52D CONGRESS, | SENATE. { M1s. Doo. 1, 1st Session. : : ! Part 2. a - iV RIFT Y-SECOND CONGRESS. [ FIRST SESSION. | OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY . | i ) ~ FOR THE USE OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS. : By W. H. MICHAEL, i CLERK OF PRINTING RECORDS. { 4 ] SECOND EDITION. i} 1 1 i | { CORRECTED TO JANUARY 29, 1892. f WASHINGTON: | GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, 1892. ENTERED ACCORDING TO ACT OF CONGRESS, IN THE YEAR 1892, Bv W. H. MICHAEL, IN THE OFFICE OF THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS, AT WASHINGTON, 2 NOTE. There are two contests for seats pending in the Senate, viz: W. H. Clagett vs. Fred T. Dubois, of Idaho; R. H. M. Davidson zs. Wilkinson Call, of Florida. The contestees in these cases were sworn in and took their seats, and the papers were referred to the Committee on Privileges and Elections. There are six contests for seats in the House of Representatives, viz: John V. McDuffie, Republican, zs. Louis W. Turpin, Democrat, of the Fourth Ala- bama district; Henry T. Noyes, Republican, vs. Hosea H. Rockwell, Demo- crat, Twenty-eighth New York district; John B. Reynolds, Democrat, vs. George W. Shonk, Republican, Twelfth Pennsylvania district; Thomas H. Greevy, Democrat, vs. Edward Scull, Republican, Twentieth Pennsylvania district; Alexander K. Craig, Democrat, zs. Andrew Stewart, Republican, Twenty-fourth Pennsylvania district; Thomas E. Miller, Republican, vs. William Elliott, Democrat, Seventh South Carolina district. By reference to ¢ Department Duties,” the reader will learn the duties of Department officers, and thus be enabled to know what Department, or officer of a Department, to visit on any business demanding attention. The informa- tion under this head is official, and is revised for each edition of the Directory. The index will be found sufficiently comprehensive for quick and easy refer- ence. 3 MEETING DAYS OF CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES. ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED. [Committees not given below have no regular meeting days, but meet upon the call of the chairmen. ] SENATE. Acrienliure'and Forestry... 2 Zin Friday. Claims. loo a hoot SC GL Te Wednesday. Commerce sp oc, di cos nn a Si Thursday. DistrictiofsColumbia. =... os Friday. FEducationand Labori. wi menstian mas Tuesday. Finamee ais Solo, SL Tuesday. Wisherles. a Ln 4 ans oy Friday. Foreign Relations. oio os oi Wednesday, REE A a Se Sa SER Tuesday. Interstate Commerce... Clo o al o Wednesday. Judiciasg oii nos oa dns PRR Monday. TADYarYE ci i aa Sn Gai Thursday. Military ARIS. ee i inhi an am mia Thursday. Noval APs, tL es aa Wednesday, Patents. J. i oo olla aiablodl Wednesday. TE EO A ES a RR TR ia Tuesday. Post-Offices od Post-Roads: o.oo namin Monday. Privileges and Blections, ......ocoivumnrai. Thursday. Public Buildings and Grounds. _________.___ Friday. Public: lands ov on el es Monday. Tetritonies’ tL ol conn dado dail aide Thursday. HOUSE. NT STI LO SR Re I RN Wednesday. Bankingand Currency = -. 0. oii... Friday. Claims 0, cro Sn tiation Catia Tuesday. Coinage, Weights, and Measures ______.____ Wednesday. Districtiof-Columbin_ oven conn Wednesday. BlecHOns re eas aan mast i Tuesday and Friday. Forelgw Allaive oii. ili .l. .. Thursday. Indian Affalys o-oo tangs Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday. Interstate and Foreign Commerce..___.__.__ Tuesday. Invalid Pensions... oes Tuesday and Friday. Jadiclary os La doa ili Tuesday and Thursday. Labor sit ee aa Wednesday. Manufactures: ©. ar coo aan Saturday. Miliary Affairs 0. 7 0 Thursday and Friday. Militant Tuesday. Minesand Mining... T_.. — Monday. Noval Affalvss 0 0 ol Tuesday. Poche Railroads «1 Te a a Thursday Patentss a a i ey Monday. Pensions... on en los cle Monday. Post-Officeand Post-Roads 0. Tuesday and Friday. FU SR a le IE Monday and Friday. Private Land Claims. L200 00 Thursday. Public Buildings and Grounds_____._________ Thursday. Publiclands [i.e li. i Monday and Thursday. Railwaysand Canals... } Thursday. Riversand Harbors = 2.0 oo 0 Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Merritories soo oo ie Wednesday. ; WarClaims = 2 oc. oo oon 0 oy Wednesday. Wayscand Means... .. ui Tuesday and Thursday. 4 fd MEETING DAYS OF CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES. [Committees not given below have no regular meeting days, but meet upon the call of the chairman. MONDAY... add cea SENATE.— Judiciary; Post-Offices and Post-Roads; Public Lands. HouskE.—Indian Affairs; Mines and Mining; Patents; Pen- sions; Printing; Public Lands; Rivers and. Harbors. BUBRSHAY = 0 Le SENATE.— Education and Labor; Finance; Indian Affairs; Pensions. House. — Claims; Elections; Interstate and Foreign Com- merce ; Indian Affairs; Invalid Pensions; Judiciary; Militia; Naval Affairs; Post-Office and Post-Roads; Ways and Means. WEDNESDAY, o.oo. SENATE.—Claims; Foreign Relations; Interstate Commerce; Naval Affairs, Patents. Housk. — Agriculture ; Coinage, Weights, and Measures; District of Columbia; Labor; Rivers and Harbors; Territories; War Claims. THURSDAY... oa SENATE.—Commerce; Library; Military Affairs; Privileges and Election; Territories. House.—Foreign Affairs; Indian Affairs; Judiciary; Mili- tary Affairs; Pacific Railroads; Private Land Claims; Public Buildings and Grounds; Public Lands; Railways and Canals; Ways and Means. TRAY: Las SENATE.—Agriculture and Forestry; District of Columbia; Fisheries; Public Buildings and Grounds. House.—Banking and Currency; Elections; Invalid Pen- sions ; Military Affairs; Post-Office and Post- Roads; Printing; Rivers and Harbors. SATURDAY... oo. .oc House.—Manufactures. { \ it a FISCAL YEAR CALENDAR FOR 1891-1892. JULY. JANUARY. Sun. M.. | T. | W.|T.{F. |Sat.(Sun| M.| T. {W.| T. | F. [Sat SE DR le i Sel Be EL Ee ER RA 51.61 7 SV olrofmn ll 3] al gs 6 7180 12 31a is 6 1y | 1S {oar tazligd 1a 1516 Yolzoyet| 22 e3i2a 2517 a8 1020) 21 22) 23 26 {27 12820] 30030 {-aoft2q]25]|26)27({28}20(30 wheelie nb ee IE Ge be is © TO Ra Pee Er pe Eo AUGUST FEBRUARY. Sn mete al wah ae SN TE DE Cr Ol TH TE Bl RE gl 34 aig di 6a 8 zl Slr o 10 71 "12 [13 olrol wm lazlagias as faa fs | 16) 17 (| 18 [109120 6: ‘17. {18 {ro { zo {zy fezill 21 | 220 23 24} 25.1 26 |-27 23 gatos 26 272 28 ag a8. 20 | lol cll ean go {ar i tbl a land a es SEPTEMBER MARCH. SRIF Ee Se J Tole Sl lumi oR TU a ee Ra 6 7 St ol 10] 1112 6 7 8 colo [TL] 12 13f list 16 ay 18 ofl 13 ral 15) 16 17 [18 [-10 20 [ay V'2a {23-24 1-251 261 20 {21220 23] 24 | 2526 onitialiiag igel cl ol 27 a8 ban Igor] an] La la onn "OCTOBER APRIL aaa Ele Se Cat co SB Ree Be AE PR 0) il alse i 8 odacli~3] 4 5} 6| 7] 8.9 Ile ag 6 yy bio] in yz 1314125 16 1310202122123 2417 18| 1020 ]|:21 | 22 | 23 25 26 (27128 [2030] 31 ll 2a/25]26)27 (282030 NOVEMBER MAY. sl 2b 31 af 5] 5) 70-120 3] 4°58] 6 7 S| ojio lr lrg 1g S| o(1olxi{rzliz ia 151617131920 21 [15 | 96 {17 [13110] 20] 21 22 | 23024 | 2512627 | 282223) 24]|25)26}]27]28 oa ee SOR VAN Soi ROR RR i RIB © RI INR SS EC DECEMBER JUNE. EISEN a le Rn 8 lg BT ET SE a ee Be 6 «71 8-010] 11]12 se SE ae SHEE TG a lets lear 8Sio lta 13 3a 1516 17 [13 on lari 2a 22 2a lies 126 ll 19 | 20 | 21.1" 22 I" 23 log. 25 27t 28 20 oar. . Jobia7i28 120130 | lia I iy CALENDAR FOR 1892. JANUARY. | JULY, Sun. M.{T.{W.|T | BASS M. | T. |W. [| T. [TF Sat il smd TRG MERE ERR oe tals 61-71 8lial 5] af 5] 6f 5 84g vo r-rel ey toa ts 60 vo vx fund 1g wa 1506 7 (18) 1920 2x {22 [23 |) 17 {183 [TQ [20 | 27 |'22 | 23. & 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 |. 30 BT levitecee niin oder Sho 13 nile nis fen RY FR © FEBRUARY. AUGUST i edhrl el slash oly 1] nla] «| 5680 21:81 9 101 11 {o32'}-13 7] 8] 9 | 10 | 11 | 124:130{} 1a {1526 [v7 | o8 [rol 20 14a] 15 | 26 | 17 { 38 [39 | DO} sr | 22 a3 2a 25 | 26 27 | 21 | 22 [23 | 24 { 25 | 261 20°] CE eR a ie BT ET SER | eS MARCH SEPTEMBER i conieasali Bf 21 31 41 ZB llsveclsianlonnnlone L4..2/:3 694 8 gl10] 371 12 Al s{ 6y 778 oro 1314153617 | 18 [19 | 11 | 22] 13 | 14} ®5 26 «| ap 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 || 18 | 19 | 20 | 21'| "22 "2324" | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 |-ore|----|| 25 | 26 | 27 |'28.| 29 30 1k APRIL. OCTOBER. jr : : 3 ri zh. pal BEE) SR Sgn La Gl Ly steal sl 6).2] 8 982 30 a] &hi8dndifcf 10 | tz [12 {a3 {va {ag | 16 o| 1020 | 12123 | 14 L258 17 18 | 19) 20 [21 22 {23 | 26 | 17.{ 18 |. 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 24 | 25126 | 27 | 28 | 20 | 30 {| 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 [ 2 ['28i 20 .- A a PR LL vl Fab dg Ae A MAY NOVEMBER if al sl al 5L 61.9 wwf Vp a ES 8| ofso fr faz }i13.014 6.7 81 gto] 11] tz & 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 [21 | 13 | 14 | 35 | 16} 2% ES T9i1 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 || 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 A 29 |i30 | 31 ary WARS) SOR LLB BE 1 29 | 30 faevelennnlenn JUNE DECEMBER FY ER “ til 2 lm fib. fl. Eq i2iy 3 graben l=8 1 glue lay [fa | giz 61 718 Hig 10 2 {ra lva ae {96 | vy 18 iar Le lrs [2a HE 110: 17 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 || 18 | .1g;|i20 | 21 | 22 },23:| 24 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 |---.|--..||:25 |"26i|.27 | 28 | i29 41 30{ 31 on REPRESENTATIVES IN CONGRESS UNDER TENTH CENSUS. i yg Se | wn 2 Alabama incre; ease of gy. mi ening ap Montana. Lo net I Arkansas (in IRF DEL) io ce stmnnneas O [i Nebraska (increase of 3) wmmwenmn suum 6 California’ (increase of, I | LE Dh RR ot Nevada LL eta I Colorado {increase | of 1 Lan ll er a 2 'New Hampshive. 0... oo 2 Connecticut - 4 "New Jersey (increagseof ¥). Lo. ic 8 Delaware. FAH OT IL... If New Vork ox ena incl dingy 34 Florida. ow. Sriiienlg Se 2.0 Novth Carolina «0 oo oh at 9 Georgia (increase ¢ if 3) SE RRR Da A iv NorthDeakom 0.0 ol il. I Idaho : Hi ROE NR i LR YL Ohio ara aa 21 Tllitiois| (increase of SE Bl CA i 22 {Oreson'(increnseof VY... Ji hh... 2 Indiana blend ie Se AER ny 13 | Pennsylvania (increase of 2). _.n...-.. 30 Iowa .l.18.4.08 pr. 8 J eco. IT} Rhodedsland. Ji on cin oni tide. 2 Kansas, (increase; Oll Wow fp ger smic St Sout Caroling. col lf chiang das atas 7 Rehtnany . LY ol. 12 12 11 SouthiDalota |... Loan ns odds 5) ve tenn ed ated mia hieied Mi Th 6 Tennessee to opi ol ial bg i Sey 10 Nie repre teen 4 | Texas (incyeaseof 2)... J 1 0 . . 4. 13 Maryland AY MR oa Gr ermont aE 2 Massachusetts. RE of Deum or NII at IO Michigan, (increase ol py doo ada v2 \Washinoten: Shc 80 ss sl 2 Minnesota (increase of 2) ne 7: "West Vivgamia 1-0 Leora ol 4 Misclosipht | OX 1 2 1.2 J Yo. oy “Wisconsin (increase of BY. C2 Li. 10 Neigoait ina off pRETan SLL Fors Wyoming 0. io aa I oy | RATIO, OF. REPRESENTATION. From 178 to 1702 A to Constitution I 30,000 1792 to 3 HE based or on Ist Cents, rT He RR SR ely a i Re RD 33,000 ies 1803 to” [Gd 1800. Sore a EW ae 33,000 46 812tp 1823; RR LR TE A RA MA Ge LC CL a 35,000 “ {803 sob Ae BEY ROR 1 a ETE i 40,000 | £4 1832 to 1843, 3: sth HS UR OC es RR I a 47,700 Ji 1843 to 1852, « GE oT aSde. il te la 70,680 f«’ 155210 1863, ‘ a a 93,423 { «5 1863 to £872, «i SRE RB. i Ea LT oe 127,381 sex 187010 1887 Bed vaothane] 99800... lll mena 130,533 | % 1883 to 1892, CL fy ICR oe Se 151,912 #1892 to ¢ adith © Lr pr a 174,395 Alaba Tvs hens lene a Sein Be 8 A ARE a Be DR SI Sa A 5 Califorgia Ee i es 6 Colorado. RD ee i I Connecticut ES RE 4 Delaware": SR Ra HT be I Pletal O88 Coli oe ino Geargia een nh A ey A eb 10 Hlinois| io oihe sd ves saa aR 20 Indiana. i. .o. ia aa ee a 13 Eh SR Sas Sl 1} antas ob. aR 7 Refuchs Yoo Lo 0p doo 11 FE Eo dA Ee 6 4 4 6 Massachusetts 0 LL Bs NEN pe 12 Michlean-ioleerc: 0 II Minnesota 5 [325 Members. ] NESSISSIDPL oc ede mabe se oes 7 Iu hia ME Se ea raed ei 14 Nebraska ou odie a fn shat 3 Nevada ir en a ea I New Hampshire Loc ol ie sna 2 New eSeY ad rae 7 New York =. 2 oo tl cms 34 Novthr Corona Soran er Dui sia 9 He eR Ee Rn A Be 21 yy SE LS er I Ponmsylyanleld =o fod 08a Baa 28 Rhodelsland oc loon 0 Cm Toe 0 2 SouthiCaveling 0 LoL f. brain 7 ‘Benmessee to nowt SpEn a divans tib 10 Taine. Lo ee ee Sg II Nermont = Ct to ne 2 Vigne oa 10 West Vispinla Lo. oot aa oh 4 Wisconsin: oo. ou aun a Uh es han 9 : ite a "UNDER ELEVENTH CENSUS. : [356 Members. ] GENERAL INDEX. Page. Adiatant-General’s Department. ...oe. tes cto vie nee ihe sinsan sans A a NE Sa 182 Agriculture, Departinent of, and Officers and Divisions of....c.ccever vein rariaiia train iia.ise..t 193 Weather'Bureat... . ... .. . init i dena das ain aiess shisnnwnie is vane 193 Bureau of Animal Industny i... cosines an doe dius cate sinie va siviain’s 193 Duties of. The Secretary. i se todo givnees vous ilory ois insinins vonine 215 Assistant Secretary....... rR I Re a, 215 Bureaus and Divislonsof. i... 2... nc Ue 215,216 Almanac, Nautileal dr. oo el oR a i Liven sd mae TE A SI ST snl os der 185 Alphabetical list of Members of Congress, city residences; MESON IR Ra eT 270-277 Apportionment laws of 1880 and 18go....... rE RE Er SINE le OR ee 256,257 Architect ofthe Capitol... 7... . cod aan vids eg a a a ig J oT aterk eget het 165 SUDETVISING J... ere eas sensi ert vise sis tninlers tial ie winia minis Sle aiuiais sino ute VRE] Rl 178 Army, Headquarters of the... le cues ieteearnanesrarbiannsriones svi sasairnsesnnnseionenssasisresios 181 AUT, TIISE . i es esc iisve de densiennnnnininesive vain sinibiensnssuineinsiasin vsisnsisienionssonsissessesese 179 Second ..cecsve sass sve ves: on vale eee EC SR A RR EE A I BL 179 BE ee ii ce sama wads iain anit sa asien ei vias Sena sd veeisit nin o's shi mite malo sie smiaials via lsinieiwistele 179 TE Re RN Sg SI BT Ese a GE ER TE SR EL 179 LT A a A SC RN SS SR 180 EL A BI ET I CO Bp a a eR OR EE 180 Bellevie Magazine... oc cniieisipeshisssisinismmenes vines St Ag ay aa ie RAS iN dete 186 Board on Geographic NAMES... .. . ics «seme ssiohssisnioeibivi: weivisiais visineininnss sshisivisaletoisisiaielsisivisiaa’s s olais 196 Dues. 00 otha tnt ale vin rs egies es mimes AS Be Rie deaf HOS 219 Board of Inspection and SUINEY. ..... «ove iivasoaiseisins deiahimaivn : vuisainesionisissavuissssiessiosalsineisais 185 Botanic Garden, The United States... ci. iu rir nicisivin sjeiseiislbnic evi iuis vieinisisieiatainis avis seins teats 3s sleinisiale uta s isle 165 Building forthe Librany of Congress, OMCersiof «iii... sues canines Lneeivnansbinsine cnivieisnisiivnoins veins 105 Bureau of Construction’ and Repair... iri sin vie iis d nisiateinioisinininleiniv's wie ainisin wivia'nie's siatale diatateins siniain ali s 50ers 185 Engraving and Printing... ....c..ce.... Saale sae ANE ee se Fie Re ee 178 Bquipment, iINaVY.....c... lcci su sivieninsivetstiominteinilnte Sulaten sian sloipa lv sioa isin sos swinie a's siely 184 Medicine and SUIZELY. .c. ceva sis romans sini Baesisnai einin iis imiipics eine esl daisies wie sia vitld 184 Navigation... ..... ii cre obiciisnes sms sists dniunisinsisininisinivisisnialuicin visisiaislsiinlate’s s sins sia amin ahesis’e 181,184 OTANI ANICE a i0 ve ole ev oss wine sales ly as Eats Sila ster ciate a ators ia dian nw atat Jka al ae 0m wisn We ee wad re en AB3 PONBIONS oi. chit iii smitten sinlesieaiates siuia alate sta a ag abs as bw Sin te wa ech ware sta te a falar 191 Provisions and Clothing... /. cou ves soasusve dari tinrressahesisnsssansase aararasareasnss 184 i SEABSHCE hi esses sais Gran nny swe hive ue wr vies ie alee blokes ete ne SinYe iam w ote Nal 178 a orn Be BT ETE ETO ne SSR lm a ARE SP Se ER SE 184 = Yardsand Docks......... 00 siineas iad iaee ss TL PR an aNd ery 184 i American Republics, duties: of . ci cv. vuesihiv sy evrasine suivant een PR A AE 197,219 Calendar for 1807-702 170: 2 is ters dove Bree dae sien dais uisisls sloiaethslnis du a ain iain Spies Sinaia ian isles dw mae msie nile 7 CRpIOL THe. ou... ve aes dons main smis nals ect Gee nati Hoi ats ooh on wt Desi Sl tsi ee ety 167 © EE HY SS RN AS RB Sa Se IN Se 165 Dingramsiof.. oii cei cuomnses TE PT Ee se Sn a I SE RR BR 168-173 ! EE I re 165 The, Description of ..... ccc reiieenivenniiesiaearsessnasecnsvesessons Seale mi gs 167 t The Original Building... ......ucee ri veeseie SD A SE INA 167 Hr it br ae Reena La Be SOR te Satie ane Rill un oe 0d 167 Dimensions of the Building......c.ccoiieivnennen AR RS RSE 167 { 41 TR BT I ES I RNR RE BT RD A LL sas 167 Census, Office of, Location of, Officers of... .....c.coverneevecnvsnnnunron amin swe siselst s sit sid ueede Seinisln 192 ] 9 10 Index. Page. Circuit Courts of the United States. .............ccuurer'n A 220 Civil Service Commission, The United States... ........cc.veiinensrressdasiness balsminioen Ser dis 195 Duties of n. fu vssvees dessa bin th is dae fio.0 amine vais ee wets Seen 218 Claims COUT OF. cd i a tales aise fo sites lhe Eibiaece a oo a tels tai eiuatare atu eie as ew a th were ra Te 9% ee wrarwl ala och 221 Clerk of the House, OMCei0f. ... .ccoivines csi trisiiss ssnisniiunes deanissvnsnesinnssissmansisioss isse ssosesne 162 Clerks to House Committees........... Ser Sr A ST ee I RR 164,165 $0 Senate COMI CEs, rs i or Seah Shas wala ate a ov are nis som alsa ete a le wba Tu ohare! sure sw wis 150-160 Coast and GeodeticSurvey, The U.S. ...:....... cc. ii assis cesiinn. asians so sissies sinwivimains aipsvies 181 Committees, HOUSE... i. soot oni shine shisssiaiioieiniie saints vate s vials siete sooo alain ties viwisia din sale aise 140 La Us a Tt Rr Re ie el Se En SE AE OR 146 Alphabetically arranged:...........cocoeseaiicn a I 147 LTE A A eB RM Re RE (RR 164,165 StenOZraAPNerS 0. (se dois crsa vr aminsts snainsnani ahs a a et eee a8 162 Le A I ee A EL aa EE ECR 126 YT a I EE Re ena A230 Alphabetically arranged... . o.oo irioi svar oo saitie eva isatarn she's «wea sisi slsie sin 4 0's 132 yn le LE A in SO a Nh Sp Fg 132 Comptroller of the Currency........ eeeeeeevennen.. IRE Ee ee A 180 Plrst occ. AE SS a LR i a Ra weg eee 178 SEEONA .. .ci. lio... iis sinensis sss yeis a vs shi assis tie estab stale lain nly 178 Commissioner Of CUSIOMS. 07 voit ass salah ris sitinidin Simin’ Isles a riein oi alain pratt aie winisln siaialn los le 1u bate ins 178 Internal Revenme. i. ives ss inaitos iss ns in sites penis vals a/asiena side ieitiasiistts 180 Congress, The LIBMry OF... hoc sa Shs sive Bins wn mene ee FAR iy Sara 166 Construcliomand Repair, Bureau of... i... ccs vena oins siaideisinvaidivsie tins suelo vis vin sigisiseisiin’s sivisia's sais 185 Consulates-General, CONSUINLES, (ELC... . . i xem snsnnssusariavnmmnries sie snes snesnnnszmsssloenn 227244 Consular Clerks....... g's Sus aca's sis mals sin wie sie mani an sw mia ol sisi laiai ls Acs ole aia slain ve mieleisls us ans ath o hie 244 Corcoran Art Gallery, Locationand Officersiof. ..'.. = Live le iLL dei aS aeres Seal 2aT CorpSoli Engineers, War. ... cv. teen dioss niu risiso mata siasissmiais sininatisls shiassivie|ih sle/s,n sla isias nisiainioinfoce 182 ra LL Rs Le BOS RE sh Sy 221 A LL SS Ee El bE NE 218 I Er Le EE Se Sg a i a a A Sn SS 221 Courts, United States Cireuil. i... ic.u iv vee suivscinasis sanivis waisiasleleicisinis is ois isisialeinnivie siete jisisiais s s'uts’s woviwie niece 220 FU A I RT DE Oo Dr Sn Sa a | RI RE Ee a eS re En So II Re I A 188 A033 TFT ESR NR Or VL BRE RS en lB here SM CARR SL OS 213 Debates Official Reporters. of . cu. ci. cues sinimais silsiaisisinivaisionns siaieviieiVinioiniaisiate sHinlrite Ae SC EL LH 165 Departments, Dutiesiof......... ui vu isan ieee tesiveinish sisisialsvisisin tc on aisle ine sisisisinis isin sina ins seis meine ds 198 Diagrams of the Capltoll. .....u.oriseiisnominsininivnasisainssivmnimesis sinus vv aisaisisbninas dials sista sisi ue 168-173 Director OF Ne VINE. uv inh. oh mais sims taimisivinn a Baie Tai oe Frais Leite St sia stare het ia a a ea Eb rie a Te 180 Directory of Washington, DD. (Cot dese isis diidiin Lunia suivisn stuinininmiva sia bis si dish vid wats wate wnsiwils ai, 249 Dispensary, INavali... ici leiiions eiommiv IR CR ERE RR TL MR 187 District Government, OfficerS Of . cueeicivs se veccen isons dasivaicrnvnsaistisnivslss + vdumaiasls sys aiomsvye 245-246 Document-room of theiSenate. .. c...h. 5: do ivamsissiameniselesie sisisiisalsrisielais sins ntelsls sid sels gals iaroleras sie » 16x Deocument-rooms of the blouse. oii. 0 iti sus Sevens veisls sitiniitialuioin Ei biateivty vw wioselaintoralera ste bln wins 162,163 Doorkeeper of the House... Li ciinisis tis mnrmvuii Bini esinin shuts innieialaeiaios SS a hy 163 BEducabont OMe of oi ihr. i a Be Sai nh hee CR a 191 Engineers, Corpsiof, Wal. ci... cu eorisionoravssverswiysansinn sine sise si doting sate el atesiso ns sos sine 182 Engraving and Printing Buream of ...c sue. vo evens idine dais snisilsnanis svivinisin na wainisls ais saiainteibats vo 178 EE OMOLOZIS lh No ih a ina sl Se a aiete as wine ew eS ae wan ME aly ul ah an a a a) See wn 194 rE qUIDMENEIBUICANROL. 1. 5 i i seh tu dase iso a se vb iam avai ints iv as wien a as a mi mia Tula a wad nie 184 Ethnology, The Bureau of ..... 0. i... sisisrianessinennsnine diesen BO pr DE BNE 248 Examining:Board, Naval. i i rn i ad i mies vn sdlsl wae uae Crain masa en 187 Executive MANSION. . 0. 0. aris sales snails nals wks alvin i sioiniin las on win winln wioia sisie alin Sls seins’ 177 Experiment Station ................ or Ea SR SS Re Fairies wan iv Vass ass 193 Hire Departments The PIS 2. or a ea es adm i saws ee Caen ane ew 246 Fish Commission, The United StateS.....c..ccevevvenenn. Sr SR SI is eT, ENE 195 Poldinr-100m Of the BlOUSE |... sh i A sams es sevens sain mns ns wbions sass tin sivsstotisnie sepes 163 Senate....... einisinjenieis Seas tks siolet EE I 00 161 Foreign Legationsinthe United States... un... 0 0 hr. ens ss nnissinscstnens vse ssnsvelunies 222-224 Franking privilege regulations 1eSpeeting .... ——......... sors vesesressnsae Et Cass on tie Nala ee 256 Geodeticand Coast Survey, The U.S... ...cieuuivsisonsdsnsees EN SRR Ry al: FES Geological Survey, Office of the......... A A I A RR Sas ie ES RIT PLR 191 Government Printing OMee. «0. a iaanas aren ein eT i 196 Duties of Public Printer and Foremen.... .. ........ icv: seneesonsreses esv stir sveeseses 81g Index. IY Page Headquarters of the Army........ Saat oR elle eR yd Te tn eie RES ER ES a EIR 181 Health Department, The District... ovo. vive svesdeninorinr crn savnsissnnsennsovsinsie dunes sieasnieinss 246 National Boafd of cv renvissviiaers Se Rey reese a ey ed nf SE, t 195 Heating and Ventilating of the House. ........ .cc.ivcveesenviansesorsss arses Tr eR 163 SONAL. tos sh oe vassals sae satu eis waeionisisy Vainiv su sles Sst alealele iow dlnin oa sare 161 Hospital, U.S. Naval i. vi. vive vis de sii dod ddueaiins sate sine EE nS PR To PS Rr a 186 House, Chaplainiol Live cis vnade sic ve nna ve vainls 5 sulas s/s a wis din sine tn /ais ale wiualuTsrotetotala laiwlee cisterns 162 Ed ON) CE RR Be ER ep RAT POR SR 253,254 Clerks:to:Commitiees of the. i... .... 000. ii veasntaarsssss A a FE BE ER 164 Directory and Diacram of ther... uit, ives sas sisin isin sss ss ens sane syve tnt ane tossss 268,269 DIOBTREEPEL LOL. Li; i wu tie sii due sus sia alias = wile uiets nis shaitareinie sini ja sik inn wieied BTiw Soin v sieht wwe uiote 163 Docoment BOOM... viliaasi se ion sain aii di oie aed is wins sss ap die iBorsin s vioreitintole cB ATOR Folding Roomof the... ....c%. ch. ives: conrnes AC UT Ge MEL A pr TR RR SITY 163 Doorkeepersiof, list of .....0......00 00 tens on nes ial ak Ve nai sat Sees Se a 255 Heating and Ventilating of the....... RR i dS SE OS Ge IL ETT AT nn FBS 163 he i es SO GR SA eS i 162 re AR NO ea aR SE EL OE GT NFR Ey 162 Document ROOMY a eras inns nr Sane bin isle sloitienleitioly sisiotety 162 a a a Rr Re Se BR Pr UR RR Sa is 162 Official :Reporters of Debates.................. Se A SR SRT RT 165 Postmastersiof, List ofl. oJ, ro canoe eractissinn en HAR CAC Pr ENE 255,256 Post-Office al the. a a SL ae nes belie sme Se sine a 163 Sergeani=at-ATIMS Of... ..... Jos ilies enlitvinneivaivine vais tein vsisnie shissinsinsiv ae sis hin eerie .. i103 Sergeante-at-Arms, List of ...... 0.5 ves. iorsaseiiin ie ae a wm ee mE he a So tat AT 254 Speaker of... uc da a See EE RS BI oe eh ‘162 Speakersiof, LisU-of oc oo vi LG lL sie a ar ab ar ae a Bossa 252,253 Hydrographic Office! The United States... ceo. ious cnsredanioe constinnsiinn ivi solaris voswinspoinvsisis 184 Indian A Tals OCE Of fh Cre cians alms sels ad eA TR sa dn Ae ae Senate se ae 191 Inspection and Survey, Boar@iof .. J... i vise haha vs Soka waa sare awe Seis nr me seals 185 Inspector-General’s Department .. ni. co. ive iivnnsrnrnases ne RS es te 182 Interior, Department, and officers of ....... ............ ion. TS I 189 Duties 6f, The Seereiary ........ 00 vessssrssn asinine issn 210 The First Assistant Secretary... ue. rvs ssseveda- 210 The AsSISiant Secretary... cuss oviuhen sass 210 The Ghief Clerk... irs ia Sai fon dstvnshisriiuis 210 The Commissioner of Patents ..........ecvun.... 210 The Commissioner of Pensions.................. 211 The Commissioner of the General Land Office .. 21x The Commissioner of Indian Affairs............. 211 The Commissioner of Education................. 211 The Commissioner of Railroads ................. 211 The Director of the Geological Survey.......... 211 The Superintendent of the Census............... 211 The CensusiOMce ....... cc cific danas. duit s 211 Internal’ Revenue, COMMISSIONEE Of ius iui inse inns nave vdinasins sds iosiie viuimsaioiies bin bjeaals 180 Interstate Commerce: Commission, OficerSof .......... . iv. ues cise ins inisuislasinieinsiven sii silane 221 Be Eo ER Re Te LS nS te 217 Judge-Advocate-General’s Department iar)... cc aii a bide cdi Welt sie winisvs ie eines a 182 Judge-Advocate-General (Navy), duties of. . Mn RSE SB 209 Offieeiof on nh a ARE a ee ee a alr Sa 185 Justice, Department, and officetB of, ni dition side sto Lins snisn ui salnnsatalenisia sats slaisietae Sash 192,193 Duties of. The: Attorney-General. . .. i. sdussrsss ene anssssh 214 The Solicitor-GGeneral... oii vii dei snins ne saanisniny 215 The Assistant Attorneys-General.................. 21% EaDOr, Department Of. tii iss sis sess a E a Prue pe ES Es ed SANE, eee anise as 195 Duties:of Commissionerof, ..... vc... eo vss ee sah ES be ST 217 Fand Office. TheGenera). o.oo di a et a yy Ea I oe ie on 189 Legations of the United States; abroad i... ii, oe i si fe vis ce sassnnesssnsamBnrsinsiten 224-226 Library of Congress, The Zi i ia i a a de Be RS En a BL Jin cat are nab davis Sas aan 166 the House. vi ru a ea, a Sd a i nh en a ae 162 LA e-Baving Service... . i th cde i se aes rr Th Tarte AA ata wa A el Sean sin maw Sere Raa ed \isinia else lis 178 Light-House Board......: cicvessrarsrevasvis Se ES TSN Oe I 181 12 > Inaex. : Page Mails, Arrival and departure of..... ses aisles einen 2 Svis ious RN a a at APE TR PTET, 261 Marine Barracks, Washington. ©... cia iesseissesssnasviesias A A a 188 CorpsyHeadquarters of TW. 8... cu... 0 adv da daniels ten ien bes fun ss eR ES nite 188 ET eC i lane I ol NE NE 186 Marine-Hospital Service........ RB Ah a A ha 181 Marshal, United States: JL. ui oan as ines resains ane isi et a op a Be SN 247 Meeting Days of Committees ............ os I a AEA LE SIR Ee LS Le 4,5 Medicine and Surgery, BUrCamiOr. .oi. oi. huinsrosssishst snes sr sionsinsnsds deans toinns es da 184 Medical Examining Board, Navy»... Flo yaaa 187 Deparment ........5 ...% se a ee Be re Cn TE ; eves) 282 os ER DYE TE BE Re SE ee LN pe LE Be EG SE 181 Money-Orders, International, Rates of commission in United States currency charged for issuing.. . 260 Money-Orders, Rates of commission charged for.) ..... 0 iin re ate ei aban» 260 Museum of Hygiene ................ cos. pt Tn LR BRE AL Cl MR Sn RE Seta 187 YC I ES CL i Se Up a a pe LO Ss a RE 284 NationaliBoardiofi Health 0) Ur i edie edd bans eon is sin nihins 3 vie Walad a aids Seine sie 195 Nautical Almanac... ..:.c... 00.0. ER aE RE Te ee IE LR I 185 Naval Dispensary. ...... cc. ccaviie sities. orcad Eh SS hE aa NT a Bia PY a se ag 187 Ean Board a eat sane wee ie San a a bs sie ate iets 187 15 ER A ee Se SS MN Sb ie se dan ele TR eel CHE A RR ER 186 Intelligence, Office of..... Ea a i SS oe Pa pe CN ag Se Rams 185 Observatory, Location and officers of .......... Dh aa at Se LR Se a 187 Ordnance Proving: Ground... ....0.... 0. 00... Wa Li... Ra RT A Laindale 186 Reng Board... Ee Cathet alse aa wR we ae a ew eles Se a a bale risers 187 Navigation, Bureau of.......... co... 0 vennens Tetinion A LS REA 184,208 Navy Department ISecretary’sOfice of, la... 0 Lio ih or ie a ad dd SL 183 | Briann dr Sed BH ROT ae by noi Se SR Ce a ie Se SO IE CR 208 The Assistant: Secretary... «i i a Sr evs in abi 208 EET I AT ee He EA hE Re IO a CD 208,209 The Judge-Advocate-General. i... .... coe. annl dod civil sacithis 209 {The Marine Corps, Commandant of... .... Lui. sess sania eiainsion 209 Marine COTDS. ...s 3 cias einai ote Saisie ms iulh’s wae ls Saiaiiosnsiors anetrs dio taa 209 Navy Pay Ofice. i... vee co iit tiie oil oini vw paisionlorsis ais th iba sitis shes > 3s ini ives Hains ma Rais ata's viviwrals 186 Navy. Yard and Station, Washington, D. C .... ......lo. 0. ile oh tr evan sets suivh he isimiere 186 Officers attached to, but not resident ................ Rie a se ry 186 Observatory, Naval, Location and oficersiof. oi 0 Liu viteic sani sun sasbnnome dati ash tannins 187 Officers'of the Senate... .... la. 020i, I ea a a a re sR i re a Sir ee aa ar sas 159 Officers ofthe El ouse: ui ai ul sh a bl Neely wie a rs iste siedreiiia alate a winnie wa in 01s aiaie 4 aime 162 Official Reporters of Debates... oe i ii a i oe civ vas ae sie veins dd wate Su sisi's vw aie wie wu an 165 Ordnance, Bureau of, INGUY 0. J. Jad din dd Sand J dd in sivas sins mia mis ald wien pile Sits SIA Le Re 183 Pepariment War oii ll foi di dio a evan a PRS Td RAT 183 Bages; mding. oi oy La a AR BT SE SB 161 Te eB a Ce PSE PIE rE AR Saat 190 Ray: Department War 5, or oe I ae CEs vite sv sma alin wih 182 PensioniAgency, United States... de eae Laat ev aa de sites sn wis 191 NR rE A EAE Ne rs SU Lg Ct ne SS IT at ER 191 PoliceiConrt The hil a i a he fina ninissioniye Pe Nea ede Ti 245 * Population of United States... .....c. aici, 2 ivaslsveinisins Se ad Si ee as 254 PostavesaleBiOlic or. oi a Sh fi Bis sa ele wea a sea ea a mea nh ER a ae Ee a wee he 262 Postal Regulations, Unlied States, i. ui ail ol dies, ode v da sel sda weiss sss vn ois va vain wiwaivisisinis isos slos 253 Postmaster=-General, Office ol... 0 ccd Jatin ddvinies ii Saldate can ot ean ns dae cundnn vanessa 188 Pirst Assistant; Offige of 5100... dia. a a ti ese va ab se pl aie ee ase ' 188 Second Assistant OMCeIOf J... ohh i aliases is yaa Wass ea lern as raise 289 Third Assistant Office Of Loi odes vt ions s es evema vis sinniva saivnieainm ani 18g Fourth Assistant OfCeiOf. .. 5. sivey chic viii iin vrineis veh inion sin buniasins nin usin 189 Dead- Letter OCR. it. i ioahois nile snsinivt seine se ol soininemetaiss EAL dS 188 Post-Ofice- Depattment. coh. i i a des wniin nine sass wade a md us we a da on aides 188 Duties. of. The Postmaster-General.............. vv oiidiom an LI 212 The First Assistant Postmaster-General...................... 212 The Second Assistant Postmaster-General.................... 213 The Third Assistant Postmaster-General._.................... 214 : The Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General .................. 214 l Index. 13 Page Post-Office of the House .... ..c.coeeiconeecreirecieacccscatacocssccccssssoneccsas Sr aah 163 of theSenate......... icv ecie crinowsee A EC UI SL A 161 Washington CHY -.......ccveurucervsiannsensnaiassanocass Fore stare as 4 mn Thiiae e ola put ly od 251 Press Galleries, Rules governing eS Be RO eh el CE dee 176 Press, The Washington ....... AI SL ly a er i A 250 Press, Members of thei... i. .iscesu sacs sbnssnssnninisnssisraisanensnssensssisisdasvensesscsven NX yma Printing Office, The GOVEIrnmMent......uieeiieirenenniiineeneeeeietnrnadorienearereitatenaenncens 196 Publication Office, War ReCOrdS.......c.cceurtcusiensnerorssvesarsnssrsasssostssoesnesarassonssese 183 Public Buildings and Grounds and Washington Monument. ........ccoiiiiiiiiiiiiiininieneaan., 183 Quartermaster’s Department. ...........oieeieeiiniiiiiiiiieiiiiiiatiiiiiaiieiaaaans RN 182 Railroads, Office of CommiSSiONer Of... ...civeeeiereaninarieeeiaiies cooeesnssessnsnsoncenecncnnss 191 Railway Commission, Intercontinental. ism al I i Ll ee 197 Putles of i. Sonn aren sie eae hata al dar nla 219 Receiving-ship Dale... .. ..coceueeneeesarinesisssesserassesscasasstesscsssssrsatarssssonsasesnannss 186 Recorder S OIC fr Ue a ssaivise se isis sian ais sisal lelaie a bint = waisle wale muins sislueiiain aioe s valor v siuin a siatuizianis 247 Register of the Treasury .....c.cceeiiunreueteaeereteaeereasennsenninn. ais is aa AST ae allele WH wel 178 Register of Wills.............. a A dl SR SE SS A Se gr ER Lisl Gy 247 Reporters of Debates, Official ....... ATSC aS ha Sie ore lao d ahi lat ie wa inte i alviere wit 165 Seer Service DIVISION «ins sass sens vias dais sion orsisielsis/ywaiseinieinionie vss nsnecss a's reltiveisialaissieeinissaisions 178 Secretary of the Senate... i. iis. sores sesieunisn sin banlsis nnswint swiss sis sniaaheainisls fivielsinisnieiaioisinitaissb ores 159 Senate, Officers 00h i... i eerie sine sisiveis sr tuivsioainin iwaini vainly viain's sso seis ota nie' els siainiviata winie ateinislataieinloe 159 Committees of Clerkin)... tu aati ves le sineiivion sa we v's viienision idl isis seinuiatyis ki vaiTets aw alaimiminive 159 Cr ET UE Ls RE oe SE SE AN I I 251 Directory and! Diagram of the... . cc. ou iii... ih verre i ch sili as se sl i 266,267 Document ROOM. iS ci ides iw a in ale sine are am a eae te ia wie wre ulate) ue Bd ete ye rahe 161 Assistant doorkeeperS of last of. a a i a sete en dwn ee ile aan Ee 252 Folding Room oi hl ir Leet ses scaniiist chia d s daisy isa ivisian sie vie sr re salsa ioe 161 Heating and ventilating of .... cco. an. vveinins aac inven nos Vn wale ah ae Vy wre 161 Mall MeSSengers.... vivo: conic isvate snc visnininion Suisiiain sian aia aiuats Srinisials sisiuieis ple eisteiais stein + wiaininl 161 IMESSENEEYS. i io. sass tleen ss sienna s sismans sainirsisimatels sla sisiaia2isisianas aisles u'nauielsnimisaionnivia’s 161 Pages, riding... oreot ode. civil nh i se ee Ree ee 161 Ly TTI (op NP Sr Ce ME eA TO RS ae Ee dL A Ba Se 161 Presidentiof ol. ei el ska sie sia ais le Sista Tala ileus e Bnia aT /n'e terest mats 159 Bresidenis grodemidore, LSE obi ov. oi Ee as a ses besive sin sea ee eet ee 249,250 Principal:clerlesiofyflistiof Lr. ch or ht sie ws se sia nate alee main stele inelals elle 252 TOR ae RO A SI ee ee a IE RE Ea 159 Secretantles ol LAR Ol i a ha Ge ET She al mee pt ee re a He 251 Sergeant-at-Arms of. ..........ciereins.ns wtile e's RR i 160 SergeaniSat-AvmsiListofl. 0. oul LL a i iY sa ee sa a ete iat 251 Senators, List'of, Commencement and expiration of service..............c.ce0iinioneernrnnnnn. 263,264 Stenal Office. i... cn ee es se a Ss as si ene aes tna lninainie a wh ni 0 183 Smithsonian'Institution, Officers and Location of... ec... ori vo dysanlon evn dsnens ns susinsissasnviy 247 . Membersiof the Institution: J 00 00 i ddl tins sive sna « wisieimate'sinirs 247 Regentsof the Institution. ci. iia Gh on ha so ld sate, 248 Soldiers’ Home. The Board of Commissioners and Officers of..........cc.ceiererrinnniseesssletn. 197 Solicitorof the Treasury, Office of the... i cus 0 eins sein a bie als i ni pista a Bd ately a als os wlaiats 102 Assistant Attorneysof Ao... un a esa ha le ae en 193 DOS Of cs ea ey Re a i Sn IT BS ae eas Sedna 204 peaker OF the House... . rues clue ee sain vrvia nis sf elon bein aiaint obi alan sitiuieis wins isis inlsi «inh sins wie slaw sotes 162 State, Department Of... i tid ier srs v esialnnin an es Set akan niatele’s blk isia td 4ivi valn ain Sluisie S 0 wim wie 177 Duties of. The Seerctary oy ss Sines BR as a a LL TUR 198 The Assistant Secretary. os. oma lb nia Steir alan ve saais 198 The Chief Clerk 1. ale Be al La, 108 Bureau of Indexes and Archives... ........ col iv vine esishe nial 198 Diplomatic Buredu.. i 6 ha A a a aa is a aes 198 Consular Bureau... . is iar oahiicee ae RE 198 Bureau of Accounts................ Tait vay ee Ba iy 199 Rolls and Library......... Bs are % serie 199 LA eR a EE NE CC SRN ERE) 199 an 14 Index, Page. State, War, and Navy Department Building, Superintendent of ..........cccviieiniiiiiiii ont “18 Statistician, Department of Agriculture... .. c.ee. conve iivaisitaresa es ssann survives inion scare sialy 19: Dutiesiof... oon co venes ER a so ra ha Al TR Tvs 21 Statistics Bureanofiil tl il Ser he et a Se msl seis fi male oles isa lusis vit leis rainie Ree 178 Steamboat INSpection, OfICE Of 1. cn. cleo cron coders sls soinsivieins va du thisinats valve on siwstinalainion oxen ais oe 178 Steam Engincering, Bureanof i... ....h cn. n dd ni se ee a eer 184 Steel Inspection’ Board ... ...... cdee. sustain suite ve ir nininies van sass sie nisin eis seie a dln ainsi sinls a vase 187 Stenographers to Committees .......... RS EE EN le BR BE SR 162 Subsistence Department... . cvs cs cs ansiisisin vs sisdoinivis sit ait stein nfs 3 aise niniein viviwieiaie hie waleoraiele site 182 Supervising Architect's Office... ......-..-.. cus intl es sess seen ss sess sabes ene 178 Supreme Court of the United States. ....... c.count iii, 220 Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. ....... coeveeiiin iii iiieieriisieianes 247 Superintendent of Immigration... ..... .............. o 4iela ts Mall a dle es Ths fababelaets vara is iaiatse metals 181 Telegraph, The Government. ......... ...cveovsveiltresvsnnsors:noivatinhotio. sanorasonssimnais esses 166 ‘Treasurer of the United States ............. ..... pais Sa srs aE Cree 180 Treasury Departments... oc. c .e i seessvaiu sis oe i hin sluistslsi nih mins sense iol is ala a 177 Dutiesiof.- The Secretary ...... coi. a ih cf Sh dade ds vie deni sme thurs 199 The Assistant Secretaries. o.oo. i. cre dels vu or saiicsnnitnions s ag0 The Chief Clerk. ...... I bi tnt ss OAS 200 The First Comptroller... ..... 00. 0 A Se hs 200 The Second Comptroller. .... ER 200 The Commissioner of Customs®,....... i... i. 0d AE 200 Theirs Andilor. ob sini va a dedi de i ail, 200 The Second AUANOr Jo ants sree ain dea ase irae 201 The Third Auditor.......... 0 con aes essai Se cies Ns 201 The Fourth Auditor... ouvir den sess di cl 202 The Fifth Auditor, ...... 0... Sh oh Sele vin Bir ova dans Cas 202 i TER I LT Sa RP RL 202 The Treasurer of thelUnited States... ...... sieeve 203 The Register of the TreaSURY «cu. ira ve sien sramsioaidents 203 The Comptroller of the Currency. .......v..cc.oive in buoenivs. 203 The: Director of the MINt oi. aid Sli susie ira os tiesto 204 Phe Sollclor... a nial as darn RL LN sos Sass ae Raia ay 204 The Commissioner of Internal Revenue........................ 204 The Superintendent of the Coast and Geodetic Survey......... 205 ' The Supervising Surgeon-General, U. S. (mercantile) Marine- ToSpHal Service. tou de. dis his Ch alien od aed ss he eee 205 The Supervising Inspector-General of Steam Vessels.......... 205 The General Superintendent of the Life-Saving Service....... 205 The Bureau of Statistics... i 2k or a visi ve ismnnivisiosirs cs 206 The Bureau of Engraving and Printing. .... .ceesececnsonen.- 206 United States Senators, classification of, as to terms of Service .......ceeeiveieeeeenrmsiesacnnnns 264,265 United States Coast and Geodetic SUIVEY . .. vv. viii faves va vaiurins sess stvintinais siassioeire tine sisiseis des 181 Fish Commission. ........ . ISO tara ats Ge vn ls Tih a todober ly tele Wintabe soit imitate 195 erations abroad. . oi .c iv rirtins in va rhs « diai swiss Sin Vuelo ale ie amis he oroidies mini incataioiats 224-226 Atiorney'andasSiStant®. cil ie ae ma ei Me in a wie wn wa SE ne 192,193 PostaliRecnlations 0... oi ig Ss vioh kuisisia swale vate nia oie le sis mie etal 253 United StatesiSupreme Count, Officers of. i... ... coe iivs vrviiivemalsisis sisi vnsesicabesisssinsveshiesiios 220 Vice-Presidents, BSt.of............ colo: civ doniais FE he SAS SI EAS SI SS Rae a 255 War Dapariment, offficersof i. ih. dics saliva hina ihe shied ielsls rindi «Tia ae oleh sis smn ax ieee pn wee 181 Duties of. The Secretary . oi iat. or a re ys masa 206 The Assistant Secretary of War... 0 0 ol. ira al Vai. 206 The Military Bureaus of... co. cei idinn ive. densvalewntunoiris san ia 206 The ChiefiClerk, .. i nis evaiaiassrrandanaisn seins sivas ssa 206 The Inspector-General ............ 0. 0.0ue as I ewes h pec 207 The Commissary=General Wil oil 0. a siden anssnass 207 The QuartermastersGeneral ...0. co 2 lL iin iss dridssessans 207 | The SurgeonisGeneral. vn) c 5 Bio 0 a Sesh semen 207 The Paymaster-General........ 0. 0 oli. 0. iii sisvees re Nie 207 The Chief of Engineers... i. oi. sve sit ti sao ensaigieaieie 207 The Chiel of Ordnance isu. a in iia diss vans srs airesivnes 207 The Judge-Advocate-General. 2. Li. ch. iis siuvaenes wes sive 207 The Chief Signal Officer..................A... Sr eg rs 207 5 : : Index. 14 : Page. War Records Publication Office........ccoeeiiieiieniiiiiiiieiioaronanaion Woes alain in Pan 183 Office and Library, Naval ........c.citieverinetsnsrsssn iavsnnnssseraosesesvenennsh 185 Washington Marine Barracks... ..........c.oiiieueiiiisennesaeacetoruenntisnnnacne taneneracacans 188 National Monument Society, The ....ccouiuriiiienriiriiiiiireiiieiaecieisnnncennnn. 248 ’ Weather Buran .....cco ao sececssceassrosessnsoseisasesensarossassesinsnsaranens ght nle nea ints 193 WILLS, REISE Of. . ou ceeene vue tten eu ataeataeiesaroaameeiaientosuassastsonssasneosonssanccances 247 Yards and Docks, Bureau of ....cceeieeiiiiennaronicaiicareciciianereananns SUE a : 184 Zoblogical Park, National, Officers of...... a Ee Ree IE ey siete A a Se alsi3 Wn Ca mela Se SHYT OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY. ' MEMBERS OF THE FIFTY-SECOND CONGRESS. VICE PRESIDENT AND PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE. Levi Parsons Morton was born at Shoreham, Vermont, May 16, 1824; received a public school and academic education; entered a country store at Enfield, Massachusetts, at fifteen _ years of age, and commenced his mercantile business at Hanover, New Hampshire, in 1843; removed to Boston in 1850, and to New York in 1854; engaged in banking business in 1863 in New York and London; was appointed by the President Honorary Commissioner to the Paris Exposition of 1878; was elected to the Forty-sixth Congress, as a Republican, from the Eleventh Congressional District of New York, and was re-elected to the Forty-seventh Con- gress. Was appointed Minister to France by President Garfield in March, 1881, and resigned his seat in Congress to accept the appointment. Was nominated for the Vice Presidency by the Republican Convention at Chicago in 1888, and was inaugurated as Vice President on the 4th of March, 1889. ALABAMA. SENATORS. John T. Morgan, of Selma, was born at Athens, Tennessee, June 20, 1824; received an academic education, chiefly in Alabama, to which State he emigrated when nine years old and has since resided there ; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1845, and practiced until his election to the Senate ; was a Presidential Elector in 1860 for the State at large and voted for Breckinridge and Lane; was a Delegate in 1861 from Dallas County to the State Convention which passed the ordinance of secession; joined the Confederate Army in May, 1861, as a private in Company I, Cahaba Rifles, and when that company was assigned to the Fifth Alabama Regiment, under Col. Robert E. Rodes, he was elected Major, and afterward Lieutenant-Colonel of that regiment; was commissioned in 1862 as Colonel and raised the Fifty-first Alabama Regiment ; was appointed Brigadier-General in 1863 and assigned to a brigade in Virginia, but resigned to rejoin his regiment, whose colonel had been killed in battle; later in 1863 he was again appointed Brigadier-General and assigned to an Alabama brigade which included his regiment ; after the war he resumed the practice of his profession at Selma ; was chosen 2D ED 2 17 . . \ ; 18 Congressional Directory. [ALABAMA., a Presidential Elector for the State at large in 1876 and voted for Tilden and Hendricks; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed George Goldthwaite, Dem- ocrat; took his seat March 5, 1877; was re-elected in 1882, and again in 1888. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. James L. Pugh, of Eufaula, was born in Burke County, Georgia, December 12, 1820; received an academic education in Alabama and Georgia; came to Alabama when four years old, where he has since resided; was licensed to practice law in 1841, and was so employed when elected to the Senate; was Taylor Elector in 1848, Buchanan Elector in 1856, and State Elector for Tilden in 1876; was elected to Congress without opposition in 1859; retired from the Thirty-sixth Congress when Alabama ordained to secede from the Union ; joined the Eufaula Rifles, in the First Alabama Regiment, as a private ; was elected to the Confederate Congress in 1861 and re-elected in 1863; after the war resumed the practice of the law; was President of the State Convention of the Democratic party in 1874; was member of the Convention that framed the State Constitution of 1875; was elected to the Senate as a Demo- crat, to fill the balance of the term made vacant by the death of George S. Houston. Took his seat December 6, 1880, and was re-elected in 1884 and in 18qgo. © His term of office will expire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, and Washington. Richard H. Clarke, of Mobile, was born in Marengo County, Alabama, February g, 1843; graduated from the University of Alabama in July, 1861; served in the Confederate Army as lieutenant in the First Battalion of Alabama Artillery; was admitted to the practice of the law in 1867; was State Solicitor (Prosecuting Attorney) for Marengo County from 1872 to 1876; was Prosecuting Attorney of the Seventh Judicial Circuit from 1876 to 1877; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress and to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,070 votes, against 2,448 votes for F. H. Threatt, Republican, and 1,890 votes for A. J. Warner, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Baldwin, Butler, Conecuh, Crenshaw, Covington, Escambia, Monlgomery, ana Pike. Hilary A. Herbert, of Montgomery, was born at Laurensville, South Carolina; when a child his father removed to Greenville, Butler County, Alabama; was educated at the University of Alabama and the University of Virginia; studied law and was admitted to the bar; entered the Confederate service as Captain; was promoted to the Colonelcy of the Eighth Alabama Vol- unteers; was disabled at the battle of the Wilderness May 6, 1864 ; continued the practice of law at Greenville, Alabama, until 1872, when he removed to Montgomery, where he has since practiced; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-Second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,611 votes, against 2,681 votes for S. A. Pilley, Independent. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Barbour, Bullock, Coffee, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Lee, and Russell. William C. Oates, of Abbeville, was born in Pike (now Bullock) County, Alabama, No- vember 30, 1835; is self-educated; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1858, and became a successful lawyer and business man; entered the Confederate Army as Captain of Company G, Fifteenth Alabama Infantry, in July, 1861; was appointed Colonel in the Pro- visional Army of the Confederate States May I, 1863, and was assigned to the command of his old regiment; the Forty-eighth Alabama Regiment was also subsequently placed under his command ; was wounded four times slightly and twice severely, losing his right arm in éront of Richmond August 16, 1864, in the twenty-seventh battle he was engaged in; was ALABAMA. | Senators and Representatives. 19 a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention held in New York in 1868 which nom- inated Seymour for the Presidency; was a member of the Alabama House of Represent- atives and Chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means at the sessions of 1870-71 and 1871-72; was an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor in 1872; was later in the same year nominated for Congress in the Montgomery district and defeated by the Republican candidate; was a member of the Constitutional Convention in 1875 and Chairman of its Judiciary Committee; was elected to the Forty-seventh, Forty- eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,268 votes, against 930 votes for J. R Treadwell, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.— Dallas, Hale, Lowndes, Perry, and Wilcox. Louis W. Turpin, of New Berne, was born in Albemarle County, Virginia, February 22, 1849; removed to Perry County, Alabama, in 1858; is self-educated; is a farmer; was Tax Assessor of Hale County seven years; served as Chairman of the Democratic Executive Com- mittee of Perry County six years, and was ex-officio member of the District Executive Com- mittee; was a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Congress in 1882, and received 31 votes out of a possible 50, but was defeated by the two-thirds rule and a dark horse; re- ceived the certificate of election to the Fifty-first Congress, but was unseated by contest; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,595 votes against 3,899 votes for G. T. McCall, Independent Republican, and 4,931 votes for J. V. McDuffie, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Autauga, Bibb, Chambers, Chilton, Clay, Coosa, Elmore, Macon, and Tallapoosa. James E. Cobb, of Tuskegee, was born in Thomaston, Upson County, Georgia, October 5, £1835; received his early education at the town schools; was graduated from Emory Col- lege, Oxford, Georgia, in June, 1856; after being admitted to the practice of the law removed to Texas in 1857; entered the Confederate Army in 1861 as Lieutenant in Company F, Fifth Texas Regiment, with which command he served in the Army of Northern Virginia until he was made prisoner at the battle of Gettysburgh; after his release, at the close of the war, he located at Tuskegee and practiced law until 1874; at the general election of that year he was chosen one of the Circuit Judges-of the State; was re-elected in 1880 and again in 1886; he was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected without oppo- sition to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 5,548 votes. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fayette, Greene, Jefferson, Lamar, Marion, Pickens, Sumter, Tuscaloosa, Walker, and Winston. John H. Bankhead, of Fayette Court-House, was Dorr in Moscow, Marion County (now Lamar), Alabama, September 13, 1842; was self-educated; is a farmer; served four years in the Confederate Army, being wounded three times; represented Marion County in the Gen- eral Assembly, sessions of 1865, ’66, and ’67; was a member of the State Senate 1876-77, and of the House of Representatives 1880-81; was Warden of the Alabama Penitentiary from 1831 till 1885; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,182 votes, against 462 votes for W. H. Davidson, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, Cleburne, Cullman, De Kalb, Etowah, Herth Randolph, St. Clair, Shelby, and Talladega. William Henry Forney, of Jacksonville, was born at Lincolnton, North Carolina, No- vember 9, 1823; received a classical education, graduating at the University of Alabama in 20 Congressional Directory. [ALABAMA, 1844; served in the war with Mexico as a First Lieutenant in the First Regiment of Alabama Volunteers; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1848, and has practiced ever since; was elected by the Legislature of Alabama a Trustee of the University of Alabama, and served 1851-’60; was a member of the State House of Representatives of Alabama 1859-60; en- tered the Confederate Army at the commencement of hostilities in 1861 as Captain, and was successively promoted Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, Colonel, and Brigadier-General; surren- dered at Appomattox Court-House; was a member of the State Senate of Alabama 1865-66, serving until the State was reconstructed; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fitth, Forty- sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re- elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,054 votes, against 6,060 votes for W. O. Butler, Independent, and 862 votes for A. J. Logan, Republican. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Colbert, Franklin, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and Moreoan. Joseph Wheeler, of Wheeler, was born in Augusta, Georgia, September 10, 1836; grad- uated at West Point, 1859; was Lieutenant of Cavalry and served in New Mexico; resigned in 1861; was Lieutenant of Artillery in the Confederate Army; was successively promoted to the command of a Regiment, Brigade, Division, and Army Corps, and in 1862 was assigned to the command of the Army Corps of Cavalry of the Western Army, continuing in that position till the war closed; by joint resolution of the Confederate Congress received the thanks of that body for successful military operations, and for the defense of the city of Aiken received the thanks of the State of South Carolina; May 11, 1864, became the senior Cavalry General of the Confederate Armies; was appointed Professor of Philosophy, Louis- iana State Seminary in 1866, which he declined; was lawyer and planter; was elected to the Forty-seventh, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,821 votes, against 12,076 votes for R. W. Austin ARKANSAS. SENATORS. James K. Jones, of Washington, Hempstead County, Arkansas, was born in Marshall County, Mississippi, September 29, 1839; received a classical education; was a private soldier during the ‘late unpleasantness’ on the losing side; lived on his plantation after the close of the war until 1873, when he commenced the practice of law; was elected to the State Senate of Arkansas in 1873; was a member of the State Senate when the Constitutional Convention of 1874 was called; was re-elected under the new government, and in 1877 was elected President of the Senate; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress; was re-elected to the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to suc- ceed James'D. Walker, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1885; was re-elected in 18go, and took his seat March 4, 1891. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. James H. Berry, of Bentonville, was born in Jackson County, Alabama, May 15, 1841; removed to Arkansas in 1848; received a limited education at a private school at Berryville, ' Arkansds; studied law, and was admitted to practice in 1866; entered the Confederate Army in 1861 as Second Lieutenant Sixteenth Arkansas Infantry; lost a leg at the battle of Corinth, Mississippi, October 4, 1862; was elected to the Legislature of Arkansas in 1866; was re- elected in 1872; was elected Speaker of the House at the extraordinary session of 1874; was President of the Democratic State Convention in 1876; was elected Judge of the Circuit Court in 1878; was elected Governor in 1882; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, to succeed Hon. A. H. Garland, appointed Attorney-General, and took his seat March 25, 1885, and was re-elected in 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. / \ ’ / ARKANSAS.| Senators and Representatives. / 21 \ REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Chicot, Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Desha, Greene, Independence, Jack- son, Lawrence, Lee, Mississippi, Phillips, Poinsett, Randolph, St. Francis, and Sharp. William Henderson Cate, of Jonesborough, was born in Rutherford County, Tennessee, November 11, 1839; was brought up and educated in East Tennessee; graduated in the class of 1837 from the University at Knoxville; was engaged in teaching in the South and West for some time; was in the Southern Army; settled at Jonesborough in 1865; was admit- ted to the bar in 1866; was elected to the Legislature of 1871 and 1873, including the extra session of 1874; was elected Prosecuting Attorney of the second circuit in 1878; was appointed judge of the second circuit in March, 1884 ; was elected to the same position without opposi- tion in September, 1884 ; has been interested in planting ; organized the Bank of Jonesborough in 1887; received certificate of election to the Fifty-first Congress as a Democrat; his seat was contested by Mr. Featherstone, Independent Union Labor, who was seated March 5, 1890, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,437 votes, against 14,834 votes for L. P. Featherston, Union Labor candidate. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Arkansas, Cleburne, Conway, Cleveland, Faulkner, Grant, Jefferson, Lincoln, Lonoke, Monroe, Pope, Prairie, Stone, Van Buren, White, and Woodruff. : Clifton R. Breckinridge, of Pine Bluff, was born at Lexington, Kentucky, November 22, 1846; received a common-school education; served in the Confederate Army as a private soldier, and at the close of the war was a midshipman on duty below Richmond, Virginia; was a clerk in a commercial house for two years; attended Washington College (now Wash- ington and Lee University), Virginia, three years; became a cotton planter in Arkansas in 1870, and was engaged in planting and in the commission business for thirteen years; was an Alderman of his town one term; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress from the State at large, was elected to the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty- first Congress asa Democrat; but was unseated by action of the House, and the seat declared vacant; was nominated for the second session of the Fifty-first Congress, and elected, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,816 votes, against 19,941 votes for Jason P. Langley, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Askley, Bradley, Calhoun, Clark, Columbia, Dallas, Drew, Hempstead, Hot Springs, Howard, La Fayette, Little River, Miller, Nevada, Ouachita, Pike, Polk, Sevier, and Union. Thomas Chipman McRae, of Prescott, was born at Mount Holly, Union County, Arkan- sas, December 21, 1851 ; received a limited education at the private schools at Shady Grove, Columbia County, Mount Holly, Union County, and Falcon, Nevada County, Arkansas; re- ceived a full course of instruction at Soulé Business College, New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1870; graduated in law at the Washington and Lee University, Virginia, in class of 1871-72; was admitted to practice in State Circuit Courts in Rosston, Nevada County, Arkansas, January 8, 1873, in the Arkansas Supreme Court January 27, 1876, and in the United States Supreme Court January 4,1886; was a member of the State Legislature of Arkansas in 1877, in which year the county seat was changed, and he moved from Rosston to Prescott, where he has since practiced his profession; was a member of the town council of the incorporated town of Pres- cott in 1879; was a Presidential Elector for Hancock and English in 1880; was Chairman of the Democratic State Convention in 1884; was Delegate to the National Democratic Con- vention in 1884; was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress, September 7, 1885, to fill the vacancy caused by the election of J. K. Jones to the United States Senate; was re-elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiv- ing 13,111 votes, against 287 votes for W. M. White. 22 Congressional Directory. [ARKANSAS. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Crawford, Franklin, Garland, Johnson, Logan, Montgomery, Perry, Pulaski, Saline, Sebastian, Scott, and Yell. William Leake Terry, of Pulaski, was born in Anson County, North Carolina, September 27, 1850; when seven years of age removed with his parents to Tippah County, Mississippi, and thence to Arkansas in 1861; received his preparatory education at Bingham’s Military Academy, North Carolina, and was admitted to Trinity College, North Carolina, in 1869, and graduated in June, 1872; studied law under Dodge & Johnson, attorneys, of Little Rock, and was admitted to the bar in November, 1873; served in the State troops under Governor bax- ter in the Brooks-Baxter troubles, and was second officer in command of Hallie Rifles in the fight at Palarm, in May, 1874; was elected to City Council in April, 1877; was elected to the State Senate in September, 1878, and was elected President of Senate at close of session in March, 1879; served eight terms as City Attorney of Little Rock; was elected to Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,670 votes, against 7,488 votes for E. M. Harrison, Republican, and 2 votes scattering. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Fulton, Isard, Madison, Marion, Newton, Searcy, and Washington. Samuel W. Peel, of Bentonville, was born in independence County, Arkansas, September 13, 1832; received a common-school education; was elected Clerk of the Circuit Court of Carroll County, Arkansas, in 1858, and again in 1860; enteredsthe Confederate service in 1861 as a private, and was elected Major of the Third Arkansas Infantry (State troops); re- entered the Confederate service in 1862 as a private, and was elected Colonel of the Fourth Regiment Arkansas Infantry; at the close of the war he commenced the practice of law in the State courts; was appointed Prosecuting Attorney of the fourth judicial circuit of Arkansas in 1873; upon the adoption of the new constitution in 1874 was elected to the same place; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 7,734 votes, against 206 votes scattering, CALIFORNIA. SENATORS. Leland Stanford, of San Francisco, was born in Albany County, New York, March 9, 1824; received an academical education; entered the law office of Wheaton, Doolittle & Hadley, at Albany, in 1846, and after three years’ study was admitted to practice law in the Supreme Court of the State of New York; removed to Port Washington, in the northern part of the State of Wisconsin, where he was engaged in the practice of his profession for four years; a fire in the spring of 1852 destroying his law library and other property, he went to California, where he became associated in business with his brothers, three of whom had pre- ceded him to the Pacific Coast; he was at first in business at Michigan Bluffs, and in 1856 removed to Sacramento to engage in mercantile pursuits on a large scale; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1860; was elected Governor of Cali- * fornia, and served, from December, 1861, to December, 1863; as President of the Central Pacific Railroad Company he superintended its construction over the mountains, building 530 miles of it in 293 days; he is interested in other railroads on the Pacific Slope, in agriculture, and in manufactures. He was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, in the place of J. T. Farley, Democrat, in 1884, and re-elected in 1890; took his seat March 4, 1891. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. Charles N. Felton, of San Francisco, though a native of the State of New York, has been a continuous resident of California from youth ; was Assistant Treasurer of the United States and Treasurer of the Mint at San Francisco for six years; served three sessions in the Legislature of California; represented the Fifth Congressional District of California in the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses; was elected United States Senator by the Legislature of California, March 19, 1891, as a Republican, to succeed George Hearst, deceased. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. CALIFORNIA. | Senators and Representatives. 23 REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Colusa, Del Norte, Humboldt, Lake, Lassen, Mendocino, Modoc, Napa, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Sonoma, Tehama, and Trinity. . Thomas J. Geary, of Santa Rosa, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, January 18, 1854; removed with his parents to California in April, 1863; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1877, and has been engaged in the practice of his profession since; was elected Dis- trict Attorney of Sonoma County in 1882, and served two years; and was elected as a Demo- crat and American to the Fifty-first Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John J. De Haven, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat and Ameri can, receiving 19,334 votes, against 19,153 votes for John A. Barham, Republican. - SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Amador, Butte, Calaveras, El Dorado, Mariposa, Merced, Nevada, Placer, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Sutter, Tuolumne, and Yuba. Anthony Caminetti, of Jackson, was born July 30, 1854, in Jackson, Amador County, California; was educated in the public schools of his native county, at the Grammar School, San Francisco, and the University of California; after leaving school was a clerk in a country store for five years; read law and was admitted to the bar in 1877; engaged in practice of his profession in Jackson, California, where he has been thus engaged since; was elected District Attorney of Amador County in 1877 for two years, re-elected in 1879 for three years; was elected to the State Assembly in 1883, declined renomination, and was elected to the State Senate in 1886; has been engaged in practical fruit culture for fourteen years; in 188c was Democratic alternate elector for the Second Congressional District; in 1888 was Demo- cratic elector, and polled the highest vote cast for any elector in the State on Democratic ticket; is the first native of California after it became a State elected to Congress; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,644 votes, against 18,485 votes for G. G. Blanchard, Republican, 912 votes for J. S. Witherell, and 2 votes scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Sacramento, Solano, and Yolo. Joseph McKenna, of Suisun, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, August 10, 1843; went to California with his parents in January, 1855; was District Attorney of Solano County for two terms, commencing in March, 1866 ; served in the California Legislature in the ses- sions of 1875 and ’76; was the unsuccessful Republican candidate for Congress in 1876 from the Third District, as the State was then districted, and was again the unsuccessful candidate in 1879; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re- elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,834 votes, against 15,997 votes for John P. Irish, Democrat, 774 votes for O. O. Felkner, Prohibitionist, and 309 votes scattering. FOURTH DISTRICT. . AssEMBLY DISTRICTS OF CITY OF SAN FRANCISCO.—29/%, 30%%, 31st, 32d, 33d, 34th, 35h, 36th, 37th, 38th, and 41st. : John Tyler Cutting, of San Francisco, was born in Westport, Essex County, New York, September 7, 1844; from 1855 to 1860 he resided in Wisconsin and Illinois and was educated in the latter State; enlisted in Taylor’s Chicago Battery at the breaking out of the civil war and served until July 20, 1862; was discharged for disability, the result of service in the field; re-enlisted January 4, 1864, in the Chicago Mercantile Battery, in which he served until the expiration of the war; removed to California in 1877 and established a wholesale fruit and com- mission business under the title of The John T. Cutting & Company; in 1880 he took an active interest in politics in San Francisco, and for two years held the position of Chairman of the I / 24 : Congressional Directory. [caLIFORNIA. Republican County Committee of that city ; later he identified himself with State and national politics; was for nine years connected with the National Guard of California, holding the commissions of Lieutenant, Major, and Colonel, and Brigadier-General commanding the Second Brigade; retired February, 1891, with the rank of Brigadier-General; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,196 votes, against 12,091 votes for Robert Ferrell, Democrat, 1,492 votes for Thomas V. Cator, Reform Democrat, and 59 votes scattering. FIETH DISTRICT. ASSEMBLY DISTRICTS AND COUNTIES.—39t%, goth, 42d, 43d, 44th, 45t%, 461%, £700, 487, San Mateo, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz. Eugene Francis Loud, of San Francisco, was born in the town of Abington, Massa- chusetts, March 12, 1847; at the age of thirteen went to sea and to California; in 1862 en- listed in California Cavalry Battalion, which formed a part of Second Massachusetts Cavalry; was with the Army of the Potomac and with Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley until the close of the war; returned to California and studied law; was in the customs service; fol- lowed mercantile business; was member of California Legislature in 1884 ; was Cashier of city and county of San Francisco; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,871 votes, against 19,899 votes for Thomas J. Clunie, Democrat, 574 votes for E. F. Howe, Prohibitionist, and 85 scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—A pine, Fresno, Inyo, Kern, Los A ngeles, Mono, Monterey, Orange, San Benito, San Bernardino, San Luis Obispo, San Diego, Santa Barbara, 7 ulare, and Ventura. ! William Wallace Bowers, of San Diego, was born in Whitestown, Oneida County, New York, October 20, 1834; attended common school until fourteen years of age; removed to Wisconsin in 1852; enlisted as a private in Company I, First Wisconsin Cavalry, February 22, 1862; was discharged from the service as second sergeant, February 22, 1865; served as post wagonmaster at Cape Girardeau, Missouri, until the close of the war; removed to San Diego in 1869; in 1873 was elected member of the California Legislature; in 1874 was appointed Collector of Customs for the San Diego District and held the office for eight years; in 1886 was elected State Senator for four years, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 33,522 votes, against 28,904 votes for W. J. Curtis, Democrat, 3,130 votes for O. R. Dougherty, Prohibitionist, and 914 votes scattering. COLORADO. SENATORS. Henry M. Teller, of Central City, was born in Allegany County, New York, May 23, 1830; studied law, was admitted to the bar in New York, and has since practiced; removed to Illinois in 1858, and from there to Colorado in 1861; never held office until he was elected - to the United States Senate (on the admission of Colorado as a State), and took his seat De- cember 4, 1876; was re-elected December 11, 1876, and served until April 17, 1882, when he was appointed Secretary of the Interior by President Arthur, and served until March 3, 1885; was again elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Nathaniel P. Hill, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1885; was re-elected in 18go. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. Edward Oliver Wolcott, of Denver, was born in Long Meadow, Massachusetts, March 26, 1848; served for a few months as private in the One hundred and fiftieth Regiment of Ohio Volunteers in 1864; entered Yale College in 1866, but did not graduate; graduated from Harvard Law School in 1871, and removed to Colorado; isa lawyer; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Thomas M. Bowen, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. COLORADO. ] Senators and Representatives. 25 REPRESENTATIVE. STATE AT LARGE. COUNTIES. —Arapahoe, Archuleta, Baca, Bent, Boulder, Chaffee, Cheyenne, Clear Creck, Conejos, Costilla, Custer, Delta, Dolores, Douglas, Eagle, Elbert, EI Paso, Fremont, Garfield, Gilpin, Grand, Gunnison, Hinsdale, Huerfano, Jefferson, Kiowa, Kit Carson, Lake, La Plata, Larimer, Las Animas, Logan, Mesa, Montezuma, Morgan, Montrose, Otero, Ouray, Park, Pitkin, Phillips, Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Grande, Rio Blanco, Routt, Saguache, San Juan, San Miguel, Sedgwick, Summit, Washington, Weld, Yuma. Hosea Townsend, of Silver Cliff, was born in Greenwich, Huron County, Ohio, June 16, 1840; after preparation entered Western Reserve College, Ohio, in 1860; left school to enter the Army, and enlisted in the Second Ohio Cavalry in 1861 ; was promoted to Lieutenant, and resigned in 1863 on account of disability; was admitted to the bar at Cleveland, Ohio, and commenced the practice of law in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1865; was elected to the Legisla-- ture of that State in 1869 as a Republican, and served one term; removed to Colorado in 1879; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 43,118 votes, against 34,736 votes for T. J. O'Donnell, Democrat, 5,207 votes for J. D. Burr, Prohibitionist, and 1,054 votes for George Richardson, Union Labor candidate. CONNECTICUT. SENATORS. Joseph R. Hawley, of Hartford, was born at Stewartsville, Richmond County, North Car- olina, October 31, 1826; graduated at Hamilton College, New York, in 1847; was admitted to the bar in 1850 at Hartford, Connecticut, where he has since resided; practiced law six and a half years; became editor of the Hartford Evening Press February, 1857, which was consolidated with the Hartford Courant, of which he is editor, in 1867; enlisted in the Union Army as a Lieutenant April 15, 1861; became Brigadier and Brevet Major-General; was mustered out January 15, 1866; was elected Governor of Connecticut April, 1866; was a Delegate to the Free Soil National Convention of 1852, Presidential Elector in 1868, Pres- ident of the Republican National Convention of 1868, and Delegate to the Republican Na- tional Conventions of 1872, ’76, and ’8o; was President of the United States Centennial Commission from its organization, in March, 1873, to the completion of the work of the Cen- tennial Exhibition; is a member of the Connecticut Historical Society and a Trustee of Ham- ilton College; received the degree of Doctor of Laws from Hamilton College and Yale Uni- versity ; was elected in November, 1872, a Representative in the Forty-second Congress to fill a vacancy caused by the death of J. L. Strong; was re-elected to the Forty-third Con- gress, and was elected to the. Forty-sixth Congress; was elected to the United) States Senate, as a Republican, to succeed William W. Eaton, Democrat; took his seat March 4, 1881, and was re-elected in 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. Orville H. Platt, of Meriden, was born at Washington, Connecticut, July 19, 1827; re- ceived an academic education; studied law at Litchfield; was admitted to the bar in 1849, and has since practiced law at Meriden; was Clerk of the State Senate of Connecticut in 1855 and 1856; was Secretary of State of Connecticut in 1857; was a member of the State Senate in 1861 and 1862; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1864 and 1869, serving the last year as Speaker; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Repub- lican, to succeed William H. Barnum, Democrat (who had been elected to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Orris S. Ferry, Republican); took his seat March 18, 1879; was re-elected in 1885 and in 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT, COUNTIES.— Hartford and Tolland, including the cities of Hartford and New Britain, and Rockville. Lewis Sperry, of South Windsor (post-office address, Hartford), was born at East Windsor Hill, town of South Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut, January 23, 1848; attended dis- \ ( | 26 Congressional Directory. [CONNECTICUT. trict school; prepared for college at Monson Academy, Monson, Massachusetts; graduated from Amherst College in the class of 1873; on graduating from college entered the law office of Waldo, Hubbard & Hyde, Hartford; was admitted to the bar in March, 1875; opened'an office in Hartford, where he has ever since practiced law; was elected to represent his native town in the Legislature in 1876; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,195 votes, against 15,503 votes for William E. Simonds, Republican, 818 votes for Samuel B. Forbes, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Middlesex and New Haven, including the city of New Haven. Washington F. Willcox, of Chester, was born in Killingworth, Connecticut; was pre- pared for college at Hopkins Grammar School, New Haven; graduated from the Yale Law School in 1862; was admitted to the bar the same year in Middlesex County, and opened a law office in Deep River, at which place he has continued the practice of the law since; was elected a member of the Connecticut House of Representatives in 1862 and ’63; was elected to the State Senate in 1875 and ’76, serving as Chairman of the Judiciary Commit- tee during two terms; was appointed State Attorney in 1875, and held that office continu- ously for eightyears; waselected to the Fifty-first Congress and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 23,367 votes, against 19,836 votes for J. M. Hubbard, Republican, 969 votes for C. M. Whittemore, Prohibitionist, and 16 votes scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — New London and Windham, including the cities of New London and Norwich. Charles Addison Russell, of Killingly, was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, March 2, 1852; received a public-school and collegiate education, graduating from Yale College in the class of 1873; was Aid-de-Camp (Colonel) on Governor Bigelow’s staff, 1881,-’82; was a member of the House, General Assembly of Connecticut, in 1883; was Secretary of State of Connecticut, 1885-86 ; is engaged in the woolen business; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 10,541 votes, against 9,549 votes for D. A. Wells, Democrat, 695 votes for H. J. Crocker, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes scattering. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fairfield and Litchfield. Robert E. De Forest, of Bridgeport, was born in Guilford, Connecticut, February 20, 1845; was brought up on a farm; was educated in Guilford Academy and Yale College, from which latter institution he was graduated in 1867; taught school; studied law, and was ad- mitted to the bar in 1868; located in the city of Bridgeport, where he has since practiced his profession; in 1872 he was appointed Prosecuting Attorney for the city of Bridgeport; in 1874 was elected by the Legislature of Connecticut Judge of the Court of Common Pleas for Fairfield County, which position he held for three years; in 1878 was elected Mayor of Bridgeport; in 1880 was elected to the Legislature; in 1882 was elected to the State Senate; was Corporation Counsel for the city of Bridgeport; was elected Mayor in 1889, and re- elected in 1890; and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,540 votes, against 12,542 votes for Frederick Miles, Republican, 437 votes for L. D. Baldwin, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering, DELAWARE. SENATORS. George Gray, of New Castle, was born at New Castle, Delaware, May 4, 1840; he gradu- ated at Princeton College when nineteen years old, receiving the degree of A. B., and in 1862 the degree of A. M.; in 1889 the degree of LL. D. was conferred upon him by his a/mae mater, after studying law with his father, Andrew C. Gray, he spent a year in the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to practice in 1863; he was appointed Attorney-General of the State of Delaware in 1879 by Governor Hall, and re-appointed Attorney-General in 1884 by Governor Stockley; he was a Delegate to the National Democratic Conventions at St. Louis in 1876, at Cincinnati in 1880, and at Chicago in 1884; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, to fill the vacancy caused by the appointment of Thomas F, DELAWARE. | Senators and Representatives. 27. Bayard as Secretary of State; was re-elected in 1887, and took his seat March 4, 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. : Anthony Higgins, of Wilmington, was born in Red Lion Hundred, New Castle County, Delaware, October 1, 1840; attended Newark Academy and Delaware College, and gradu- ated with the degree of A. B. from Yale in 1861; Yale conferred upon him the degree LL. D. in 1891; studied law at the Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the bar in 1864; in September, 1864, was appointed Deputy Attorney-General; was United States Attorney for Delaware from May, 1869, until 1876; was Chairman of the Republican State Committee in 1868 ; received the votes of the Republican members of the Legislature for the United States Senate in 1881; was Republican candidate for Congress in 1884, and was elected to the United States Senate, as a Republican, to succeed Eli Saulsbury, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. REPRESENTATIVE. STATE AT LARGE. COUNTIES.— Kent, New Castle, and Sussex. John Williams Causey, of Milford, was born in Milford, Kent County, Delaware, Sep- tember 19, 1841; was educated in the schools of his native town, Albany Academy, New York, and Pennsylvania Agricultural College; is engaged in farming and fruit growing; was elected to the State Senate for 1875-"77 ; was delegate to the National Democratic Conven- tion in 1884; was appointed Internal Revenue Collector for the District of Delaware by President Cleveland; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,848 votes, against 17,180 votes for Henry P. Cannon, Republican, and 257 votes for Daniel M. Green, Prohibitionist. / FLORIDA. SENATORS. Samuel Pasco, of Monticello, was born in London, England ; when quite young removed with his father first to Prince Edward Island, thence to Massachusetts; was prepared for college at the High School in Charlestown, and graduated at Harvard in 1858; in January, 1859, he went to Florida to take charge of the Waukeenah Academy, in Jefferson County, where he has ever since resided; in July, 1861, entered the Confederate Army as a private ; at the close of the war became Clerk of the Circuit Court of his county ; was admitted to the bar in 1868; in 1872 became a member of the Democratic State Committee, and from 1876 to 1888 was its Chairman ; has represented Florida on the Democratic National Committee since 1880; in 1880 was ¢lected a Presidential Elector at Large; in 1885 was President of the Constitutional Convention of his State; in 1887, while Speaker of the State House of Repre- sentatives, he was elected to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, to succeed Charles W. Jones. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. Wilkinson Call,* of Jacksonville, was born at Russellville, Logan County, Kentucky, January 9, 1834; is by profession a lawyer; was elected to the United States Senate after the war, but was not allowed to take his seat; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Demo- crat, in the place of Simon B..Conover, Republican, took his seat March 18, 1879, and was re-elected in 1885, and in 1891. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoOUNTIES.— Calhoun, Citrus, De Soto, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Hernando, Hillsborough, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, La Fayette, Lee, Leon, Levy, Liberty, Manatee, Monroe, Pasco, Polk, Santa Rosa, Taylor; Wakulla, Walton, and Washington. Stephen Russell Mallory, of Pensacola, was born November 2, 1848; entered Confed- erate Army in Virginia in the fall of 1864; in the spring of 1865 was appointed midshipman *The Governor of Florida denies the validity of Mr. Calls election in 1891 and appointed R. H. M. Davidson to fill the alleged vacancy. The contest for the seat is now pending. 28 Congressional Directory. [FLORIDA. in Confederate Navy; entered Georgetown College, District of Columbia, November, 1865, and graduated in June, 1869; taught a class at Georgetown College until July, 1871; was admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of Louisiana in 1872; removed to Pensacola, Florida, in 1874, and began practice of law; was elected to lower house of the Legislature in 1876; was elected to the Senate in 1880, and was re-elected in 1884; was elected to Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,467 votes, against 3,312 votes for Harrison Reed, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Alackua, Baker, Brevard, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Dade, Duval, Hamilton, Lake, Madison, Marion, Nassaw, Orange, Osceola, Putnam, St. John's, Sumlter, Suwannee, and Volusia. Robert Bullock, of Ocala, was born in Greenville City, North Carolina, December 8, 1828; received a common-school education ; taught school until twenty years of age; was elected Clerk of the Circuit Court at twenty-one years of age, and held the office three terms, of two years each ; is married, and has a family of thirteen children; was commissioned in 1856 by the Governor as Captain to raise a mounted company of volunteers;.was mustered into the United States service for the suppression of Indian hostilities, and served eighteen months, until the cessation of hostilities; commenced the study of law in 1859, and was admitted to the bar; entered upon the practice of the law in 1861; in 1862 went into the war as Lieuten- ant-Colonel of the Seventh Regiment Florida Volunteers, and remained until the close of the war; was promoted to Brigadier-General in 1864; was severely wounded near Murfreesborough, Tennessee, during Hood’s advance; was elected Judge of Probate during Johnson’s recon- struction, and was appointed Judge of County Criminal Courts by the Governor; was deposed by second reconstruction, when he resumed the practice of the law; was Democratic candi- date for Lieutenant-Governor in 1872, and was defeated; in 1873 was Democratic caucus nominee for United States Senator, and lacked one vote of election; withdrew from the con- test in favor of ex-Senator Jones, now of Detroit, Michigan, who was elected; was a Tilden ' Elector in 1876; was elected to the Legislature in 1879; was elected Clerk of the Circuit Court, which office he held when elected to the Fifty-first Congress; was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,623 votes, against 11,733 votes for Strip- ling, Republican. GEORGIA. SENATORS. Alfred Holt Colquitt, of Atlanta, was born in Walton County, Georgia, April 20, 1824; graduated at Princeton College, New Jersey, in the class of 1844; studied law and was ad- mitted to the bar in 1845; served as a staff officer, with the rank of Major, during the Mexican war; was elected and served as a member of the Thirty-third Congress; was a member of the Georgia Legislature in 1859; was a Presidential Elector for the State at large on the Breck- inridge ticket in 1860; was a member of the Secession Convention of the State of Georgia; entered the Confederate service as Captain; was subsequently chosen Colonel of the Sixth Georgia Infantry; served as a Brigadier-General, and was commissioned as a Major-General; was elected Governor of the State of Georgia in 1876 for four years, and was re-elected under a new constitution for two years; at the expiration of his term as Governor he was elected to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, for the full term commencing March 4, 1883, and was re-elected in 1888. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. John B. Gordon, of Atlanta, was born in Upson County, Georgia, February 6, 1832; was educated at the University of Georgia; read law and was admitted to the bar; at the begin- ning of the war entered the Confederate Army as Captain of Infantry, and occupied the positions of Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, Colonel, Brigadier-General, and Major-General, respectively ; commanded the Second Army Corps; commanded one wing of General Lee’s army at Appomattox Court-House; was wounded in battle eight times; was the Democratic / GEORGIA. ] Senators and Representatives. ) 29 candidate for Governor of Georgia in 1868; was a member of the National Democratic Con- vention in 1868 and in 1872; was elected Presidential Elector for the State at Large in 1868 and in 1872; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat in 1872, and took his seat March 4, 1873; was re-elected in 1879; was elected Governor in 1886, and re-elected in 1888; was elected United States Senator in 18go. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Appling, Bryan, Bullock, Camden, Chariton, Chatham, Clinch, Echols, Effing- ham, Emanuel, Glynn, Liberty, McIntosh, Pierce, Scriven, Tatnall, Ware, and Wayne. Rufus E. Lester, of Savannah, was born in the County of Burke, in the State of Georgia, December 12, 1837 ; graduated at Mercer University, Georgia, 1857; admitted to the bar in Savannah and commenced the practice of law in 1859; entered the military service of the Confederate States in 1861; remained in the service till the end of the war; resumed the practice of law at the close of the war; was State Senator from the First Senatorial District of Georgia 1870-"79; was President of the Senate during the last three years of service; was Mayor of Savannah from January, 1883, to January, 1889, and was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,905 votes, against 3,271 votes for Doyle, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Baker, Berrien, Brooks, Calhoun, Clay, Colguitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Early, Lowndes, Miller, Mitchell, Quitman, Randolph, Terrell, Thomas, and Worth. Henry G. Turner, of Quitman, was born in North Carolina March 20, 1839; was elected to the Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses and re- elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 7,361 votes, against 948 votes / for C. S. Mattison, Independent and. Alliance. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.— Coffee, Dodge, Dooley, Houston, Irwin, Laurens, Lee, Macon, Montgomery, Pu- laski, Schley, Stewart, Sumter, Telfair, Webster, and Wilcox. Charles Frederick Crisp, of Americus, was born onthe 29th of January, 1845, in Sheffield, England, where his parents had gone on a visit; was brought by them to this country the year of his birth; received a common-school education in Savannah and Macon, Georgia; entered the Confederate Army in May, 1861; was a Lieutenant in Company K, Tenth Virginia Infantry, andserved with that regiment until the 12th of May, 1864, when he became a prisoner of war; upon his release from Fort Delaware, in June, 1865, he joined his parents at Ellaville, Schley County, Georgia; read law in Americus, and was admitted to the bar there in 1866; began the practice of law in Ellaville, Georgia; in 1872 was appointed Solicitor-General of the South- western Judicial Circuit, and was re-appointed in 1873 for a term of four years; located in Americus in 1873; in June, 1877, was appointed Judge of the Superior Court of the same circuit; in 1878 was elected by the General Assembly to the same office; in 1880 was re-elected Judge for a term of four years; resigned that office in September, 1882, to accept the Democratic nomination for Congress; was Permanent President of the Democratic Convention which as- sembled in Atlanta in April, 1883, to nominate a candidate for Governor; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 8,038 votes, against 1,248 votes for Peter O. Gib- son, Republican, ; FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Coweta, Chattahoochee, Carroll, Harris, Heard, Marion, Meriwether, Muscogee, Talbot, Taylor, and Troup. Charles L. Moses, of Turin, was born in Coweta County, Georgia, May 2, 1856; atiended the country schools of his native county, and graduated at Mercer University in the class of 1876; became a farmer and teacher; was for several years principal of the Newnan 39 o Congressional Directory. [GEORGIA. Male Seminary; since 1886 has devoted his time exclusively to agricultural interests, and is a member of the Farmers’ Alliance. Was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Demo- crat, receiving 9,480 votes, against 3,360 votes for W. H. Johnson, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Campbell, Clayton, De Kalb, Douglas, Fayette, Fulton, Henry, Newton, Rock- dale, Spalding, and Walton. Leonidas F. Livingston, of Atlanta, was born in Newton County, Georgia, April 3,1832; is of Scotch-Irish descent; was educated in the common schools of the county; is a farmer by occupation and has always lived on his farm; was a private soldier in the Confederate Army from August, 1861, to May, 1865 ; was two terms a member of the House of Repre- sentatives and one term a member of the State Senate; was Chairman of the Committee on Agriculture in both the House and Senate; was Vice President of the Georgia State Agricul- tural Society for eleven years, and President of the same for four years; he is now Presi- dent of the Georgia State Alliance; has been prominent in all political struggles in his State for many years; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 8, 688 votes, against 3,608 votes for Will Haight, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Baldwin, Bibb, Bulls, Crawford, Jasper, Jones, Monroe, Pike, Twiggs, Upson, and Wilkinson. James H. Blount, of Macon, was born in Georgia September 12, 1837; was elected to the Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congresses as a Democrat, receiving 2,860 votes. No opposition. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield. Robert William Everett, of Fish, Polk County, was born near the village of Hayneville, Houston County, Georgis, March 3, 1839; received his preparatory education in the village - school ; entered Mercer University September, 1856, from which institution he was graduated in July, 1859 ; upon leaving school located in Polk County, his present home, and engaged in teach- ing school; entered the Confederate Army as a sergeantin General N. B. Forrest's Escort Squad- ron, and served until the close of the war; served two years as Commissioner of Revenue; served twelve years on the Board of Education, the last four as President of the Board; served four years, from 1832 to 1885, as a member of the General Assembly of Georgia; was Chairman of the House Committee on Agriculture the last two years; is engaged in farm- ing ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,031 votes, against 8,460 votes for William H. Felton, Independent, and 638 votes for Z. B. Hargrove, Repub- lic'ue EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clarke, Elbert, Frankiin, Greene, Hancock, Hart, Madison, Morgan, Oglethorpe, Oconee, Putnam, and Wilkes. Thomas G. Lawson, of Eatonton, was born in Putnam County, Georgia, a little over fifty years ago; was educated in the common schools and at Mercer University; was elected to the Legislature in 1861, and re-elected in 1863 and 1865; was a member of the Constitu- tional Convention in 1877; was elected by the General Assembly in 1878 Judge of the Superior Courts of the Ocmulgee Circuit, and re-elected without opposition in 1882; in 1886 retired from the bench to his farm; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Demo- crat, without opposition, and received all the votes cast, 3,405. } GEORGIA. | Senators and Representatives. 3 NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Banks, Cherokee, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Gilmer, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Jackson, Lumpkin, Milton, Pickens, Rabun, Towns, Union, and White. Thomas Elisha Winn, of Gwinnett County, Ga., was born in Clark County, that State, May 21, 1839; was bred to the farm and pursuits of husbandry; received an academic edu- cation in the schools about his home, after which his father, Maj. R. D. Winn, sent him to Emory and Henry College, Virginia, where he finished his course of studies in 1860; read law and was admitted to practice in the courts of Georgia; was elected Solicitor of the County Court of Milton County; entered the Confederate Army as First Lieutenant in 1861; was soon pro- moted to Captain, afterwards Major, and finally Lieutenant-Colonel, Twenty-fourth Georgia Regiment, serving with Lee’s Army until the surrender ; began farming in 1868, which pursuit he still follows; was County School Commissioner of Public Schools of Gwinnett County from 1876 to August 16, 1890, when he resigned the office ; was an unsuccessful candidate for the State Legislature in 1886; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as an Alliance man and Democrat, receiving 10,315 votes, against 4,087 votes for Pickett, Independent, and 3,133 votes for Zion A. Darnell, Republican. