Dolliver (R.).... Fort Dodge, 1909 Wm. B. Allison (R.)...Dubuque. 1907 William P. Frye (R.)...Lewiston, 1909 Wm. P. Whyte (D.)... Baltimore. 1907 Russell A. Alger (R.)...Detroit. 1907 Knute Nelson (R.).....Alexandria, MISSISSIPPI. 1907 A. J. McLaurin (D.).. Brandon. MISSOURI 1909 Wm. J. Stone (D.)........St. Louis. 1911 William Warner (R.)..... Kansas City. ΜΟΝΤΑΝΑ. 1907 William A. Clark (D.).... Helena, 1911 Thos. H. Carter (R.)..... Helena NEBRASKA, 1907 Joseph H. Millard (R.)...Omaha. 1911 Elmer J. Burkett (R.)........ Lincoln. |