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Burke, Columbia, Glascock, Jefferson, Johnson, Lincoln, McDuffie, Richmond, Taliaferro, Warren, and Washington. Thomas E. Watson, of Thomson, was born in Columbia County, Georgia, September 5, 1856; received a common-school education, and was then sent to Mercer University, Macon, Georgia; at the end of the sophomore year left college for lack of funds; taught school two years; read law for a few weeks under Judge W. R. McLaws, of Augusta, Georgia, and was admitted to the bar; commenced the practice of the profession at Thomson, Georgia, his old home, November, 1876; was a member of the Georgia Legislature, 1882-’83 ; was Demo- cratic Elector for the State at large in 1888; besides the practice of law has been, and still is, largely interested in farming; was elected tc Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiv- ing 5,456 votes, against 597 votes for Anthony E. Williams, Republican. SENATORS. I I IDAHO. | George L. Shoup, of Salmon City, was born in Kittanning, Armstrong County, Pennsyl- vania, June 15, 1836; was educated in the public schools of Freeport and Slate Lick; moved with his father to Illinois in June, 1852; was engaged in farming and stock raising near Gales- burg until 1858; removed to Colorado in 1859; was engaged in mining and mercantile business until 1861; in September, 1861, enlisted in Captain Backus’s independent company | of scouts, and was soon thereafter commissioned Second Lieutenant; during the autumn and | winterof 1861 was engaged in scouting along the base of the Rocky Mountains; was ordered to Fort Union, New Mexico, in the early part of 1862; was kept on scouting duty on the 1 Canadian, Pecos, and Red Rivers until the spring of 1863, ‘and during this time was pro- moted to a First Lieutenancy; was then ordered to the Arkansas River; had been assigned in 1862 to the Second Colorado Regiment of Volunteer Infantry, but was retained on duty in the cavalry service; was assigned to the First Colorado Regiment of Cavalry in May, 1863; in 1864 was elected to the Constitutional Convention to prepare a constitution for the proposed State of Colorado, and obtained a leave of absence for thirty days to serve as a member of said Convention; after performing this service he returned to active duty in the Army; was commissioned Colonel of the Third Colorado Cavalry in September, 1864, and was mustered out in Denver with the regiment at the expiration of term of service; engaged in the mercantile business in Virginia City, Montana, in 1866, and during the same year estab- lished a business at Salmon City, Idaho; since 1866 has been engaged in mining, stock raising, mercantile, and other business in Idaho; was a member of the Territorial Legislature during the eighth and tenth sessions; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention in : | i a 37 i Congressional Directory. [1DAHO. ’ 1830; was a member of the Republican National Committee from 1880 until 1884; was United States Commissioner for Idaho at the World’s Cotton Centennial Exposition at New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1884-85; was again placed on the Republican National Committee in 1888; was appointed Governor of Idaho Territory March, 1889, which position he held until elected Governor of the State of Idaho, October 1, 1890; and was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, December 18, 1890, and took his seat December 29, 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. Fred. T. Dubois, of Blackfoot, was born in Crawford County, Illinois, May 29, 1851; received a public-school and collegiate education, graduating from Yale College in the class of 1872; was Secretary of the Board of Railway and Warehouse Commissioners of Illinois in 1875-76; went to Idaho Territory, and engaged in business, in 1880; was United States Marshal of Idaho from August 25, 1882, till September 1, 1886 ; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses as a Republican; was elected to the United States Senate as a Re- publican, December 18, 18go. Took his seat March 4, 1891. His term of service will ex- pire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. Willis Sweet, of Moscow, was born at Alburgh Springs, Vermont, January 1, 1856; was educated in the common schools and attended the Nebraska State University three years; learned the printer’s trade at Lincoln, Nebraska; located at Moscow, Idaho, in September, 1881, where he engaged in the practice of law; was appointed United States Attorney for Idaho in May, 1838; was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Idaho November 25, 1889, which position he held until the admission of Idaho into the Union; was elected to the unex- pired term of the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Repub- lican, receiving 10,138 votes, against 8,026 votes for Alexander E. Mayhew, Democrat. \ \ ILLINOIS. SENATORS. Shelby M. Cullom, of Springfield, was born in Wayne County, Kentucky, November 22, 1829; his father removed to Tazewell County, Illinois, the following year; he received an academic and university education; went to Springfield in the fall of 1853 to study law, and has since resided there; immediately upon receiving license to practice was elected City Attorney; continued to practice law until he took his seat in the House of Representatives in 1865; was a Presidential Elector in 1856 on the Fillmore ticket; was elected a member of the House of Representatives of the Illinois Legislature in 1856, ’60, ’72, and ’74, and was elected Speaker in 1861 and in 1873; was elected a Representative from Illinois in the Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, and Forty-first Congresses, serving from December 4, 1865, to March 3, 1871; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Philadelphia in 1872, being Chairman of the Illinois Delegation, and placed General Grant in nomination; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention in 1884, and Chairman of the Illinois Dele- gation; was elected Governor of Illinois in 1876, and succeeded himself in 1880, serving from January 8, 1877, until February 5, 1883, when he resigned, having been elected to the United States Senate, as a Republican, to succeed David Davis, Independent Democrat. He took his seat December 4, 1883, and was re-elected in 1888. His term of service will expire March 3; 18053, John McAuley Palmer, of Springfield, was born in Scott County, Kentucky, September 13, 1817; removed with his father to Madison County, Illinois, in 1831 ; attended the common schools in Kentucky and Illinois, and entered Alton (now Shurtleff) College in 1835, where he remained a year, paying his expenses, which were very small, by his labor; in 1838 taught school and studied law; in December, 1839, was admitted to the bar; in 1843 was elected Probate Judge of Macoupin County; in 1847 was elected a member of the Convention to amend the State Constitution; in 1848 he was re-elected Probate Judge; and in November of the same year, 1848, was elected County Judge, an office created by the new Constitution, which ILLINOIS. | Senators and Representatives. 33 office he held until 1852, when he was elected to the State Senate to fill a vacancy; opposed resolution proposed in the Senate approving the repeal of ‘the ¢ Missouri compromise’ as proposed by what was called the «Nebraska bill; ”’ in 1854 the counties composing his Sena- torial district adopted resolutions approving the Nebraska bill, and he declined a renomina- tion for Senator, but became an Independent candidate, leading the anti-Nebraska Democrats, and was elected at the session of the Legislature in 1855; the Nebraska Democrats nomi- nated General James Shields; the anti-Nebraska Democrats, Lyman Trumbull, and the oppo- sition nominated Abraham Lincoln for United States Senator. Mr. Trumbull was elected. In 1856, the slavery controversy having become intense, he found himself separated from the Democratic party; he resigned his seat in the Senate upon that ground, and was a Delegate to the Republican State Convention, and was made its President; was Delegate to the Conven- tion in 1856 in Philadelphia, which nominated John C. Fremont; favored the nomination of Lincoln as a candidate for Senator by the Republican State Convention in 1858, and sup- ported him during the canvass; in 1859 was a candidate for Congress ; the John Brown raid x into Virginia occurred during the canvass, and in consequence he was beaten over 4,000 votes ; in 1860 was one of the Electors at large on the Republican ticket, and was elected ; in 1861 was a member of the Peace Conference at Washington; on the gth of May, 1861, was elected Colonel of the Fourteenth Regiment of Illinois Infantry; marched under Fremont to Springfield, Missouri, in October ; was promoted to Brigadier-General of Volunteers in No- vember, 1861; in March and April, 1862, commanded a division under General Pope in the operations against New Madrid and Island No. 10, and later took part in the operations against Corinth; in ‘August and September, 1862, marched to Nashville ; took part in the battle of Murfreesboro in December, 1862, and January, 1863, and was promoted to Major- General of Volunteers; took part in the operations against the Confederate Army commanded by General Bragg on its retreat via Tullahoma to Chattanooga; commanded a division in the battle of Chickamauga ; was promoted to the command of the Fourteenth Army Corps in October, 1863; took part in the operations around Chattanooga, including the battles of Look- out Mountain and Missionary Ridge, in November, 1863; in 1864 commanded the Fourteenth Corps on the Atlanta campaign, and was relieved at his own request August 4, 1864; com- manded the Military Department of Kentucky from February, 1865, to May 1, 1866; resig- nation accepted September 1, 1866; removed to Springfieid in 1867; was elected Governor of Illinois in 1868 ; supported Horace Greeley in 1872 and Samuel J. Tilden in 1876; was one of the Democratic visitors to Louisiana after the Presidential election in 1876; was nominated as a candidate for United States Senator by the Democratic members of the Legislature in January, 1877, and was afterwards twice nominated for the same office and defeated ; was Delegate-at-large to National Democratic Convention in 1884; in 1888 was nominated by the Democratic State Convention a candidate for Governor and was defeated ; in 1890 was nominated by the Democrats of the State a candidate for Senator; carried the State by 30,000 plurality; ror Democratic members of the Legislature were elected who voted for him 153 ballots; on the 154th ballot the Independents united with the Democrats, and he was elected United States Senator. His term will expire March 3, 1897. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTY.— T%e first four wards of the city of Chicago, with the townships of Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, Hyde Park, Lake, Lemont, Lyons, Orland, Rich, Riverside, Thornton, Worth, in Cook County. Abner Taylor, of Chicago, was born in Maine; has been in active business all his life, as contractor, builder, and merchant; the only office he ever held was that of member of the State Legislature for one term (Thirty-fourth); was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention in 1884, and was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty- | second Congress as a Republican, receiving 22, 235 votes, against 21,796 votes for W. G. Ewing, Democrat, and 483 votes for Isaac H. Pedrick, Prohibitionist. I | | | REPRESENTATIVES. | SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTY.— Part of Cook; the 5th, 6th, and 7th wards of the city of Chicago, and that pure of the 8th ward south of the center of Polk street and the center of Macalaster Place. Lawrence Edward McGann, of Chicago, was born February 2, 1852, in Ireland; his father died in 1854; emigrated to the United States with his mother in 1855, and settled in Milford, Massachusetts, where he attended the public schools; removed to Chicago in 1865, and there worked at the boot and shee trade until 1879 ; was employed as clerk in the service of the city until 1885; was appointed superintendent of streets January 1, 1885, and resigned . 2D ED-=mgd 34 : Congressional Directory. / [ILLINOIS > : May, 1891; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,383 votes, against 10,633 votes for John G. Schaar, Republican, and 767 votes for William Bentley, Prohibitionist. : THIRD DISTRICT. CoUNTY.— Part of Cook; part of the goth, roth, 15th, and 19th wards, and all of the 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 16th, 17th, and 18th wards in the city of Chicago, west side. Allan Cathcart Durborow, Jr., of Chicago, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, No- vember 10, 1857 ; removed with his parents at the age of five to Williamsport, Indiana, where he received his early education ; entered the preparatory department of Wabash College, Craw- fordsville, Indiana, in the fall of 1872; graduated from the University of Indiana at Bloom- ington, in 1877 ; after two years’ residence in Indianapolis he moved to Chicago, where he has since been engaged in business ; has always been active in local politics, but never held office until elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,069 votes, against 17,933 votes for William E. Mason, Republican, and 263 votes for J. L. Whitlock, prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTY.— Cook County; part of the 15th and the 20th, 21st, 22d, 23d, and 24th wards of the city of Chicago, and the towns of Barrington, Cicero, Elk Grove, Evanston, Hanover, feffer- son, Lakeview, Leyden, Maine, Niles, New Trier, Norwood Park, Northfield, Palatine, Proviso, Schaumburg, and Wheeling, in Cook County. Walter C. Newberry, of Chicago, was born in Sangerfield, Oneida County, New York, December 23, 1835; received an academic education; served during the war in volunteer armies of the United States as private, Lieutenant, Captain, Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, Celonel, and brigadier-general by brevet; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,835 votes, against 19,173 votes for George E. Adams, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Boone, De Kalb, Kane, Lake, and McHenry. Albert J. Hopkins, of Aurora, was born in De Kalb County, Illinois, August 15, 1846; graduated at Hillsdale College, Michigan, in June, 1870; studied law and commenced practice at Aurora, Illinois; was State’s Attorney of Kane County from 1872 to 1876; was a member of the Republican State Central Committee from 1878 to 1880; was Presidential Elector on the Blaine and Logan ticket in 1884; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Con- gresses as a Republican, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 15,845 . votes, against 9,664 votes for Jacob Haish, Democrat, and 1,036 votes for Frederick F. Farmiloe, Prohibitionist, and 1 vote scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carroll, Jo Daviess, Ogle, Stephenson, and Winnebago. Robert Roberts Hitt, of Mount Morris, was born at Urbana, Ohio, January 16, 1834; removed to Ogle County, Illinois, in 1837; was educated at Rock River Seminary (now Mount Morris College) and at Asbury University; was First Secretary of Paris Legation, and Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim from December, 1874, until March, 1881; was Assistant Secretary of State in 1881; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress November 7, 1882, to fill the va- cancy occasioned by the death of Hon, R. M. A. Hawk; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses as a Republican, and was re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress, receiving 14,028 votes, against 13,517 votes for Andrew Ashton, Democrat and Farmers’ Alliance. * SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bureau, Henry, Lee, Putnam, and Whitesides. Thomas J. Henderson, of Princeton, was born at Brownsville, Haywood County, Ten- nessee, November 29, 1824; removed to Illinois at the age of eleven; received an academic education; was reared upon a farm; was elected Clerk of the County Commissioners’ Court of Stark County, Illinois, in 1847, and served until 1849; was elected Clerk of the County Court of Stark County, and served from 1849 until 1853; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1852, and has since practiced his profession; was a member of the State House of ~ ILLINOIS.] Senators and Representatives. As ; Representatives in 1855 and ’56, and of the State Senate in 1857, ’58, ’59, and ’60; entered the Union Army in 1862 as Colonel of the One hundred and twelfth Regiment of Illinois Volunteer Infantry, served until the close of the war, and was brevetted Brigadier-General in January, 1865; was elected a Presidential Elector for the State at large on the Republican ticket in 1868; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty- eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses as a Republican, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 12,046 votes, against 10,374 votes for John W. Blee, Democrat, and 740 votes for D. E. Holmes, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes scattering. EIGHTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Du Page, Grundy, Kendall, La Salle, and Will. Lewis Steward, of Plano, was born in Wayne County, Pennsylvania, November 20, 1824; received a common school education; read law and was admitted to the bar, but never prac- ticed; removed with his parents in 1838 to Kendall County, Illinois, where he has since re- sided ; has been engaged in farming and manufacturing; was the Democratic candidate for Governor in 1876 against Hon. Shelby M. Cullom, Republican candidate, and received, in round numbers, 273,000 votes, against 279,000 votes cast for Mr. Cullom; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,496 votes, against 16,794 votes for Charles A. Hill, Republican, and 1,118 votes for Charles T. Farrell, Prohibitionist, and 5 votes scat- tering. : NINTH DISTRICT. Herman W. Snow, of Sheldon, was born in La Porte County, Indiana, July 3, 1836; was brought up in Kentucky until he was thirteen years old ; worked on a farm five years; educated himself entirely; taught school several years; was admitted to the bar; enlisted asa private in 3 the One hundred and thirty-ninth Illinois Volunteer Infantry ; served in Illinois, Missouri, and Kentucky, and rose to the rank of Captain; after expiration of enlistment re-enlisted in the One hundred and fifty-first Illinois Infantry, and rose to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel ; served in most of the Southern States, and was Provost-Marshal-General of Georgia on Major-General Steedman’s staff; was with his regiment when Brigadier-General Wofford surrendered 10,400 Confederate troops to Steedman at Kingston, Georgia ; at the expiration of service resumed = ~ teaching in the Chicago High School for three years; was elected to the Illinois Legislature ; traveled extensively in the United States; is a good Latin, Greek, and French scholar; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,427 votes, against 14,480 votes for Lewis E. Payson, Republican, and 793 votes for O. W. Stewart; Prohibitionist, and 03 votes scattering. | | | COUNTIES.— Ford, Iroquois, Kankakee, Livingston, Marshall, and Woodford. | TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fulton, Knox, Peoria, and Stark. Philip Sidney Post, of Galesburgh, was born in Florida, Orange County, New York, March . 19,1833; received a classical education, graduating at Union College, Schenectady, New York, in 1855; entered the Poughkeepsie Law School; was admitted to the bar ir Illinois in 1856; entered the Union Army in 1861 as Second Lieutenant Fifty-ninth Illinois Infantry; was § appointed Adjutant July 21, 1861; was promoted to Major January 1, 1862; was severely wounded at the battle of Pea Ridge, Arkansas, March 7, 1862; was promoted to Colonel March 19, 1862; was assigned to the command of the First Brigade, First Division, Twentieth Army Corps, Army of the Cumberland, October 1, 1862; was transferred to the command of the Second Brigade, Third Division, Fourth Army Corps, August, 1864, and commanded the division at the battle of Lovejoy’s Station; was desperately wounded by a grape-shot at the battle of Nashville, December 16, 1864 ;* was promoted on the same day Brigadier-General by brevet; was in command of Western Texas in 1865, headquarters at San Antonio; was ap- pointed Consul to Vienna in 1866; was promoted Consul-General for Austria-Hungary 1874; resigned in 1879; was member at large of the Illinois Republican State Central Committee from 1882 to 1836; was Commander Department of Illinois, Grand Army of the Republic, in 1836; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,194 votes, against 15,576 votes for George A. Wilson, Democrat, 465 votes for Marvin S. Carr, Prohibitionist, 107 votes for Joseph S. Barnum, Farmers’ Alliance, and 3 votes scattering. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CoOUNTIES.— Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, Rock Island, Schuyler, and Warren. 4 Benjamin T. Cable, of Rock Island, was born in Georgetown, Scott County, Kentucky, + August 11, 1853; removed with his father’s family to Rock Island, his present home, in Sep- 36 Congressional Directory. [1LLINOIS. tember, 1856; was educated in the public schools of Rock Island and the University of Michi- gan, graduating from the latter institution in June, 1876; has been engaged in ranching and manufacturing ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,334 votes, against 17,461 votes for W. H. Gest, Republican, 730 votes for S. T. Shelton, Pro- hibitionist, and 13 votes scattering. TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Brown, Calhoun, Cass, Greene, Jersey, Pike, and Scott. Scott Wike, of Pittsfield, was born at Meadville, Pennsylvania, April 6, 1834; removed with his parents to Quincy, Illinois, in 1838, and to Pike County in 1844; was educated at Lombard University, Galesburgh, graduating therefrom in 1857; studied law with Judge O. C. Skinner at Quincy, and was admitted to the bar in 1858; graduated from Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1859, and commenced the practice of law the same year at Pittsfield, where he has since resided; was twice elected to the Legislature of Illinois, and served from 1863 to 1867; was a member of the Forty-fourth Congress; was elected to to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving . 20,805 votes, against 13,336 votes for Milton McClure, Republican, 922 votes for John W, Bush, Prohibitionist, 748 for Thomas Barton, Farmers’ Allance, and I vote scattering. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Christian, Mason, Menard, Morgan, Sangamon, and Tazewell. William M. Springer, of Springfield, was born in Sullivan County, Indiana, May 30, 1836; removed to Illinois with his parents in 1848; graduated at the Indiana State University, Bloomington, in 1858; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1859; was Secretary of the State Constitutional Convention of Illinois in 1862; was a member of the State Legislature of Illinois in 1871-72; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,951 votes, against 15,916 votes for Jesse Hannon, Republican, 1,656 votes for Robert H. Patton, Prohibitionist, and 3 votes scattering. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —De Witt, Logan, Macon, McLean, and Piatt. Owen Scott, of Bloomington, Illinois, was born in Jackson Township, Effingham County, Illinois, July 6, 1848; was brought up on a farm and received a common-school education ; became a teacher in the public schools; was elected Superintendent of Schools for Effingham County, and served in that capacity eight years; was admitted to the bar by the Illinois Supreme Court, January 10, 1874, and practiced law for ten years, leaving this to engage in newspaper work ; published the Effingham Democrat, leaving it to become proprietor and manager of the Bloomington Daily and Weekly Bulletin; also publishes monthly the Illinois Freemason; was elected City Attorney and Mayor of Effingham; was Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,670 votes, against 15,448 votes for Jonathan H. Rowell, Republican, 1,533 votes for W. C. Outten, Prohibitionist, and 6 votes scattering. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Champaign, Coles, Douglas, Edgar, and Vermillion. Samuel T. Busey, of Urbana, was born in Greencastle, Putman County, Indiana, Novem- ber, 16, 1835; removed with his parents the following spring to his present home; resided on a farm, and was educated at the public schools in Urbana; was engaged in merchandising from 1857 to 1859 inclusive; studied law; attended commercial college and law lectures 1859-’60; returned to merchandising for two years; was First Sergeant and First Lieutenant of the Urbana Zouaves 1861-62; was town collector 1862; was commissioned Second Lieu- tenant in the recruiting service by Governor Yates in June, 1862, and helped to organize the Seventy-sixth Illinois Volunteer Infantry; was elected Captain Company B of that regiment August 7, 1862; was elected Lieutenant-Colonel August 12, 1862, and commissioned August 16 by Governor Yates; was promoted to the Colonelcy of the same regiment May, 1863; was mustered out of the service August 6, 1865, at Chicago, Illinois, with the rank of Brevet Brigadier-General; received the last commission on recommendation of Major- General C. C. Andrews for leading the assault on Fort Blakeley, Alabama, 1865; ran for Representative for Legislature on Democratic ticket, 1866, and for Trustee of the State University, 1888, and was defeated; was Mayor and Presi:lent of the Board of Education of Urbana, 1880-’89; organized Busey’s Bank in 1867, and conducted his business twenty-one ILLINOIS. | Senators and Representatives, vi years; has traveled extensively in nearly every State and Territory in the Union; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,010 votes, against 18,428 votes for Joseph G. Cannon, Republican, 652 votes for John S. Sergent, Prohibitionist, and 160 votes for Jesse Harper, Union Labor, and 7 votes scattering. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.— Clark, Clay, Crawford, Cumberland, Edwards, Jasper, Lawrence, Richland; Wabash, and Wayne. George W. Fithian, of Newton, was born on a farm near the village of Willow Hill, Illinois, July 4, 1854; was educated in the common schools; learned the printer’s trade at Mount Carmel, Illinois, which business he followed until he was admitted to the bar, in 1875 ; is married ; was elected State’s Attorney of Jasper County in 1876,and was re-elected in 1880; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,473 votes, against 15,957 votes for John D. Reeder, Alliance and Republican, and 350 votes for W. H. Hughes, Prohibitionist, and 1 vote scattering. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Zffingham, Fayette, Macoupin, Montgomery, Moultrie, and Shelby. Edward Lane, of Hillsboro, was born in Cleveland, Ohio, March 27, 1842; removed to Illinois in May, 1858; received an academic education; afterwards read law, and was licensed to practice by the Supreme Court of the State of Illinois in February, 1865, and has since practiced his profession; was elected Judge in November, 1869, and served one term; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,700 votes, against 9,761 votes for Fletcher H. Chapman, Re- publican, 4,845 votes for E. Roessler, Farmers’ Alliance, 997 votes for Jasper L. Douthit, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bond, Madison, Monroe, St. Clair, and Washington. William S. Forman, of Nashville, was born in Natchez, Mississippi, January 20, 1847; removed with his father to the county in which he now lives in 1851 and has resided there since; is a lawyer by profession; was a member of the State Senate, Thirty-fourth and Thirty- fifth General Assemblies; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,279 votes, against 14,529 votes for Cicero J. Lindley, Republican, and 653 votes for James P. Courtney, Prohibitionist. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clinton, Franklin, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Jefferson, Marion, Saline, and White. James R. Williams, of Carmi, was born in White County, Illinois, December 27, 1850; was graduated from the Indiana State University, Bloomington, in 1875, and from the Union College of Law, Chicago, in 1876; has been actively engaged in the practice of his profession at Carmi since the latter year; was Master in Chancery from 1880 to 1882, and County Judge of White County from 1882 to 1886; was nominee for Elector on the Cleveland and Thurman ticket; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, as a Democrat, at a special election’ to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. R. W. Townshend, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 17,410 votes, against 12,613 votes for George W. Pillow, Republican, 831 votes for John H. Wilson, Prohibitionist, and 22 votes scattering. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Alexander, Jackson, Johnson, Massac, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, Randolph, Union, and Williamson. George W. Smith, of Murphysborough, was born in Putnam County, Ohio, August 18, 1846; was raised on a farm in Wayne County, Illinois, to which his father removed in 1850; learned the trade of blacksmithing ; attended the commonschools; graduated from the Literary Department of McKendree College, at Lebanon, Illinois, in 1868; read law in Fairfield, Illinois ; after which he entered the Law Department of the University at Bloomington, Indiana, from which he graduated in 1870; was admitted to the practice of law by the Supreme Court of Illinois the same year, since which time he has resided in Murphysbor- ough in the active practice of his profession; in 1880 he was the Republican Elector for his Congressional District (then the Eighteenth), and cast the vote of the district for Garfield and 38 Congressional Directory. [ INDIANA. Arthur; is married; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,580 votes, against 16,273 votes for W. S. Morris, Democrat, 685 votes for Edward A. Davis, Prohibitionist, 945 votes for L, L. Law- rence, Farmers’ Alliance, and 2 votes scattering. / INDIANA. SENATORS. Daniel Wolsey Voorhees, of Terre Haute, was born September 26, 1827, in Liberty Township, Butler County, Ohio, and in his early infancy was carried by his parents to their pioneer home in the Wabash Valley of Indiana; was graduated from the Indiana Asbury (now DePauw University) in 1849; studied law and commenced the practice of that profession in 1851; was appointed United States District Attorney for Indiana in 1858, and held that office until he entered Congress in 1861; was elected to the Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, Thirty- ninth, Forty-first, and Forty-second Congresses; was defeated for the Forty-third Congress by reason of the nomination of Horace Greeley as the Democratic candidate for President; was appointed ‘United States Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Oliver P. Morton, and took his seat November 12, 1877; was immediately assigned to the Committee on Finance as his leading committee, and has been a member of that committee to the present time. Soon after entering the Senate he addressed that body in favor of free coinage of sil- ver and the preservation of the greenback currency as full legal-tender money. In this speech he laid down the principles on which as a direct issue the State of Indiana was carried by the Democratic party the following year (1878) by over 30,000 majority in the election of mem- bers of the Legislature; this Legislature returned him to the Senate by 23 majority on joint ballot over Benjamin Harrison, now President of the United States; was re-elected in January, 1885, by a majority of 46 over Albert G. Porter, and was re-elected in January, 1891, by a majority of 69 on joint ballot over Alvin P. Hovey. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. David Turpie, of Indianapolis, studied law and was admitted to practice at Logansport, Indiana, in 1849 ; was appointed by Governor Wright, whom he succeeded inthe Senate, Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in 1854, and was Judge of the Circuit Court in 1856, both of which offices he resigned; in 1853, and also in 1858, he was a member of the Legislature of Indiana; in 1863 was elected a Senator in Congress for the unexpired term of Jesse D. Bright, and immediately succeeding Joseph A. Wright, who served by appointment of the Governor ; was elected a member of the House of Representatives of the General Assembly of Indiana, and served as Speaker of that body, 1874-75 ; in 1878 was appointed one of the three Commission- ers to revise the laws of Indiana, serving as such three years; in August, 1886, was appointed United States District Attorney for the State of Indiana, and served as such until March 3, 1887 ; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, February 2, 1887, and took his seat March 4, 1887; was a Delegate at Large to the National Democratic Convention at St. Louis in June, 1888. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Gibson, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh, and Warrick. William F. Parrett, of Evansville, was born on a farm near Blairsville, Posey County, Indiana, August 10, 1825; was raised on the farm, attending school in winter and working on the farm in summer; completed a partial course at Asbury (now De Pauw) University, at Greencastle ; received early business training in the old Branch Bank in Evansville; began the study of law under the late Governor Baker, at Evansville, in 1847, and was admitted to the bar after examination; remained in Boonville until 1852, when he removed to Oregon, ‘where he practiced law for two years and a half, when he returned to Evansville, and entered the law firm of Lockhart, Parrett & Denby; in 1855 he removed to Boonville and opened a law office; in 1856 was Democratic Presidential Elector for the First District and cast the electoral vote of Indiana for Buchanan; in 1858 was elected to the Legislature and served during the general and special session; in 1859 was appointed by Governor Willard Judge of the Fifteenth Circuit, to which position he was elected for six years at the election following his appointment; after his election he returned to Evansville, where he has since resided; in 1865 he was re-elected for a term of six years; before the expiration of the second term INDIANA.| Senators and Representatives. ; 39 he resigned, and formed a law partnership with General James M. Shackelford, now United States Judge, Indian Territory, and subsequently formed a partnership with Luke Wood; in 1873 was appointed Judge of the First Circuit by Governor Hendricks, and was elected to the same position, and twice re-elected, 1879 and ’84, resigning the office in December, 1888; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,730 votes, against 16,875 votes for James S. Wright, Republican, 572 votes for William M. Land, Prohibitionist, and 34 votes imperfect. / SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Daviess, Dubois, Greene, Knox, Lawrence, Martin, Orange, and Crawford. John L. Bretz, of Jasper, was born near Huntingburg, Du Bois County, Indiana, Septem- ber 21, 1852; farmed until 23 years of age; was educated in common country schools and Huntingburg High School; taught school three years; read law under Hon. W. A. Traylor, and graduated from the Cincinnati Law School in 1880; located in Jasper the same year; was elected Prosecuting Attorney of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit in 1884; was re-elected in 1886 and 1888; was elected to the Fifty-Second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,697 votes, against 11,996 votes for William H. Darnell, Republican, 4,649 votes for Sampson Cox, Farmer and Labor candidate, and 369 votes for Anderson F. Fox, Prohibition candidate. THIRD DISTRICT, COUNTIES. — Clark, Floyd, Harrison, Jackson, Jennings, Scott, and Washington. Jason Brevoort Brown, of Seymour, was born in Dillsborough, Indiana, February 26, 1839; was educated in the common schools, except a short course at the Wilmington Academy in Dearborn County, Indiana; earned his own living when a boy, and therefore had little op- portunity to acquire an education; studied law at Indianapolis, Indiana, in 1858, ’59, and was admitted to the bar in 1860, and to practice in the Supreme Court of the United States in 1866; located in Jackson County, Indiana, in 1860, where he has since resided in the practice of his profession ; has taken part as a public speaker in all of the political campaigns in his State since 1862; was elected to the Indiana House of Representatives from Jackson County in 1862, and was re-elected in 1864; was elected to the State Senate in 1870 from the counties of Jackson and Brown,and was re-elected in 1880 from the counties of Jackson and Jennings; is married; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,369 votes, against 12,430 votes for William J. Dunham, Republican, and 319 votes for Moses G. Poindexter, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Dearborn, Decatur, Franklin, Jefferson, Oko, Ripley, Switzerland, and Union. William S. Holman, of Aurora, was born at a pioneer homestead called Veraestau, in Dearborn County, Indiana, September 6, 1822; received a common-school education, and studied at Franklin College, Indiana, for two years; taught school, and then studied and prac- ticed law; was Judge of the Court of Probate from 1843 to 1846; was Prosecuting Attorney from 1847 to 1849; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of Indiana in 1850; was a member of the Legislature of Indiana in 1851; was a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas from 1852 to 1856; was elected to the Thirty-sixth, Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,639 votes, against 13,867 votes for John T. Rankin, Republican, 356 votes for Samuel V. Wright, Prohibitionist, and 50 votes imperfect. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bartholomew, Brown, Hendricks, Johnson, Monroe, Morgan, Owen, and Putnam George William Cooper, of Columbus, was born in Bartholomew County, Indiana, May 21, 1851; received a preliminary education in the public schools, and took a four years’ collegiate course at the Indiana State University, graduating from the literary and law courses in 1872, and has been in the active practice of the law since; is married; was elected Prosecuting Attorney in 1872; was elected Mayor of the city of Columbus in 1877,and was City Attorney of Columbus for four years; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,070 votes, against 15,355 votes for John G. Dunbar, Republican, 711 votes for William R. Shelt, Prohibitionist, and 11 votes imper- fect. , 40 : : Congressional Directory. [INDIANA. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Delaware, Fayette, Henry, Randolph, Rush, and Wayne. Henry U. Johnson, of Richmond, was born at Cambridge City, Wayne County, Indiana, October 28, 1850; received his education at Centreville Collegiate Institute and at Earlham College, located in Wayne County; is not a graduate; studied law and was admitted to practice at the Wayne County bar in February, 1872; was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Wayne County in 1876, and re-elected in 1878; was elected to the State Senate from Wayne County in 1886, and served in the legislative sessions of 1887 and 1839; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,786 votes, against 13,050 votes for David S. Trowbridge, Democrat and People’s candidate, 1,178 votes for William Edgerton, Prohibitionist, and 243 votes, imperfect, cast for David S. Trowbridge. SEVENTH. DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Hancock, Madison, Marion, and Shelby. William D. Bynum, of Indianapolis, was born near Newberry, Greene County, Indi- ana, June 26, 1846; received a primary education in the common schools, and collegiate at State University at Bloomington, Indiana, graduating in 1869; studied law with Hon. William Mack, of Terre Haute, and was admitted to practice in 1869; was City Attorney of Washington, Indiana, 1871-75; was Mayor of Washington, 1875-"79; was appointed by Governor Hen- dricks a Trustee of the State Normal School of Terre Haute, in February, 1875, and served until he resigned in June, 1875; was a Democratic Elector in 1876; removed from Daviess County to Marion County in May, 1881; was a member of the State Legislature in 1882, and elected Speaker of the House at the beginning of the session of 1883; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 27,401 votes, against 22,086 votes for John J. W. Billingsley, Republican, and 1,074 votes for Charles W. Culbertson, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clay, Fountain, Montgomery, Parke, Sullivan, Vermillion, and Vigo. Elijah Voorhees Brookshire, of Crawfordsville, was born near Ladoga, in Montgomery County, Indiana, August 15, 1856; graduated in the scientific course in the Central Indiana Normal College at Ladoga in August, 1878; was engaged in farming and school teaching antil 1883; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in Crawfordsville in that year; was engaged in the practice of the law and farming when elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re- elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,391 votes, against 18,333 yotes for James A. Mount, Republican, 646 votes for J. C. Ashley, Prohibitionist, and 176 votes for Oliver M. Curry, Union Labor. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Benton, Boone, Clinton, Hamilton, Howard, Tippecanoe, Tipton, and Warren. Dan Waugh, of Tipton, was born March 7, 1842; was brought up on a farm in Wells County, Indiana, until the breaking out of the war; received a common-school education ; served for three years as a private in Company A, Thirty-fourth Indiana Volunteer Infantry ; after the war attended a private school for two years during the summer, and taught in the public schools during the winter; studied law while working on a farm; was admitted to ted har and settled in Tipton in 1867; practiced his profession until 1884, when he was elected to the office of Judge of the Thirty-sixth Judicial Circuit for six years; was elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,752 votes, against 19,494 votes for L.. Temple- ton, Democratic Labor and Alliance candidate, and 1,120 votes for M. Hanson, Prohibitionist, and 41 imperfect votes, cast for Leroy Templeton. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carroll, Cass, Fulton, Jasper, Lake, Newton, Porter, Pulaski, and White. David H. Patton, of Remington, was born in Fleming County, Kentucky, November 26, 1837; was educated at the Collegiate Institute at Waveland, Indiana; enlisted in the Thirty- eighth Indiana Regiment in 1861, attaining the rank of colonel, and as such was mustered out with his regiment at the close of the war; graduated from the Chicago Medical College in 1867, since which time he has practiced medicine at his present home; never held any political office until elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,262 votes, against 16,100 for William D. Owen, Republican, 955 votes for Henry I. Adams, Pro- hibitionist, and 31 votes for John B. Milroy, People’s candidate. INDIANA. | Senators and Representatives, : 41 ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Blackford, Grant, Huntington, Jay, Miami, Wabash, and Wells. Augustus N. Martin, of Bluffton, was bornat Whitestown, Butler County, Pennsylvania, on the farm of hisfather, John Martin, March 23, 1847 ; was educated in the common schools, and at Witherspoon Institute, Butler, Pennsylvania, and graduated in February, 1867, at Eastman College, Poughkeepsie, New York; enlisted July 3, 1863, in Company I, Fifty- eighth Pennsylvania Volunteer Militia, which assisted in the capture of General John Morgan’s command ; enlisted again February 22, 1865, in Company E, Seventy-eighth Pennsylvania Volunteers, serving until discharged, August 30, 1865, for disability ; left home for the West March 23, 1868, working in saw-mills and on farms and teaching school in Ohio, and arriving in Wells County, Indiana, June 19, 1869, where he worked on farm and railroad until he commenced reading law in Bluffton in 1869 ; was admitted to the practice of the law in 1870, which has been his calling ever since ; represented Adams and Wells Counties in the Legis- lature in 1875, where he served on the House Judiciary, Organization of Courts, and Corpo- ration Committees; was elected Reporter of the Supreme Court of Indiana in 1876, and served for a term of four years, during which period he edited and published Indiana Su- preme Court Reports from volume 54 to volume 70, inclusive ; was renominated, but, with the whole ticket, was defeated in 1880; resided from 1881 to 1883 at Austin, Texas; is married; became again a resident of Bluffton upon his return from Texas; was elected to the Fifty- first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,813 votes, against 18,000 votes for Cyrus E. Bryant, Repulican, 1,627 votes for Benjamin F. Dickey, Prohibitionist. TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—A len, De Kalb, La Grange, Noble, Steuben, and Whitley. Charles A. O. McClellan, of Auburn, was born at Ashland, Ohio, May 25,1835, where he resided until 1856, when he removed to Auburn, his present residence; was educated in the district school; studied law at Auburn, and was admitted to the bar in 1860, and has been in the practice since; he has also.been in the banking business since 1868, being the President of the First National Bank of Auburn and De Kalb Bank of Waterloo; was Judge of the Fortieth Circuit Court of Indiana, and served for two years; is married; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,970 votes, against 13,020 votes for Jacques N. Babcock, Republican, and 939 votes for George H. Hubbard, Prohibitionist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. o COUNTIES. — Elkhart, Kosciusko, La Porte, Marshall, St. Joseph, and Starke. Benjamin F. Shively, of South Bend, was born in St. Joseph County, Indiana, March 20, 1857; taught school from 1874 till 1880, when he engaged in journalism; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of William H. Calk- ins; graduated in law from the Ann Arbor University with the class of 1886; was admitted to the bar; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,318 votes, against 17,614 votes for Henry D. White, Republican, 845 votes for Robert H. Clark, Prohibitionist, 166 votes for John Y. Maughemar, Union Labor. IOWA. SENATORS. William B. Allison, of Dubuque, was born at Perry, Ohio, March 2, 1829; was educated at the Western Reserve College, Ohio; studied law and practiced in Ohio until he removed to Towa in 1857; served on the staff of the Governor of Iowa, and aided in organizing volun- teers in the beginning of the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected a Repre- sentative in the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, and Forty-first Congresses; and was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed James Harlan, Republican; took his seat March 4, 1873, and was re-elected in 1878, 1884, and 18go. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. | 1 4a Congressional Directory. [1oWA. James F. Wilson, of Fairfield, was born at Newark, Ohio, October 19, 1828 ; learned the harness-maker’s trade, and worked at it for eight years, during which time he pursued his educational studies and acquired a thorough education; studied law, was admitted to the bar mn 1851, and commenced the practice of his profession in his native town; removed to Iowa in 1853; was elected a member of the Constitutional Convention of Iowa in 1856; was a mem- ber of the State Legislature of Iowa in 1857,’59, and’ 61, serving the last year as President of the Senate ; was elected a Representative in Congress from Iowa, in 1861, for the unexpired term of General S. R. Curtis; was re-elected to the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, and Fortieth Con- gresses, serving from December 2, 1861, to March 3, 1869; was a member of the Judiciary Committee of the House during the entire period of his service, and was its chairman during the last six years of his membership; was elected to the United States Senate as a Repub- lican, to succeed James Wilson McDill, Republican, and took his seat December 4, 1883, and was re-elected in 1888. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoOUNTIES.— Des Moines, Henry, Jefferson, Lee, Louisa, Van Buren, and Washington. iid 4 John J. Seerley, of Burlington, was born in Toulon, Tllinois, March 13, 1852; graduated from the State University of Iowa, degree A. B., in 1875; was principal of the Towa City High School in 1876; graduated from the Law Department of the State University of Iowa in 1877; is a lawyer by profession; was City Solicitor of Burlington for six years; was the candidate of the Democratic party for Congress in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,459 votes, against 16,388 votes for John H. Gear, Republican, and 150 votes for Isaac T. Gibson, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.. COUNTIES.— Clinton, lowa, Jackson, Johnson, Muscatine, and Scott. Walter I. Hayes, of Clinton, was bornin Marshall, Michigan, December 9, 1841 ; received a common-school education ; graduated from the Law Department, Michigan University, in 1863; 1s a lawyer by profession; was City Attorney for Marshall, Michigan; was United States Com- missioner for the Eastern District of Michigan, and also of Iowa; was City Solicitor of Clinton, Iowa; was District Judge of the Seventh Judicjal District of Iowa’ from August, 1875, till Jan- uary I, 1887; was twice the candidate of the Democratic party for Judge of the Supreme Court of the State; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,748 votes, against 11,738 votes for Bruce T. Seaman, Republican, and 24 votes for T. L.. Taggart, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT, COUNTIES.— Black Hawk, Bremer, Buchanan, Butler, Delaware, Dubuque, Franklin, Har- din, and Wright. David Bremner Henderson, of Dubuque, was born at Old Deer, Scotland, March 14, 1840; was brought to Illinois in 1846 and to Iowa in 1849; was educated in common schools and at the Upper Iowa University; studied law with Bissel & Shiras, of Dubuque, and was ad- mitted in the fall of 1865; was reared on a farm until twenty-one years of age; enlisted in the Union Army in September, 1861, as private in Company C, Twelfth Regiment Iowa Infantry Volunteers, and was elected and commissioned First Lieutenant of that company, serving with it until discharged, owing to the loss of his leg, February 16, 1863; in May, 1863, was appointed Commissioner of the Board of Enrollment of the Third District of Iowa, serving as such until June, 1864, when he re-entered the Army as Colonel of the Forty-sixth Regiment Iowa In- fantry Volunteers, and served therein until the close of his term of service; was Collector of Internal Revenue for the Third District of Iowa from November, 1865, until June, 1869, when he resigned and became a member of the law firm of Shiras, Van Duzee & Henderson; was Assistant United States District Attorney for the Northern Division of the District of Iowa about two years, resigning in 1871; is now a member of the law firm of Henderson, Hurd, Daniels & Kiesel; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Con- gresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,689 votes, against 19,491 votes for Carl F, Couch, Democrat, and 10 votes for John Bowman, Prohibi- tionist. J | | | 2 | IOWA. | Senators and Representatives. 43 FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Allamakee, Cervo Gordo, Chickasaw, Clayton, Fayette, Floyd, Howard, Mitchell, Winneshiek, and Worth. Walt H. Butler, of West Union, was born in Springboro, Crawford County, Pennsylvania, his father being Colonel Hiram Butler, of that placé; has lived in Iowa since 1875, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,972 votes, against 16,023 votes for Joseph IH. Sweney, Republican, and 101 votes for H. G. Parker, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Benton, Cedar, Grundy, Jones, Linn, Marshall, and Tama. John Taylor Hamilton, of Cedar Rapids, was born October 16, 1843, on a farm near Geneseo, Henry County, Illinois; removed to Iowa in 1868; is not a graduate of any college; since 1868 has been engaged in the wholesale farm machinery business; is President of the Cedar Rapids Savings Bank, and a Director in the Cedar Rapids Electric Light and Power Company; was Mayor of Cedar Rapids; was member of the Board of Supervisors; was three times a member of the State Legislature, and Speaker of the House; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,153 votes, against 17,860 votes for George R. Strubel, Republican, 250 votes for Enoch Lewis, Farmers’ Alliance, and 4 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.— Davis, Jasper, Keokuk, Mahaska, Monroe, Poweshiek, and Wapello. Frederick Edward White, of Webster, was born in Prussia, Germany, in 1844; his father died when he was ten years old; came to America with his mother in 1857, and settled on a farm in Keokuk County, Iowa, where he has since remained; up to the breaking out of the war worked as a farm hand for other parties in the neighborhood; early in the winter of 1861 enlisted in the Eighth Towa Infantry, and was rejected on account of not being quite 18 years old; enlisted February, 1862, in the Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, and served until the close of the war; was mustered out in August, 1865; returned home, and bought land and engaged in farming and stock raising, which business he has followed since; never held a public office ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,092 votes, against 16,572 votes for John F. Lacy, Republican, 1,048 votes for Perry Engle, Union Labor, and 201 votes for Listen McMillin, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Dallas, Madison, Marion, Polk, Story, and Warren. John A. T. Hull, of Des Moines, Iowa, was born in Sabina, Clinton County, Ohio, May I, 1841; removed with his parents to Iowa in 1849; was educated in public schools, Asbury University, Indiana, Iowa Wesleyan College, Mount Pleasant; was graduated from the Cin- cinnati, Ohio, Law School in the spring of 1862; enlisted in the Twenty-third Towa Infantry July, 1862; was First Lieutenant and Captain; was wounded in the charge on intrenchments at Black River May 17, 1863, resigned October, 1863; was elected Secretary of the Towa State Senate in 1872, and re-elected in 1874, 1876, and 1878; was elected Secretary of State in 1878, and re-elected in 1880 and 1882; was elected Lieutenant-Governor in 1885 and re-elected in 1887; is engaged in farming and manufacturing; was elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,821 votes, against 14,276 votes for H. C. Hargis, Democrat, Union Labor, and Alliance, and 97 votes for J. G. Little, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Appanocose, Clarke, Decatur, Fremont, Lucas, Page, Ringgold, Taylor, Union, and Wayne. James P. Flick, of Bedford, was born at Bakerstown, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, August 28, 1845; removed with his parents to Wapello County, Iowa, when seven years of age, and from there to Taylor County in 1857, where he has since resided; received a common- school education; enlisted in the Fourth Iowa Infantry April 3, 1862, and served as a private ee 44 | Congressional Directory. [Towa. soldier; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1870, and has been in active practice since; was a member of the Seventeenth General Assembly of Iowa, and served as District Attorney of the Third Judicial District of Iowa for six years; he was elected over Hon. A. R. Anderson, who was his captainin the Army, to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty second Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,003 votes, against 18,887 votes for A. R. Anderson, Democrat, 331 votes for S. A. Gilley, Prohibitionist, 62 votes for I. N. Harris, Farmers’ Alliance. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adair, Audubon, Cass, Guthrie, Harrison, Mills, Montgomery, Pottawattamie, and Shelby. Thomas Bowman, of Council Bluffs, was born at Wiscasset, Lincoln County, Maine, May 25, 1848; received a common English education at Oak Grove Seminary, at Vassalboro, Maine; removed to Council Bluffs in 1868, where he engaged in commercial business; was elected Treasurer of Pottawattamie County in 1875 and re-elected in 1877 and 1879; was elected Mayor of Council Bluffs in 1882; was appointed Postmaster in 1885 and served until 1889, when he resigned; in 1883 he purchased a controlling ownership in the Council Bluffs Globe; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,605 votes, against 17,322 votes for Joseph R. Reed, Republican, 1,243 votes for Noah H. Bowman, Farmers’ Alliance, and 55 votes for John Christy, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Boone, Callkoun, Carroll, Crawford, Emmet, Greene, Hamilton, Hancock, Hum- boldt, Kossuth, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Webster, and Winnebago. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Fort Dodge, was born near Kingwood, Preston County, Virginia (now West Virginia), February 6, 1858; graduated in 1875 from the West Virginia University ; was admitted to the bar in 1878; never held any political office until elected to the Fifty-first Congress ; was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,395 votes, against 17,084 votes for I. L.. Woods, Democrat, Union Labor, and Farmers’ Alliance, and 89 votes for Willis Werner, Prohibitionist, and 20 votes scattering. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, lda, Lyon, Monona, O’Brien, Osceola, Plymouth, Sac, Sioux, and Woodbury. George D. Perkins, of Sioux City, was born in Holly, Orleans County, New York, Febru- ary 29, 1840; removed at an early age to the West; learned the printers’ trade at Baraboo, Wis- consin; in connection with his brother started the Gazette at Cedar Falls in 1860; enlisted as private soldier Company B, Thirty-first Iowa, August 12, 1862, and was discharged from Jefferson Barracks, Missouri, January 12, 1863; removed to Sioux City in 1869, and has been editor of the Journal since; was a member of the Iowa Senate 1874-76; was appointed United States Marshal for Northern District of Iowa by President Arthur and removed by President Cleveland; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,972 votes, against 15,065 for John P. Allison, Democrat, 4,658 votes for A. J. Westfall, Independent (Farmers’ Alliance), and 119 votes for D. J. Farnham, Prohibitionist. on KANSAS. SENATORS. William Alfred Peffer, of Topeka, was born on a farm in Cumberland County, Pennsyl- vania, September 10, 1831; attended a public school; began teaching at the age of fifteen years; taught during winter and farmed in summer; removed to Indiana June, 1853, and opened a farm in St. Joseph County; removed to Missouri September, 1859, and purchased a farm in Morgan County ; because of the war removed to Illinois February, 1862, and enlisted as a private in Company F, Eighty-third Illinois Infantry the following August; was promoted to Second Lieutenant March, 1863; served as Regimental Quartermaster and Adjutant, Post Adjutant, Judge-Advocate of a Military Commission, and Depot Quartermaster in the Engi- neer Department at Nashville; studied law odd hours during the war; was mustered out of service June 26, 1865; began practice of law at Clarksville, Tennessee, August, 1865 ; removed KANSAS.| Senators and Representatives. 45 to Kansas January, 1870, and practiced law there until 1878, in the mean time establishing and conducting two newspapers—LFredonia Journal and Coffeyville Journal; was elected to the State Senate in 1874; was Chairman of Joint Centennial Committee, member of Judiciary, and Chairman of Committee on Corporations; was Republican Presidential Elector in 1830; became editor of the Kansas Farmer 1881; was elected to the United States Senate as a mem- ber of the People’s party ; took his seat March 4, 1891. His term will expire March 3, 1897 Bishop W. Perkins, of Oswego, was born in Rochester, Lorain County, Ohio, October 18, 1841; received a common-school education, with a short attendance at Knox Academy, at Galesburg, Illinois; read law at Ottawa, Illinois; was admstted to the bar there in 1867, and commenced practice; served four years as a soldier in the Union Army, going out as } Sergeant in the Eighty-third Illinois Infantry, and was Adjutant and Captain of the Sixteenth United States Colored Infantry for two years and six months; was County Attorney of Labette County in 1869; was elected Probate Judge of the county in 1870 and again in 1872; in February, 1873, was appointed Judge of the Eleventh Judieial District of Kansas, and in November of that year was elected for the unexpired term; was reélected in November, 1874, and again in November, 1878, holding the office for almost ten years; is President of the Board of Trustees of the Oswego College for Young Ladies; was elected to the Forty- eighth Congress as Congressman at large, to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Con- gresses, and was appointed January 1, 1892, to the United States Senate to fill, until the election of his successor, the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Preston B. Plumb, which occurred December 20, 1891. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. 5 COUNTIES.— Atchison, Brown, Doniphan, Jackson, Jefferson, Leavenworth, Nemaha, ana Pottuwatomie. Case Broderick, of Holton, was born in Grant County, Indiana, September 23, 1839; received’ a common-school education; removed to Kansas Territory in the fall of 1858; settled in Douglas Township, Jackson County, and engaged in farming ; enlisted at Fort Scott, Kansas, as a private soldier in the Second Kansas Battery, in 1862, and was mustered out at Leaven- worth in August, 1865; was elected Probate Judge of Jackson County in 1868, and was twice re-elected ; studied law and was admitted to the bar at Holton in 1870; was elected County Attorney of Jackson County in 1876, and re-elected in 1878 ; was elected State Senator in 1830 to represent Jackson and Pottawatomie Counties ; in March, 1884, was appointed by President Arthur Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Idaho for the term of four years; removed at once to Boisé City, Idaho, assumed the duties of the position, and served until the fall of 1888, when he returned to Holton and resumed the practice of law ; was elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Republican receiving 14,630 votes, against 13,250 votes for Thomas Moon- 1 light, Democrat, 7,176 votes forL. C. Clark, Alliance, and 39 votes for J. H. Woodull, Prohi- bitionist, and 13 votes scattering. ; SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Alen, Anderson, Bourbon, Douglas, Franklin, johnson, Linn, Miami, and Wyandotte. Edward H. Funston, of lola, was born in Clarke County, Ohio, 1836; was reared ons a farm; educated in the common schools, New Carlisle Academy, and Marietta College; * i entered the Army in 1861 as Lieutenant Sixteenth Ohio Battery; was mustered out 1865; located in Kansas on a prairie farm 1867, on which he resides at present; was elected to Kansas House of Representatives 1873, ’74, and ’75; was Speaker in 1875; was elected to State Senate 1880, of which he was made President pro fempore; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,713 votes, against 10,130 votes for J. B. Chap- man, Democrat, and 12,273 votes for Albert F. Allen, Farmers’ Alliance, and 206 votes for M. F. King, Prohibitionist, and 13 scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Crawford, Cherokee, Neosho, Labette, Wilson, Montgomery, Elk, Chautauqua, and Cowley. B. H. Clover, of Cambridge, was born in Franklin County, Ohio, December 22, 1837; received his education inthe common schools of his native State and the school of experience; was married on All Fools’ Day in 1859, and has seven children; is a farmer; never held public office except School Commissioner and similar local offices; has lived in Kansas 46 | : Congressional Directory. [kANsAsS. twenty-one years; has twice been chosen President of the Kansas State Farmers’ Alliance and Industrial Union, and twice Vice President of the national organization of that order; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a candidate of the Farmers’ Alliance, receiving 23,492 votes, against 19,062 votes for Bishop W. Perkins, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Butler, Chase, Coffey, Greenwood, Lyon, Marion, Morris, Osage, Shawnee, Wabaunsee, and Woodson. John Grant Otis, of Topeka, was born on a farm at Danby, Rutland County, Vermont, February 10, 1838, of Quaker parentage ; took an academic course at Burr Seminary, Man- chester, Vermont ; attended one year at Williams College, Massachusetts, and one year at Harvard Law School ; was admitted to the bar of Rutland County, Vermont, in the spring of 1859 ; removed to Kansas in May same year and located at Topeka, where he has since resided ; took an active part in recruiting the first colored regiment of Kansas in 1862; was a member of infantry company in Second Regiment of Volunteers at time of Price raid ; was an ardent supporter of Abraham Lincoln; since the war closed has been a most uncompromising Greenbacker and advocate of a new American monetary system in theinterest of the industrial classes ; for over twenty years has been engaged in the dairy business near Topeka; has been a member of the Grange for eighteen years; is also a member of the Farmers’ Alliance and Industrial Union; was State Agent of the Grange from 1873 to 1875, and the State Lecturer from 1889 to 1891 ; has always supported prohibition and equal suffrage ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a People’s party candidate, receiving 24,993 votes, against 19,994 votes for Harrison Kelley, Republican, and 3 votes scattering. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clay, Cloud, Dickinson, Geary, Marshall, Ottawa, Republic, Riley, Saline, and Washington. - John Davis, of Junction City, was born in Sangamon County, Illinois, August 9, 1826; from the farm at twenty entered Springfield Academy preparatory to a course in Illinois Col- lege at Jacksonville; opened a farm in Macon County in 1850, and followed agricultural pur- suits for twenty-two years in Illinois ; actively favored Government endowment of agricultural colleges, and took a leading part in the anti-slavery movement; engaged in farming again in 1872 in Kansas; was President in 1873 of the first distinctive Farmers’ organization of Kan- sas; as editor of the Tribune, Junction City, since 1875, and through correspondence in the journal of the Knights of Labor and other mediums, became widely known as an able and fearless writer on economic subjects ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a candidate of the People’s party, receiving 19,482 votes, against 13,998 votes for William A. Phillips, Republican, and 3,337 votes for Park S. Warren, Democrat, and 2 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTtiEs.— Cheyenne, Decatur, Ellsworth, Ellis, Graham, Gove, Jewell, Lincoln, Logan, Mitchell, Norton, Osborne, Phillips, Rawlins, Russell, Rooks, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Trego, Thomas, and Wallace. William Baker, of Lincoln, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, April 29, 1831; was ‘brought up on a farm; was graduated from Waynesburg College, 1856; fol- lowed teaching as a profession a number of years, and while teaching studied law and was admitted to the bar; for the last thirteen years has been engaged in farming and stock raising in Lincoln County, Kansas, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a nominee of the People’s party, receiving 20,749 votes, against 12,105 votes for Webb McNall, Republican, 293 votes for Tully Scott, Democrat, and 7 votes scattering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. Barber, Barton, Clark, Comanche, Edwards, Finney, Ford, Garfield, Grant, Greeley, Gray, Hamilton, Harper, Harvey, Haskell, Hodgeman, Kearney, Kingman, Kiowa, Lane, McPherson, Meade, Morton, Ness, Pawnee, Pratt, Reno, Rice, Rush, Scott, Seward, Sedgwick, Sumner, Stafford, Stanton, Stevens, and Wichita. Jerry Simpson, of Medicine Lodge, was born in the Province of New Brunswick, March 31,1842. When six years of age his parents moved to Oneida County, New York; at the age of fourteen he began life as a sailor, which pursuit he followed for twenty three years; during his career as a sailor he had command of many large vessels on the Great Lakes; during the early KANSAS. ] Senators and Representatives. A part of the civil war he served for a time in Company A, Twelfth Illinois Infantry, but contract- ing a disease he left the service; in 1878 he drifted to Kansas and is now living six miles from Medicine Lodge, Barber County, where he is engaged in farming and stock raising; was a Re- publican originally, casting his first vote for the second election of Abraham Lincoln, but during the past twelve years has been voting and affiliating with the Greenback and Union Labor par- ties; he twice ran for the Kansas Legislature on the Independent ticket in Barber County, but was defeated both times by a small plurality; was nominated for Congress by the People’s party, and elected by the aid of the Democrats, who indorsed his nomination, receiving 32,603 votes, against 25,181 votes for James R. Hallowell, Republican, and g votes scattering. KENTUCKY. SENATORS. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Versailles, was born in Woodford County, Kentucky, October 1, 1838; was educated at Sayres Institute, Frankfort, Kentucky, and at Centre Col- lege, Danville, Kentucky, whence he graduated in 1857; studied law with George B. Kin- caid, esq., at Lexington; was admitted to the bar in 1858, and practiced until 1861; entered the Confederate Armyin 1861, and served throughout the war; resumed practice in 1865; was elected to the State Legislature of Kentucky in 1871 and ’73; was elected to the House in the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed John S. Williams, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1885, and was re elected in 18go. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. ad John Griffin Carlisle, of Covington, was born in Campbell (now Kenton) County, Kentucky, September 5, 1835; received a common-school education; taught school in the county and afterwards at Covington; studied law with J. W. Stevenson and W. B. Kinkead; was admitted to the bar in March, 1858, and has practiced since; was a member of the State House of Representatives 1850-"61; was nominated for Presidential Elector on the Demo- cratic ticket in 1864, but declined; was elected to the State Senate in February, 1866, and re- elected in August, 1869; was a Delegate at Large from Kentucky to the National Democratic Convention at New York in July, 1868; was nominated for Lieutenant-Governor of Kentucky in May, 1871; resigned his seat in the Senate in June, 1871, and was elected Lieutenant- Governor in August, 1871,serving until September, 1875 ; was alternate Presidential Elector for the State at large in 1876; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty- eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses; was elected Speaker in the Forty- eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses, and was elected to the United States Senate, May 17, 1890, as a Democrat, to fill the unexpired term of James B. Beck, deceased, and took his seat May 260, 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Carlisle, Crittenden, Fulton, Graves, Hickman, Liv- ingston, Lyon, Marshall, McCracken, and Trigg. William Johnson Stone, of Kuttawa, was born June 26, 1841, in Lyon (then Caldwell) County, Kentucky; was educated at the common schools of the county and at Q. M. Tyler’s Collegiate Institute in Cadiz, Trigg County, Kentucky; is a farmer by occupation; was elected a member of the State House of Representatives in 1867,’75, and ’83, and was Speaker, of the House during his second term; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Con- gresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,749 votes, against 3,743 votes for E. T. Franks, Republican, 1,086 votes for William Curd, Prohibi- tionist, and 5I votes scattering. 48 ' Congressional Directory. _ |XENTUCKY. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Christian, Daviess, Hancock, Henderson, Hopkins, McLean, Union, and Webster. William T. Ellis, of Owensboro, was born in Daviess County, Kentucky, July 24, 1845; is a lawyer; served in the Confederate Army from October, 1861, until April, 1865; was elected County Attorney of Daviess County in August, 1870, and was re-elected in August, 1874; was Presidential Elector for the Second Congressional District in 1876; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,983 votes, against 10,592 votes for H. R. Bourland, Alliance candidate. THIRD DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—A len, Butler, Barren, Cumberland, Edmonson, Logan, Monroe, Muhlenburgh, Simpson, Todd, and Warren. Isaac Herschel Goodnight, of Franklin, was born in Allen County, Kentucky; his edu- cation in literature and law was received at Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tennessee; represented Simpson County in the State Legislature in 1877-78; was elected to the Fifty- first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,649 votes, against 7,420 votes for Addison D. James, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Breckinridge, Bullitt, Grayson, Green, Hardin, Hart, La Rue, Marion, Meade, Nelson, Ohio, Taylor, and Washington. Alexander B. Montgomery, of Elizabethtown, was born on a farm in Hardin County, Kentucky, December 11, 1837, and has always resided in that county; received a collegiate education at Georgetown College, Kentucky, graduating with the class of 1859; studied law and graduated from the Louisville Law School with the class of 1861; engaged in farming till 1870, and since then in the practice of law; was elected County Judge of Hardin County in 1870, serving till 1874; was elected to the State Senate in 1877, serving till 1881; was elected tothe Fiftiethand Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,036, against 6,990 for G. W. Long, Republican, and 4 votes scattering. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNYY.— Jefferson. Asher Graham Caruth, of Louisville, was born in Scottsville, Allen County, Kentucky, February 7, 1844; attended the public schools of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and graduated at the Male High School of Louisville in June, 1864; graduated in the Law Department of the University of Louisville March, 1866, and has since practiced his profession; was Presi- dential Elector in 1876; was Attorney of the Board of Trustees of the Public Schools of Louisville, by annual elections, from 1873 until 1880; in 1880 was elected Commonwealth’s Attorney for the Ninth Judicial District of Kentucky for the constitutional term of six years, - and was re-elected without opposition in August, 1886; resigned the office in March, 1887; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses as a Democrat, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 14,395 votes, against 9,291 votes for St. John Boyle, Repub- lican. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Pendleton, and Trimble. W. W. Dickerson, of Williamstown, was born ‘in Grant County, Kentucky, November 29, 1851 ; was educated in the public schools and in the private school of Professor N. M. Lloyd, at Crittenden, Kentucky; read law, and was admitted to the bar in 1872; was elected County Attorney in August, 1874, for a term of four years; was elected a member of the State House of Representatives in December, 1885, for a term of two years; was elected a member of the State Senate in August, 1887, for a term of four years; was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-first Congress June 21, 1890, to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of John G. Carlisle, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 11,310 votes, against 6,801 votes for Weden O'Neal, Republican, 57 votes for J. W. Vallandingham, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes scattering, KENTUCKY.] Senators and Representatives. 49 SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bourbon, Fayette, Franklin, Henry, Oldham, Owen, Scott, and Woodford. William C. P. Breckinridge, of Lexington, was born August 28, 1837; graduated at Centre College, Danville, Kentucky, April 26, 1855, and in the Law Department of the Uni- versity of Louisville February 27, 1857; is an attorney at law; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 7,146 votes, against 442 votes for Hiram Ford, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Anderson, Boyle, Garrard, Jackson, Jessamine, Lincoln, Madison, Mercer, Rock Castle, Shelby, and Spencer. ~ James B. McCreary, of Richmond, was born in Madison County, Kentucky, July 8, 1838; received a classical education, and graduated at the age of eighteen at Centre College, Dan- ville, Kentucky, in 1857; at once commenced the study of law, and graduated in the Law Department of the Cumberland University of Tennessee (with the first honor in a class of forty-seven) in 1859, and immediately commenced the practice of law at Richmond, Ken- tucky; entered the Confederate Army in 1862, and was Lieutenant-Colonel of the Eleventh Kentucky Cavalry at the close of the war; was selected as a Presidential Elector on the Dem- ocratic ticket in 1868, but declined; was subsequently elected a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention held in New York in July, 1868; was elected a member of the State House of Representatives of Kentucky in 1869, ’71, and "73, and was elected Speaker of the House in 1871 and ’73; was nominated as Democratic candidate for Governor in May, 1875; and was elected, serving as Governor from August, 1875, to September, 1879; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 7,430 votes, against 394 for J. C. Gilliam, Pro- hibitionist, and 11 votes scattering. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bath, Bracken, Boyd, Carter, Fleming, Greenup, Harrison, Lawrence, Lewis, Mason, Nickolas, Robertson, and Rowan. Thomas H. Paynter, of Greenup, was born in Lewis County, Kentucky, December g, 1851; was educated in the common schools of that county, and at Jacob Rand’s Academy, and at Centre College, Danville, Kentucky ; is a lawyer, and has been engaged in his profession at his present residence since his admission to the bar in 1873; was appointed Attorney for Greenup County in 1876, and held that office, under appointment, until August, 1878, at which time he was elected to the same office, which he held until 1882; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,276 votes, ~ against 10,053 votes for Alexander Bruce, Alliance, and 122 votes for W. W. Dye, Prohibition- ist, and I vote scattering. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Breathitt, Clark, Elliott, Estill, Floyd, Johnson, Knott, Lee, Martin Magoffin, Menifee, Montgomery, Morgan, Pike, Powell, and Wolfe. : John W. Kendall, of West Liberty, was born in Morgan (now Elliott) County, Kentucky, June 26, 1834; attended the country schools and the Owingsville Academy ; studied law with Judge W. H. Burns, of West Liberty, afterwards of Virginia; twice elected County Attorney of Morgan; First Lieutenant and Adjutant of the Tenth Kentucky Confederate Cavalry, and served throughout the war; twice a member of the Kentucky Legislature; six years Com- monwealth Attorney for the Thirteenth Judicial District; elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 10,746 votes, against 9,219 votes for Robert C. Hill, Repub- lican, 19 votes for George W. McCormick, Prohibitionist, and 3 votes scattering. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Adair, Bell, Casey, Clay, Clinton, Harlan, Knox, Letcher, Leslie, Laurel, Met- calfe, Owsley, Perry, Pulaski, Russell, Wayne, and Whitley. John Henry Wilson, of Barboursville, was born January 30, 1846; was graduated from Tusculum College, Tennessee, June, 1870; studied law and was admitted to the bar in Septem- ber, 1871; was elected to the State Senate in August, 1883, for a term of four years, and was elected to the Fifty-first Congress and re-elected as a Republican, receiving 9,612 votes, against 5,964 for E. J. Howard, Democrat, and 311 votes for D. T. Chestnut, Prohibitionist. 2D ED 4 50 Congressional Directory. [KENTUCKY. LOUISIANA. SENATORS. Randall Lee Gibson, of New Orleans, was born September 10, 1832, at Spring Hill, near Versailles, Woodford County, Kentucky; was educated in Lexington, Kentucky ; in Terre Bonne Parish, Louisiana; at Yale College; in the Law Department of the Tulane University of Louis- iana; declined the Secretaryship of Legation to Spain in 1855; was Aid to the Governor of Louisiana at the commencement of the civil war, and commanded a company, regiment, brigade, and division in the Confederate Army; is President of the Board of Administrators of the Tulane University of Louisiana; is one of the administrators of the Howard Memorial Library in New Orleans; is one of the trustees of the Peabody Education Fund; is a Regent of the Smithsonian Institution; is a lawyer.and planter; was elected to the Forty- third Congress from the Second Congressional District, but was denied admission; was a Representative in the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses, and was elected to the United States Senate without opposition as a Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1883, and was re- elected in 1888. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. Edward Douglass White was born in the Parish of Lafourche, Louisiana, in November, 1845; was educated at Mount St. Mary’s, near Emmitsburg, Maryland, at the Jesuit College in New Orleans, and at Georgetown College, District of Columbia; served in the Confeder- ate Army; was licensed to practice law by the Supreme Court of Louisiana in December, 1868; elected State Senator in 1874; was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Louisiana in 1878; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat to succeed James B. Eustis, receiving 119, against 11 for H. C. Warmoth, Republican. Took his seat March 4, 1891. His term will expire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. DISTRICT. — Wards, 3d, 4t%, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, oth, and 15th of the city of New Orleans. PARISHES— Of Orleans, of St. Bernard and Plaquemines, extending from Julia street in the city of New Orleans to the Gulf of Mexico. Adolph Meyer, of New Orleans, was born October 19, 1842; was a student at the Uni- versity of Virginia until 1862, during which year he entered the Confederate Army and. served till the close of the war on the staff of Brigadier General John S. Williams, of Ken- tucky; at the close of the war returned to Louisiana and has been engaged largely i in the culture of cotton and sugar since ; has also been engaged in merchandizing and banking in the city of New Orleans; was elected Colonel in 1879 of the first regiment of Louisiana State National Guard, and in 1881 was appointed Brigadier General to command the first brigade, embracing all the uniformed corps of the State, which position he still holds; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,824 votes against ’6, 155 votes for H. C. Warmoth, Republican, and 136 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. CITY AND PARISHES.—District composed of the rst, 2d, roth, rrth, rath, ryth, rqth, roth, and 17th wards of the city of New Orleans, and the parishes of Jefferson, St. Charles, St. James, and St. John the Baptist. Matt. D. Lagan, of New Orleans, was born in Ireland, June 20, 1829; educated in the ive schools of his native town; emigrated to the United States, arriving at the city of ew Orleans in 1843, since which time he has been engaged in manufacturing and mercan- tile pursuits; was a member of the School Board; was twice a member of the City Council ; was President pro tempore, and Acting Mayor; was a member of the Convention which framed the present Constitution of the State of Louisiana; was elected to the Fiftieth Congress, and again elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 10,948 votes, against 6,412 votes for H. D. Coleman, Republican, and 422 votes scattering. ¥ LOUISIANA. | Senators and Representatives, 51 THIRD DISTRICT. PARISHES.— Ascension, Assumption, Calcasien, Cameron, Iberia, Iberville, La Fayette, La Fourche, St. Martin, St. Mary's, Terre Bonne, and Vermillion. Andrew Price, of Thibodeaux, was born April 2, 1854, at Chatsworth Plantation, near Franklin, St. Mary’s Parish, Louisiana; he attended various private schools, and the Collegiate Department of Cumberland University, at Lebanon, Tennessee; was graduated from the Law Department of the same University in 1875; continued his legal studies for two years in the Law Department of Washington University at St. Louis, Missouri, and grad- uated from this University in 1877 ; practiced law in St. Louis until the fall of 1880, when he returned to Louisiana, where he has since been engaged in sugar planting; has for several years taken an active interest in public affairs; was a member of the Democratic State Cen- tral Committee from 1884 to 1888; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1888 ; prior to being a candidate for Congress was never a candidate for office ; received the nomination of his party without opposition and by acclamation, and was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, as a Democrat, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of his father-in-law, Hon. Edward J. Gay, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 11,318 votes, against 48 votes for Taylor Beattie, Republican, and 17 votes scattering. FOURTH DISTRICT. PARISHES.— Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, De Soto, Grant, Natchitoches, Rapides, Red River, Sabine, Vernon, Webster, and Winn. ) Newton Crain Blanchard, of Shreveport, was born in Rapides Parish, Louisiana, Janu- ary 29, 1849; received an academical education; commenced the study of law at Alexandria, Louisiana, in 1868; entered the Law Department of the University of Louisiana, at New Orleans, in the winter of 1869, and graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Laws in 1870; commenced the practice of law at Shreveport in 1871, and still continues the practice there; in 1876 was made Chairman of the Democratic Committee of Caddo Parish; took an active part in the politics of the State, looking to the restoration of the government of the State to the hands of her own people; was nominated by the Democracy of Caddo Parish for the position of Representative Delegate to the State Constitutional Convention of 1879, and elected by a large majority ; served in that body as Chairman of the Committee on Federal Relations; was appointed by Governor Wiltz, of Louisiana, to the position of aid-de-camp on his staff, with the rank of Major, in the Louisiana State Militia, and subsequently held a similar position with similar rank on the staff of Governor S. D. McEnery, of Louisiana; was appointed member for Louisiana on the Board of Trustees of the University of the South at Sewanee, Ten- nessee ; was elected to the Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 8,307 votes, against 277 votes for T. S. Gince, Republican, and 47 votes scattering. FIFTH DISTRICT. PARISHES. — Caldwell, Catahoula, East Carroll, West Carroll, Claiborne, Concordia, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, and Union. Charles J. Boatner, of Monroe, was born at Columbia, in the parish of Caldwell, Louisi- ana, January 23, 1849; was admitted to the bar in January, 1870; was elected a member of the State Senate in 1876, which position he resigned in May, 1878; was a candidate for Congress in 1884, and was defeated by General J. Floyd King, the then incumbent; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,993 votes, against 258 votes for S. W. Green, Republican, and 677 scattering. - SIXTH DISTRICT. PARISHES. —Acadia, Avoyelles, East Baton Rouge, West Baton Rouge, East Feliciana, West Feliciana, Livingston, Pointe Couple, St. Helena, St. Landry, St. Tt ammany, Tangipakoa, and Washington. Samuel Matthews Robertson, of Baton Rouge, was born in the town of Plaquemine, Louisiana, January 1, 1852; received his preparatory education in the Collegiate Institute of Baton Rouge; was graduated from the Louisiana State University in 1874; completed a course of law study and was admitted to practice in 1877; was elected 2 member of the State Legis- lature from the parish of East Baton Rouge in 1879 for a term of four years; in 1880 was elected a member of the Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Congressional Directory. LOUISIANA. Mechanical College; he filled the Chair of Natural History in that institution, and the position of Commandant of Cadets, until he was elected to the Fiftieth Congress, to fill the vacancy created by the death of his father, E. W. Robertson ; was elected to the Fifty-first and re- elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 6,611 votes, against 5 votes scattering. MAINE. SENATORS. Eugene Hale, of Ellsworth, was born in Turner, Oxford County, Maine, June 9, 1836; received an academic education; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1857, and commenced practice at the age of twenty; was for nine successive years County Attorney for Hancock County; was a member of the Legislature of Maine in 1867, ’68, and ’80; was elected to the Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses; was appointed Postmaster-General by President Grant in 1874, but declined; was re-elected to the Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth Congresses; was tendered a Cabinet appointment by President Hayes, and declined; was Chairman of the Republican Congressional Committee for the Forty-fifth Congress; received the degree of LL. D. from Bates College and from Colby University ; was a Delegate to the Cincinnati Convention in 1876 and the Chicago Conventions in 1868 and ’80; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican to succeed Hannibal Hamlin, Republican (who de- clined a re-election), and took his seat March 4, 1881, and was re-elected in 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. : William P. Frye, of Lewiston, was born at Lewiston, Maine, September 2, 1831; grad- uated at Bowdoin College, Maine, 1850; studied and practiced law; was a member of the State Legislature in 1861, ’62, and ’67; was Mayor of the city of Lewiston in 1866 and ’67; was Attorney-General of the State of Maine in 1867,’68,and ’69; was elected a member of the National Republican Executive Committee in 1872, re-elected in 1876, and re-elected in 1880; was elected a Trustee of Bowdoin College in June, 1880; received the degree of LL. D. from Bates College in July, 1881, and the same degree from Bowdoin College in 1889; was a Presidential Elector in 1864; was a Delegate to the National Republican Conventions in 1872, ’76, and ’80; was elected Chairman of the Republican State Committee of Maine in place of Hon. James G. Blaine, resigned, in November, 1881; was elected a Representative in the Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Con- gresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of James G. Blaine, appointed Secretary of State; took his seat March 18, 1881, and was re-elected in 1883, and again in 1888. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cumberland and York. Thomas B. Reed, of Portland, was born at Portland, October 18, 1839; graduated at Bow- doin College, Maine, in 1860; studied law; was Acting Assistant Paymaster, United States Navy, from April 19, 1864, to November 4, 1865; was admitted to the bar in 1865, and com- menced practice at Portland; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1868-69, and of the State Senate in 1870; was Attorney-General of Maine in 1870, ’71, and ’72; was City Solicitor of Portland in 1874,’75,’76,and ’77; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, * Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 16,797 votes, against 11,971 votes for Melvin P. Frank, Democrat, 557 votes for Timothy B. Hussey, Prohibitionist, 51 votes for G. D. Weeks, Labor, and 5 votes scattering. He was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives December 2, 1889. ; SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Androscoggin, Franklin, Knox, Lincoln, Oxford, and Sagadahoc. Nelson Dingley, Jr., of Lewiston, was born in Durham, Androscoggin County, Maine, February 15, 1832; graduated at Dartmouth College in the class of 1855; studied law and was admitted to the bar, but left the profession to become proprietor and editor of the Lew- MAINE. | Senators and Representatives. 53 iston (Maine) Journal, daily and weekly, in 1856, and still maintains that connection; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1862,’63,’64,’65,’68,and 73; was Speaker of the State House of Representatives in 1863 and 64; was Governor of Maine in 1874 and 75; received the degree of LL. D. from Bates College in 1874; was a Delegate to the Na- tional Republican Convention in 1876; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress as a Repub- lican, at a special election on the 12th of September, 1881, to fill the vacancy caused by the election of Hon. William P. Frye to the United States Senate; was re-elected a Representative at large tothe Forty-eighth Congress; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 16,499 votes, against 11,187 votes for Charles E. Allen, Democrat, 745 votes for William H. Foster, Prohibitionist, and 5 votes scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Hancock, Kennebec, Somerset, and Waldo. Seth L. Milliken, of Belfast, was born in Montville, Waldo County, Maine; was educated at Union College, New York, where he graduated in 1856; is a lawyer by profession; was, during two terms, a member of the Maine Legislature; was Clerk of the Supreme Judicial Court; was Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Cincinnati in 1876; was Elector of President the same year; was a Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Chicago in 1884; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Con- gresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 14,477 votes, against 11,011 votes for Charles Baker, Democrat, 995 votes for Luther C. Bateman, Prohi- bitionist, and 68 votes scattering. : FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Aroostook, Penobscot, Piscataquis, and Washington. Charles Addison Boutelle, of Bangor, was born at Damariscotta, Lincoln County, Maine, February 9, 1839; was educated in the public schools at Brunswick, and at Yarmouth Acad- emy ; early adopted the profession of his father, a shipmaster,and on return from a foreign voyage inthe spring of 1862 volunteered and was appointed Acting Masterin the United States Navy; he served in the North and South Atlantic and West Gulf Squadrons; took part in the block- ade of Charleston and Wilmington, the Pocotaligo expedition, the capture of St. John’s Bluff and occupation of Jacksonville, Florida, and while an officer of United States steamer Sassacus was promoted to Lieutenant ¢“ for gallant conduct in the engagement with the rebel iron-clad Albemarle,’ May 5, 1864 ; afterwards, in command of United Statessteamer NMyanza, participated in the capture of Mobile and in receiving surrender of the Confederate fleet, and was assigned to command of naval forces in Mississippi Sound, and honorably discharged at his own request January 14, 1866; engaged in commercial business in New York; in 1870 became managing editor and in 1874 proprietor of the Bangor (Maine) Whig and Courier; was a District Delegate to National Republican Convention in 1876; was Delegate at large and Chairman of Maine delegation in the National Republican Convention of 1888; was unani- mously nominated in 1880 as Republican candidate for Congress in the Fourth Maine Dis- trict; was elected Representative at large to the Forty-eighth Congress, was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty second Con- gress as a Republican, receiving 15,716 votes, against 11,144 votes for Josiah Crosby, Demc- orat, 962 votes for Volney B. Cushing, Prohibitionist, and 3 votes scattering. MARYLAND. SENATORS. Arthur P. Gorman, of Laurel, was born in Howard County, Maryland, March 11, 1839; attended the public schools in his native county for a brief period; in 1852 was appointed Page in the Senate of the United States, and continued in the service of the Senate until 1866, at which time he was Postmaster; on the 1st of September of that year he was removed from 54 Congressional Directory. [MARYLAND. his position and immediately appointed Collector of Internal Revenue for the fifth district of Maryland, which office he held until the incoming of the Grant administration in 1869; in June, 1869, he was appointed a Director in the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, and in November was elected a member of the House of Delegates of the Maryland Legislature as a Democrat; he was re-elected in 1871, then elected Speaker of the House of Delegates at the ensuing session; in June, 1872, he was elected President of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company ; in 1875 he was elected to represent Howard County in the Maryland State Senate, and was re-elected for a term of four years in November, 1879; was elected in January, 1880, to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Hon. William Pinkney Whyte; took his seat March 4, 1881, and was re-elected in 1886 and in 1892. His present term of ser- vice will expire March 3, 1893, and that to which he was last elected in 1889. Charles Hopper Gibson, of Easton, was born in Queen Anne’s County, Maryland, Janu- ary 19, 1842; his education was commenced at the Centreville Academy, and he was after- wards sent to the Archer School in Harford County, and from there to Washington College, Chestertown, where his course of study was completed; was admitted to the bar in 1864, and commenced the practice of law at Easton with Col. Samuel Hambleton; was appointed by President Johnson Collector of Internal Revenue for the Eastern Shore District, but his nom- ination was rejected in the Senate by a majority of one vote ; was appointed in 1869 Commis- sioner in Chancery, and Auditor in 1870, which offices later on in 1870 he resigned to accept the appointment by the Circuit Court for the three years’ unexpired term of the State’s Attor- ney for Talbot County, to which position he was elected for four years in 1871, and again in 1875, holding the office for three consecutive terms, and declining a renomination for the fourth; was elected as a Democrat to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses; was ap- pointed United States Senator till the election of his successor, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Ephraim K. Wilson, and took his seat December 7, 1891; was elected to fill the unexpired term January 21, 1892. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Caroline, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne's, Somerset, Talbot, Wicomico, ana Worcester. Henry Page, of Princess Anne town, Somerset County, was born in that county June 28, 1841; received his preparatory instruction at the school of Anthony Bolivar, West Chester, Pennsylvania; entered the University of Virginia and remained there parts of four years, leaving without completing the course upon the breaking out of the war in 1861; entered upon the study of law, and was admitted to the bar in 1864; began the practice of the law in Princess Anne, in Somerset County, and has pursued it up to the present time; in 1867 he was a member of the Constitutional Convention which framed the present Constitution of Maryland ; in 1870 was appointed by the Circuit Court for Somerset County States Attorney for that county to fill an unexpired term; was elected hy the people to that place in 1872, and by successive re-elections in 1876 and 1880; held the position until 1884; in 1888 was Elector at large upon the Democratic ticket; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,817 votes, against 12,437 votes for George M. Russum, Republican, and 1,043 votes for George W. Covington, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT, COUNTIES. —202%, 21st, and 22d wards of Baltimore city, Cecil county, Harford county, Carroll county, and the 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, Oth, 7th, 8th, oth, 10th, 11th, and 12th election dis- tricts of Baltimore county. Herman Stump, of Bel A was born on Oakington Farm, situated on the Chesa- peake Bay, in Harford County, August 8, 1837; after receiving a classical education he studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1856; commenced the practice of his pro- fession in Bel Air, the county town of Harford, and has been actively so engaged to the present time; is also largely interested in agricultural pursuits, and resides upon his estate near the county seat; was elected to the State Senate in 1878, and was made President of that body in 1880; presided over the Democratic State Convention in 1879, which nominated Hon. William T. Hamilton for Governor; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,740 votes, against 12,130 votes for John E. Wilson, Republican, and 1,224 votes for George Balderston, Prohibitionist. MARYLAND. | Senators and Representatives. | 55 THIRD DISTRICT. CITY. —15t, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, Oth, 7th, 15th, and 16th wards of Baltimore City. Harry Welles Rusk, of Baltimore, was born at Baltimore, Maryland, October 17, 1852; was educated at private schools and at the Baltimore City College, graduating from the latter in 1866, and graduating from the Maryland University Law School in 1872, with the degree of LL. B. ; was admitted to the bar, and has ever since practiced law in Baltimore; was for six years a member of the Maryland House of Delegates, and for four years a member of the Maryland Senate; was elected to fill the unexpired term of William H. Cole, deceased, in the Forty-ninth Congress ; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Democrat, receiving 16,914 votes, against 11,273 votes for Royal H. Pullman, Republican, and 444 votes for W. J. H. Gluck, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. City.—8%, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 18th, and 19th wards of Baltimore City. Isidor Rayner, of Baltimore, was born April 11, 1850; was educated at the University of Virginia; was admitted to the bar in Baltimore in 1370, and has been practicing law since that time; in 1878 was elected to the Maryland Legislature for two years, and was chosen chairman of the Baltimore City delegation; in 1886 was elected to the State Senate from Baltimore City for four years, and while a member of that body was elected to the Fiftieth Congress as a Democrat, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 18,740 votes, © against 12,106 votes for H. H. Goldsborough, Republican, and 534 votes for P. L. Perkins, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES AND CI1TVv.—St. Mary's, Charles, Calvert, Prince George's, Anne Arundel, includ- ing the city of Annapolis, Howard county, and the 1st and 13th election districts of Baltimore County, and of the ryth ward of Baltimore City. Barnes Compton, of Laurel, was born at Port Tobacco, Charles County, Maryland, November 16, 1830; was educated at Charlotte Hall Academy and Princeton College, from which latter institution he graduated in June, 1851; is a planter and farmer; was a member of the State House of Delegates from Charles County, 1860 to 1861, and of the Senate from the same county in 1867 to 1868, 1870, 1872, serving as President of the Senate during the session of 1868 and 1870; was State Tobacco Inspector in 1873 to 1874; was elected State Treasurer of Maryland in 1874 for two years, and re-elected for five successive terms, holding the office for eleven years and two months, resigning in the second year of his sixth term; was elected to the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses, and received the certificate of election to the Fifty- first but was unseated by contest, the seat being given to Sydney E. Mudd, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 14,697 votes, against 13,079 votes for Sydney E. Mudd, Republican, and 52 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, Montgomery, and Washington. William McMahon McKaig, of Cumberland, was born of Scotch-Irish parentage in Cumberland, Allegany County, Maryland, July 29, 1845; was educated in the Carroll School and the Allegany County Academy; boated coal over the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal from Cumberland to the navy-yard in Washington City during the navigable portions of the years 1860,’61,’62,%63,064, and ’65 ; read law with his uncles, General Thomas J. McKaig and W. W. McKaig, and was admitted to the Allegany bar April, 1868; health failing him in 1873, he went to Colorado Territory and lived an out-door life, ranching, hunting, and trapping, in the Pike’s Peak region; spring of 1874 went to Manitou and Denver, and engaged in the hotel business until October, when he went to Salt Lake City, Utah, then to San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Cajon Pass, near the Panamint Mines, California, where he followed gold mining; spring of 1875 went to Acapulco, Mexico, Pont Auranus, Costa Rica, Panama, Aspinwall, and Savanilla, in the United States of Colombia; then to New York; failed to secure the Demo- cratic nomination for State’s Attorney for Allegany County; was appointed City Attorney of Cumberland in 1876; was elected in 1877 from Allegany County to the lower branch of the Maryland Legislature; was appointed in 1879 Colonel on the personal staff of Governor 56 Congressional Directory, [MARYLAND. Hamilton; was appointed Chief of Ordnance on the general staff by Governor Robert M. McLane in 1884, and reappointed by Governors Lloyd and Jackson; was élected State Sen- ator from Allegany County in 1887; spring of 1890 was elected Mayor of Cumberland; in the fall of same year was elected to the Iifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,940 votes, against 10,775 votes for Hon. Louis E. McComas, Republican, and 630 votes for H. B. Moulton, Prohibitionist. MASSACHUSETTS. SENATORS. Henry L. Dawes, of Pittsfield, was born at Cummington, Massachusetts, October 30, 1816; graduated at Yale Ccllege; was a school teacher, and edited the Greenfield Gazette and Adams Transcript; studied and practiced law; has received the degree of Doctor of Laws from Williams College and Yale University ; was a member of the House of Representa- tives of Massachusetts in 1848, 49, and ’52; was a member of the Senate of Massachusetts in 1850; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention of Massachusetts in 1853; was District Attorney for the Western District of Massachusetts from 1853 until 1857; was elected a Representative in the Thirty-fifth, Thirty-sixth, Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses, and declined being a candidate for election to the Forty-fourth; he was elected to the United States Senate, as a Republican to succeed Charles Sumner (whose unexpired term had been filled by William B. Washburn), took his seat March 4, 1875, and was re-elected in 1881 and ’87. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. George F. Hoar, of Worcester, was born at Concord, Massachusetts, August 29, 1826; studied in early youth at Concord Academy; graduated at Harvard College in 1846; studied law, and graduated at the Dane Law School, Harvard University; settled at Worcester, where he practiced; was City Solicitor in 1860; was President of the Trustees of the City Library; was a member of the State House of Representatives in 1852, and of the State Senate in 1857; was elected a Representative to the Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses; declined a renomination for Representative in the Forty-fifth Congress; was an Overseer of Harvard College, 1874-'80; was chosen President of the Association of the Alumni of Harvard, but declined; presided over the Massachusetts State Republican Conven- tions of 1871, ’77,’82, and ’85; was a Delegate to the Republican National Conventions of 1876 at Cincinnati,and of 1880, ’84, and ’88 at Chicago, presiding over the Convention of 1880; was Chairman of the Massachusetts delegation in 1880, ’84, and ’88; was one of the Managers on the part of the House of Representatives of the Belknap impeachment trial in 1876; was a member of the Electoral Commission in 1876; was Regent of the Smithsonian Institution in 1880; has been President and is now Vice-President of the American Antiqua- rian Society, Trustee of the Peabody Museum of Archeology, Trustee of Leicester Academy, is a member of the Massachusetts Historical Society, of the American Historical Society, and the Historic-Genealogical Society; has received the degree of Doctor of Laws from William and Mary, Amherst, Vale, and Harvard Colleges; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Republican, to succeed George S. Boutwell, took his seat March 5, 1877, and was re- elected in 1883 and ’89. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. BARNSTABLE COUNTY.— Towns of Barnstable, Bourne, Brewster, Chatham, Dennis, East ham, Falmouth, Harwich, Mashpee, Orleans, Provincetown, Sandwich, 7 ruro, Wellfleet, Yarmouth. Briston COUNTY.— Zowns of Acushnet, Dartmouth, Fairhaven, Fall River, Freetown, New Bedford, Somerset, Swansea, Westport. Dukes CouNtY.— Towns of Chilmark, Cottage City, Edgartown, Gay Head, Gosnold, Tis- bury. : \ MASSACHUSETTS.| Senators and Representatives. 57 } NANTUCKET COUNTY.— Zown of Nantucket. PLymoUTH COUNTY.— Zowns of Marion, Mattapoisett, Rochester, and Wareham. Charles S. Randall, of New Bedford, was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, Febru- ary 20, 1824, and has always resided there; was educated at private school, Friends Acad- emy, New Bedford, and in France; retired from mercantile business in 1872; is married, represented the Third Massachusetts Senatorial District in the State Senate in 1883 and ’84; and was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 8,728 votes, against 6,518 votes for Charles R. Codman, Democrat, 984 votes for John D Flint, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. BristoL CoUNTY.— Towns of Attleborough, Berkley, Dighton, Easton, Lakeville, Mansfield, Middleboro, North Attleborough, Norton, Rehoboth, Raynham, Seekonk, Taunton. NORFOLK COUNTY.— Zowns of Avon, Braintree, Cantor, Cohasset, Holbrook, Quincy, Ran- dolph, Sharon, Stoughton, and Weymouth. PrymoutrH COUNTY.— Zowns of Abington, Bridgewater, Brockton, Carver, Duxbury, East Bridgewater, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Marshfield, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rockland, Scituate, West Bridgewater, and Whitman. Elijah Adams Morse, of Canton, was born at South Bend, Indiana, May 25, 1841; removed with his parents to Massachusetts in his childhood, where he has resided since; received his education in the public schools of Massachusetts and at Onondaga Academy, New York; is a business man and manufacturer; is married; was a soldier in the Fourth Mas- sachusetts Regiment in the war of the rebellion, enlisting at the age of nineteen; served three months under General Butler in Virginia, and one year under General Banks in Louisiana ; was taken prisoner at the capture of Brashear City, Louisiana; entered the service as a private and was promoted to a Corporal; served a term in the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1876; wasa member of the State Senate in 1886, and was re-elected in 1887; was elected a member of the Governor’s Council in 1877; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 12,339 votes, against 10,489 votes for Bushrod Morse, Democrat, 782 votes for Thomas J. Lothrop, Prohibitionist, and 1 vote scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Part of Suffolk, comprising wards 11, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24; precincts 3 and 4 of ward 15, in the city of Boston ; and the town of Milton, in the county of Nor- folk. : John Forrester Andrew, of Boston, was born in Hingham, Massachusetts, November 24, 1850; was graduated from Harvard College in 1872, and received the degree of LL. B. from the Harvard Law School in 1875; was admitted to the Suffolk bar and practiced law in Bos ton; served three terms as member of the State House of Representatives and two terms in the State Senate; was Democratic candidate for Governor in 1886 and was defeated ; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Demo- crat, receiving 14,992 votes, against 11,184 votes for Edward L. Pierce, Republican, 524 votes for John W. Field, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CITY OF BOSTON.— Wards 1, 2,0, 7, 12, 13, 14, and 16 ; precincts 2, 3, and 4 of ward 8; and precincts 1 and 2 of ward 15. Joseph H. O’Neil, of Boston, was born in Fall River, Massachusetts, March 23, 1853; received a common-school education; was a member of the Boston School Committee in 1875; was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1878, ’79, ’8o, 81, ’82, and ’84; was a member of the Board of Directors for Public Institutions for five years, the last eighteen months being Chairman of the Board; was City Clerk of Boston in 1887 and ’88; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Demo- crat, receiving 11,780 votes, against 4,170 votes for Thomas Copeland, Republican, 304 votes for George L. Dacy, Prohibitionist, and 11 votes scattering. FIFTH DISTRIET. SUFFOLK COUNTY.— City of Boston, precinct 1 of ward 8; wards 9, 10, and 25. MIDDLESEX COUNTY.—Zowns of Arlington, Belmont, Burlington, Cambridge, Lexington, Somerville, Waltham, Watertown, and Woburn. Sherman Hoar, of Waltham, was born in Concord, Massachusetts, July 30, 1860; was educated in the public schools of his native viilage, at Phillips Exeter Academy, at Harvard 58 Congressional Directory. . [MAssacHUSETTS. University, and Harvard Law School; is a lawyer; is Trustee of Phillips Exeter Academy, and a Director of the American Unitarian Association; is a member of the Democratic State Committee of Massachusetts; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, re- ceiving 13,081 votes, against 10,807 votes for James A. Fox, Republican, 793 votes for James H. Roberts, Prohibitionist, and 6 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. SUFFOLK COUNTY.— City of Boston, wards 3, 4, and 5, and the towns of Chelsea, Revere, and Winthrop. . MIDDLESEX COUNTY.— Zvwns of Everett, Malden, Medford, Melrose, Reading, Stoneham, Wakefield, and Winchester. : Essex COUNTY.— Zowns of Lynn, Nakant, Saugus, and Swampscott. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Nahant, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, May 12, 1850; re- ceived a private school and collegiate education; was graduated from Harvard College in 1871; studied law at Harvard Law School, and graduated in 1875, receiving the degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1876; profession, that of literature; served two terms as member of House of Representatives in the Massachusetts Legislature; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,579 votes, against 13,539 votes for William Everett, Democrat, 1,035 votes for Charles E. Kimball, and 9 votes scattering. 3 SEVENTH DISTRICT. Essex COUNTY.— Zowns of Amesbury, Beverly, Boxford, Bradford, Danvers, Essex, George- town, Gloucester, Groveland, Hamilton, Haverhill, Ipswich, Lynnfield, Manchester, Mar- blehead, Merrimac, Middleton, Newbury, Newburyport, Peabody, Rockport, Rowley, Salem, Salisbury, Topsfield, Wenham, and West Newbury. William Cogswell, of Salem, was born in Bradford, Massachusetts, August 23, 1838; he fitted at Kimball Union Academy, Meriden, New Hampshire, and at Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, and entered Dartmouth College August 23, 1855; graduated at the Dane Law School, Harvard University, in 1860; is a lawyer by profession; was Mayor of the city of Salem, Massachusetts, in 1867, ’68, ’69, ’73, and ’74; was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives 1870-71, 1881-83, and a member of the State Senate 1885-’86; served in the Union Army from April, 1861, till July 25, 1865; held commissions as Captain, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel in the Second Massachusetts Infantry, and Brigadier-General by brevet, and assigned by special order of the War Department to the command of the Third Brigade, Third Division, Twentieth Army Corps; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 12,496 votes, against 10,910 votes for Jonas H. French, Democrat, and 848 votes for Jacob F. Spaulding, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes seattering. EIGHTH DISTRICT. Essex CoUNTY.— Zowns of Andover, Lawrence, Methuen, and North Andover. MIDDLESEX COUNTY.— Zowns of Acton, Ashby, Ayer, Bedford, Billerica, Boxborough, Car- liste, Chelinsford, Concord, Dracut, Dunstable, Groton, Littleton, Lowell, North Reading, Pepperell, Shirley, Stow, Tewksbury, Townsend, Tyngsborough, Westford, and Wilmington. WORCESTER COUNTY.— Zowns of Bolton, Harvard, Lancaster, and Lunenburg. Moses T. Stevens, of North Andover, was born in North Andover, Essex County, Massachusetts, October 10, 1825; graduated at Phillips Academy, Andover, in 1842; entered Dartmouth College same year, and left that institution in 1843 to learn business of manufac- turing woolen goods, and has been engaged in that business to the present time in North Andover; was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1861 and of the Senate in 1868; is President of Andover National Bank; was elected to the Fitty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,726 votes, against 11,272 votes for Frederick T. Green- halge, Republican, 518 votes for Walter A. Glidden, Prohibitionist, and 1 vote scattering. NINTH DISTRICT. WORCESTER COUNTY.— Zowns of Berlin, Blackstone, Clinton, Hopedale, Mendon, Milford, Northborough, Southborough, and Westborough. NORFOLK COUNTY.— Zowns of Bellingham, Brookline, Dedham, Dover, Foxborough, Frank- lin, Hyde Park, Medfield, Medway, Millis, Needham, Norfolk, Norwood, Walpole, Wellesley, and Wrentham. - Ef MASSACHUSETTS. | Senators and Representatives. 59 MIDDLESEX COUNTY.— Zowns of Ashland, Framingham, Holliston, Hopkinton, Hudson, Lin- coln, Marlborough, Maynard, Natick, Newton, Sierborn, Sudbury, Wayland, and Weston. . George Fred. Williams, of Dedham, was born in Dedham, Norfolk County, Massachu- setts, July 10, 1852; was graduated at Dedham High School in 1868, at Dartmouth in 1872, and studied at the Universities of Heidelberg and Berlin ; was admitted to the bar in October, 1875; in 1878 edited Williams’ Citations of Massachusetts Cases, and from 1880 to 1887 edited volumes 10 to 17 of the Annual Digest of the United States ; was elected to the Massa- chusetts Legislature in 1889, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, re- ceiving 12,207 votes, against 12,076 votes for John W. Candler, Republican, and goo votes for Melvin H. Walker, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. HAMPDEN COUNTY.— Zowns of Brimfield, Holland, and Wales. WORCESTER COUNTY.— Zowns of Auburn, Barre, Boylston, Brookfield, Charlton, Douglas, Dudley, Grafton, Hardwick, Holden, Leicester, Millbury, New Braintree, Northbridge, North Brookfield, Oakham, Oxford, Paxton, Princeton, Rutland, Shrewsbury, Southbridge, Spencer, Sterling, Sturbridge, Sutton, Upton, Uxbridge, Warren, Webster, West Boylston, West Brookfield, and Worcester. Joseph Henry Walker, of Worcester, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, December 21, 1829; worked on boots and shoes in his father’s factory; was admitted to partnership of the firm of Joseph Walker & Co. in Worcester in 1850; was engaged in boot and shoe manu- facturing till 1887; retired from business in Worcester; he established the business of manufacturing leather in Chicago, Illinois, in 1868, and is still a member of the firm carrying on that business under the name of Walker, Oakley & Co.; has been several times a member of the City Council of Worcester and of the Massachusetts Legislature; was elected to the Fifty-first, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 11,131 votes, against 10,431 votes for Charles B. Pratt, Democrat, 952 votes for Herbert M. Small, Prohibitionist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. FRANKLIN COUNTY.— Towns of Ashfield, Bernardston, Buckland, Charlemont, Conway, Deerfield, Erving, Gill, Greenfield, Hawley, Heath, Leverett, Leyden, Monroe, Montague, New Salem, Northfield, Orange, Rowe, Shelburne, Shutesbury, Sunderland, Warwick, Wendell, and Whately. HAMPDEN - COUNTY.— Zowns of Amherst, Belchertown, Chesterfield, Cummington, East hampton, Enfield, Goshen, Granby, Greenwich, Hadley, Hatfield, Huntington, Middlefield, Northampton, Pelham, Plainfield, Prescott, Southampton, South Hadley, Ware, Westhampton, Williamsburgh, and Worthington. J WORCESTER COUNTY.— Towns of Ashburnham, Athol, Dana, Fitchburg, Gardner, Hub- bardston, Leominster, Petersham, Phillipston, Royalston, Templeton, Westminster, and Winchendorn. Frederick Spaulding Coolidge, of Ashburnham, was born in Westminster, Massachusetts, December 7, 1841 ; received his education in the common schools of the State; is a manu- facturer of chairs and chair cane, and is the manager of the Boston Chair Manufacturing Com- pany and of the Leominster Rattan Works; was Selectman of his native town for three years, and has held other offices; was for three years a member of the Democratic State Central Committee; was Democratic elector in 1888; was Representative to the General Court of Massachusetts in 1875; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Demccrat, receiving 9,300 votes, against 9,150 votes for Timothy G. Spaulding, Republican, 3,538 votes for Myron P. Walker, Independent Republican, 1,260 votes for Henry C. Smith, Prohibitionist, and 3 votes scattering. TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Berkshire and Hampden, except the city of Holyoke and the towns of Brimfield, Holland, and Wales. John Crawford Crosby, of Pittsfield, was born in Sheffield, Berkshire County, Massachu- setts, June 15, 1859; was educated in the public schools of Pittsfield ; studied law and gradu- ated from the Boston University Law School; was admitted to the bar and engaged in the practice of law; in 1885 was elected a member of the School Committee of Pittsfield and | . 60 Congressional Direcrory. | MASSACHUSETTS. served six consecutive years in that office; was elected a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1885 and re-elected in 1886, serving each year on the Committees on Rules and Railroads; in 1887 was elected a member of the Massachusetts Senate, and served on Committees on Judiciary, Probate and Insolvency, and Constitutional Amendment; in 1888 was re-elected and.served on Committees on Probate and Insolvency and Mercantile Affairs, being Chairman of both Committees; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,106 votes, against 11,724 votes for Francis W. Rockwell, Republican, and 864 votes for John Bascom, Prohibitionist. MICHIGAN. SENATORS. Francis B. Stockbridge, of Kalamazoo, was born in Bath, Maine, April 9, 1826; re- ceived a common-school education; was clerk in a wholesale house-in Boston from 1843 till 1847, when he went to Chicago and opened a lumber-yard, being interested in saw-mills in Michigan; in 1851 removed to Allegan County, Michigan, taking charge of his mills; was elected to the Legislature in 1869 and to the Senate in 1871; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Republican, to succeed Omar D. Conger, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1887. His term of office will expire March 3, 1893. James McMillan, of Detroit, was born at Hamilton, Ontario, May 12, 1838; was pre- pared for college, but in 1855 removed to Detroit, where he entered upon a business life. In 1863 he, with others, established the Michigan Car Company, of which enterprise, with its various branches, he is the President. In 1876 he was a member of the Republican State Central Committee, and on the death of Zachariah Chandler was made Chairman. Again, in 1836 and in 1890, he was elected Chairman of the Committee. For three years he was President of the Detroit Board of Park Commissioners, and for four years was a member of the Detroit Board of Estimates. Was a Republican Presidential Elector in 1884. Re- ceived the unanimous nomination of the Republican members of the Legislature and was . elected to the United States Senate to succeed Thomas Witherell Palmer, and took his seat March 4, 1889. His term will expire March 3, 1895. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTY .— Wayne. J. Logan Chipman, of Detroit, was born in Detroit, Michigan, June 5, 1830; was edu cated in the schools of that city and at the University of Michigan; in 1846 was engaged ir the Lake Superior region as an explorer for the Montreal Mining Company; in 1854 was ad- mitted to the bar, and in that year aided in the payment of the Chippewas of Lake Superior, and participated in making the treaty of Detroit with the Ottawas and Chippewas of Michigan; in 1853 was Assistant Clerk of the State House of Representatives of Michigan; in 1856 was elected City Attorney of Detroit, and held that position till 1861; in 1863 was elected to the Michigan Legislature; in 1865 was appointed Attorney of the Police Board of Detroit; in 1866 ran for Congress on the Democratic ticket, but was defeated; retained the office of Attorney of Police till May 1, 1879, when he was elected Judge of the Superior Court of De- troit, to which position he was re-elected at the end of six years; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Democrat, re- ceiving 21,791 votes, against 15,861 votes for Hibbard Baker, Republican, 859 votes for Pitkin, Prohibitionist, and 49 votes for Thornton, Industrial. . SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Hillsdale, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw. James Sedgwick Gorman, of Chelsea, was born on the farm on which he now resides in the township of Lindon, Washtenaw County, Michigan, December 28, 1850; began his edu- cation in a log school house, and was graduated from the Union School at Chelsea; was grad- uated from the Law Department of the University of Michigan in 1876, and engaged in the practice of law in the city of Jackson; was two years Assistant Prosecuting Attorney; removed ] MICHIGAN. | Senators and Representatives. "+7 BY to the village of Dexter, near his own home, in 1879; was elected to the Lower House of the Michigan Legislature in 1880; owing to the failing health of his father he went back on the farm, where he has since been engaged as a practical everyday farmer; in 1886 was elected to the State Senate from the Fourth District, and re-elected in 1888; was elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,471 votes, against 14,568 votes for Edward P. Allen, Republican, and 2,522 votes for Thomas F. Moore, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Barry, Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, and Jackson. James O’Donnell, of Jackson, was born at Norwalk, Connecticut, March 25, 1840; re- moved with his parents to Michigan in 1848; is a printer by trade and completed his educa- tion in the printing office; at the breaking out of the war he enlisted as a private in the First Michigan Infantry, and served out his time, participating in the first battle of Bull Run; was elected Recorder of the city of Jackson for four terms, 1863-'66; established the Jackson Daily Citizen in 1865, and has owned and edited the same since ; was Presidential Electorin 1872; was elected Mayor of Jackson in 1876, and was re-elected in 1877; was appointed in 1878 as Aid-de-Camp on the staff of Governor Croswell, with the rank of Colonel; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 16,679 votes, against 14,216 votes for John W. Fletcher, Democrat, 3,187 votes for Dickie, Prohibitionist, and 3,423 votes for Fraser, Industrial. \ FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Berrien, Cass, Kalamazoo, St. Joseph, and Van Buren. Julius C. Burrows, of Kalamazoo, was born at North East, Erie County, Pennsylvania, January 9, 1837; received a common-school and academic education; by profession a law- yer; was an officer in the Union Army, 1862-64; Prosecuting Attorney of Kalamazoo County, 1865-67; appointed Supervisor of Internal Revenue for the States of Michigan and Wisconsin in 1867, but declined the office; elected a Representative to the Forty- third, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses; appointed Soiicitor of the United States Treasury Department by President Arthur in 1884, but declined the office ; elected a Delegate at large from Michigan to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1884; elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, twice elected Speaker pro tempore of the House of Representatives during the Fifty-first Congress, and was re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 16,067 votes, against 15,673 votes for George L. Yaple, Democrat, 2,843 votes for Cunningham, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Alegan, Ionia, Kent, and Ottawa. Charles Eugene Belknap, of Grand Rapids, was born in the town of Massena, St. Law- rence County, New York, October 17, 1846; removed with his parents to Grand Rapids, Michigan, in 1855; was educated in the common schools of Grand Rapids; left school August 14, 1862, and enlisted in Twenty-first Regiment, Michigan Infantry ; was promoted to different positions, and received a Captain’s commission January 22, 1864, at the age of seventeen years and three months; served until June, 1865, with the Army of the Cumber- land ; was wounded seven times; served eleven years in the Fire Department of Grand Rapids as Captain of a company, Assistant Chief, and Chief ; seven years on Board of Edu- cation; served two years as Alderman; served one year as Mayor; has been a member of the Board of Control of State School Institution for the Deaf for the past four years; is married ; is engaged in the manufacture of wagons and sleighs; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, at the election Novem- ber 3, 1891, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Melburne H. Ford, Democrat, re- ceiving 14,667 votes against 13,135 votes for John S. Lawrence, Democrat, 3,681 votes for Hutchins, People’s party candidate, and 1,156 votes for Shultz, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clinton, Genesee, Ingham, Livingston, and Oakland. Byron Gray Stout, of Pontiac, was born in Ontario County, New York, in 1829; removed to Michigan in 1831; was graduated from the literary department of the Michigan State University in 1851; spent three years in charge of the Schools, in the mean time read- ing law, but never practiced; in 1854 was elected to the State Legislature; was re-elected l] 62 Congressional Directory. [MICcHIGAN. in 1856, and chosen Speaker of the House; was State Senator in 1860, serving on the com- mittees on Public Lands, Finance, and State Affairs, being chairman of the latter ; was Pres- ident pro zempore of the Senate ; in 1862 was the nominee of the Union party for Governor, but was defeated by Austin Blair; in 1868 and 1870 was the Democratic candidate for Congress against Omar D. Conger, but was defeated ; in 1883 was the nominee of the ¢ fusion’ mem- bers of the State Legislature for United States Senator against Thomas W. Ferry, the contest ending on the 1st of March in the election of Thomas W. Palmer; was a member of the Philadelphia Convention of 1866, and also of the National Democratic Conventions of 1868, 1880, and 1888; was engaged in private banking prior to 1869 and since that time-in agri- culture’; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,140 votes, against 16,457 for William Ball, Republican, 3,004 for Jay Sessions, Prohibitionist, and 1,940 for George W. Caswell, Industrial. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, and St. Clair. Justin Rice Whiting, of St. Clair, was born in Bath, Steuben County, New York, February 18, 1847 ; when two years of age removed with his parents to St. Clair; received his preparatory education at the Union School, and was admitted to the Michigan University in 1863, at the age of sixteen years; left college at the close of the sophomore year; is a mer- chant and manufacturer; was elected Mayor of St. Clair in 1879; was elected State Senator in 1882; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress, as a Democrat, receiving 14,553 votes, against 12,566 votes for James I. Ayres, Republican, 1,280 votes for Russell, Prohibitionist, 288 votes for Paget, Labor candi- date. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Gratiot, Isabella, Midland, Montcalm, Saginaw, and Shiawassee. Henry Melville Youmans, of Saginaw, was born in Otego, Otsego County, New York, May 15, 1832; received a common-school education, attending school during the winter months and working on his father’s farm during the summer season; was in the employ of the York and Erie Railroad Company, Susquehanna Division, for ten years; removed to East Saginaw, Michigan, in 1862; engaged in the manufacture of lumber and salt; was elected Mayor of East Saginaw for the years 1886 and 1887; held all the positions of honor under the municipal government of East Saginaw, where he now resides; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,230 votes, against 17,154 votes for Aaron T. Bliss, Republican, and 2,100 votes for Smith, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Antrim, Charlevoix, Kalkaska, Lake, Manistee, Mason, Mecosta, Missaukee, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, Osceola, and Wexford. Harrison H. Wheeler, of Ludington, was born in Lapeer County, Michigan, March 22, 1839; received a common-school education, and at the age of eighteen years commenced teaching school winters and working upon a farm summers until the fall ‘of 1861, when he _ enlisted as a private in Company C, Tenth Regiment Michigan Volunteer Infantry ; in June, 1862, was promoted to Second Lieutenant same company, and in April, 1863, was promoted to First Lieutenant Company E, same regiment; in April, 1865, was promoted to Captain Company F, same regiment; was wounded at Buzzard’s Roost Gap, Kenesaw Mountain, and Jonesboro, Georgia, during the Atlanta campaign; in 1866 was elected Clerk of Bay County, Michigan, and was admitted to the bar in 1868; in 1870 was elected State Sen- ator for Bay and adjoining counties, and re-elected in 1872; after the session of the Legis- lature in 1873 moved to Ludington, Mason County, Michigan, and was appointed Circuit Judge in 1874 by Governor Bagley; at the first election thereafter was elected to the same office without opposition; resigned in June, 1878, since which time he has practiced law at Ludington ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,854 votes, against 15,794 votes for Byron M. Cutcheon, Republican. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Alcona, Alpena, Arenac, Bay, Cheboygan, Clare, Crawford, Emmet, Gladwin, dosco, Montmorency, Ogemaw, Oscoda, Otsego, Presque Isle, Roscommon, and Tuscola. Thomas A. E. Weadock, of Bay City, was born January 1, 1850, at Ballygarret, County Wexford, Ireland. His parents emigrated to America during his infancy and settled at St. Marys, Ohio, soon afterward removing to a farm near St. Marys, where they resided until their death; was educated in the common schools; in 1865, on the return of his elder oy MICHIGAN. | : Senators and Representatives. 63 ¢ brother from the Army, went to Cincinnati, Ohio, and began to learn the printing trade; dis- liking this business returned and attended the Union school at St. Marys for a year; taught school in the counties of Auglaize, Shelby, and Miami for the period of five years; in 1871 entered the Law Department of Michigan University ; read law during the vacation at Detroit; and graduated Bachelor of Laws in March, 1873; in that year, after further study at Detroit, was admitted to the bar, and in 1873 located at Bay City; assisted in making an abstract of title to the real estate in Bay County; in 1874 began the practice of law in Bay City, which he still continues; in 1877 was appointed Prosecuting Attorney of Bay County, and served till December 31, 1878; was Mayor of Bay City from April, 1883,to April, 1835; was a mem- ber of the Board of Education of Bay City for a short time; was elected to the Fifty- second Congress, as a Democrat, receiving 16,721 votes, against 15,055 votes for Watts S. Humphrey, Republican, 943 votes for Silas A. Lane, Prohibitionist, and 291 votes for Charles S. Kilmer, Industrial. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—A ger, Baraga, Bensie, Chippewa, Della, Dickinson, Gogebic, Grand Traverse, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, Leelenaw, Luce, Mackinac, Manitou, Marquette, Menominee, Onionagon, and Schoolcraft. Samuel M. Stephenson, of Menominee, was born in New Brunswick in 1831; removed to Maine with his parents when six years of age; in 1846 removed to Delta County, Michi- gan, where he engaged in lumbering ; in 1858 removed to his present place of residence and built the second saw-mill on the river, and has ever since been largely interested in real estate, lumbering, general merchandising, and farming; is President First National Bank, and an officer in the Kirby Carpenter Company, of Menominee, and an officer in the Stephenson Banking Company of Marinette, Wisconsin; was Chairman of the Board of Supervisors of Menominee County for several years; was a Representative in the State Legislature in 1877- 78, and a member of the Senate in 1879-’80and 1885-’86; was Presidential Elector in 1880 on the Republican ticket, and a Delegate to the National Republican Convention in 1884 and ’88; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Repub- lican, receiving 16,667 votes, against 14,579 votes for Semer, Democrat, 1,759 votes for Semmons, Prohibitionist. MINNESOTA. SENATORS. Cushman Kellogg Davis, of St. Paul, was born in Henderson, Jefferson County, New York, June 16, 1838; received a common-school and collegiate education, graduating from the University of Michigan in June, 1857; is a lawyer by profession; was First Lieutenant in the Twenty-eighth Wisconsin Infantry, 1862-’64; was a member of the Minnesota Legislature in 1867; was United States District Attorney for Minnesota, 1868-'73; was Governor of Minnesota, 1874-75; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Republican, to succeed Hon. S. J. R. McMillan, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. William Drew Washburn, of Minneapolis, was born at Livermore, Androscoggin County, Maine, January 14, 1831; was reared on a farm; attended the common schools in the winter and worked on the farm in the summer until twenty years of age; was graduated from Bowdoin College in 1854; after studying law for two years with Hon. Israel Wash- burn, jr., of Orono, Maine, he removed to the West, locating in Minneapolis in 1857; was appointed Surveyor-General of Minnesota by President Lincoln in 1861, and held the office for four years; has been actively engaged in various manufacturing industries in the city of Minneapolis since that time; was a Director and large owner of the Minneapolis Water Power Company; was the projector, and afterwards President, of the Minneapolis and St. Louis Railroad; organized and built the Sault line of railway from Minneapolis to Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, of which he was the chief projector, and remained President until his elec- tion to the United States Senate in 1889; was elected to the Legislature in 1858 and "71; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses, and was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Dwight May Sabin, and took his seat March 4, 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. 64 Congressional Directory. [MINNESOTA. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Dodge, Fillmore, Freeborn, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Steele, Wabasha, and Winona. William Henry Harries, of Caledonia, was born in Montgomery County, Ohio, January 15, 1843, and while yet a boy found his way to Wisconsin, and for a few years lived on a farm in Jowa County in that State: later moved to La Crosse, where he resided when the late civil war broke out; April 18, 1861, enlisted as a private in Company B, Second Wisconsin Vol- unteer Infantry; rose through all the grades of non-commissioned officers to Second and First Lieutenant of his company; December 21, 1864, was commissioned Captain of Company F, Third United States Veteran Volunteers, General Hancock’s Corps; was severely wounded through the left lung in the battle of Antietam, September 17, 1862; was discharged from the Army April 17, 1866; was graduated from the Ann Arbor Law School in 1868; located in Houston County, Minnesota, and was admitted to the bar May 6, 1868; has been County Attorney two terms; was member of the Board of Education and President of Board of Trustees of Caledonia; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, being also indorsed by the Alliance, receiving 17,198 votes, against 14,87 5 votes for Mark H. Dunnell, Republican, and 6 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Blue Earth, Brown, Chippewa, Cottonwood, Faribault, Jackson, Le Sueur, Lin- coln, Lac-qui- Parle, Lyon, Martin, Murray, Nicollet, Nobles, Pipe Stone, Redwood, Rock, Sibley, Waseca, Watonwan, and Yellow Medicine. John Lind, of New Ulm, was born in Sweden, March 25, 1854, and has resided in Min- nesota since 1868; received a public-school education; taught school; read law and was admitted to the bar in 1877, since which time he has been engaged in the practice of his pro- fession; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 20,788 votes, against 20,306 votes for James H. Baker, Alliance candidate with Democratic indorsement, 1,146 votes for Ira B. Reynolds, Prohibi- tionist, and 42 votes scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carver, Chippewa, Dakota, Goodhue, Kandiyohi, Mcleod, Meeker, Renwville, Rice, Scott, and Swift. Osee Matson Hall, of Red Wing, was born in Conneaut, Ohio; graduated at Williams College in the class of 1868; has since resided and practiced law in Red Wing, Minnesota; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,639 votes, against 13,106 votes for D. S. Hall, Republican, 3,056 votes for W. W. Gamble, Alliance, and 1,116 votes for C. R. Shepard, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Anoka, Chisago, Shi Isanti, Kanabec, Pine, Ramsey, Sherburne, Wash- ington, and Wright. James N. Castle, of Stilbwiter, was born at Shefford, Province of Quebec, May 23, 1836; was educated in the public schools; in 1862 removed to Washington County, Minnesota; in 1865 was elected District Attorney and located in Stillwater, where he has been engaged in the practice of law since; was elected to the State Senate in 1868, and re-elected in 1878 and 1882, serving in all ten years; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 35,903 votes, against 30,175 votes for S. P. Snider, Republican, 3,238 votes for W. J. Dean, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Aitkin, Becker, Benton, Beltrami, Big Stone, Carlton, Cass, Clay, Cook, Crow Wing, Douglas, Grant, Hubbard, Itasca, Kittson, Lake, Marshall, Mille Lacs, Morrison, Norman, Otter Tail, Polk, Pope, Stearns, Stevens, St. Louis, Todd, 1raverse, Wadena, and Wilkin. Kittel Halvorson, of North Fork, Stearns County, was born December 15, 1846, in Tele- marken, Norway, Europe; emigrated to the United States with his parents in the summer of 1848, and settled in Wisconsin; attended the public school of the neighborhood; entered the ~ military service in 1863, enlisting in Company C, First Regiment Wisconsin Heavy Artiliery, MINNESOTA. | Senators and Representatives. I 6s and served until the close of the war; removed to Minnesota in November, 1865, and settled on a homestead in Stearns County, where he still resides; has been and still is engaged in farming and stock raising; was a member of the lower house of the State legislature in 1877; was elected by the Farmers’ Alliance and Prohibitionists to the Fifty-second Congress, receiv- ing 21,514 Votes, against 19,372 votes for S. G. Comstock, Republican, and 16,203 votes for Alonzo J. Whiteman, Democrat, and 42 votes scattering. MISSISSIPPI. SENATORS. # James Z. George, of Carrollton, was born in Monroe County, Georgia, October 20, 1826; his father having died in his infancy, he removed, when eight years of age, with his mother to Noxubee County, Mississippi, where he resided two years; he then removed to Carroll County, where he was educated in the common schools then existing; he volunteered as a private inthe First Regiment of Mississippi Volunteers in the Mexican war, commanded by Colonel Jefferson Davis, and was at the battle of Monterey; on his return he studied law, and was admitted to the bar in Carroll County; he was elected Reporter of the High Court of Errors and Appeals in 1854, re-elected in 1860, and prepared and published ten volumes of the Reports of the decisions of that court, and afterwards prepared and published a Digest of all the decisions of the Supreme Court and High Court of Errors and Appeals of that State, from the admission of the State into the Union to and including the year 1870; he was a member of the Convention in Mississippi in 1861 which passed the ordinance of secession, and he voted for and signed that instrument; he was a Captain in the Twentieth Regiment of Mississippi Volunteers in the Confederate States Army; afterwards a Brigadier-General of State troops, and afterwards Colonel of the Fifth Regiment of Mississippi Cavalry in the Confederate States Army; was Chairman of the Democratic State Executive Committee of Mississippi in 1875 and ’76; in 1879 was appointed one of the Judges of the Supreme Court of Mississippi, and elected Chief- Justice; resigned his seat on the Supreme Bench in February, 1881, to take his seat in the Senate on the 4th of March of that year, and was re-elected in 1886 and again in January, 1892; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of the State of Mississippi which was held in 1Sg0 and framed the present Constitution of the State. His present term of service will expire March 3, 1893, and that to which last elected in 1899. Edward Cary Walthall, of Grenada, Mississippi, was born in Richmond, Virginia, April 4, 1831; received an academic education at Holly Springs, Mississippi; studied law at Holly Springs; was admitted to the bar in 1852, and commenced the practice of law the same year in Coffeeville, Mississippi; was elected in 1856 District Attorney for the Tenth Judicial District of Mississippi, and re-elected in 1859; resigned that office in the spring of 1861, and entered the Confederate service as a Lieutenant in the Fifteenth Mississippi Regiment; was soon after elected Lieutenant-Colonel of that regiment; in the spring of 1862 was elected Colonel of the Twenty-ninth Mississippi Regiment, was promoted to Brigadier-General in December, 1862, and Major-General in June, 1864; after the surrender practiced law at Coffeeville until January, 1871, when he removed to Grenada, and continued the practice there until March, 1885; was a Delegate at large to the National Democratic Conventions in 1868, 76, 80, and 84; in 1868 was one of the Vice-Presidents of the Convention, and in 1876, ’80o, and ’84, was Chairman of the Mississippi Delegation; was appointed to the United States Senate as a Dem- ocrat, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. L. Q. C. Lamar, appointed Secre- tary of the Interior, and took his seat March 12, 1885; was elected by the Legislature in Jan- uary, 1886, for the unexpired term; was re-elected, January, 1888, and again January, 1892. His present term of service will expire March 3, 1895, and that to which last elected in 1901. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Alcorn, Itawamba, Lee, Lowndes, Monroe, Oktibbeha, Prentiss, and Tisko- mingo. : John M. Allen, of Tupelo, was born in Tishomingo County, Mississippi, July 8, 1847; re- ceived a common-school education up to his enlistment as a private in the Confederate Army, in which he served through the war; after the cessation of hostilities attended the Law School 2D BD—==0 vom a 66 Congressional Directory. ~ [MISSISSIPPL at the Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee, and graduated in law in the year 1870 at the University of Mississippi; commenced the practice of his profession at Tupelo, Lee County, Mississippi, in 1870; in 1875 was elected District Attorney. for the First Judicial Dis- trict of Mississippi; served a term of four years, and retired from that office; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 2,786 votes, and 35 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Benton, De Soto, La Fayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallakatchee, Tate, Tippak, and Union. John Curtes Kyle, of Sardis, Panola County, was born near the town in which he now resides, July 17, 1851 ; was educated at Bethel College and Cumberland University, graduat- ing at the latter with the degree of LL. B. in 1874, and immediately began the practice of law in his native county ; in 1879 was elected Mayor of Sardis ; in 1881 was elected to the State Senate ; at the close of the Senatorial term was by the joint ballot of the twgo branches of the Legislature elected a member of the Mississippi Railroad Commission ; re-elected in 1888 ; was Chairman of the Democratic Executive Committee; was elected to the Fifty-second Congiess as a Democrat, receiving 7,635 votes, against 3,949 for George M. Buchanan, Re- publican. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bolivar, Coakoma, Issaquena, Le Flore, Quitman, Sharkey, Sunflower, Tunica, . Warren, and Washington. Thomas Clendinen Catchings, of Vicksburg, was born in Hinds County, Mississippi January 11, 1847; entered the University of Mississippi in September, 1859, and, after passing through the freshman and part of the sophomore years, left to enter Oakland College, Missis- sipp1, where he passed into the junior class in the spring of 1861; entered the Confederate Army early in 1861,and served throughout the war; commenced the study of law in 18635, after the termination of the war; was admitted to the bar in May, 1866, and has since practiced law at Vicksburg; was elected to the State Senate of Mississippi in 1875 for a term of four years, but resigned on being nominated in 1877 for Attorney-General; was elected Attorney-General of Mississippi in November, 1877, for a term of four years; was renominated by acclamation in August, 1881, and elected in the following November, resigning February 16, 1885; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 8,689 votes, against 2,767 votes for James Hill, Republican. (NoTE.—Seven hundred or more votes for Mr. Hill were thrown out by the canvassers as not conforming to State law prescribing the style of tickets.) FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Clay, Grenada, Kemper, Monigomery, Noxubee, Pontotoc, Webster, Winston, and Yalobusha. Clarke Lewis, of Macon, was born in Madison County, Alabama, November 8, 1840; three years later moved with his widowed mother to Noxubee County, Mississippi, where he has resided since; worked on a farm and attended the county school until sixteen years of age, when he entered Somerville Institute, and took a partial course; taught school; entered the Confederate Army in February, 1861, and served as a private until the close of the war; resumed teaching in May, 1865, and continued in that work one year; clerked in a store during 1866, when he engaged in merchandising and farming on his own account, and con- tinued in these businesses thirteen years; has been exclusively a planter since 1879; in 1877 he was elected to the State Legislature, and served one term; in 1884 was a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Congress, but was defeated by the fraction of a vote; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Demo- crat, receiving 5,498 votes, against 1,572 votes for Frazer, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Attala, Clarke, Holmes, Jasper, Lauderdale, Leake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott, Smith, Wayne, and Yazoo. Joseph H. Beeman, of Eley, was born in Gates County, North Carolina, November 17, 1835; removed with his parents in 1847 to Morgan County, Alabama, and from thence to Mississippi in 1849; was brought up on the farm and has spent much of his life in active MISSISSIPPI] - Senators and Representatives. : 67 participation in agricultural pursuits; received an academic education; was elected to the Legislature from Scott County in 1883 and re-elected in 1885, 1887, and 1889; has been - connected with the Farmers’ Alliance since its organization in the State, having served during this time as Chairman of the State Executive Committee; was elected to the Fifty-second ‘Congress, as a Democrat without opposition, receiving 6,303 votes and 8 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Adams, Amite, Covington, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Jones, Lawrence, Marion, Perry, Pike, and Wilkinson. Thomas Ringland Stockdale, of Summit, Pike County, Mississippi, was born and raised in the State of Penhsylvania, and graduated from Jefferson College (now Washington and Jefferson), in that State, in June, 1856; settled in Covington County, Mississippi, in the fall of that year as teacher; was principal of Holmesville Academy, Pike County, Mississippi, 1857— ’58; graduated from the Law Department of the University of Mississippi in 1859; enlisted in the Quitman Guards, at Holmesville ; was elected Lieutenant in 1861; was appointed Ad- jutant of the Sixteenth Mississippi Infantry, and elected Major of that regiment in 1861; being defeated for Lieutenant- Colonel of that regiment at the reorganization in 1862, he went back to Mississippi and immediately entered the service again as Captain of Cavalry; was elected commander of Stockdale’s Battalion of Cavalry, and commissioned as Major of Volunteers in 1863; was promoted to rank of Lieutenant-Colonel and assigned to the Fourth Mississippi Cavalry in 1864 ; was severely wounded while in command of his regiment in the battle of Harrisburgh (one of the engagements near Tupelo), July 14, 1864 ; was paroled with General Forrest’s army May 12, 1865, after continuous service from April, 1861; after the war closed he settled in Summit, Mississippi, and resumed the practice of law; was a member of the National Democratic Convention of 1868; was Presidential Elector on the Democratic ticket in 1872 and again in 1884; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re- elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Democrat, receiving 9,340 votes, against 3,768 votes for Henry C. Griffin, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Hinds, Jefferson, Lincoln, Madison, Rankin, and Simpson. Charles E. Hooker, of Jackson, was born in Union District, South Carolina ; graduated at the Cambridge Law School ; removed to Jackson, Mississippi, and entered upon the practice of his profession ; was elected District Attorney of the River District in 1850; was elected to the Mississippi Legislature in 1859, and resigned his seat to enter the Confederate Army ; was wounded during the siege of Vicksburg; promoted to the rank of Colonel of Cavalry, and assigned to duty on the military court attached to General Polk’s command ; was elected Attor- ney-General of the State of Mississippi in 1865, and re-elected in 1868, and, in common with the other civil officers of the State, was removed by the military authorities ; was elected to the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Democrat, receiving 6,284 votes, against 2,028 votes for John M. Matthews, Republican. : MISSOURI. SENATORS. Francis Marion Cockrell, of Warrensburgh, was born in Johnson County, Missouri, October 1, 1834; received his early education in the common schools of his county; gradu- ated from Chapel Hill College, La Fayette County, Missouri, in July, 1853; studied law, and has pursued that profession, never having held any public office prior to his election to Con- gress; was elected to the Senate, as a Democrat, to succeed Carl Schurz, Independent Repub- lican; took his seat March 4, 1875, and was twice re-elected. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. 68 Congressional Directory. [MIssouRr1. George Graham Vest, of Kansas City, was born at Frankfort, Kentucky, December 6, 1830; graduated at Centre College, Kentucky, in 1848, and at the Law Department of the Transylvania University, at Lexington, Kentucky, in 1853; removed the same year to Mis- souri, and began the practice of law in Central Missouri; was a Presidential Elector on the Democraticticketin 1860; was a member of the Missouri House of Representatives in 1860-61; was a member of the House of Representatives of the Confederate Congress for two years and a member of the Confederate Senate for one year; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, in the place of James Shields, Democrat (who had been elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Lewis V. Bogy, Democrat); took his seat March 18, 1879; was re-elected in 1885 and 18go. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adair, Clark, Knox, Lewis, Macon, Marion, Putnam, Schuyler, Scotland, and Shelby. : William Henry Hatch, of Hannibal, was born in Scott County, Kentucky, September 11, 1833; was educated at Lexington, Kentucky; was admitted to the bar in September, 1854, as a practicing lawyer; was elected Circuit Attorney of the Sixteenth Judicial Cir- cuit of Missouri in October, 1858, and re-elected to the same position in November, 1860; served in the Confederate Army; was commissioned Captain and Assistant Adjutant-General December, 1862, and in March, 1863, was assigned to duty as Assistant Commissioner of Ex- change under the cartel, and continued in this position until the close of the war; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth and Fifty-first, Con- gresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congressas a Democrat, receiving 20,527 votes, against 15,080 votes for Harrington, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carroll, Chariton, Grundy, Linn, Livingston, Monroe, Randolph, and Sullivan. Charles H. Mansur, of Chillicothe, was born in the city of Philadelphia, March 6, 1835; received a common-school and an academic education at Lawrence Academy, Groton, Massa- chusetts ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar at Richmond, Missouri, August 30, 1856; in 1856 removed to Chillicothe, where he has since resided and practiced law; has been a member of the Board of Education of Chillicothe for eight years; was a member of the Democratic State Central Committee from 1864 till 1868; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Con- vention at New York in 1868; was Prosecuting Attorney of Livingston County from 1875 till 1879; was a Delegate at large to the Democratic National Convention at Chicagoin 1884; in 1872 was the joint nominee for Congress of the Democracy and Liberal Republicans in the Tenth District, and was again the nominee of the Democracy in the same district in 1880; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress, as a Democrat, receiving 20,527 votes, against 13,147 votes for A. C. Pettijohn, Repub- lican. THIRD DISTRICT. § COUNTIES.— Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, De Kalb, Daviess, Gentry, Harrison, Mercer, Ray, and Worth. Alexander Monroe Dockery, of Gallatin, was born in Daviess County, Missouri, Feb- ruary II, 1845; attended the comimon schools, completing his education at Macon Academy, Macon, Missouri; studied medicine and graduated at the St. Louis Medical College in March, 1865; also attended lectures at Bellevue College, New York City, and Jefferson Med- ical College, Philadelphia, during the winter of 1865-66; practiced medicine at Chillicothe, Missouri, until January, 1874, serving several years as County Physician of Livingston County ; in March, 1874, abandoned the practice of medicine and removed to Gallatin, Missouri, and assisted in organizing the Farmers’ Exchange Bank, of which organization he was cashier until elected to Congress; was one of the Curators of the University of Missouri from 1872 to 1882, and in 1870, ’71, and ’72 President of the Board of Education of Chillicothe, Mis- souri; has served as Chairman of the Congressional Committee of his district; was a member of the City Council of Gallatin for the five years previous to April, 1883, serving the last two years as Mayor, elected without opposition; was Chairman of the Democratic State Conven- tion in 1886; waselected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Democrat, receiving 20,594 votes, against 13,139 votes for P. S. Kenney, Republican, and 3,681 votes for J. H. Willis. Union Labor. ed -—r AF MISSOURL.] Senators and Representatives. 69 FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Platte, Buchanan, Andrew, Atchison, Holt, and Nodaway. Robert P. C. Wilson, of Platte City, was born at Boonville, Cooper County, Missouri ; when a small boy was taken by his parents to Platte County, where he has mostly resided since; was educated at William Jewell College, Liberty, Missouri, and at Centre College, Dan- ville, Kentucky, from which latter institution he graduated ; read law under Judge E. H. Nor- ton, by whom he was licensed to practice; located at Seguin, Texas, where he began the practice of his profession, and has been thus actively engaged since; remained in Texas a few years and returned north; located in Leavenworth City, Kansas, in 1860, and was one of the Democratic members of the House of Representatives from Leavenworth County in the first General As- sembly of that State; during that year returned to Missouri; was elected a member from Platte County to the Twenty-sixth General Assembly, and made Speaker of the House; was Elector for Greeley and Brown in 1872, but on the death of Greeley cast his vote for Hendricks, of Indiana; was State Senator from the Third District from 1876 to 1880; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention at St. Louis in 1888, and Chairman of the Missouri delega- tion; was for several years President of the Agricultural and Stock Association of his county; is the President of the School Board of his town, and was elected, as a Democrat, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. James N. Burnes, in the Fifty-first Congress, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 15,753 votes, against 12,444 votes for Nicholas Ford, Republican, and 2,191 votes for John B. Whipple, Union Labor. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Jackson, Johnson, and La Fayette. John C. Tarsney, of Kansas City, was born in Lenawee County, Michigan, November 7, 1845; attended the common schools until August, 1862, when he enlisted in the Fourth Regi- ment Michigan Infantry, then serving in the Fifth Army Corps; joined the regiment in the field near Antietam immediately after the battle of that name; was slightly wounded at the battle of Fredericksburgh, and was severely wounded and taken prisoner at the battle of Gettysburgh; remained a prisoner of war at Belle Isle, Andersonville, and Milan until the latter part of No- vember, 1864, when, being exchanged, he rejoined his command in front of Petersburgh, and participated in the campaign which followed, ending in the surrender at Appomattox; was mustered out of the service in June, 1865, when he entered the High School at Hudson, Mich- igan, and remained in that school until the fall of 1866, when he entered the Law Department of the University of Michigan, from which he graduated March, 1869; practiced law at Hud- son, Michigan, until 1872, when he removed to Kansas City, Missouri; was City Attorney of Kansas City in 1874 and ’75, since which time he has followed the profession of the law; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress asa Demo- crat, receiving 19,387 votes, against 13,505 votes for D. S. Twitchell, Republican, and 6 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Benton, Boone, Camden, Cooper, Dallas, Hickory, Howard, Monitean, Morgan, Pettis, Polk, and Saline. John T. Heard, of Sedalia, was born at Georgetown, Pettis County, Missouri, October 29, 1840; was educated at the common schools of Pettis County and at the State University at Co- lumbia, graduating in 1860; read law in the office of his father, George Heard, with whom he practiced several years at the Sedalia bar; was elected to the State Legislature of Missouriin 1872, serving as Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, and member of the Committees on Judiciary and the University; was elected without opposition to the State Senate in 1881, and served four years; was employed in 1881 by the Fund Commissioners of the State to prose- cute and adjust all claims of the State against the General Government; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 24,027 votes, against 16,365 votes for E. L. Redmond, Re- publican, and 3,600 votes for William C. Aldridge, Union Labor. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Audrain, Franklin, Lincoln, Montgomery, Pike, Ralls, St. Charies,and Warren. Richard Henry Norton, of Troy, was born at Troy, Lincoln County, Missouri, November 6, 1849, where he has resided during his entire life; was educated at the St. Louis University, where he took the classical course ; graduated in the Law Department of Washington Uni- versity, St. Louis, in the class of 1870, and has practiced his profession since that time; is 70 Congressional Directory. (MISSOURI. married ; has had no public service, civil or military; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,926 votes, against 12,946 votes for W. O. Barnett, Republican. EIGHTH DISTRICT. City AND COUNTY.— T%e 4th, 6th, 8th, roth, 12th, 14th, 16th, 18th (two precincts 22d), 24t4, 26th, and 28th wards of the city of St. Louis, and St. Ferdinand Township, of St. Louis County. John J. O’Neill, of St. Louis, was born June 25, 1846; received a common-school edu- cation; was elected to the State Legislature from St. Louis in 1872, and re-elected in 1874 and 1876 ; nominated for Congress in 1878 by Workingmen’s party, but declined; was admitted to the bar by Supreme Court of Missouri 1878; was elected to the Municipal Assembly of St. Louis in 1879 and re-elected in 1881; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,621 votes, against 9,560 votes for C. F. Joy, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT. City oF St. Louls.— The 1st, 2d, 3d, 15th, 17th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 22d, 23d, 25th, and 27th wards. Seth W. Cobb, of St. Louis, was born in Southampton County, Virginia, December 5, 1838; received a common-school education ; joined a volunteer company from his native county in 1861, and served throughout the war in the Army of Northern Virginia; removed to St. Louis in 1867 and worked as clerk in a grain commission house for three years; engaged in the same business on his own account in 1870 and has continued in that business since; has never held or sought a political office; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiying 10,576 votes, against 6,962 votes for P. J. Prosser, Republican, 118 votes for Bauer, Union Labor candidate, and 317 votes for Thos. Field, Prohibitionist. . TENTH DISTRICT. City OF ST. Louis.—7%e 5th, 7th, gth, r1th, and r3th wards. COUNTIES.—S?. Louis, except St. Ferdinand Township; Jefferson, Washington, St. Francots, Ste. Genevieve, Perry, Madison, Iron, and Reynolds. Sam Byrns, of Potosi, was born on a farm in Jefferson County, Missouri, March 4, 1848; received a good English education; studied law and was admitted to the bar of Missouri at Hillsboro, in 1872; was appointed in 1872 Collector of Revenue for Jefferson County; was nominated by the Democratic Convention in 1876 Presidential Elector for the Fifth Congres- sional District; was elected in 1876 a member of the twenty-ninth General Assembly to rep- resent Jefferson County; was a member of the Committee on Judiciary; was elected State Senator for the twenty-sixth Senatorial district in 1878, and was Chairman of the Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence; was a member of the Democratic State Central Committee 1886 to 1888; was Democratic Presidential Elector for the Tenth Congressional District in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,744 votes, against 15,095 votes for William M. Kinsey, Republican, 52 votes for Isaac M. Baker, Prohibitionist, and 3 votes scattering. ; ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.— Callaway, Cole, Crawford, Dent, Gasconade, Laclede, Maries, Miller, Osage, Phelps, Pulaski, Texas, and Wright. Richard Parks Bland, of Lebanon, was born near Hartford, Kentucky, August 19, 1835; received an academic education; removed to Missouri in 18535, thence to California, and thence to that portion of Utah now Nevada, locating at Virginia City; practiced law; was interested in mining operations in California and Nevada; was County Treasurer of Carson County, Utah Territory, from 1860 until the organization of the State government of Nevada; returned to Missouri in 1865; located at Rolla, Missouri, and practiced law with his brother, C. C. Bland, until he removed to Lebanon in August, 1869, and continued his practice there; was elected to the Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty- ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,991 votes, against 14,881 votes for John W. Erwin, Republican, > MONTANA J: Senators and Representatives. 71 TWELFTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.— Barton, Bates, Cass, Cedar, Dade, Henry, Jasper, St. Clair, and Vernon. David A. De Armond, of Butler, was born in Blair County, Pennsylvania, March 18, 1844; ‘was brought upon a farm ; educated'in the common schools, and at Williamsport Dickinson Seminary; was Presidential Elector in 1 884; was State Senator, Circuit Judge, and Missouri Supreme Court Commissioner; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,556 votes, against 14,441 votes for W. B. Lewis, Republican, 8,535 votes for George M. Wikoff, Union Labor, and 210 votes for V. B. Wisker, Prohibitionist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Barry, Christian, Greene, Lawrence, McDonald, Newton, Stone, Taney, and Webster. ; : Robert W. Fyan, of Marshfield, was born in Pennsylvania; emigrated to Missouri and settled in Marshfield in 1858; was Captain and Major of the Twenty-fourth Missouri Volun- teer Infantry, and Colonel of the Forty-sixth Volunteer Infantry (Federal); was Circuit Attorney of the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit from 1865 to 1866; was elected judge of the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit in 1866; was re-elected to the same position in 1868, 1374, and 1880, having four years to serve when he was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress in 1882; was a member of the Constitutional Convention that framed the present Constitution of Mis- souri; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,488 votes, against 13,728 votes for W. H. Wade, Republican, and 803 votes for Vertrees, Union Labor. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bollinger, Butler, Cape Girardeau, Carter, Douglas, Dunklin, Howell, Missis- sippi, New Madrid, Oregon, Ozark, Pemiscot, Ripley, Scott, Shannon, Stoddard, and Wayne. Marshall Arnold, of Benton, was born in St. Francois County, Missouri, October 21, 1845; was educated in the common schools; was Piofessor in Arcadia College in 1870 and 1871; has been Deputy Clerk of the Circuit, County, and Probate Courts in St. Francois County, Missouri; was Prosecuting Attorney of Scott County, Missouri; served two terms in the Legislature of Missouri; was Presidential ‘Elector on the Hancock ticket, was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 19,312 votes, against 13,037 votes for J. W. Rogers, Republican, MONTANA. SENATORS. Wilbur F. Sanders, of Helena, was born in Leon, Cattaraugus County, New York, May 2, 1834; was educated in the common and high schools of his native State; taught school in New York; removed to Ohio in 1854, where he continued in that work; studied law at Akron, Ohio, and was admitted to the bar in 1856; recruited a company of infantry and a battery in tlie summer of 1861, and in October following was commissioned a First Lieu- tenant in the Sixty-fourth Ohio, of which regiment he was made Adjutant; was Acting Assistant Adjutant-General on the staff of General James W. Forsyth; assisted in 1862 in the construc- tion of defenses along the railroads south of Nashville; ill health compelled his resignation, and he located in Idaho (now Montana), where he has been engaged in the practice of law and interested in mining and stock-raising; was selected to prosecute robbers and murderers before popular tribunals organized to maintain public order; was the Republican candidate for Delegate to Congress in 1864,’67,’80, and 86; was Delegate to the Republican National Con- ventions in 1868, ’72, ’76, and ’84; was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Montana from 1872 till 1880, inclusive; was appointed United States Attorney for Montana by Presi- dent Grant in 1872, but declined the office; for twenty-five years was President of the Histori- cal Society of Montana; is president of the Board of Trustees of the Montana University; in 1868 was Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Republican, January I, 1890, and took his seat April 16, 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. lm 5 : 72 Congressional Directory. [NEBRASKA. Thomas C. Power, of Helena, was born on a farm near Dubuque, Iowa, May 22, 1839; received his primary education in the common schools, and took a three years’ course in civil engineering at Sinsiniwa College, Wisconsin; followed his profession summers and taught school winters for three years; went with a surveying party to Dakota in (860; soon thereafter engaged in the mercantile business on the Missouri River, and continued in that business till 1867, in which year he located at Fort Benton, the head of navigation; was President of the ‘Benton P.” line of steamers; is interested in cattle, mines, and various mer- cantile companies; located in Helena, his present home, in 1878; is married; was elected a member of the first Constitutional Convention of Montana in 1883; was a Delegate to the Re- publican National Convention in 1888; was nominated by the Republicans of his State for Governor in 1889, and was defeated by J. K. Toole, Democrat, by 576 votes; was elected to the United States Senate January 2, 1890; took his seat April 16, 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. William Wirt Dixon, of Butte City, was born in Brooklyn, New York, June 3, 1838; removed to Illinois in 1843,and went from there to Keokuk, Iowa, in 1849; read law at Keokuk, and was admitted to the bar in 1858; never attended college; lived in Tennessee and Arkansas in 1860; went to California in 1862,and same year settled in Humboldt County, Nevada; remained there until 1866, when he removed to Montana ; resided in Helena and Deer Lodge until 1879; spent two years in the Black Hills, and returned to Montana in 1881, and settled at Butte City, where he has resided since; has always been engaged in the prac- tice of law; was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Montana Territory in 1871-72; was a member of the Constitutional Conventions of Montana of 1884-'89; has held no other office; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,411 votes, against 15,128 votes for Thomas H. Carter, Republican, 389 votes for Corbly, Prohibitionist, and 162 votes for William T. Fields, Labor candidate. NEBRASKA. SENATORS. Charles F. Manderson, of Omaha, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, February 9, 1837; was educated in the schools of his native city; removed to Canton, Ohio, in 1856, where he studied law, and was called to the bar in 1859; was elected City Solicitor of that city in 1860, and in April, 1861, entered the Army as First Lieutenant Company A, Nineteenth Regiment Ohio Infantry; participated in the campaign under General McClellan in West Virginia in the summer of 1861, and afterwards in the campaigns of the Army of the Cumberland ; rose through the grades of Captain, Major, Lieutenant-Colonel, and Colonel of the Nineteenth Ohio Infantry, being in command of the regiment from the date of the battle of Shiloh; on September 2, 1864, at the battle of Lovejoy’s Station, he was severely wounded, and, because of disability from such wound, resigned in April, 1865; in March, 1865, he was brevetted Brigadier-General of Volunteers, United States Army, “for gallant, long-continued, and meritorious service during the war of the rebellion; ”’ he continued the practice of law at Canton, Ohio, being twice elected as District Attorney, until November, 1869, when he removed to Omaha, Nebraska, where he has since resided and practiced law; for six years he was City Attorney at Omaha, and in 1871, and again in 1874, was elected by both political parties as a member of the Constitutional Convention for those years; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Alvin Saunders, Republican, and took his seat December 3, 1883, and was re-elected in 1888; was elected President pro Zempore in April, 1891, to succ eed John J. Ingalls. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. Algernon S. Paddock, of Beatrice, was born at Glens Falls, Warren County, New York, November 9, 1830; was educated at an academy in his native town, taking there the regular Union college course; in the early spring of 1857 he went to Nebraska and was soon after- wards admitted to the bar. He took a prominent part in the general development of the Ter ritory, and afterwards of the State; was a candidate for the legislature in 1858,a delegate to the first Territorial Republican conventionin 1859, a delegate to the Republican national con- vention at Chicago in 1860, which nominated Abraham Lincoln for President, and was also a NEBRASKA. | Senators and Representatives. . 73 delegate to the Republican national convention at Baltimore in 1864, which renominated Mr. Lincoln; he was appointed Secretary of the Territory of Nebraska by President Lincoln in April, 1861,and held this office until the admission of Nebraska asa State in 1867; acted as Governor part of this period ; removed from Omaha to Beatrice, and engaged in manufactur- ing and agriculture; was an independent Republican candidate for Congress in 1866; in 1868 was appointed Governor of Wyoming Territory, but declined to accept the office; was elected U. S. Senator from Nebraska as a Republican, to succeed Thomas W. Tipton, receiving nearly all the votes of both the Republican and Democratic members of the legislature; took his seat in the Senate March 4, 1875, and served until March 4, 1881; was appointed a mem- ber of the Utah Commission in June, 1882, by President Arthur, on which he served until October 1, 1886, when he resigned; was again elected U. S. Senator in January, 1887, to succeed Hon. Charles H. Van Wyck. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cass, Douglas, Gage, Johnson, Lancaster, Nemaha, Otoe, Pawnee, Richardson, Sarpy, and Saunders. William Jennings Bryan, of Lincoln, was born in Salem, Marion County, Illinois. March 19, 1860; attended public school until fifteen years of age, spending his vacations on the farm; in the fall of 1875 entered Whipple Academy at Jacksonville, Illinois; entered Illinois College, Jacksonville, in 1877; completed a classical course and was graduated with the highest honors in 1881; attended Union College of Law, Chicago, Illinois, for two years, during which time he was connected with the office of ex-Senator Lyman Trumbull; began the practice of his profession at Jacksonville; removed to Lincoln, Nebraska, October I, 1887, and became a member of the firm of Talbot & Bryan; never held an elective office prior to his election to Congress; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, reeeiving 32,376 votes, against 25,663 votes for William J. Connell, Republican, 13,066 votes for Allen Root, Independent, 1,670 votes for E. H. Chapin, Prohibitionist, and 8 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Butler, Chase, Clay, Dundy, Fillmore, Franklin, Frontier, Furnas, Gosper, Hamilton, Harlan, Hayes, Hitchcock, Jefferson, Kearney, Nuckolls, Phelps, Polk, Red, Willow, Saline, Seward, Thayer, Webster, and York. William Arthur McKeighan, of Red Cloud, was born of Irish parents in Cumberland County, New Jersey, January 19, 1842; removed with his parents to Fulton County, Illinois, in 1848, where he lived on a farm and attended the common school; enlisted in the Eleventh Regiment Illinois Cavalry, September, 1861 ; at the close of the war settled on a farm near Pontiac, Illinois ; took an active part in organizing the Farmers’ Association; was elected Vice- President for the Eighth Congressional District; removed to Nebraska in 1880, and settled on farm near Red Cloud; took an active interest in organizing the Alliance; was elected County Judge of Webster County in 1885; in 1886 was Democratic candidate for Congress against Hon. James Laird and was defeated; was again nominated for Congress by the Alliance, or Independent party, was indorsed by the Democratic Convention, and elected to the Fifty- second Congress as an Independent, receiving 36,104 votes, against 21,776 votes for N. V. Harlan, Republican, and 1,220 votes for L. B. Palmer, Prohibitionist, and 16 votes scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—dAntelope, Arthur, Banner, Blaine, Boone, Box Butte, Brown, Buffalo, Burt, Cedar, Cheyenne, Cherry, Colfax, Cuming, Custer, Dakota, Dawes, Dawson, Deuel, Dixon, Dodge, Garfield, Grant, Greeley, Hall, Holt, Hooker, Howard, Keya Paha, Keith, Kimball, Knox, Lincoln, Logan, Loup, Madison, McPherson, Merrick, Nance, Perkins, Pierce, Platte, Rock, Scott's Bluff, Sheridan, Sherman, Sioux, Stanton, Thomas, Thurston, Val- ley, Washington, Wayne, and Wheeler. Omer Madison Kem, of Broken Bow, was born in Wayne County, Indiana, November 13, 1855; was brought up on a farm and received a common school education; removed to Custer County, Nebraska, in March, 1882, where he entered land under the homestead law ; resided on this homestead until January, 1890, when he removed to Broken Bow to fill an appointment 74 - Congressional Directory. [NEVADA. as Deputy Treasurer of Custer County; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as an Inde- pendent, receiving 31,831 votes, against 25,440 for George W. E. Dorsey, Republican, 22,353 votes for W. H. Thompson, Democrat, g61 votes for W. L, Pierce, Prohibitionist, and 57 votes scattering. NEVADA. SENATORS. John P. Jones, of Gold Hill, was born in Herefordshire, England, in 1830, and came with his parents to this country when he was less than a year old, settling in the northern part of Ohio, where he attended public school in Cleveland for a few years; in the early part of the California excitement he went to that State, and engaged in mining in one of the inland counties; was subsequently a member of the State Senate; went to Nevada in 1867, and since then has been entirely engaged in the development of the mineral resources of that State; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed J. W. Nye, Republican; took his seat March 4, 1873, and was re-elected in 1879, 1885, and 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. : William Morris Stewart, of Carson City, was born in Lyons, Wayne County, New York, August 9, 1827; removed with his parents while a small child to Mesopotamia Township, Trumbull County, Ohio; attended lyons Union School and Farmington Academy; was teacher of mathematics in the former school while yet a pupil; with the little money thus earned and the assistance of James C. Smith, one of the Judges of the Supreme Court of New York, he entered Yale College, remaining there till the winter of 1849-50, when, attracted by the gold discoveries in California, he found his way thither, arriving at San Francisco in May, 1850; he immediately engaged in mining with pick and shovel in Nevada County, and in this way accumulated some money; in the spring of 1852 he commenced the study of law under John R. McConnell, and in December following was appointed District Attorney, to which office he was elected at the general election of the next year; in 1854 was appointed Attorney-General of California; in 1860 he mioved to Virginia City, Nevada, where he was largely engaged in early mining litigation and in the development of the Comstock lode; was chosen a member of the Territorial Council in 1861; in 1863 was elected a member of the Constitutional Convention; was elected United States Senator in 1864 and re-elected in 1869; in 1875 he resumed the practice of law in Nevada, California, and the Pacific Coast generally, and was thus engaged when elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, in 1887, to succeed James G. Fair, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. COUNTIES.— Churchill, Douglas, Elko, Esmerelda, Eureka, Humboldt, Lander, Lincoln, Lyon, Nye, Ormsby, Storey, Washoe, White Pine. Horace F. Bartine, of Carson City, was born in New York City, New York, March 21, 1848; attended the common schools until fifteen years of age; at the age of fifteen years and four months enlisted as a private soldier in the Eighth New Jersey Regiment, serving during the last two years of the late civil war; was wounded in the breast at the battle of the Wilder- ness, but speedily recovered and rejoined his regiment, and participated in nearly all the prin- cipal engagements in which the Army of the Potomac was engaged until the surrender at Ap. pomattox; in 1869 removed to Nevada, in which State he has since resided; during the greater part of the time from 1869 to 1876 he was engaged as a mill hand and in the manufacture of sulphate of copper for milling purposes, endeavoring in the mean time, by studying nights, to supply the defects in his education; in 1876 began the study of law, devoting his evenings to that purpose; in 1880 was admitted to the bar, and is now a practitioner in all the courts, State and Federal, within the State of Nevada; was a candidate for the office of Justice of the Supreme Court of the State at the last Republican convention, but yielded to the general de- sire that he should accept the Congressional nomination; served one term of two years as District Attorney of Ormsby County; is married; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-electedt o the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 6,610 votes, against 5,736 votes for George W, Cassidy, Democrat, and 34 votes for Ward, Prohibitionist. \ nt £ — a ER i E _= NEW HAMPSHIRE. | Senators and Representatives. 735 NEW HAMPSHIRE. SENATORS. William Eaton Chandler, of Concord, was born in Concord, New Hampshire, Decem- ber 28,1835; received a common-school education; studied law; graduated at Harvard Law School, and was admitted to thebarin 1855; in 1859 was appointed Reporter of the Decisions of the Supreme Court; was a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives in 1862, ’63, and ’64, serving as Speaker during the last two years; on March 9, 1865, became Solicitor and Judge-Advocate-General of the Navy Department; was appointed First Assist- ant Secretary of the Treasury June 17, 1865, and resigned that office November 30, 1867; in 1876 was a member of the New Hampshire Constitutional Convention ; in 1881 was again ‘amember of the New Hampshire House of Representatives ; on March 23, 1881, was appointed by President Garfield Solicitor-General, but was rejected by the Senate; was appointed by . President Arthur Secretary of the Navy April 12, 1882, and served till March 7, 1885; was elected to the United States Senate June 14; 1887, as a Republican, to fill the unexpired term of Austin F. Pike, which ended March 3, 1889; was re-elected June 18, 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. Jacob H. Gallinger, of Concord, was born in Cornwall, Ontario, March 28, 1837; received a common school and academic education ; was a printer in early life ; studied medicine and was graduated in May, 1858, and has practiced medicine and surgery since; is a member of various State and National medical societies, and has a practice which extends beyond the limits of his own State ; was a member of the State House of Representatives of New Hamp- shire in 1872-’73 and 1891 ; was a member of the Constitutional Convention in 1876; was a member of the State Senate in 1878, 1879, and 1880, being President of that body the last two years; was Surgeon-General of New Hampshire with the rank of Brigadier-General in r879-’80; received the honorary degree of A. M. from Dartmouth College ; was Chairman of the Republican State Committee from 1882 to 1890, when he resigned the place ; was chairman of the delegation from his State io the Republiean National Convention of 1888; was elected to the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses as a Republican, and declined renomination to the Fifty-first Congress; was elected United States Senator to succeed Henry W. Blair, whose term of service expired March 3, 1891; his term of service commenced March 4, 1891, and will expire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Belknap, Carroll, Rockingham, and Strafford. HiLLsBOROUGH COUNTY.—Zowns: Bedford, Goffstown, Merrimack, Hudson, Litchfield, Manchester, and Pelham. MERRIMACK COUNTY.— Towns: Allenstown, Canterbury, Chichester, Epsom, Hooksett, London, Northfield, Pembroke, and Fillsfield. Luther Franklin McKinney, of Manchester, was born near Newark, Ohio, April 25, 1841 ; spent his early life on a farm with his father; after he was eighteen years old spent his winters in teaching; in August, 1861, cnlisted in the First Ohio Cavalry, and served as a Sergeant in Company D until February, 1863, when he was discharged on account of disa- bility ; in 1865 removed to Iowa, where he devoted his time to farming and teaching for two years; in 1867 entered St. Lawrence University at Canton, New York; studied for the min- istry, graduating in June, 1870; his first pastorate was in the State of Maine; removed to New Hampshire in 1873; was the Democratic candidate for Congress in 1884, but was de- feated ; was elected to the Fiftieth Congress in 1886; was again defeated in 1888, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,732 votes, against 20,499 votes for David Arthur Taggart, Republican, and 569 votes for Frank K. Chase, Prohi- bitionist, and 15 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan. HiLLsBOROUGH COUNTY.— Zowns. Amherst, Antrim, Bennington, Brookline, Deering, Fran- cestown, Greenfield, Greenville, Hancock, Hillsborough, Hollis, Lyndeborough, Mason, Milford, Mount Vernon, Nashua, New Boston, New [pswich, Peterborough, Sharon, Temple, Weare, Wilton, and Windsor. 76 Congressional Directory. [NEW JERSEY. MERRIMACK COUNTY.— Towns. Andover, Boscawen, Bow, Bradford, Concord, Danbury, Dun- barton, Franklin, Henniker, Hill, Hopkinton, Newbury, New London, Salisbury, Sutton, Warner, Webster, and Wilmot. Warren Fisher Daniell, of Franklin, was born in Newton Lower Falls, Massachusetts, June 26, 1826; removed to Franklin, New Hampshire, with his parents in 1834, and has resided there since; was educated in the common schools; entered his father’s paper mill when fourteen years of age, and has been thus employed as a journeyman or proprietor most of the time; was a member of the State House of Representatives six and of the State Senate two years; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,426 votes against 21,077 votes given for Orren C. Moore, Republican, and 538 votes for Charles H. Thorndyke, Prohibitionist, and 15 votes scattering. NEW JERSEY. ’ : SENATORS. Rufus Blodgett, of Long Branch, was born in Dorchester, New Hampshire, October g, 1834; received a common-school and academic education; at the age of eighteen was ap- prenticed to the Amoskeag Locomotive Works, of Manchester, New Hampshire, where he learned the trade of locomotive building ; removed to New Jersey in 1866 and engaged in rail- road business, and is so engaged at present; is President of the First National Bank of Long Branch ; was a member of the New Jersey Legislature, House of Assembly, 1878-80; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Cincinnati in 1880; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Hon. W. J. Sewell, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. John Rhoderic McPherson, of Jersey City, was born at York, Livingston County, New York, May 9, 1833; received a common-school and academic education; removed to Jersey City, New Jersey, in 1859; was elected a member of the Board of Aldermen of Jersey City in 1864, and held that office for six years, serving for three years as President of the Board; was President of the People’s Gas-Light Company during the years 1868-69; was a member of the State Senate of New Jersey in 1871-73; was a Presidential Elector on the Tilden and Hendricks ticket in 1876; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed F. T. Frelinghuysen, Republican; took his seat March 5, 1877; was re-elected in 1883 and again in 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. ~ REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, and Salem. Christopher Augustus Bergen, of Camden, was born at Bridge Point, Somerset County, New Jersey, August 2, 1841; was educated at Harlingen School, at Edge Hill Classical School, and at Princeton College, graduating from the Academic Department in 1863; studied law, and was licensed by the Supreme Court of New Jersey as an attorney at law November, 1866, and as a counselor at law November, 1869; is married; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving19,082 votes, against 16,372 votes for William M. Newell, Democrat, and 2,007 votes for William H. Nicholson, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Atlantic, Burlington, Mercer, and Ocean. James Buchanan, of Trenton, was born at Ringoes, Hunterdon County, New Jersey, June 17, 1839; wasraised on a farm, and educated at public schools and Clinton Academy; studied law at the Albany University, and for four years in the law office of Hon. John T. Bird, now Vice-Chancellor of New Jersey; was admitted to practice in 1864; was Reading Clerk of the New Jersey Legislature in 1866; was a member of the Board of Education of Trenton, New Jersey, in 1868-69; was Presiding Judge of Mercer County 1874,°75,°76,°77,’78, and ~ "19; was a member of the Common Council of Trenton in 1883, 84,85; was elected to the NEW JERSEY. ] Senators and Representatives. 7 Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Republican, receiving 17,515 votes, against 16,352 votes for Wilson Haven, Dem- ocrat, and 1,200 votes for Brown, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. > COUNTIES.— Middlesex, Monmouth, and Union. Jacob Augustus Geissenhainer, of Freehold, was born in the city of New York in 1841; was graduated from Columbia College, receiving the degrees of A. B.and A. M., and afterwards studied law at Yale and at the New York University, receiving the degree of LL. B.; com- menced the practice of law in New York City in 1863, which he still continues, giving his attention specially to conveyancing; is married; was never in public service; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiv- ing 20,266 votes, against 15,748 votes for Amos Clark, jr., Republican, and 1,123 votes for Snyder, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Hunterdon, Somerset, Sussex, and Warren. ‘Samuel Fowler, of Newton, was born at Franklin, Sussex County, New Jersey, March 22, 1851; was educated at Newton Collegiate Institute, Princeton College, and Columbia College Law School; was admitted to the bar of New York in 1873 and of New Jersey in 1876; has since practiced law in Newark and Newton, New Jersey; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,459 votes, against 8,775 votes for Richard F. Goodman, Republican, and 1,583 votes for Schenk, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bergen, Morris, and Passaic. Cornelius A. Cadmus, of Paterson, was born in Bergen County, New Jersey, October 7, 1844 ; attended the public schools of his native county; was elected a member of the House General Assembly from Passaic County in 1883; was elected Sheriff of Passaic County in 1887 for three years; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,815 votes, against 15,459 votes for Charles D. Beckwith, Republican, and 1,069 votes for Bradbrook, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTY.— Kssex. Thomas Dunn English, of Newark, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, June 29, 1819; was graduated Doctor of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania in 1839, and called to the Philadelphia bar in 1842, but has mainly pursued authorship and journalism; in 1863-64 served in the New Jersey Legislature ; in 1876 received the degree of Doctor of Laws from William and Mary College, Virginia; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 23,278 votes, against 21,468 votes for Elias M. Condit, Republican, and 995 votes for John R. Anderson, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTY of Hudson, including the cities of Jersey City and Hoboken. Edward Francis McDonald, of Harrison, was born in Ireland, September 21, 1844, and came to this country with his parents during his infancy; his education was obtained in the public schools; is a skilled mechanic, having learned the trade of machinist, which he fol- lowed up to 1875; was elected to the New Jersey Assembly in 1874; in 1877 was elected Director at large of the Board of Chosen Freeholders of Hudson County, and re-elected in 1879, serving four years; in 1884 was chosen Presidential Elector by the Democratic State Convention, but declined the office; in 1889 was elected State Senator but was unseated for purely partisan reasons; was restored to his seat by the next Senate, and resigned to begin his term as Congressman; was a soldier in the late civil war, enlisting in 1861, before he was seventeen years old in the Seventh Regiment New Jersey Volunteers, serving under McClellan and Hooker; is largely interested in the business of real estate; was town Treasurer for ten years, until he declined a further election; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,875 votes, against 16,761 votes for Thomas McEwen, Republican, and 448 votes for Brown, Prohibitionist. 78 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. NEW YORK. SENATORS. Frank Hiscock, of Syracuse, was born in Pompey, September 6, 1834; received an academic education; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1855 and commenced to practice at Tully, Onondaga County; was elected District Attorney of Onondaga County, serving 1860-’63; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention in 1867; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Warner Miller, and took his seat March 4, 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. David Bennett Hill, of Elmira, was born in Havana, Schuyler (then Chemung) County, New York, August 29, 1843; was graduated from the Havana Academy; studied law in Elmira, and admitted to the bar in November, 1864, at the age of twenty-one; within a few months he was appointed City Attorney; in 1871, and again in 1872, was elected from Chemung County to the State Assembly; was President of the Democratic State Conventions in 1877 and in 1881; was elected Mayor of Elmira in 1882; was President of the New York State Bar Association in 1886, and again in 1887; was chosen Lieutenant-Governor of the State in November, 1882; became Governor, in the place of Grover Cleveland, in January, 1885; was elected Governor in November, 1885; re-elected in 1888; and in 1891 was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed William M. Evarts. His term of office will expire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. a COUNTIES.— Queens, Rickmond, and Suffolk. James W. Covert, of Long Island City, was born at Mill Neck, Queens County, New York, September 2, 1842; was admitted to the bar in 1863, and has since practiced his pro- fession in Queens County and in New York City; was elected School Commissioner for his county in 1866; was elected Surrogate in 1870; was elected to the State Senate from the First Senatorial District and served during 1882-83; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiv- ing 18,999 votes, against 14,085 votes for John Lewis Childs, Republican, 869 votes for Ellisworth J. Johnson Prohibitionist, and 436 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. County OF KINGS—7%e 8th, gth, 12th, 22d, 24th, 25th and 206th wards of the City of Brooklyn and the towns of Flatlands, Flatbush, New Utrecht, and Gravesend. Alfred C. Chapin, of Brooklyn, was born at South Hadley, Massachusetts, March 8, 1848; resided in Springfield, Massachusetts, in Keene, New Hampshire, and in Rutland, Vermont; was educated at public and private schools, and at Williams College, from which latter he was graduated in 1869, and at Harvard Law School, from which he graduated in 1871; re- moved to New York in 1871; was a member of the New York Assembly in 1882, and in 1883, being speaker in the latter year ; was elected State Comptroller in 1883,and re-elected in 1885; was elected Mayor of Brooklyn in 1887, and re-elected in 1889; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 24,081 votes against 21,566 votes for Henry Bristow, Republican. * THIRD DISTRICT. City OF BROOKLYN, COUNTY OF, KINGS.— 7%e territory comprised in the present 7th, 13th, Igth, 20th, 21st, und 23d wards. William J. Coombs, of Brooklyn, was born in Jordan, Onondaga County, New York, December 24, 1833; removed to New York City in early life, and for many years has resided in Brooklyn; is one of the pioneers in the business of exporting American goods, having been engaged in that business over thirty-five years; was the unsuccessful Independent and Demo- cratic candidate for Congress in 1888; and was elected to the Fifty-sécond Congress’as a Democrat, receiving 15,670 votes, against 15,652 votes for William C. Wallace, Republican, 338 votes for Freeborn Garretson, Prohibitionist, 341 votes for Matthew Loven, Socialist, and 241 votes scattering. «= Li | { i NEW YORK.] Senators and Representatives. 79 FOURTH DISTRICT. CITY OF BROOKLYN.— 7e territory comprised in the 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 10th, and 11th wards of the city of Brooklyn, County of Kings. : John M. Clancy, of Brooklyn, was born in Ireland, May 7, 1837, and immigrated with his parents to New York; was educated at the public schools of Brooklyn; is in real estate; unmarried; served as an Alderman of the city of Brooklyn from 1868 to 1875; was a member of the State Assembly from 1878 to 1881; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,216 votes, against 8,454 votes for Andrew J. Perry, Republican, 287 votes for Andrew L. Martin, Prohibitionist, and 445 defective and scattering. FIFTH DISTRICT. CITY -OF BROOKLYN.— 77%e territory comprised in the present 14th, 15th, 16th, ryih, and 18th wards. Thomas F. Magner, of Brooklyn, was born in the city of Brooklyn, March 8, 1860; was a member of the Assembly one year, which office he held when elected to the Fifty-first Congress; was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,470 votes, against 10,814 votes for John R. Smith, Republican, 870 votes for Gustav Schaefer, Prohi- bitionist, 33 votes for John Brenen, Labor, and 469 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. City oF NEW YORK.—zs?, 52%, and gth Assembly districts of the county of New York. John R. Fellows, of New York, was born in Troy, New York, July 29, 1832; removed to Camden, Arkansas, 1850, and made his home in the family of an uncle, his father’s brother; read law there and was admitted to the bar; was a member of the firm of Bragg & Fellows when the war began; entered the Southern Army in the First Arkansas Regiment; after the battle of Shiloh was assigned to staff duties as Assistant Adjutant and Inspector General, and ordered to report to General Van Dorn, at Vicksburg; was assigned to the staff of Brigadier- General W. N. R. Bell, commanding a district in General Van Dorn’s department; was captured at the surrender of Port Hudson, Louisiana, July 9, 1863, and released June 10, 1865 ; returned to Arkansas, and was elected to the State Senate; removed to New York City in 1868; was appointed Assistant District Attorney in 1869; was elected District Attorney in 1887; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,170 votes, against 5,574 votes for Cornelius Donovan, Republican, 1,928 votes for Edwin L. Abbett, County Democrat, 118 votes for Nathan W. Cady, Union Labor, and gog votes defective, blank, and scattering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. City OF NEW YORK.— T%e 2d, 3d, and 7th Assembly districts of the county of New York. Edward J. Dunphy, of New York, was born in New York City, New York, May 12, 1856; received his primary education in the public schools of his native city, and in 1871 began ‘a collegiate course at Mount St. .Mary’s College, Emmitsburg, Maryland, where, in 1876, he received the degree of A. B.; in 1878 the degree of A. M., and, in 1891, the degree of LLL. D.; was engaged in the practice of law until elected to the Fifty-first Con- gress; was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Tammany Democrat, receiving 10,855 votes, against 4,351 votes for William Morgan, Republican, 2,787 votes for Williara T. Croasdale, County Democrat, 99 votes for William S. Pulver, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. City OF NEW YORK.— 7%e 4th, 6th, and Sth Assembly districts (or 7th, roth, and 13th wards). Timothy J. Campbell, of New York City, was born in County Cavan, Ireland, in 1841, and came to this country when five years old ; attended the public schools in the city of New York; learned the printing business and worked on the New York Times, Express, Tribune, and Herald; was employed as a printer on the Herald when he was nominated in 1867 forthe State Assembly by the Democracy of his district; elected to the Assembly in 1868, ’69, ’70, 71,’72, and ’73; served on all leading and important committees and took an active part in I _ 8o Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. the legislation during this period ; was re-elected to the Assembly in 1875; studied law with Judge Flanagan, and was admitted to the bar in November, 1869; was elected Justice of the Fifth District Civil Court in New York City in 1875; served six years in this capacity; was ad- mitted to the U. S. Supreme Court in 1888 ; in 1883 was returned to the State Assembly; sup- ported the administration of Governor Cleveland while in the legislature, and was nominated for State Senator in opposition to the Tammany candidate and was elected by 5,547 majority; before his term expired a vacancy occurred in the Eighth Congressional District of New York, by the appointment of S. S. Cox as Minister to Turkey, and Mr. Campbell was nom- inated and elected to the Forty-ninth Congress to fill the vacancy thus created ; was re-elected to the Fiftieth Congress, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, re- ceiving 15,958 votes, against 3,840 votes for Samuel Rinaldo, Republican, 595 votes for Al- exander Jonas, Prohibitionist, 100 votes for William Brown, Union Labor, and goo votes defective, blank, and scattering. NINTH DISTRICT. C11y OF NEW YORK.— 7Vse 10th, 12th, and 14th Assembly districts of the county of New York. Amos J. Cummings, of New York City, was born in Conkling, Broome County, New York, May 15, 1841; received a common-school education; entered a printing office as an appren- tice when twelve years of age, and has set type in nearly every State in the Union; was a boy with Walker in the last invasion of Nicaragua; was Sergeant-Majorin the Twenty-Sixth New Jersey Regiment of Infantry, Second Brigade, Second Division, Army of the Potomac ; has filled editorial positions on the New York Tribune, under Horace Greeley; on the New York Sun, New York Express, and was Editor of the Evening Sun when elected to the Fiftieth Con- gress; declined a renomination, preferring to give his whole attention to editorial work; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, as a Democrat, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Samuel Sullivan Cox, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 14,252 votes, against 4,462 votes for John Weiss, Republican, 1,072 votes for Christian Ensminger, Labor, 66 votes for Irving S. Roney, Prohibitionist, and 1,436 votes scattering. TENTH DISTRICT. City oF NEW YORK.— 7%e 11th, 16th, and 18th Assembly districts of the county of New York. William Bourke Cockran, of New York, was born in Ireland, February 28, 1854; was educated in France and in his native country; removed to America when seventeen years of age; soon after his arrival received the appointment of teacher in a private academy; was principal of a public school in Westchester County, New York; while engaged in teaching read law, and was admitted to the bar in 1876; was a member of the Fiftieth Congress ; was a member of the commission to revise the Judiciary Article of the Constitution of the State of New York; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, to fill the va- cancy caused by the death of Francis B. Spinola, receiving 13,234 votes, against 7,160 for James E. Townsend, Republican, and 343 votes for John Hauser, Socialist Labor. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. City OF NEW YORK. — Te 13th, 15th, and 17th Assembly districts of the county of New York. John DeWitt Warner, of New York City, was born in Yates County, New York, in 1851; worked on a farm till seventeen years of age, during which time he managed to pre- pare himself for college; entered Cornell University the first day it opened, in October, 1868, and was graduated therefrom in 1872; after leaving college edited the Ithaca Daily Leader for a few months; was Professor in the Ithaca and Albany Academies, each two years; studied law during his connection with the latter institution at the Albany Law School, from which he graduated, and was admitted to the bar in June, 1876; removed to New York in that year, and has been in the active practice of his profession since; was a member of the Albany Institute, which published his historical researches; is the author of several tariff- reform publications and magazine articles, and has been a public speaker for his party; was alumni trustee of Cornell University, and is now President of Cornell University Club, of New York ; is a Governor of the Delta Kappa Epsilon, Shakespearan and Reform Clubs; was Chair- man of the Reform Club’s Tariff Reform Committee; was never a candidate for office until nominated for Congress by the United Democracy, and was elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 17,033 votes, against 8,850 votes for Charles A. Flammer, Republican, 488 votes for August Freudig, Labor, 173 votes for William H. Draper, Prohi- bitionist, and 1,799 votes scattering, as pe ~~ NEW YORK. | Senators and Representatives, got TWELFTH DISTRICT. City AND COUNTY OF NEW YORK.- Twentieth and Twenty-first Assembly Districts of the county of New York, asnow constituted, and that portion of the Twenty-second Assembly Dis- trict of the county of New York, bounded on the north by the south side of Eighty-sixth Street, on the south by the north side of Fifty-ninth street, on the west by the east side of Lex- ington avenue, and on the east by the East River. Joseph J. Little, of New York, was born in the city of Bristol, England, June 5, 1841; immigrated with his parents to the United States in the Spring of 1846, who settled soon after in the village of Morris, Otsego County, New York; was educated in the village dis- trict school; was apprenticed at the age of fourteen to the local printer, and four years later entered a New York book-printing office to complete his trade; served in the Union Army in 1862, in 1863 and 1864 as Corporal, First Sergeant and First Lieutenant; is Colonel of the Seventy-first Regiment Veteran Association, and member of Lafayette Post No. 140, De- partment of New York, Grand Army of the Republic; was married in 1866 to Josephine, youngest daughter of John Robinson, direct descendant of John Robinson, who came over in the Mayflower; in 1867 established a printing business which still continues under the name of J. J. Little & Company; is a prominent Free Mason; was a member of the Board of Education and Chairman of Committee on Buildings at the time of his election to Con- gress; was an active member of the New York World’s Fair committee; was named as one of the incorporators in the World’s Fair bill passed by the New York Legislature, as also in the Congressional bill introduced on behalf of New York; was elected to the Fifty- second Congress, as a Democrat, to fill the unexpired term of Roswell P. Flower, receiving 19,448 votes, against 11,440 votes for William McMichael, Republican, 1,382 votes for David De Venny, also a Democrat, and 916 votes for John J. Flick, Socialist Labor. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. City oF NEW YORK.— 7%e 19th and 23d Assembly districts of the county of New York, as now constituted, and that portion of the 22d Assembly district bounded on the north by the south side of Ninety-first street, on the south by the north side of Eighty-sixth street, on the west by the east side of Fifth avenue, and east by the East River. Ashbel Parmelee Fitch, of New York City, was born in Mooers, Clinton County, New York, October 8, 1848; was educated in the public schools of New York; Williston Seminary, Easthampton, Massachusetts; the Universities of Jena and Berlin, Germany; and Columbia College Law School, in New York City; was admitted to the bar in November, 1869, and has since practiced his profession in New York City; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 28,268 votes, against 11,820 votes for Percy D. Adams, Republican, 674 votes for Eugene H. Eckbert, Socialist, and 263 votes for Howard Gillespie Myers, Prohibitionist, 2,577 votes scattering. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Westchester, and the 24th Assembly district of the county of New York. William G. Stahlnecker, of Yonkers, was born at Auburn, Cayuga County, New York, June 20,1849; received an academic education; engaged in mercantile business, and is a member of the New York Produce Exchange; was elected Mayor of Yonkers in March, 1884, for aterm of two years, and held the office until the expiration of his term, in April, 1886, serving for a year as both Representative in Congress and Mayor; was a Delegate to the Democratic State Con- vention held at Saratoga, New York, in June, 1884,and also to the National Democratic Con- vention held at Chicago, Illinois, in July, 1884; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, re- ceiving 18,391 votes, against 12,211 votes for J. Thomas Stearns, Republican, 2,561 votes for Alexander Taylor, jr., Independent, 770 votes for Squire T. Willis, Prohibitionist, 492 votes for Frederick Bennetts, Socialist, and 221 scattering. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Orange, Rockland, and Sullivan. Henry Bacon, of Goshen, was born in Brooklyn, New York, March 14, 1846; received an academic education at the Mount Pleasant Academy at Sing Sing and at the Episcopal * Academy, Cheshire, Connecticut; was at Union College, Schenectady, New York, from which he graduated in 1865; studied law and commenced to practice in December, 1866; was elected to the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses as a Democrat, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,640 votes, against 13,061 votes for Clarence Lexow, Republican, 1,074 votes for John A, Helvin, Prohibitionist, and 374 votes scattering, 2D ED—6 = NT / Br —— I I a —— 82 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Columbia, Dutchess, and Putnam. John H. Ketcham, of Dover Plains, was born at Dover, New York, December 21, 1832; received an academic education; became interested in agricultural pursuits; was Supervisor of his town in 1854 and ’55; was a member of the State Assembly of New York in 1856 and 57; was a member of the State Senate of New York in 1860 and '61; entered the Union Army as Colonel of the One hundred and fiftieth Volunteers in October, 1862, and was ap- pointed Brigadier-General, serving until he resigned, in March, 1863, to take the seat in Con- gress to which he had been elected; he was afterwards appointed Major-General by brevet; was elected to the Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, and Forty-second Congresses; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention in 1876; was Commissioner of the District of Columbia from July 3, 1874, until June 30, 1877, when he resigned, having been elected to the Forty-fifth Congress; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty- ninth, 'Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,474 votes, against 4,428 votes for William W. Smith, Prohibitionist, and 4,424 votes blank, defective, and scattering. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Delaware, Greene, and Ulster. Isaac Newton Cox, of Ellenville, was born at Fallsburgh, Sullivan County, New York, August 1, 1846; located at Ellenville in his boyhood, where he received an academic educa- tion, and where he has resided continuously since; was elected Supervisor 1875, 1883, 1884, 1885, and 1886, and served as chairman of the board during the last named year; was chair- man of the committee that effected a settlement with the State by which Ulster County was relieved of the payment of $27,000 for back taxes claimed by the State; served four years on the Democratic State Committee as representative of the Seventeenth Congressional District, and has been frequently sent as delegate to Democratic Conventions, State and local; in 1886 was appointed by President Cleveland Chairman of the Commission to make an examination of the Northern Pacific Railroad; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,439 votes, against 13,429 votes for Theodore C. Teale, Republican and 1,502 votes defective, blank, and scattering. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Rensselaer and Washington. John A. Quackenbush, of Stillwater, was born in Schaghticoke, New York, October 15, 1828; was educated in the district schools and at the academy at Stillwater, New York; isa farmer and speculator in farm products and lumber; is married; was elected Supervisor of his town in 1860, ’61, and 62; was Chairman of the Board of Supervisors of the county of Rensselaer in 1862; was elected a member of the Assembly from the Second District of Rens- selaer County in the fall of 1862; was elected Sheriff of Rensselaer County in the fall of 1873, and served three years; has been a member of the Republican State Central Committee for the last four years, was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty--second Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,185 votes against 15,939 votes for Michael F. Collins, Demo- crat, 1,092 votes for Jonathan F. Hoag, Prohibitionist and 168 votes scattering. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTY.—Albany. Charles Tracey, of Albany, was born in the city of Albany, May 27, 1847; received his education at the Albany Academy, from which he graduated in 1866; served in the Papal Zouaves at Rome, Italy, portions of the years 1867,'68, 69, and ’70; was appointed Aid-de-Camp to Governor Tilden, of New York, January 1, 1875; was appointed, by Governor Robinson, Commissary-General of Subsistence of New York State, January 1, 1877; was appointed Manager of the House of Refuge at Hudson, New York, by Governor Cleveland, and re-ap- pointed to the same office by Governor Hill in 1886; was elected to the Fiftieth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Nicholas T. Kane; was re-elected to the Fifty- first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,021 votes, against 12,942 votes for Angus McDuffie Shoemaker, Republican, 690 votes far Levi Dederick, Labor candidate, and 252 votes scattering. » EE NEW YORK.] Senators and Representatives. 83 TWENTIETH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fulton, Hamilton, Monigomery, Saratoga, and Schenectady. John Sanford, of Amsterdam, was born in Amsterdam, Montgomery County, New York, January 18, 1851; graduated from Yale College in 1872; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,369 votes, against 16,788 votes for Alexander B. Baucus, Democrat, and 1,265 votes for James H. Bronson, Pro- hibitionist, and 326 scattering. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clinton, Essex, Franklin, and Warren. John M. Wever, of Plattsburgh, was born in Ganges, Allegan County, Michigan, Feb- ruary 24, 1847 ; received his education at’ common schools and at Albion College; entered Union Army at age of sixteen; served in Army of Cumberland and Army of the Ohio; at close of war located in New York State and entered into banking business, in which business he has since continued ; was elected County Treasurer of Clinton County in 1884 and re- elected in 1887; was elected to Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,314 votes, against 9,820 votes for Anthony J. B. Ross, Democrat, 810 votes for Charles S. Judd, Prohibitionist, and 229 votes scattering. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Jefferson and St. Lawrence. Newton Martin Curtis, of Ogdensburg, was born in Depeyster, St. Lawrence County, New York, May 21, 1835, of New England parentage; was educated in the common schools and the Gouverneur Wesleyan Seminary; commenced the organization of a company of vol- unteers April 15, 1861; was commissioned Captain May 7th following in the Sixteenth New York Infantry; served in Sixth corps, Army of the Potomac, till October 17, 1862, when he was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, and January 21, 1863, to be Colonel of the One hundred and forty-second New York Infantry; was assigned to command of Second Brigade, Second Division, Tenth Army Corps, June 10, 1864; assigned to command of First brigade, same division and corps, June 25, 1864; commissioned Brigadier General by brevet for distinguished services to date from October 28, 1864; appointed on the field, January 16, 1865, Provisional Brigadier General for gallant services in the capture of Fort Fisher; ap- pointed Major General by brevet for gallant and meritorious services and assigned duty as Chief of Staff of Major General Ord; assigned to command of Southwest Virginia July 1, 1865 ; was seriously wounded in left breast May 7, 1862, and lost his left eye in the battle ‘of Fort Fisher; was mustered out of service January 15, 1866; was appointed Collector of Customs, district of Oswegatchie, New York, in 1866; was appointed special agent U. S. Treasury Department in 1867, which position he resigned in 1880; was employed from 1880 till 1882 by the Department of Justice to assist the United States District Attorney for the Southern District of New York, in preparing for trial and settlement cases pending in the Circuit Court of that district, known as the “Charges and Commissions” cases; was presi- dent of the St. Lawrence County Agricultural Society for five years, and president of the New York State Agricultural Society in 1880; a trustee of the Board of Control of the New York Agricultural Experiment Station from its organization in 1880 to 1891, serving as secretary and later as president of the Board; was a member of the Assembly from 1884 to 1890 in- clusive ; wasrelected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, vice Leslie W. Russell, resigned, receiving 19,096 votes against 14,423 votes for Wilbur F. Porter, Democrat, and 1,357 votes for Alonzo M. Leffingwell, Prohibitionist. : TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT. CoOUNTIES.— Lewis and Oneida. Henry W. Bentley, of Boonville, was born at De Ruyter, Madison County, New York, September 30, 1838; was admitted to the bar in April, 1861, and for thirty years has been actively engaged in the practice of law in Boonville; was elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 15,449 votes, against 14,933 votes for James S. Sherman, Republican, 286 votes for W. F. Curtis, Prohibitionist, and 817 votes scattering. 84 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Herkimer, Otsego, and Schoharie. George Van Horn, of Cooperstown, was born in Otsego County, New York, February 5,1850; was educated in the common schools, the Cooperstown Seminary, and the New Berlin Academy; studied law with Judge Harris, of Cooperstown, and was admitted to the bar in February, 1871; formed a law partnership with James A. Lynes, and practiced law at Cooperstown from January 1, 1873, to January 1, 1882; in the fall of 1881 was elected Clerk of the County of Otsego, and re-elected in 1884; was twice elected Supervisor of the Town of Otsego, and several times a member of the Democratic County Committee; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,127 votes, against 13,929 votes for Frank B. Arnold, Republican, 1,222 votes for Andrew A. Mather, Prohibitionist, and 251 votes scattering. ; TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cortland amd Onondaga. James J. Belden, of Syracuse, was born in Fabius, Onondaga County, September 30, 1825; after receiving an ordinary common-school education he early engaged in mercantile pursuits; has resided since 1853 in Syracuse, where he has large interests in manufactures and other local enterprises; is Director and Trustee in several banks, and President of the Robert Gere Bank, which he established; was for many years extensively engaged in railroad and other public works and improvements throughout the country and in Canada; was elected Mayor of Syracuse in 1877 and re-elected in 1878; was elected to the Fiftieth Congress, to fill the un- expired term of Hon. Frank Hiscock, elected to the United States Senate; was re-elected to the Fifty-first Congress and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, re- ceiving 17,283 votes, against 11,455 votes for William Stitt, Democrat, and 1,547° votes for Andrew N. Vanderbilt, Prohibitionist, and 692 votes scattering. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Broome, Chenango, Madison, and Tioga. George W. Ray, of Norwich, was born in Otselic, Chenango County, New York, February 3, 1844; was brought up on the farm and educated in the common schools and at Norwich Academy; was a private in Company B, Ninetieth New York Volunteers, and Brigade Clerk, First Brigade, First Division, Nineteenth Army Corps, and was discharged at the close of the war; studied law; was admitted to practice in November, 1867, and has practiced his profes- sion since; is largely interested in farming; has been Chairman of the Republican County Committee of his County, and was a member of the Republican State Committee in 1880; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress; is a member of the Board of Education of Norwich Academy and Union Free School; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,804 votes, against 14,402 votes for Thomas H. Beall, Democrat, 2,208 votes for Mott C. Dixon, Prohibitionist, and 355 votes scattering. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cayuga, Oswego, and Wayne. Sereno E. Payne, of Auburn, was born at Hamilton, New York, June 26, 1843; graduated from the University at Rochester in 1864 ; was admitted to the bar in 1866, and has since practiced law at Auburn; was City Clerk of Auburn, 1868-71; was Supervisor of Auburn, 1871-72; was District Attorney of Cayuga County, 1873-79; was President of the Board of Education at Auburn, 1879-'82; was elected to the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Con- gresses, and was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, as a Republican, to fill the vacancy occa- sioned by the death of Newton W. Nutting, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 17,970 votes, against 15,978 votes for Edwin K. Burnham, Democrat, 1,588 votes for Charles Mills, Prohibitionist, and 289 votes scattering. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Chemung, Schuyler, Seneca, and Tompkins. Hosea H. Rockwell, of Elmira, was born in Tioga County, Pennsylvania, in 1840; edu- cated in the common schools; served as private in Twenty-third New York Volunteers; after the war studied law; was admitted to the bar in Elmira in 1869, and has since prac- ticed his profession there ; was a member of the Assembly in 1877, and served on the Judiciary Committee ; for several years was City Attorney of Elmira; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,440 votes, against 12,351 votes for Henry T. Noyes, Republican, 1,171 votes for Isaac C. Andrews, Prohibitionist,and 237 votes scattering. | » . NEW YORK. | Senators and Representatives. 85 TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Ontario, Steuben, and Yates. John Raines, of Canandaigua, was born at Canandaigua, New York, May 6, 1840; was educated in the public schools; taught school three years; studied law two years, and gradu- ated from the Albany Law School in 1861; entered upon the practice of the law at Geneva, New York; raised Company G, Eighty-fifth Regiment New York Volunteers, in 1861, and served in the armies of the Potomac and North Carolina as Captain of that company until July, 1863; was a member of the Assembly of the State of New York in 1881,’82,and ’85; was State Senator in 1886, 87,788, and "89; held that office when elected to Congress; is President of the Board of Education of Canandaigua; was Alternate at large for Hon. C. M. Depew to the Republican National Convention in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,722 votes, against 13,369 votes for De Merville Page, Democrat, 1,540 votes for Daniel J. Chitten&en, Prohibitionist, and 215 votes scattering. THIRTIETH DISTRICT. CouNTY.— Monroe. Halbert Stevens Greenleaf, of Rochester, was born in Guilford, Windham County, Ver- mont, April 12, 1827; was brought up on a farm, and received a common-school and academic education; is a manufacturer of locks—time, combination, and key locks; is also engaged in farming and stock-raising; enlisted as a private soldier in the Union Army, August, 1862; was commissioned Captain in the Fifty-second Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers, Sep- tember 12, 1862; was elected Colonel of the regiment October 23 of the same year, and subse- quently served under General Banks in the Department of the Gulf; was elected Represent- ative to the Forty-eighth Congress as a Democrat; was defeated as a candidate for the Forty- ninth Congress by Charles S. Baker, Republican, and elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,047 votes, against 14,796 for John Van Voorhis, Republican, 1,180 for John J. Cornell, Prohibitionist, and 58 scattering. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Genesee, Livingston, Orleans, and Wyoming. James W. Wadsworth, of Genesee, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, October 12, 1846; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses, and to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 13,716 votes, against 2,275 votes for Alva Carpenter, Prohibitionist, 701 votes for Michael C. Shea, Union-Labor candidate. and 1,879 scattering. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT. City OF BUY¥FALO.—15¢, 2d, and 3d Assembly districts of the county of Erie. Daniel N. Lockwood, of Buffalo, was born at Hamburgh, Erie County, New York, June 1, 1844; graduated at Union College, Schenectady, New York, in 1865; studied law; was admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court in May, 1866, and has practiced since at Buffalo; was elected District Attorney for Erie County in 1874 for the term of three years; was a Rep- resentative from New York in the Forty-fifth Congress; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Cincinnati in 1880, and at Chicago in 1884; was United States Attorney for the Northern District of New York from October, 1886, to June, 1889, when he resigned; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,213 votes, against 16,240 for Benjamin H. Williams, Republican, 634 votes for Calvin S. Crosser, Pro- hibitionist, and 860 votes defective, blank, and scattering. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Niagara, 4th and 5th Assembly districts of the county of Erie. Thomas L. Bunting, of Hamburg, was born in the town of Eden, Niagara County, New York, in 1844 ; was educated in the common schools and at Springville Academy; taught school winters and attended the Academy during the summer months ; was prevented from entering college by impaired health; entered a store at Hamburg in the position of clerk, and after a few years’ clerkship commenced business for himself, and is now engaged extensively in merchan- dising ; is President of the New York Packers’ Association, and State President of the National Packers’ Association ; is President of the Hamburg Water and Electric Light Company, and Investment and Improvement Company ; is Vice-President of the Bank of Hamburg, and Man- ager of the Hamburg Canning Company ; is also interested in farming, dairying, and stock- raising ; is one of the City and County Hall Commissioners; is a member of the Erie County 86 Congressional Directory. [NORTH CAROLINA. / Farmers’ Institute, in which he has taken a deep and active interest, and represented that body ‘before the Committee on Agriculture of the House of Representatives on the subject of bogus butter; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,585 votes, against 10,793 votes for George W. Davis, Republican, 1,027 votes for Guy C. Humphrey, Pro- hibitionist, and 420 scattering. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Alegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua. Warren Brewster Hooker, of Fredonia, was born at Perrysburg, Cattaraugus County, New York, November 24, 1856; has always lived in New York State except two years spent in Tacoma, Washington, practicing law ; has been Special Surrogate of Chautauqua County; has been Supervisor of his town two terms; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 15,843 votes, against 10,117 votes for Hiram Smith, Democrat, 2,981 votes for Jesse Rogers, Prohibitionist, and 356 scattering. NORTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. Matt W. Ransom, of Northampton County (post-office, Weldon), was born in Warren County, North Carolina, in 1826; received an academic education; graduated from the Uni- versity of North Carolina in 1847; studied law and was admitted to the bar on graduating in 1847; is a lawyer and planter; was elected Attorney-General of North Carolina in 1852, and resigned in 1855; was a member of the Legislature of North Carolina in 1858, ’59, and ’60; was a Peace Commissioner from the State of North Carolina to the Congress of Southern States at Montgomery, Alabama, in 1861; entered the Confederate Army, serving as Lieutenant-Colo- nel, Colonel, Brigadier-General, and Major-General, and surrendered at Appomattox; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat in January, 1872, took his seat April 24, 1872, and wasre-elected in 1876,’83,and in ’89. His term of service willexpire March 3, 1895. Zebulon B. Vance, of Charlotte, was born in Buncombe County, North Carolina, May 13, 1830; was educated at Washington College, Tennessee, and at the University of North Car- olina; studied law, was admitted to the bar in January, 1852, and was elected County Attor- ney for Buncombe County the same year; was a member of the State House of Commons in 1854; was a Representative from North Carolina in the Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth Con- gresses; entered the Confederate Army as Captain in May, 1861, and was made Colonel in August, 1861; was elected Governor of North Carolina in August, 1862, and re-elected in August, 1864; was elected to the United States Senate in November, 1870, but was refused admission, and resigned in January, 1872; was the Democratic nominee for the United States Senate in 1872, but was defeated by a combination of bolting Democrats and Republicans; was elected Governor of North Carolina for the third time in 1876; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, in place of A. S. Merrimon, Democrat; took his seat March 18 1879; and was re-elected in 1884 and 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897 REPRESENTATIVES, FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Beaufort, Camden, Carteret, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Martin, Pamlico, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington. William A. B. Branch, of Washington, was born in Tallahassee, Florida, February 26, 1847 ; removed with his father to Raleigh, North Carolina, when five years of age ; was pre- pared for college by W. J. Bingham ; entered the University of North Carolina at the age of fifteen, remaining there two years ; entered the Virginia Military Institute, remaining there a few months when he joined the Confederate Army; served as a courier on staff of General R. F. Hoke; surrendered with General Johnson’s army in 1865 ; studied law under Governor — —_—— op —— TIE NORTH CAROLINA. ] Senators and Representatives. 87 Thomas Bragg, of North Carolina, but never practiced ; at the age of twenty took charge of his landed estate in Beaufort County, North Carolina, upon which he has lived ever since engaged in agriculture; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,436 votes, against 12,683 votes for Claude M. Bernard, Republican, and 110 votes for De Catur W. Jarvis, Prohibitionist.- SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bertie, Craven, Edgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Jones, Lenoir, Northampton, Vance, Warren, and Wilson. Henry Plumme: Cheatham, of Littleton, was born in Granville, North Carolina, De- cember 27, 1857 ; attended public and private schools near the town of Henderson while a boy, and when eighteen years of age entered the Normal Department of Shaw University, at Raleigh; atthe age of twenty-one he entered the College Department of the University, and was graduated with honors in 1882, receiving the degree of A. B.; was elected Principal of the Plymouth State Normal School immediately after his graduation, and served in that capacity until 1885, when, without any serious opposition, he was elected Register of Deeds of Vance County, which office he held when elected to the Fifty-first Congress ; on the 25th of May, 1887, his alma mater conferred upon him the degree of A.M. ; has read law very extensively, and ~ would have applied for a license to practice had it not conflicted with his official duties; he is a bright mulatto, and the only colored Representative in the Fifty- first Congress; was elected to the Fifty-firstand re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,943 votes, against 15,713 votes for J. M. Mewborne, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bladen, Cumberiand, Duplin, Harnett, Moore, Onslow, Pender, Sampson, and Wayne. : Benjamin F. Grady, of Wallace, was born in Duplin County, North Carolina, October 10, 1831; attended Oldfield schools during winter months till nearly grown; was prepared for college by Rev. James M. Sprunt, of Kenansville; entered the University of North Caro- lina in 1853, and was graduated from that institution in 1857 ; after teaching two years in association with his old teacher in Kenansville, he was elected Professor of Mathematics and Natural Sciences in Austin College, then located in Huntsville, Texas; remained in Austin College till he enlisted in a Texas Confederate regiment; served in the Trans-Mississippi Department until he was captured with his whole command at ,Arkansas Post, January 11, 1863; was about three months a prisoner at Camp Butler, Illinois; when exchanged was sent to General Bragg’s Army at Tullahoma, Tennessee, in which he served until the close of the war in Cleburne’s Division; was twice wounded at Franklin, Tennessee: located in North Carolina at the close of the war and engaged in teaching, which occupation he fol- lowed for ten years, when he engaged in agricultural pursuits; has been a strict construction Democrat all his life, but not an office-seeker; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,348 votes, against 8,541 votes for George C. Scurlock, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Alamance, Chatham, Durham, Franklin, Johnston, Nash, Orange, and Wake. Benjamin H. Bunn, of Rocky Mount, was born near Rocky Mount, Nash County, North Carolina, October 14, 1844; owing to the civil war, received only an academic education; at the age of sixteen he enlisted in the Confederate Army; commanded Fourth Company Sharp- shooters, MacRae’s Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia; was twice wounded; read law with his uncle, Hon. William T. Dortch, at Goldsborough, North Carolina, in 1866, was licensed to practice in 1867, and has been in active practice at Rocky Mount since; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention in 1875; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Conven- tion in 1880; was a member of the State Legislature in 1883, and was Chairman of the Com- mittee on Code; was Presidential Elector in 1884, and voted for Cleveland and Hendricks; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, re- ceiving 18,995 votes, against 12,417 votes for Alexander McIver, Republican, and 393 votes Fi James M. Templeton, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Caswell, Forsyth, Granville, Guilford, Person, Rockingham, Stokes, and Surry. Archibald H. A. Williams, of Oxford, was born in Franklin County, North Carolina, October 22, 1842; received his education in the neighborhood schools of his State and at Emory and Henry College, Virginia; in 1861 he enlisted as a private in the Confederate ] 88 : Congressional Directory. [NORTH CAROLINA. Army; served four years in the Army of Northern Virginia, and at the surrender at Appomattox Court-House was Captain of his company; was severely wounded at Gettysburgh; was taken prisoner, but eluded the vigilance of his captors, and returned to his command; since the war he has been engaged in farming and merchandising; was instrumental in building the Oxford and Henderson Railroad, which was for several years under his management; is Treasurer and also one of the Directors of the Oxford, North Carolina, Orphan Asylum; is a Director of the Odd Fellows’ Orphan Asylum; has twice represented Granville County in the Legislature; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,143 votes, against 14,204 votes for John M. Brower, Republican, 172 votes for Charles H. Moore (colored), Republican, and 197 votes for C. H. Ireland, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT. 7 COUNTIES.—Anson, Brunswick, Cabarrus, Columbus, Mecklenburgh, New Hanover, Rich- mond, Robeson, Stanley, and Union. ~ Sydenham B. Alexander, of Charlotte, was born in Mecklenburgh County, December 8, 1840; entered the University of North Carolina in 1856 and graduated from that institu- tion in 1860; is by profession a farmer; in 1861 enlisted in the Army as a private soldier in the First North Carolina Volunteer Infantry; in June, 1862, was elected Captain of Company K, Forty-second North Carolina Infantry ; in 1864 was detached from his company and served as Inspector-General on the staff of Major-General R. F. Hoke; after the war returned ‘home and engaged in farming; in 1877 was Master of State Grange and ex officio member of State Board of Agriculture; was elected to the State Senate in 1878 and was re-elected in 1882, ’84, and ’86; is a member of the Board of Trustees of the North Carolina Agri- cultural and Mechanical College; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,820 votes, against 8,424 votes for Richard M. Norment, Independent. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Catawba, Davidson, Davie, Iredell, Montgomery, Randolph, Rowan, and Yadkin. John S. Henderson, of Salisbury, was born near Salisbury, Rowan County, North Caro- lina, January 6, 1846; was prepared for college at Dr. Alexander Wilson’s school, Melville, North Carolina; entered the University of North Carolina in January, 1862, and left in No- vember, 1864, to enter the Confederate Army as a private in Company B, Tenth Regiment North Carolina State Troops; after the war studied law under the late Judge Nathaniel Boy- den, and in January, 1866, entered Judge Pearson’s Law School at Richmond Hill, North Car- olina; obtained County Court license in June, 1866, and Superior Court license in June, 1867 ; was appointed in June, 1866, Register of Deeds for Rowan County, and resigned that office in September, 1868; was elected in 1871 a Delegate to the proposed Constitutional Convention; declined a nomination in 1872 for a seat in the lower house of the General Assembly; was a member of the State Constitutional Convention in 1875; was elected a member of the State House of Representatives in 1876 and of the State Senate in 1878; was elected by the General Assembly in 1881 one of the three Commissioners to codify the statute laws of the State; was elected Presiding Justice of the Inferior Court of Rowan Countyin June, 1884; was elected to the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,246 votes, against 9,080 votes for Pleasant C. Thomas, Republican, and 539 votes for Thomas M. George, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Burke, Caldwell, Cleveland, Gaston, Lincoln, Wa- lauga, and Wilkes. William H. H. Cowles, of Wilkesborough, was born at Hamptonville, North Carolina, April 22, 1840; was educated at home, at the common schools and academies of his native county; entered the Confederate service as a private in Captain Crumpler’s company, afterwards Company A, of the First North Carolina Cavalry, which formed a part of ten regiments of State troops en- listed for the war and for the service of the Confederate States; upon the organization of the company he was made First Lieutenant, and served from the spring of 1861 to the close of the war with the Army of Northern Virginia, holding successively the positions of Captain, Major, and Lieutenant-Colonel of his regiment; was twice wounded, once through the body at Mine Run, Virginia, in November, 1863, and again severely in the head in the closing battles around Petersburgh, March 31, 1865; in 1866 entered upon the study of law at “Richmond Hill,” Yadkin County, under the instruction of the Hon. Richmond M. Pearson; obtained a County Court license in January, 1867, and that of the Superior Court in January, 1868 ; removed to Wilkesborough, where he entered upon the practice of his profession; was Reading Clerk of the Senate of North Carolina in the sessions of 1872-'73 and 1873-74; was elected Solicitor of the Tenth Judicial District in 1874 and served for four years; was a member of the Demo- Bb Te NORTH DAKOTA. | Senators and Representatives. 89 cratic State Executive Committee for eight years; was a candidate for the House of Repre- sentatives of North Carolina in 1882 and was defeated ; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, re- ceiving 9,986 votes, against 9,243 votes for E. W. Faucette, Republican, and 151 votes for ' S. S. McCall, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, McDowell, Macon, Madison, Mitchéll, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, Transylvania, and Yancey. William Thomas Crawford, of Waynesville, was born in Haywood County, North Carolina, June 1, 1856; was educated in the common schools and at Waynesville Academy ; taught school and was for a while engaged in a mercantile business; was elected to the State Legislature in 1884 and in 1886; was a Democratic elector in 1888; was Engrossing Clerk of the State House of Representatives in 1889; pursued the study of law at the State Uni- versity of North Carolina, 1889-"90, and obtained license to practice in January, 1891 ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,979 votes, against 14,851 votes for Hamilton G. Ewart, Republican. NORTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. Lyman R. Casey, of Jamestown, was born in York, Livingston County, New Vork,in 1837, his boyhood years were spent on his father’s farm; later on his parents removed to Ypsilanti, - Michigan, where he pursued his studies preparatory to entering the University of Michigan; ill health, however, forced him’ to forego a complete classical education, and he engaged in the hardware business for many years; he afterward, with his wife, spent several years in study and travel in Europe; in 1882 he removed to North Dokota, and has since been en- gaged in the management of the affairs of the Carrington & Casey Land Company, whose business includes the cultivation of several thousand acres of land; acted as commissioner on the organization of Foster County, Dakota Territory, but, except that, has never sought public office, nor consented to such responsibility, until he was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, November 21, 1889, under the provisions of the act of Congress admitting North Dakota and other States into the Union. He took his seat December 2, 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. Henry Clay Hansbrough, of Devils Lake, was born at Prairie du Rocher, Randolph County, Ill., January 30, 1848; received a common school education; removed with his parents to California in 1867; learned the trade of printer in that State; published a daily paper at San José, Cal., 1869-"70; was connected with the San Francisco Chronicle until 1879; published a paper at Baraboo, Wis., for two years, and moved to the then Territory of Dakota in 1882, engaging in journalism; became prominent as an advocate of the Repub- lican policy of division and admission; was twice elected mayor of his city; was a delegate to the Chicago convention in 1888, and was there chosen National committeeman for North Dakota; received the Republican nonimation for Congress at the first State convention, and was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, receiving 26,077 votes, against 12,006 for Daniel W. Marrata, Democrat; was defeated for renomination in July, 1890, and was elected to the United States Senate, as a Republican, January 23, 1891, to succeed Gilbert A. Pierce, Re- publican. His term of service commenced March 4, 1891, and will expire March 3, 1897. / REPRESENTATIVE, AT LARGE. CoUNTIES.— Barnes, Benson, Billings, Bottineau, Burleigh, Cass, Cavalier, Dickey, Eddy Emmons, Foster, Grand Forks, Griggs, Kidder, La Moure, Logan, McHenry, McLean, Me Intosh, Mercer, Morton, Nelson, Oliver, Pembina, Pierce, Ramsey, Ransom, Richland, Rolette, Sargent, Stark, Steele. Stutsman, Towner, Traill, Walsh, Ward, Wells, and unorgan- ized territory, which will make about fifteen counties. Martin N. Johnson, of Petersburg, was born in Wisconsin in 1850, and removed to Towa same year; graduated at the Iowa State University in 1873; taught two years in the Cali- fornia Military Academy at Oakland; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1876; go wongressional Directory. [oH1O0. served a term in each branch of the Towa Legislature and was a Hayes Elector for the Du- buque district in the Electoral College of 18706; removed to Dakota in 1882; was elected District Attorney in 1886 and re-elected in 1888; was member of the Constitutional Conven- tion of North Dakota in 1889 and Chairman of the First Republican State Convention same year; received 42 out of a total of 8o votes in the Republican Legislative caucus in Novem- ber, 1889, for United States Senator, but was beaten in the joint convention by a coalition of Democrats with the minority of the Republican caucus; was elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Republican, receiving 21,365 votes, against 14,830 for John D. Benton, Democrat. OHIO. SENATORS. John Sherman, of Mansfield, was born at Lancaster, Ohio, May 10, 1823; received an academic education; studied law, and was admitted to the bar May 11, 1844; was a Delegate in the National Whig Conventions of 1848 and ’52, and presided over the first Republican Convention in Ohio in 1855; was a Representative in the Thirty-fourth, Thirty-fifth, Thirty- sixth, and Thirty-seventh Congresses, and was the Republican candidate for Speaker in the winter of 1859-’60; was elected to the Senate in March, 1861, and re-elected in 1866 and 72; was appointed Secretary of the Treasury in March, 1877, and served as such during President Hayes’s administration; was President of the Senate from December 7, 1885, till February 26, 1887, and was re-elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to suc- ceed Allen G. Thurman, Democrat; took his seat March 4, 1881; was re-elected in 1886 and 1892. His present term of service will expire March 3, 1893, and the term to which he was elected January, 1892, in 1899. : : Calvin Stewart Brice, of Lima, was born at Denmark, Ohio, September 17, 1845; entered Miami University, at Oxford, Ohio, September, 1858; enlisted in Captain Dodd’s University —uompany April, 1861, and served at Camp Jackson, Columbus, Ohio; in April, 1862, enlisted in Captain McFarland’s University Company A, Eighty-sixth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and served the summer of that year in West Virginia; graduated at Miami University June, 1863; after teaching three months in the public schools at Lima recruited a company, re-entered the service as Captain of Company E, One hundred and eightieth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and served in the First Division of the Twenty-third Corps in Tennessee, Georgia, and Carolina until July, 1865; he studied law in the law department of the University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor, and was admitted to the practice by the State and United States District and Circuit Courts at Cincinnati in the spring of 1866; was on the Tilden electoral ticket in 1870 and Cleveland electoral ticket in 1884; Delegate at large from Ohio to the St. Louis Democratic National Convention in 1888; was selected to represent Ohio on the National Democratic Committee, and was made Chairman of the Campaign Committee for the ensuing national cam- paign; on the death of William H. Barnum he was unanimously elected Chairman of the National Committee, in 1889; and in January, 1890, was elected United States Senator, to succeed the Hon. Henry B. Payne, for the term commencing March 4, 1891. His term of service will expire March 4, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. DiISTRICT.— 7%at so much of the county of Hamilton as is now contained within the limits of the 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, Oth, 7th, Sth, 9th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 26th, and 27th wards of the city of Cincinnati, as they are now constituted, and the townships of Anderson, Columbia, Spencer, Symmes, Sycamore, and Southeast, St. Bernard, and Clifton precincts of Mill Creek Township, shall compose the first district. Bellamy Storer, of Cincinnati, was born in Cincinnati, August 28, 1847; was graduated from Harvard College in 1867, and from the law school of Cincinnati College in 1869; was admitted to the bar April, 1869; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,661 votes, against 14,373 votes for Otway J. Cosgrave, Democrat, 128 votes for C. P. Bennet, Prohibitionist, and 87 votes scattering. OHIO. | Senators and Representatives. 91 SECOND DISTRICT. DISTRICT.— The balance of the county of Hamilton, as is now contained within the limits of the 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 22d, 23d, 24th, 25th, 28th, 29th, and 30th wards of the city of Cincinnati as they are now constituted, and the townships of Springfield, Colerain, Greene, Delhi, Miami, Whitewater, Harrison, Crosby, and College Hill, Winton Place, Western, Avondale, Bond Hill, Elmwood, and Northeast precincts of Mill Creek Township shall compose the second district. John A. Caldwell, of Cincinnati, Ohio, was born in F air Haven, Preble County, Ohio, April 21, 1853; received his education in the common schools of his native county; gradu- ated from the Cincinnati Law College with the class of 1876; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,021 votes, against 14,291 votes for Oliver Brown, Democrat, 119 votes for C. B. Bosserman, Pro- hibitionist, and 320 votes scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Butler, Montgomery, and Warren. George W. Houk, of Dayton, was born in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, September 25, 1825; removed with his father to Ohio in 1827, and settled in Dayton, his present home ; received an academic education; taught school; studied law, and was admitted to the bar and formed a partnership witb his preceptor, Hon. Peter P. Lowe in 1846; in 1852-53 was elected to the State Legislature from Montgomery County, and served through his term as Chairman of the Judiciary Committee of the House; in 1860 was a Delegate to the Charleston- Baltimore Convention; was an ardent supporter of Mr. Douglas for the Presidency; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention in 1876; was in active law practice in part- nership with Hon. John A. McMahon from 1861 to 1882, in Dayton; in 1884 was unani- mously nominated for the Circuit Judgeship of the Second Circuit, but was defeated; in 1884 was District’ Elector on the Democratic Presidential ticket; in 1888 was unanimonsly nomi- nated as the Democratic candidate for Congress for the Third district but was defeated ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,270 votes, against 18,639 votes for H. L.. Morey, Republican, g51 votes for W. M. Hollinger, Prohibitionist, and 447 votes for S. H. Ellis, Union Labor. : FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Champaign, Darke, Mercer, Miami, Preble, and Shelby. Martin K. Gantz, of Troy, was born in Bethel Township, Miami County, Ohio, January 28, 1862; received a common-school education; attended college at Lebanon, Ohio, and graduated from the Cincinnati Law College, class of 1883; was elected Mayor of the city of Troy; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,705 votes against 19,295 votes for William P. Orr, Republican, 1,602 votes for Randolph Rock, Prohi- bitionist, and 198 votes for Isaac Freeman, Union Labor. : FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—A len, Auglaize, Hardin, Logan, Putnam, and Van Wert. Fernando C. Layton, of Wapakoneta, was born in Auglaize County, Ohio, April 11, 1847; was educated in the public schools and at Wittenberg College, Springfield, Ohio; was ad- mitted to the bar in 1869 ; was a County School Examiner for several years; was Prosecuting Attorney for the years 1875,’76,’77,and 78; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,179 votes, against 15,973 for Lawrence K. Stroup, Republican, 1,452 votes for Henry Price, Prohibitionist, and 684 votes for John Smith, Union Labor candidate. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Defiance, Fulton, Henry, Paulding, Williams, and Wood. D. D. Donovan, of Deshler, was born near Texas, Henry County, Ohio, January 31, 1859; attended common school until eighteen years of age, afterwards attended two years at the Northern Indiana Normal School at Valparaiso, Indiana ; taught school three years, and then engaged in mercantile and timber business ; was appointed Postmaster at Deshler by President Cleveland, which position he resigned when elected to the Legislature from Henry County iu 1887; was re-elected to the Legislature in 1889, and was elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 18,741 votes, against 17,029 votes for Joseph H. Brigham, Re- publican, and 1,005 votes for W. A. Corkle, Prohibitionist. 92 \ Congressional Directory. [on10. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Erie, Lucas, Ottawa, and Sandusky. William E. Haynes, of Fremont, was born at Hoosac Falls, New York, October 19, 1829, removed to Ohio in 1839; received a common school education; was a printer in early life but engaged in mercantile pursuits from 1850 until 1856, when he was elected Auditor of Sandusky County, Ohio, and served two terms; enlisted April 16, 1861, in the Eighth Regi: ment Ohio Infantry; was commissioned Captain, and served with that regiment in Western Virginia, the Shenandoah Valley, and the Army of the Potomac, until November, 1862, when he was commissioned Lieutenant-Colonel of the Tenth Ohio Cavalry, and served with it in the Army of the Cumberland until 1864; was appointed Collector of Internal Revenue for the Ninth District of Ohio, in 1866, which position he held until March 4, 1867; since that time has been principally engaged in farming and banking; is married; was a member of the Board of Trusteessof the Toledo Insane Asylum from 1884 to 1888; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Conventions held in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1880, and in Chicago, Illinois, in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-first, and re-elected to the Fifty-second, Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,126 votes, against 16,070 votes for J. M. Ashley, Republican, 391 votes for A. I. Jones, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Hancock, Marion, Seneca, Union, and Wyandot. Darius D. Hare, of Upper Sandusky, was boin near Adrian, in Seneca County, Ohio, Jan- uary 9, 1843, removing with his parents while yet a child to Wyandot County, where he has ever since resided ; was reared on a farm; received a common-school education; was engaged in teaching, and attended the Ohio Wesleyan University at Delaware, Ohio, during the years 1861, ’62, and ’63, but did not graduate ; entered the military service as a private in the Sig- nal Corps, U.S. Army in March, 1864, and served during the remainder of the war ; after the war was assigned to special duty at the headquarters of Major-General Canby and afterwards of Major-General Sheridan, at New Orleans, remaining on duty with the latter until discharged February 17, 1866; attended the law department of the University of Michigan ; was admitted to the bar in September, 1867, and since May, 1868, has been engaged in the practice of the law at Upper Sandusky; was elected Mayor of Upper Sandusky in 1872, ’74, ’78, ’80, and ’82, serving ten years; has held no other elective office; was elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 17,414 votes against 17,220 for Hon. Charles Foster, Repub- lican, and 1,436 votes for W. H. Likins, Prohibitionist and Farmers’ Alliance. NINTH DISTRICT. CoOUNTIES— Franklin, Madison, and Pickaway. Joseph H. Outhwaite, of Columbus, was born in Cleveland, Ohio, December 5, 1841, was educated in the public schools of Zanesville, Ohio, taught two years in the High School of that city, and was principal of a grammer school in Columbus, Ohio, three years; read law while teaching, and was admitted to the bar in 1866 ; practiced law from 1867 to 1871 at Osceola, Missouri; was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Franklin County, Ohio, in 1874, and again in 1876 ; was appointed one of the Trustees of the County Children’s Home from March, 1879, until July, 1883, and one of the Trustees of the Sinking Fund of the city of Columbus in 1883, and re-appointed in 1884 for a term of five years; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Dem- ocrat, receiving 18,550 votes, against 16,418 votes for T. B. Wilson, Republican, 860 votes for A. Dunlap, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes scattering. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clarke, Clinton, Fayette, Greene, and Ross. Robert E. Doan, of Wilmington, was born of farmer parents and brought up on a farm in Clinton County, Ohio; received a common school and academic education; taught school three years in southern Ohio; and studied law during this time; was graduated from the Cin- cinnati Law School April 15, 1857, with the degree of Bachelor of Laws; was admitted to the bar, and has continued ever since in the practice at Wilmington; was editor of the Wil- mington Watchman in 1859 and 1860; was appointed Prosecuting Attorney for Clinton County in 1862; held an important secret position under Abraham Lincoln connected with the Post-Office Department during the war; was elected a Garfield Presidential Elector for the Third Congressional District in 1880; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,353 votes, against 15,569 votes for J. Q. Smith, Democrat, 1,954 votes for R. Rathburn, Prohibitionist, and 3 scattering. OHIO. | Senators and Representatives. 93 ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Adams, Brown, Clermont, Highland, and Pike. John M. Pattison, of Milford, was born in Clermont County, Ohio, June 13, 1847; entered the Union Army at the age of sixteen, in 1864 ; graduated at the Ohio Wesleyan University at Delaware, Ohio, in 1869; was admitted to the bar of Hamilton County, Cincinnati, 1872; was elected to the State Legislature from Hamilton County in 1873; was attorney for the Com- mittee of Safety of Cincinnati in 1874, ’75,’76; was elected Vice-President and Manager Union Central Life Insurance Company of Cincinnati in 1881 and President in i891; was elected State Senator to fill vacancy caused by the death of Judge Ashburn, February, 1890; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,110 votes, againat 13,157 votes for D. W. C. Loudon, Republican, 819 votes for S. ‘G. Linsey, Prohibitionist, 955 and votes for FH. W. Rhodes, Union Labor and Farmers’ Alliance. TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Athens, Gallia, Lawrence, Meigs, and Scioto. " William H. Enochs, of Ironton, was born near Middleburg, Noble County, Ohio, March 29, 1842; brought up on farm; educated in common schools; served through late war as Private, Corporal, Sergeant, Lieutenant, Captain, Lieutenant-Colonel, Colonel, and Brevet Brigadier-General ; graduated from the Cincinnati Law School, 1866, and has been engaged in the practice of law ever since; elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,851 votes, against 9,814 votes for Ezra Dean, Democrat, 897 votes for Jonathan Morris, Prohibitionist, and 3 votes for J. H. Junkins, Union Labor candidate. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fairfield, Hocking, Jackson, Morgan, Perry, and Vinton. Irvine Dungan, of Jackson, Ohio, was born at Canonsburg, Washington County, Penn- sylvania; received a collegiate education; served till the close of the war in the Nineteenth Iowa Infantry; was captured and confined ten months in a military prison; was elected Mayor of Jackson in 1869; was elected State Senator from the Seventh Senatorial District in 1877; led the Democratic Electoral ticket in Ohio in 1888; was the author of the first law in Ohio against the truck system; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,225 votes, against 14,759 votes for William T. Lewis, Republican, and 1,006 votes for William J. Kirkenaall, Prohibitionist. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Coshocton, Licking, Muskingum, Tuscarawas. James W. Owens, of Newark, was born in Springfield Township, Franklin County, In- diana, October 24, 1837; entered Miami University, at Oxford, Ohio, in 1859, and graduated in 1862; is a lawyer by profession; enlisted in the Army as a private soldier in the Twentieth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and served during the first three months’ service; re-enlisted and was made First Lieutenant Company A, Eighty-sixth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and on the reorganization of that Regiment was made Captain of Company K; attended Law School at Ann Arbor, Michigan; was elected Prosecuting Attorney of Licking County, Ohio, in 1867, and re-elected in 1869; was elected to the Ohio Senate in 1875, and re-elected in 1877, and was elected President of the Senate; is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Miami Uni- versity ; is married; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,193 votes, against 15,773 votes for Samuel Slade, Republican, 1,056 votes for A. S. Caton, Prohibitionist, and 30 votes for J. Junkins, Union Labor. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Ashland, Crawford, Delaware, Knox, Morrow, and Richland. Michael D. Harter, of Mansfield, was born at Canton, Ohio, April 6, 1846; has spent his business life as a manufacturer and banker, and is President of the Aultman and Taylor Company ; is a member of the Cobden Club, London, of the Reform Club, New York, of the Democratic Club of the city of New York, and of the Young Men’s Democratic Club of Cin- cinnati; has used his voice and pen in the interest of tariff reform for many years; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,832 votes, against 16,084 votes for George L. Sackett, Republican, 1,445 votes for W, D. Miller, Prohibitionist,and 414 votes for D, T, Adams, Union Labor, 94 Congressional Directory. [oHIO. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Holmes, Medina, Stark, and Wayne. John G. Warwick, of Massillon, was born in County Tyrone, Ireland, December 23, 1830; came to America in 1850 and engaged in mercantile pursuits; is interested in milling, mining, and farming; was elected Lieutenant-Governor of Ohio in 1883; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,059 votes, against 19,757 for Wm. Mc- Kinley, jr., Republican, and 846 votes for J. J. Ashenhurst, I'rohibitionist. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Belmont, Monroe, Noble, and Washington. A. J. Pearson, of Woodsfield, was born at Centreville, Belmont County, Ohio, May 20. 1846; removed with his parents, at an early age, to Beallsville, Monroe County, Ohio; was educated in the common schools of Beallsville and the Normal School at Lebanon, Ohio; was a private soldier in Company I, One hundred and eighty-sixth Ohio Volunteer Infantry; read law with Amos & Spriggs, of Woodsfield, Ohio; was admitted to the bar in September, 1868, and commenced the practice of his profession at Woodsfield, where he has since resided; was Prosecuting Attorney of Monroe County for three successive terms; a member of the State Senate for two years; was Probate Judge of Monroe County for six years; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,928 votes, against 14,224 votes for C, L. Poorman, Republican, and 812 votes for L. C. Crippen, Prohibitionist. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.— Carroll, Columbiana, Guernsey, Harrison, and Jefferson. Joseph Danner Taylor, of Cambridge, was born in Belmont County, Ohio, November 7, 1830; was educated in the public schools and at Madison College; was School Examiner and taught school for a time; was admitted to the bar in 1859; graduated at the Cincinnati Law College in 1860; served on military committees by the appointment of the Governor from the opening of the war until June, 1863, when he entered the Army as Captain of the Eighty-eighth Ohio Regiment, from which he was soon detached and made Judge-Advocate, and subsequently Judge-Advocate of the District of Indiana, which position he held until the close of the war, when he was employed by the Government to try important cases at Indian- apolis, Indiana, where he remained until April, 1866; was twice brevetted for meritorious services in the discharge of his official duties; served two terms as Prosecuting Attorney of his county; had control of a Republican newspaper from 1860 to 1870; was President of the Cambridge School Board seven years; has been President of the Guernsey National Bank since its organization in 1872; represented his State in the Philadelphia Loyalists’ Conven- tion in 1866, and his District in the National Conventions of 1876 and '80; was elected to the Forty-seventh and Forty-eighth Congresses to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. J. T. Updegraff; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re- elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,993 votes, against 11,783 votes for H. H. McFadden, Democrat, and 1,568 votes for S. W. Wilkins, Prohibitionist. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Ashtabula, Geauga, Mahoning, Portage, and Trumbull. Ezra B. Taylor, of Warren, was born at Nelson, Portage County, Ohio, July 9, 1823; was admitted to the bar in 1845; except while on the bench and in the Army has practiced his profession ever since; was elected to fill a vacancy in the Forty-sixth Congress; was elected to the Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,419 votes, against 11,972 for T. E. Hoyt, Democrat, 1,753 votes for Richard Brown, Prohibitionist, and 58 scattering. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Huron, Lake Lorain, Summit, and the townships of Bedford, Chagrin Falls, East Cleveland, Euclid, Mayfield, Newburg, Orange, Warrensville, Solon, Brecksville, Brooklyn, Dover, Middleburg, Olmstead, Parma, Independence, Rockport, Royalton and Strongsville in Cuyahogo county, and the 18th, 19th, 20th, 21st, and 27th wards of the city of Cleveland, as they are now constituted, shall compose the twentieth district. Vincent Albert Taylor, of Bedford, was born in Bedford, December 6, 1845; was edu- cated in the common schools ; enlisted May, 1864, in Company H, One hundred and fiftieth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and in August of the same year in Company H, One hundred and Ra ad ER re OHIO.) Senators and Representatives. 95 seventy-seventh Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and served in that regiment until the close ot the war, when he began business as a manufacturer and has been so engaged up to the present time; served two years, 1888 and 1889, in the Ohio Senate; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,672 votes, against 14,748 votes for H. L. Stewart, Democrat, and 1,613 votes for A. S. Root, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes scattering. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTY.— Te 15¢, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, Oth, 7th, Sth, gth, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16, I7lh, 22d, 23d, 24th, 25th, 26th, 28th, 29th, 30th, 31st, 32d, 33d, 34th, 35th, 30th, 37k. 38th, 39th, and goth wards of the city of Cleveland, as they are now constituted, shall com- pose the 21st district. Tom L. Johnson, of Cleveland, was born in Scott County, Kentucky, july 18, 1854 ; was educated in the public schools of Evansville, Indiana; was Secretary and subsequently Superintendent of the Central Passenger Railroad Company of Louisville, Kentucky ; in 1876 became the owner of the Indianapolis (Ind.) Street Railway; in 1879 purchased the Brooklyn Street Railway of Cleveland, Ohio, and is President of that company at this time ; in 1884 established the Johnson Company, of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, for the manufacture of steel rails; was the Democratic nominee of his district for the Fifty-first Congress, but was defeated; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,646 votes, against 14,256 votes for T. E. Burton, Republican, 178 votes for F. W. Cramer, Prohibitionist, and 259 votes for E. C. Vail, Union Labor. OREGON. SENATORS. John H. Mitchell, of Portland, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, June 22, 1835; received a public-school education and the instruction of a private tutor; studied and practiced law; removed to California and practiced law, first in San Luis Obispo and then in San Francisco; removed to Portland, Oregon, in 1860, and there continued his profession; was elected Corporation Attorney of Portland in 1861, and served one year; was elected as a Republican to the State Senate in 1862, and served four years, the last two as President of that body; was commissioned by the Governor of Oregon in 1865 Lieutenant-Colonel in the State militia; was a candidate for United States Senator in 1866, and was defeated in the party caucus by one vote; was chosen Professor of Medical Jurisprudence in Willamette University, at Salem, Oregon, in 1867, and served in that position nearly four years; was elected to the United States Senate September 28, 1872, and served from March 4, 1873, to March 3, 1879; received the caucus nomination of the Republican party for United States Senator in 1882, receiving the votes of two-thirds of all the Republicans in the Legislature on first ballot, but was finally, after a contest lasting until the close of the session, defeated in joint session; was again elected to the United States Senate November 19, 1885, as a Republican, to succeed James H. Slater, Democrat, for the term commencing March 4, 1885, and took his seat De- cember 17, 1885; was re-elected January 20, 1891. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. Joseph N. Dolph, of Portland, was born at what was then called Dolphsburgh, in Tompkins (now Schuyler) County, New York, October 19, 1835; received a common-school education, private instruction, and for a time attended the Genesee Wesleyan Seminary at Lima, New York; after arriving at the age of eighteen years taught school a portion of each year while acquiring an education and his profession; studied law with Hon. Jeremiah McGuire at Havana, New York, and was admitted to the bar at the General Term of the Supreme Court of that State held at Binghamton, November, 1861; practiced his profession in Schuyler County, New York, during the winter of 1861-’62; in 1862 enlisted in Captain M. Crawford’s company, known as the Oregon Escort, raised under an act of Congress for the purpose of protecting the emigration of that year to the Pacific Coast against hostile Indians, filling the position of Orderly Sergeant; settled in Portland, Oregon, in October, 1862, where he has since resided; in 1864 he was elected City Attorney of the city of Portland, and the same year was appointed by President Lincoln District Attorney for the District of Oregon; held both po- sitions until he resigned them to take his seat in the State Senate of Oregon; was a member of the State Senate in 1366, ’68, ’72, and 74; has been actively engaged since his removal to Oregon in the practice of his profession, and at the time of his election had a large and lucra- tive law practice, and was actively engaged in various business enterprises; he was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Lafayette Grover, Democrat, and took his seat March 3, 1883, and was re-clected in January, 1889. His term of service wiil ex- pire March 3, 1895. 96 Congressional Directory. - [orEGON. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. \ COUNTIES. — Baker, Benton, Clackamas, Clatsop, Columbia, Coos, Crook, Curry, Douglas, Gill- iam, Grant, Harney, Jackson, Josephine, Klamath, Lake, Lane, Linn, Malkeur, Marion, Morrow, Multnomak, Polk, Sherman, Tillamook, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, Wasco, Washington, Yam Hill—31 counties, Binger Hermann, of Roseburgh, was born at Lonaconing, Allegany County, Maryland, February 19, 1843; was educated in the rural schools of Western Maryland and at the Inde- pendent Academy (afterwards Irving College), near Baltimore City; removed to Oregon, taught country schools, studied law, was admitted to the Supreme Court of Oregon in 1860, and has practiced law continuously since; was elected to the Oregon Legislature (lower house) in 1866, and was State Senator in 1868; was Deputy Collector of United States Inter- nal Revenue for Southern Oregon, 1868-71; was receiver of public moneys at the United States Land Office at Roseburgh, Oregon, under appointment by President Grant, 1871-73; was Judge-Advocate, with the rank of Colonel, in the Oregon State Militia, 1882-84; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 40,176 votes, against 30,263 votes for Rob- ert A. Miller, Democrat, and 2,856 votes for James A. Bruce, Prohibitionist. PENNSYLVANIA. SENATORS. James Donald Cameron, of Harrisburg, was born at Middletown, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, in 1833; graduated at Princeton College in 1852; entered the Middletown Bank, now the National Bank of Middletown, as Clerk, became its Cashier, and afterwards its President, which position he now fills; was President of the Northern Central Railway Company of Pennsylvania from 1863 until 1874, when the road passed under the control of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company; was Secretary of War under President Grant from May 22,1876,to March 3, 1877; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1868 and at Cincinnati in 1876; was Chairman of the Republican National Committee and a Delegate to the Republican National Convention at Chicago in 1880; was elected a United States Senator from Pennsylvania, as a Republican, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of his father, Hon. Simon Cameron, in March, 1877, and took his seat October 15,1877; was re-elected in 1879; and was again re-elected in 1885 and in 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. Matthew Stanley Quay, of Beaver Court-House, was born in Dillsburgh, York County, Pennsylvania, September 30, 1833; was prepared for college at Beaver and Indiana Acade- mies; was graduated from Jefferson College in 1850; was admitted to the bar in 1854; was elected Prothonotary of Beaver County in 1856 and re-elected in 1859; was a Lieutenant in the Tenth Pennsylvania Reserves; was Colonel of the One hundred and thirty-fourth Penn- sylvania Volunteers; was Lieutenant-Colonel and Assistant Commissary-General; was mili- tary State agent at Washington; was Private Secretary to the Governor of Pennsylvania; was Major and Chief of Transportation and Telegraphs; was Military Secretary to the Governor of Pennsylvania, 1861-65; was a member of the Legislature, 1865-’67; was Secretary of Commonwealth, 1872-"78; was Recorder of the city of Philadelphia, and Chairman of Re- publican State Committee, 1878-79; was Secretary of the Commonwealth, 1879-82; was Delegate at large to the Republican National Conventions of 1872, ’76, and ’80; was elected State Treasurer in 1885; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican to succeed John I. Mitchell, and took his seat March 4, 1887; was selected a member of the Republican National Committee, and chosen Chairman thereof, and ex gfficio Chairman of the Executive Committee when the committee organized, in July, 1888, and conducted the suc- cessful Presidential campaign of that year. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. i} PENNSYLVANIA. | Senators and Representatives. 97 REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA. — 15%, 2d, 7th, 26th, and 30th wards. Henry H. Bingham, of Philadelphia, was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1841; was graduated at Jefferson College in 1862; studied law; entered the Union Army as a Lieu- tenant in the One hundred and fortieth Pennsylvania Volunteers; was wounded at Gettysburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1863, Spottsylvania, Virginia, in 1864, and at Farmville, Virginia, in 1865; ‘mustered out of service July, 1866, as Brevet Brigadier-General of Volunteers; was appointed ~ Postmaster of Philadelphia in March, 1867, and resigned November, 1872, to accept the Clerkship of the Courts of Oyer and Terminer and Quarter Sessions of the Peace at Philadel- phia, having been elected by the people; was re-elected Clerk of Courts in 1875; was Dele- gate at large to the Republican National Convention at Philadelphia in 1872, also Delegate from the First Congressional District to the Republican National Convention at Cincinnati in 1876 and Chicago in 1884, and also in 1888; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Republican, receiving 22,166 votes, against 14,497 votes for Edwin G. Flanagan, Democrat, 87 votes for Samuel M. Kennedy, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. City oF PHILADELPHIA.—8%%, gtk, 10th, 13th, 14th, and 20th wards. Charles O’Neill, of Philadelphia, was born in Philadelphia, March 21, 1821; graduated at Dickinson College in 1840; studied and practiced law; was a member of the House of Rep- resentatives of Pennsylvania in 1850, ’51, 52, and ’60; was a member of the State Senate of Pennsylvania in 1853; was elected to the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty- third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, re- ceiving 16,324 votes, against 9,785 votes for Edwin F. Lott, Democrat, and 133 votes for John B. Jones, Prohibitionist, and I vote scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. City OF PHILADELPHIA.—3d, 4%, 5th, Oth, 11th, 12th, 16th, and ryth wards. William McAleer, of Philadelphia, was born in County Tyrone, Ireland, January 6, 1838; immigrated to Philadelphia with his parents in 1851 ; attended public and private schools ; is a flour merchant, having engaged in business with his father and brothers in 1861 ; was elected a member of Common Councils from the Fifth Ward in 1871 for a term of two years; was elected by Councils in 1873 a member of the Board of Guardians of the Poor for a term of three years and re-elected five ci nsecutive terms; was Vice-President and President of the Board; is a member of the Commercial Exchange; has held the position of Director, Vice-President, and President of the same; was a Director of the Chamber of Commerce in 1880; was elected to the Senate of Pennsylvania in 1886 for a term of four years, and received the nomination for President pro tempore by the Democratic members in 1889; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,121 votes, against 10,037 votes for Richard Vaux, Independent Democrat, and 33 votes for F. G. Percival, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA. —15%%, 21st, 24th, 27th, 28th, 29th, 32d, and 34th wards. John Edgar Reyburn, of Philadelphia, was born at New Carlisle, Clark County, Ohio, February 7, 1845; was educated by private tutor, and at Saunders Institute, West Philadelphia; studied law and was admitted to the bar in Philadelphia in 1870; was a member of the House of Representatives of Pennsylvania, sessions 1871, ’74, 75, '76; was elected a member of the Senate of Pennsylvania for a term of four years from December 1, 1376, and re-elected No- vember, 1880; was elected President pro tempore for the session of 1883; was re-elected Sen- ator November, 1884, and again elected November, 1888, for a term of four years; was elected as a Republican to fill the unexpired term of Hon. William D. Kelley to the Fifty-first Congress, February 18, 1890, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, receiving 33,253 votes against 20,088 votes for William M. Ayres, Democrat, and 395 votes for Alvin G. Walker Prohibitionist. 2D ED——1T {7 / Congressional Duyectory. [PENNSYLVANIA. FIFTH DISTRICT. City OF PHILADELPHIA.—78%%, 19th, 22d, 23d, 25th, 31st, and 33d wards. Alfred C. Harmer, of Philadelphia, was born in Germantown (now part of the city ot Philadelphia), Pennsylvania; was educated at public schools and at Germantown Academy; was engaged in mercantile pursuits; is identified with railroad enterprises, and is largely en- gaged in mining and land operations; was elected a member of the City Councils of Philadel- phia in 1856 and served four years; was elected Recorder of Deeds for Philadelphia in 1860, and served three years; was elected to the Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 30,016 votes, against 19,213 votes for J. Henry Taylor, Democrat, and 173 votes for J. Baker Stewart, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Crester and Delaware. John B. Robinson, of Media, was born in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania, May 23, 1846, graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1868; is a lawyer; was elected to the State Legislature from Delaware County in 1884, and re-elected in 1836; was elected to the State Senate in 1889, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,447 votes, against 13,342 votes for Thomas W. Pierce, Democrat, 930 votes for J. Simons Kent, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bucks and Montgomery. Edwin Hallowell, of Willow Grove, was born in Abington, Montgomery County, Penn- sylvania, in 1844; was educated in the public schools; was brought up on a farm, and has always been a farmer; was elected a member of the Legislature of Pennsylvania in 1876, and re-elected in 1878; was elected Chairman of the Democratic County Committee of Mont- gomery County in 1886; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,810 votes, against 20,623 votes for I. P. Wanger, Republican, 572 votes for Oliver H. Holcomb, Prohibitionist, and 3 votes scattering. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carbon, Monroe, Northampton, and Pike. William Mutchler, of Easton, was born in Northampton County, Pennsylvania, Decem- ber 21, 1831; received an academic education; is a lawyer by profession; was Prothonotary of his native county from 1860 to 1866; was appointed Assessor of Internal Revenue by President Johnson in March, 1867, and held the office until May, 1869; was Chairman of the Democratic State Committee of Pennsylvania in 1869-’70; was a member of the Forty-fourth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,424 votes, against 10,549 votes for George M. Davis, Republican, 11 votes for George W. Gross, Prohibitionist, and 2 votes scattering. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES — Berks and Lehigh. David B. Brunner, of Reading, was born in Amity, Berks County, Pennsylvania, March 7.1835; received a good common-school education; learned the carpenter’s trade; taught school from 1853 to 1856, during which time he studied the classics and entered Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, in 1856, and graduated in 1860; opened an academy in his native place, and in 1862 located in the city of Reading, and taught a classical academy until 1869, when he was elected County Superintendent of the public schools of the county, which office he filled until 1875; taught private school until 1880, when he opened the Reading Business College, and has since been the Principal of that institution; is the author of an elementary work on English Grammar and Analysis, and a work entitled ¢“ The Indians of Berks County, Pennsylvania ;’’ has devoted much time to mineralogy and microscopy, and has large collec- tions of specimens in those departments of science; is married; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 26,627 votes, against 15,434 votes for Daniel H. Wingered, Republican, 330 votes for W. D. Cross, Prohibi- tionist, and 3 votes scattering. i PENNSYLVANIA. ] Senators and Representatives. 99 TENTH DISTRICT. CouNTY.— Lancaster. Marriott Brosius, of Lancaster, was born in Colerain Township, Lancaster County, Penn- sylvania, March 7, 1843; received a common-school and academic education; enlisted as a private in Company K, Ninety-seventh Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, in October, 1861, for three years, and March 6, 1863, while engaged on the Edisto River, was promoted to Ser- geant; participated in the seige of Charleston and the assault on Fort Wagner, and on the 28th of February, 1864, re-enlisted as a veteran; on May 20, 1864, participated in the brilliant charge at Green Plains, in the Bermuda Hundred; in this encounter he sustained a severe wound, from the effects of which he has been a life-long sufferer; no bone now connects his right arm with his shoulder; was discharged December 28, 1864, and on February 28, 1865, was commissioned a Second Lieutenant for bravery on the field of battle; after the war he finished his education at the Millersville Normal School, and took a course of law at Ann Arbor University ; was admitted to the bar in 1868, and has practiced his profession since; is married; in 1882 was the Republican candidate for Congressman at large, and although running over 7,600 votes ahead of his ticket, was defeated; was elected to the Fifty-first Con- gress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 19,126 votes, against 9,358 votes for D. F. Magee, Democrat, and 336 votes scattering. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTY.— Lackawanna. Lemuel Amerman, of Scranton, was born near Danville, Montour County, Pennsylvania, October 29, 1846; was brought up on a farm; was educated in the common schools, Danville Academy, and Bucknell University at Lewisburg, Pennsylvania; taught school three years; was professor of ancient languages and English literature in the State Normal School at Mansfield, Pennsylvania, for three years; read law in Philadelphia with Hon. Lewis C. Cas- sady; was admitted to practice and located in Scranton in 1876; was engaged in the practice of his profession when elected ; was County Solicitor for Lackawanna County, 1879-80; was Representative in Pennsylvania Legislature, 1881-84; was City Comptroller of Scranton, 1885-86; was Reporter of the decisions of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1886-87; is largely interested in the construction and operation of water works; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,336 votes, against 9,033 votes for Joseph A. Scranton, Republican, and 839 votes for Samuel Hockenbury, Prohibitionist. TWELFTH DISTRICT. CouNTY.— Luzerne. George W. Shonk, of Plymouth, was born in Plymouth, Pennsylvania, April 26, 1850; was educated at Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pennsylvania, and Wesleyan University, Mid- dletown, Connecticut, graduating from the latter institution in the class of 1873; was admitted to the bar of Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, September 29, 1876, and has practiced his pro- fession at Wilkes Barre since; has also been interested in mining coal, and in railroads connected with the development of mining properties, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 14,558 votes, against 13,074 votes for John B. Reynolds, ‘Democrat, and 764 votes for Benjamin Harding, Prohibitionist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTY. —Schuylkill. James B. Reilly, of Pottsville, was born in West Brunswig Township, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, August 12, 1845; was educated at the Pottsville High School, from which he graduated in 1862, and by private study; read law, and was admittéd to the bar January 11, 1869, at Pottsville, where he has since practiced; was elected District Attorney of Schuylkill County October 8, 1871, and served until January 1, 1875; was elected to the Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth Congresses; was Delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1880; was nominated by the Democratic County Convention for Law Judge of his county in 1881, and again in 1882, and also as the candidate for Congress in 1884, but was defeated at the election; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress asa Democrat, receiving 13,308 votes, against 11,328 votes for John T. Shoener, Republican. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Dauphin, Lebanon, and Perry. John W. Rife, of Middletown, was born in Middletown, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, August 14, 1846; received a common-school education; learned the trade of tanner, and has been in that business since 1867; has been President of Council and Burgess of Middletown ~a number of years; was a member of the One hundred and ninety-fourth Regiment Pennsyl- vania Volunteers; was a member of the House of Representatives of Pennsylvania 1885 and I | 100 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA. ’86; is President of the Middletown and Hummelstown Railroad Company; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiv- ing 17,795 votes, against 14,308 votes for W. L. Gorgas, Democrat, 397 votes for G. W. Camp- bell, Prohibitionist, and 1 vote scattering. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bradford, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming. Myron B. Wright, of Susquehanna, was born at Forest Lake, Susquehanna County, Penn- sylvania, June 12, 1847; received a common-school and academic education; taught school in winter of 1865-66; in the spring of 1866 was employed as Clerk in the First National Bank of Susquehanna; was elected Assistant Cashier of bank in 1867, and in 1869 was elected Cashier, which position he has held continuously since; has been largely interested in several financial, business, and manufacturing enterprises; never held public office, except that of School Director, until he was elected to the Fifty-first Congress; was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 16,076 votes, against 13,854 votes for C. W. Canfield, Democrat, 1,079 votes for John C. Bateson, Prohibitionist, and 3 votes scat- tering. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clinton, Lycoming, Potter, and Tioga. Albert C. Hopkins, of Lock Haven, was born in Villenovia, Chautauqua County, New York, September 15, 1837; attended various schools until November, 1856, when he left Alfred, Allegany County, New York, to teach school in Troy, Bradford County, Pennsyl- vania; from there he returned to Chautauqua County, where he was educated for a merchant, and resided in Jamestown, Westfield, and Forestville until 1862, when he engaged in the mer- cantile business in Troy, Pennsylvania, where he remained until 1867; removed to Lock Haven, Clinton County, Pennsylvania, in that year, and became actively engaged in lumber business, in its various branches, in which business he still continues; has never been an appli- cant for office, nor held one until elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiv- ing 15,824 votes, against 15,773 votes for Mortimer F. Elliott, Democrat, and 1,063 votes for Herbert T. Aimes, Prohibitionist. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, and Sullivan. Simon P. Wolverton, of Sunbury, was born January 28, 1837, in Rush Township, North- umberland County, Pennsylvania; was educated in the common schools, at Danville Academy, and was graduated from Lewisburg University in 1860; after graduating took charge of Sunbury Academy and read law under the instruction of Judge Alexander Jordan; was ad- mitted to the bar in 1862, and has practiced his profession at Sunbury since; in 1862 raised a company of emergency men, of which he was made Captain, and served in the Eighteenth Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers; in June, 1863, was chosen Captain of Company F, Thirty-sixth Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers; in 1878 was elected to the State Senate, and was re-elected in 1880 and 1884, when he declined further nomination to that office; in 1884 was nominated for United States Senator by the Democrats of both houses; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,178 votes, against 9,234 votes for W. C. Farnsworth, Republican, 803 votes for John B. Patton, Prohibitionist, and 11 votes scattering. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, funiate, Mifflin, Snyder, and Union. Louis E. Atkinson, of Mifflintown, was born in Delaware Township, Juniata County, Pennsylvania, April 16, 1841; was educated in the common schools and at’ Airy View and Milnwood Academies; studied medicine, and graduated at the Medical Department of the University of the City of New York, March 4, 1861; entered the Medical Department, United States Army, September 5, 1861; served as Assistant Surgeon of the First Pennsyl- vania Reserve Cavalry and Surgeon of the One hundred and eighty-eighth Pennsylvania In- fantry,and was mustered out in December, 1865; was disabled while in the Army; and, being unable to practice medicine, studied law; was admitted to the bar in September, 1870, and has practiced law since that time; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses as a Republican, and was re-elected.to the Fifty-second Congress, re- ceiving 17,443 votes, against 16,834 votes for G. W. Skinner, Democrat, and 3 votes scattering. i i i Lian 73 | / i ! y . PENNSYLVANIA. ] Senators and Representatives. 101 NINETEENTH DISTRICT. CoOUNTIES.—A dams, Cumberland, and York. F. E. Beltzhoover, of Carlisle, was born in Silver Spring Township, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, November 6, 1841 ; received his primary education in the common schools of the district and Big Spring Academy at Newville; in 1858 entered Pennsylvania College at Gettysburg, where he graduated in 1862 ; he then read law with Hon. W. H. Miller, at Car- lisle, where he was admitted to the bar in 1864, and has practiced since; in 1868 and 1873 he was Chairman of the Democratic Executive Committee of the county ; in 1874 was elected District Attorney and served for three years; in 1876 was a Delegate from the Nineteenth Congressional district of the State to the Democratic National Convention at St. Louis, and voted for Samuel J. Tilden; in 1878 was elected from the same district to the Forty-sixth Con- gress and re-elected in 1880; spent the summer of 1887 in Europe; was re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,969 votes, against 14,860 votes for D. K. Trimmer, Republican, 428 votes for John M. Bacheldar, Prohibitionist, and 189 votes scat- tering. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bedford, Blair, Cambria, and Somerset. Edward Scull, of Somerset, was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1818; received a common-school and academic education; studied law at Greensburgh, and was admitted to the bar in 1844; removed to Somerset in 1846 and practiced law until 1857, when he was elected Prothonotary and Clerk of the Courts for a term of three years; on March 4, 1863, was appointed Collector of Internal Revenue by President Lincoln; was removed by President Johnson, Sep- tember, 1866; was appointed Assessor of Internal Revenue by President Grant, April, 1869; was appointed Collector, March 22, 1873, and served in that capacity until August, 1883, when the district was consolidated with another; published and edited the Somerset Herald since 1852; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Baltimore in 1864, at Cincinnati in 1876, and at Chicago in 1884; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,434 votes, against 16,908 votes for Thomas H. Greevy, Democrat, 915 votes for George H. Hocking, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Armstrong, Indiana, Jefferson, and Westmoreland. George Franklin Huff, of Greensburg, was born at Norristown, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, July 16, 1842; received his education in the public schools at Middletown, Dauphin County, and Altoona, Blair County, where he learned the trade of car finishing, and subsequently the banking business, and was employed in the banking house of William M. Lloyd & Company, until 1867, when he removed to Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania; is at present engaged in the banking business at Greensburg, and largely identified with the industrial and mining interests of western Pennsylvania; he was a member of the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1880, where he came into national prominence as one of the “Old Guard,” or ¢* Immortal 306; he was elected to the Senate of Pennsylvania in November, 1884, and represented the thirty-ninth senatorial district in that body until the close of the term ending in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 21,212 votes, against 19,714 votes for Jacob Crepps, Democrat and Fusion, and 2 votes scattering. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. CrrY OF PITTSBURGH and all townships and boroughs lying between the Monongahela and Allegheny Rivers, except the borough of McKeesport, and boroughs and townships lying between the Youghiogheny and Monongahela Rivers, in the county of Allegheny. John Dalzell, of Pittsburgh, was born in New York City, April 19, 1845; removed to Pittsburgh in 1847; received a common-school and collegiate education, graduating from Yale College in the class of 1865; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in February, 1367; has since practiced his profession; at time of his election was, and for years had been, one of the Attorneys for the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and for all its Western lines; was also attorney for many corporations in Allegheny County ; never held any office until he was elected to the Fiftieth Congress; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Republican, receiving 21,464 votes, against 13,559 votes for W. J. Brennan, Democrat, 246 votes for J. D. Simons, Prohibitionist, and 7 votes scattering. 102 : : Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA, TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT. CITY OF ALLEGHENY, and all the townships and boroughs lying north of the Allegheny and Olio Rivers, in the county of Allegheny. ‘William Alexis Stone, of Allegheny, was born in Delmar Township, Tioga County, Pennsylvania, April 18, 1846; was educated at the State Normal School, Mansfield, Tioga County, Pennsylvania; served in the war as Second Lieutenant of Company A, One hundred and eighty-seventh Pennsylvania Volunteers; after the war was Lieutenant-Colonel in the National Guard of the State; studied law with Hon. S, F. Wilson and Hon. J. B. Niles, at Wellsboro, Pennsylvania; was admitted to the bar in 1870; has practiced law at Wellsboro and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, since his admission to the bar; has been District Attorney of Tioga County and United States Attorney for the western district of Pennsylvania; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,904 votes, against 6,788 votes for Morrison Foster, Democrat, 134 votes for David H. Martin, Prohibitionist, and 8 votes scattering. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Fayette, Greene,and Washington, and all boroughs and townships lying south. of the Monongahela and Ohio Rivers, and the boroughs and townships lying between the Youghio- gheny and Morongahela Rivers, and the borough of McKeesport, in the county of Allegheny. Andrew Stewart was born in Uniontown, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, April 6, 1836; is the son of honorable Andrew Stewart, who served for eighteen years in Congress and was known as “ Tariff Andy; was educated at Sewickley Academy and Madison College ; studied medicine and attended lectures at Jefferson Medical College Philadelphia; at the breaking out of the war he enlisted as a private in the three months’ service and afterwards for three years or the war, in the Eighty-fifth Pennsylvania Regiment; was frequently promoted for personal bravery and gallant conduct, and was one of the last Assistant Adjutant-Generals of Volunteers mustered out of the service ; was confined in Libby, Macon, Charleston, Columbia, and other Southern prisons for over a year; was nominated for Congress in 1874; wasa Dele- gate to the Republican National Convention at Cincinnati and led the break for Blaine; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 21,708 votes, against 21,535 votes for Alex. K. Craig, Democrat, 995 frr Edward Campbell, Prohibitionist, and 1 vote scattering. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Beaver, Butler, Lawrence, and Mercer. Eugene P. Gillespie, of Greenville, was born at Greenville, Mercer County, Pennsylvania, September 24, 1852; was educated in the common schools of Greenville, at St. Michael’s College Toronto, Canada, and at Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania ; was admitted to the bar in August, 1874, and has been in the practice of the law since; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,797 votes, against 10,531 votes for Alex- ander McDowell, Republican, 10,636 votes for Thomas W. Phillips, Independent Republican, and 1,056 votes scattering. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Erie and Crawford. Matthew Griswold, of Erie, was born in Lyme, New London County, Connecticut, June 6, 1833; received a common school and academic education; was engaged in teaching and farming for a number of years; was frequently elected to various local town offices; in 1862 was elected a member of the Connecticut House of Representatives, and re-elected in 1365 ; in 1866 removed to Erie, his present home, where he became engaged in manufacturing; was elected trustee for four successive terms of the Erie Academy, a State institution; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 13,779 votes, against 12,891 votes for A. L. Tilden, Democrat and Farmers’ Alliance, 1,008 votes for Hugh Wilson, Pro- hibitionist, and 2 votes scattering. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cameron, McKean, Venango, and Warren. Charles W. Stone, of Warren, was born in Groton, Massachusetts, June 29, 1843; fitted for college at Lawrence Academy, Groton, and graduated at Williams College in 1863; was admitted to the bar in 1867, and has been engaged in the practice of law since that time, and of later years to some extent in lumbering, oil production, and farming; was appointed County \ PENNSYLVANIA. | Senators and Representatives. 103 Superintendent of Schools of Warren County in 1865; was a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives 1870 and 1871; was a member of the Pennsylvania Senate in 1877 and 1878; was Lieutenant-Governor of that State from 1879 to 1883; was appointed Secretary of the Commonwealth January 18, 1887, which office he resigned to accept the nomination for Congress; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress as a Republican to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. L. F. Watson, and at the same election to the Fifty- second Congress, receiving 12,713 votes, against 9,405 votes for R. W. Dunn, Democrat, and 1,212 votes for D. H. Boulton, Prohibitionist. I TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Centre, Clarion, Clearfield, Elk, and Forest. G. F. Kribbs, of Clarion, was born in Clarion County, Pennsylvania, November 8, 1846, on the farm on which he was brought up; during the winter months attended the country schools, working on the farm during the summer; after attaining his majority prepared for college, entering the junior class and graduating in 1873 at Muhlenberg College, Allentown, Pennsylvania; studied law and was admitted to practice in 1875; from 1877 to 1889 he edited the Clarion Democrat; since then he has been engaged in the practice of law; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,636 votes, against 12,944 votes for D. C. Oyster, Republican, 715 votes for J. C. Hayden, Prohibitionist, and 10 votes scattering. : RHODE ISLAND. SENATORS. Nelson Wilmarth Aldrich, of Providence, was born at Foster, Rhode Island, November 6, 1841; received an academic education; is engaged in mercantile pursuits; was President of the Providence Common Council in 1871-73; was a member of the Rhode Island General Assembly in 1875-76, serving the latter year as Speaker of the House of Representatives; was elected to the House of Representatives of the Forty-sixth Congress, and was re-elected to the Forty-seventh Congress; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, to succeed Ambrose E. Burnside, Republican, took his seat December 5, 1881, and was re-elected n 1886. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. Nathan Fellows Dixon, of Westerly, was born at Westerly, Rhode Island, August 28, 1847; was prepared for college at Westerly and Phillips Academy, Andover; was graduated from Brown University in 1869 ; studied law under his father, Hon. Nathan F. Dixon, and at the Albany Law School; was admitted to practice in New York, Rhode Island, and Con- necticut in 1871; was appointed United States District Attorney for the District'of Rhode Island by President Grant in 1877, and re-appointed in 1881; was elected State Senator from the Town of Westerly in 1885, and successively up to and including 1839; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy occasioned by the election of Hon. Jonathan Chace to the United States Senate, and was elected April 10, 1889, to the United States Senate, as a Republican, to succeed Jonathan Chace, resigned. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bristol, Newport, and part of Providence, including the city of Providence. Oscar Lapham, of Providence, was born in Burrillville, Rhode Island, June 29, 1837; was educated at University Grammar School, Providence, and graduated from Brown Uni- versity, class of 1864 ; is now member of Board of Trustees of that University; was admitted to the bar at Providence, May, 1867, and has since continued in active practice in that city ; was First Lieutenant, Adjutant, and Captain in Twelfth Rhode Island Volunteers; served in Virginia and Kentucky, in Army of Potomac and Department of Ohio; was Captain of Uni- versity Cadets’ of Brown University and Colonel of United Train of Artillery; represented city of Providence in State Senate, 1887-’88 ; was Chairman Judiciary Committee and mem- ber Special Committee to Investigate State Institutions ; was member and Treasurer Democratic State Central Committee 1887 to 1891; was Democratic candidate for Congress in 1882, ’86, ’88, and was elected to Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,377 votes, against 8,612 votes for Henry J. Spooner, Republican, 60g votes for Harrison H. Richardson, Prohi- bitienist, and 4 votes scattering. vA 1 104 Congressional Directory. [RHODE ISLAND. SECOND DISTRICT. Crries AND TowNs.— Cities of Pawtucket and Woonsocket, and the towns of Lincoln, Cum- berland, North Providence, Smithfield, North Smithfield, Burrillville, Gloucester, Scituate, Foster, Johnston, Cranston, Warwick, Coventry, West Greenwich, East Greenwich, Novih Kingston, South Kingston, Exeter, Richmond, Charlestown, Hopkinton, and Westerly. Charles Harrison Page, of Scituate, was born in Gloucester, county of Providence, Rhode Island, July 19, 1843; was thrown upon his own resources when quite young, leaving home at the age of eleven years; attended the public schools in winter and worked on a farm in sum- mer until he was seventeen years of age; after that devoted all his time to farming until he was nineteen years of age, when he enlisted as a private in Company A, Twelfth Regiment Rhode Island Volunteers, and was mustered out with his regiment July 29, 1863, when he returned to the farm and continued that business until 1868; gave up farming and went to the State of Illinois, where he resumed his studies at the Illinois State Normal School at Bloom- ington, and the Southern Illinois College at Carbondale; returning home to Rhode Island in 1869, taught school in his native town until the spring of 1870, when he entered the law department of the University of Albany, New York, from which he graduated in 1871; was admitted to the bar in the Supreme Court of New York; returned to Rhode Island and in 1872 was admitted to the Rhode Island bar, and has practiced his profession since; was elected to the State House of Representatives in 1872and 1873 from his native place; in 1874 was elected to the State Senate, and re-elected in 1875; in 1876 was Democratic candidate for Congress; in 1879 was candidate for Attorney-General of the State ; in 1880 was Delegate tothe Nationa! Democratic Convention; in 1884 was again elected to the State Senate; was Delegate to the National Democratic Convention in 1884; was nominated for Congress in 1884, ang, although his opponent was declared elected by a small majority, he made a successful contest and the seat was declared vacant; a special election was ordered and he was elected by a plurality of 295; took his seat and served about ten days in the last session of Forty-ninth Congress; was elected to the State Senate in 1885; was Delegate to the N ational Democratic Convention in 1888; in 1890 was again elected to State Senate ; while a member of the Legis- lature served on important committees, either Judiciary or Corporations; was nominated by the Democrats for the Fifty-second Congress, and received a plurality of 73 votes, the vote standing, Charles H. Page 8,329 votes, against 8,256 votes for Warren O. Arnold, Republican, and 504 votes for John A. Tripp, Prohibitionist. Thelaw of Rhode Island requires a majority, and the General Assembly in January, 1891, ordered a special election, which resulted in the election of Mr. Page to the Fifty-second Congress, who received 6,893 votes, against 725 votes for Warren O. Arnold, Republican, 462 votes for John A. Tripp, Prohibitionist, and 32 votes scattering. SOUTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. Matthew Calbraithe Butler, of Edgefield, was born near Greenville, South Carolina, March 8, 1836; received a classical education at the academy at Edgefield, and entered the South Caro- lina College in October, 1854; left this institution before graduating, and studied law at Stone- lands, the residence of his uncle, Hon. A. P. Butler, near Edgefield Court-House; was ad- mitted to the bar in December, 1857; practiced at Edgefield Court-House; was elected to the Legislature of South Carolina in 1860; entered the Confederate service as Captain of Cavalry in the Hampton Legion in June, 1861, and became a Major-General through the regular grades; lost his right leg at the battle of Brandy Station, on the oth of June, 1863; was elected to the Legislature of South Carolina in 1866; was a candidate for Lieutenant-Governor of South Carolina in 1870; received the Democratic vote of the South Carolina Legislature for United States Senator in 1870, receiving 30 votes; was elected to the United States Senate as a Demo- erat, to succeed Thomas J. Robertson, Republican; was admitted to his seat December 2, 1877, and was re-elected in 1882, and again in 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. John Laurens Manning Irby, of Laurens, wasborn September 10, 1854, at Laurens, South Carolina; was educated at Laurensville Male Academy, College of New Jersey, Princeton, New Jersey, and University of Virginia; was admitted to the bar in 1876, and practiced law until 1879; was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel in South Carolina volunteers in 1877 ; has been a large planter since he retired from the bar; was elected to the State House of Representa- tives of South Carolina in 1886, and re-elected in 1888 and 1890; was unanimously elected Speaker in the latter year ; was Chairman of the State Democratic Executive Committee in the SOUTH CAROLINA]. Senators and Representatives. : oe campaign of 1890; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat December 11, 1890, for the full term commencing March 4, 1891, receiving 105 votes, against 42 votes for General Wade Hampton, and 10 votes for M. L. Donaldsons ; took his seat March 4, 1891 ; his term of service will expire March 3, 1897. / REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— County of Charleston, except James Island, Folly Island, Morris Island, and the island lying between them the lower harbor of Charleston Harbor, and the ocean coast-line from and below high-water mark; the towns of Mount Pleasant and Summerville, and so much of the parish of St. James, Goose Creek, as lies between the western track of the South Carolina Railway and the Ashley River, in the county of Berkeley, and below the county of Colleton; parts of the counties of Colleton and Orangeburgh, and the county of Lexington. William H. Brawley, of Charleston, was born in South Carolina in 1841; was educated at the State College; served in the Confederate Army; was Solicitor of the Sixth Judicial Circuit; served in the Legislature of South Carolina; was elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 7,249 votes, against 1,349 votes for W. D. Crum, Republican, and I4 votes scattering. : SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Aiken, Barnwell, Edgefield, Hampton, and part of Colleton. George D. Tillman, of Clark’s Hill, was born near Curryton, Edgefield County, South Car- olina, August 21, 1826; after receiving an academical education at Penfield, Georgia, and at Greenwood, South Carolina, entered Harvard University, but did not graduate; studied law with Chancellor Wardlaw, and was admitted to the bar in 1848; practiced at Edgefield Court- House until the civil war broke out, but has been a cotton-planter since the war; volunteered in the Third Regiment of South Carolina State troops in 1862, and shortly after its disband- ment entered the Second Regiment of South Carolina Artillery, in which he served as a private until the close of the war; was elected to the State House of Representatives of South Caro- lina in 1854-"55, and again in 1864; was chosen a member of the State Constitutional Con- vention in 1865, held under the reconstruction proclamation of President Johnson; was also elected State Senator from Edgefield County in 1865 under that constitution; was likewise a member of the Democratic State Executive Committee of South Carolina in 1876; was the * Democratic candidate in the Fifth District of South Carolina for the Forty-fifth Congress, and unsuccessfully contested the seat of his competitor, Robert Smalls; although the Committee on Elections reported in favor of vacating the election, the House failed to act on the report; was elected to the Forty-sixth Congress; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress, but was contested out of his seat by Robert Smalls; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Dem- ocrat, receiving 9,956 votes, against 1,671 votes for S. E. Smith, Republican, and 18 votes scattering. : THIRD: DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Abbeville, Anderson, Newberry, Oconee, and Pickens. George Johnstone was born at Newberry, South Carolina, April 18, 1846; received his early education principally in the schools of his native town; entered the State Military . Academy from which he enlisted in the Confederate Army as a member of the Battalion of State Cadets and served until the close of the war; from 1866 until 1869 was a student in the University of Edinburgh, Scotland ; returned to his native town, studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1871, since which time he has continued in active practice; in 1874 he declined a nomination to the State Legislature, which was tendered him; he was elected to the State Legislature at a special election in 1877, and served continuously until 1884 when he declined to stand for re-election; he was Chairman of the House Committee on Corporations from 1878 to 1880; in 1881 he served as a member of the Commission created by act of the Legis- lature which revised the tax laws and to suggest amendments to the State Constitution ; during his active service in the Legislature he was a member of the Committee on Ways and Means, and from 1880 to 1884 was Chairman of that Committee; from 1880 to 1884 he was a mem- ber of the State Executive Committee of his party; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress asa Democrat, receiving 8,942 votes, against 803 votes for John R. Tolbert, Republican, and 34 votes scattering. Congressional Directory. ' [SOUTH CAROLINA. FOURTH DISTRICT. ’ COUNTIES.— Fairfield, Greenville, Laurens, Richland, Spartanburgh, and Union. George W. Shell, of Laurens, was born in Laurens County, South Carolina, November 13, 1831, where he has lived ever since; worked on a farm and attended country school until eighteen years of age; continued to farm until the war; entered the Confederate Army in April, 1861, and remained in the service until the surrender at Appomatox; served us private, Lieutenant, and Captain; after the war resumed farming, which occupation he has followed ever since; served as Clerk of Court for six years; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,372 votes, against 2,258 votes for J. F. Ensor, Re- publican, and 32 votes scattering. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Chester, Chesterfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, York, the townships of White Plains and Limestone Springs, in the county of Spartanburgh, and the townships of Gowdeysville and Draytonville, in the county of Union. : John J. Hemphill, of Chester, was born at Chester, South Carolina, August 25, 1849, and has always resided in his native town; he attended the schools in the town until 1866, when he entered the South Carolina University, from which he was graduated in 1869; after leaving college he began the study of law, and was admitted to the bar in the fall of 1870, and began practice on the Ist of January following; he was nominated by the Democrats as a candidate for the Legislature in 1874, but was not elected; he was again nominated for the same office by the same party in 1876 and elected, and was likewise renominated and re-elected in 1878 and 1880; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,432 votes, against 1,321 votes for G. G. Alexander, Republican, and 75 votes scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clarendon, Darlington, Florence, Horry, Marion, Marlborough, and part of Williamsburg. / Eli Thomas Stackhouse, of Little Rock, was born in Marion County, South Carolina, near where he now lives, March 27, 1824; was educated in the country schools, which he attended a few months each year, and worked remainder of the year on his father’s farm; taught school four years, between the ages of nineteen and twenty-three years; in 1847 settled on the farm where he now lives; left his farm in 1861 to respond to the call of his State for soldiers ; served in Longstreet’s Corps, Army Northern Virginia, and was surrendered as Colonel of his regiment ; before reconstruction he was three times elected to represent his county in the State Legislature; since reconstruction he has devoted his time and attention to the improvement of his farm and the education of his children; while thus engaged he has found time to write agricultural essays and to contribute to the Southern agricultural press; most of his life has been devoted to the effort to elevate and improve Southern agriculture; these efforts doubtless caused him to be elected and re-elected President of the State Alliance during term of eligibility; is a member of all the organizations in his State designed to benefit agriculture, and a Trustee of the State Agricultural College; was elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,022 votes, against 2,352 votes for Edmund Deas, Republican, and 79 votes scattering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Beaufort, Georgetown, Sumter, and Berkeley (excepting the towns of Mount Pleas: ant and Summerville, and so much of the parish of St. James, Goose Creek, as lies between the western track of the South Carolina Railway and the Ashley River below the county of Colleton); the lower township of Richland County; the townships of Collins, Adams Run, Glover, Fraser, Lowndes, and Blake, in the county of Colleton; the townships of Amelia, Goodby’s, Lyons, Pine Grove, Poplar, Providence, and Vance’s, in the county of Orange- burgh; the townships of Anderson, Hope, Indian, King's (excepting the town of Kingstree), Laws, Mingo, Penn, Ridge, Sutton’s, and Turkey, in the county of Williamsburgh, and that portion of Charleston County composed of James Island, Folly Island, Morris Island, and the island lying between them, the lower harbor of Charleston Harbor, and the ocean coast-line from and below high-water mark. William Elliott, of Beaufort, was born in Beaufort, South Carolina, September 3, 1838; was educated at Beaufort College; entered Harvard University in 1854, but before graduating | | | Cw SOUTH CAROLINA.] Senators and Representatives. 107 [ entered the University of Virginia and studied law; was admitted to the bar at Charleston in April, 1861; entered the Confederate service and served as an officer throughout the war; in 1866 was elected a member of the Legislature and Intendant of Beaufort; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at St. Louis in 1876; was Democratic Presidential Elector for the State at Large in 1880; was Democratic candidate for Congress in 1884, and was defeated by Robert Smalls, Republican; was elected to the Fiftieth Congress, and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Democrat, receiving 3,792 votes, against 3,315 votes for Thomas E. Miller, Republican, 1,410 votes for E. M. Brayton, Farmers’ Alli- ance, and 26 votes scattering. SOUTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. Richard Franklin Pettigrew, of Sioux Falls, was born at Ludlow, Vermont, July, 1848; removed with his parents to Evansville, Rock County, Wisconsin, in 1854; was prepared for college at the Evansville Academy, and entered Beloit College in 1866, where he remained two years; was a member of the law class of 1870, University of Wisconsin; went to Dakota in July, 1869, in the employ of a United States Deputy Surveyor as a laborer; located in Sioux Falls, where'he engaged in the surveying and real-estate business; opened a law officein 1872, and has been in the practice of his profession since; was elected to the Dakota Legislature as a member of the Council in 1877, and re-elected in 1879; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress as Delegate from Dakota Territory; was elected to the Territorial Council in 1884-’85; was a member of the South Dakota Constitutional Convention of 1883; Chair- man of the Committee on Public Indebtedness, and framed the present provisions of the con- stitution on ‘that subject; was elected United States Senator October 16, 1889, under the pro- visions of the act of Congress admitting South Dakota into the Union. Took his seat Decem- ber 2, 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. James Henderson Kyle, of Aberdeen, was born near Xenia, Ohio, February 24, 1854; entered the University of Illinois in 1871, but left in 1873 to enter Oberlin College; he was graduated from the classical course in 1878; prepared for admission to the bar, but afterward entered the Western Theological Seminary at Allegheny, Pennsylvania, graduating in 1882; was pastor of Congregational Churches at Echo and Salt Lake City, Utah, from 1882 to 1885; since then has resided at Ipswich and Aberdeen, South Dakota; was elected to the State Senate upon the Independent ticket in 1890; after a contest lasting twenty-seven days, upon the fourtieth ballot was elected as an Independent to the United States Senate to succeed Gideon C. Moody, receiving 75 ballots, as against 55 for Thomas Sterling, Repub- lican, 8 for Bartlett Tripp, Democrat, and 1 for Hugh J. Campbell ; took his seat March 4, 1891. His term will expire March 3, 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE. John Li. Jolley, of Vermillion, Clay County, South Dakota, was born in Montreal, Quebec, July 14, 1840; received a common-school education; removed to Wisconsin in 1857; settled ‘in Dakota Territory, July 9, 1866. Worked at harness making from 1853 to 1857. Enlisted as a private in Company C, Twenty-third Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, August 22, 1862, and was mustered out as Second Lieutenant, July 4, 1865; was elected a member of Dakota House of Representatives in 1867, and re-elected in 1868; was a member of the Dakota Territorial Council in 1875 and 1881; was elected State Senator -in 1889 and re-elected in 1890; was Mayor of the city of Vermillionin 1877 and in 1885; was a member of the Sioux Falls Con- stitutional Convention in 188g; was a member of the Republican National Convention in Chicago in 1884; nominated by the Republican Convention at Aberdeen, South Dakota, Sep- tember 29, 1891, for member of Congress, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John R. Gamble and was elected November 3, 1891, over Henry W. Smith, Independent, and James M. Wood, Democrat. AT LARGE, John A. Pickler, of Faulkton, was born near Salem, Washington County, Indiana, January 24, 1844; removed at the age of nine years with his father to Davis County, Iowa; entered the Army at the age of eighteen and served three and a half years—two years in the ranks of Y 108 Congressional Directory. [souTH DAKOTA. the Third Towa Cavalry, and mustered out as Captain in that regiment ; subsequently served six months as Major of the One hundred and thirty-eighth U. S. I. C.; was graduated from the literary department of the Iowa State University in 1870, and from Ann Arbor Law School in 1872; has practiced law since; was elected District Attorney of Adair County, Missouri, in the fall of 1872; removed to Muscatine, Iowa, in 1874; was a Garfield Elector, Second District of Iowa, in 1880; was elected to the Towa Legislature in 1881; removed to Dakota in 1883; was elected to the Dakota Legislature in 1884; appointed Inspector in Pub- lic Land sérvice in Interior Department April, 1889; and was elected to the Fifty-first Con- gress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second ( ongress as a Republican, receiving 34,856 votes, against 17,527 votes for F. H. Clark, Democrat, and 24,907 votes for F. A. Leavitt, In- dependent. TENNESSEE. SENATORS. Isham G. Harris, of Memphis, was born in Franklin County, Tennessee; was educated at the academy at Winchester; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and commenced to prac- tice at Paris, Henry County, Tennessee, in 1841; was elected to the State Legislature as a Democrat from the counties of Henry, Weakley, and Obion, in 1847; was a candidate for Presidential Elector in the Ninth Congressional District of Tennessee on the Democratic ticket in 1848; was elected to Congress as a Democrat from the Ninth Congressional District - in 1849 ; re-elected in 1851, and nominated as the candidate of the Democratic party in 1853, but declined the nomination; removed to Memphis, and there resumed the practice of his pro- fession; was a Presidential Elector for the State at large in 1856; was elected Governor of Tennessee as a Democrat in 1857, re-elected in 1859, and again in 1861; was a Volunteer Aid upon the staff of the Commanding General of the Confederate Army of Tennessee for the last three years of the war; returned to the practice of law at Memphis in 1867, and was en- gaged in it when elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat (defeating Judge 1.1. Hawkins, Republican), to succeed Henry Cooper, Democrat; took his seat March 5, 1877, and: was re-elected in 1883, and again in 188g. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. William B. Bate, of Nashville, was born near Castalian Spring, Tennessee; received an academic education; when quite a youth served as second clerk on a steamboat between Nash- ville and New Orleans; served as a private throughout the Mexican war in Louisiana and Tennessee regiments ; a year after returning from the Mexican war was elected to the Ten- nessee Legislature ; graduated from the Lebanon Law School in 1852, and entered upon the practice of his profession at Gallatin, Tennessee ; in 1854 was elected Attorney-General for the Nashville District for six years; during his term of office was nominated for Congress, but declined ; was a Presidential Elector in 1860 on the Breckinridge-Lane ticket; was pri- vate, Captain, Colonel, Brigadier and Major General in the Confederate service, surrendering with the Army of the Tennessee in 1865; was three times dangerously wounded ; after the close of the war returned to Tennessee and resumed the practice of law ; was a Delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1868; served on the National Democratic Execu- tive Committee for Tennessee twelve years; was an Elector for the State at large on the Til- den and Hendricks ticket in 1876; in 1882 was elected Governor of Tennessee, and re-elected without opposition in 1884; in January, 1887, was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Washington C. Whitthorne, and took his seat March 4, 1887. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. REPRESENTATIVES. IRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hancock, Hawkins, Jokn- son, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington. Alfred Alexander Taylor, of Johnson City, was born near Elizabethton, Carter County, Ten- nessee, in 1849; was educated at Edge Hill, under Professors White and Cattell, and at Penning- ton, New Jersey, under Professors Knowles and Hanlon; read law, and was admitted to the bat in 1870; was elected to the Legislature in 1875 from Carter and Johnson Counties; in 1876 canvassed the First Congressional District against Judge Henry H. Ingersoll as candidate for Elector on the Hayes and Wheeler ticket; was candidate for Elector for State at large in 1880 ou the Garfield and Arthur ticket, and canvassed the State against Judge Andrew B. Mar- 7 pom Se an TENNESSEE. | Senators and Representatives. 109 tin; was called into the campaign of the State in 1882 by the State Central Committee, and canvassed in joint discussion with Senator Isham G. Harris; was nominated for Governor in 1886. and was defeated by his brother, Robert L. Taylor, the Democratic nominee; was a delegate from the State at large to Republican National Convention in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-first, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 11,464 votes, against 10,717 votes for Roderick R. Butler, Independent Republican, 1,063 votes for Bruner, Prohibitionist, and 162 votes for P. M. Kian, Independent Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Jefferson, Knox, Loudon, Morgan, Roane, Scott, Sevier, and Union. ; John C. Houk, of Knoxville, was born February 26, 1860, in Clinton, Anderson County, Tennessee; removed with his father to Knoxville in 1870; was educated in the University of Tennessee; read law and was licensed to practice at the age of 24; acted as private secre- tary to his father, who was a member of Congress, from 1879 until 1891, when his father died ; was clerk of the War Claims Committee of the House, Forty-seventh Congress; was President of the Republican Club of Knox County, Tennessee, for 8 years ; was chairman of the County Republican Central Committee for 2 years, and was its secretary for several years; ~ was chairman of the Congressional Republican Committee for 2 years and was secretary of the Congressional Committee for 10 years; was secretary of the State Republican Committee for 4 years; is at present a member of the State Republican Committee ; received all of the Republican votes of the Legislature in 1884 for State Treasurer; refused the nomination for mayor of Knoxville ; refused to accept membership on the Republican National Committee in 1884; was assistant doorkeeper of the House of Representatives, Fifty-first Congress. His friends claim he was the originator of the idea of a league of Republican clubs; is the pres- ent permanent secretary of the Republican caucus of the House of Representatives; was nominated by the Republicans of his district to succeed his father in Congress over W. W. Woodruff, by 9,271 majority in a popular primary election; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, at a special election held November 21, 1891, receiving 14,095 votes against 7,829 votes for J. C. J. Williams, Democrat, and 215 votes for W. H. Henry, Alliance and Prohibition candidate. THIRD. DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bledsoe, Bradley, Franklin, Grundy, Hamilton, James, McMinn, Marion, Monroe, Polk, Van Buren, Warren, and White. H. C. Snodgrass, of Sparta, was born in White County, Tennessee, 1848; was educated at the Sparta Academy, and afterwards studied law at the University in Lebanon, Tennessee; commenced the practice of law in Sparta, Tennessee, which he still continues; was Attorney- General of the Fifth Judicial Circuit for eight years; was elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress as a Democrat, receiving 13,773 votes, against 13,250 votes for H. Clay Evans, Repub- lican, and 384 votes for J. E. Rogers, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Clay, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Overton, Putnam, Pickett, Smith, Sumner, Trous- dale, and Wilson. Benton McMillin, of Carthage, was born in Monroe County, Kentucky, September 11, 1845; was educated at Philomath Academy, Tennessee, and Kentucky University, at Lexing- ton; studied law under Judge E. L. Gardenhire, and was admitted to the bar; commenced the practice of the law at Celina, Tennessee, in 1871; was elected a member of the House of Rep- resentatives of the Tennessee Legislature in November, 1874, and served out his term; was commissioned by the Governor to treat with the State of Kentucky for the purchase of territory in 1875; was chosen Elector on the Tilden and Hendricks ticket in 1876; was commissioned by the Governor Special Judge of the Circuit Court in 1877; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re- elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving’ 14,514 votes, against 7,630 votes for C. W. Garrett, Republican, and 523 votes for J. R. Goodpasture, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, De Kalb, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore, and Rutherford. James Daniel Richardson, of Murfreesborough,was born in Rutherford County, Tennessee, March 10, 1843; was educated at good country schools; was at Franklin College, near Nash- ville, Tennessee, when the war began, and entered the Confederate Army at eighteen years of age, before graduating; served in the army nearly four years, the first year as private and the remaining three as Adjutant of the Forty-fifth Tennessee Infantry; read law after the war, and 110 ; : Congressional Directory. [TENNESSEE, began the practice January 1, 1867, at Murfreesborough; was elected to the lower house of the Tennessee Legislature, took his seat in October, 1871, and on the first day was elected Speaker of the House, he being then only twenty-eight years of age; was elected to the State Senate the following session, 1873-"74; was Grand Master of Masons in Tennessee, 1873-74, Grand High Priest of Grand Chapter, Royal Arch Masons of the State, 1882; and Inspector- General Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, Thirty-third Degree, in Tennessee; was a Dele- gate to the St. Louis Democratic Conventionin 1876; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as, a Democrat, receiving 12,890 votes, against 4,340 votes for P. C. Smithson, Republican, and 1,484 votes for H. R. Moore, Prohibitionist, and 153 wotes for P. C. Isbell, Independent. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Cheatham, Davidson, Houston, Humphreys, Montgomery, Robertson, and Stewart. Joseph Edwin Washington, of Cedar Hill, was born at Wessyngton, the family home- stead, Robertson County, Tennessee, November 10, 1851 ; was educated at home and at George- town College, District of Columbia, where he graduated, June 26, 1873; studied law with the first law class organized at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, in 1874; gave up his law studies to engage in farming; was elected a member of the House of Representatives of the State Legislature in November, 1876; was chosen Elector on the Hancock and English ticket for the Fourth Congressional District in 1880; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,656 votes, against 2,708 votes for S. Watson, Republican, and 1,302 votes for W. D. Turnley, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Dickson, Giles, Hickman, Lawrence, Lewis, Maury, Wayne, and Williamson. Nicholas Nichols Cox, of Franklin, was born in Bedford County, Tennessee, January 6, 1837; removed with his parents to the frontier of Texas when a small boy, and was brought up in the town of Seguin, near San Antonio; was educated in the common schools; pursued the study of law at the law school of Lebanon, Tennessee, from which institution he gradu- ated in 1858, and was licensed to practice at the same time; was a Confederate Colonel and served during most of the war with General Forrest; after the war he located in Franklin, Williamson County, Tennessee, where he has followed his profession ever since, and at the same time has been engaged in farming ; was an elector on the Breckinridge and Lane ticket in 1860; was elector on the Greeley ticket in 1872; Mr. Greeley having died before the Col- lege of Electors met he cast his vote for Hendricks, of Indiana, for President ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,362 votes, against 5,364 votes for A. M. Hughes, Republican, and 1,289 votes for John Graham, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Benton, Carroll, Chester, Decatur, Hardin, Henderson, Henry, Madison, McNairy, and Perry. Benjamin Augustine Enloe, of Jackson, was born near Clarksburgh, Carroll County, Ten- nessee, January I8, 1848; was raised on a farm, and enjoyed the benefit of such country schools as the country afforded between 1855 and 1865; entered Bethel College in 1867, and afterwards became a student in the Literary Department of the Cumberland University at Leb- anon, Tennessee; while a student at the latter institution was elected a member of the House of Representatives of the General Assembly of the State, at the age of twenty-one years; re- elected under the new constitution in 1870; graduated from the Law Department of Cumber- land University in 1872; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Balti- more in 1872; was a Tilden and Hendricks Elector in 1876; was appointed a Commissioner by Governor Marks in 1878 to negotiate a settlement of the State debt; served on the State Executive Committee for the State at large from 1878 till 1880; was President of the State Democratic Conventionin 1880; was a Delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Cincinnati in 1880; was President of the Tennessee Press Association in 1883-84; edited the Jackson Tribune and Sun from 1874 till 1886; was elected to the Fiftieth and. Fifty-first Congresses, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,444 votes, against 4,469 votes for J. R. McKinney, Republican, and 1,070 votes for James T. Warren, Prohibitionist, 1,439 votes for George McCall, Republican, and 540 votes imperfect. Gai TIN ; ; ; ro eT 2 TENNESSEE. | Senators and Representatives. fos {ALE NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Crockett, Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion, and Weakley. Rice A. Pierce, of Union City, Tennessee, was born on a farm in Weakley County, Ten- nessee, July 3, 1848; was for two years a member of the Eighth Tennessee Cavalry, Confed- erate States Army ; was wounded and captured in a cavalry fight near Jackson, Tennessee, in 1864; was a prisoner of war till close of war; attended the common schools of the country, and was two and one-half years at the London High School, London, Ontario; read law at Halifax, North Carolina, in the office of Judge Edward Conigland; was licensed to practice law by the Supreme Court of North Carolina in July, 1868; was elected District Attorney of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit in 1874; re-elected in 1878 for the full term of eight years; was elected to the Forty-eighth Congress as a Democrat; was defeated for renomina- tion in 1884 by Hon. P. T. Glass, being opposed by Mr. Glass and four other candidates, who threw their votes to Mr. Glass; was nominated in a primary election as the Democratic nominee over Hon. P. T. Glass, Hon. F. P. Bond, and Hon. James M. Coulter; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 12,191 votes, against 3,959 votes for W. F. Poston, Republican, and 1,109 votes for J. B. Cummings, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Fayette, Hardeman, Shelby, and Tipton. Josiah Patterson, of Memphis, was born April 14, 1837, in Morgan County, Alabama; was brought up on a farm; was educated in the old field schools, and attended for two years the Somerville Academy; read law on his father’s farm without the aid of an instructor, and : was admitted to practice in April, 1859; entered the Confederate Army in September, 1861, as First Lieutenant in the First Alabama Cavalry Regiment; commanded his company at the battle of Shiloh, and was in May, 1862, promoted to the rank of Captain; in December, 1862, he was again promoted to the rank of Colonel, and was assigned to the command of the Fifth Alabama Cavalry Regiment; while retaining the rank of Colonel he commanded a brigade of cavalry during the last year of the war; surrendered the Fifth Alabama Cav- alry Regiment on the 19th day of May, 1865, it being probably the last organized body of Confederate troops surrendered east of the Mississippi River; returned to the practice of law after the war, and has since devoted himself to his profession; in January, 1867, he located at Florence, Alabama, where he resided for five years; located in Memphis, Tennessee, in March, 1872, where he has since resided; in 1882 was elected to the lower branch of the State Legislature; in 1888 he was an Elector for the State at large on the Democratic ticket; in 1890 was a candidate for Governor, but was defeated for the nomination in the State Dem- ocratic Convention by John P. Buchanan, the candidate of the Farmers’ Alliance; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 9,108 votes, against 2,962 votes for L. B. Eaton, Republican. TEXAS. SENATORS. Richard Coke, of Waco, was born at Williamsburgh, Virginia, March 13, 1829; was edu- rated at William and Mary College; studied law, was admitted to the bar when twenty-one years of age, and has since practiced constantly when not in the public service; removed in 1850 to Waco, McLennan County, Texas, where he has since resided ; served in the Confed- erate Army as private and afterward as Captain; was appointed District Judge in June, 1865; was nominated by the Democratic party for Judge of the State Supreme Court in 1866, and elected, and after having occupied the position one year was removed by General Sheridan as “an impediment to reconstruction; ”’ returned to the practice of law the latter part of 1367; was elected Governor of Texas in December, 1873, by a majority of 50,000, and was re-elected in February, 1876, by a majority of 102,000, resigning December 1, 1877, after having been elected the previous April to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Morgan C. Hamilton, Republican; took his seat March 4, 1877, and was re-elected in 1883, and again 1 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. Horace Chilton, of Tyler, was born in Smith County, Texas, December 29, 1853; is an attorney at law; was appointed Assistant Attorney-General of the State of Texas in 1881; was a Delegate at Large from Texas to the National Democratic Convention at St. Louis in 1888, and was appointed to the United States Senate as a Democrat to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. John H. Reagan. He took his seat December 7, 1891. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. £12 Congressional Directory. [TEXAS. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Angelina, Brazos, Chambers, Grimes, Hardin, Harris, Jasper, Jefferson, Lib- erty, Madison, Montgomery, Newton, Orange, Folk, San Jacinto, Trinity, Tyler, Walker, and Waller. : Charles Stewart, of Houston, was born in Memphis, Tennessee, May 30, 1836; is by pro- : fession a lawyer; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Con- gresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,356 votes, against 11,291 votes for E. L.. Angier, Republican, and 20 votes scattering. \ SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIE—Anderson, Cherokee, Freestone, Henderson,” Houston, Leon, Nacogdoches, Robert- son, Sabine, and San Augustine. John Benjamin Long, of Rusk, was born in the County of Nacogdoches, September 8, 1843; moved with his parents to Rusk, Texas, in 1846, where he has since resided; his education is ordinary; has held no official position of any import; in 1874 became a member of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry, and took an active interest in advocating the cause of progress among his fellow laborers; is now Overseer of the Texas State Grange and President “of the Texas Farmer Co-operative Publishing Association; has always been a Democrat; is a Ruling Elder in the Cumberland Presbyterian Church; made the canvass and secured the nomination for the Fifty-second Congress over some of the most prominent and best men of ithe State; had no expressed oppositidn after nomination; he received 12,973 votes, and 56 votes scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. CoOUNTIES.— Camp, Gregg, Harrison, Hunt, Panola, Rains, Rusk, Shelby, Smith, Upshur, Van Zandt, and Wood. Constantine Buckley Kilgore, of Will's Point, was born in Newnan, Georgia, February 20, 1835; removed with his parents to Rusk County, Texas, in 1846; received a common-school and academic education ; served in the Confederate Army as private, Orderly Sergeant, First Lieutenant,and Captain inthe Tenth Texas Regiment; in 1862 was made the Adjutant-General of Ector’s Brigade, Army of the Tehnessee; was wounded at Chickamauga; was captured, and confined as a prisoner in Fort Delaware during the year 1864; was admitted to the bar after the war, and has been practicing law since that time; was elected Justice of the Peace in Rusk County in 1869; was a member of the Constitutional Convention in 1875; was a Presidential Elector in 1880 on the Hancock and English ticket; was elected to the State Senate in 1884 for four years; was chosen President of that body in 1885 for two years; resigned his posi- tion in the Senate when nominated for Congress in 1886; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiv- ing 19,038 votes, against 7,340 votes for L. B. Fish, Republican, 325 votes for John O. Byrne, Prohibitionist, and 4 votes scattering. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bowie, Cass, Delta, Fannin, Franklin, Hopkins, Lamar, Marion, Morris, Red River, and Titus. David B. Culberson, of Jefferson, was born in Troup County, Georgia, September 29, 1830; was educated at Brownwood, La Grange, Georgia; studied law under Chief-Justice Chilton, of Alabama; removed to Texas in 1856, and was elected a member of the Legisla- ture of that State in 1859; entered the Confederate Army as a private, and was promoted to the rank of Colonel of the Eighteenth Texas Infantry; was assigned to duty in 1864 as Adju- tant-General, with the rank of Colonel, of the State of Texas; was elected to the State Legis- lature in 1864; was elected to the Iorty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty- eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,290 votes, against 5,279 votes for J. C. Gibbons, Re- “ publican, 532 votes for P. B. Clark, Prohibitionist, and 28 votes scattering. / TEXAS. Senators and Representatives. 113 FIFTH DISTRICT. l COUNTIES. —-Archer, Baylor, Clay, Collin, Cook, Denton, Grayson, Montague, Rockwall, Wichita, Wilbarger, and Wise. Joseph W. Bailey, of Gainesville, was born in Copiah County, Mississippi, October 6, 1863 ; was admitted to the bar in 1883; served as a District-elector on the Cleveland and Hendricks ticket in 1884; moved to Texas in 1885, and located at his present home; served as Elector for the State at large on the Democratic ticket in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 26,791 votes against 4,252 votes for A. W. Acheson, Republican, and 1,683 votes for W. R. Lamb, Independent. : SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bosque, Dallas, Ellis, Hill, Johnson, Kaufman, and Tarrant. Jo Abbott, of Hillsboro, was born near Decatur, Morgan County, Alabama, January 15, 1840; began his education in the public schools of that State; went with his father and family to Texas in the fall of 1853, and entered the private school of Dr. Frank Yoakum, and after- ward that of Professor Allison; served in the Twelfth Texas Cavalry, Confederate Army, as First Lieutenant; studied law and was admitted to the bar in October, 1866; was elected to the State Legislature in 1869, and served one term; was appointed by Governor Roberts Judge of the Twenty-eighth Judicial District in February, 1879; was elected to the same position in November, 1880, and served four years; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 29,982 votes, against 571 votes for H. W. Barclay, Republican, 4,430 votes for Isaac Darter, Alliance and Knights of Labor,and 10 votes scattering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Aransas, Bee, Brazoria, Calloun, Cameron, Dimmit, De Witt, Duval, Encinal, Fort Bend, Frio, Galveston, Goliad, Hidalgo, Jackson, La Salle, Matagorda, Maverick, Mec- Mullen, Nueces, Refugio, San Patricio, Starr, Victoria, Webb, Wharton, Zapata, and Zavalila. William H. Crain, of Cuero, Texas, was born at Galveston, Texas, November 25, 1848; graduated at St. Francis Xavier’s College, New York City, July 1, 1867, and received the de- gree of A. M. several years afterwards ; studied law in the office of Stockdale & Proctor, Indian- ola, and was admitted to practice in February, 1871; has practiced law since that time; was elected as the Democratic candidate for District Attorney of the Twenty-third Judicial District of Texas in November, 1872; was elected a State Senator on the Democratic ticket in Febru- ary, 1876; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re- elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,550 votes, against 9,069 votes for J. V. Spohn, Republican, and 2 votes scattering. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—AZascosa, Austin, Caldwell, Colorado, Fayette, Gonzales, Guadalupe, Hayes, Karnes, Lavaca, Lee, Live Oak, and Wilson. Littleton Wilde Moore, of La Grange, was born in Alabamain 1835; removed to Mississippi whena child; was educated at the State University, graduating with the first honors of his class in 1855; read law; removed to Texas in 1857, and began the practice of his profession; served in the Confederate Army during the war; was elected to the Constitutional Convention of Texas in 1875; was elected District Judge in 1876, and remained upon the bench till 1885; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress, as a Democrat, receiving 20,739 votes, against 7,468 votes for William Greene, Republican, and 4 votes scattering. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bell, Burleson, Falls, Limestone, McLennan, Milam, Navarro, and Washington. Roger Q. Mills, of Corsicana, was elected to the Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 21,847 votes, against 5,600 votes for D. W. Roberts, Republican, and 7 votes scattering. 2D ED——S8 . 3 1 i 3 a 2 Y vi Y 3 \ 4 114 : Congressional Directory. [TExAS., TENTH DISTRICT. CoOUNTIES.— Bandera, Bastrop, Bexar, Blanco, Burnet, Coleman, Comal, Concho, Crockett, Edwards, Gillespie, Kendall, Kerr, Kimball, Kinney, Lampasas, Llano, McCulloch, Mason, Medina, Menard, Runnels, San Saba, Sutton, Sleicker, Travis, Uvalde, and Williamson. Joseph D. Sayers, of Bastrop, was born at Grenada, Mississippi, September 23, 1841; removed with his father to Bastrop, Texas, in 1851; entered the Confederate Army early in 1861 and served continuously until April, 1865; was admitted to the bar in 1866 and became a partner of Hon. George W. Jones; served as a member of the State Senate in the session of 1873; was Chairman of the Democratic State Executive Committee during the years 1875— ’78; was Lieutenant-Governor of Texas in 1879 and ’80; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 32,479 votes, against 2,537 votes for W. G. Robinson, Republican, and 147 votes scattering. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Andrews, Armstrong, Bailey, Borden, Briscoe, Brewster, Brown, Buchel, Calla- han, Carson, Castro, Childress, Cochran, Coke, Collingsworth, Comanche, Coryell, Cottle, Crane, Crosby, Dallam, Dawson, Deaf Smith, Dickens, Donley, Eastland, Ector, El Paso, Erath, Fisher, Floyd, Foley, Gaines, Garsa, Glasscock, Gray, Greer, Hale, Hall, Hamilton, Hansford, Hardeman, Hartley, Haskell, Hemphill, Hockley, Hood, Howard, Hutchinson, Irion, Jack, Jeff Davis, jones, Kent, King, Knox, Lamb, Lipscomb, Loving, Lubbock, Lynn, Mar- tin, Midland, Mills, Mitchell, Moore, Motley, Nolan, Ochiltree, Oldham, Palo Pinto, Parker, Parmer, Pecos, Potter, Presidio, Randall, Reeves, Roberts, Scurry, Shackelford, Sherman, Somerville, Stephens, Sterling, Stonewall, Swisher, Taylor, Terry, Throckmorton, Tom Green, Upton, Val Verde, Ward, Wheeler, Winkler, Yoakum, and Yourng—98 counties. Samuel W. T. Lanham, of Weatherford, was born in Spartanburgh District, South Caro- lina, July 4, 1846; received only a common-school education; entered the Confederate Army (Third South Carolina Regiment) when a boy; removed to Texas in 1866; studied law, and ' was admitted to practice in 1869; was District Attorney of the Thirteenth District of Texas; was Democratic Elector of the Third Congressional District of Texas in 1880; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 38,348 votes, against 858 votes for C. W. John- son, Republican, and 20 votes scattering. VERMONT. SENATORS. Justin Smith Morrill, of Strafford, was born at Strafford, Vermont, April 14, 1810; received a common school and academic education; was a merchant, and afterward engaged in agricul- tural pursuits; was a Representative in the Thirty-fourth, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-sixth, Thirty- seventh, Thirty-eighth. and Thirty-ninth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Union Republican, to succeed Luke P. Poland, Union Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1867; was re-elected 1872, in 1878, in 1884, and in 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1897. Redfield Proctor, of Proctor, was born at Cavendish, Vermont, June 1, 1831; graduated at Dartmouth College and at the Albany Law School; served as Lieutenant and Quarter- master of the Third Regiment of Vermont Volunteers, on the Staff of Major-General William F. (Baldy) Smith, and was Major of the Fifth and Colonel of the Fifteenth Vermont Regi- ments; was a member of the Vermont House of Representatives in 1867, 1868, and in 1888; was a member of the State Senate and President pro tempore of that body in 1874 and 1875; was Lieutenant-Governor from 1876 to 1878, and Governor from 1878 to 1880; was a dele- gate to the Republican National Conventions of 1884 and 1888, and Secretary of War from March, 1889, to November, 1891; was appointed by Governor Page, November 2, 1891, to fill, until the election of his suceessor, the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. George F. Edmunds. i | ho i i a SL a VERMONT.| Senators and Representatives, 115 REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Addison, Bennington, Chittenden, Franklin, Grand Isle, Lamoille, and Rutland. H. Henry Powers, of Morrisville, was born at Morristown, Lamoille County, Vermont, May 29, 1835; was graduated from the University of Vermont in 1855; was admitted to the bar in 1858; was a member of the House of Representatives of Vermont in 1858; was Prosecuting Attorney of Lamoille County in 1861-62; was member of Council of Censors of Vermont in 1869; was member of the Constitutional Cortvention of the State in 1870; was member State Senate in 1872-73; was Speaker of the House of Representatives in 1874; was Judge of the Supreme Court of Vermont from December, 1874, to December, 1890; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 17,136 votes, against 8,605 votes for Thomas W. Maloney, Democrat, and 11 votes scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Caledonia, Essex, Orange, Orleans, Washington, Windham, and Windsor. William W. Grout, of Barton, was born May 24, 1836; received an academic education and graduated at Poughkeepsie Law School in 1857; was admitted to the bar in December of same year; practiced law and was State’s Attorney for Orleans County 1865-'66; served as Lieutenant-Colonel of Fifteenth Vermont Volunteers in the Union Army; was made Brigadier- General of Vermont militia at time of St. Albans raid in 1864; was a member of Vermont House of Representatives in 1868, ’69,’70, and 74, and of the Senate in 1876, and President pro tempore of that body; was elected to the Forty-seventh, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty- first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 18,092 votes, against 8,960 votes for Stephen C. Shurtluff, Democrat, and 33 votes scattering. VIRGINIA. SENATORS. John Warwick Daniel, of Lynchburgh, was born in Lynchburgh, Campbell County, Vir- ginia, September 5, 1842; was educated at Lynchburgh College and at Dr. Gessner Harrison’s University School; served in the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia throughout the war, and became Adjutant-General on General Early’s staff; studied law in the University of Vir- ginia during session of 1865 and 66, and has practiced ever since; is author of “Daniel on Attachments,” and “ Daniel on Negotiable Instruments;”’ served in the Virginia House of Delegates, sessions 1869—"70 and 1871-72, and in the State Senate from 1875 to 1831; was an Elector at large on the Tilden and Hendricks ticket in 1876; was member of the National Democratic Conventions of 1880 and ’88; was defeated for Governor in 1881 by W. E. Cameron, Readjuster; was a member of the Forty-ninth Congress; was elected to the United States Senate, as a Democrat, to succeed William Mahone, and took his seat March 4, 1887; was re-elected by unanimous vote December, 1891. His present term of service will expire March 3, 1893, and that to which last elected in 1899. John S. Barbour, of Alexandria, was born in Culpeper County, Virginia, December 29, 1820; pursued a course of study at the University of Virginia for three years, and graduated from the school of law there in 1842; began the practice of the law in his native county of Culpeper; was elected to the Legislature of Virginia from Culpeper County in 1847, and was re elected, serving four consecutive sessions; was elected President of the railroad company then called the Orange and Alexandria Railroad Company in 1852,and served in that position until it was merged into what is now known as the Virginia Midland Railroad Company, of which he was President till he resigned, in 1883; was elected to the Forty-seventh, Forty- eighth, and Forty-ninth Congresses, and was elected to the United States Senate, as a Demo- crat, to succeed Harrison H. Riddleberger, Readjuster, and took his seat March 4, 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. 116 Congressional Directory. ~ [VIRGINIA. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Accomack, Caroline, Essex, Gloucester, King and Queen, Lancaster, Matthews, Middlesex, Northampton, Northumberland, Richmond, Spottsylvania, and Westmoreland, and the city of Fredericksburg. 3 William Atkinson Jones, of Warsaw, was born in Warsaw, Richmond County, Virginia, March 21, 1849; in the winter of 1864-'65 entered the Virginia Military Institute, where he remained until the evacuation of Richmond, serving, as occasion required, with the cadets in the defense of that city; after the close of the war studied at Coleman’s School, in Freder- icksburg, until October, 1868, when he entered the academic department of the University of Virginia, from which institution he graduated with the degree of B. L. in 1870; was ad- mitted to the bar in July, 1870, and has continued to practice law ever since, although also engaged in farming operations; was for several years Commonwealth’s Attorney for his county; was a delegate in 1880 to the National Democratic Convention at Cincinnati; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,613 votes, against 12,150 votes for Thomas H. Bayly Browne, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Charles City, Elizabeth City, Isle of Wight, James City, Nansemond, Norfolk, Princess Anne, Southampton, Surry, Warwick, and York, and the cities of Norfolk, Ports- mouth, and Williamsburgh, and Newport News. John W. Lawson, of Isle of Wight, was born in James City County, Virginia, September 13, 1837 ; was educated in the schools of Williamsburgh, at William and Mary College, and at the University of Virginia; studied medicine and graduated from the University of ‘the City of New York, March 4, 1861 ; returned to his native State and enlisted as a private soldier in the Thirty-second Regiment Virginia Infantry ; served on the Peninsula under General J. B. Macgruder, commanding Confederate forces; participated in the battle of Williamsburgh, and in the series of battles beginning with Seven Pines, including Gaines’ Mill, Savage Station, White Oak Swamp, and Malvern Hill; then entered the Medical Department Confederate States of America; served as assistant surgeon in charge of artillery battalion; was promoted to full Surgeon March 10, 1864; surrendered to General Grant’s forces at Appomattox April 9, 1865; settled in Isle of Wight County, Virginia, December, 1865; practiced medicine for ten years; was elected to the House of Delegates and re-elected a second term ; was elected to the State Senate and served four years ; at the expiration of the Senatorial term settled on a farm and has been following agricultural pursuits since ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,472 votes, against 12,717 votes for George E. Bow- den, Republican, and 700 votes scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Chesterfield, Goochland, Hanover, Henrico, King William, and New Kent, and the cities of Richmond and Manchester. George D. Wise, of Richmond, was born in Accomack County, Virginia, in 1835; re- moved with his parents to Washington, District of Columbia, when a small boy; was pre- pared for college in the schools of that city; was graduated from the University of Indiana and from the Law School of William and Mary College, Virginia; served four years in the Confederate Army, the greater part of the time on the staff of Major-General C. L. Stevenson, with the rank of Captain; after the war engaged in the practice of the law in Richmond, Virginia, where he has resided since; was elected Commonwealth’s Attorney in 1870, and successively re-elected till 1880, when he resigned ; was elected to the Forty-seventh, Forty- eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, without opposition, receiving 13,937 votes, and 20 votes scattering. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Amelia, Brunswick, Dinwiddie, Greenesville, Lunenburgh, Mecklenburgh, Notto- way, Powhatan, Prince Edward, Prince George, and Sussex, and the city of Petersburgh. James F. Epes, of Blackstone, was born in the county of Nottoway, Virginia, May 23, 1842; was educated in the primary schools of his native county and in several private schools, and at the University of Virginia; in 1861 he entered the Confederate Army in the Third VIRGINIA. | Senators and Representatives. : 117 Virginia Cavalry; was wounded at Ream’s Station; during the session of 1866 and 1867 attended the Law Department of Washington and Lee University, and received the degree of Doctor of Laws; engaged in the practice of his profession until 1883, when he retired to private life on a farm and devoted himself to agricultural pursuits; was elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 13,325 votes, against 9,991 votes for John M. Langston, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Carroll, Floyd, Franklin, Grayson, Henry, Patrick, and Pittsylvania, and the cities of Danville and North Danville. Posey Green Lester, of Floyd Court-House, was born in Floyd County, Virginia, March 12, 1850; lived on a farm until twenty years of age, after which he obtained a common-school education, and fora few years was engaged in teaching literary and vocal school; in 1876 was ordained to the work of the Gospel ministry in the Primitive or Old School Baptist Church, since which time he has been principally engaged in traveling and preaching in eighteen States; since July, 1883, has been associate editor of Zion’s Landmark, one of the periodicals of his Church; is also associated in the publication of a hymn and tune book, for use in the Baptist Church; is not married ; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,569 votes, against 1,360 votes for Adams, In- dependent. : SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Bedford, Botetourt, Campbell, Charlotte, Halifax, Monigomery, Roanoke, and the city of Lynchburgh, and Roanoke City. Paul Carrington Edmunds, of Halifax Court-House, was born in Halifax County, Vir- ginia, November 1, 1836; was educated by a private tutor at home; was three years at the University of Virginia; graduated in law at William and Mary College, Williamsburgh, Virginia; practiced law for nearly two years in Jefferson City, Missouri; returned to Virginia in 1858, and has Been engaged in agricuiture since that time on his farm in Halifax County; was elected to the Senate of Virginia in 1881, and served four years; was re-elected in 1884; was a Delegate from the Sixth District to the Democratic National Convention at Chicago in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 11,615 votes, and 1,200 votes scattering. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Albemarie, Clarke, Frederick, Greene, Madison, Page, Rappahannock, Rock- ingham, Shenandoah, Warren, and the cities of Charlottesville and Winchester. Charles T. O’Ferrall, of Harrisonburgh, was born in Frederick County, Virginia, October 21, 1840; at the age of fifteen he was appointed Clerk pro tempore of the Circuit Court of Morgan County, Virginia, to fill a vacancy occasioned by the death of his father, and at the age of seventeen was elected Clerk of the County Court of that county for six years; in May, 1861, he enlisted in the cavalry service of the Confederate States as a private; passed through all the grades from Sergeant to Colonel, and at the surrender of Lee was in command of all the Con- federate Cavalry in the Shenandoah Valley; he was several times wounded—once through the lungs; soon after the close of the war he studied law at Washington College, Lexington, Virginia; graduated, and located at Harrisonburgh, where he commenced the practice of his profession; he was a member of the General Assembly of Virginia, 1871-"73; Judge of the County Court of Rockingham County, 1874—'80; Democratic State Canvasser 1880, ’81, and ’83; in 1882 he was the Democratic nominee for Congress in the Seventh District, and accord- ing to returns he received 11,041 votes, against 12,146 votes for John Paul, the nominee of the Republican-Readjuster-Coalition party; he contested upon the ground of fraud and illegal voting, and was seated by the Forty-eighth Congress, May 5, 1884; was elected to the Forty- ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 10,167 votes, and 1,225 votes scattering. Congressional Directory. [VIRGINIA. EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Alexandria, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, King George, Loudoun, Louisa, Orange, Prince William, and Stafford. Elisha E. Meredith, of Brentsville, Prince William County, was born in Sumter County, Alabama, December 26, 1848; was educated at Hampden-Sydney College, Virginia; was admitted to the bar in 1869; was Prosecuting Attorney for Prince William County seventeen years; served in the State Senate of Virginia. from 1883 to 1887; was Presidential Elector in 1888; and was elected to the Fifty-second Congress. as a Democrat December 9, 1891, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. W. H. F. Lee, receiving 8,891 votes, against 4,218 votes for J. Ambler Brooke, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Bland, Buchanan, Craig, Dickenson, Giles, Lee, Pulaski, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington, Wise, and Wythe. John Alexander Buchanan, of Abingdon, was born in Smyth County, Virginia, October 7, 1843; was a private in the Stonewall Brigade, Confederate Army; was taken prisoner at Gettysburgh, July 3, 1863, and remained in prison until February, 1865; graduated from Emory and Henry College, Emory, Virginia, June, 1870; studied law at the University of Virginia, 1870 and.1871; is an attorney at law; was a member of the House of Delegates of Virginia from 1885 until 1887 . was elected to ‘the Fifty-first Congress, and re-elected to the Fifty- second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,324 votes, against 11,977 votes for Mills, Republican. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Alleghany, Amherst, Appomattox, Augusta, Bath, Buckingham, Cumberland, Fluvanna, Highland, Nelson, and Rockbridge, and the city of Staunton. Henry St. George Tucker, of Staunton, was born in Winchester, Virginia) April 5, 1853; was educated at Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia, graduating with the degree of A. M. in 1875, and with the degree of B. L. in 1876; has practiced law continuously since in Staunton; had never held any public office before his election to Congress; was elected to the I ifty first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving - 9,721 votes, against 531 votes for Taylor, Independent Republican. WASHINGTON. SENATORS. John Beard Allen, of Walla Walla, was born at Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, In- diana, May 18, 1845; was educated in Wabash College, Crawfordsville; was a private soldier in the One Hundred and thirty-fifth Regiment of Indiana Volunteers; removed with his father’s family to Rochester, Minnesota, where heresided until January, 1870; here he read law, and was admitted to practice; removed to Washington Territory in March, 1870, and entered upon the practice of his profession; is married; was appointed United States Attor- ney for Washington Territory April, 1875, by President Grant, and continued in that office until July, 1885; was Reporter of the Supreme Court of Washington Territory from 1878 to 1885; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress as a Republican from the Territory of Washing- ‘ton; was elected to the United States Senate under the provisions of the act of Congress ad- mitting Washington Territory into the Union; took his seat December 2, 1889. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. Watson C. Squire, of Seattle, Washington, was graduated at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn.; was admitted to the practice of law in Ohio; served as a soldier and held several commissions; was engaged in business in the City of New York and at Ilion, New York, in the manufacture and sale of breech-loading arms, typewriters, etc., for many years; visited European countries and Mexico for this purpose; after disposing of his interest in this business became interested in the Territory (now State) of Washington, where he has engaged in farming and other business since the year 1879; was Governor of the Territory, 1884-87 ; was elected to United States Senate in November, 1889; was reélected in 1891. His term will expire March 3, 1897. 7k Fy N \ WASHINGTON. | Senators and Representatives. : IIg REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. John L. Wilson, of Spokane Falls, was born at Crawfordsville, Indiana, Augusty, 1850; received a primary education in the common schools; was graduated from Wabash College in 1874 ; studied law under Colonel W. C. Wilson, of La Fayette, Indiana ; was elected a Repre- sentative to the State Legislature of Indianain 1880 from Montgomery County; was appointed by President Arthur Receiver of Public Moneys at Spokane Falls, and served four years and four mouths; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress as a Republican, being the first member of Congress elected from the State of Washington; was re-elected to the Fifty-second Con- gress, receiving 29,153 votes, against 22,831 votes for Carroll, Democrat, and 2,819 for Abernathy, Prohibitionist. WEST VIRGINIA. SENATORS. John E. Kenna, of Charleston, Kanawha County, was born at Valcoulon, Virginia (now West Virginia), April 10, 1848; lived and worked on a farm; entered the Confederate Army as a pri- vate soldier; was wounded in that service in 1864, and was surrendered at Shreveport, Louisi- ana, in 1865; afterward attended St. Vincent’s College, Wheeling; studied law with Miller & Quarrier at Charleston; was admitted to the bar June 20, 1870, and has continued to practice law from that time; was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Kanawha County, on the Democratic ticket, in 1872, and served until January 1, 1877; in 1875 was elected by the bar in the re- spective counties under statutory provision to hold the Circuit Courts of Lincoln and Wayne; was elected to the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses, and had been elected to the Forty-eighth Congress, when he was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Henry G. Davis, Democrat, and took his seat December 3, 1883, and was re- elected. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. Charles James Faulkner, of Martinsburgh, was born in Martinsburgh, Berkeley County, West Virginia, September 21, 1847; accompanied his father, who was minister to France in 1859; attended noted schools in Paris and Switzerland ; returned to the United States in August, 1861, and after the arrest of his father he immediately went South; in 1862, at the age of fifteen, he entered the Virginia Military Institute at Lexington; served with the cadets in the battle of New Market; served as Aid to General J. C. Breckinridge, and afterwards to Gen- eral Henry A. Wise, surrendering with him at Appomattox; on his return to Boydville, his home in Martinsburgh, he studied under the direction of his father until October, 1866, when he entered the University of Virginia, graduating in June, 1868; was admitted to the bar in September, 1868; was made Grand Master of the Masonic Grand Lodge in 1879; in October, 1830, was elected Judge of the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, composed of the counties of Jef- ferson, Morgan, and Berkeley; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed Johnson N. Camden, and took his seat March 4, 1887. His term of service will ex- pire March 3, 1893. : [4 REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Braxton, Brooke, Doddridge, Gilmer, Hancock, Harrison, Lewis, Marshall, Oko, Tyler, and Wetzel. John O. Pendleton, of Wheeling, Ohio County, was nominated for State Senator for First Senatorial District in 1886, and was defeated ; was elected to the House of Representatives of the Fifty-first Congress on November 6, 1888, and was unseated February 27, 1890; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 18,479 votes, against 17,831 votes for W. P. Hubbard, Republican, 415 votes for F. N. Lynch, Prohibitionist, and 72 votes for C. H. Davis, Union Labor candidate. 120 Congressional Directory. [WEST VIRGINIA. SECOND DISTRICT. \ COUNTIES.— Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Marion, Mineral, Monongalia, Morgan, Pendleton, Preston, Randolph, Taylor, and Tucker. William L. Wilson, of Charlestown, was born in Jefferson County, Virginia, May 3, 1843; was educated at Charlestown Academy and at Columbian College, District of Colum- bia, where he graduated in 1860, and at the University of Virginia; served in the Confed- erate Army; was for several years after the war Professor in Columbian College; but on the overthrow of the lawyers’ test oath in West Virginia resigned and entered upon the prac-- tice of law at Charlestown; was a Delegate in 1880 to the National Democratic Convention at Cincinnati, and was chosen an Elector for the State at large on the Hancock ticket; was elected President of the West Virginia University in 1882 and entered upon the office September 6; but on September 20 was nominated as the Democratic candidate for the Forty- eighth Congress, and elected; resigned the Presidency of the State University in June, 1883; received the degree of LL.D. from Columbian University in 1883 and from Hampden Sidney College, Virginia, in 1886; was appointed a Regent of the Smithsonian Institution for two years in 1884 and reappointed in 1886; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiv- ing 20,439 votes, against 18,374 votes for George Harmon, Republican, 136 votes for Aaron ° Baker, Prohibitionist, and 19 votes for John M. Harr, Union Labor candidate. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Boone, Clay, Fayette, Greenbrier, Kanawha, Logan, Mercer, Monroe, Mec Dowell, Nicholas, Pocahontas, Raleigh, Summers, Upshur, Webster, and Wyoming. John Duffy Alderson, of Nicholas Court-House, was born at Nicholas Court-House, West Virginia, November 29, 1854; received a common-school education ; studied law, and was admitted to the bar when twenty-one years of age; was appointed Prosecuting Attorney in each of the counties of Nicholas and Webster, to fill vacancies occasioned by the death of his father, Hon. Joseph A. Alderson; in 1876 was elected Prosecuting Attorney for these counties, and was twice re-elected, serving until January 1, 1889; was a Page in the West Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1872; was elected Doorkeeper of the State Senate of 1872-73; was Sergeant-at-Arms of thatbody and afterwards Clerk, serving seventeen years as an attaché of the Legislature; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Democrat, receiving 20,433 votes, against 15,778 votes for Theophilus Gaines, Republi- can, and 207 votes for J. E. Middleton, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Cabell, Calhoun, Jackson, Lincoln, Mason, Pleasants, Putnam, Ritchie, Roane, Wayne, Wirt, and Wood. James Capehart, of Mason County, was born in the house where he now lives, in Mason County, Virginia (now West Virginia), March 7, 1847; was educated at Marietta College, Ohio, but did not graduate; hasbeen engaged'in farming and stock breeding since 1865; has held no public office except that of President of County Court of Mason County, which posi- tion he held in 1871-72, and from 1880 to 1885; was a Delegate to the National Demo- cratic Convention in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 19,573 votes, against 17,648 votes for C. B. Smith, Republican, and 199 votes for M. S. Hall, Prohibitionist. WISCONSIN. SENATORS. Philetus Sawyer, of Oshkosh, was born at Whiting, Vermont, September 22, 1816; re- moved with his family to New York in the following year; received a common-school educa- tion; went to Wisconsin in 1847 and engaged in the lumber business; was a member of the Legislature of Wisconsin in 1857 and 61; was Mayor of Oshkosh in 1863 and ’64; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Baltimore in 1864, at Cincinnati in 1876, and at Chicago in 1880; was a Representative in the Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, ! 7 i | iy \ | 3 : 9 3 WISCONSIN. | Senators and Representatives. 121 Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate as a Re- publican, to succeed Angus Cameron, Republican ; took his seat March 4, 1881, and was re- elected in 1887. - His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. 5 ~ 3 bi § 45.3 3 William F. Vilas, of Madison, was born at Chelsea, Orange County, Vermont, July 9, 1840; removed with his father’s family to Wisconsin, and settled at Madison, June 4, 1851; was graduated at the State University in 1858; from the Law Department of the University of Albany, N. Y., in 1860; was admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of New York and by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in the same year, and began the practice of the law at Madison, July 9, 1860; was Captain of Company A, Twenty-third Regiment Wisconsin In- fantry Volunteers, and afterwards Major and Lieutenant-Colonel of the regiment; has been one of the Professors of Law of the Law Department of the State University since 1868, omit- ting four years, 1885 to 1889; was one of the Regents of the University from 1880 to 1885; was one of three revisers appointed by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in 1875 who prepared the existing revised body of the statute law adopted in 1878; was a member of Assembly in the Wisconsin Legislature in 1885; was a delegate to the Democratic National Conventions of 1876, 1880, 1884, and permanent chairman of the latter ; was Postmaster-General from March 7, 1885, to January 16, 1888, and Secretary of the Interior from the latter date to March 6, 1889; received the unanimous nomination of the Democratic legislative caucus, and was elected January 28, 1891, United States Senator to succeed John C. Spooner, Republican. Took his seat March 4, 1891. His term of service will expire March 3," 1897. REPRESENTATIVES. : FIRST DISTRICT. Ton eo COUNTIES.— Jefferson, Kenosha, Racine, Rock, and Walworth. Clinton Babbitt, of Beloit, was born in Westmoreland, New Hampshire, November 16, 1831; received a common school education and graduated from Keene Academy, New Hampshire ; removed to Wisconsin in 1853 ; is by occupation a farmer and breeder of blooded stock, and resides on his farm, giving his personal attention to that business; was for several years Secretary of Wisconsin State Agricultural Society; was elected Alderman, and was one of the members of the first City Council of Beloit; was appointed Postmaster of Beloit by Grover Cleveland in August, 1886; was Democratic candidate for Congress in 1880, and was defeated by Hon. C. G. Williams, Republican; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 14,522 votes against 14,209 votes for H. A. Cooper, Republican, 1,316 votes for Stephen Favill, Prohibitionist, I vote for L. B. Caswell, 1 vote for H. F. Bliss, and 132 blanks. SECOND DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.— Dodge, Fond du Lac, Washington, and Waukesha. Charles Barwig, of Mayville, was born in Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany, March 19, 1837; emigrated to this country with his parents in 1845, locating at Milwaukee ; graduated from the Spencerian Business College in 1857; located at, Mayville in 1865; has retired from active business ; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected tothe Fifty-second Congress as a 1 Democrat, receiving 17,826 votes, against 9,206 votes for Van Brunt, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Dane, Grout, Green, lowa, and La Fayette. Allen Ralph Bushnell, of Madison, was born in the town of Hartford, Trumbull County, Ohio, July 18, 1833; received an academic education at Oberlin and Hiram, and pursued a special course for the legal profession; is by profession a lawyer; removed to Wisconsin in 1554, and settled in Platteville; removed to Lancaster in 1864, and to Madison in 1891; was elected District Attorney of Grant County in 1860, and resigned to enter the Army in August, 1861 ; served as First Lieutenant and afterward as Captain of Company C, Seventh Wisconsin Volunteers ; resigned from failing health in 1863; was in the Iron Brigade from its organization till discharged, participating in the engagements at Orange Court-House, Beverly Ford, White Sulphur Springs, Gainesville, Second Bull Run, and Fredericksburg; | a ‘was appointed by the Governor in 1864 District Attorney of Grant County to fill the unex- | pired term of Hon. J. T. Mills, elected Judge of the Fifth Circuit; member of the Wisconsin fit. Legislature in 1872; United States District Attorney for Western District’ of Wisconsin four years, from 1886 to 1890; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 16,432 votes, against 15,430 votes for R. M. LaFollette, Republican, and 1,567 votes for | Marion Ames, Prohibitionist. ; 122 co Congressional Directory. [WISCONSIN FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTY.— Milwaukee, John Lendrum Mitchell, of Milwaukee, was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, October 19, 1842; received an academic education in this country and studied in England, Switzer- land, and Germany; served in the War of the Rebellion in the Twenty-fourth Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry; was a member of the State Senate of Wisconsin in 1872-73 and 1875-"76 ; in 1885 was President of the Public School Board of the city of Milwaukee; is at present a member of the Board of Managers of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; is President of the Wisconsin Marine and Fire Insurance Company’s Bank, of Milwaukee, and President of the Milwaukee Gas Company; is interested in agricultural pursuits; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 24,679 votes, against 17,605 votes for R. C. Spencer, Republican, 1,605 votes for R. Schilling, Union Labor, and 133 votes for Chas. E. Reed, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. — Brown, Calumet, Kewaunee, Manitowoc, Ozaukee, and Sheboygan. George H. Brickner, of Sheboygan Falls, was born in Bavaria, Germany, January 211 1834; immigrated to Ohio in 1840; was educated inthe common schools; is a woolen manu- facturer; is married; was elected to the Fifty-first and re-elected to the Fifty-Second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,708 votes, against 80,93 votes for Blackstock, Republican, 552 votes for McKenney, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adams, Columbia, Green Lake, Marquette, Outagamie, Waushara, and Winne- bago. : Lucas M. Miller, of Oshkosh, was born in Laviadia, Greece, in 1824 ; isthe son of a Greek chieftain, who was killed by the Turks during the Greek revolution, soon after his mother died, and he was cared for a short time by a woman who claimed she found him in an abandoned town soon after a battle had taken place within its streets ; subsequently she applied to Colonel J. P. Miller for assistance ; the colonel was an American, who joined the Greek Army at the beginning of therevolution ; was commissioned as Colonel and distinguished himself as a brave and efficient officer, and rendered very material service to the Greeks by securing the donation of several vessels laden with provision and clothing by the citizens of his country for the benefit of the destitute people of Greece; the colonel learning the history of the orphan boy con- cluded toadopthim,and when he returned to this country settled in Montpelier, Vermont; Lucas attended the schools of the town until he was sixteen, when his father was injured to an ex- tent to be incapacitated for business, which was assumed by his adopted son; at the age of twenty-one took out naturalization papers; was admitted to the bar and soon after moved to the Territory of Wisconsin and settled in Oshkosh in 1846; purchased several hundred acres of land and soon after engaged in farming; at present resides on a portion of the land. Soon after settling in Wisconsin, during the Mexican war, he was appointed Colonel by Governor Dodge; in 1853 he was a member of the Wisconsin Legislature ; was one of the Commissioners of the State Board of Public Works ; for the last ten years has been Chairman of the County Board of Supervisors of Winnebago County ; at various times has been urged to run for vari- ous State offices; at the time he was nominated for Congress he was in Vermont and did not hear of it until the next day after the convention had adjourned ; had he been at home he weuld - not have accepted the nomination ; remained in Vermont until two weeks before his election ; on his return home he informed the people of the District thathe had been nominated contrary to his wishes; if elected he proposed to attend to their interests, and if not elected he proposed to attend to his own business ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, re- ceiving 15,573 votes, against 13,409 votes for Chas. B. Clark, Republican, and 1,156 votes for George W. Gates, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Crawford, funean, La Crosse, Monroe, Richland, Sauk, and Vernon. Frank Potter Coburn, of West Salem, was born in the town of Hamilton, La Crosse County, Wisconsin, December 6, 1858; was educated in the public schools; is a farmer; has held no public office; was the Democratic candidate for Congress in the seventh district in 1888, and was defeated ; was elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 15,399 votes, against 13,397 votes for Ormsby B. Thomas, Republican, and 1,499 votes for Syl- vanus Holmes, Prohibitionist. WISCONSIN.] Senators and Representatives. 123 EIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Barron, Bayfield, Buffalo, Burnett, Clark, Douglas, Dunn, Eau Claire, Jackson, Pepin, Pierce, Polk, St. Croix, Trempealean, and Washburn. ~ Nils P. Haugen, of River Falls, was born in Norway, March 9, 1849 ; graduated from the Law Department of the Michigan State University in the class of 1874; settled in Wisconsin in 1854; was Stenographic Court Reporter from 1874till 1881; was a member of the Assem- bly in 1879 and 80; was State Railroad Commissioner from 1882 till 1887; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress, as a Republican, receiving 17,609 votes, against 15,261 votes for Bailey, Democrat, 2,911 votes for Jones, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Ashland, Chippewa, Door, Florence, Forest, Langlade, Lincoln, Marathon, Marinelle, Oneida, Oconto, Portage, Price, Sawyer, Shawano, Taylor, Waupaca, and Wood. Thomas Lynch, of Antigo, was born in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, November 21, 1844 ; resided on a farm, and attended the public schools of that period until 1863, when he moved to Calumet County, where he continued farming and also taught school; held various local offices; was a member of the Wisconsin Legislature in 1873 and 1883 ; graduated from the Law Department of the Wisconsin University in 1875; was District Attorney of the county from 1878 to 1882; in 1883 he moved to Antigo, in Langlade County, where he now resides; was Mayor of Antigo in 1885 and again in 1888; was elected to Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 24,491 votes, against 19,161 votes for Myron H. McCord, Republican, and 1,299 votes fur J. H. Vrooman, Prohibitionist. WYOMING. SENATORS. Joseph M. Carey, of Cheyenne, was born in Milton, Delaware, January, 19, 1843; received a common-school education, and attended Fort Edward Collegiate Institute and Union College, New York; studied law at Philadelphia, and was admitted to the bar in 1867, graduating the same year at the Law Department of the University of Pennsylvania ; is en- gaged in stock-growing; was appointed United States Attorney for the Territory of Wyom- ing on the organization of the Territory in 1869; was an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Wyoming, from 1871 until 1876; was a member of the United States Centennial Commis- sion, 1872-76; was three times elected Mayor of Cheyenne, serving 1881-85; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses as a Republican, and: was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, November 15, 1890; took his seat December 1, 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1895. Francis E. Warren, of Cheyenne, was born in Hinsdale, Massachusetts, June 20, 1844; received a common-school and academic education; enlisted in 1862 in the Forty- ninth Massachusetts Regiment, and served as private and non-commissioned officer in that regiment till it was mustered out of the service; was afterwards Captain in the Massa- chusetts militia; was engaged in farming and stock-raising in Massachusetts till early in 1868, when he removed to Wyoming (then a part of Dakota); is at present engaged in mer- cantile, live-stock, and lighting business; was President of the Council, Wyoming Legislature, in 1873, and member of the Council in 1884; was Mayor of Cheyenne, and served as Treas- urer of Wyoming; was a Delegate to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1888; was appointed Governor of Wyoming by President Arthur and removed by President Cleveland ; was again appointed Governor of Wyoming by President Harrison and served till the Territory was admitted as a State, when he was elected Governor, September 11, 1890; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, November 18, 1890, and took his seat December 1, 1890. His term of service will expire March 3, 1893. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE. Clarence D. Clark, of Evanston, was born in Sandy Creek, New Vork, April 16, 1851; was educated in the common schools and Towa State University ; read law and was admitted to the bar in 1874; removed to Evanston in 1881, and has been engaged in the practice of ar Te = es 124 Congressional Directory. [wvoMING. the law since; was elected Prosecuting Attorney for Uinta County three terms; was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Wyoming in 1890, but declined the office; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress (being the first Representative from the State), and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Republican, receiving 8,751 votes, against 6,219 votes for George T. Beck, Democrat. TERRITORIAL DELEGATES. ARIZONA. Marcus Aurelius Smith, of Tombstone, wasborn near Cynthiana, Harrison County, Ken- tucky, January 24, 1852; received a common-school education ; taught school in Bourbon County, Kentucky, and with the proceeds derived from this occupation entered the Kentucky Univer- sity at Lexington, where he remained three years; read law in the office of Huston & Mulli- gan; entered the Law Department of the Kentucky University, graduating with the first honors of his class; was elected Prosecuting Attorney for the city of Lexington; at the expi- ration of his term of office removed to San Francisco, where he practiced his profession for two years; in 1881 went to Arizona, and continued in the practice of law in the city of Tomb- stone; in 1882 was elected Prosecuting Attorney for the Tombstone District, and held the office for one term; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses and re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 6,137 votes, against 4,941 votes for George W. Cheney, Republican. NEW MEXICO. Antonio Joseph, of Ojo Caliente, was born at Taos, New Mexico, August 25, 1846; re- ceived his early education at Lux’s Academy, in Taos, and attended Bishop Lammy’s school, in Santa Fé, New Mexico, for two years; he afterwards attended Webster College, in St. Louis County, Missouri, for four years, completing a commercial course at Bryant & Stratton’s Com- mercial College, in St. Louis, Missouri; engaged in mercantile pursuits, and is now a mer- chant; has been County Judge of Taos County, New Mexico, for six years; has been a mem- ber of the Territorial Legislature six years, and was a Senator in the Territorial Legislature when elected to Congress; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses and was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress as a Democrat, receiving 17,206 votes, against 15,142 votes for Mariano S. Otero, Republican. OKLAHOMA. David A. Harvey, of Oklahoma City, was born in the Province of Nova Scotia, March 20, 1845; went with his parents to Clermont County, Ohio, in 1852; enlisted September, 1861, in Company B, Fourth Ohio Cavalry, and served throughout the war; after the war ° attended Miami University, at Oxford, Ohio; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in September, 1368; removed to Topeka, Kansas, in 1869, where he served four years as City Attorney and six’years as Probate Judge; was elected Delegate from Oklahoma to the Fifty- second Congress as a Republican, receiving 4,478 votes against 2,446 votes for J. G, McCoy, Democrat, and 1,529 votes for Samuel Crocker, People’s party. EE een UTAH. | Territorial Delegates. | 12% UTAH. | oo John T. Caine, of Salt Lake City, was born in the Isle of Man, January 8, 1829; received a grammar-school education; immigrated to the United States in 1846, and lived in New York City and St. Louis till 1852, when he crossed the plains and settled in Utah; in 1870, with two associates, he founded the Salt Lake Herald; served as Secretary of the | Legislative Council during the sessions of 1856, ’57, ’59, and 60; was elected a member of that body for the sessions of 1874, 76,’80, and ’82; in 1876, by joint vote of the Legislative | Assembly, was elected a Regent of the University of Deseret, and served twelve years; was | elected Recorder of Salt Lake City in 1876, and re-elected in 1878, 80, and ’82; was a member of the Constitutional Conventions of Utah of 1872,’82, and ’87; was President of the | latter convention, which adopted a constitution with a clause punishing polygamy and bigamy, | and asked admission into the Union as a State; in politics he is a Democrat; was elected to the i id Forty-seventh Congress, to fill a vacancy; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, was re-elected to the Fifty-second Congress on the People’s ticket, receiving 16,353 votes, against 6,912 votes for Charles C. Goodwin, Liberal, \ 126 Congressional Directory. COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE. STANDING COMMITTEES. Committee on Agriculture and Forestry. Algernon S. Paddock, of Nebraska. | James Z. George, of Mississippi. James McMillan, of Michigan. Randall L. Gibson, of Louisiana. Lyman R. Casey, of North Dakota. James K. Jones, of Arkansas. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. William B. Bate, of Tennessee. Charles N. Felton, of California. Committee on Appropriations. William B. Allison, of Iowa. : Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Wilkinson Call, of Florida. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. John P. Jones, of Nevada. Zebulon B. Vance, North Carolina. Algernon S. Paddock, of Nebraska. Commiitice on the Census. Eugene Hale, of Maine. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Francis B. Stockbridge, of Michigan. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. Nathan F. Dixon, of Rhode Island. Rufus Blodgett, of New Jersey. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. David Turpie, of Indiana. William A. Peffer, of Kansas. Committee on Civil Service and Retrenchment. Edward O. Wolcott, of Colorado. Edward C. Walthall, of Mississippi. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Wilkinson Call, of Florida. Leland Stanford, of California. John B. Gordon, of Georgia. William D. Washburn, of Minnesota. John L. M. Irby, of South Carolina. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. Committee on Claims. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Samuel Pasco, of Florida. John B. Allen, of Washington. Charles J. Faulkner, of West Virginia. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. William F. Vilas, of Wisconsin. Wilbur F. Sanders, of Montana. Edward D. White, of Louisiana. William A. Peffer, of Kansas. Committee on Coast Defenses. Watson C. Squire, of Washington. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon. John B. Gordon, of Georgia. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. Horace Chilton, of Texas. Anthony Higgins, of Delaware. John L. M. Irby, of South Carolina. Charles N. Felton, of California. Comunitice on Commerce. William P. Frye, of Maine. | Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. John P. Jones, of Nevada. Richard Coke, of Texas. Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon. George G. Vest, of Missouri. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. John E. Kenna, of West Virginia. William D. Washburn, of Minnesota. Randall L. Gibson, of Louisiana. Matthew S. Quay, of Pennsylvania. Senate Committees. 127 ‘Committee on the District of Columbia. James McMillan, of "Michigan. Anthony Higgins, of Delaware. Edward O. Wolcott, of Colorado. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. Bishop W. Perkins, of Kansas. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Zebulon B. Vance, of North Carolina. Charles J. Faulkner, of West Virginia. John S. Barbour, of Virginia. Charles H. Gibson, of Maryland. Committee on Education and Labor. Joseph M. Carey, of Wyoming. Leland Stanford, of California. William D. Washburn, of Minnesota. James McMillan, of Michigan. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. James Z. George, of Mississippi. James L. Pugh, of Alabama. John S. Barbour, of Virginia. James H. Kyle, of South Dakota. Committee on Engrossed Bills. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. William B. Allison, of Iowa. | Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Committee on Enrolled Bills. Wilbur F. Sanders, of Montana. Fred. T. Dubois, of Idaho. | Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia. « Committee on Epidemic Diseases. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Edward D. White, of Louisiana. John L. M. Irby, of South Carolina. Francis B. Stockbridge, of Michigan. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Charles N. Felton, of California. Committee to Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Thomas C. Power, of Montana. . Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. William A. Peffer, of Kansas. | George Gray, of Delaware. . William F. Vilas, of Wisconsin. Committee on Finance. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. John Sherman, of Ohio. John P. Jones, of Nevada. William B. Allison, of Towa. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. Frank Hiscock, of New York. Daniel W. Voorhees, of Indiana. John R. McPherson, of New Jersey. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Zebulon B. Vance, of North Carolina. John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky. Committee on Fisheries. Francis B. Stockbridge, of Michigan. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Leland Stanford, of California. Watson C. Squire, of Washington. Thomas C. Power, of Montana. Rufus Blodgett, of New Jersey. Wilkinson Call, of Florida. Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. Charles H. Gibson, of Maryland. Committee on Foreign Relations. John Sherman, of Ohio. William P. Frye, of Maine. Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon. Cushman K. Davis, of Minnesota. Trrank Hiscock, of New York. Commaittee on William E. Chandler, of New Hampshire. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Watson C. Squire, of Washington. Redfield Proctor, of Vermont, Fred. T. Dubois, of Idaho. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. M. C. Butler, of South Carolina. John E. Kenna, of West Virginia. George Gray, of Delaware. Immigration. Daniel W. Voorhees, of Indiana. John R. McPherson, of New Jersey. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. David B. Hill, of New York. Committee on Improvement of the Mississippi River and its Tributaries. i & "a William D. Washburn, of Minnesota. Richard F. Pettigrew, of South Dakota. Thomas C. Power, of Montana. William A. Peffer, of Kansas. Congressional Directory. Edward C. Walthall, of Mississippi. William B. Bate, of Tennessee. John M. Palmer, of Illinois. Committee on Indian Affairs. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Orville 11. Platt, of Connecticut. Francis B. stockbridge, of Michigan. Charles FF. Manderson, of Nebraska. Richard F. Pettigrew, of South Dakota. Committee on Interstate Commerce. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. James F. Wilson, of Towa. Frank Hiscock, of New York. William E. Chandler, of New Hampshire. Edward O. Wolcott, of Colorado. Anthony Higgins, of Delaware. Committee on Irrication and 1 clamation of Arid Lands. S Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. Lyman R. Casey, of North Dakota. Wilbur F. Sanders, of Montana. Fred. T. Dubois, of Idaho. Committee on George IF. [ "oar. of Massachusetts. James F. Wilson, of fowa. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. George L. Shoup, of Idaho. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. James K. Jones, of Arkansas. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. | William F. Vilas, of Wisconsin. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. ! Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. James K. Jones, of Arkansas. b John S. Barbour, of Virginia. David B. Hill, of New York. James K. Jones, of Arkansas. Calvin S. Brice, of Ohio. James H. Kyle, of South Dakota. }- Charles H. Gibson, of Maryland. the Judiciary. James L. Pugh, of Alabama. ¥ Richard Coke, of Texas. | George G. Vest, of Missouri. James Z. George, of Mississippi. Joint Committee on the Library. * Matthew S. Quay, of Pennsylvania. Edward O. Wolcott, of Colorado. Committee on Manufactures. Anthony Higgins, of Delaware. Fred. T. Dubois, of Idaho. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Committee on Military . Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. James Donald Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska. Cushman K. Davis, of Minnesota. Redfield Proctor, of Vermont. Committee on Mines and Mining. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. John P. Jones, of Nevada. Thomas C. Power, of Montana. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Charles N. Felton, of California. Committze on James Donald Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Eugene Hale, of Maine. I.eland Stanford, of California. Francis B. Stockbridge, of Michigan. William E. Chandler, of New Hampshire. Daniel W. Voorhees, of Indiana. Rufus Blodgett, of New Jersey. Charles H. Gibson, of Maryland. Affairs. 1 Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Edward C. Walthall, of Mississippi. William B. Bate, of Tennessee. John M. Palmer, of Illinois. William B. Bate, of Tennessee. Wilkinson Call, of Florida. Horace Chilton, of Texas. John L. M. Irby, of South Carolina. a a ra Naval Affairs. John R. McPherson, of New Jersey. Matthew C. Butler, of South Carolina. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. & Randall L. Gibson, of Louisiana. £ * This committee has power to act concurrently with the same committee of the House of Represent- atives. Bishop W. Perkins, of Kansas. \ Senate Committees. 129 Committee on Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Frank Hiscock, of New York. Lyman R. Casey, of North Dakota. James F. Wilson, of Iowa. Redfield Proctor, of Vermont. Fred. T. Dubois, of Idaho. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. John E. Kenna, of West Virginia. David B. Hill, of New York. Committee on Patents. Nathan F. Dixon, of Rhode Island. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Wilbur F. Sanders, of Montana. George Gray, of Delaware, Horace Chilton, of Texas. James H. Kyle, of South Dakota. Committee on Pensions. Cushman K. Davis, of Minnesota. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. Algernon S. Paddock, of Nebraska. George L. Shoup, of Idaho. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. David Turpie, of Indiana. Rufus Blodgett, of New Jersey. John M. Palmer, of Illinois. William F. Vilas, of Wisconsin. Calvin S. Brice, of Ohio. Committee on Post- Offices and Post- Roads. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. James McMillan, of Michigan. Edward O. Wolcott, of Colorado. Nathan F. Dixon, of Rhode Island. Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia. Rufus Blodgett, of New Jersey. Calvin S. Brice, of Ohio. John L. M. Irby, of South Carolina. Horace Chilton, of Texas. William D, Washburn, of Minnesota. Committee on Printing * Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. | Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Committee on Private Land Claims. Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia. Samuel Pasco, of Florida. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. Wilbur F. Sanders, of Montana. Redfield Proctor, of Vermont. Committee on Privileges and Elections. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. William P. Frye, of Maine. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. William E. Chandler, of New Hampshire. Committee on Public B Leland Stanford, of California. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. Matthew S. Quay, of Pennsylvania. Watson C. Squire, of Washington. Joseph M. Carey, of Wyoming. Committee on Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon. Algernon S. Paddock, of Nebraska. John B. Allen, of Washington. R. F. Pettigrew, of South Dakota. Wilbur F. Sanders, of Montana. Joseph M. Carey, of Wyoming. * Thiscommittee has power to act concurrently w 9 atives. 2D ED Anthony Higgins, of Delaware. ebulon B. Vance, of North Carolina. James L. Pugh, of Alabama. George Gray, of Delaware. David Turpie, of Indiana. wildings and Grounds. George G. Vest, of Missouri. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. Samuel Pasco, of Florida. Calvin S. Brice, of Ohio. Public Lands. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. Edward C. Walthall, of Mississippi. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Samuel Pasco, of Florida. : Edward D. White, of Louisiana, ith the same committee of the House of Represent. 130 Congressional Directory. s Committee on Railroads. Lyman R. Casey, of North Dakota. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. Francis B. Stockbridge, of Michigan. Richard F. Pettigrew, of South Dakota. ‘Thomas C. Power, of Montana. William A. Peffer, of Kansas. Committee on the Revision of James F. Wilson, of Towa. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. William B. Bate, of Tennessee. John B. Gordon, of Georgia. John M. Palmer, of Illinois. the Laws of the United States. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. Wilkinson Call, of Florida. Redfiela Proctor, of Vermont. Committee on Rev Richard Coke, of Texas. James L. Pugh, of Alabama. olutionary Claims. James Donald Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. Calvin S. Brice, of Ohio. Committee orn Rules. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. John Sherman, of Ohio. Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. Committee on Territories. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. Cushman K. Davis, of Minnesota. Joseph M. Carey, of Wyoming. George L. Shoup, of Idaho. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Watson C. Squire, of Washington. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. James K. Jones, of Arkansas. John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky. Charles J. Faulkner, of West Virginia. John B. Gordon, of Georgia. David B. Hill, of New York. Committee on Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Randall L. Gibson, of Louisiana. James Z. George, of Mississippi. "David Turpie, of Indiana. John B. Gordon, of Georgia. Lyman R. Casey, of North Dakota. Committee on Relations with Canada. John B. Allen, of Washington. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. William B. Allison, of Iowa. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon. James L. Pugh, of Alabama. David B. Hill, of New York. Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia. John G. Carlisle, of Kenturky. SELECT COMMITTEES. Select Committee to Investigate Condition John R. McPherson, of New Jersey. Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. John S. Barbour, of Virginia. Select Committee to Inquire into all Claims of Citizens of the United States against the Govern. of Potomac River Front of Washington. Philetus Sawyer, of Wisconsin. John Sherman, of Ohio. William P. Frye, of Maine. ment of Nicaragua. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. John M. Palmer, of Illinois. Edward D. White, of Louisiana. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Select Committee on Woman Suffrage. Zebulon B. Vance, of North Carolina. John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky. James Z. George, of Mississippi. George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts. John B. Allen, of Washington. Matthew S. Quay, of Pennsylvania, Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming, Senate Committees. Select Committee on Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. Daniel W. Voorhees, of Indiana. Matthew C. Butler, of South Carolina Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont. Nathan F. Dixon, of Rhode Island. Algernon S. Paddock, of Nebraska. Select Committee on the Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Matthew C. Butler, of South Carolina. Samuel Pasco, of Florida. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Select Committee on the President's Message transmitting the Report of the Pacific Railway Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. Commission. William P. Frye, of Maine. Henry L. Dawes, of Massachusetts. Frank Hiscock, of New York. Cushman K. Davis, of Minnesota. Joseph M. Carey, of Wyoming. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. David Turpie, of Indiana. Charles J. Faulkner, of West Virginia. Edward D. White, of Louisiana. Select Committee on the Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. George G. Vest, of Missouri. Richard Coke, of Texas. Thomas C. Power, of Montana. Select Committee on George L. Shoup, of Idaho. Algernon S. Paddock, of Nebraska. William E. Chandler, of New Hampshire. John B. Allen, of Washington. Thomas C. Power, of Montana. Lyman R. Casey, of North Dakota. Bishop W. Perkins, of Kansas. Indian Depredations. Charles J. Faulkner, of West Virginia. Richard Coke, of Texas. John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky. James H. Kyle, of South Dakota. Select Committee on the Quadyo-Centennial. Richard F. Pettigrew, of South Dakota. Frank Hiscock, of New York. John Sherman, of Ohio. James Donald Cameron, of Pennsylvania. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. James F. Wilson, of Iowa. Charles N. Felton, of California. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. Select Committee to Establish th Redfield Proctor, of Vermont. John Sherman, of Ohio. Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon. William D. Washburn, of Minnesota. Watson C. Squire, of Washington. Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia. George G. Vest, of Missouri. John E. Kenna, of West Virginia. George Gray, of Delaware. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. William F. Vilas, of Wisconsin. Charles H. Gibson, of Maryland. e University of the United States. Matthew C. Butler, of South Carolina, Randall I. Gibson, of Louisiana. John S. Barbour, of Virginia. James H. Kyle, of South Dakota, 131 James Donald Cameron, of Pennsylvania. UNITED STATES SENATORS, ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED, Congressional Directory. SHOWING THE COMMITTEES OF WHICH THEY ARE MEM- LEVI P. MORTON, Vice-President of the United States and President of the Senate. ei pe es nk i a Rules, chairman. mn =m rp na os Em a Nl ee naidia Census. a — —— —- ————— Finance. . Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Relations with Canada, chairman. » Claims. : Public Lands. Indian Depredations (Select). Woman Suffrage (Select). Appropriations, chairman. Engrossed Bills. Finance. | Relations with Canada. Li District of Columbia. ] Ny Education and Labor. Interstate Commerce. Potomac River Front (Select). Establish University of the United States (Select). Agriculture and Forestry. Improvement of the Mississippi River. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Railroads. Coast Defenses. Epidemic Diseases. Public Lands. Railroads. Appropriations. Census. Naval Affairs. Railroads. Rules. Fisheries. Manufactures. | Pensions. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Irrigation. h Pensions. : Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. Revolutionary Claims. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select), chairman. Foreign Relations. Naval Affairs. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select). Establish University of the United States (Select). Appropriations. Civil Service and Retrenchment, Fisheries. \ Mines and Mining. » Revision of the Laws. Alphabetical List of Senators and Committees. 133 CAMBRON, LL a sane Naval Affairs, chairman. Military Affairs. Revolutionary Claims. Quadro-Centennial (Select). Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select). CAREY a oy i aay Education and Labor, chairman. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands. Territories. Pacific Railroads (Select). CARLISUR. Je cesar Finance. Territories. Indian Depredations (Select). Woman Suffrage (Select). Relations with Canada. CASEY dia bat dian i Railroads, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Irrigation. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select). CHANDLER he deb oa do Immigration, chairman. Interstate Commerce. 7 Naval Affairs. Privileges and Elections. Indian Depredations (Select). CHILEON, on eo Coast Defenses. Mines and Mining. Patents. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. COCRREBLL | ous simi ma ita Engrossed Bills, chairman. Appropriations. Military Affairs. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. CORP. rh se LT Revolutionary Claims, chairman, : Commerce. Judiciary. Indian Depredations (Select). Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select). COLOUITT Saco aot Enrolled Bills. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Private Land Claims. Quadro-Centennial (Select). Relations with Canada. CULNOM Lar oe ie 3 Interstate Commerce, chairman. Appropriations. Commerce. Quadro-Centennial (Select). DANIEL. an ae Immigration. Indian Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Revision of the Laws. i Quadro-Centennial (Select). PAvaS Let ne Pensions, chairman. Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. Territories. Pacific Railroads (Select). 134 Congressional Directory. DAWES. _Indian Affairs, chairman. : Appropriations. | Civil Service and Retrenchment. Fisheries. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select). Pacific Railroads (Select.) cr ——.._Patents, chairman. Census. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select). _Public Lands, chairman. Coast Defenses. ) Commerce. Foreign Relations. Relations with Canada. University of the United States (Select). DUBBIS erie nit damm aww Manufactures. Enrolled Bills. Immigration. Irrigation. : Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Dixon DoLrH ; Territories. Pacific Railroads (Select). Indian Depredations (Select). ili nm a re Sens i Agriculture and Forestry. Coast Defenses. "Epidemic Diseases. Mines and Mining. Quadro-Centennial (Select). FRYE A Se Commerce, chairman. Foreign Relations. Pacific Railroads (Select), chairman. Potomac River Front (Select). ATTIRE oc nes ly Transportation Routes to Seaboard, chairman. District of Columbia. Epidemic Diseases. Examine into Several Branches of the Civil Service. Manufactures. Pensions. GEORGE ca ot rm isn winioin Agriculture and Forestry. Education and Labor. Judiciary. Transportation Routes to Seaboard. Woman Suffrage (Select). G1BsoN, of Maryland. ___.___.____ District of Columbia. ) Fisheries. ; Irrigation. Manufactures. : Quadro-Centennial (Select). GIBSON, of Louisiana. _.._.._.____ Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Naval Affairs. + Transportation Routes to Seaboard, University of the United States (Select). GORDON oo veo cian. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Coast Defenses. Railroads. Territories. Transportation Routes to Seaboard. Alphabetical List of Senators and Comini'lees. 135 ) | | | GORMAN fe ohm ta saa —__ Appropriations. ; ; | Commerce. Interstate Commerce. . yo : Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. : Printing. GRAY. enn le ss na Swed Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Foreign Relations. Patents. | Privileges and Elections. Quadro-Centennial (Select). | | | | ) | a a SEE SURI Census, chairman. ; Appropriations. Immigration. Naval Affairs. Private Land Clajms. Relations with Canada. HANSEROUGH. . cdot wean Census. District of Columbia. y Education and Labor. & Pensions. Territories. IARRIE, cai il ie, Epidemic Diseases, chairman. District of Columbia. Finance. Interstate Commerce. Rules. HAWLEY oie saa Military Affairs, chairman. if Coast Defenses. : Printing. : Railroads. 1 Quadro-Centennial (Select). GRINS Sr na, Manufactures, chairman. ; ’ Coast Defenses. District of Columbia. Interstate Commerce. Privileges and Elections. : 5 BY Tp a RC RE Immigration. Be Interstate Commerce. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Territories. Relations with Canada. HISCOCY whit mmm ions ___Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments, chairman. ) Finance. : Foreign Relations. : : | Interstate Commerce. Quadro-Centennial (Select). Pacific Railroads (Select). LET 0 at SR Sl Judiciary, chairman. Privileges and Elections. Relations with Canada. Woman Suffrage (Select). Hn Sh SEAT Er Pe ST BAS Civil Service and Retrenchment. Coast Defenses. Epidemic Diseases. Mines and Mining. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. 136 Congressional Directory, JonEs, of Nevada... re aa Agriculture and Forestry. Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. Irrigation. Territories. Audit and Control Contingent Expenses of the Senate, chairman. Commerce. Finance. Mines and Mining. BRENNA ooh os Commerce. Foreign Relations. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Quadro-Centennial (Select). Ga Te Re Re md eR Education and Labor. Irrigation. Patents. Indian Depredations (Select). University of the United States (Select). District of Columbia, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Education and Labor. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. MCPHERSON. teat ia ai Potomac River Front (Select), chairman. Finance. Immigration. Naval Affairs. MANDERSON Laine samen Printing, chairman. Indian Affairs. Military Affairs. Rules. MITCHELL oa i oi: Claims, chairman. Judiciary. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Privileges and Elections. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Claims against Nicaragua (Select). MOBGAN =. idan ~--Claims against Nicaragua (Select), chairman. Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. Public Lands. Pacific Railroads (Select). TT EM a SD lai Finance, chairman. PADDOCK, ~~ Nad Civil Service and Retrenchment. Public Buildings and Grounds. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select). Agriculture and Forestry, chairman. Audit and Control Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Pensions. Public Lands. Indian Depredations (Select). Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select). PALMER. ni ei tran Improvement of the Mississippi River, Military Affairs. Pensions. ~ Railroads. Claims against Nicaragua (Select). asia Alphabetical List of Senators and Committees. 137 Private Land Claims. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select). PRYERR aii a Claims. Census. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Improvement of the Mississippi River. Railroads. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select}. PErTIGREW. nnn inant] Quadro-Centennial (Select), chairman. Improvement of the Mississippi River. Indian Affairs. Public Lands. Railroads. PLATT anna maa “Territories, chairman, Indian Affairs. Judiciary. Patents. Revision of the Laws. POWER. oo a Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service, chair- man. Fisheries. Improvement of the Mississippi River. Mines and Mining. Railroads. Indian Depredations (Select). Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select). PROCTOR 2. oi crim ms mies ng ite Establish the University of the United States (Select), chairman. > Immigration. Military Affairs, Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Private Land Claims. Revision of the Laws. PUGH. i i eimlunns nmin te Education and Labor. Judiciary. Privileges and Elections. Revolutionary Claims. Relations with Canada (Select). 0 SA SR RT Library, chairman. Commerce. Public Buildings and Grounds. Woman Suffrage (Select). RANSOM hoa basa ST Private Land Claims (chairman). Commerce. Fisheries. Potomac River Front (Select). RU Le a eT SO Enrolled Bills, chairman. Claims. Irrigation. Patents. Public Lands. Private Land Claims. £38 Congressional Directory. \ SAWYER SHERMAN STANEORD wb oo mmm di nies smn me Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. SPRWART a CS TOCRBRIDGR aii 4 Bra Dr HR SR Ca WG TURPIE VANCE _._. BL en A A TR Rs MT Post-Offices and Post-Roads, chairman. oo 5 0 tp mn on OE mn on 5 om = Commerce. Pensions. Revolutionary Claims. Investigate Condition of Potomac River Front of Wash- ington (Select). _Foreign Relations, chairman. Finance. Rules. Quadro-Centennial (Select). University of the United States (Select). Investigate Condition of Potomac River Front of Wash- ington (Select). ; : ¥ _Indian Depredations (Select), chairman. Pensions. Territories. Indian Affairs. _Coast Defenses, chairman. Transportation Routes to Seaboard. Immigration. Fisheries. Public Buildings and Grounds. University of the United States (Select). Civil Service and Retrenchment. Education and Labor. Fisheries. Naval Affairs. _Mines and Mining, chairman. Appropriations. Claims. Irrigation. Territories. Nicaragua Claims (Select): _Fisheries, chairman. Census. Epidemic Diseases. Indian Affairs. Naval Affairs. Railroads. - Privileges and Elections, chairman. Judiciary. Private Land Claims. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select). Pensions. Privileges and Elections. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Pacific Railroads (Select). SE Se -Woman Suffrage (Select), chairman. Audit and Control Contingent Expenses of the Senate. District of Columbia. Finance. Privileges and Elections. LL en a OR EAE ENO Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select), chair- man. Commerce. Judiciary. Public Buildings and Grounds. | Quadro-Centennial (Select). A Alphabetical List of Senators and Committees. 139 Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Servize. Indian Affairs. Pensions. Quadro-Centennial (Select). VooREERS, |. 0 ol. care rites Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select), chairman. Finance. Immigration. Library. WAT TIIALL ap ea Civil Service and Retrenchment. Improvement of Missin River and its Tributaries. Military Affairs. Public Lands. WARREN oc dene Irrigation, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Engrossed Bills. Mines and Mining. Woman Suffrage (Select). WASHBURN i. enon pn nas Improvement of the Mississippi River and its Tributaries, : chairman. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Commerce. Education and Labor. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. University of the United States (Select). Epidemic Diseases. Public Lands. Claims against Nicaragua (Select). Pacific Railroads (Select). WILSON oo has ata Revision of the Laws, chairman. Interstate Commerce. Judiciary. ; Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Execu~ tive Departments. Quadro-Centennial (Select). WorcoTT Logan ee Civil Service and Retvenchment, chairman, District of Columbia. Interstate Commerce. Library. Post-Offices and Post Roads. 140 Congressional Directory. COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE, STANDING COMMITTEES. Committee on Elections. Charles T. O’Ferrall, of Virginia. Littleton W. Moore, of Texas. James E. Cobb, of Alabama. Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky. Jason B. Brown, of Indiana. Daniel N. Lockwood, of New York. Thomas G. Lawson, of Georgia. Eugene P. Gillespie, of Pennsylvania. George Johnstone, of South Carolina. Nils P. Haugen, of Wisconsin. Alfred A. Taylor, of Tennessee. Robert E. Doan, of Ohio. Henry U. Johnson, of Indiana. John E. Reyburn, of Pennsylvania. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Commitiee on Ways and Means. William M. Springer; of Illinois. Benton McMillin, of Tennessee. Henry G. Turner, of Georgia. William L. Wilson, of West Virginia. Alexander B. Montgomery, of Kentucky. Justin R. Whiting, of Michigan. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. W. Bourke Cockran, of New York. Moses T. Stevens, of Massachusetts. William J. Bryan, of Nebraska. Thomas B. Reed, of Maine. Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan. Joseph McKenna, of California. Sereno E. Payne, of New York. John Dalzell, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Appropriations. William S. Holman, of Indiana. William H. Forney, of Alabama. Joseph D. Sayers, of Texas. William C. P. Breckinridge, of Kentucky. Alexander M. Dockery, of Missouri. William Mutchler, of Pennsylvania. Clifton R. Breckinridge, of Arkansas. Barnes Compton, of Maryland. Commitiee on David B. Culberson, of Texas. William C. Oates, of Alabama. William D. Bynum, of Indiana. Thomas R. Stockdale, of Mississippi. Isaac H. Goodnight, of Kentucky. Charles J. Boatner, of Louisiana. John A. Buchanan, of Virginia. Alfred C. Chapin, of New York. Joseph H. O’Neil, of Massachusetts. Leonidas F. Livingston, of Georgia. David B. Henderson, of Iowa, William Cogswell, of Massachusetts. Henry H. Bingham, of Pennsylvania. Nelson Dingley, jr., of Maine. William-W. Grout, of Vermont. the Judiciary. Fernando C. Layton, of Ohio. Simon P. Wolverton, of Pennsylvania. Ezra B. Taylor, of Ohio. James Buchanan, of New Jersey. George W. Ray, of New York. H. Henry Powers, of Vermont. Case Broderick, of Kansas. Commitlee on Banking and Currency. Henry Bacon, of New York. Scott Wike, of Illinois. William H. Crain, of Texas. William H. Cate, of Arkansas. Worth W. Dickerson, of Kentucky. Lewis Sperry, of Connecticut. Martin K. Gantz, of Ohio. Committee on Coinage, Richard P. Bland, of Missouri. Charles Tracey, of New York, James R. Williams, of Illinois. C. Buckley Kilgore, of Texas. Samuel M. Robertson, of Louisiana. Rice A. Pierce, of Tennessee. James F. Epes, of Virginia, Nicholas N. Cox, of Tennessee. Seth W. Cobb, of Missouri. Joseph H. Walker, of Massachusetts. Marriott Brosius, of Pennsylvania. Hosea Townsend, of Colorado. Thomas J. Henderson, of Illinois. Weights, and Measures. William A. McKeighan, of Nebraska. Horace F. Bartine, of Nevada. Abner Taylor, of Illinois. Charles W. Stone, of Pennsylvania. Martin N. Johnson, of North Dakota. George Fred. Williams, of Massachusetts. House Committees. 141 . Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Roger Q. Mills, of Texas. George D. Wise, of Virginia. Andrew Price, of Louisiana. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. George H. Brickner, of Wisconsin. Thomas J. Geary, of California. George W. Houk, of Ohio. Stephen R. Mallory, of Florida. Josiah Patterson, of Tennessee. John J. O’ Neill, of Missouri. Charles O’Neill, of Pennsylvania. John Lind, of Minnesota. Charles S. Randall, of Massachusetts. Bellamy Storer, of Ohio. John H. Ketcham, of New York. Committee on Rivers and Harbors. Newton C. Blanchard, of Louisiana. Thomas C. Catchings, of Mississippi. Charles Stewart, of Texas. Rufus E. Lester, of Georgia. Richard H. Clarke, of Alabama. William E. Haynes, of Ohio. Thomas A. E. Weadock, of Michigan. William A. Jones, of Virginia. Charles H. Page, of Rhode Island. Samuel Byrns, of Missouri. Thomas J. Henderson, of Illinois. > Binger Hermann, of Oregon. Samuel M. Stephenson, of Michigan, William A. Stone, of Pennsylvania. John A. Quackenbush, of New York, Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries. | Samuel Fowler, of New Jersey. George W. Fithian, of Illinois. Littleton W. Moore, of Texas. Asher G. Caruth, of Kentucky. John A. Buchanan, of Virginia. Robert E. De Forest, of Connecticut. Thomas F. Magner, of New York. Connitice on William H. Hatch, of Missouri. Clarke Lewis, of Mississippi. Sydenham B. Alexander, of North Carolina. Henry M. Youmans, of Michigan. George W. Shell, of South Carolina. William S. Forman, of Illinois. Fred. E. White, of Ohio. Anthony Caminetti, of California. Committee on Foreign Affairs. James H. Blount, of Georgia. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. Charles E. Hooker, of Mississippi. J- Logan Chipman, of Michigan. Ashbel P. Fitch, of New York. John F. Andrew, of Massachusetts Benjamin T. Cable, of Illinois. Herman Stump, of Maryland. Harrison H. Wheeler, of Michigan. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. S Louis E. Atkinson, of Pennsylvania. | John H. Wilson, of Kentucky. George D. Perkins, of Iowa. | Agriculture. Charles L. Moses, of Georgia. John B. Long, of Texas. Edward H. Funston, of Kansas. John H. Wilson, of Kentucky. John L. Jolley, of South Dakota. Daniel Waugh, of Indiana. ‘Henry P. Cheatham, of North Carolina. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. Thomas J. Geary, of California. Robert R. Hitt, of Illinois. Alfred C. Harmer, of Pennsylvania, Y James O'Donnell, of Michigan. John Sanford, of New York. Committee on Military Affairs. Joseph H. Outhwaite, of Ohio. Joseph Wheeler, of Alabama. Walter C. Newberry, of Illinois. David H. Patton, of Indiana. Hosea H. Rockwell, of New York. John L. Mitchell, of Wisconsin. Oscar Lapham, of Rhode Island. Edward F. McDonald, of New Jersey. John C. Crosby, of Massachusetts. Henry H. Bingham, of Pennsylvania. Charles E. Belknap, of Michigan. William W., Bowers, of California. John A. T. Hull, of Towa. Committee on Naval Affairs. Hilary A. Herbert, of Alabama. William Elliott, of South Carolina. Amos J. Cummings, of New York. Jacob A. Geissenhainer, of New Jersey. Warren F. Daniell, of New Hampshire, Adolph Meyer, of Louisiana. John W. Lawson, of Virginia William McAleer, of Pennsylvania. Henry Page, of Maryland. Charles A. Boutelle, of Maine. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Towa. James W. Wadsworth, of New York. # } 142 Congressional Directory. Committee on the Post- Office and Post- Roads. John S. Henderson, of North Carolina. John M. Pattison, of Ohio. James H. Blount, of Georgia. John C. Crosby, of Massachusetts. Benjamin A. Enloe, of Tennessee. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. Robert P. C. Wilson, of Missouri. John A. Caldwell, of Ohio. Edward J. Dunphy, of New York. John L. Wilson, of Washington. John D. Alderson, of West Virginia. Christopher A. Bergen, of New Jérsey. Elijah V. Brookshire, of Indiana. Eugene F. Loud, of California. John C. Kyle, of Mississippi. John T. Caine, of Utah. . Committee on the Public Lands. Thomas C. McRae, of Arkansas. Darius D. Hare, of Ohio. % John O. Pendleton, of West Virginia. Byron G. Stout, of Michigan. Henry St. G. Tucker, of Virginia. John A. Pickler, of South Dakota. Le B uel Amerman, of Pennsylvania. Hosea Townsend, of Colorade. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Willis Sweet, of Idaho. David A. De Armond, of Missouri. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. John J. Seerley, of Iowa. Commitiece on Indian Affairs. Samuel W. Peel, of Arkansas. Benjamin H. Clover, of Kansas. \ John M. Allen, of Mississippi. Omer M. Kem, of Nebraska. ; Louis W. Turpin, of Alabama. John L. Wilson, of Washington. William H. Brawley, of South Carolina. Warren B. Hooker, of New York. Thomas Lynch, of Wisconsin. Albert C. Hopkins, of Pennsylvania. Thomas Dunn English, of New Jersey. David A. Harvey, of Oklahoma. i Hosea H. Rockwell, of New York. Joseph McKenna, of California. Committee on the Territories. Joseph E. Washington, of Tennessee. Jeremiah Simpson, of Kansas. " C. Buckley Kilgore, of Texas. Dennis D. Donovan, of Ohio. Charles H. Mansur, of Missouri. John W. Rife, of Pennsylvania, Timothy J. Campbell, of New York. George W. Smith, of Illinois. William F. Parrett, of Indiana. George D. Perkins, of Iowa. William A. B. Branch, of North Carolina. James O’Donnell, of Michigan. William L. Terry, of Arkansas. Antonio Joseph, of New Mexico. Committee on Railways and Canals. Thomas C. Catchings, of Mississippi. Kittel ITalvorsen, of Minnesota. Posey G. Lester, of Virginia. John Davis, of Kansas. William H. Cate, of Arkansas. Charles S. Randall, of Massachusetts. Henry W. Bentley, of New York. Christopher A. Bergen, of New Jersey. Frank E. Beltzhoover, of Pennsylvania. John A. T. Hull, of Iowa. John W. Causey, of Delaware. Eugene F. Loud, of California. Seth W. Cobb, of Missouri. Committee on Manufactures. Is Charles H. Page, of Rhode Island. A. H. A. Williams, of North Carolina. JIE Luther F. McKinney, of New Hampshire. Michael D. Harter, of Ohio. : Matthew D. Lagan, of Louisiana. Ezra B. Taylor, of Ohio. John De Witt Warner, of New York. Elijah A. Morse, of Massachusetts, Joseph H. Beeman, of Mississippi. John E. Reyburn, of Pennsylvania. Sherman Hoar, of Massachusetts. Committee on Mines and Mining. William H. H. Cowles, of North Carolina. Thomas Bowman, of Towa. George W. Cooper, of Indiana. Lucas M. Miller, of Wisconsin. | Samuel W. Peel, of Arkansas. Hosea Townsend, of Colorado. | Timothy J. Campbell, of New York. Samuel M. Stephenson, of Michigan. Sl Tohn O. Pendleton, of West Virginia. Philip S. Post, of Illinois. Anthony Caminetti, of California. George F. Huff, of Pennsylvania. § Marshall Arnold, of Missouri. Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona. \ House Committees. 143 Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Jo Abbott, of Texas. larke Lewis, of Mississippi. John C. Tarsney, of Missouri. John G. Warwick, of Ohio. William M. McKaig, of Maryland. Walter C. Newberry, of Illinois. John De Witt Warner, of New York. A. H. A. Williams, of North Carolina. Seth I. Milliken, of Maine. George W. Shonk, of Pennsylvania. - William H. Enochs, of Ohio. Willis Sweet, of Idaho. Committee on the Pacific Railroads. James B. Reilly, of Pennsylvania. Samuel W. T. Lanham, of Texas. Edward Lane, of Illinois. Jason B. Brown, of Indiana. William T. Ellis, of Kentucky. James W. Covert, of New York. James N. Castle, of Minnesota. Frederic S. Coolidge, of Massachusetts. Henry C. Snodgrass, of Tennessee, John Raines, of New York. * James P. Flick, of Iowa. ! John Lind, of Minnesota. Vincent A. Taylor, of Ohio. John T. Caine, of Utah. Committee on Levees and Improvements of the Mississippt River. Samuel M. Robertson, of Louisiana. Thomas R. Stockdale, of Mississippi. Rice A. Pierce, of Tennessee. Richard H. Norton, of Missouri. William L. Terry, of Arkansas. R. William Everett, of Georgia. Michael D. Harter, of Ohio. Stephen R. Mallory, of Florida. David H. Patton, of Indiana. Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan. Edward Scull, of Pennsylvania. John H. Wilson, of Kentucky. Philip S. Post, of Illinois. Committee on Education. © Walter I. Hayes, of Towa. David B. Brunner, of Pennsylvania. Dennis D. Donovan, of Ohio. John L. Bretz, of Indiana. R. William Everett, of Georgia. Benjamin F. Grady, of North Carolina. Frank P. Coburn, of Pennsylvania. | Committee John C. Tarsney, of Missouri. Washington F. Willcox, of Connecticut. William W. Dixon, of Montana. Lawrence E. McGann, of Illinois. Irvine Dungan, of Ohio. Thomas L. Bunting, of New York. James Capehart, of West Virginia. Joseph H. Beeman, of Mississippi. Edwin Hallowell, of Pennsylvania. Joseph D. Taylor, of Ohio. Henry P. Cheatham, of North Carolina. John Sanford, of New York. Andrew Stewart, of Pennsylvania. on Labor. John W. Causey, of Delaware. John Davis, of Kansas. James Buchanan, of New Jersey. Marriott Brosius, of Pennsylvania. Nils P. Haugen, of Wisconsin. John L. Wilson, of Washington. Committee on the Militia. Edward Lane, of Illinois. Newton C. Blanchard, of Louisiana. William J. Stone, of Kentucky. William J. Coombs, of New York. Eli T. Stackhouse, of South Carolina. Harrison H. Wheeler, of Michigan. Lewis Steward, of Illinois. Osee M. Hall, of Minnesota. Thomas E. Watson, of Georgia. Thomas J. Henderson, of Illinois. John T. Cutting, of California. William H. Enochs, of Ohio. Matthew Griswold, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Patents. George D. Tillman, of South Carolina. John T. Heard, of Missouri. Louis W. Turpin, of Alabama. Halbert S. Greenleaf, of New York. Lucas M. Miller, of Wisconsin. Osee M. Hall, of Minnesota. Oscar Lapham, of Rhode Island. John T. Hamilton, of Iowa. Robert E. De Forest, of Connecticut. James Buchanan, of New Jersey. Charles E. Belknap, of Michigan. John A. Quackenbush, of New York. Edward Scull, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Invalid Pensions. Augustus N. Martin, of Indiana. Luther F. McKinney, of New Hampshire. Robert W. Fyan, of Missouri. George Van Horn, of New York. Herman W. Snow, of Illinois. George F. Kribbs, of Pennsylvania. Albert J. Pearson, of Ohio. William H. Harries, of Minnesota. Edward F. McDonald, of New Jersey. Walter H. Butler, of Towa. James P. Flick, of Iowa. Alfred A. Taylor, of Tennessee. N. Martin Curtis, of New York. John L. Jolley, of South Dakota. John B. Robinson, of Pennsylvania. 144 Congressional Directory. Committee on Pensions. Robert P. C. Wilson, of Missouri. John S. Henderson, of North Carolina. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Richard H. Norton, of Missouri. William F. Parrett, of Indiana. Charles Barwig, of Wisconsin. William A. Jones, of Virginia. Committee Benjamin H. Bunn, of North Carolina. Charles H. Mansur, of Missouri. William G. Stahlnecker, of New York. ‘Robert Bullock, of Florida. Samuel Byrns, of Missouri. Nicholas N. Cox, of Tennessee. Lawrence EE. McGann, of Illinois. Isaac N. Cox, of New York. \ Committee on Frank E. Beltzhoover, of Pennsylvania. William J. Stone, of Kentucky. Benjamin A. Enloe, of Tennessee. Tohn M. Clancy, of New York. Seth W. Cobb, of Missouri. Thomas E. Winn, of Georgia. Charles L. Moses, of Georgia. Lewis Steward, of Illinois. Edward Scull, of Pennsylvania. Daniel Waugh, of Indiana. John C. Houk, of Tennessee. William W. Bowers, of California. on Claims. John W. Kendall, of Kentucky. Charles H. Page, of Rhode Island. John I. Reyburn, of Pennsylvania. Louis E. Atkinson, of Pennsylvania. George W. Smith, of Illinois. Eugene F. Loud, of California. John M. Wever, of New York. War Claims. Owen Scott, of Illinois. George W. Shell, of South Carolina. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa. John A. Pickler, of South Dakota. John C. lTouk, of Tennessee. John W. Rife, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Private Land Claims. Ashbel P. Fitch, of New York. John D. Alderson, of West Virginia. David B. Brunner, of Pennsylvania. Clinton Babbitt, of Wisconsin. George Van Horn, of New York. Thomas E. Winn, of Georgia. Marshall Arnold, of Missouri. William T. Crawford, of North Carolina, Allen R. Bushnell, of Wisconsin. Henry H. Bingham, of Pennsylvania. John Lind, of Minnesota. Bellamy Storer, of Ohio. John G. Otis, of Kansas. Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona. Committee on the District of Columbia. John J. Hemphill, of South Carolina. John T. Heard, of Missouri. James D. Richardson, of Tennessee. Harry Welles Rusk, of Maryland. James E. Cobb, of Alabama. Tohn R. Fellows, of New York. Tom L. Johnson, of Ohio. Elisha E. Meredith, of Virginia. Cornelius A. Cadmus, of New Jersey. Alfred C. Harmer, of Pennsylvania. Philip S. Post, of Illinois. William Cogswell, of Massachusetts. James J. Belden, of New York. Committee on the Revision of the Laws. William T. Ellis, of Kentucky. Joseph H. Outhwaite, of Ohio. Robert Bullock, of Florida. Paul C. Edmunds, of Virginia. Richard H. Norton, of Missouri. Thomas F. Magner, of New York. Elijah V. Brookshire, of Indiana. Lemuel Amerman, of Pennsylvania. Josiah Patterson, of Tennessee. | Case Broderick, of Kansas. ! John B. Robinson, of Pennsylvania. Vincent A. Taylor, of Ohio. Daniel Waugh, of Indiana. Commuttee on Expenditures in the State Depariment. Rufus E. Lester, of Georgia. William C. P. Breckinridge, of Kentucky. Sydenham B. Alexander, of North Carolina. Walter H. Butler, of Towa. John Sanford, of New York. Charles W. Stone, of Pennsylvania. John M. Wever, of New York. Committee on Expenditures in the Treasury Department. George H. Brickner, of Wisconsin. Johu J. O’ Neill, of Missouri. William T. Crawford, of North Carolina. Benjamin H. Clover, of Kansas. William A. Stone, of Pennsylvania. James W. Wadsworth, of New York. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. ” ’ | House Commiltlees. Leas Committee on Expenditures in the War Department. Alexander B. Montgomery, of Kentucky. Robert R. Hitt, of Illinois. Benjamin H. Bunn, of North Carolina. George W. Shonk, of Pennsylvania. Warren F. Daniell, of New Hampshire. Warren B. Hooker, of New York. Irvine Dungan, of Ohio. Committee on Expenditures in the Navy Department. Charles A. O. McClellan, of Indiana. | George W. Ray, of New York. Alexander M. Dockery, of Missouri. | Seth L. Milliken, of Maine. Jo Abbott, of Texas. | Horace F. Bartine, of Nevada. George Johnstone, of South Carolina. | Committee on Expenditures in the Post- Office Department. William C. Oates, of Alabama. James J. Belden, of New York. 5 Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky. Andrew Stewart, of Pennsylvania. Eugene P. Gillespie, of Pennsylvania. John C. Houk, of Tennessee. i James S. Gorman, of Michigan. Committee on Expenditures in the Interior Department. James W. Owens, of Ohio. William W. Grout, of Vermont. Fred. E. White, of Iowa. Albert C. Hopkins, of Pennsylvania. Benjamin F. Grady, of North Carolina. William W. Bowers, of California. John C. Kyle, of Mississippi. Committee on Expenditures in the Department of Justice. John M. Allen, of Mississippi. : Ezra B. Taylor, of Ohio. William H. H. Cowles, of North Carolina. Nelson Dingley, jr., of Maine. George D. Wise, of Virginia. Sereno E. Payne, of New York. Thomas G. Lawson, of Georgia. Commiitiee on Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Paul C.' Edmunds, of Virginia. Kittel Halvorsen, of Minnesota. Thomas L. Bunting, of New York. Omer M. Kem, of Nebraska. James Capehart, of West Virginia. N. Martin Curtis, of New York. Eli T. Stackhouse, of South Carolina. Committee on Expenditures on Public Buildings. Henry M. Youmans, of Michigan. John H. Ketcham, of New York. Halbert S. Greenleaf, of New York. Abner Taylor, of Illinois. John T. Hamilton, of Iowa. Henry P. Cheatham, of North Carolina. William A. B. Branch, of North Carolina. Committee on Rules. The Speaker. Thomas B. Reed, of Maine. Benton McMillin, of Tennessee. Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan. Thomas C. Catchings, of Mississippi. Committee on Accounds. Harry Welles Rusk, of Maryland. Albert J. Pearson, of Ohio. George W. Cooper, of Indiana. John A. Quackenbush, of New York. Worth W. Dickerson, of Kentucky. Matthew Griswold, of Pennsylvania. Charles L.. Moses, of Georgia. John T. Cutting, of California. John J. Seerley, of Iowa. Committee on Mileage. James N. Castle, of Minnesota. John A. Caldwell, of Ohio. William T. Crawford, of North Carolina. James P. Flick, of Towa. John W. Kendall, of Kentucky. The Joint Committee on the Library. Amos J. Cummings, of New York. | Charles O’Neill, of Pennsylvania. Charles T. O’ Ferrall, of Virginia. Committee on Printing. * James D. Richardson, of Tennessee. | Case Broderick, of Kansas. William M. McKaig, of Maryland. | * Has power to act with the Committee on Printing of the Senate as a joint committee. 2D ED 10 \ 146 hb Congressional Directory. Commitee on Enrolled Bills. John G. Warwick, of Ohio. Walter I. Hayes, of Iowa. Clarke Lewis, of Mississippi. Owen Scott, of Illinois. John A. Pickler, of South Dakota. Henry U. Johnson, of Indiana. William A. McKeighan, of Nebraska. SELECT COMMITTEES. Committee on Reform John F. Andrew, of Massachusetts. Charles J. Boatner, of Louisiana. Scott Wike, of Illinois. William H. Brawley, of South Carolina. John M. Pattison, of Ohio Lewis Sperry, of Connecticut. Elisha E. Meredith, of Virginia. in the Civil Service. William J. Coombs, of New York. William H. Harries, of Minnesota. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. Charles A. Russell, of Connecticut. Marriott Brosius, of Pennsylvania, John Raines, of New York. Committee on Election of President and Vice- President and Representatives in Congress. J. Logan Chipman, of Michigan. Henry St. G. Tucker, of Virginia. William H. Crain, of Texas. Barnes Compton, of Maryland. Charles A. O. McClellan, of Indiana. Martin K. Gantz, of Ohio. David A. De Armond, of Missouri. : Committee on the Washington F. Willcox, of Connecticut. James W. Owens, of Ohio. William D. Bynum, of Indiana. Thomas E. Watson, of Georgia. Samuel T. Busey, of Illinois. Henry W. Bentley, of New York. Clinton Babbitt, of Wisconsin. Allen R. Bushnell, of Wisconsin. Isaac N. Cox, of New York. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. H. Henry Powers, of Vermont. Robert E. Doan, of Ohio. Martin N. Johnson, of North Dakota. Eleventh Census. John W. Lawson, of Virginia. William Baker, of Kansas. Joseph D. Taylor, of Ohio. Charles A. Boutelle, of Maine. David B. Henderson, of Iowa. George F. Huff, of Pennsylvania. Committee on Ventilation and Acoustics. William G. Stahlnecker, of New York. Charles Stewart, of Texas. Byron G. Stout, of Michigan. Allan C. Durborow, jr., of Illinois. Myron B. Wright, of Pennsylvania. | James O’Donnell, of Michigan. George D. Perkins, of Iowa. Committee on Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. William E. Haynes, of Ohio. Richard H. Clarke, of Alabama. Posey G. Lester, of Virginia. Charles Barwig, of Wisconsin. Thomas Dunn English, of New Jersey. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Thomas Bowman, of Jowa. Joseph D. Taylor, of Ohio. Elijah A. Morse, of Massachusetts. Matthew Griswold, of Pennsylvania. John T. Cutting, of California. Select Committee on Irrigation of Arid Lands in the United States. Samuel W. T. Lanham, of Texas. John M. Clancy, of New York. John L. Bretz, of Indiana. James S. Gorman, of Michigan. Frederic S. Coolidge, of Massachusetts. William W. Dixon, of Montana. Jeremiah Simpson, of Kansas. John A. Pickler, of South Dakota. Charles S. Randall, of Massachusetts. N. Martin Curtis, of New York. Willis Sweet, of Idaho. John T. Caine, of Utah. Committee on Immigration and Naturalization. Herman Stump, of Maryland. James W. Covert, of New York. William Elliott, of South Carolina. Jacob A. Geissenhainer, of New Jersey. James F. Epes, of Virginia. Robert W. Fyan, of Missouri. Darius D. Hare, of Ohio. Frank P. Coburn, of Wisconsin. John H. Ketcham, of New York. Edward H. Funston, of Kansas. Myron B. Wright, of Pennsylvania. - Committee on the Columbian Exposition. Allan C. Durborow, jr., of Illinois. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. James B. Reilly, of Pennsylvania. George W. Houk, of Ohio. Joseph Wheeler, of Alabama. Matthew D. Lagan, of Louisiana. Joseph J. Little, of New York. William Cogswell, of Massachusetts. Nelson Dingley, jr., of Maine. Joseph McKenna, of California. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa. Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. 147 ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MEMBERS AND DELEGATES OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIV ES, AND THE STANDING AND SELECT COMMITTEES OF WHICH THEY ARE MEMBERS. CHARLES F. Crisp, Georgia, Speaker; Rules, chairman. Abbott, Jo, Tex Alderson, John D., W. Va Alexander, Sydenham B., N. C Allen, John M., Miss Amerman, Lemuel, Pa Andrew, John F., Mass Arnold, Marshall, Mo oa. oi sii. Atkinson, Louis E., Pa Babbitt, Clinton, Wis Bacon, Henry, N. Y PANE err AO RE Bailey, Joseph W., Tex Paker, William, Kang ~ _ >... _ 0 Bankhead, Jon H. Ala... ..... : Bartine, Horace F., Nev Public Buildings and Grounds. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Private Land Claims. Agriculture. Expenditures in the State Department. Indian Affairs. Expenditures in the Department of Justice, chairman. Public Lands. Revision of the Laws. Foreign Affairs. Reform in the Civil Service, chairman. Mines and Mining. Private Land Claims. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Claims. Private Land Claims. Eleventh Census. Banking and Currency, chairman. Public Lands. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Eleventh Census. Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman, Pensions. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. " Expenditures in the Navy Department. Barwio, Charles, Wis o.oo. Lo, Beeman, Joseph Tl. Miss. So. _ cian lo. Belden, Jomes J. Na Y 0 dana... Belknap, Charles E:, Mich Beltzhoover, Frank B., Pa. Loi 0. ino ii Bentley, Henry W., N. Y Bergen, Christopher A., N. J Bingham, Henry H., Pa Blanchard, Newton C., Lal. il... oii. Bland, Richard P., Mo Blount, James H., Ga Pensions. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic, Manufactures. Education. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Military Affairs. Patents. Railways and Canals. War Claims, chairman. Railways and Canals. Eleventh Census. Pust-Office and Post-Roads. Railways and Canals. Appropriations. Military Affairs. Private Land Claims. Rivers and Harbors, chairman. Militia. Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman. Foreign Affairs, chairman, Post-Office and Post-Roads. ERS TE ? : = tok gE \ 148 Congressional Directory. Boatner, Charles J., La ...oouac ocean naoL-Judiciary, Boutelle, Charles A, Me eran boat Reform in the Civil Service. Naval Affairs. Eleventh Census. Bowers, Williaa W3, Cal... osc 2c Military Affairs. Pensions. : Expenditures in the Interior Department. Bowman, Thomas: Iowa... anima oni, Mines and Mining. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Branch, William A. B.,, N.C... .... Territories. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Brawley, William H., 8, C. ..cnvuvannncin. Indian Affairs. Reform in the Civil Service. Breckinridge, Clifton R., Ark ____..__.._____ Appropriations. Breckinridge, William CP... Ky... .._.. Appropriations. Expenditures in the State Department. Bretz, Jom L., Ind cic cnn sanmnn cmb vie Education. Brickner, George H., Wis. ___~ __ _.._. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Expenditures in the Treasury Department, chairman. Broderick, Case, Kans 0... ..... Judiciary. Brookshire, Elijah V., Indv. o-oo ooo Cn, Revision of the Laws. Printing. Post-Office and. Post-Roads. Revision of the Laws. Brosius, Mariel, Po. un. cac on a Soe Banking and Currency. Labor. Reform in the Civil Service. Brown, Jason B., Ind _____....cconuun. als Elections. Brunner; David B., Pa... co. ol... i Pacific Railroads. Education. Private Land Claims. Bryan, William J, Nebr. __..... 0... : Ways and Means. ~ Buchanan, Jom A. Va... ceeinmpniioms Judiciary. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Buchanan, James, N. J... _ cemvucuee-e Judiciary. Labor. Patents. Bullock, Robert, Bla... ..cosaacccaauaas. Claims. Bunn, Benjamin HL, N.C. _ cli... Revision of the Laws. Claims, chairman. Expenditures in the War Department. Bunting, Thomas L., NV ~~... Labor. Barrows, Juhus C., Mich o___.-_... ceium~ Busey, Samuel T., I11 Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Ways and Means. Levees and Improvement of the Mississippi River. Rules. Re Eleventh Census. Bushnell, Allen R., Wis: ___._ 0... in. Private Land Claims. Election of President, Vice-President, ete. Baller, Walter Hl. Towa lc. anal. kL Invalid Pensions. Expenditures in the State Department. Judiciary. Eleventh Census. Bymum, William D., Ind oci ancien ini 7 Alphabetic Byrns, Samuel, Mo Cable, Benjamin T., 111 ~ Cadmus, Cornelius A., N. J Caine, John T., Utah Caldwell, John A., Ohio Caminetti, Anthony, Cal Campbell, Timothy J., N. Y Capehart, James, W. Va Caruth Asher G., By +r. inet hun Castle, James N., Minn Catchings, Thomas C., Miss Cate, William H., Ark Causey, Jom 'W., Del ena: Chapin, Alfred C., NN i ila cavinidl Cheatham, Henry P., N. C Chipman, J. Logan, Mich Clancy, John M., N.Y Clark, Clarence D., Wyo Clarke, Richard H., Ala Clover, Benjamin H., Kans Cobb, James E., Ala Cobb, Seth W., Mo Coburn, Frank P., Wis Cockran, W. Bourke, N. Y Cogswell, William, Mass Compton, Barnes, Md Coolidge, Frederic S., Mass Coumbs, William J., N.Y al List of Members and Committees. A on = oo \ 149 Rivers and Harbors. Claims. Foreign Affairs. District of Columbia. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Pacific Railroads. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Mileage. 2 Agriculture. Mines and Mining. Territories. Mines and Mining. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Pacific Railroads. Mileage, chairman. Rivers and Harbors. Railways and Canals, chairman, Rules. Banking and Currency. Railways and Canals. Railways and Canals. Labor. Judiciary. Agriculture. Education. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Foreign Affairs. : Election of President, Vice-President, etc., chairman, War Claims. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Elections. Public Lands. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Rivers and Harbors. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Indian Affairs. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Elections. District of Columbia. Banking and Currency. Railways and Canals. War Claims. Education. Immigration and Naturalization, Ways and Means. Appropriations. District of Columbia. Columbian Exposition. Appropriations. Election of President, Vice-President, ete. Pacific Railroads. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Militia. Reform in the Civil Service, 150 Congressional Directory. | Cooper, George W., Ind ‘io Col: vd... Mines and Mining. Accounts. Covert, Tames W., N.Y oo caniiveriuun ins Cowles, William H. H., N. Colas Testy Cox, Isaac Nu, N.Y Li. oun chmammniads Cox, Nicholas N., Tenn _..a.. oo. uo 50 Crain, William I1., Tex coo coo 2 Pacific Railroads. Immigration and Naturalization. Mines and Mining, chairman. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Claims. ; Election of President, Vice-President, etc. Banking and Currency. Claims. Banking and Currency. Election of President, Vice-President, etc. Crawford, William T., N. Coil aco vauess Private Land Claims. Crosby, Jom C,, Mass... occ nn as Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Mileage. Military Affairs. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Culberson, David B), Tex... vivid Judiciary, chairman. Cummings, Amos J., N.Y _____ it a ha Naval Affairs. Joint Committee on the Library, chairman. Carlis,/ N:> Martin, N.Y ea Invalid Pensions. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture Irrigation of Arid Lands. Cutting, John S., Cal. ou ce Ca as Militia. Accounts. : Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Palzell, John, Pa... on olin Ways and Means. Daniell; Warren B., N..HL oo huni Naval Affairs. Expenditures in the War Department. Davis; Jom, Ifans. or. foil io oie doncing Railways and Canals. De Armond, David A.,, Mo _........couee ical Labor. Public Lands. Election of President, Vice-President, etc. De Forest, Robert B.,:Conn., «eee 2 300 Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Patents. Dickerson, Worth W., Ky. ooo. o_o... Banking and Currency. Accounts. Dingley, Nelson, jr., Me _...oo_....____Appropriations. Expenditures in the Department of Justice Columbian Exposition. Dixon, William W.,, Mon obo. coil. Labor. Doan, Robert B., Ohio. ao uns ooo. Dockery, Alexander M., Mo... use Irrigation of Arid Lands. Elections. Election of President, Vice-President, etc. Appropriations. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Dolliver, Jonathan P., Towa... een uit Naval Affairs. War Claims. Columbian Exposition. fl Donovan, Dennis D., Ohio. oo. ica cia Territories. Education. Dungan, Irvine, Ohio . wove civ cuc can cciiusd Labor. \ ; Expenditures in the War Department. Dunphy, Edward J., N.Y or nin il Post-Office and Post-Roads. Durborow, Allan'C,, jr. IH. o..ibin Ventilation and Acoustics. Columbian Exposition, chairman. Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. Edmunds, Paul C., Va Elliott, William, S. C Ellis, William T., Ky English, Thomas Dunn, N. J Enloe, Benjamin A., Tenn Enochs, William H., Ohio Epes, James F., Va Everett, R. William, Ga Fellows, John R., N.Y Fitch, Ashbel P., N. Y Fithian, George W., Flick, James P., Iowa Forman, William S., TH... __- me Forney, William H., Ala Fowler, Samuel, NN. Jt. oo aii dane nn Funston, Edward H., Kans Fyan, Robert W., Mo... ccuinpat mnmusuio.. Gantz, Martin K., Ohio Geary, Thomas J, Cal .. oo. unvomae 0 Geissenhainer, Jacob A., N. J Gillespie, Eugene P., Pa Goodnight, Isaac H., Ky Gorman, James S., Mich Grady, Benjamin P., N.C... cre ancien Greenleaf, Halbert S., N. Y Griswold, Matthew, Pa Grout, William W., Vt Hall, Osee Matson, Minn Hallowell, Edwin N., Pa Halvorsen, Kittel, Minn I51 Revision of the Laws. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture, chairman. Naval Affairs. Immigration and Naturalization. Pacific Railroads. ‘Revision of the Laws, chairman. ‘Indian Affairs. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Post-Office and Post-Roads. War Claims. Public Buildings and Grounds. Militia. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Immigration and Naturalization, Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Education. District of Columbia. Foreign Affairs. Private Land Claims, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Pacific Railroads. Invalid Pensions. Mileage. Agriculture. Appropriations. Merchant Marine and Fisheries, chairman. Agriculture. Immigration and Naturalization. Invalid Pensions. Immigration and Naturalization. Banking and Currency. Election of President, Vice-President, ete. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Foreign Affairs. Naval Affairs. Immigration and Naturalization. Elections. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Judiciary. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Education. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Patents. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Militia. Accounts. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Appropriations. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Militia. Patents. Education. Railways and Canals. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture ~~ 152 Congressional Directory. a, ! Hamilton, John T., Towa . -.esunmmmivianses Patents. Expenditures on Public Buildings Hare, Darius D., Ohio... ev emm oi Public Lands. ’ ; Immigration and Naturalization. Harmer, 3lfred”C., Pa...) oni aca Foreign Affairs. District of Columbia. Harries, William H., Minn ce cer eee wo- Invalid Pensions. Reform in the Civil Service. Harter, Michael D., Ohio... eine Manufactures. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Harvey, David AL, Okla... onal s ci Indian Affairs. Hatch, William H, Mo... oat cain Agriculture, chairman. Hongen, Nils P., Wis... on coternrominarrr Elections. Labor Hayes, Walter T., Towa. _.....cociecroconss Education, chairman. : : Larolled Bills. Haynes, William E., Ohio. cee eevee der Rivers and Harbors. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic, chairman. Heard, John T., Mo -. os sumuie nme wma -. Patents. District of Columbia. Hemphill, John J.,S.C _____.___.__..__._ District of Columbia, chairman. Henderson, David B.,Jowa._ ._ ..__. >... ...: Appropriations. 8 vy Eleventh Census. Henderson, Jom 8S, N.C... oc vnsnsnine- Post-Office and Post-Roads, chairman. Pensions. Henderson, Thomas J., IN ____. _.. _ ....-. Banking and Currency. Rivers and Harbors. Militia. Herbert, Hilary A., Ala Hermann, Binger, Oregon Hitt, Robert R., Ill Naval Affairs, chairman. Rivers and Harbors. Foreign Affairs. Expenditures in the War Department. Hoar, Sherman, Moss... .cuue ein cmnnanhs Manufactures. Holman, Willlam'S:, Ind... Soo nico Appropriations, chairman. Hooker, Charles E., Miss =... i. Foreign Affairs. Hooker, Warten’ B.,, N.Y L..... - 2 Indian Affairs. Expenditures in the War Department. Hopkins, Albert C.,; Pa ounve cnommmmsmnns Indian Affairs. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Hopkins, Albert J., Tool (lo cnnuimnimain Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Reform in the Civil Service. Houk, George W., Ohio ____ ae gr Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Columbian Exposition. Houk, John C., Tent 2 Ls Ladin el Pensions. War Claims. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Hull, George ®., Pa... oi io Mines and Mining. ; Eleventh Census. Hull, John A. T,, Towa cco nnn Military Affairs. Railways and Canals, Johnson, Henry U., Ind, . cewen amv asmniess Elections. Enrolled Bills. Alphabetical List of Members and Committees, 153 Johnson, Martin D5, N. Dak .. uuicea canal Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Election of President, Vice-President, etc. Johnson, Tom L., Ohio. ro. oii co .. District of Columbia. Jolmstone, George, 8. CL... oc icon Elections. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Jolley, John WET SRE 0 Co, Agriculture. : Invalid Pensions. Jones, William A., Va... biccocconenine Rivers and Harbors. Pensions. Joseph, Antonio, NoMex 2 o_o ius Territories. ] Indian Affairs. ; Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Kem, Omer M., Nebr Rendall, John W.. Ry... sn 0 Claims, . oli oo. Elections, chairman. Joint Committte on the Library. O'Neil, Toseph H., Mass. onan hmm iia Appropriations. ONeill, Charles, Pa xo So ii bss Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Joint Committee on the Library. @ Neill, John]. MO... ...c cea wots em i Interstate and Foreign €ommerce. T Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Otis, Tom G., Kans... ommend l on Private Laud Claims. Outhwaite, Joseph H., Ohio. omnia Military Affairs, chairman. be Revision of the Laws. Owens, James W., Ohio. 1. ..ol oo Lo Expenditures in the Interior Department, chair - man. Eleventh Census. Page, Charles HI, R. 1.) creo So Rivers and Harbors. Manufactures, chairman, ~ Claims. Page, Henry, MA... x oi cian nnsiob smn Naval Affairs. Parrett, Willlam EF. Ind i... ou iouad.. Territories. : Pensions. Patterson, Josiah, Tenn... i... _ Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Revision of the Laws. Pattison, John M., Ohio oc. C.-C Post-Office and Post-Roads. Reform in the Civil Service. Patton, David H., Ind honed Military Affairs. : Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Payne, Sereno E., N.Y... oii. Ways and Means. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Paynier, Thomas H., By". ._. __. Loe... Elections. | Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Pearson, Albert J., OD onan so Invalid Pensions. Accounts. Peel. Somuel Wankel Indian Affairs, chairman. Mines and Mining. Pendleton, John O., W.Va... C. .... Public Lands. Mines and Mining. Perkins, George D., Towa. ___ ___...____..Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Territories. Ventilation and Acoustics. Pickler, John 'A., S. Dok... ouuce oa. ui... Public Lands. War Claims. Enrolled Bills. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Pierce, Rice A., Tenn... iceniimms ios Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Levees and Improvements of the Mississipp!? River. : Powers, H. Henry, Vt Price, AndrewcLa © oy. aS tT Quackenbush, John A., N. Y Raines, John, N. Y Randall, Charles S., Mass Ray, George W., N. Y Rayner, Isidor, Md Reed, Thomas B., Me... core bee oc 2 "Reilly, James B., Pa Reyburn, John E., Pa Richardson, James D., Tenn Rife, John W., Pa Robertson, Samuel M., La Robinson, John B., Pa Rockwell, Hosen 1. N.Y Rusk; Harry Welles, Md Russell, Charles A., Conn Sanford, John, N.Y Sayers, Joseph D., Tex Scott, Owen, Ill Scull, Edward, Pa Seerley, John J., Towa Shell, George W., S. C Shively, Benjamin F., Ind Shonk, George W., Pa Simpson, Jeremiah, Kans Smith, George W., Ill —— = tr = = Congressional Directory. S Mines and Mining. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. District of Columbia. Judiciary. : Election of President, Vice-President, etc. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Rivers and Harbors. Patents. Accounts. Pacific Railroads. Reform in the Civil Service. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Railways and Canals. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Judiciary. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Foreign Affairs. Ways and Means. Rules. Pacific Railroads, chairman, Columbian Exposition. Elections. Manufactures. Claims. District of Columbia. Printing, chairman. Territories. War Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River, chairman. Invalid Pensions. Revision of the Laws. Military Affairs. Indian Affairs. District of Columbia. Accounts, chairman. Reform in the Civil Service. ] Foreign Affairs. Education. Expenditures in the State Department. Appropriations. War Claims. Enrolled Bills. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Patents. Pensions. Public Lands. Accounts. Agriculture. War Claims. Ways and Means. Public Buildings and Grounds. Expenditures in the War Department. Territories. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Territories. Claims. Hi 1 8 4 Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. 157 ! Smith, Marcus A, Ariz oo oLooloici.. Mines and Mining. : * Private Land Claims. Snodgrass, Henry C., Tenn -___ _____._.. Pacific Railroads. Snow, Herman'W., Tl 2-2 be Biel 7d Invalid Pensions. Sperry, Lewin, Connie. aii ae nae Banking and Currency. Reform in the Civil Service. Springer, William M., 71] __..__.. Sr mm ie Ways and Means, chairman, Stackhouse, ELT. S. Co .. . Militia. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture, Stahlnecker, William G., N.Y _____ i. ___.___ Claims. / Ventilation and Acoustics, chairman. Stephenson, Samuel M., Mich................ Rivers and Harbors. Mines and Mining. Stevens; Moses T, Mass veniam. Ways and Means. Steward, Lewis, Ill -- roa GRO RB Militia. Pensions. Stewart; Andrew, Poo i enna 0 Education. Stone, William A, Pa use latanasln. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Stewart, Charles, Tex. 00 Loo wanda ic Rivers and Harbors. Ventilation and Acoustics. Stockdale, Thomas 'R., Miss. 1 .._ .. .. Judiciary. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. / _ Stone, Charles W., Pac Sno nl. Cel Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures in the State Department. Rivers and Harbors. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Stone, WilllamyY.; Ky oi las Militia. War Claims. ; Stover, Bellamy, Ohio... ..... col os ni foo Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Stout, Byron G.(Mch 0 conor aa Stamp, Herman, Wd li 0 0 al Sweet, Willis, Mallo™ LLL eae Farmey, Jom Co Mo io es Taylor, Abwer, To docu c ais sidan Taylor, Alfred A., Tem fie ia ollie. Taylor, Ezra B., Ohi0... ..cquweiinmdnmg mmm Caylor, Joseph D,, Ohio. .couvunmm mmm as Taylor, Vineet A., OHO. cnn iennn on nmin Private Land Claims. Public Lands. Ventilation and Acoustics. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Immigration and Naturalization, chairman. Public Lands. Public Buildings and Grounds. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Public Buildings and Grounds. S Labor, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Elections. Invalid Pensions. Judiciary. Manufactures. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Education. Eleventh Census. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. . Pacific Railroads. Revision of the Laws. Terry, William L., Ark eee cawmmmm ne Territories. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Tillman, George DL, S.C. i oo. Patents, chairman. . Townsend, Hosen, Coloi.l i. waive nmemes obs Tracey, Charles, NW. Vo oem Banking and Currency. Public Lands. Mines and Mining. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. : i / 158 Tucker, Henry St. G., Va 0 lo lois Congressional Directory. Public Lands. Election of President, Vice-President, etc. Turner, Henry G., Ga... aE a Ways and Means. Turpin, Louis W., Ald ._ co. cuetmmunmes smi Van Horm, George, Ne Yc cndemmaneass ae Wadstvorth, James W., N.Y oc eicuncecas Walker, Joseph J. Mass ___ «Co. ones Warrier, John De Witt, Ni Y ccc mv me wien Indian Affairs. Patents. Invalid Pensions. Private Land Claims. Naval Affairs. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Banking and Currency. Manufactures. Public Buildings and Grounds. . Warwick, Jolm G., Ohio. . .c.cianmmummsmver Public Buildings and Grounds. Washington, Joseph E., Tenn... vc nwuuie Enrolled Bills, chairman. Territories, chairman. Watson, Thomas B., Ga... oli lil Militia. Eleventh Census. Waugh, Daniel, Ind cc cnr snmmnrdmnnmoms Agriculture. Pensions. ; Revision of the Laws. Weadock, Thomas A.E., Mich... ..... .__Rivers and Harbors. Wever, John Mo, No XY cccnunnnn cnn mmm me Expenditures in the State Department. Wheeler, Harrison H., Mich... ....o.. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Militia. Wheeler, Joseph, Ala... icin ndemmpmusinn Military Affairs. White, Fred. E., Iowa Columbian Exposition. Agriculture. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Whiting, JustinR., Mich: .... one wimimmen Ways and Means. Wike, Scott, TN... is ce SS eawiei Banking and Currency. Willcox, Washington F., Conn ______.____.__ Reform in the Civil Service. Eleventh Census, chairman. Williams, Archibald H. A. , N.C vce Manufactures. Public Buildings and Grounds. Williams, George Fred., Mass... «ocean. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Williams, James R,, BY... cennutcnnsnn- Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Wilson, John FL. BYiL co nmin issn mmm arses Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Agriculture. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Wilson, John L., Wash _. .__.....cccuuines Post-Office and Post-Roads. Indian Affairs. Labor. Wilson, Robert P. C., Mo nn oa Post-Office and Post-Roads. Pensions, chairman. / Wilson, William'L.,, W.Va __. _. .. _.. Ways and Means. Winn, Thomas E., Ga 0 0 0 emia. War Claims. Private Land Claims. | Wise George I, Va o_o. Bo iia, Interstate and Foreign Commerce. : Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Wolverton, Simon P., Pa. o_o... Judiciary. : | MWrioht, Myron B., Pao. oo cic ae soi Ventilation and Acoustics. Immigration and Naturalization. Youmans, Henry M., Mich______ ooo... Agriculture. Expenditures on Public Buildings, chairman, Officers of the Senale— Clerks to Senate Committees. 159 OFFICERS OF THE SENATE, PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE. President of the Senate.—1LEVI P. MORTON, Scott Circle. Chaplain lo the Senate.—Rev. J. G. Butler, 1107 Eleventh street, N. W. Private Secretary.—Robert S. Chilton, jr., 225 Delaware avenue, N. E. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY. Secretary of the Senate—Anson G. McCouk, 1631 Massachusetts avenue, N. W, Chief Clerfe.—Charles W. Johnson, 1334 I street, N. W. Principal Legislative Clerk—Henry H. Gilfry, The Elsmere. Principal Executive Clerk —James R. Young, 1506 QQ street, N. W. Minute and Journal Clerk.—William E. Spencer, 1228 Thirteenth street, N. W. Financial Clerk —R. B. Nixon, 409 M street, N. W. Assistant Financial Clerk. —Henry A. Pierce, 232 New Jersey avenue, S. E., Enrolling Clerk.—B. S. Platt, 802 L street, N. W. Librarian. —A. W. Church, 1414 Fifteenth street, N. W. Assistant Librarian —E. T. Cressey, 58 B street, N. E. Clerks.—M. R. Shankland, 1633 Twenty-ninth street, N. W. H. B. McDonald, 1204 Eighteenth street, N. W. Jere Williams, 114 Second street, S. E. Jacob C. Donaldson, 200 E street, N. W. J. W. Bartlett, 113 C street, N. E. C. C. Morrow, Hillman House. J. H. C. Wilson, 26 Myrtle street, N. E. Charles Newell, 117 B street, N. E. George W. Seaver, Howard avenue, Mt. Pleasant. John R. Thompson, 150 A street, N. E. Keeper of Stationery.—Charles N. Richards, 1o1 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. ‘ Assistant Keeper of Stationery —Frank M. Evans, 232 New Jersey avenue, S. E. Assistant in Stationery-Room.— John L. Nichols, 203 D street, N. W. Messengers.—E. A. Hills, gor French street. Joseph McGuckian, 230 East Capitol street. Page.—Charles R. Nixon, 409 M street, N. W. Laborers.—Charles Murray, 1207 I street, N. W. T. S. Hickman, 122 LL street, N. W. William Lucas, 423 Fourth street, S. E. Moses Jessup, 2041 E street, N. W. : Griffin Johnson, 1441 N street, N. W. CLERKS TO SENATE COMMITTEES. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress—Paul D. T albott, 1323 New Hamp- shire avenue. Agriculture and Forestry—0O. Jansen Collman, The Portland. Apprapr ‘ations —Thomas P. Cleaves, 1819 Tenth street, N. W. Assistant Clerk. — Joseph S. Morgan, Wormley’ s Messenger.—Christian Chritzman, 409 Second street, N. W, ; Conn P lin Pulsifer, 1523 Fourteenth street, N. W. Civil Service and Retrenchment, —F. J. Haig, 215 East Capitol street. Claims.—]no. Irwin, Jr., 2319 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. Assistant Cher. —Merton Herrick, 246 Delaware avenue, N. E, Messenger.— James M. Pipes, 1708 Tenth street, N. W. Coast Defenses. — Commerce.—Woodbury Pulsifer, 1523 Fourteenth street, N. W. Assistant Clerk.—Otis H. Cutler, 515 Second street, N. E, 0o Congressional Direclory. Contingent Expenses.—Eugene Davis. | District of Columbia.—Charles Moore, 1101 K street, N. W. Education and Labor.—Robert C. Morris, 707 Thirteenth street, N. W. Engrossed Bills.—F. M. Cockrell, jr., 1518 R street, N. W. “Messenger —E. YX. Mitchell, jr., 1008 M street, N. W. Enrolled Bills—Daniel Shepard. Epidemic Diseases.—C. H. Harris, Belvedere Hotel. Messenger.—H. W. Wall, 211 North Capitol street. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.—Isaac Hamburger, 915 N, street, N. W. Finance.—Benj. Durfee, 637 East Capitol street. (Telephone, 977 and 999.) Messenger.—George M. Taylor, 13 Third street, N. E. Fisheries—Schuyler S. Olds, 1800 N street, N. W. ; Five Civilized Tribes of Indians,—Carroll Brooks. Foreign Relations—E. J. Babcock, 1334 Thirteenth street, N. W. Messenger —Henry A. Vale, 1328 R street, N. W. Immigration.—Clarence Johnson, 1412 I street, N. W. Indian Affairs—Wm. Henry Darlington, 39 B street, S. E. Indian Depredations—Addison T. Smith, 413 Third street, N. W. Interstate Commerce—~Milton W. Blumenberg, 1627 Q street, N. W., Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands.—L. C. Baker, 1449 N street, N. W. Judiciary.—George P. Furber, gog I street, N. W. : Messenger—Edward W. Doherty, 715 Fourteenth street, N. W. Library.—Henry E. Hinman, 1512 U street, N. W. Messenger —W. H. H. Hart, 1130 Fifteenth street, N. W Manufactures.— Military Affairs —W.P. Huxford, 1727 De Sales street. Messenger.—Frederick E. Chapin, 3043 P street., N. W. Mines and Mining. —Charles J. Kappler, 735 Sixth street, N. W. Improvement Mississsippi River—Solon O. Morse, 1141 Nineteenth street, N. W. Naval Affairs—H. J. Gensler, 1318 Thirteenth street. Nicaraguan. Claims —George W. Morgan, 118 Eleventh street, S. E. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of Executive Departments—E. C. Goodwin, 1005 H street, N. W. Patents.—]. Alonzo Babcock, 1334 Q street, N. W.; Eleventh street N. W. Pensions.—W. H. H. Johnstone, 1329 G street, N. W. Assistant Clerks.—Earle S. Goodrich, 1323 Thirteenth street, N. W. William C. Hubbell, 916 Fourteenth street, N. W. Potomac River Front—E. T. Mathews, 1743 F street, N. W. Post- Offices and Post-Roads.— William T. Ellsworth, 1701 Connecticut avenue, : Messenger —C. W. Fitch, 1600 Sixteenth street. President's Message Transmitting Report of Pacific Railway Commission.— Printing —W. H. Michael, 215 North Capitol street. Private Land Claims.—Thomas R. Ransom, Metropolitan Hotel. Privileges and Elections.—Thos. F. Dawson, 118 Fourth street, N. E. Public Buildings and Grounds.—John B. McCarthy, 1612 Fifteenth street, N. W. Public Lands.—Richard Nixon, 1825 Q street, N. W. Quadro- Centennial —Richard Pettigrew, 100 B street, N. E. Railroads —George Brent, 800 Eleventh street, N. W. Relations with Canada.—E.B. Wright, 312 F street, N. W. Revision of the Laws—Hawkins Taylor, jr., 56 B street, N. E. Revolutionary Claims—George Pierce, 809 Twenty-first street, N. W. Rules —William Herbert Smith, 2025 Q street, N. W. Territories—Edward T. Lee, 916 Fourteenth street, N. W. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard —Wm. Henry Gallinger, 1 B street, N. W. Woman Suffrage—Charles N. Vance, Hotel Oxford. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS. Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate—Edward K. Valentine, 6 B street, N. E. Assistant Doorkeeper—Isaac Bassett, 18 Second street, N. E. Acting Assistant Doorkeeper.—Charles B. Reade, 1529 I street, N. W. Clerk to Sergeant-at-Arms.—XKimball E. Valentine, 300 Delaware avenue, N. E. Messengers, Act’'g Asst. Doorkeepers.—]John G. Merritt, 118 Maryland avenue, N. E. C. S. Draper, 325 A street, S. E. \ D. W. Wilson, 1406 T street, N. W. Assistant Messenger on floor of Senate—Alonzo H. Stewart, 204 Fourth street, S. E. Upholsterer and Locksmith.—Jobn R. Zimmerman, 201 C street, S. E. . | { | ES A ET ee ee mtr = ~ Officers of the Senate— Office of Sergeant-at-Arms. 161 POST-OFFICE. Postmaster of the Senate.—Stanley Plummer, 12 B street, N. E. Assistant Postmaster —Aaron W. Kellogg, 1247 Maryland avenue, N. E. Clerk in Post-office.—~James A. Crystal, 108 Fifth street, N. E. MAIL MESSENGERS. James A. McMullin, 229 D street, N. W. J. H. Sturtevant, 227 Ind. ave., N. E. John. D. Severn, 154 East Capitol street. William Peck, 409 Fourth street, N. E. Murray S. Dunbar, 623 Penn. ave., N. W. Fred. L. Dennie, 218 Third street, N. W. Fred. M. Colwell, 1817 Fourteenth street, N.W. RIDING PAGES. Moxley Ferris, 420 Massachusetts avenue. William W. Aulick, 21 Grant Place. Alfred S. Howard, 1o10 Fifteenth street, N.W, Elwood Graver, 6 B street, N. E. DOCUMENT ROOM. Superintendent. —Amzi Smith, 125 C street, S. E. First Assistant. —George H. Boyd, 1702 F street, N. W. Second Assistant.—]. W. Hathaway, 246 Eighth street, N. E. Clerk.—Frank Burton, 1125 Seventeenth street, N. W. Assistant in Document Room.—C. H. Monroe, Howard House. FOLDING ROOM. Superintendent —7J. S. Hickcox, 106 C street, N. E. Assistant.—W. P. Brownlow, 516 M street, N. W, Clerk —R. B. Tretler, 454 K street, N. W. Foreman. —Hiram H. Brewer, Lanham’s, Md. MESSENGERS. Milo R. Adams, 820 A street, S. E. . J. G. Ball, 1016 Sixth street, N. W. Ww. H. May, Mades’s Hotel. A. Barnes, 1108 Eighth street, N. W. . F. Edwards, Hillman House. H. W. Wall, 246 Delaware ave. William Griffis, 510 E street, N. W. O. H. Curtis, 1525 Corcoran street. J. M.. Pipes, gog T street, N. W. O. S. Sanford, 103 Eighth street, N. W. C. H. Hitchcock, 218 Third street, S. E.! W. I. Latimer, 1139 Twelfth street, N. W. C. P. Swain, 106 F street, N. W. Cliff Warden, goo Twenty-third street, N. W. Henry Brady, 613 B street, S. I. C.W. Barrett, 1449 U street, N. W. J. H. Marshall, 324 East Capitol street. Edward Ham, 306 B street, N. E. Arthur M. Payne, 2215 Washington Circle. H. E. Ward, 48 B street, S. W. Horace Scudder, 1606 Nineteenth street, N. W. T. W. Keller, 152 East Capitol street. Preston L.. Delden, gos Thirteenth street, N. W. Charles E. Stuven, 14 Third street, N. E. HEATING AND W. F. Wright, northwest corner Eleventh and G streets, N. W. Clarence G. Northup, Howard avenue, Mount Pleasant, W. E. Pressey, 14 Third street, N. E. C. P. Crandall, 1331 N street, N. W, Lyman B. Cutler, 410 Sixth street, N. W. L. Kimball, jr., 103 Eighth street, N. E. Chas. G. Phelps, 935 Rhode Island ave., N.W. G. M. Taylor, 13 Third street, N. E. C. W. Fitch, 1600 Sixteenth street, N. W Wm. C. Hubbell, 916 Fourteenth street, N. W. F. E. Chapin, 3043 P street, N. W, ° H. A. Vale, 1328 R street, N. W. Wm. H. H. Hart, 1130 Fifteenth street, N. W, E. Y. Mitchell, 1008 M street, N. W. C. Chritzman, 409 Second street, N. W. E. C. Moxley, 1503 Thirty-ffth street. J. T. Gaskin, 416 Ninth street, S. W. P. V. Roux. F. T. Gilbert, 401 C street, S, E. Joseph Stevens, 211 A street, N. E. W. J. Reed, 716'C street, N. BE. C. W. Sparr, 118 Maryland ave., N. E. VENTILATING. Chief Engineer —T. A. Jones, 946 I street, S. W. Assistants.—E. C. Stubbs, 406 Second street, N. W. W. H. Prescott, 323 A street, S. E. F. E. Dodson, 710 Maryland avenue, N. E. Conductors of Elevators.—A. D. Wiggin, 207 Third street, N. E. George N. Stranahan, 322 Four and-a-half street, N. W. dssistant.—E. ]. Atherton, 408 Second street, N. E, Superintendent of Senate Stables.—W. R. Reynolds, 624 Pennsylvania avenue, S. E. 11 2D ED 162 Congressional Directory. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE, SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE. The Speaker.—Charles F. Crisp, Metropolitan Hotel. Private Secretary.—John T. Waterman, 618 Twelfth street, N. W. Clerk at the Speaker's Table—Charles R. Crisp, Metropolitan Hotel. Clerk to the Speaker. —Edward W. Barrett, Metropolitan Hotel. Messenger. —~Henry Neal, 415 Fifth street, S. E. CHAPLAIN. Rev. W. H. Milburn, D. D., 210 A street, S. E. OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHERS TO COMMITTEES. Will J. Kehoe, 100 Fourth street, S. E. George C. Lafferty, 1701 I street, N. W. OFFICE OF THE CLERK OF THE HOUSE, Clerk of the House—James Kerr, 421 B street, N. E. Chief Clerk—Thomas O. Towles, 1518 R street, N. W. Journal Clerk—N. T. Crutchfield, Metropolitan. Reading Clerks.—Pembroke Pettit. W. J. Houghtaling, 315 Ninth street, N. E. Tally Clerk—F. H. Hosford, 112 Ninth street, S. E. Assistant Journal Clerk.—Edwin S. Hoskins, 335 C street, N. W. File Clerk.—Walter H. French, National Hotel. Assistant File Clerk.—George W. Cruikshanks. Bill and Printing Clerk—]John H. Rogers, 517 East Capitol street. Assistant Clerke.—W. R. Bell, 1115 G street, N. W. Disbursing Clerk.—]. Frank Snyder. Assistant Disbursing Clerf.—Richard Theophilus, 640 Massachusetts avenue, Enrolling Clerk.—George B. Parsons, 2006 Fourteenth street, N. W. Assistant Enrolling Clerk.—]James Kelley, 415 New Jersey avenue, S. E. Resolution and Petition Clerke.—G. W. Luke. Newspaper Clerke.—H. H. Moler, 702 North Carolina avenue, S. E. Index Clerfe—F. H. Tompkins, 608 C street, N. E. Assistant Index Clerk.—]. H. Van Buren, 415 East Capitol street. Indexers of Private Claims —Edwin Beekman, 116 F street, N. W, Patrick E. Walsh, go3 C street, N. E. Allen J. Hooker, 3 B street, N. W. Distributing Clerk—George M. Campbell, 114 Fifth street, N. E. Stationery Clerk.—John S. Graybill, 632 North Carolina avenue, S. E. Assistant Clerk.—]John B. McDonnell, 209 D street, N. W. Bookkeeper —G. Walker Pratt, 124 F street, N. W. Assistant Clerk —W. W. Cate. Page—Clifford Lucas, 115 F street, N. E. DOCUMENT-ROOM. Superintendent —E. B. Smith. Clerks—George B. Fleming, 917 R street, N, W. J. W. Hiatt, 517 East Capitol street. LIBRARY OF THE HOUSE. Librarian.—--Asher Barnett, 116 F street, N. W. Assistants.—)ames R. Fisher, 1212 Ninth street, N. W, W. W. Screws, 306 C street, N, W. Messenger. — Aaron Russell, 411 N street, N, W, N.E \ Sergeant-at-Arms of the House— Doorkeeper of the House. 163 SERGEANT-AT-ARMS OF THE HOUSE. Sergeant-at-Arms—S. S. Yoder, 24 Third street, N. E. Deputy Sergeant-at-Arms.—Isaac R. Hill, 110 Maryland avenue, N. E. Cashier—D. Z. Yoder, 11 Third street, N. E. Zeller—Henry L. Ballentine, 1531 I street, N. W. Bookkeeper —W. W. Pennell, 10 Fourth street, S. E. Messenger.—Felix McCloskey, 813 Vermont avenue. Page—Roscoe C. Peacock, 128 Massachusetts avenue, N. W, Laborer.—Charles H. Christian, 62115 B street, N. E. DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE. Doorkeeper of the House.— Charles H. Turner, National. Assistant Doorkeeper.—W. H. Nichols, 1307 L street, N. W. Special Employés.—John T. Chancey, 221 I street, N. W. Thos. A. Coakley, 814 B street, N. E. Messengers.—Charles H. Mann, Reporters’ Gallery, 627 A street, N. E.; R. H. Betts, 637 Massachusetts avenue, N. E.; Geo. F. Bristol, 628 I street, N. E.; W. F. Drummey, 719 Sixth street, N. E.; J. S. Dunham, Belvedere; M. H. Ellis; Sumpter Phillips, 209 C street, N. W.; A. H. Lewis, 413 Sixth street, N. W.; C. H. Playter, 1523 Eighth street, N. W.; Ryder Henry, 312 C street, N. W.; John E. Betts, 720 Eleventh street, N. W.; W. S. Copeland, 449 First street, S. E.; Charles Weber, 330 Missouri avenue, N.'W.; Martin Gardner, 1719 Gough street, Baltimore, Md.; E. B. Hursey, 908 S street, N. W.; E. Meredith, 628 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W.; C. C. Wilson, 621 Fourth street, N. W.; Charles Ostelder, 405 G street, N. W.; J. S. Cultino; H. B. Lingenfelter, Belvelere; A. D. Watts, 940 [ street, N. W. Acting Messengers —H. C. Littlefield, 404 Rhode Isfand avenue, N. W.; G. W. Feelemyer, Catonsville, Md.; Albert C. Davis, 618 Twelfth street, N. W.; J. V. Cunningham, 415 Third street, N. W.; J. A. Newsom, 359 Pennsylvania avenue; E. D. Eaton, 620 E street, N. W.; H. B. Keffer, 18105 Sixth street, N. W.; G. M. Le Fevre, 2028 Thirteenth street, N. W. Soldiers’ Roll.—S. H. Decker, 515 A street, S. E.; W. T. Fitch, 210 A street, N. E.; Wil- liam Irving, 321 A street, N. E.; Hugh Lewis, 222 G street, N. W.; J. I. McConnell, gos East Capitol street; Fernando Page, 495 C street, S. W.; John Rome, 106 Fifth street, N. E.; John Ryan, 210 Fourth street, S. E. ; J. A. Stewart, 127 Third street, N. E.; J. A. Travis, 1008 East Capitol street; J. F. Wilson, 1315 Clifton street, N. W.; J. W. White, 134 Tenth street, N. E.; E. S. Williams, 242 North Capitol street; J. R. Whitacre, 320 Tenth street, S. E. Chief Pages.—E. L. Phillips, 1003 East Capitol street. James F. English, 115 Pennsylvania avenue. FOLDING-ROOM. Superintendent.—George M. Cruickshank, 616 F street, N. W. Chief Clerk.— Charles L. Burgess, 502 B street, N. E. Foreman.—J. ML. McKay, 1020 Twenty sixth street, N, W, Clerks.—H. G. Clement, The Shoreham. George L. Browning, 1424 N street, N. W. Department Messenger.—C. W. Coombs, 101 F street, N. E. DOCUMENT-ROOM. Superintendent. —John A. Hannay, 415 Sixth street, N.W. Assistant Superintendent.—H. G. Williams, 1212 G street, N.W, File Clerfe.—Thomas O’Connor, National. : Assistant File Clerk. — : POST-OFFICE OF THE HOUSE. Postmaster —Lycurgus Dalton, 238 North Capitol street. Assistant Postmaster.— John T. Ross, 1737 East Baltimore street, Baltimore, Md. Messengers.—John R. Grace, 624 B street, N. E.; William C. Crawley, 304 East Capitol street; W. A. Horbach, 1335 N street, N. W.; W. E. Boothe 207 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W.; John H. Pratt, 340 C street, N. W.; John Coustade, 119 B street, S. E.; John Stack, 603 F s'reet, N. W.; G. H. Gibson, Dumbarton; Reuben Bourne, 238 North Capitol street; John C. Lutz, 802 Twenty-first street, N. W.; W. M. Prescott, 618 Sixth street, N. W.; B. A. En- leo, jr., 1527 I street, N. W.; R. B. Carlton, 603 F street, N. W.; James M. Workman, 218 Third street, N. W.; R. H. Wolfolk, 238 North Capitol street; E. E. Hennis, 515 Second street, N. W.; Henry Yater, 605 A street, S. E. Laborer.—Daniel B. Webster, 1127 C street, S. E. HEATING AND VENTILATING OF THE HOUSE. Chief Engineer.—Wm. Lannan, 52 I street, N. W. Assistant Engineers—H. W. Taylor, 100 Fifth street, N. E, B. H. Morse, 1905 F street, N. W, Electrician —A. B, Talcott, 1339 E street, S. E, Trot / 164 Congressional Directory. CLERKS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES. Ti Accounts.—Henry T. Lyle, 1412 N street, N. W, Agriculture—R. M. Wallace, 1010 East Capitol street. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic—H. Thompson. Appropriations— Clerk, James C. Courts, 416 Second street, N. W. Assistant Clerk.—J. D. Cremer, 647 Massachusetts avenue, N. E. Messenger —XKennedy F. Rea, 605 A street, S. E. Banking and Currency. —William Howell, 224 New Jersey avenue, N. W. Claims. — Clerk, John T. Morgan, 413 Sixth street, N. W. Assistant Clerk.—George W. Rae, 1334 Seventh street, N. W, Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—]James B. Snell. Commerce.— District of Columbia.—William P. Pollock, 1002 K street, N. W. Education.—Edgar S. Edger. Elections—Alfred J. Stofer. Election of President —Bernard Goode, 222 Indiana avenue, N. W. Eleventh Census—]. Kirtland Denison. Enrolled Bills.—Leslie C. Macpherson, 913 G street, N. W. Expenditures in the Department of Justice—]J. P. Canaway. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture—D. Q. Eggleston. Expenditures in the Interior Department—H. W. Merrick, 1103 H street, N. W. Expenditures in the Navy Department. —Frank Brown. Expenditures in the Post- Office Department —H. H. Pechin. Expenditures on Public Buildings.—Hiram W. Robinson, 621 K street, N. W. Expenditures in the State Department—Thomas H. Laird, 513 E street, N. W. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. — Expenditures in the War Department.—H. A. Sommers. Foreign Affairs—B. S. Willingham, The Livingston, 1009 Thirteenth street, N. W. Immigration and Naturalization.—George H. Maynadier, 1433 L street, N. W. Indian Affairs—David W. Peel, 227 Four-and-half street, N. W. Indian Depredation Claims.— Invalid Pensions.— Clerk, William H. Wilson, 244 Delaware avenue, N. E. First Assistant Clerk—Adoniram J. Hill, 244 Delaware avenue, N. E. Second Assistant Clerk.— Daniel McDonald, The Belvedere. Irrigation of Arid Lands—Robert T. Hill, 1426 Chapin street, N. W. Judiciary —B. A. ‘Read. Labor —S. K. Farr, Hillman House. ZLibrary.—Thadeus Cahill, 1808 Sixteenth street, N. W. Manufactures—George B. Parker, 933 G street, N. W. Merchant Marine and Fisheries.—Richard Hawkey, 708 Eleventh street, N. W. Mileage—Calvin S. Wine. Military Affairs—Mather Gumble, go3 C street, N. E. Assistant Clerk.—Robert B. Palmer. { Messenger.—]. A. Blanchard. Militia.—Thomas P. Smith, 624 B street, N. E. Mines and Mining —John F. Leeper. Mississippi River Improvements and Levees— Alfred Hebrard. Naval Affairs—Joseph Baumer, Brookland, D. C. Pacific Railroads.—Francis M. Dunn, 210 Fourth street, S. E. Patents—James H. Tillman, The Metropolitan. Pensions.—Frank P. Elliott, 250 Delaware avenue. Special detail from Pension Office—William H. Dennis, 20 Grant Place. Deurelle S. Porter. (These gentlemen are on the pay-rolls of the Pension Office.) Post- Office and Post-Roads.—]. W. Mauney, 419 Sixth street, N. W. Printing.—~Edmund C. Bullock, 4 Third street, N. W. Private Land Claims. — Public Buildings and Grounds—John H. Bankhead, jr., 914 New York avenue, N. W, Public Lands.—Samuel T. White, 912 M street, N. W. : Railways and Canals.—T. C. Catchings, jr. Reform in the Civil Service—Charles A, Conant, 2321 Pennsylvania avenue. | Revision of the Laws.—Robert G. Hegden. f Rivers and Harbors— James P. Hickman. Messenger — Rules—John T. Waterman, 618 Twelfth street, N. W. Territories.—C. S. Pearce, 507 Sixth street, N. W. Ventilation and Acoustics.—William G. Stahlnecker, jr., The Randall, War Claims.—Edward M. Biddle, 1826 I street, N. W. Assistant. —R. W, Short, The Rochester. Official Reporters of Debates— The Capitol Police. 165 Ways and Means—Ruter W. Springer, 43 B street, S. E. Assistant Clerk.—Alexander J. Jones, Willard’s. / Messenger.—John Darneille, 252 Delaware avenue, N. E. : Columbian Exposition.— James W. Twohig. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES, SENATE. HOUSE. D. F. Murphy, 314 C street, N. W. David Wolfe Brown, 314 A street, S. E. Assistants— Theo. F. Shuey, 728 Ninth street, | John H. White, 1502 Vermont avenue. N, W. Andrew Devine, 1408 Thirty-first st., N. W. E. V. Murphy, 419 2d st., N. W. | A. C. Welch, 222 Third street, N. W. Henry J. Gensler, 1318 13th st. | Fred Irland, Congressional Hotel. Dan. B. Lloyd, Bowie, Md. ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOY,, Edward Clark, 417 Fourth street, N. W.; Office, sub-basement of the Capitol. THE NATIONAL BOTANIC GARDEN, Superintendent —William R. Smith, at the Garden, west of the Capitol Grounds. THE CAPITOI, POLICE, (Headquarters in basement of Capitol.) Zaptain.—P. H. Allabach, 223 B street, N. W. Lieutenants.—D. B. Bradley, 720 C street, N. E. S.-W. Baxter, 718 C street, N. E. J. W. Jones, 115 Carroll street, S. E. Privates.—]oseph Gilbert, 457 Missouri avenue. L. D. Bumpus, 326 A street, S. E. Charles Stone, 134 East Capitol street. J. A. Burrows, 501 D street, S. E. G. W. Hazer, American House. Geo. P. Butler, 107 Eighth street, N. E. O. A. Hamblett, 8 Tenth street, S. E. A. W. Cook, 227 Seventh street, N. E. John Welch, 1114 Twellth street, N. E. F. G. Jones, 1837 Sixth street, N. W. A. J. Eaton, Anacostia. H. H. Lemon, 503 Maryland avenue, S. W. James Byrne, 243 New Jersey avenue, N. W, B. F. Graham, 209 Third street, S. E. A. F. Rudolph, 314 Third street, N. E. John Gates, 133 Carroll street, S, E. Dan O’Neill, 121 Sixth street, S. E. D. J. Williams, 315 Pennsylvania avenue. H. Hunter, 1116 Florida avenue. | S. H. Kerr, gio I street, N. W. J. H. Dougherty, 1120 D street, N. W, | C. H. Saffell, 1227 Ninth street, N. W. L. W. Walters, 1012 Pennsylvania avenue. | F. P. Pingree, 14 Eighth street, S. E. f Watchmen —A. H. Pruitt, 503 New Jersey avenue, N. W. Geo. H. Rahm, 1608 R street, N. W. James Stump, 242 North Capitol street. Sidney Burlingame, 102 E street, N. E. J. F. McCarthy, 603 Second street, N. E. : H. B. Webb, 23 Ninth street, N. E. . S. A. Boyden, 317 Fifth street, N. E. 166 Congressional Directory. THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. (West front of Capitol, main floor.) Librarian of Congress—AINSWORTH R. SPOFFORD, 1621 Massachusetts avenue, N. W Assistants. —George F. Curtis, 3112 O street, N. W, (in charge of Law Library). Louis Solyom, Montgomery County, Md. David Hutcheson, Harewood Road, Brookland, D. C, James C. Strout, 124 E street, N. W. John Savary, 2114 M street, N. W. Paul Neuhaus, 607 Sixth street, N. W. J. S. P. Wheeler, 311 Delaware avenue, N. E. P. Lee Phillips, 1707 H street, N. W. Spencer Marsh, 1217 L street, N. W. Vernon Dorsey, 2025 N street, N. W. T. J. Putnam, Anacostia, D.C. J. F. N. Wilkinson, gor E street, S. W. Arthur Crisfield, 1633 Twenty-ninth street, N. W. P. C. Nicholas, 910 Nineteenth street, N. W. Daniel Murray, 1333 Twelfth street, N. W. J. G. Morrison, 811 Thirteenth street, N. W. W. T. Moore, 1318 S street, N. W. George Kearney, 3425 Prospect avenue, West Washington. Hugh A. Morrison, Baltimore, Md. The Library of Congress occupies the entire western projection of the central Capitol building. The original library was commenced in 1800, but was destroyed with the Capitol in 1814 during the war with England. It was afterwards replenished by the purchase of the . library belonging to ex-President Jefferson, by Congress, embracing about 7,000 volumes. In 1851 it contained 55,000 volumes, and by an accidental fire in that year the whole collec- tion was destroyed, except 20,000 volumes. It was rebuilt in 1852, when $75,000 was appropriated in one sum to replenish the collection. The new library halls, three in number, are fitted up with ornamental iron cases and iron ceilings, the whole being perfectly fire- proof. The library is recruited by regular appropriations made by Congress, which aver- age about $11,000 per annum; also by additions received by copyright, by exchanges, and from the Smithsonian Institution. The library of the Smithsonian Institution has now been deposited inthe Library of Congress, where it is secured against loss by fire. This collection is especially rich in scientific works, embracing the largest assemblage of the transactions of learned societies which exists in the country. The library was also enriched by the presen- tation to the Government, in 1882, of the large private library of Dr. Joseph M. Toner, of Washington, numbering over 27,000 volumes, besides nearly as many pamphlets. The donor, whose public spirit is worthy of emulation, adds to the collection annually. The library of copyright books was removed here from the Patent Office in 1870, and all copyrights issued in the United States are now recorded in the books deposited in the office of the Librarian of Congress. The present number of volumes in the whole library, including law books, which are kept in a separate library room under the Supreme Court, is over 625,000, besides about 200,000 pamphlets. A new building to contain its overflowing stores of learning and to afford room for their proper arrangement is in progress of erection, a liberal appropriation having been made by the Fiftieth Congress. This collection is very rich in history, political science, jurisprudence, and in books, pamphlets, and periodicals of American publication, or relating in any way to America. At the same time the library is a universal one in its range, no department of literature or science being unrepresented. The public are privileged to use the books in the library, while members of Congress and about thirty official members of the Government only can take away books. The library is open every day (Sundays excepted) during the session of Congress from 9 a. m. to the hour of adjournment. In the recess of Congress it is open between the hours of 9 a. m. and 4 p.m. THE GOVERNMENT TELEGRAPH. SENATE MANAGER, HOUSE MANAGER, E. E. Morison, 941 H street, N. W. E. J. McCristal, 816 O street, N. W. > THE CAPITOL. The Capitol is situated in latitude 38° 537 20//.4 north and longitude 77° oo’ 3577.7 west from Greenwich. It fronts east, and stands on a plateau eighty-eight feet above the level of the Potomac. THE ORIGINAL BUILDING. The southeast corner-stone of the original building was laid on the 18th of September, 1793, by President Washington, with Masonic ceremonies. It is constructed of sandstone from quarries in Aquia Creek, Virginia. The work was done under the direction of Stephen H, Hallett, James Hoban, George Hadfield, and B. H. Latrobe, architects. The north wing was finished in 1800, and the south wing in 1811. A wooden passage way connected them. On the 24th of August, 1814, the interior of both wings was destroyed by fire, set by the British. The damage to the building was immediately repaired. In 1818 the central portion of the building was commenced under the architectural superintendence of Charles Bulfinch. The original building was finally completed in 1827. Its cost, including the grading of the grounds, alterations, and repairs, up to 1827, was $2,433,844.13. : THE EXTENSIONS. The corner-stone of the extensions was laid on the 4th of July, 1851, by President Fillmore, Daniel Webster officiating as orator. This work was prosecuted under the architectural di- rection of Thomas U. Walter, till 1865, when he resigned. It was completed under the supervision of Edward Clark, the present Architect of the Capitol. The material used in the walls is white marble from the quarries at Lee, Massachusetts, and that in the columns from the quarries at Cockeysville, Maryland. These extensions were first occupied for legis- lative purposes January 4, 1859. DIMENSIONS OF THE BUILDING. The entire length of the building from north to south is seven hundred and fifty-one feet four inches, and its greatest dimension from east to west three hundred and fifty feet. The area covered by the building is one hundred and fifty-three thousand one hundred and twelve square feet. THE DOME. The dome of the original central building was constructed of wood, covered with copper. This was replaced in 1856 by the present structure of cast-iron. It was completed in 1865. The entire weight of iron used is 8,909,200 pounds. The dome is crowned bya bronze statue of Freedom, which is nineteen feet six inches high, and weighs 14,985 pounds. It was modeled by Crawford. The height of the dome above the base-line of the east {ront is two hundred and eighty-seven feet five inches. The height from the top of the balustrade of the building is two hundred and seventeen feet eleven inches. The greatest diameter at the base is one hundred and thirty-five feet five inches. The rotunda is ninety-five feet six inches in diameter, and its height from the floor to the top of the canopy is one hundred and eighty feet three inches. The Senate Chamber is one hundred and thirteen feet three inches in length, by eighty feet three inches in width, and thirty-six feet in height. The galleries will accommodate one thou- sand persons. The Representatives’ Hall is one hundred and thirty-nine feet in length, by ninety-three feet in width, and thirty-six feet in height. The room now occupied by the Supreme Court was, until 1859, occupied as the Senate Chamber. Previous to that time the court occupied the room immediately beneath, now used as a law library, 2 ne Br Lenn! 2 o I~, A = S A R «x 25 N © = Eh 8 : SN © OLD HALL OF : 3 Lo i = Y s L | yr EEE & | : 0 A S Trees REPRESENTATIVES Q \ 1 be 3 i X ARB EY : s\! ek Bdge NZ BT BN S 3 ) x : gy ML | SE 9% EER & i Et 0% 2 ) RS Vii NEE X > J } SR} py FNS wp [sli lie]} «NO § " Hess 4&5 NN i § 073435 Rm \\ : i ee a SEN Espo 000% @0 00 oll N : i = i X 3 3 Se ° 9 Ne 5 : 30 NB S N= \ °° 8 : I = N D Ni sP™ \ : s I 3 Nas 20 B: : 4 8 N32) . 3 \ Bis 3 3 1 NEEM NED ENN EWEN = =: = fog dOdOG0agd gg Od 0 00g dg PRINCIPAL STORY HOUSE WING. Room, i } Appropriations. 3. 4e II. 12. 13. I4e 15. 16. x7: Committee on Rivers and Harbors. Journal and Printing Clerks of the House. . Committee on Naval Affairs. . Closets. - ( Members’ Retiring-Room, . Speaker’s Room, Hall Folding-Room. Cloak-Rooms. Sergeant-at-Arms. Committee on Ways and Means, Committee on Military Affairs. House Library. Elevator. THE PRINCIPAL STORY OF THE CAPITOL, MAIN BUILDING. Room, ~ 33. House Document-Room. 34. Clerk’s Room. 35. Enrolled Bills. 36. Clerk House Representatives. It was in this room, then occupied by the Speaker of the House, that ex-President John Quincy Adams died, two days after he fell at his seat in the House, February 23, 1848. 37. Office of the Clerk of the Supreme Court. 38. Robing-Room of the Judges of the Supreme Court. 39. Withdrawing-Room of the Supreme Court. 40. Office of the Marshal of the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court, formerly the Senate Chamber. The Old Hall of the House of Representativesisnow used as a statuary hall, to which each State has been invited to contribute two statues of its most distinguished citizens. The Congressional Library contains sgo,000 vol- umes and 180,000 pamphlets. SENATE WING. Room. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27, 28. 29. 30. 3%. 32. 33. Office of the Secretary of the Senate, Executive Clerk of the Senate. Financial Clerk of the Senate. Chief Clerk of the Senate. Engrossing and Enrolling Clerks of the Senate. Committee on Appropriations. Closets. Committee on Enrolled Bills. Cloak-Rooms. Room of the President, etc. 0nd) yp fo suvyy The Senators’ Withdrawing-Room. The Vice-President’s Room. Committee on Finance. Official Reporters of Debates. Reception-Room. Committee on District of Columbia, Office of the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate Elevator. 194 1 TEL: BEET (=< | en 2 77 Ze 7, IN (§ AE ° i A o J y Ji SUPREME COURT 8 LS Oo Bb 0a’ go mm 8g. 0 is *(40722.41(] JOUOISSIUSUO) THE ATTIC STORY OF THE CAPITOL. HOUSE WING. . Room. . I 2. 3. 13. 14. 15. . Committees on Pacific Railroads, and Pensions. Committee on Elections. Committee on Railways and Canals. Committee on Patents. . Committee on the District of Columbia. . Committee on Banking and Currency. . Lobby. . Correspondents and Journalists’ Withdrawing-Room. ! Water-Closet. . Ladies’ Retiring-Room. . Committee on Public Lands. . Committee on Commerce. Committee on Foreign Affairs. Committee on Tenth Census. Committee on the Judiciary, Elevator. MAIN BUILDING, Room. 27. Senate Library, 28. Senate Library—Librarian’s Room, 29. Select Committee on Library Building. 30. Senate Committee on Nicaragua Claims, 31. Senate Document-Room. 32. Senate Document-Room. 33. Senate Document-Room. 34. Superintendent of the Senate Documents. 35. House Library. 36. House Document-Room. 37. House Document-Room. 38. House Document-Room. 39. Clerk’s Office. 40. Senate Document-Room. 2 SENATE WING. Roomz. 14. 15. 16. 22. Lobby. Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds, Committee on Coast Defenses. Committee on Expenditures of Public Moneys. Committee on Railroads. . Committee on Privileges and Elections. . Committee on Commerce. . Committee on Engrossed Bills, . Correspondents’ Room. Western Union Telegraph. Ladies’ Room. . Senate and Joint Committees on Public Printing. . Conference Room. . Committee on Claims. . Committee on Private Land Claims. . Elevator. . Correspondents’ Room. ondvD yr fo suvig lx NE EEEEEEIErrT™™™™™ ti ii Congressional Directory. MEMBERS OF THE PRESS WHO ARE ENTITLED TO ADMISSION TO THE PRESS GALLERIES. ! Name. Papers represented. | Office. Residence. Adams, Walter E ...... Boston Herald ......0. =... | 1406 G street, N. W...| 1721 G street, N. W, Albert C. 8. to. Agt. Press News Association.| B, Rapley Building ...| 928 E street, N. W. {, Allison, James W ...... New York World............] 610 Fourteenth street..| 610 Fourteenth street. - | Alvord, Thomas G., Jr.| New York Herald ........... | Fifteenth and G, N.W.| The Woodmont. 3 Annin, William E ...... Salt Lake Tribune and Omaha | §17 Poussenih street, | 1606 Nineteenth street. ee, SW Apperson, George H ..| Chicago Herald .............. | 1417 G street, N. W...| 1114 G street, N. W. Atkins, Addison B ..... Brooklyn Daily Eagle ........ | 610 Fourteenth street.| 1221 O street, N. W. AUSHN Bld Seah iets United Press i... oo... oid | 515 Fourteenth street. .| 1428S street, N. W. Austin, O. PJ... 0.0 Inter-State Press Association .| 27 Corcoran Building .| 1620 Mass. ave., N. W. Ayres, BH. W.. i... .... San Antonio Express, .... ... | Sun Building...) .: 1114 New Hamp. ave. Baker, Delos R ........ Cinci’ti Post, Cleveland Press, | 606 Third street, N.W.| 606 Third street, N. W. and St. L. Chronicle. Barrett, B.W.......... Atlanta Constitution ......... s15 Fourteenth street..| Metropolitan Hotel. Barry, David S......... New. York Sun. .t........... 1417 G street, N. W...| 1617 S street, N. W. Bell, W.R.....:{..0.x Pittsburg Leader. ............ 515 Fourteenth street.| 1116 G street, N. W. Bennett, Claude N..... Atlanta , Bi SEAGIG 1427 F street, N. W...| 730 Twelfth street. Bertrand, BE. L......... Bowsfield, C.C.... Boyle, john Boynton,Chas. A... .... Boynton, Chas. H Brady, E. W Brooks, Hobart Burhans, W.W..... .... Campbell, Francis C... Capper, Arthur Carlton, Charles Carroll Carson, John M... ..... Chapin, Frederick E. .. Chapline, Albert. ...... Clark, Selden N Clarke, Alfred J ....... Clarke, H. Conquest. . Comly, Guy S Conant, Charles A Coolidge, 1. A ........ Corwin, John A......... Crounse, W. L......... Curtis, Sumner N Dawson, Thos. F ..... Decker, Karl... ........ DeGraw. P.V......... Dunn, Arthur W....... Dunnell, E.G.......... Dwyer, W. J -....... Eland, Henry E ....... Berris, FB. PR... 0. as Fleming, Geo. B......: Fleming, Ha vey Fry, Smith D Gardiner, Cornelius. ... Garthe, Louis... ... Gibson, Edgar J Gilliland, George E.... Grimm, Frederick ..... Gross, John'A. ....... Guthridge, Jules Haag, Jackson D....... Haliord, A. J .......... Halstead ,Albert...... ’ San Francisco Chronicle . ... Minneapolis Tribune United Press Agent Western Asso. Press .. Kiernan News Co..... ...... Springfield Union... ..-. . +- ew York Herald............ United Press........ 00 400 The Williamsport Republican. Topeka Capital... ..........0 California Associated Press and Indianapolis Sentinel. Philadelphia Ledger.......... Elmira Advertiser. .... a United Press... i... o.00., New York Tribune Associated Press... ....... United Press... ....... Eg Toledo (O.) Commercial ..... N. Y. Commercial Bulletin, Springfield Republican. New York Recorder.......... Chicago Tribune... .......... New York World............. United Press... 5. mn. iv. Pioneer Press, Portland Ore- gonian. New York Times, ...........» United Press... 2.0.00. Roch’ter Union & Adv’tiser.. Baltimore Herald, Richmond Times. Evansville Courier........... California Associated Press .. Des Moines Register, Butte Miner, St. Paul Dispatch. Chicago Evening Post........ Baltimore American.......... Philadelphia Press’...... .... Cincinnati Enquirer........... New York Staats Zeitung .... Associated Press. ....... ... New York Herald, Salt Lake Herald. Toledo Bee ............0....0 United Press... i... 0.0, sor Fourteenth street. . 521 Fourteenth street. . s15 Fourteenth street. . Corcoran Building. ... sir Fourteenth street. . s15 Fourteenth street. . Fifteenth and G,N.W, s15 Fourteenth street. . 1543 T street, N.W , ... 924 N.Y. ave.,, N. W. 1420 N. Y. avenue .... s17 Fourteenth street. . wry Gistreet. ...\.. ..» s15 Fourteenth street. 1322 IF street, N. WW... Corcoran Building .... s15 Fourteenth street. . 29 Corcoran Building. . 1406 G street, N. W... 7 Corcoran Building .. 610 Fourteenth street. . 608 Fourteenth street. . Rapley Building 1420 Pennsylvaniaave. s15 Fourteenth street. . siz Fourteenth street. . 515 Fourteenth street. . s15 Fourteenth street. . 515 Fourteenth street. . 1420 N. Y.ave.,,N.W, 1420 N. Y.ave.,N. W, 519 Fourteenth street. . 1417 G street, N. WW. .. 1420 Pennsylvania ave. sor Fourteenth street. . 1411 I street, N.W ... 517 Fourteenth street.. Corcoran Building .. . Cor. Fifteenth and G.. s13 Fourteenth street. . Cinc’ti Commercial Gazette .. 51g Fourteenth street. . 1613 S street, N. W. 1113 Seventeenth st. 1113 Seventeenth st. Hotel Langham. 1108 H street, N. W. 1543 T street, N. W. 924 N.Y. ave.,, N. W, Willard’s Hotel. 1332 Vermont avenue. 3043 P street / 917 Sixteenth st., N. W, 725 Eighteenth street. 8oo Eighteenth street. 1752 N street, N. W. 1221 | street. 2321 Pennsylvaniaave. ! 2321 Pennsylvania ave. Willard’s Hotel. s27 Eighteenth street. The Aston. 118 Fourth street, N. E. 2626 K street, N. W. 9 Fifth street, N. E. 1929 Fifteenth street. 1615 Eighth st., N. W. 1206 Twelfth street. 631 G street, S. E. 917 R street, N. W. 1235 N. Y.ave.,, N. W, 1720 Fourteenth street, N.W 8:3 Vermont avenue. | Willard’s. { 1510 Sixteenth street. 1328 Eighth st., N. W. 1534 Fourteenth street. 1907 Eleventh street. 1420 New York ave, 1310 Twelfthst.,N.W, 1519 O street, N. W, The Oxford, Members of the Fress. re Members of the Press who are entitled to admission to the Press Galleries—Continued. Name. Papers represented. Office. Residence. Hamilton, Chas. A..... Brooklyn Times, Buffalo Cou-| 515 Fourteenth street. .| soo Maple avenue. rier. Handy, Fred. A. G....] Chicago Tribune............. Corcoran Building. 1206 N street, N. W. Hannum, T.C......... Pittsburg Chronicle-Tele- ’m A, National The- | 1534 Sixth st., N. W, graph. ater Building. Harries, George H..... Washington Evening Star ...| ror Pennsylvania ave.| 401 P street, N. W. Hatton, QO. C.. . iiss ‘Associated Press............. Corcoran Building ....| 1604 Thirteenth street. Hayes, Charles J Associated Press........ .«...| Corcoran Building ....| Fairlawn, Anacostia. Hayes, George W..... St. Paul Daily Globe......... Arlington Hotel ...... Arlington Hotel. ...... Hayes, Henry G........ Associated Press... .......... Corcoran Building....| 113 First street, N.W Heath, Perry S ........ Indianapolis Journal, Omaha | sts Fourteenth street..| 1223 Fifteenth street, Bee, and Columbus Dispatch. N.W. Henry, JamesS........| Philadelphia Press and Pitts- | sot Fourteenth street, | 1403 Twelfth street, N. : burg Times. N. WwW, WwW. Hinman, W. F......... Cleveland Leader. ..........| 1427 F street, N. W...| 1512 U street, N. W. Hodges, Fletcher ...... Louise Post, Richmond | 5:5 Fourteenthstreet..| 1845 R street, N. W. tate. Hood, Edwin M ....... Associated Press.........\.., Corcoran Building....| 221 Twelfth st., S. W. Hosford, Frank H ..... Detroit Free Press ....... 5: 608 Fourteenth street..| 112 Ninth street, S. E. Howe, FranklinT.... | Helena Journal ..... ........ 1101 Pennsylvania ave.| 1419 Corcoran street. Howland, E.C......... New York Press. oo... 1405 G street, N. W...| The Gramercy. Hunt, C. EE LY, Times, Columbia (S. | 515 Fourteenth street. .| 1432 Corcoran street. .) State. Hutchison, J. A........ St: Louis Republic ...>. ....... sot Fourteenth street. .| 21g First street, N. E. Johnson, S/H. ......... Keim, De B. Randolph. Kemp, Henry G....... Kirby, Thomas B... .. Kloeber,Chas. E., jr... Lampton, W.J.... .... Larner, BR. M .......... Tarner, W.S........... Teech, I. A..;.... ...: Leupp, Francis E...... lewis; A. H.... ...... Lighiner, BE. W........ Low, A. Maurice ...... MacBride, William C.. Macfarland,Henry B.F. Markle, Frank. ........ Matthews, J. A......... Matthews, R. Bowman. McKee, David R... .. McPherson, William L. Merrick, FL. L.......... Merillat, CGC. H......... Messenger, N.O....... Metcalfe, Richard ..... Metzgar, Chas. W. .... Michels, Ivan C........ Miller, }. P.o...n Moore, Charles.... .. Moore, Henry W...... Moore, O’Brien. ....... Morgan, Frank P...... Morrow, James B...... Muddy A, Tint. Mussey, Fred D...... Noah, Jacob T.......:.. Noyes, T.C,.......... O'Neill, Francis ]J...... Oulahan, Richard V .... Painter, U. H.......... Pepper, Charles M..... Pickering, 1.L ... i... Potter, Edwin S ....... Randolph, Charles C... Reynolds, J. B......... Richardson, F. A ...... Robarts, Wm. Hugh... Rose, Clifford. ....... A Sale, T. DD ....cioivin Savvis, J. M............ Sawter, George........ Schrader,Fred F .. .... Seckendorff, M.G....., Cincinnati Enquirer. ........ Philadelphia Inquirer, Har- risburg Telegraph. Associated Press. .......... N. Y. Journal of Commerce. . Press News Association...... Detroit Free Press... .......-x Baltimore Sun, and Charles- ton News and Courier. Dalziel’s News Agency ...... United Press... oi". EAS. New York Evening Post ... Kansas City Times........... Pittsburg Dispatch........... Boston Globe ...:. sas priate Cincinnati Enquirer.......... Boston Herald and Philadel- phia Record. Evening Wisconsin, Milw’kee Chicago News... .... .:.5- 2% New Orleans Picayune....... Agent Associated Press...... New York Tribune..... teats Ohio State Journal . .......... Associated Press........ .... Minneapolis Times... . ...... Omaha World-Herald........ Pittsburg Com. Gaz. , Buffalo Express, and N.O. Item. N.Y. DailyJournal of Finance. Wash’n Star, N.Y.Com’l Ad- vertiser,and Phila. Telegraph Detreit Tribe, uu. St. Lonis Republic ....... «xu. Brooklyn Standard-Union ... Cleveland Leader............. Associated Press .............. Cinc’ti Commercial Gazette .. Denver: News... ..0.....0. iin Washington Evening Star.... Chicago'Globe......-. ....... United Press. .....uieisaina Washington Post .....c...... Chicago Tribune......... hs. Chicago Times... ..0..ccunah Elmira Gazette. .....c. vn vs. New York Times . .....cecva Boston Advertiserand Record. Baltimore Sun................ Chicago Times ..........i 00. Honsion Post, Roanoke Her- ald. Press News Association. ..... New York Daily News ...... New Haven News, Connecti- cut Associated Press. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. ... New York Tribune ..vsuveiss 1411 F street, N. W... 31 Corcoran Building. . Corcoran Building. ... 515 Fourteenth street. . B. Rapley Building ... 608 Fourteenth street . Baltimore Sun Build- ing. 1427 F street, N. W ... 515 Fourteenth street. . 62 Corcoran Building . Baltimore Sun B’ld’g. 85 Corcoran Building . 515 Fourteenth street . rar 1t street. hy, aa 1406 G street, N. W. . 1527 I street, N. W .., 515 Fourteenth street . 1427 F street, N.W , .. Corcoran Building .... 1322 I street, N. W ... 515 Fourteenth street. Corcoran Building... .. 515 Fourteenth street. . s15 Fourteenth street. . 603 Fifteenth street ... Congressional Hotel.. Room A, National Theater Building. rior street’, 0... 610 Fourteenth street . sor Fourteenth street . sts Fourteenth street . 1427 F street, N. W... 72 Corcoran Building. 519 Fourteenth street. . Balto. Sun Building ... 1101 Pennsylvaniaave. 1347 BE street, N. W.... s15 Fourteenth street . goo Fourteenth street. . 7 Corcoran Building. . sor Fourteenth street. 1417 G street, N. W... s15 Fourteenth street. . 515 Fourteenth street. Balto. Sun Building. .. sor Fourteenth street . Atlantic Building ..... 623 F street, N.W..... 1419 F street .......c.- six Fourteenth street . 1322 FLStrect ov iv vyer 1206 A street, N. E. 1512 P street, N. W. 1605 O street, N. W. si5 Fourteenth street. 10 Grant Place. 1510 H street, N. W. s29 Eighteenth st., N.Y. Do. 1211 T street, N. W. 1813 Sixteenth st., NW. 413 Sixth street, N. W. 1440 S street. 1346 Riggs st.,N. W. 1752 Corcoran street. 1816 K street, N.W. 1527 1 street, N. W. 1109 street, N. W., 1446 N street, N. W. 1753 Rhode Island ave. 1123 Thirteenth street. 1103’ H street, N. W. 1430 Eighth st., N. W. 25 Lafayette Square. The Auburn. 1403 Rhode Island ave. Congressional Hotel. 2408 Fourteenth street. 1101 K street. 610 Fourteenth street. 1841 R street, N. W. 616 Pa. avenue, S. E. Randall Hotel. 1925 Fifteenth st.,N.W, 1323 I street, N. W. sos M street, N. W. 1606 Corcoran street. 614 A street, S. E. goo Fourteenth street. 1337 R street, N. W. National Hotel. 76 L street, N. W. 924 New York avenue. 1721 F street, N. W. 1308 Vermont avenue. siz Thirteenth street. 944 New York avenue. 623 F street, N. W. 2419 Pennsylvania ave. 247 North Capitol st. 1220 H street, N. W, 2018 Hillyer Place. 176° Congressional Directory. Members of the Press who are entitled to admission fo the Press Galleries—Continued. Name. « Papers represented. Office. Residence. Shaw, W. Bor. aii. Shriver, John S....... Snowden, Harold Sommers, H. A ........ ar BoP cond Boston Transcript. ........... N.Y. Mail and Express ...... Alexandria Gazette........... Louisville Times. ...... i... Augusta Chronicle, Nashville American. Pittsburg Post ....i Lo Erie (Pa.) Daily Times....... Louisville Courier-Journal ... Galveston and Dallas News. . 31 Corcoran Building. . 519 Fourteenth street . Alexandria, Va ....... 1043 F street, N.W... 1427 F street, N. W... B. & O. Building ....... 1343 F street, N. W... sit Fourteenth street. . 1829 G street, N. W, 1729 H street, N. W. Alexandria, Va. The Windsor. 1317 N street, N. W. 1004 I street, N. W. 1209 K street. 2134 L street, N. W. 209 A street, N. E. Stevens, Walter Bx... St. Louis Globe-Democrat ... Stofer, Alfred 2 jr Richmond Dispatch... ...... 1317 I street, N. W, Sylvesters, BR, H........ Kansas City Journal..., ..... Rapley Building . .... Thompson, Chai les T..| Chicago News, Detroit News.| 515 Fourteenth street. . Thompson, Howard N.| Cleveland Plaindealer, Phil- | 515 Fourteenth street. . adelphia Times. sit Fourteenth street. .| go6 Fourteenth street. 422 Fifth street, N.W. The Woodmont. Wiliard’s Hotel. Truesdell, Julius A ....| Globe Press Association ..... Rapley Building...... 1530 Sixteenth street. Van Antwerp, J. S..... Li Journal, Denver | 515 Fourteenth street. .| 539 Florida avenue. imes. Walker, Geo. H........ San Francisco Chronicle..... sor Fourteenth street..| 1448 V street, N. W. Walker, Harry W ..... N.Y. Tos, Kansas City | siz Fifteenth street ...| The Arlington. Star, N. Y. Journal. Warden, Cliff, ......... Concord Evening Monitor, . J... if favs ous goo Twenty-third st. Watki=s, RH... Memphis Appeal- Avalanche . 1343 F street, N. W...| 1212 Twelfth street. Wellman, Walter ...... Chicago Heraldand American | 1417 G street.......... 1411 Twentieth street. Press Association. West, 11. 1. sae Washington Pesto 00000 Tenth and D streets ..| 134 C street, N. E. Whitehead, 45 Bi Washington Post ............ Tenth and D streets ..| 1315 M street, N. W. Wight, E. Be Boston Journal and Chicago | 1333 F street, N. W....| 1803 Nineteenth street. Inter Ocean. Wilber, Jerome J ...... Associdted Press... ......... 72 Corcoran Building ..| 1331 Wallach Place. Wright B.S... ..... United Press.) (ich «onnsie. 515 Fourteenth street. .| 715 Tenth st., N. W. Young, James R....... Philadelphia Evening Star. . 517 Fourteenth street..| 1506 Q street, N. W ~ C. H. Mann, Doorkeeper House Press Gallery ; residence, 627 A street. N. E. Clifford Warden, Doorkeeper Senate Press Gallery ; residence, goo Twenty-third street, N. W., RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES. 1. Persons desiring admission to the Press Gallery shall make application to the Speaker as required by Rule 36 of the House of Representatives; and shall also state, in writing, for what paper or papers they are employed; and shall further state that they are not engaged in the prosecution of claims pending before Congress or the Departments, and will not become so engaged while allowed admission to the gallery; and that they are not in any sense the agents or representatives of persons or corporations having legislation before Congress, and will not become either while retaining their place in the gallery. Visiting journalists who may be allowed temporary admission to the gallery must conform to the restrictions of this rule. \ The applications required by above rule shall be authenticated in a manner that shall be satisfactory to the Standing Committee of Correspondents, who shall see that the occupa- tion of the gallery is confined to bona fide correspondents of reputable standing in their business, who represent daily newspapers, and not exceeding one seat shall be assigned to each paper; and it shall be the duty of the Standing Committee, at their discretion, to report violations of the privileges of the gallery to the Speaker, and pending his action thereon the offending correspondent shall be suspended. 3. Clerks in the Executive Departments of the Government, and persons engaged in other occupations whose chief attention is not given to newspaper correspondence, are not entitled to admission; and the Press list in the Congressional Directory shall be confined to telegraphic correspondents. 4. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to admission. The gallery, subject to the approval of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, shall be under the control of the Standing Committee of Correspondents. CHARLES F. Crisp, Speaker of the House of Representatives. FreD A. G. HANDY, Chairman, Jon M. CARSON, PErrY S. HEATH, JoHN P. MILLER, Standing Committee of Correspondents. Note.—Rules identical with the above have been approved by the Committee on Rules of the Senate. | i i i § Executive Departments. : 177 THE EXECUTIVE. EXECUTIVE MANSION. (Pennsylvania avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets.) . President of the United States—BENJAMIN HARRISON, Executive Mansion. Private Secretary —E. W. Halford, The Shoreham. Assistant Secretary —O. L. Pruden, 317 Eleventh street, S. W. Executive Clerks.—William H. Crook, 939 O street, N. W. E. F. Tibbott, 2136 G street, N. W. U. S. District Marshal.—Daniel M. Ransdell, Riggs House. In Charge of Public Buildings and Grounds—Col. O. H. Ernst, 1 Dupont Circle. DEPARTMENT OF STATE. (Seventeenth street, south of Pennsylvania avenue.) Secretary of State.—JAMES G. BLAINE, 17 Madison Place. Assistant Secretary.—Wm. F. Wharton, 1731 K street, N.W. Second Assistant Secretary.—Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth street, N. W. Third Assistant Secretary. — : Solicitor.—Frank C. Partridge, 1754 M street N. W. Chief Clerk.—Sevellon A. Brown, 1620 Rhode Island avenue. Chief of the Diplomatic Bureau.— Thomas W. Cridler, 407 Eighth street, S. E. Chief of the Consular Bureaw.—F. O. St. Clair, 1428 Rhode Island avenue. Chief of the Bureau of Archives and Indexes.—John H. Haswell, 1920 H street, N. W. Chief of the Bureau of Accounts—Francis J. Kieckhoefer, 1505 Vermont avenue. Chief of the Bureau of Statistics.—Michael Scanlan, 1336 Riggs street. Chief of the Bureau of Rolls and Library —Frederic Bancroft, 1909 G street. Private Secretary.—Louis A. Dent, 1516 Ninth street, N. W. TREASURY DEPARTMENT. (Fifteenth street and Pennsylvania avenue.) Secretary of the Treasury.~~CHARLES FOSTER, 1122 Vermont avenue, N. W. z Assistant Secretary —A. B. Nettleton, 1 Cooke Place. 3 Assistant Secretary.—Oliver L. Spaulding, The Elsmere. Assistant Secretary. —L. Crounse, The Shoreham. Chief Clerk.—Fred. A. Stocks, 119 Maryland avenue, N. E. Appointment Division.— Chief, Daniel Macauley, goz T street, N. W. Warrant Division.— Chief, W. F. Maclennan, 728 Twentieth street, N. W, Public Moneys.— Chief, Eugene B. Daskam, 1425 R street, N. W. Customs Division.— Chief, John M. Comstock, 1418 Fifteenth street, N. W. Revenue Marine Division.—Acting Chief, L. G. Shepard, 1807 Nineteenth street, N. W., Stationery Division.— Chief, A. L. Sturtevant, Howard avenue, Mount Pleasant. Loans and Currency Division.— Chief, A. T. Huntington, Vienna, Va. Mail and Files Division.— Chief, John Nichols, 646 East Capitol street. Miscellaneous Division.— Chief, J. W. Thomson, 647 A street, N. E. Supervising Special Agent of the Treasury Department —A. K. Tingle, Spring street, near Thirteenth street extended, county. Disbursing Clerk.—George A. Bartlett, Park street, Mount Pleasant. Disbursing Clerfe.—Thomas J. Hobbs, 1622 H street. Private Secretary to Secretary of the Treasury. —R. J. Wynne, 1718 Thirteenth street, N. W, 2D ED 12 \ 178 Congressional Directory. SUPERVISING ARCHITECT’S OFFICE. (In Treasury Building.) Supervising Architect.—W. J. Edbrooke, Willard’s Hotel. Assistant and Chief Clerk.—H. C. McLean, Park and Sixteenth streets, Mount Pleasant. Law and Contract Division.— Chief, St. Julien B. Dapray, 1107 Thirteenth street, N. W. Engineering and Draughting Division.— Chief, James P. Low, 1328 Corcoran street, N. W Computing Division.— Chief, F. W. Pease, 1800 Eighth street, N. W. Construction Division.— Chief, Account Division.— Chief, P. S. Garretson, 1341 T. street N. W. Repair Division. — Chief, F. W. Smith, 1201 Nineteenth street, N. W. Tracing Division. — Chief, Chas. Ridgeway, 1515 R street, N. W. Record and File Division.— Chief, F. Milliken, 1833 Corcoran street, N. W, Copying Division.— Chief, F. W. Flowers, 1010 Eleventh street, N. W. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. (Fourteenth and B streets, S. W.) Chief of Burean.—William M. Meredith, 1412 Stoughton street, N. W. Assistant Chief. —Thomas J. Sullivan, 1530 Ninth street, N. W. Accountant,—Edwin Lamasure, 216 Twelfth street, S. W. Engraving Division. — Superintendent, Geo. W. Casilear, 3019 N street, Georgetown Custodian Dies, Rolls, and Plates—]John T. Willams, 45 Massachusetts avenue. SECRET-SERVICE DIVISION. (Treasury Department Building.) Chief—Andrew L. Drummond, 1529 Corcoran street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Geo. E. McOmber, 1106 New York avenue, N. W. OFFICE STEAM-BOAT INSPECTION. (Maltby Building, New Jersey avenue and B street, N. W.) Supervising Inspector- General.—James A. Dumont, 216 A street, S. E. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. (Adam’s Building, 1335 I street, N. W.) Chief of Burean.—S. G. Brock, 1739 Nineteenth street, N. W. Chief Clerf.—]. N. Whitney, 1403 I street, N. W, Examining and Revising Division.—Chicf, E. J. Keferstein, 1636 Sixteenth street, N. W. Compiling Division.— Chief, William Burchard, 513 Twelfth street, N. W, Miscellaneous Division.— Chief, J. D. O’ Connell, 727 Sixth street, N. W. LIFE-SAVING SERVICE. (Treasury Department Building.) General Superintendent. —S. 1. Kimball, 1316 Rhode Island avenue. Assistant General Superintendent.—orace L. Piper, 1505 L street, N. W, FIRST COMPTROLLER’S OFFICE. (In Treasury Department Building.) Comptroller —A. C. Matthews, 924 Fourteenth street, N. W. Deputy Comptroller.—J. R. Garrison, 1427 R street, N. W, Division of Judiciary Accounts.— Chief, Louis C. Ferrell, 601 Spruce street, N. W. Division of Internal-Revenue and Miscellaneous Accounts.— Chief, Roch. F. Robb, 1344 Vermont avenue. Division of Warrants and Records, Public Lands and Territorial Accounts.— Chief, Dan. A. Grosvenor, 1210 G street, N. W. Division of Foreign Intercourse and Public Debt.— Chief, Alexander McArthur, 6 Towa Circle. Division of District of Columbia Accounts.—Acting Chief, John J. Glover, 1505 R street, IN.W, SECOND COMPTROLLER’S OFFICE. (In Treasury Department Building.) Comptroller —B. F. Gilkeson, 1920 Sunderland Place. Deputy. —E. N. Hartshorn, 8o5 O street, N. W. Army Back Pay and Bounty Division.—Collin Peebles, 513 Spruce street, LeDroit Park. Navy Diviston.—Geo. H. French, 1701 T street, N. W. Quartermasters’ Division.—E. S. Norton, 214 New Jersey avenue, N. W, Army Paymasters’ Division.—'T. O. W. Roberts, Brightseat, Md. Indian Division. —W. M. Henry, 1915 H street, N. W, Miscellaneous Division.—Frank Swigart, 1402 Stoughton street, N. W. Army Pension Division.—Benj. S. Pike, 2040 I street, N. W. | Executive Departments. 79 COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS. (In Treasury Department Building.) Commissioner —Samuel V. Holliday, 1448 N street, N. W. Deputy.—H. A. Lockwood, corner First and B streets, S. W. Customs Division.— Chief, H. E. Hoard, 120 Fourth street, S. E. Division of Appointments, Bonds, Refunds, and Records.— Chief, Thos. S. Chappell, 819 North avenue, Baltimore, Md. REGISTER OF THE TREASURY, (In Treasury Department Building.) i Register —William S. Rosecrans, Willard’s Hotel. \ Assistant Register —L. W. Reid, 504 Duke street, Alexandria, Va. Loan Division.— Chief, A. M. Hughes, jr., 516 M street, N. W, Receipts and Expenditures Division.— Chief, J. H. Beatty, 610 East Capitol street. Note, Coupon, and Currency Division.— Chief, B. F. Worrell, 2000 F street, N. W. Interest and Expenses on Loans Division.— Chief, John H. King, 7 H street, N. W, FIRST AUDITOR. (In Treasury Department Building.) Auditor —George P. Fisher, 2006 G street, N.. W. Deputy.—A. F. McMillan, 1311 Wallach Place, N. W. Judiciary Division.— Chief, John J. Hawkins, 1626 Nineteenth street, N. W, Customs Division.— Chief, Henry K. Leaver, 1528 Sixteenth street, N. W. Public Debt Division.—Acting Ci A. B. Jameson, 1602 Vermont avenue, N. W. Miscellaneous Division. — Chief, J. A. Sparks, . | 7 194 Congressional Directory. ! : % DIVISION OF ENTOMOLOGY. Entomologist.—C. V. Riley, Sunbury, Wyoming avenue, Washington Heights, D. C. First Assistant Entomologist.—L. O. Howard, 1336 Thirtieth street, N. W. DIVISION OF ORNITHOLOGY AND MAMMALOGY. Ornithologist.—C. Hart Merriam, 1919 Sixteenth street, N. W. ! First Assistant Ornithologist.—T. S. Palmer, 1349 Q street, N. W, | DIVISION OF FORESTRY. Chief —B. E. Fernow, 1843 R street, N. W. i Assistant Chief.—N. H. Egleston, 1527 O street, N. W. DIVISION OF ROTANY. Botanist—George Vasey, 1307 Riggs street, N. W. : First Assistant Botanist.—]. N. Rose, 1883 Harewood avenue, Le Droit Park. ! DIVISION OF POMOLOGY. Pomologist—H. E. Van Deman, 1429 Chapin street, N. W. Assistant Pomologist.—W. A. Taylor, 1228 Fourteenth street, N. W., DIVISION OF VEGETABLE .PATHOLOGY. | | Chief—B. T. Galloway, Garrett Park, Md. | A First Assistant Pathologist.—Miss E. A. Southworth, 1303 R street, N. W. : DIVISION OF MICROSCOPY. NS Microscopist.—Thomas Taylor, 238 Massachusetts avenue, N. E. Assistant Microscopist—Mrs. M. H. Mahon, 532 Twentieth street, N. W. a FIBER INVESTIGATION. Special Agent in Charge—Charles R. Dodge, 1336 Vermont avenue. OFFICE OF IRRIGATION INQUIRY. Special Agent in Charge.—Richard J. Hinton, 1215 L street N. W. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS. Chief—B. F. Fuller, 1321 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. Assistant Disbursing Officer (in charge of Weather Bureau Disbursements.)—Israel W. Stone, 728 F street, N. E. Cashier.—F. L. Evans, 923 Virginia avenue, S. W, DIVISION OF RECORDS AND EDITING. Chief.—Geo. Wm. Hill, 431 Tenth street, N. W. Assistant Chief.—V . Hallenbeck, 1101 K street, N. W. DIVISION OF ILLUSTRATIONS "AND ENGRAVINGS. Chief —George Marx, 924 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. ] DOCUMENT AND FOLDING ROOM. Superintendent.—A. T. Longley, 821 Massachusetts avenue, N. E. SEED DIVISION. Chief. —]. B. Peck, 511 Fourth street, N. W. Fil Superintendent of Seed- Room.—James S. Stocking, 413 Fourth street, N. W GARDENS AND GROUNDS. Horticulturist and Superintendent of Gardens and Grounds.—William Saunders, 1603 Third street, N. W. ENGINEER, | Chief—]John A. Harvey, 1228 C street, S. W. Department of Labor— United States Fish Commission. 195 DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. (National Safe Deposit Building, corner Fifteenth street and New York avenue, N. W.) | Commissioner —CARROLL D. WRIGHT, 1209 S street, N. W. Chief Clerf.—Oren W. \Veaver, 1020 Eighth street, N. W. : - Disbursing Clerk.—Charles E. Morse, 304 St. Asaph street, Alexandria, Va. yg NATIONAL BOARD OF HEALTH. OFFICERS. President.— Vice- President. —Stephen Smith, M. D., 574 Madison avenue, New York City, N. V. Secretary.—W ., P. Dunwoody, 437 Classon avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y. (During temporary ab- bo sence of the Secretary, Dr. Smart attends to the official business of the Board.) MEMBERS. A John Mills Browne, M. D., Surgeon-General, U. S. Navy, The Portland. Stanford E. Chaillé, M. D., etc., New Orleans, La. William P. Dunwoody, 437 Classon avenue, Brooklyn, N. VY. Robert W. Mitchell, M. D., Memphis, Tenn. : Charles Smart, Major and Surgeon, U. S. Army, 2017 Hillyer avenue. Stephen Smith, M. D., etc., 574 Madison avenue, New York City. «Tullio Verdi, M. D., etc., 815 Fourteenth street, N. W. "UNITED STATES CIVIL-SERVICE COMMISSION. (Offices, City Hall Building.) Commissioners.— President, Charles Lyman, of Connecticut, 423 M street, N. W. Theodore Roosevelt, of New York, 1215 Nineteenth street, N. W. Hugh S. Thompson, of South Carolina, corner Connecticut avenue $29 De Sales street. B ; Chief Examiner —William H. Webster, 1534 I street, N. W. j * Secretary. —John T. Doyle, Wyoming avenue, N. W. BUILDING FOR THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. (Office, 145 East Capitol street.) | In Charge.—DBrig. Gen. Thomas Lincoln Casey, Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army. Super intondent and Engineer —DBernard R. Green, 1738 N street, N. W, Architect.—Paul J. Pelz. Chief Clerk.—Ed. Sutherland, 1418 S street, N. W. | UNITED STATES FISH COMMISSION. | (Office, corner Sixth and B streets, S. W. ) Commissioner.—Marshall McDonald, 1514 R street, N. W. I: Assistantin charge of Scientific Inguiry.—Richard Rathbun, 1622 Massachusetts avenue, N.W. | Assistant in charge Division of Fisheries.—]. W. Collins, Washington, D. C. Chief Clerk.—]. T O’Connor, 100 I street, N. W. Disbursing Agend.—Herbert A. Gill, 1608 Q street, N. W, X | iemmomsan so a \ Congressional Direclory. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. (Corner North Capitol and H streets.) Public Printer. —FRANK W. PALMER, 1303 P street, N. W, Chief Clerk—W. H. Collins, 125 Tenth street, N. E. Cashier.—John Larcombe, 1817 H street, N. W. Chief Time Clerk —John. T. Welch, 21 M street, N. W, \ PRINTING DEPARTMENT. (In Printing Office.) Foreman of Printing.—Henry T. Brian, 34 I street, N. W. Assistant Foreman.—J. M. A. Spottswood, 70 I street, N. W. Assistant Foreman in charge of Press-Room.—A. B. Auer, 730 Fourth street, N. E. Assistant Foreman in charge of Job-Room.—L. C. Hay, 128 Tenth street, N. E. Assistant Foreman in charge of Electrotype Foundry.—Alex. Elliott, 508 I street, N. W. Superintendent of Folding Division.— Thos. B. Penicks, 1414 Sixth street, N. W. BINDING DEPARTMENT. (In Printing Office.) Foreman of Binding.—James W. White, 512 Third street, N. W. Assistant Foreman.—P. J. Byrne, 819 North Capitol street. Assistant Foreman.—F. Munson, 436 M street, N. W. Assistant Foreman.—A. L. Wood, 411%; G street, N. W. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. (In Printing Office.) Foreman in Charge.—Aven Pearson, corner Twelfth and F streets, N. W. Clerk. —C. A. Hofheins, 414 Seventh street, S. E. Clerk in charge at Capitol —W. A. Smith, 2004 Fourteenth street, N. W. UNITED STATES BOARD ON GEOGRAPHIC NAMES. Chairman.—Prof. Thomas C. Mendenhall, U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. Marcus Baker, U. S. Geological Survey. Andrew H. Allen, Department of State. Capt. Henry L. Howison, Light-House Board, Treasury Department. Capt. Thomas Turtle, Engineer Corps, War Department. Secretary. —Lieut. Com’d’r Richardson Clover, Hydrographic Office, Navy Department, Pierson H. Bristow, Post-Office Department. Otis T. Mason, Smithsonian Institution. Herbert G. Ogden, U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. Henry Gannett, U. S, Geological Survey. bs | i ! ’ \ The Soldiers Home—Intercontinental Railway Commission. 197 THE SOLDIERS’ HOME. BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS. (Office No. 55, War Department, North Wing.) President of the Board —John M. Schofield, Major-General, Commanding the Army. John C. Kelton, Adjutant-General, U. S. Army. Richard N. Batchelder, Quartermaster-General, U. S. Army. Beekman Du Barry, Commissary-General of Subsistence, U. S. Army. Charles Sutherland, Surgeon-General, U. S. Army. David G. Swaim, Judge-Advocate-General, U. S. Army (absent). O. B. Willcox, Brig. General U. S. A. (retired), Governor of the Soldiers’ Home. Clerk of the Board. —Oliver W. Longan. OFFICERS OF THE HOME. (Residence at the Flome.) Governor —Brig. Gen. O. B. Willcox, U. S. Army (retired). Deputy Governor.—Capt. David A. Irwin, U. S. Army (retired). Secretary and Treasurer—Bvt. Maj. R. C. Parker, U. S. Army (retired). Attending Surgeon.—Lieut. Col. W. A. Forwood, Surgeon, U. S. Army. BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS. (No. 2 Lafayette Square.) Director—William E. Curtis, 1801 Connecticut avenue. Secretary.—Henry L. Bryan, 604 East Capitol street. Translators (Portuguese).—John C. Redman, 311 Elm street, Le Droit Park. (Spanish).—José I. Rodriguez, 1340 Vermont avenue, N. W. Clerks.—John T. Suter, jr., 420 H street, N. W. Leonard G. Myers, 1918 I street, N. W. Stenographers—Imogen A. Hanna, 1009 New Hampshire avenue. Lucretia Jackson, 712 Eighteenth street, N. W. Distributing Clerk.—Henrietta P. Dunn, 935 P street N. W. Librarian.—Tillie L. Phillips, 2126 Fourteenth street N. W. Copyist.—Rosabelle S. Rider, 923 Nineteenth street, N. W. INTERCONTINENTAL RAILWAY COMMISSION. (1016 Vermont avenue N. W.) Commissioners for the United States.— President, A. J. Cassatt, 305 Walnut street, Philadel- phia, Pa. Henry G. Davis, 213 East German street, Baltimore, Md. ! R. C. Kerens, Saint Louis, Mo. Executive and Disbursing Officer. —R. M. G. Brown, 1812 N street N. W. Secretary. —Hector de Castro, 2101 P street N. W. Special Duty.—E. Z. Steever, 1025 Vermont avenue. Clerk —H. S. Flynn, 420 H street N. W. —_— hdl X i > / Congressional Directory. DEPARTMENT DUTIES. THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. THE SECRETARY OF STATE. The Secretary of State is charged, under the direction of the President, with the duties ap- pertaining to correspondence with the public ministers and consuls of the United States, and with the representatives of foreign powers accredited to the United States; and to negotiations of whatever character relating to the foreign affairs of the United States. He is also the me- dium of correspondence between the President and the chief executive of the several States of the United States; he has the custody of the great seal of the United States, and countersigns and affixes such seal to all executive proclamations, to various commissions, and to warrants . for pardon, and the extradition of fugitives from justice. He is regarded as the first in rank among the members of the Cabinet. Ie is also the custodian of the treaties made with for- eign states, and of the laws of the United States. He grants and issues passports, and exe- quaturs to foreign consuls in the United States are issued through his office. He publishes the laws and resolutions of Congress, amendments to the Constitution, and proclamations declaring the admission of new States into the Union. He is also charged with certain annual reports to Congress relating to commercial information received from diplomatic and consular officers of the United States. : THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE becomes the Acting Secretary of State in the absence of the Secretary. Under the organiza- tion of the Department the Assistant Secretary, Second Assistant Secretary, and Third Assist- ant Secretary are respectively charged with the immediate supervision of all correspondence with the diplomatic and consular officers in the countries named in the divisions of those Bu- reaus, and of the miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto, and, in general, they are intrusted with the preparation of the correspondence upon any questions arising in the course of the public business that may be assigned to them by the Secretary. THE CHIEF CLERK. The Chief Clerk has the general supervision of the clerks and employés and of the business of the Department. BUREAU OF INDEXES AND ARCHIVES. The duty of opening the mails; preparing, registering, and indexing daily all correspond- ence to and from the Department, both by subjects and persons; the preservation of the ar- chives; answering calls of the Secretary, Assistant Secretaries, Chief Clerk, and chiefs of bureaus for correspondence, etc. DIPLOMATIC BUREAU. Diplomatic correspondence and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto. Division A.—Correspondence with France, Germany, and Great Britain, and miscellaneous correspondence relating to those countries. Division B.—Correspondence with Argentine Republic, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Chili, Denmark, Greece, Italy, Netherlands, Paraguay, Peru, Portugal, Russia, and Uruguay, and miscellaneous correspondence relating to those countries. Division C.—Correspondence with Barbary States, Bolivia, Central America, Colombia, China, Ecuador, Egypt, Fiji Islands, Friendly and Navigator's Islands, Hawaiian Islands, Hayti, Japan, Liberia, Madagascar, Mexico, Muscat, San Domingo, Siam, Society Islands, Turkey, Venezuela, and other countries not assigned, and miscellaneous correspondence relat- ing to those countries. CONSULAR BUREAU. Correspondence with consulates, and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto. Division 4.—Correspondence with consulates within the dominion of Great Britain, and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto, Division B.—Correspondence with consulates within the dominions of Argentine Republic, Austria-Hungary, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Chili, Denmark, Greece, Italy, Netherlands, Par- aguay, Peru, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Sweden and Norway, Switzerland, and Uruguay, and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto. Drzision C.—Correspondence with consulates within the dominions of Barbary States, Cen- tral America, Colombia, China, Ecuador, Egypt, France, Friendly and Navigator's Islands, PRON IRT Cg 3 i ii or bi wis ji il Cl . Cid ou om i id y 5 f : \ al er a i j y ih { Department Duties. 199 t [Hawaiian Islands, Hayti, Japan, Liberia, Madagascar, Mexico, Muscat, San Domingo, Siam, Turkey, Venezuela, and other countries not assigned, and miscellaneous correspondence re- p lating thereto. / Division D.—Correspondence with consulates in Germany, and miscellaneous correspond- ence relating thereto. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS. Custody and disbursement of appropriations under direction of the Department; charged with custody of indemnity funds and bonds; care of the building and property of the Depart- . ment. 2 BUREAU OF ROLLS AND EIBRARY, 4 be Cl Custody of the rolls, treaties, etc.; promulgation of the laws, etc.; care and superintendence of the library and public documents; care of the Revolutionary archives, and of papers relating to international commissions. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. Preparation of the reports upon Commercial Relations. EXAMINER OF CLAIMS. [From the Department of Justice.] The examination of questions of law and other matters submitted by the Secretary or the Assistant Secretary, and of all claims. / | THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT. 4 THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY. The Secretary of the Treasury is charged by law with the management of the national finances. He prepares plans for the improvement of the revenue and for the support of the 2 public credit; superintends the collection of the revenue, and prescribes the forms of keeping and rendering public accounts and of making returns; grants warrants for all moneys drawn from the Treasury in pursuance of appropriations made by law, and for the payment of moneys into the Treasury; and annually submits to Congress estimates of the probable revenues and disbursements of the Government. He also controls the construction of public buildings; the coinage and printing of money; the collection of statistics; the administration of the coast and geodetic survey, life-saving, light-house, revenue-cutter, steamboat-inspection, and marine- | hospital branches of the public service, and furnishes generally such information as may be required by either branch of Congress on all matters pertaining to the foregoing. The routine work of the Secretary’s office is transacted in the offices of the Supervising Architect, Director of the Mint, Superinterident of Engraving and Printing, Supervising Sur- bs geon-General of Marine Hospitals, General Superintendent of Life-Saving Service, Supervis- 2 ing Inspector-General of Steamboats, Bureau of Statistics, Light-House Board, and in the fol- | lowing divisions: Warrants, Estimates, and Appropriations; Appointments; Customs; Public I Moneys; Loansand Currency; Revenue-Marine; Stationery, Printing, and Blanks; Mails and Files; Special Agents; and Miscellaneous. io ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF THE TREASURY. I One of the three Assistant Secretaries has the general supervision of the work assigned to the divisions of Appointments; Public Moneys; Stationery, Printing, and Blanks; Loans and % Currency; Mails and Files; Miscellaneous; Chief Clerk and Superintendent; Secret Service, i and Marine Hospital Service; the signing of all letters and papers as Assistant Secretary, or “by order of the Secretary,” relating to the business of the foregoing divisions and bureaus “that do not by law require the signature of the Secretary, and the performance of such other duties as may be prescribed by the Secretary or by law. One Assistant Secretary has the general supervision of the work dssigned to the divi- sions of Customs; Revenue Marine; Special Agents, and Bureau of Navigation; the sign- A ing of all letters and papers as Assistant Secretary, or “by order of the Secretary,” relating i to the business of the foregoing divisions and bureaus that do not by law require the signature of the Secretary, and the performance of such other duties as may be prescribed hy the Sec- retary or by law. One other Assistant Secretary has the general supervision of the work assigned to the divi- E sions of Mails and Files; Warrants, Estimates, and Appropriations; Stationery, I’rinting, and Blanks; and the offices of the Light-House Board; Supervising Architect, and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing; the signing of all letters and papers as Assistant Secretary, or “by order of the Secretary,’ ’relating to the business of the foregoing divisions and bureaus that do not by law require the signature of the Secretary, and the performance of such other duties us may be prescribed by the Secretary or by law. . Congressional Directory. THE CHIEF CLERK, The Chief Clerk supervises, under the immediate direction of the Secretary and Assistant Secretaries, the duties of the clerks and employés connected with the Department. The superintendence of all buildings occupied by the Department in this city; the transmission of the mails ; the care of all horses, wagons, and carriages employed; the direction of engineers, machinists, firemen, or laborers. The expenditure of the appropriations for contingent ex- penses of the Treasury Department; for furniture and repairs of same; fuel, lights, water, and miscellaneous items, and the assignment of custodians’ force for buildings under the con- trol of the Department; the supervision of accounts relating to World’s Columbian Expo- sition; the distribution of the mail; the custody of the records and files and library of the Secretary’s office; the answering of calls from Congress, and elsewhere, for copies of papers, records, etc. Supervision of all the official correspondence of the Secretary’s office, so far as to see that it is expressed in correct and official form; the enforcement of the general regula- tions of the Department, and the charge of all business of the Secretary’s office not assigned. THE FIRST COMPTROLLER. All warrants issued by the Secretary of the Treasury, whether intended to cover public rev- enues into the Treasury, or to authorize payments of money from the Treasury, or to accom- plish any other of the purposes for which warrants are used, require the counter-signature of the First Comptroller. All accounts examined and stated by the First Auditor, except those relating to receipts from customs, and all examined and stated by the Fifth Auditor, and by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, are re-examined and revised in this office, and the balances thereon certified ; and the First Comptroller is to superintend the recovery of all debts certified by him to be due to the United States. The requisitions issued in payment of drafts for salaries and expenses of ministers and consuls abroad are examined, certified, and reported on by this office, as also the requisitions of marshals, collectors of internal revenue, secretaries of Territories, and other disbursing officers, for advances of public funds. Many other duties in adjusting claims against the United States are required of this office. THE SECOND COMPTROLLER. Accounts received from the Second, Third, and Fourth Auditors are revised, viz : Reported by the Second Auditor—for organizing volunteers, recruiting, pay of the Army, special mili- tary accounts, Army ordnance, the Indian service, the Army Medical Department, contingent military expenses, back pay and bounty to officers and soldiers, the Soldiers’ Home, and the National Home for Disabled Volunteers. Reported by the Third Auditor—disbursements by the Quartermaster’s, the Subsistence, and the Engineer Departments; Army pensions, prop- erty taken by military authority for the use of the Army, and miscellaneous war claims. Re- ported by the Fourth Auditor—disbursements for the Marine Corps, by Navy paymasters for pay and rations, by paymasters at navy-yards, for Navy pensions at foreign stations, and the financial agent at London. 3 The work of the office is distributed among seven divisions: Army Paymasters’, Army Pen- sion, Back Pay and Bounty, Indian, Miscellaneous, Quartermasters’, and Navy divisions, ‘THE COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS. The Commissioner of Customs revises and certifies the accounts of revenues collected from duties on imports and tonnage ; fines, penalties, and forfeitures under the customs and navi- gation laws, and from miscellaneous sources connected with customs matters; accounts of the importation, withdrawal, transportation, and exportation of goods under the warehouse system ; for disbursements for the expenses of collecting the revenue from customs, revenue-cutter service, life-saving service, shipping service, seal fisheries in Alaska, construction and main- tenance of lights, marine-hospital service, debentures, and excess of deposits for unascertained duties, refund of duties exacted in excess; approves and files the official bonds given by cus- toms officers, and transmits their commissions; files the oaths of office of the persons paid in the accounts certified by him, and prepares for the use of the law officers of the Department the accounts of those in arrears under the heads above mentioned. The office is organized in two divisions, viz: Customs, Appointments, etc. THE FIRST AUDITOR. The First Auditor receives all accounts accruing in the Treasury Department (except those arising under internal revenue laws), and, after examination, certifies the balance, and trans- mits the accounts, with the vouchers and certificate, to the First Comptroller or to the Com- missioner of Customs, having respectively the revision thereof. The subordinate divisions of his office are— Customs Division.—Receipts and expenditures of the customs service, including fines, emol- uments, forfeitures, debentures, drawbacks, marine-hospital service, revenue-cutter service, etc. BR f~ Department Duties. 201 Judiciary Division.—Fees of United States marshals, district attorneys, commissioners and clerks; rent of court-houses, support of prisoners, and other expenses of United States coutts. Public Debt Division.—Redemption of the public debt, including principal, premium, and interest , payment of interest ; redemption of certificates of deposit ; notes destroyed. Warehouse and Bond Division.—Examination of warehouse and bond accounts received from custom-houses. Miscellaneous Division.—Accounts of mints and assay offices ; Territories ; Coast Survey; salaries and contingent expenses of the legislative, executive, and judicial departments of the Government ; construction, repair, and preservation of public buildings ; Treasurer of the United States for general receipts and expenditures. THE SECOND AUDITOR. The Second Auditor examines the following classes of accounts and claims, certifies the balances and transmits the accounts, vouchers, and certificates to the Second Comptroller for his decision thereon: Claims arising since 1816 for arrears of pay and bounty due soldiers or their heirs; ac- counts of Army paymasters, recruiting, ordnance, and medical officers; the Soldiers’ Home; the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; Artillery School, Fort Monroe ; Infantry and Cavalry School at Fort Leavenworth, and Army and Navy Hospital, Hot Springs, Arkan- sas; contingent expenses of the Army and the Adjutant-General’s department; expenses of the commanding general’s office; publication of official records of the war of the rebellion, and all other Army accounts and claims not adjusted by the Third Auditor; also, all accounts relating to Indian affairs, including claims of contractors and others for supplies furnished and services rendered. The Second Auditor finally adjusts, without reference to the Comptroller, all returns of clothing, etc., rendered by Army officers and the property accounts of Indian agents. The work is distributed among eleven divisions, namely: Book-keepers’; Pay and Bounty; Paymasters’; Indian; Ordnance, Medical, and Miscellaneous; Property; Archives (or Files); Division for Investigation of Fraud (in connection with bounty and other claims); Inquiries ‘and Replies; Old Army, and Mail. THE THIRD AUDITOR. The Third Auditor examines accounts relating to the Quartermaster’s Department, Subsist- ence Department, Corps of lingineers, and Signal Service of the Army; the Military Acad- emy, military prison, and payment of Army pensions; claims for Army supplies and trans- portation; for occupation of real estate for military purposes; lost horses; reimbursement of expenses incurred on last sickness and burial of deceased pensioners, and claims of States and Territories for aid in suppression of the rebellion; Indian hostilities, and border invasion. The divisions are— Book-keepers' Division.—K eeps accounts of appropriations upon which requisitions are drawn by the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Interior. Military Division.—Accounts of quartermasters for transportation of the Army and sup- plies; the purchase of clothing, camp and garrison equipage, horses, mules, forage, fuel, ete.: the erection and repair of quarters, barracks, hospitals, offices, and stables; payment to hired men and soldiers on extra duty; expenses incurred in the apprehension of deserters; hire of escorts, expresses, interpreters, spies, and guides; burial of officers and soldiers; care of national cemeteries, and all other authorized expenses of the Army not otherwise assigned; support of the Military Academy and military prisons; accounts of commissaries and acting commissaries for purchase, preservation, and distribution of provisions and stores necessary for the subsistence of the Army; accounts of engineers for construction and preservation of fortifications and breakwaters, improvement of rivers and harbors, and surveys on the coasts, lakes, and rivers; accounts of the Signal Service for Army signaling, the construction and repair of military telegraphs, and the observation and report of storms for the benefit of com- merce. Army Pension Division.—Adjusts agents’ accounts for payment of Army pensions, and con- ducts correspondence and all other business in connection therewith ; adjusts under section 4718, Revised Statutes, claims for expenses on account of last sickness and burial of deceased pensioners. : Horse Claims Division.—Adjusts claims for compensation for horses and equipage lost by officers and enlisted men in the military service and of other persons for horses, mules, oxen, . wagons, sleigh, and harness, while the same was in the military service by impressment or contract. Miscellaneous Claims Division.—Adjusts claims for supplies purchased or appropriated by the Army; for vessels, horses, cars, engines, and other means of Army transportation and railroad stock purchased or lost in the military service; for the occupation of real estate for mili- tary purposes; for court-martial fees, traveling expenses, etc.; those growing out of the various Indian wars; those of various descriptions under special acts of Congress ; and those not other- \ 202 Congressional Directory. wise assigned for adjudication; claims of States and Territories under various acts of Con- gress for expenses incurred in the suppression of the rebellion, Indian hostilities, and border invasions. Collection Division.—Prepares transcripts of accounts of defaulting officers reported for suit; examines all cases for information from files of the office in various matters, including reports on evidence relating to claims for bounty land and pensions to soldiers of the war of 1812; copies and compares difference sheets and miscellaneous papers, and has charge of the set- tlements, etc., made by the office. THE FOURTH AUDITOR. The Fourth Auditor examines, adjusts, and transmits to the Second Comptroller all accounts concerning the pay, expenditures, pensions, and prize-money of the Navy. The divisions are: Paymasters’ Division.—Examines the accounts of paymasters, including mechanics’ rolls. Navy Pay and Pension Division.—Examines the accounts of the disbursements by the Navy pay agents at Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, San Francisco, andvNorfolk; and of Navy pension agents at Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, Chicage Was hington, and San Francisco. Record and Prize- Money Division.—Has charge of the records and files of the office, ad- justs the prize-money accounts, and prepares tabulated statements for Congress. General Claims Division. — Adjusts claims of a miscellaneous character, such as arrears of pay, bounty, etc., arising in the Navy and Marine Corps. Book-keepers’ Division.—Ledger accounts of all appropriations for the naval establishment and of all disbursing officers and claimants. THE FIFTH AUDITOR. The Fifth Auditor examines, adjusts, and transfers to the First Comptroller the diplomatic and consular accounts, the expenditures of the Department of State, including all inter- national commissions; the accounts of the internal revenue, the census, the Patent Office, the Smithsonian Institution and National Museum, and the contingent expenses of the Post-Office Department. There are three divisions: Diplomatic and Consular Division.—Adjustment is made of the expenses of all diplomatic missions abroad for salaries, contingencies, and loss by exchange; consular accounts for fees, salaries, loss by exchange, contingent expenses, salaries of interpreters and marshals, consular courts ‘and prisons; the relief and passage of American seamen; the return of persons charged with crime; the rescuing of shipwrecked American seamen; estates of American citizens dying abroad; accounts of the bankers of the United States at London; awards of commissions and expenses of international exhibitions; commissions; State Department disbursements, etc. Internal- Revenue Division.—Accounts of collectors of internal revenue, including salaries, contingent expenses, and compensation of store-keepers. Miscellaneous Division.—All miscellaneous internal-revenue accounts, including salaries and expenses of agents, surveyors of distilleries, fees and expenses of gaugers, direct tax accounts, counsel fees, drawbacks, taxes refunded, redemption of stamps, accounts for the manufacture of paper and stamps, and for the salaries of the office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue; also accounts of the Census Office, Smithsonian Institution, and National Museum; contingent expenses of the Post-Office Department, and sundry accounts of the Patent Office. THE SIXTH AUDITOR. The Sixth Auditor examines and adjusts all accounts relating to the postal service, and his decisions on these are final, unless an appeal be takenyin twelve months to the First Comp- troller. He superintends the collection of all debts due the United States for the service of the Post-Office Department, and all penalties imposed; directs suits and all legal proceedings, civil and criminal, and takes all legal means to enforce the payment of moneys due the United States for services of the Post-Office Department. There are ten subordinate divi- sions, viz: 1. Zxamining.—Receives and audits the quarterly postal accounts of all post-offices in the United States. 2. Collecting.—The collection of balances due from and the payment of balances due to late and present postmasters, and the final settlement of postal accounts. 3. Bookkeeping.—XKeeps the ledger accounts of the Department. 4. Pay.—The adjustment and payment of all accounts for the transportation of the mails, both foreign and domestic, and all post-office supplies. 5. Review Division.—Reviews the accounts of postmasters at Presidential post-offices and accounts for mail transportation and miscellaneous expenses. Department Duties. | 203 6. Foreign Division.—Adjustment of postal and money-order accounts with foreign countries. v7. Inspecting Division.— Examination of weekly money-order statements and vouchers. 8. Recording Division.— Stating accounts of postmasters at money-order and postal-note offices, payment of commissions, and collection of balances. 9. Assorting Division.— Arranging paid money orders and postal notes by States, post- offices, and numerically. 10. Checking Division.—Comparison of paid money orders and postal notes with state- ments of issuing postmasters. THE TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. The Treasurer of the United States is charged with the receipt and disbursement of all pub- lic moneys that may be deposited in the Treasuryat Washington and the sub-treasuries at Bos- ton, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, New Orleans, San Francisco, Saint Louis, Chicago, and Cincinnati, and in the national bank United States depositaries; is trustee for bonds held to secure national-bank circulation, and custodian of Indian trust fund bonds; is agent for paying the interest on the public debt, and for paying salaries of members of the House of Representatives. The Treasury subdivisions are: Chaef Clerk.— Receives and distributes the official mail ; has charge of the correspondence - and the disposition and payment of the clerical force, and the custody of the records and files ; and of the issue of duplicate checks and drafts. Cash Division.—For receipt and payment of public funds at Washington. Issue Division.—Completion of new United States notes, gold and silver certificates, and count of silver, gold, and minor coin. Redemption Division—All currency except national-bank notes received and redeemed. Loan Division.—Interest checks prepared and bonds redeemed. Accounts Division—The accounts of the Treasury, the sub-treasuries, and the United States national banks depogitaries are kept. National-Bank Division.—Has custody of bonds held for national-bank circulation, for public deposits, and various public trusts, and makes collection of semi-annual duty. National-Bank Redemption Agency ~Notes of national banks are redeemed and accounted for. THE REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. The Register of the Treasury is the official bookkeeper of the United States, and prepares a statement which shows all receipts and disbursements of the public money (except those under the supervision of the Post-Office Department), which statement is transmitted annu- ally to Congress by the Secretary of the Treasury. He signs and issues all bonds and sends to the Treasurer of the United States schedules showing the names of persons entitled to receive interest thereon. He registers all warrants drawn by the Secretary of the Treasury upon the Treasurer of the United States; and transmits statements of balances due to indi- viduals after the settlement of their accounts by the First Comptroller or the Commissioner of Customs, upon which payment is made. The work is distributed among four divisions, as follows: Loan Division.—In this division registered and coupon bonds are issued, and all regis- tered bonds transferred; it also has charge of the conversion of coupon into registered bonds; the ledger accounts with holders of registered bonds, and the preparation of schedules upon which interest on the registered bonds is paid. Receipts and Expenditures Division.—In this division are kept the great account books of the United States, which show the civil, diplomatic, internal-revenue, miscellaneous, and public-debt receipts and expenditures; also, statements of warrants and transfer drafts issued. Note, Coupon, and Currency Division.—In this division redeemed bonds, paid interest coupons, interest checks, and interest-bearing notes are examined and registered. Treasury notes, legal tenders, and fractional currency are examined, canceled, and the destruction thereof witnessed and recorded. It also has charge of the files of the Bureau, and prepares, for use in Government suits, certified transcripts of accounts of Government officers. Interest, Expense, and Warrant Division.— In this division the interest on the various loans, ° the premiums and discounts on bonds sold, and the expenses of negotiation are ascertained. It also receives and registers a 1 civil accounts and civil pay warrants. THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. The Comptroller of the Currency has, under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, the control of the national banks. The divisions of this Bureau are: Organization Division.— The organization of national banks. Issue Division. —The preparation and issue of national-bank circulation. Reports Division.—Examination and consolidation of the reports of national banks. Redemption Division.—The redemption and destruction of notes issued by national banks. Congressional Directory. THE DIRECTOR OF THE MINT. The Director of the Mint has general supervision of all the mints and assay offices of the United States. ; He prescribes rules, to be approved by the Secretary of the Treasury, for the transaction of business at the mints and assay offices. He regulates the distribution of silver coin and the charges to be collected of depositors. He receives for adjustment the accounts of the mints and assay offices, superintends their expenditures and annual settlements, and makes special examinations of them when deemed necessary. All appointments, removals, and trans- fers in the mints and assay offices are subject to his approval. The purchase of silver bullion and the allotment of its coinage are made by the Director; and, at his request, also transfers of the moneys in the mints and assay offices, and advances from appropriations for the mint service. Tests of the weight and fineness of coins struck at the mints are made in the assay laboratory under his charge. The values of the standard coins of foreign countries are annually estimated for custom-house and other public purposes. Two annual reports are prepared by the Director, one for the fiscal year, and printed in the Finance Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, the other for the calendar year, on the statistics of the production of the precious metals. THE SOLICITOR. The Solicitor of the Treasury takes cognizance of all frauds or attempted frauds on the customs revenue. He is charged by law with duties regarding the compromise of debts and with a supervision over suits for the collection of moneys due the United States, excepting those due under internal-revenue laws. His approval is required of official bonds of United States Assistant Treasurers, Department Disbursing Clerks, Collectors of Internal Revenue, the Secretary and the Chief Clerk of the Department of Agriculture. As the law officer of the Treasury Department many matters are referred to him for his examination and opinion arising under the customs, navigation, banking, and registry laws, and in the administration of the Department. He is also charged by law with the supervision of suits and proceedings arising out of the provisions of law governing national banking associations in which the United States and any of its agents or officers are parties; also, with the charge, release, and sale of lands acquired in payment of debt, excepting those acquired under internal-revenue laws. THE COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE. The Commissioner makes assessment of, and has general superintendence of the collection of all internal-revenue taxes, and of the enforcement of internal-revenue laws; employment of internal-revenue agents; compensation and duties of gaugers, store-keepers, and other subor- dinate officers ; the preparation and distribution of stamps, instructions, regulations, forms, blanks, hydrometers, stationery, etc.; and analysis of foods and drugs in the District of Co- lumbia, and payment of bounty on sugar. The business of his office is divided into the several subject-matters and distributed among eight divisions, as follows : Appointments, —Discipline of official force, general files, registering and copying letters, dis- tributing mail, issuing commissions and leaves of absence, printing and distributing blanks, blank books, and stationery. 3 Law.—Seizures, forfeitures, compromises, suits, abatement and refunding claims, direct axes, etc.; distraints, and lands purchased on same for (or otherwise forfeited to) the United States. Zobacco.—Matters relating to tobacco, snuff, and cigars not in suit or in bond. Accounts.—Revenue and disbursing accounts, allowances to collectors of internal revenue for salaries, etc., purchase of blank books and other supplies for collectors and revenue agents ; examination and reference of bills of agents, gaugers, etc. ; miscellaneous claims under appropriation acts (except for abatement, refunding, and drawback); estimates for appropria- tions by Congress, and statistical records. Distilled Spirits.—Matters pertaining to distilleries, distilled spirits, fermented liquors, wines, rectification, gaugers’ instruments, approval of bonded warehouses, assignment of store-keep- ers, etc. Stamps.—Preparation, safe-keeping, issue, and redemption of all stamps, accounts pertaining thereto, and preparation, custody, and issue of steel dies for canceling stamps. Assessments.— Assessments, bonded accounts, warehouse reports of store-keepers and gaugers, exports, drawbacks, and general supervision of oleomargarine tax and the analysis of food and drugs in the District of Columbia. Revenue Agents.—Supervision of agents (under Commissioner’s direction), examination of their reports and accounts, and discovery and suppression of violations of internal-revenue law. Sugar Bounty.—General supervision of matters relating to bounty on sugar. There is a chemical laboratory connected with this Bureau, in charge of a chemist and mi- croscopist, for making the required tests and analysis of oleomargarine and foods and drugs. i I H l Department Duties. 205 THE SUPERINTENDENT OF THE COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY. | \ The Coast and Geodetic Survey is charged with the survey of the Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific coasts of the United States, including the coasts of Alaska; the survey of rivers to the head of tide-water or ship navigation; deep-sea soundings, temperature and current ob- servations along the said coasts and throughout the Gulf Stream and Japan Stream flowing off from them ; magnetic observations and gravity research; determinations of heights by geodetic leveling, and of geographical positions by lines of transcontinental triangulation, which, with other connecting triangulations and observations for latitude, longitude, and azimuth, furnish points of reference for State surveys and connect the work on the Atlantic coast with that on the Pacific. Results ‘of the survey are published in the forms of annual reports, which include pro- fessional papers of value; bulletins which give information deemed important for immediate publication; notices to mariners, issued monthly; tide tables, issued annually; charts upon various scales, including harbor charts, general charts of the coast, and sailing charts; chart catalogues and coast pilots. SUPERVISING INSPECTOR-GENERAL OF STEAM VESSELS. The Supervising Inspector-General superintends the administration of the steam-boat inspec- tion laws, presides at the meeting of the Board of Supervising Inspectors, receives all reports, and examines all accounts of inspectors. The Board ef Supervising Inspectors meets in Washington annually, on the third Wednes- day in January, to establish regulations for carrying out the provisions of the steam-boat inspec- tion laws. SUPERVISING SURGEON-GENERAL, MARINE-HOSPITAL SERVICE. The Supervising Surgeon-General is charged with the supervision of the marine hospitals and other relief stations of the service, and the care of sick and disabled seamen taken from the merchant vessels of the United States (ocean, lake, and river), and from the vessels of . the Revenue-Marine and Light-House Services. This supervision includes the purveying of medical and other supplies; the assignment of and orders to medical officers; the examina- tion of requisitions, vouchers, and property returns, and all matters pertaining to the service. Under his direction all applicants for pilots’ licenses are examined for the detection of color blindness. Ordinary seamen, on request of a master or agent, are examined physicaloy to determine their fitness before shipment, and a like examination is made of the candidatles for admission to the Revenue-Marine Service and candidates for appointment as surfmen in the United States Life-Saving Service. He examines also and passes upon the medical certificates of claimants for pensions under | the laws of the Life-Saving Service. Under the act of April 29, 1878, he is charged with the framing of regulations for the pre- vention of the introduction of contagious diseases and the prevention of their spread; and under the act of August 1, 1888, he is charged with the conduct of the quarantine service of the United States. He has the direction of laboratories established to investigate the cause of contagious diseases, and publishes each week an abstract of sanitary reports received from all parts of the United States and (through the State Department) from all foreign countries. \ : GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT OF THE LIFE-SAVING SERVICE. It is the duty of the General Superintendent to supervise the organization and government of the employés of the service; to prepare and revise regulations therefor as may be neces- sary; to fix the number and compensation of surfmen to be employed at the several stations within the provisions of law; to supervise the expenditure of all appropriations made for the support and maintenance of the Life-Saving Service; to examine the accounts of disburse- ments of the district superintendents, and to certify the same to the accounting officers of the Treasury Department; to examine the property returns of the keepers of the several stations, and see that all public property thereto belonging is properly accounted for; to acquaint him- self, as far as practicable, with all means employed in foreign countries which may seem to advantageously affect the interest of the service, and to cause to be properly investigated all plans, devices, and inventions for the improvement of life-saving apparatus for use at the sta- tions which may appear to be meritorious and available; to exercise supervision over the se- lection of sites for new stations the establishment of which may be authorized by law, or for old ones the removal of which may be made necessary by the encroachment of the sea or by other causes; to prepare and submit to the Secretary of the Treasury estimates for the sup- port of the service; to collect and compile the statistics of marine disasters contemplated by the act of June 20, 1874, and to submit to the Secretary of the Treasury, for transmission to Congress, an annual report of the expenditures of the moneys appropriated for the maintenance of the Life-Saving Service, and of the operations of said service during the year. . . | 206 : Congressional Directory. \ ; BUREAU OF STATISTICS. The Chief of the Bureau of Statistics collects and publishes the statistics of our foreign commerce, embracing tables showing the imports and exports, respectively, by countries and customs districts; the transit trade inwards and outwards by countries and by customs dis- tricts; imported commodities warehoused, withdrawn from, and remaining in warehouse; the imports of merchandise entered for consumption, showing quantity, value, rates of duty, and amounts of duty collected on each article or class of articles; number of immigrants, their nationality, occupation etc., arriving from foreign countries, and the number of passengers departing for foreign countries; the inward and outward movement in our foreign trade and the countries whence entered and for which cleared, distinguishing the nationalities of the foreign vessels; also special information in regard to our internal commerce. The publications of the Bureau are as follows: Annual Report on Commerce and Naviga- tion; Annual Report on Internal Commerce; Annual Statistical Abstract of the United States; - Quarter-yearly Reports on Commerce, Navigation, and Immigration; Monthly Summary State- ments of Imports and Exports; Monthly Reports of Total Values of Foreign Commerce and Im- migration; Monthly Reports of Exports of Breadstuffs, of Provisions, of Petroleum, and Cotton. The divisions of the Bureau are as follows: Division of Examination and Revision; Division of Compilation; Miscellaneous Division; Library and Files. THE BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing designs, engraves, prints, and finishes all of the securities and other similar work of the Government printed from steel plates (except postage- stamps and postal-notes), embracing United States notes, bonds, and certificates, national-bank notes, internal-revenue and customs stamps, Treasury drafts and checks. disbursing officers’ checks, licenses, commissions, patent and pension certificates, and portraits of deceased mem- bers of Congress and other public officers authorized by law. THE WAR DEPARTMENT. THE SECRETARY OF WAR. | The Secretary of War is at the head of the War Department, and performs such duties as the President may enjoin upon him concerning the military service. He has supervision of all the estimates of appropriations for the expenses of the Depart- ment, of all purchases of Army supplies, and of all expenditures for the support and transpor- tation of the Army, and of such expenditures of a civil nature as are by law placed under his direction. He also has supervision of the United States Military Academy at West Point; of national cemeteries ; of the publication of the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion, and of the Board of Ordnance and Fortification. He has charge of all matters relating to river and harbor improvements; the prevention of obstruction to navigation; the establishment of harbor lines, and approves the plans and lo- cation of bridges authorized by Congress to be constructed over the navigable waters of the United States. ! : THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF WAR. The Assistant Secretary of War performs such duties in the Department of War as shall be prescribed by the Secretary or may be required by law. THE CHIEF CLERK. The Chief Clerk has charge of the official mail and correspondence, and performs such duties as are enjoined by law or assigned to him by the Sectretary of War. MILITARY BUREAUS OF THE WAR DEPARTMENT, The chiefs of the military bureaus of the War Department are officers of the Regular Army of the United States, and a part of the military establishment, viz: The Adjutant- General promulgates all orders of a military character of the President, the Secretary of War, and the Major General commanding the Army, and conducts the corre- spondence between the latter and the Army; receives reports and returns pertaining to the Army; prepares commissions, appointments, and acceptances of resignations for issuance; receives all muster-rolls, and prepares consolidated reports of the Army and the militia; he also is the custodian of the records of the military prison at Fort Leavenworth and under the immediate direction of the Secretary of War has charge of the recruiting service. Department Duties. 207 ’ The Inspector- General, with his assistants, inspects all military commands and stations, the Military Acadenty, the schools of application, the military department of all colleges and schools at which officers of the Army are detailed, all depots, rendezvous, armories, arsenals, fortifications, and public works of every kind under charge of, or carried on by, officers of the Army; and also the money accounts of all disbursing officers of the Army. To the Inspector- General are referred matters relating to military duties and conduct; the matériel, personnel, discipline, instruction, uniform, and outfit of the Army, and the character, quality, and ade- quacy of its supplies. The Inspector-General’s Department is specially established to promote uniform economy, efficiency, and compliance with the laws and orders, 2 The Quartermaster-General, aided by assistants, provides transportation for the Army; also clothing and equipage, horses, mules, and wagons, vessels, forage, stationery, and other miscellaneous quartermaster’s stores and property for the Army, and of clothing and equipage' for the militia; constructs necessary buildings, wharves, roads, and bridges at military posts, and reparis the same; furnishes water, heating and lighting apparatus; pays guides, spies, and interpreters, and is in charge of national cemeteries. The Commissary- General has administrative control of the Subsistence Department—of the disbursement of its appropriations; the providing of rations and their issue to the Army; the purchase and distribution of articles authorized to be kept for sale to officers and enlisted men; and the adjustment of accounts and returns for subsistence funds and supplies, preliminary to their settlement by the proper accounting officers of the Treasury. The Surgeon- General, under the immediate direction of the Secretary of War, is charged with the administrative duties of the Medical Department; the designation of the stations of “medical officers, and the issuing of all orders and instructions relating to their professional duties. He directs as to the selection, purchase, and distribution of the medical supplies of the Army. The Army Medical Museum and the official publications of the Surgeon-General’s office are also under his direct control. The Paymaster- General is charged with the payment of the officers and enlisted men of the Army and civil employés of the Department; with furnishing funds to his officers and seeing that they duly account for the same, and with a preliminary examination of their accounts; also with the payment of Treasury certificates for bounty, back pay, etc., and balances due deceased officers and soldiers of the volunteer and regular Army. The Chief of Engineers commands the Corps of Engineers, which is charged with all duties relating to fortifications, whether permanent or temporary; with torpedoes for coast defense; with all works for the attack and defense of places; with all military bridges, and with such surveys as may be required for these objects, or the movement of armies in the field. It is also charged with the harbor and river improvements; with military and geograph- ical explorations and surveys; with the survey of the lakes; and with any other engineer work specially assigned to the corps by acts of Congress or orders of the President. The Chief of Ordnance commands the Ordnance Department, the duties of which consist in providing, preserving, distributing, and accounting for every description of artillery, small- arms, and all the munitions of war which may be required for the fortresses of the country, the armies in the field, and for the whole body of the militia of the Union. In these duties are comprised that of determining the general principles of construction and of prescribing in detail the models and forms of all military weapons employed in war. They comprise also the duty of prescribing the regulations for the proof and inspection of all these weapons, for main- taining uniformity and economy in their fabrication, for insuring their good quality, and for their preservation and distribution; and for carrying into effect the general purposes here stated large annual appropriations are made, and in order to fulfill these purposes extensive operations are conducted at the national armories, the gun factory, arsenals, and ordnance depots. The Judge-Advocate- General is directed by law to “receive, review, and cause to be re- acorded, the proceedings of all courts-martial, courts of inquiry and military commissions.” He also fnrnishes the Secretary of War reports and opinions upon legal questions arising under the laws, regulations, and customs pertaining to the Army, and upon questions arising under the civil law ; reports upon applications for clemency in the cases of military prioners; examines and prepares legal papers relating to the erection of bridges over navigable waters; drafts bonds, and examines those given to the United States by disbu rsing officers, colleges, and others; examines, revises, and drafts charges and specifications against officers and sol- diers; and also drafts and examines deeds, contracts, licenses, leases, and legal papers gen- erally. The Chief Signal Officer is charged with the supervision of all military signal duties, and of books, papers, and devices connected therewith, including telegraph and telephone apparatus and the necessary meteorological instruments for use on target ranges, and other military uses; the construction, repair, and operation of military telegraph lines, and the duty of collecting and transmitting information for the Army by telegraph or otherwise, and all other duties usually pertaining to military signaling. | | } ' | i | Congressional Directory. THE NAVY DEPARTMENT. THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY. The Secretary of the Navy performs such duties as the President of the United States, who is Commander-in-Chief, may assign him, and has the general superintendence of con- struction, manning, armament, equipment, and employment of vessels of war. The Chief Clerk has general charge of the records and correspondence of the Secretary’s Office. : THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY, The Assistant Secretary of the Navy performs such duties in the Navy Department as shall be prescribed by the Secretary of the Navy, or may be required by law. NAVAL BUREAUS OF THE NAVY DEPARTMENT. The chiefs of the naval bureaus of the Navy Department are officers of the United States Navy, and a part of the naval establishment, viz : BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. The duties of the Bureau of Navigation comprise all that relates to the promulgation and enforcement of the Secretary’s orders to the fleet and to the officers of the Navy; the educa- tion of officers and men, including the Naval Academy and technical schools for officers (ex- cept the Torpedo School), the apprentice establishment and schools for the technical educa- tion of enlisted men; the enlistment and discharge of all enlisted persons, including ap- pointed petty officers for general and special service; controls all rendezvous and receiving ships, and provides transportation for all enlisted persons and appointed petty officers ; estab- lishes the complement of the crews of all vessels in commission; keeps the records of service of all squadrons, ships, officers, and men, and prepares the annual Naval Register for publica- tion; has under its direction the Hydrographic Office; the enforcement of the laws and au- thorized regulations, tactics, signal codes, and manuals of the service, and the uniform regu- lations; the collection of foreign surveys, publication of charts, sailing directions, and nautical - works, and the dissemination of nautical and hydrographical information to the Navy and mercantile marine. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. The duties of the Bureau of Yards and Docks comprise all that relates to the planning, con- struction, and maintenance of all docks (including dry-docks), slips, wharves, piers, quay walls, and buildings of all kinds, for whatever purpose needed, within the limits of the navy-yards, and of the Naval Home, but not of hospitals and magazines outside of those limits, nor of build- ings for which it does not estimate ; it repairs and furnishes all buildings, stores, and offices in the several navy-yards, and is charged with the purchase, sale, and transfer of all land and buildings connected with the navy-yards; has under its sole control the general administra- tion of the navy-yards; provides and has sole control of all landings, derricks, shears, cranes, sewers, dredging, railway tracks, cars, and wheels, trucks, grading, paving, walks, shade trees, inclosure walls and fences, ditching, reservoirs, cisterns, fire engines and apparatus, all watch- men, and all things necessary, including labor, for the cleaning of the yards and the protec- tion of the public property. BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT AND RECRUITING. The duties of the Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting comprise all that relates to the equip- ment of all vessels with rigging, sails, anchors, yeomen’s stores, furniture, not provided by other bureaus, navigation stores and supplies of all kinds, including nautical and navigating instruments and books, stationery, and blank books for commanding and navigating officers ashore and afloat, binnacles, flags, signal-lights, running lights, and standing lights on board vessels, including all electrical apparatus for lighting purposes and search lights, logs, leads, lines, and glasses, log- books, ships’ libraries, illuminating oil for all purposes, except that used in the engineer de- partment of steamers, and fuel for steamers, the rope-walks and the shops for making anchors and cables, rigging, sails, galleys, and cooking utensils, the Naval Observatory, Nautical Almanac, Compass Offices, and pilotage. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. The duties of the Bureau of Ordnance comprise all that relates to the manufacture or pur- chase of offensive and defensive arms and apparatus (including torpedoes), all ammunition, war explosives, vessels for submarine torpedo service, magazines on shore, and of all machinery, apparatus, equipment, and things for use with the above; the recommending the nature of the armament to be carried by vessels, and the material, kind, and qualities of ship’s armor and Department Duties. 209 dimensions of gun-turrets; charged with the carrying power of vessels, as determined by the Bureau of Construction and Repair, and fixes the location and command of the armament, and distributes the thickness of armor; places the armament on board of vessels, and determines . the method of construction of armories and ammunition rooms—the latter in conjunction with the Bureau of Construction and Repair; purchases torpedo-boats intended to be carried by ships, and has charge of all their details of whatever nature, and prescribes the armament to be given to all torpedo vessels. / BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. The duties of the Bureau of Construction and Repair comprise all that relates to designing, building, fitting, and repairing the hulls of vessels, spars, boats, capstans, windlasses, steering- gear, ventilating apparatus, tanks, ballast, casks, blocks, furniture for ship’s use of the kind made in the navy-yards, and lumber, plates, and tools for sea stores of the kind used by it in building vessels; also the turrets and armor plating, after the material, quality, and distribu- tion of thickness have been determined by the Bureau of Ordnance; has control of all ves- sels building and under repair, and is responsible that vessels in ordinary do not go to decay for want of proper examination on the part of constructors in the yards; and has charge of the docking of vessels. BUREAU OF STEAM-ENGINEERING. The duties of the Bureau of Steam-Engineering comprise all that relates to the designing, building, fitting out, repairing, and engineering of the steam machinery used for the propul- sion of naval vessels, and will also include steam-pumps, steam heaters and connections, and the steam machinery necessary for actuating the apparatus by which turrets are turned. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. The duties of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery comprise all thatrelates to laboratories, naval hospitals, and dispensaries, the furnishing of all supplies, medicines, and instruments required in the Medical Department of the Navy; has sole control of all buildings erected for its purposes, and determines upon and furnishes all the stores, etc., used in the medical and hospital departments, materials, instruments, means, and appliances of every kind used for its purposes, and controls their inspection, storing, transportation, and preparation; designs, erects, furnishes, and maintains all the buildings constructed for its purposes outside the limits of the navy-yards, and for which it may have estimated ; is charged with the purchase, sale and transfer of all land and buildings in connection therewith, and with the preservation of the public property under its control; designs the various buildings erected within navy-yards for its purposes so far only as their internal arrangements are concerned, and after their com- pletion has exclusive control of the same, and makes all contracts for and superintends all the work done under it. / BUREAU OF PROVISIONS AND CLOTHING. The duties of the Bureau of Provisions and Clothing comprise all that relates to supplying the Navy with provisions, clothing, small stores, fresh water, and contingent stores in the Pay- master’s Department; the reception, care, and custody of all stores not exempt by order from the general store-keeper’s system, and the keeping of a proper system of accounts regarding the same ; the purchase, at shore stations within the United States, of stores and supplies and their custody, transfer, and issue, upon authorized requisitions, except those of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, the Marine Corps, and those exempt by Regulation Circular No. 51. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL. It shall be the duty of the Judge-Advocate-General, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, to revise, report upon, and have recorded the proceedings of all courts-martial, courts of inquiry, and boards for the examination of officers for retirement and promotion in the naval service; to prepare the charges and specifications and the necessary orders con- vening general courts-martial in cases where such courts are ordered by the Secretary of the Navy; to prepare general orders promulgating the final action of the reviewing authority in general court-martial cases; to prepare the necessary orders convening courts of inquiry, boards for the examination of officers for promotion and retirement, and for the examination of candidates for appointment in the medical corps, and to conduct all official correspondence relating to courts-martial, courts of inquiry, and such boards; to examine and report upon claims of every description filed in the Department; to conduct the departmental correspond- ence relating to the business connected with the increase of the Navy, including the prepa- rition of advertisements inviting proposals for the construction of new vessels, or for furnish- ing materials for use in their construction; of forms of proposals to be used by bidders in offering to construct such vessels or furnish such materials, and forms of contracts to be en- tered into and bonds to be furnished by such bidders on the acceptance of their proposals, and including also the departmental correspondence relating to the plans, specifications, and materials of new vessels and to proposed changes in the same; to consider and report upon all matters which may be referred to him involving questions of law, regulations, and dis- 2D ED 14 210 Congressional Directory. cipline and requiring the Department’s action; the meaning or construction of the general : regulations of the Navy, including those relating to rank or precedence, or to appointments, commissions, promotions, and retirement, and to the validity of proceedings in courts-martial cases; to conduct the correspondence with the Attorney-General relative to questions of statu- tory construction submitted for his opinion thereon; to the institution of suits, at the instance of the Navy Department, and to the defense of suits brought by private parties against the officers or agents of the Department; to answer calls from the Department of Justice and the Court of Claims for information and papers relating to cases pending in that court and affect- ing the Navy Department; to examine and report upon the official bonds of pay officers, and all questions presented to the Department relating to pay and traveling expenses of officers; to attend to all correspondence relating to the care of naval prisons and prisoners, and to consider and act upon applications for the removal of the mark of desertion standing against the names of enlisted men of the Navy or Marine Corps. MARINE CORPS. The Commandant of the Marine Corps is responsible to the Secretary of the Navy for the general efficiency and discipline of the Corps; makes such distribution of officers and men for duty at the several shore stations as shall appear to him to be most advantageous for the interests of the service; furnishes guards for vessels of the Navy, according to the authorized scale of allowance; under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy issues orders for the movement of officers and troops, and such other orders and instructions for their guidance as may be necessary; and has charge and exercises general supervision and control of the recruit- ing service of the corps, and of the necessary expenses thereof, including the establishment of recruiting offices. / THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. The Secretary of the Interior is charged with the supervision of public business relating to patents for inventions; pension and bounty lands; the public lands and surveys; the In- dians ; education; railroads; the geological survey; the census; the Hot Springs Reserva- tion, Arkansas; Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, and the Sequoia Parks, California ; distribution of appropriations for agricultural and mechanical colleges in the States and Ter- ritories; the custody and distribution of certain public documents; and certain hospitals and eleemosynary institutions in the District of Columbia. He also exercises certain powers and duties in relation to the Territories of the United States. : THE FIRST ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. The First Assistant Secretary of the Interior considers appeals from the Commissioners of the General Land Office and Indian Affairs and from the administrative action of the Commis- sioner of Patents; examines charges against officials and employés; instructs Indian inspectors, commissions, and school superintendents, and supervises matters pertaining to the Indians generally; supervises business relating to distribution of certain public documents and from the Office of Education, and matters relating to the Government Hospital for the Insane, Columbia Institute for Deaf and Dumb, education of the blind and of feeble-minded children of the District of Columbia, Freedmen’s Hospital, Yellowstone National Park, and the Hot Springs in Arkansas, and acts as Secretary in the absence of that officer. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. The Assistant Secretary of the Interior considers appeals from the Commissioner of Pen- sions and questions relating to violations of pension laws; has general supervision of the business of the Boards of Pension Appeals; countersigns letters patent; examines official bonds and contracts as to their correctness; has the admission and disbarment from practice of at- torneys and agents, and acts as Secretary in the absence of both that officer and the First Assistant Secretary. THE CHIEF CLERK. The Chief Clerk has the general supervision of the clerks and employés; of the order of business, records, and correspondence of the Secretary’s Office; of all expenditures from ap- propriations for contingent expenses, stationery, and printing for the Department and bureaus; enforcement of the general regulations of the Department; also the superintendence of buildings occupied by the Interior Department. COMMISSIONER OF ‘PATENTS. The Commissioner of Patents is charged with the administration of the patent laws, and supervises all matters relating to the issue of letters patent for new and useful discoveries, / Department Duties. 211 “inventions, and improvements, and the registration of trade-marks and labels. He is aided by an Assistant Commissioner, Chief Clerk, three Examiners-in-Chief, an Examiner of In- terferences, and thirty-two Principal Examiners. COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS. The Commissioner of Pensions supervises the examination and adjudication of all claims arising under laws passed by Congress granting bounty land or pension on account of service in the Army or Navy during the Revolutionary War and all subsequent wars in which the United States has been engaged. He is aided by two Deputy Commissioners and the Chief Clerk of the Bureau, each of whom has supervision over business arising in divisions of the Bureau assigned, under order of the Commissioner, to his immediate charge. COMMISSIONER OF THE GENERAL LAND OFFICE. The Commissioner of Public Lands is charged with the survey, management, and sale of the public domain, and the issuing of titles therefor, whether derived from confirmations of grants made by former governments, by sales, donations, or grants for schools, railroads, mili- tary bounties, or public improvements. He is aided by an Assistant Commissioner and Chief Clerk. COMMISSIONER OF INDIAN AFFAIRS. The Commissioner of Indian Affairs has charge of the several tribes of Indians in the States and Territories. He issues instructions to, and receives reports from, agents, special agents, and school superintendents; superintends the purchase, transportation, and distribution of presents and annuities; and reports annually the relations of the Government with each tribe. He is aided by an Assistant Commissioner, who under the law also performs the duties of Chief Clerk. COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION. The duties of the Commissioner of Education are to collect such statistics and facts as shall show the condition and progress of education in the several States and Territories, and to diffuse such information respecting the organization and management of schools and school systems and methods of teaching as shall aid the people of the United States in the establish- ment and maintenance of efficient school systems, and otherwise promote the cause of educa- tion throughout the country. COMMISSIONER OF RAILROADS. The Commissioner of Railroads is charged with the duty of prescribing a system of reports to be rendered to him by the railroad companies whose roads are in whole or in part west, north, or south of the Missouri River, and to which the United States have granted any loan of credit or subsidy in bonds or lands; to examine the books and accounts of each of said rail- road companies once in each fiscal year, and at such other times as may be deemed by him necessary to determine the correctness of any report received from them; to assist the Govern- ment directors of any of said railway companies in all matters which come under their cogni- zance, whenever they may officially request such assistance; to see that the laws relating to said companies are enforced; to furnish such information to the several departments of the Government in regard to tariffs for freight and passengers and in regard to the accounts of said railroad companies as may be by them required, or, in the absence of any request therefor, as he may deem expedient for the interest of the Government; and to make an annual report to the Secretary of the Interior, on the 1st day of November, on the condition of each of said rail- road companies, their road, accounts, and affairs, for the fiscal year ending June 30 immedi- ately preceding. : DIRECTOR OF THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. The Director of the Geological Survey has charge of the classification of the public lands, and examination of the geological structure, mineral resources, and products of the national domain. SUPERINTENDENT OF THE CENSUS. The Superintendent of the Census supervises the taking of the census of the United States every tenth year, and the subsequent arrangement, compilation, and publication of the statistics collected. CENSUS OFFICE. In accordance with an act of Congress approved March 1, 1889, entitled “An act to pro- vide for taking the Eleventh and subsequent Censuses,” the Superintendent of the Census, under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, shall cause to be taken as of the date of June 1, 1890, a census of the population, wealth, and industry of each State and Territory, 212 Congressional Directory. and of the District of Columbia. He shallalso at the time of the general enumeration herein provided for, or prior thereto, as the Secretary of the Interior may determine, collect the sta- tistics of, and relating to, the recorded indebtedness of private corporations and individuals, and make report thereon to Congress; and he shall collect, from official sources, information relating to animals not on farms. The Superintendent shall, under the authority of the Sec- retary of the Interior, cause to be taken on a special schedule of inquiry the names, organi- zations, and length of service of those who have served in the Army, Navy, or Marine Corps of the United States in the war of the rebellion, and who are survivors at the time of said inquiry, and the widows of soldiers, sailors, or marines. The population schedule shall include an inquiry as to the number of negroes, mulattoes, quadroons, and octoroons. The Superintendent shall also collect and publish the statistics of the population, industries, and resources of the District of Alaska, with such fullness as he may deem expedient or practicable under the appropriations made, or to be made, for the expenses of the Eleventh Census. He may employ special agents, or other means, to make an enumeration of all Indians living within the jurisdiction of the United States, with such information as to their condition as may be obtainable, classifying them as to Indians taxed and Indians not taxed. He may also employ experts and special agents to investigate and ascertain the statistics of the manu- facturing, railroad, fishing, mining, cattle, and other industries of the country, and of tele- graph, express, transportation, and insurance companies as he may designate and require. The only volumes that shall be prepared and published in connection with the said Census shall relate to population and social statistics relating thereto, the products of manufactories, mining and agriculture, mortality and vital statistics, valuation and public indebtedness, re- corded indebtedness, and to statistics relating to railroad corporations, incorporated express, telegraph, and insurance companies, a list of the names, organizations, and length of service of surviving soldiers, sailors, and marines, and the widows of soldiers, sailors, and marines. THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. THE POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Postmaster-General has the direction and management of the Post-Office Department. He appoints all officers and employés of the Department, except the four Assistant Post- - masters-General, who are appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate; appoints all postmasters whose compensation does not exceed one thousand dollars; makes postal treaties with foreign Governments, by and with the advice and consent of the President, awards and executes contracts, and directs the management of the domestic and foreign mail service. : THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The First Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the following divisions, viz: Salary and Allowance Division.—The duty of readjusting the salaries of postmasters and the consideration of allowances for rent, fuel, lights, clerk hire, and other expenditures. Free Delivery.—The duty of preparing cases for the inauguration of the system in cities, the aj pointment of letter-carriers, and the general supervision of the system. Division of Post- Office Supplies.—The duty of sending out the blanks, wrapping-paper, twine, etter-balances, and canceling stamps to offices entitled to receive the same. The Money- Order Division.——Under the immediate direction of a Superintendent, who has supervision and control thereof, including the domestic money-order business and the postal- note business, and the superintendence of the international money-order correspondence with foreign countries, as well as the preparation of postal conventions for the exchange of money- orders therewith, and the conduct of correspondence relating to these subjects. The Examining Division receives in the first instance the money-order weekly state- ments of postmasters, and subjects the same to critical examination, that it may be ascertained whether they are in proper form, and whether the postmaster has promptly deposited, in accordance with regulation, the surplus money-order funds received by him. The Blank Division is charged with ordering from contractors supplies of blanks and blank books for the money-order business, of caring for the same, and of filling requi- sitions therefor from postmasters. The Duplicate Division disposes of applications for the issue of duplicate money-orders and postal notes, and all such duplieates are prepared therein, and, after being signed by the Superintendent, are transmitted to postmasters. The Division of Domestic Correspondence prepares replies to inquiries from postmasters and the public in cases involving construction of the postal laws and regulations relating to Department Duties. 213 the money-order business, and relating also to controversies between postmasters and the public as to the payment of money-orders or postal-notesiand to it is assigned the preparation of the annual list of post-offices to be established as money-order and postal- note offices. The Division of Drafts, Credits, and Transfers prepares for transmittal to postmasters, upon their application, blank drafts to supply them with funds for the payment of money-orders and letters of credit upon the postmaster at New York for the same purpose, and keeps a record thereof; it also records all transfers made for a similar purpose by the post- ma- ters from their postal funds to their money-order funds. The International Division conducts correspondence between postmasters and this office and between this office and foreign post-office departments, relating to international money-orders; it also issues duplicates of, and authorizes repayment of, international money orders. This division has charge, furthermore, of the payment, by bills of exchange procured for the purpose, of balances found due in the settlement of accounts of money-orders exchanged between the United States and foreign countries, and receives and duly disposes of bills of exchange transmitted from foreign countries in payment of balances due the United States on money-order account. Dead- Letter Office. —Under the immediate direction of the Superintendent, who is charged with the treatment of all unmailable and undelivered mail matter which is sent to it for disposition; the enforcement of the prompt sending of such matter according to regula- tions; the duty of noting and correcting errors of postmasters connected with the delivery or withholding of mail matter; the investigation, by correspondence, of complaints made with reference thereto; the verification and allowance of claims for credit by postmasters for postage- due stamps affixed to undelivered matter; the examination and forwarding or return of all letters which have failed of delivery; inspection and return to country of origin of undeliv- ered foreign matter; recording and restoration to owners of letters and parcels which contain valuable inclosures; care and disposition of all money, negotiable paper, and other valuable articles found in undelivered matter and correspondence, both foreign and domestic, relating to these subjects. Its clerical force is distributed into seven divisions, as follows: Opening Division, Unmail- able and Property Division, Money Division, Minor Division, Returning Division, Foreign Division, Inquiry Division. Correspondence Division.—To this division are referred all inquiries received from postmas- ters concerning the discharge of their duties; disputes regarding the delivery of mail matter ; inquiries relative to the construction of postal laws and regulations; and all correspondence of a miscellaneous character. THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL, The Second Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the transportation of all mails. His office embraces four divisions and two offices, viz* Contract Division prepares all advertisements inviting proposals for star, steamboat, and mail-messenger service, receives the proposals, prepares orders for the award of contracts, attends to the execution of contracts, prepares cases and orders for the establishment of new service or changes in existing service, attends to all correspondence relating thereto, and prepares statistics and reports of mail service required by law. Division of Inspection is charged with the examination of monthly and special reports of postmasters as to performance of mail service by contractors and carriers; the preparation of - cases and orders for deductiens for nonperformance of service and for the imposition of fines for delinquencies of contractors and carriers, of authorization for payment of railway postal clerks, of certifications of service to the Sixth Auditor, and the correspondence, relative to nonperformance of contract requirements for carrying the mails. Railway Adjustment Division prepares cases authorizing the transportation of mails by railroads, the establishment of railway postal-car service and changes in existing service; prepares orders and instructions for the weighing of mails, receives the returns and computes basis of pay therefrom; prepares cases for the adjustment of allowances to railroads for carry- ing the mails and for postal cars, and attends to all correspondence relating to these matters. Mail Equipment Division is charged with the preparation of advertisements inviting pro- posals for furnishing mail-bags, mail locks and keys, label cases, mail-bag-cord fasteners, and mail-bag catchers; the receipt of proposals and the preparation of contracts therefor, the issuing of such articles for the use of the service, the repairing of the same, the keeping of records and accounts and the preparation of all correspondence incident to these duties. Office of Railway Mail Service has charge of the railway-mail service and the railway post office clerks, prepares for the Second Assistant Postmaster-General cases for the appoint- ment, removal, promotion, and reduction of said clerks, conducts the correspondence, and issues the orders relative to moving the mails on railroad trains; has charge of the dispatch, distribution and separation of mail matter in railway post- office cars and the principal post offices, and conducts the weighing of mails when ordered. 214 Congressional Directory. Office of Foreign Mails has charge of all foreign postal arrangements (except those relating to the money-order system), including the preparation of postal conventions and the regula: tions for their execution, as well as the consideration of questions arising under them ; and conducts the correspondence relative thereto both with foreign Governments and private citi- zens. It also has the supervision of the ocean mail steamship service in all its details, includ- ing the settlement of the accounts with steamship companies for the conveyance of mails from the United States to foreign countries. : \ THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Third Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the Finance Office, etc., embracing the following four divisions: Division of Finance—The duty of issuing drafts and warrants in payment of balances re- ported by the Auditor to be due to mail contractors or other persons; the superintendence of the collection of revenue at depository and depositing offices, and the accounts between the Department and the Treasurer and Assistant Treasurers and special designated depositories of the United States. This division receives all accounts, monthly or quarterly, of the depos- itory offices, and certificates of deposit from depositing offices. Division of Postage-stamps and Stamped Envelopes.—The issuing of postage-stamps, stamped envelopes, newspaper wrappers, and postal cards; also the supplying of postmasters with en- velopes for their official use, including registered-package envelopes. Division of Registered Letters—The duty of preparing instructions for the guidance of post- masters relative to registered letters, and all correspondence connected therewith; also the compilation of statistics as to the transaction of the business. Division of Files, Mails, etc.—The duty of receiving, distributing, and indexing all papers coming into the office; of dispatching and recording all papers sent from the office, and of keeping and attending to the office files. The office of the Third Assistant Postmaster-General has als charge of the Special De- Livery System, and of all business relating to the rates of postage and the classification of mail matter, including the official entry of newspapers and periodicals. FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the Bureau including the Divisions of Appointments, Bonds, and Commissions, and of Post-Office Inspectors and Mail Depreda- tions. Division of Appointiments— The duty of preparing all cases for establishment, discontinuance, and change of name or site of post-offices, and for the appointment of all postmasters, and attending to all correspondence consequent thereto. Division of Bonds and Commissions.—The duty of receiving and recording appointments; sending out papers for postmasters and their assistants to qualify; receiving, entering, and filing their bonds and oaths; and issuing the commissions for postmasters. Division of Post Office Inspectors and Mail Depredations.—To this office is intrusted the general supervision of the work of ‘the Post-Office Inspectors; the consideration and adjust- ment of their accounts for salary and expenses. To it are referred all complaints of losses or irregularities in the mails, and all reported violations of the postal laws. THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL. The Attorney-General is the head of the Department of Justice, and the chief law officer of the Government. He represents the United States in matters involving legal questions; he gives his advice and opinion on questions of law when they are required by the President or by the heads of the other Executive Departments, on questions of law arising upon the ad- ministration of their respective Departments; he exercises a general superintendence and direction over United States Attorneys and Marshals in all judicial districts in the States and Territories ; and he provides special counsel for the United States whenever required by any Department of the Government. He is assisted by a Chief Clerk and other clerks and employés in the executive management of the business of the Department. A law Clerk, who is also an Examiner of Titles, assists the Attorney-General in the inves- tigation of legal questions and in the preparation of opinions. Department Duties. 21% THE SOLICITOR-GENERAL. The Solicitor-General assists the Attorney-General in the performance of his general duties, and by special provision of law in the case of a vacancy in the office of Attorney-General, or in his absence, exercises all these duties. Except when the Attorney-General otherwise directs, the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General conduct and argue all cases in the Supreme Court and in the Court of Claims in which the United States is interested; and, when the Attor- ney-General so directs, any such case in any court of the United States may be conducted and argued by the Solicitor-General ; and in the same way the Solicitor- General may be sent by the Attorney-General to attend to the interests of the United States in any State court or elsewhere. THE ASSISTANT ATTORNEYS-GENERAL. Four Assistant Attorneys-General assist the Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General in the performance of their duties. Two assist in the argument of causes in the Supreme Court and in the preparation of legal opinions; one is charged with the conduct of the defense of the United States in the Court of Claims, and has to assist him six assistant attorneys; the other is charged with the defense of the Indian depredation claims. Under the act of 1870 the different law officers of the Executive Departments exercise their functions under the supervision and control of the Attorney-General. They are: the Assust- ant Attorney-General for the Department of the interior ; the Assistant Attorney- General for the Post- Office Department ; the Solicitor of the Treasury; and the Solicitor of Internal Reve- nue, Treasury Department; and the Solicitor for the Department of State. THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. THE SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE. The Secretary of Agriculture is charged with the supervision of all public business relating to the agricultural industry. He appoints all the officers and employés of the Department, with the exception of the Assistant Secretary and the Chief of the Weather Bureau, who are ap- pointed by the President, and directs the management of all the divisions and sections and the bureaus embraced in the Department. He exercises advisory supervision over the agri- cultural experiment stations deriving support from the National Treasury, and has control of the quarantine stations for imported cattle, and of interstate quarantine rendered necessary by contagious cattle diseases. ASSISTANT SECRETARY. The Assistant Secretary performs such duties as may be required by law or prescribed by the Secretary. To his office has been assigned the control and direction of the scientific policy and operations of the following divisions and sections: The Botanical Division, the Division of Vegetable Pathology, the Pomological Division, the Microscopical Division, the Chemical Division, except the investigations and experiments in the manufacture of sugar from sorghum, the Ornithological Division, the Forestry Division, the Entomological Division, and the Office of Experiment Stations. All questions relating to the scientific operations and policy of the above-mentioned divisions, but involving questions of administrative policy, while primarily matters for the consideration of the Assistant Secre- tary, are submitted to the Secretary for his approval before final action is taken. The Chief of the Weather Bureau, under the direction of the Secretary of Agriculture, has charge of the forgcasting of weather; the issue of storm warnings; the display of weather and flood signals for the benefit of agriculture, commerce, and navigation; the gauging and report- ing of rivers; the maintenance and operation of seacoast telegraph lines, and the collection and transmission of marine intelligence for the benefit of commerce and navigation; the re- porting of temperature and rainfall conditions for the cotton interests; the display of frost and cold-wave signals; the distribution of meteorological information in the interests of agriculture and commerce, and the taking of such meteorological observations as may be necessary to establish and record the climatic conditions of the United States; or as are essential for the proper execution of the foregoing duties. The Bureau of Animal Industry makes investigations as to the existence of contagious pleuro-pneumonia and other dangerous communicable diseases of live stock, superintends the measures for their extirpation, makes original investigations as to the nature and preven- tion of such diseases, and reports on the condition and: means of improving the animal indus- tries of the country. It also has charge of the inspection of import and export animals, of the inspection of vessels for the transportation of export cattle, and of the quarantine stations for imported neat cattle; supervises the interstate movement of cattle, and inspects live stock and their products slaughtered for food consumption. ee ee rr ——— 216 Congressional Directory. The Statistician collects information as to the condition, prospects, and harvests of the principal crops, and of the numbers and status of farm animals, through a corps of county cor- respondents and the aid of a supplementary organization under the direction of State agents, and obtains similar information from European countries monthly through the Deputy Consul- General at London, assisted by consular, agricultural, and commercial authorities. He records, tabulates, and co-ordinates statistics of agricultural production, distribution, and consumption, the authorized data of governments, institutes, societies, boards of trade, and in- dividual experts; and writes, edits, and publishes a monthly bulletin for the use of editors and writers, and for the information of producers and consumers, and for their protection against combination and extortion in the handling of the products of agriculture. The Chemist makes analyses of natural fertilizers, vegetable products, and other materials which pertain to the interests of agriculture. Applications are constantly made from all por- tions of the country for the analysis of soils, minerals, liquids, and manures. The Office of Experiment Stations represents the Department in its relations to the agri- cultural experiment stations in the several States and Territories. Its object is to promote uniformity of methods in the work of the stations, and, in ‘general, to furnish to them such advice and assistance as will best promote the purposes of the act of Congress by which they were established. To this end, it indicates lines of inquiry, aids the stations in the conduct of co-operative experiments, helps to make available to them the processes and results of experimental inquiry in the United States and abroad, and compiles, edits, and publishes accounts of station investigations. The Entomologist obtains and disseminates information regarding insects injurious to vege- tation; investigates insects sent him in order to give appropriate remedies; conducts investi- gations of this character in different parts of the country; and mounts and arranges specimens for illustrative and museum purposes. The Ornithological Division investigates the economic relations of birds and mammals, and recommends measures for the preservation of beneficial and destruction of injurious species. The Division of Forestry is occupied with experiments, investigations, and reports dealing with the subject of forestry ; with the distribution of seeds of valuable economic trees; and with the dissemination of information upon forestry matters. The Botanist investigates plants and grasses of agricultural value or of injurious charac- ter, and answers inquiries relating to the same; also has charge of the Herbarium, receives botanical contributions and purchases for its improvement, and distributes duplicate speci- mens to agricultural colleges and educational institutions. The Pomologist collects and distributes information in regard to the pomological industry of the United States; investigates the habits and peculiar qualities of fruits, their adaptability to various soils and climates and conditions of culture; and introduces new and untried fruits from foreign countries. : The Division of Vegelable Pathology investigates the diseases of plants, such as the rusts, smuts, blights, rots, etc., and by experiment seeks to determine remedies for their mitigation and pevention. The Microscopist makes investigations mostly relating to parasitic growths, to the charac- teristics of fibers, and to the adulteration of foods. The Office of Fiber Investigations collects and disseminates information regarding the cul- tivation of textile plants, directs experiments in the culture of new and hitherto unused plants, and investigates the merits of new machines and processes for textile manufactures. The Office of Irrigation Inquiry is charged with investigations for the purpose of deter- mining the extent and availability for irrigation of certain underflow and artesian waters, and with the collection and publication of information as to the best methods oi cultivating the soil by irrigation. The Division of Records and Editing excercises general supervision of the Department printing; issues in the form of press notices official information of interest to agriculturists, and distributes to agricultural publications and writers synopses of Department publications. The Division of Illustration and Engraving comprises the artists and engravers engaged in preparing illustrations for the Department publications, and its chief is charged with general supervision of the illustration work. The Seed Division collects new and valuable seeds and plants for propagation in this coun- try, and distributes them to applicantsin all parts of the country, such applicants being required to furnish the Department with a report as to results obtained with seeds so furnished them. The Division of Gardens and Grounds is charged with the care and ornamentation of the park surrounding the Department buildings, and with the duties connected with the conserva- tories and gardens for testing and propagating exotic and economic plants. 5 | Department Duties. 21% \ THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. THE COMMISSIONER OF LABOR. A Bureau of Labor, connected with the Department of the Interior, was established by act of Congress approved June 27, 1884. By an act of Congress approved June 13, 1888, a De- partment of Labor was created, and the Bureau of Labor, with its officers and duties, trans- ferred to the Department of La bor. The Department is placed incharge of a Commissioner of Labor, who is directed to acquire and diffuse among the people of the United States useful information on subjects connected with labor in the most general and comprehensive sense of that word, and especially upon its relation to capital; the hours of labor; the earnings of laboring men and women; and the means of promoting their material, social, intellectual, and moral prosperity. He is also especially charged, in accordance with the general design and duties prescribed by the law, at as early a date as possible and whenever industrial changes shall make it essential, to asoer- tain the cost of producing articles, at the time dutiable in the United States, in leading countries where such articles are produced, by fully specified units of production, and under a classifica- tion showing the different elements of cost of such articles of production, includin ; wages paid in such industries, etc. It is also the duty of the Commissioner to ascertain and report as to the effect of the cus- toms laws upon the currency and on the agricultural industry, especially as to their effect on the mortgage indebtedness of farmers; what articles are controlled by trusts, or other combi- nations of capital, business operations, or of labor, and what effect such trusts, or other com- binations of capital, business operations, or of labor have on production and prices. The Commissioner is also to establish a system of reports, by which, at intervals of not less than two years, he can ascertain the general condition, so far as production is concerned, of the leading industries of the country. He is also especially charged to investigate the causes of, and facts relating to, all controversies and disputes between employers and employés as they may occur, and which may happen to interfere with the welfare of the people of the different States. He may obtain information upon the various subjects committed to him, and, as he may deem desirable, from different foreign countries. He is to make a report annually in writing to the President and Congress of the information collected and collated by him, and he is authorized to make special reports on particular subjects whenever required to do so by the President or either House of Congress, or when he shall think the subject in his charge requires it. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. This Commission, appointed under ¢“ An act to regulate commerce,” approved February 4, 1887, has authority to inquire into the management of the business of all common carriers who are subject to the provisions of the act. These are all which are “ engaged in the transpoii.- tion of passengers or property wholly by railroad, or partly by railroad and partly by water when both are used, under a common control, management, or arrangement, for a continuous carriage or shipment, from one State or Territory of the United States, or the District of Co- lumbia, to any other State or Territory of the United States, or the District of Columbia, or from any place in the United States to an adjacent foreign country, or from any place in the United States through a foreign country to any other place in the United States, and also in the transportation in like manner of property shipped from any place in the United States to a foreign country and carried from such place to a port of transshipment, or shipped from a foreign country to any place in the United States and carried to such place from a port of entry either in the United States or an adjacent foreign country.”” It has jurisdiction generally over rates on interstate traffic, to pass upon their reasonableness and justice, to decide ques- tions of unjust discrimination, and of undue preference, to prescribe the publicity to be given to joint tariffs, and to institute and carry on proceedings for the enforcement of the provisions of the law. It has power to call for reports; to require the attendance of witnesses and the pro- duction of books and papers; to hear complaints made against any such carrier of a violation of the act, and to determine what reparation shall be made to a party wronged; to institute in- quiries on its own motion or at the request of State Railroad Commissions, and to report thereon ; and it is required to make an annual report, which shall be transmitted to Congress. . It is also empowered in special cases to authorize any such common carrier to charge less for a longer distance than for a shorter over the same line, and to prescribe the extent to which the carrier may be relieved from the “long and short haul clause” of said act. The Commission also appoints a secretary and clerks, whose duties are not specifically defined by the act,’ Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CIVIL-SERVICE COMMISSION. The purpose of the civil-service act, as declared in its title, is “to regulate and improve the civil service of the United States.” It provides for the appointment of three Commissioners, a Chief Examiner, a Secretary, and other employés, and makes it the duty of the Commission to aid the President as he may request in preparing suitable rules for carrying the act into effect; to make regulations for and control the examinations provided for, and supervise and control the records of the same; and to make investigations and report upon all matters touching the enforcement and effect of the rules and regulations. The service classified under the act, and to which it and the rules apply, embraces the Ex- ecutive Departments at Washington, the Department of Labor, and the Civil-Service Commis- sion, the customs districts in each of which there are fifty or more employés, eleven in num- ber, the post-offices in each of which there are fifty or more employés, now fifty, the Railway Mail Service, and the Indian School Service, including altogether about thirty-four thousand places. ; : COURT OF CLAIMS. Jurisdiction.—This court was established by act of Congress, February 24, 1855 (10 Stat L., 612). It has general jurisdiction of all “claims founded upon the Constitution of the United States or any law of Congress, except for pensions, or upon any regulation of an Ex- ecutive Department, or upon any contract, expressed or implied, with the Government of the United States, or for damages, liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not sounding in tort, in - respect of which claims the party would be entitled to redress against the United States, either in a court of law, equity, or admiralty, if the United States were suable, except claims grow- ing out of the late civil war, and commonly known as war claims,” and certain rejected claims. It has jurisdiction also of claims of like character which may be referred to it by any Executive Department, involving disputed facts or controverted questions of law, where the amount in controversy exceeds $3,000, or where the decision will affect a class of cases or furnish a precedent for the future action of any Executive Department in the adjustment of a class of cases, or where any authority, right, privilege, or exemption is claimed or denied under the Constitution. In all the above mentioned cases the court, when it finds for the claim- ant, may enter judgment against the United States, payable out of the public treasury. An appeal, only upon questions of law, lies to the Supreme Court on the part of the defendants in all cases, and on the part of the claimants when the amount in controversy exceeds $3,000. The findings of fact by the Court of Claims are final and not subject to review by the Su- preme Court. By the act of March 3, 1883, chapter 116 (22 Stats. L., 485, also printed in full at the be- ginning of the 18th volume, Court of Claims Reports), called the “Bowman Act,” the head of an Executive Department may refer to the court any claim or matter’ pending in his Department involving controverted questions of fact or law. The court is required to find the facts and its conclusions of law and to report the same to the Department for its guidance and action. The same act authorizes either house of Congress, or any of its committees, to refer to the court any “claim or matter” involving the investigation and determination of facts, the court to find the facts and report the same to Congress for such action thereon as may there be determined. There 15 a statute of limitations which prevents parties from bringing actions on their own motion beyond six years after the cause of action accrued, but the Departments may refer claims at any time, if they were pending therein within the six years. The only limitation under the “Bowman Act” is that the court shall have no jurisdiction of any claim barred before the passage of the act by any then existing provision of law. By act of January 20, 1885 (23 Stat. L., 283), Congress gave to the court jurisdiction over ¢¢ claims to indemnity upon the French Government arising out of illegal captures, detentions, seizures, condemnations, and confiscations prior to the ratification of the convention between the United States and the French Republic, concluded on the 30th day of September, 1800.” The time of filing claims is limited to two years from the passage of the act, and all claims not presented within that time are forever barred. The court finds the facts and the law, and reportsthe same in each case to Congress. : By act of March 3, 1891, chapter 538 (26 Stat. L.; 851), the court is vested with jurisdic- tion of certain Indian depredation claims. There are five judges, who sit together in the hearing of cases, the concurrence of three of whom is necessary for the decision of any case. Zerm.—The court sits at Washington, D. C., in the Department of Justice building, 1509 Pennsylvania avenue, on the first Monday in December each year, and continues into the fol- lowing summer and until all cases ready for trial are disposed of. Cases may be commenced and entered at any time, whether the court be in session or not. ESET § Government Printing Office—Intercontinental Railway Commission. 219 THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. The Public Princer.—The Public Printer has charge of all business relating to the Public Printing and Binding. He appoints the officers and employés of the Government Printing Office, and purchases all necessary machinery and material. The Chief Clerk.—The Chief Clerk has general supervision of the clerks and clerical work of the office. He conducts the correspondence relating to public business, and performs such other duties as may be assigned to him by the Public Printer. The Foreman of Printing.—The Foreman of Printing has charge of all matter which is to be printed. His department consists of the following divisions: the Document, Job, Specifi- cation, Press, Folding, Stereotype, and Congressional Record rooms, as well as the various branch offices. The Foreman of Binding.—The Foreman of Binding has charge of the Bindery, in which division all work requiring binding, ruling, or marbling is executed. The binderies of the branch offices are under his supervision. BOARD ON GEOGRAPHIC NAMES. That uniform usage in regard to geographic nomenclature and orthography shall obtain throughout the Executive Departments of the Government, and particularly upon maps and charts issued by the various departments and bureaus, this board is constituted. To it shall be referred all unsettled questions concerning geographic names which arise in the Depart- ments, and the decisions of the board are to be accepted by the Departments as the standard authority in such matters. BUREAU OF AMERICAN REPUBLICS. The Bureau of the American Republics is, under the recommendation of the late Interna- tional American Conference, for the prompt collection and distribution of commercial infor- mation concerning the American Republics. It publishes translations of the tariffs of the countries of Latin America reduced to the United States equivalents; also Hand-Books to these countries containing the latest information respecting their resources, commerce, and general features. Replies are also furnished to inquiries in relation to the commercial and other affairs of the countries, and items of news giving recent laws of general interest, devel- opment of railways, agriculture, mines, manufactures, shipping, etc., are given daily to the press. INTERCONTINENTAL RAILWAY COMMISSION. The examination of the possible routes and preparation of reports on their length, cost, and advantages, together with the conduct of proper surveys for an intercontinental railway to connect the United States of America and the other Republics of the American Continent. 220 Congressional Directory, SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES, (In Capitol Building.) [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the § designates those whose daughters ac- company them; the || designates those having other ladies with then. ] * Mr. Chief-Justice Fuller, 1800 Massachusetts avenue, N. W, * || Mr. Justice Field, 21 First street, N. E. * ¢ || Mr. Justice Harlan, University Park, Fourteenth street, Extended. * Mr. Justice Gray, 1601 I street, N. W. *|| Mr. Justice Blatchford, 1432 K street, N. W. * ¢ Mr. Justice Lamar, 1412 Massachusetts avenue, N. W. * ¢ Mr. Justice Brewer, 1404 Massachusetts avenue, N. W, * Mr. Justice Brown, 1300 Seventeenth street, N. W, \ Retired. ¢¢ Mr. Justice Strong, 1411 H street, N. W. OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT. Clerk.—James H. McKenney, 1 523 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. Deputy Clerk.—Chas. B. Beall, 1626 Fifteenth street, N. W, Marshal.—]. M. Wright, 1738 M street, N. W, Reporter.—]. C. Bancroft Davis, 1621 H street, N. W, CIRCUIT COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES. First Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Gray, of Boston, Massachusetts. Districts of Maine New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island. Circuit Judge.—ILe Baron B. Colt, Bristol, Rhode Island. : Second Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Blatchford, of New York City. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut, Northern New York, Southern New York, and Eastern New York. Circuit Judges.—William J. Wallace, Syracuse, New York, and E, Henry Lacombe, New York City. Third Judicial Circuit.—(Vacant.) Districts of New Jersey, Eastern Pennsylvania, West- ern Pennsylvania, and Delaware. : Circuit Judge.—Marcus W. Acheson, Pittsburg, Pa. Lourth Judicial Circuit —Mr. Chief- Justice Fuller, of Chicago, Illinois. Districts of Mary- land, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Circuit Judge.—Hugh L. Bond, Baltimore, Maryland. Lofth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Lamar, of Oxford, Mississippi. Districts of North- ern Georgia, Southern Georgia, Northern F lorida, Southern F lorida, Northern Alabama, Mid- dle Alabama, Southern Alabama, Southern Mississippi, Eastern Louisiana, Western Louisiana, Northern Texas, Eastern Texas, and Western Texas. Circuit Judge.—Don A. Pardee, New Orleans, Louisiana. Sixth Judicial Circuit—Mr. Justice Brown, of Detroit, Michigan. Districts of Northern Ohio, Southern Ohio, Eastern Michigan, Western Michigan, Kentucky, Eastern T ennessee, Middle Tennessee, and Western Tennessee. Circuit Judge.—Howell Edmunds Jackson, Nashville, Tennessee. Seventh Judicial Circuit. —Mr. Justice Harlan, of Chicago, Illinois. Districts of Indiana, Northern Illinois, Southern Illinois, Eastern Wisconsin, and Western Wisconsin. Circuit Judge.— Walter Q. Gresham, Indianapolis, Indiana. Lighth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Brewer, of Leavenworth, Kansas. District of Min- nesota, Northern District of Towa, Southern District of Iowa, Eastern District of Missouri, Western District of Missouri, Eastern District of Arkansas, Western District of Arkansas, District of Nebraska, District of Colorado, and District of Kansas, and Territories of New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Utah. Circuit Judge.—Henry C. Caldwell, Little Rock, Arkansas. Ninth Judicial Circuit—Mr. Justice Field, of San F rancisco, California. Districts of Northern and Southern California, Oregon, and N evada, and Territories of Alaska and Arizona, Circuit Judge.—( Vacant.) VE Court of Claims— Corcoran Gallery of Art. 221 COURT OF CLAIMS. (1509 Pennsylvania avenue.) Chief-Justice William A. Richardson, 1739 H street, N. W. Judge Charles C. Nott, 826 Connecticut avenue. Judge Lawrence Weldon, Hamilton House. Judge John Davis, The Shoreham. One vacancy. Retired. Chief-Tustice Charles D. Drake, 1416 Twentieth street, N. W. Chief Clerk.—Archibald Hopkins, 1826 Massachusetts avenue, N. W, Assistant Clerk.—John Randolph, 28 I street, N. W. Bailiff —Stark B. Taylor, 485 H street, S. W. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. (Sun Building, 1317 F street, N. W.) [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the designates those whose daughters ac- company them; the | designates those having other ladies with them.] Commissioners.— Chairman. * William R. Morrison, of Illinois, Willard’s Hotel. * 9 Wheelock G. Veazey, of Vermont, The Cochran. * Martin A. Knapp, of New York, The Arno. James W. McDill, Ebbitt House. Secretary.—Edward A. Moseley, 1901 Q street, N. W. Auditor.—-C. Curtice McCain, The Randall. Statistician.— Henry C. Adams, The Woodmont. Docket Clerk. —Martin S. Decker, 1602 Nineteenth street, N. W, THE CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART. (Corner Seventeenth street and Pennsylvania avenue.) BOARD OF TRUSTEES. President. —James C. Welling, President of Columbian University, 1302 Connecticut avenue Vice- President.—Charles M. Matthews, 1403 Thirtieth street, West Washington. Secretary and Treasurer—Anthony Hyde, 1319 Thirtieth street, West Washington. Edward Clark, Architect of the United States Capitol, 417 Fourth street, N. W. : Samuel H. Kauffmann, 1421 Massachusetts avenue. Frederick B. McGuire, 1333 Connecticut avenue. Walter S. Cox, Associate Judge of the Supreme Court D. C., 1636 I street, N. W. Charles C. Glover, 20 Lafayette Square, Lexington place. Calderon Carlisle, 1722 I street, N. W, CURATOR. F. S. Barbarin, 3046 N street, West Washington. ’ N 222 Congressional Directory. FOREIGN LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES. [Those having ladies with them are marked with * for wife and § for daughter.] / ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Sefior Don Vicente G. Quesada, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1822 \ Jefferson Place. Sefior Don Roque Casal Carranza, First Secretary of Legation, The Arno. Sefiora Doifia Delia C. de Casal Carranza. Sefior Don Juan S. Attwell, Naval Attaché, 818 Eighteenth street. Office of the Legation, 1822 Jefferson Place. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Chevalier Schmit von Tavera, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1537 I | | ; | : street N. W., Mr. de Mezey, Counselor, 1708 H street. : L BELGIUM. Mr. Alfred Le Ghait, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1336 I street. * Count Gaston d’Arschot, Counselor of Legation, 1211 K street. * Baron Raoul de Vriére, Secretary of Legation. (Absent). Office of the Legation, 1336 I street. BRAZIL. #2 Senhor Salvador de Mendonga, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1761 Massachusetts avenue. Senhor Alfredo de M. Gomes Ferreira, Second Secretary, 1707 G street. Senhor Mario de Mendonca, Second Secretary, 1761 Massachusetts avenue. Office of the Legation, 1761 Massachusetts avenue. CHILE. *Sefior Don Pedro Montt, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1329 M street. Sefior Anibal Cruz, First Secretary of Legation, 1329 M street. Sefior Guillermo Amunétegui, Second Secretary of Legation, 1329 M street. CHINA. : 4 * Mr. Tsui Kwo Yin, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Dupont Circle. Mr. Pung Kwang Yu, First Secretary of Legation, Dupont Circle. * Mr. Wang Hung Ting, Secretary, Dupont Circle. Mr. Ho Shen Chee, Translator and Attaché, Dupont Circle. Mr. Yung Kwai, Translator and Attaché, Dupont Circle. Mr. Ling Shen Cheng, Student Translator and Attaché, Dupont Circle. Mr. Yaw Fung Chi, Attaché, Dupont Circle. Mr. Ho Chen Shing, Attaché, Dupont Circle, Mr. Ting Mung Shung, Dupont Circle. COLOMBIA. *Sefior Don José Marcelino Hurtado, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1903 N street. ; : Sefior Don Julio Rengifo, Secretary of Legation, 1807 H street. Sefior Don J. Vincente Serrano, Attaché. (Absent.) Office of the Legation, 1903 N street. COSTA RICA. ¥Sefior Don Joaquin Barnardo Calvo, Chargé d’ Affaires, ad interim, 1616 Nineteenth st. Office of the Legation, 1616 Nineteenth street. DENMARK. * Count W. de Sponneck, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2 Towa Circle, FRANCE. Mr. J. Patendtre, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1400 Massachusetts avenue. / Mr. Paul Desprez, Counselor, 1010 Connecticut avenue. | * Maurice J. Depret, Third Secretary, 729 Eighteenth street. The Diplomatic Corps. 223 Mr. André Aude, Attaché, 1807 H street. * Maj. Lottin, Military Attaché, 1021 Vermont avenue. Mr. Jules Beeufvé, Chancellor, 81 3 Fifteenth street. Office of Legation, 1400 Massachusetts avenue. : GERMANY. Mr. A. von Mumm Sctwatiension, Secretary of Legation and Chargé d’Affaires, 734 Fifteenth street N. W. Lieut. Heese, Attaché, 734 Fifteenth street. * Mr. Von Mutzenbecher, Attaché, 734 Fifteenth street. Mr. P. W. Biiddecke, Chancellor of Legation, 110 I street N. W. Mz. C. von der Weth, Assistant Chancellor, 530 Twentieth street N. W. GREAT BRITAIN, *23 Sir Julian Pauncefote, G. C. M.. G., K. C. B., Envoy Extraordinary a Minister Pleni- potentiary, British Legation. * The Hon. Henry G. Edwardes, First Secretary of Legation, British Legation. (Absent.) * Hon. Michael H. Herbert, Second Secretary of Legation, 1228 Connecticut avenue. Hon. Alan Johnstone, Second Secretary. Mr. Cecil A. Spring Rice, Second Secretary. Mr. Edmund Fraser, Third Secretary. Capt. William H. May, R. N., Naval Attaché. Capt. Gerald C. Langley, R. N., Second Naval Attaché. GUATEMALA. Sefior Don Antonio Baters, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, The Arling- ton, HAITI. Mr. Hannibal Price, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 101 Pearl street, New York City. Mr. John Hurst, Secretary of Legation. HAWAII '% Mr. J. Mott Smith, Special Envoy and Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim, 101 Newbury street, Boston. ITALY. * Baron de Fava, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Marquis Imperiali di Francavilla, Secretary of Legation, Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim, 1015 Connecticut avenue. Mr. Georges Levi, Attaché. (Absent.) * KOREA. %* Mr. Pak Chung Yang, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. ~ (Absent.) *¥Mr. Ye Cha Yun, Secretary of Legation and Chargé d’ Affaires, ad interim, 1500 Thir- teenth street. : JAPAN, * Mr. Gozo Tateno, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1310 N street. Mr. -—, Secretary of Legation, 1310 N street. Mz. Durham White Stevens, Counselor of Legation, 1416 N street. * Mr. Shiro Akabane, Counselor of Legation, 1416 N street. \ Lieut. S. Nakamura, I. J. N., Naval Attaché, 1342 Vermont avenue. Mr. Eki Ilioki, Attaché, 1300 Vermont avenue. Mr. K. Nakayama, Chancellor, 1310 N street. MEXICO. ¥ Sefior Don Matias Romero, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1413 I st. * Sefior Don Cayetano Romero, First Secretary of Legation, 12 E. Lafayette avenue, Bal- timore, Md. * Sefior Don Miguel Covarrubias, Second Secretary, 1307 Connecticut avenue. Sefior Don Enrique Santibafiez, Second Secretary, The Hamilton. Sefior Don Edmundo J. Plaza, Third Secretary, 1807 H street, N. W. Sefior Don Ramon G. Pacheco, Third Secretary. (Absent.) *Sefior Don Antonio Leon Grajeda, Third Secretary, 1623 Thirty-fifth street. Sefior Don José Romero, Attaché, 1413 I street. NETHERLANDS. Mr. G. de Weckherlin, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1013 Fifteenth street. 224 Congressional Directory. NICARAGUA. *Gefior Don Horacio Guzman, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1623 Massachusetts avenue. *Sefior Don Roman Mayorga, Secretary of Legation, 1837 Corcoran street. PERU. * Dr. Don Pedro A. del Solar, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) * Dr. Don J. M. Yrigoyen, Secretary of Legation, 1839 Corcoran street. Sefior Don Manuel Elguera, Attaché and Chargé &’Affaires ad interim, 1839 Corcoran street N. W. Office of the Legation, 1839 Corcoran street. PORTUGAL. Senhor Thomaz de Souza Roza, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. RUSSIA. Mr. Chades de Struve, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. - (Absent.) Mr. Alexander Greger, First Secretary of Legation and Chargé d’Affaires ad interim, 1705 K street. Mr. P. Botkine, Second Secretary. (Absent.) SALVADOR. Dr. Manuel L. Morales, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, The Arlington. Sefior Federico Mora, Secretary of Legation, The Arlington. Sefior Mariano Pinto, Attaché, The Arlington. SPAIN. Sefior Don Miguel Suarez Guanes, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Ab- sent. *2 id Don José Felipe Sagrario, First Secretary of Legation and Chargé d’Affaires ad interim, 1431 Q street. Sefior Don Augustine G. del Compillo, Second Secretary, The Richmond. Sefior Don Manuel Multedo, Third Secretary, The Richmond. Sefior Don Rodrigo de Saavedra, Attaché, The Richmond. Sefior Don Pérez Seoane, Attaché, The Richmond. * Captain Sefior Don Manuel del Carre, Military Attaché, 1219 I street. SWEDEN AND NORWAY. Mr... A.W. I. Grip, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2011 0% street. Baron H. J. Beck-Friis, Secretary of Legation, 806 Eighteenth street. SWITZERLAND. Mr. A. de Claparéde, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1761 Q street. Major Karl Kloss, Secretary of Legation, 1449 Corcoran street. Dr. Albert Georg, Attaché. TURKEY. Mavroyeni Bey, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1015 Connecticut ave. ¥Migirditch Effendi Norighian, First Secretary of Legation, 1631 Q street. VENEZUELA. * Sefior Don Nicanor Bolet Peraza, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1754 M street. * Senior Don Leopoldo Terrero, First Secretary of Legation, 1754 M street. *Sefior N. Bolet-Monagas, Second Secretary of Legation, 1754 M street. *Sefior Don Carlos C. Bolet, Attaché, 1754 M street. UNITED STATES LEGATIONS, ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. John R. G. Pitkin, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Buenos Ayres. George W. Fishback, Secretary of Legation, Buenos Ayres. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Frederick D. Grant, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Vienna. John J. Chew, Secretary of Legation, Vienna. | L N United States Legations. 22% BELGIUM. Edwin H. Terrell, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Brussels. BOLIVIA. Thomas H. Anderson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, La Paz. BRAZIL. Edwin H. Conger, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Rio de Janeiro. , Secretary of Legation, Rio de Janeiro. CHILE. Patrick Egan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Santiago. Fenton R. McCreery, Secretary of Legation, Santiago. CHINA. Charles Denby, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Peking. Howard Martin, Secretary of Legation, Peking. Charles Denby, jr., Second Secretary, Peking. Fleming D. Cheshire, Interpreter, Peking. COLOMBIA, John T. Abbott, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Bogot4. Jeremiah Coughlin, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Bogota. KOREA. Augustine Heard, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Sedul. H. N. Allen, Secretary of Legation, Sedul. Hong Woo Kwan, Interpreter, Sedul. Kim Kyeng Ha, Interpreter, Seoul. COSTA RICA. Richard Cutts Shannon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (See Nicaragua.) DENMARK. Clark E. Carr, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Copenhagen. ‘FRANCE. Whitelaw Reid, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Paris. Henry Vignaud, Secretary of Legation, Paris. Augustus Jay, Second Secretary of Legation, Paris. GERMAN EMPIRE, ~ William Walter Phelps, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Berlin. Chapman Coleman, Secretary of Legation, Berlin, John B. Jackson, Second Secretary of Legation, Berlin. GREAT BRITAIN, Robert T. Lincoln, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, London. Henry White, Secretary of Legation, London. Larz Anderson, Second Secretary of Legation, London. : GREECE. A. Loudon Snowden, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Athens. GUATEMALA. Romualdo Pacheco, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Guatemala City. Samuel Kimberly, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Guatemala City. HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. John L. Stevens, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Honolulu. ! HAITI. John S. Durham, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Port au Prince; also Chargé d’ Affaires to Santo Domingo. HONDURAS. Romualdo Pacheco, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, (See Guatemala.) ITALY. A. G. Porter, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Rome. H. Remsen Whitehouse, Secretary of Legation, Rome. 2D ED 15 EE EES 226 - Congressional Directory. JAPAN. , Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Tokyo. : Edwin Dun, Secretary of Legation and Chargé d’Affaires ad interim, Tokyo. Wm. R. Gardiner, jr., Second Secretary of Legation, Tokyo. Willis N. Whitney, Interpreter, Tokyo. LIBERIA. ————— — Minister Resident and Consul-General, Monrovia. * MEXICO. Thomas Ryan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Mexico. Charles A. Dougherty, Secretary of Legation, Mexico. THE NETHERLANDS. Samuel R. Thayer, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, The Hague. NICARAGUA. Richard Cutts Shannon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Managua. ‘PARAGUAY AND URUGUAY. George Maney, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Montevideo, Uruguay. PERSIA. | Truxtun Beale, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Teheran. PERU. John Hicks, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Lima. Richard R. Neill, Secretary of Legation, Lima. PORTUGAL. George S. Batcheller, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Lisbon. ' ROUMANIA. A. Loudon Snowden, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Athens; also Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Greece and Servia. RUSSIA. Charles Emory Smith, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, St. Petersburg. George W. Wurts, Secretary of Legation, St. Petersburg. SALVADOR. Richard Cutts Shannon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (See Nicaragua.) SANTO DOMINGO. John S. Durham, Chargé d’ Affaires, Santo Domingo. (See Haiti.) / SERVIA. A. Loudon Snowden, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (See Greece.) SIAM. Sempronius H. Boyd, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Bangkok. SPAIN. E. Burd Grubb, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Madrid. Harrie R. Newberry, Secretary of Legation, Madrid. SWEDEN AND NORWAY. W. W. Thomas, jr., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Stockholm. SWITZERLAND. John D. Washburn, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Berne. TURKEY. Solomon Hirsch, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Constantinople. Francis MacNutt, Secretary of Legation, Constantinople. A. A. Gargiulo, Interpreter, Constantinople. VENEZUELA. Wm. L. Scruggs, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Caracas. Richard M. Bartleman, Secretary of Legation, Caracas. | be 8 CONSULATES-GENERAL, CONSULATES, Consuls and Consulates. 227 - Commercial Agencies, Consular Agencies, and Consular Clerks, ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED. [Corrected to January 2s, 189a.] Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Aarau, Switzerland oo... Aberdeen. Seafland oon allo Abo, Finland’. oa. Aenjutle, Salvador. 0. nooo Lo fcapulen, Mexico, Jb .oa. laud Adra Stioes Swaine coor ie on Asuadilla, Puerto Rico. or oon Aix la Chapelle, Cerna Sige Sri te Ayah Bengal 02 cont Co Soul Albony, Australia... ogionoooiog Alberton, Prince Edward Island _____ Albert Town, West Indies... _ Aleppo, Syria... ia. aiiiaiilo Alexandretta, Syria... Alexandria, Boypl ....cucivavineiana Algiers, Algeria, Afvica.. 1 __._ | ROR CRE Alcomn, Onlario. 0... viinnn Alicante; Spain, ius. Conn. ER ie ee eR TE Almeria Malaga, Spain.......... ._.. Amapala, Honduras. .............. Ambernthurg, Ontario lobo Sie Ancona, Waly cor oo. bas Andakabe, Madagascar_____________ Amoers, France... cou. donaw Anguilla, West Indies... cea. Amnsbers, Germany... 0... c..... Annapolis, Nova Scotia.............e..... Antigonish, Nova Scotia on... Antioua, West Indies... Co... .. Aracaju, Brazil... niin Archangel, Rusia .......covaecanaa- Arecibo, Puerto Rico Arendal, Norway. ....eunicnneds Avthabaska, Quebec... ooo anvn.e Assioot, Eoypt on uiivvaronninas Assouan, Egypt = Remigius Sauerlaender___ Andrew Murray Victor Forseline Charles A. Murphy ___.__ Joseph A. Jones’... Dwight Moore... RamonMedina. ._....... Augustus Ganslandt Charles Weare... William Haywood _____._ David R. Cameron’... Frank R. Dymes Albert Glidden... Howard H. Farrington Frederic Poche Jom EL. Give =... Herman FE. Fischer Theodore Kohncke ______ Jomes W. Hine ........... ILO MTBlorey........... Edward Bedloe ______.__._ Wager Rey. ooondiinann Daniel B. Hubbard Harry J. Nason JoecobM, Owen _......... Rupert Cunningham Richard Herbst SH. Haine: = =. Frederick Von Wrede ____ Harold M. Sewall William Blacklock John J. Ball, jr Christian Eyde N.Poitras.- 0 Bestanros W. Khayat ____ Abdel K. M. El Ammari__ Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Acting consular agent. Acting consul. Consular agent. Do. Consular agent. Do, ; Consul, Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Asuncion, Paraguay... Edmund Shaw... Consul. RR STC Ss Eben M. Flage 0... Vice-consul. Athens, Greece. oo oun osnnats Irving. J. Manait ......... Consul. AE RR Le Arthur C. McDowall _____ Vice-consul. Athlone, Ireland... civ oat. John Burgess... _...... Consular agent. Auckland, New Zealand.............. John O. Connolly. = ..._.. Consul. HU el Len ET Leonard A. Dachelder....... Vice-consul. Aucshburg, Germany... __-.___ CG. Oberndorl Consular agent. Anx'Cayes, Hail iL... u..00 0.0 Henry E. Robertson______ Do. Azua, Santo Domingo ____ John Hardy o.oo Do. Bagdad, Turkey o_o... oon. Tohm'E- Haynes 0.0. ¢ Consul. Bahia, Bragil ~'c tos ao ne William O. Thomas______ Do. D0. ii i Res SS. Schindler... J. Vice-consul, Bahia de Caraquez, Ecuador ________ Edward Thos. Goddard.__| Consular agent. Ballymena, Ireland... i... .._. George Ballentine... Do. Bamberg, Germany' oc. oo. Hush SclLecaréd. Commercial agent. Bangkok, Siam: 000 oh SAL. Boyd ol a Consul-general. 1B Es BE DE R-MBoyd _.... Vice-consul-general. Baracoa, Cube... oll. ocidaol od William B. Dickey... __ Commercial agent. De. i Seis Frank N..Gomez Vice-commercial agent Barbadoes, WestIndies. _ = oi Edward A. Dimmick_ ____ Consul. TEE REL, RL PRIN CL So An Vice and deputy consul Barcelona, Spain... 0... ela Herbert W:' Bowen... Consul. 153 Sale RA Cel M. Cassacemag oo 0 Vice-consul. Barcelona, Venezuela... 5 ol YonaciooH. Balz oo Consular agent. Baxi, ftaly 0. i ar Joseph: Blein o.oo Do. Barmen, Germany... .........% Adolph G. Studer... _.: Consul. Do. dsb dnd le nade Frank Hessenburch______ Vice and deputy consul, Do Charles Krueger Deputy consul. Barnsley, England __ 0. J... Barranquilla, Colombia Do Barrington, Nova Scotia Basle, Switzerland Bastia, France Batavia, Java Batoum, Russia Beirut, fe Belovade, Servin . __0 ola 00 Belize, British Honduras Doss eT Beni-Souef, Egypt Bergen, Norway _ Berne, Switzerland ________________ Bilbao, Spain et = a Robert C. Maddison Johnson Nickens George D. Ellis Arthur McGray George Gifford... August Kauffmann Charles Gairdner Simon Damiani Henry C. Goddard Edward Hickson... James C. Chambers Erhard Bissinger Samuel G. Ruby Ralph ©. Ruby... Alfred MacClure John BE. Muivie. ........ ‘Samuel H. Deneen William N. Ponton E. L. G. Milson Masrallah Lucca Pred. G. Gade 0. i Johan C.Isdahl, jr........ Wm. Hayden Edwards___ George H. Murphy William K. Sullivan James B. Heyl TE: Himnen 0 Angel Urraza . Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice- consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Do. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice commercial agent. | Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice and deputy consul Do. Consular agent. Consuls and Consulates. 229 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Bloemfontein, Otance Free State _._. Bluefields, Nicaragua... cmmem=- Bocas del Toro, Colombia phe me rT Bogota, Colombia____._ PL cs Le Bologna, finaly Loto eee en mi Boma, Kongo: State... __...o..o- Bombay, Indigis sada Bonacea, Honduras... cceioie- Buen Ayre, West Indies... eo Bone, Aca it. hn et Bordeaux, France... eoeem—~ Boulogne-sur-mer, France ___________ Bradford 'England Cnn Por doe lis oo iiiaganid Brake and Nordenhamm, Germany___ Brava, Cape Verde Islands. ...........- Bremen, Germany... nmol Brest, Tyance Sil oss Bridgewater, Nova Scotia__..o————_ Brighton; England... cee canoe Brisbane, New South Wales_________ Bristol, England AUBRE NE Broom, Susteias ool dd. deo Brunswick, Germany... -eecane- Bucaramauga, Colombia ____________ Bucharest, Roumania, 2. i... Buenos Ayres, Argentine Republic___ EEE SI eR AR ee IR Bushive, Persia co it oem Butaritari, Gilbert Islands ______..___ Cadiz, Spain. 1 i men nn {ln i eR Re Cagliari, Italy. 0 Lene mie Cairo, Evpt...~ a Re a Calais, a LO eS Sa SR a Calcutta, Bengal, India... __...... Do Camargo Mexico il cm nvm mm mei Campbellton, Nu Bo. smn Campeachy, Mexico... oc. crane Campobello Island, N. B Cannes, France Canton, China John Jarrett © o....cs Frederick M. Burton____. E.R. Landgraf:_ os... Louis Bamberger... - Jeremiah Coughilin_ _____. William G. Boshell Carlo Gardind ooo R. Dorsey Mohan”. .____. Henry Ballantine... ..... Henry Ballantine, jr William Bayly LC Boye. i... lation, FlieG. F.LeCoat ..._... Horace G. Knowles John A. Fibbits _.. _.._. Thomas IL. Renton Wilhelm Clemens JJ Nuves. Hugo M. Starkloff Leopold Strube. JohnH, Schnabel... Joseph E. Hayden ...._.. William H. Musselman _ __ A. Pitel Charles H. Turner Lorin A. Lathrop Frank Morris James BF. Ellis. il. ue. Edward A. Buckman Gustavus Schoeller_______ L. Austin Spalding W.G. Spalding... i. George W. Roosevelt ____ Gregory Phelan... _.. ChatlesKeller » .._. William G. Boxshall Edwardi1.. Baker _______ Edward L. Baker, jr T. G. Malcolm A. J. Bensusan Alphonse: Dol. oo... John A. Anderson Louis B. Grant J. P. Vendroux Samuel Mermll o______. Samuel Merrill, jr John C. Morong A. J. Daugherty Jom Byrne. Lanes Juliand.acaze . _.."...... Charles Murray Gasper Trueba John J. Alexander ______. Theo. D. Valcourt... Chas. Seymour John G. Kerr Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Deo. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Agent and con. gen. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Congressional Directory. 230 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Cape Coast Castle, Liberia... George E. Eminsang _____ Consular agent. Cape'Haitien, Haiti... 0. i Stanislas Goutier_________ Consul. HRs RT ee ie a Se Ss CLAN Ree Vice-consul. Cape Town, Afpica oo oi oil. George B. Hollis... Consul. 0a. i ee are te eB James W. Atwell... Vice-consul. Caracas,"Venezunela' __ . ........... CharlesiR. Rohl... __.. Consular agent. Cardenas, Cuba... ..-. ll Sydenham P.C. Henriques.| Commercial agent. | SL SS en TR Julius B. Flamel............ Vice-commercial agent. Cardiff, Wales... : ~~... Walter E. Howard ______ Consul. 00 oe aE en LST William B. Levie......... Vice and deputy consul. Carleton Place, Ontario... .-.-_oLC. James Fowler... ... Consular agent. Carlisle, Eneland Lo. va J. Hewetson Brown______ Do. Camara, Maly. ls. oben. in Ulisse Boecacel. 2: . Do. Corll; Spain. 22 Leva rain LonlsPont . 0-0. Do. Carthagena, Colombia... ......... ClwyionT: Croft... ._. Consul. Por il ead Adolphus Lecompte______ Vice-consul. Carthaoens, Spain oa 00. (0 C.Molima ovat Consul. Po, Ja civ en fo gic to i AlbertoMelina_.._... _. Vice-consul. Carapano, Venezuela... Joan A. Orsini So... Consular agent. Casa-Blanca, Morocco......oceon 2 JomiCobb.. .. i. . Do. Caszel, Germany 0 ...... .ul CC Raiht eile Do. Costellammare, {aly __............ Alfred M. Wood... _. Commercial agent. Blois Sora ate eas Nestore Calvano ......... Vice-commercial agent. Catania, Tally... or. canna 0 Charles Heath... ___. Consul. Bn sieend co Dal Eat Augustus Peratoner ______ Vice and deputy consul. Candry, France... coco. ti. 8 Hans Dietiker.. o> Consular agent. Cayenne, French Guiana... .. Leon Wacongne. .......... Consul. Lana Ls en SR ER ee Cl ES a Te Se Vice-consul. Ceara, Bragil. oo. oii) William H. Murdock _____ Consular agent. Cebu, Philippine Islands cca... G.E. AiCadell, Do. Ceiba, Honduras,» ol cic. 205! S.Toegu 1. Lior 0 Do. Cerrode Pasco, Peru... .ci cu. C0 MJ) C.-McNulty. Do. Cette, Yianee ie viol oe L.SNamens ~~ | Do. Ceylon, Todia.._ coats. William Morey... >. Consul. Le Ce ae SE Walter B. Paterson .____. Vice-consul. Champerico, Guatemala ____._______ Florentine Souza... _... Consular agent. Charleroi, Belginm__._..... c.....} Charles Vander-Elst______ Do. Charlottetown, P. B-T -____ ii 2: Isaac Colall Consul. 1B SR Sa ER i a Join T. Crockett. ...... Vice and deputy consul, ChathomaOntario vo... William H. H. Webster __| Commercial agent. |G PN ER RR I a William L. Tackoberry___| Vice-commercial agent. Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland _______ Henri Rieckel 1. Consular agent. CheF¥oo, China. i... 0 W.Roboller Vice-consul. Chemnitz, Germany... .. ............ Yenry B Merritt... Consul. DOL a0 Ls Ge amir die Frederick B. Tuttle ______ Vice and deputy consul BR Se i Arthur Beyreuther _.__ Deputy consul. Cherbourg, France ...\..... cui. ii. Emil-Postel 0 Consular agent. Chiclayo, Peru... .... oii... Alfred Soll 0 Do. Chiwohua,; Mexico. 0... oue bic bay, vp Consul. BE SI a William Heimke __.... Vice-consul. Chin Kiang, China. _ co... Alexander C. Jones... ___: Consul. a AR ie LS LE) PR Vice-consul. Chitagong' India... culmea i C.M. Somerville... _. Consular agent. Christ Church, No Z _ ol id AlbertiCuff!. ~~ 1 Do. Christiania, Norway oJ Gerhard Gade... Consul. oli lie ST Oh Lawritz’ PF. Brown_.._.._._ Vice-consul. Cliristiansand, Norway____.________| Ferdinand Reinhardt _____ Consular agent.. Cienfuegos, Cuba... coi. i) Henry A. Ehninger _____. Consul. HI RES SR Juan B. Carbo... —_-| Vice-consul. Ciudad Bolivar, Venezuela. _____..___ Peter Scandella ____ Consul. {IR CEE eee CP UNS sR RT de A ie Co Vice-consul. Ciudad Porfirio Diaz, Mexico ______. Samuel M. Simmons _____ Consular agent. Civita Vecchia, Italy... _... __.- @. Marsaniek.. . .0... Do. Clarenceville, Quebet......ciudv nex Edmund Macomber____._. Do. —————— ETT —— Consuls and Consulates. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Clifton, Ontario... eC : | Tae A Ree 0 Clinton; Ontario i cue nee os Coaticook, Quebec. =... oeewm Dg ahicdas Sido Ch Coatzacoalcos, Mexico; ce Cobourg, Ontario________ in Je Coburg, Germany... nce Cockburn Harbor, West Indies ESE Copnoe, Prange... oo ite. Collo, Algeria, Africa 4 2 _ ____.:.. Cologne, Germany... _.-coios €ookshire, Quebec &___ 0. __S..... Capen: Dempark. Too Coqitimbe, Chill. + cues Corcubion, Spain... i. onan Cordoba, Argentine Republic________ Corinto, Bi Aan Re Cork (Queenstown), Ireland _________ D Corn Island, Nicaragua... =... __.:.. Cornwall, Ontavier =i. nuncio Cornwallis, Nova Scotia ..vcemas- Coro, Venezuela: .... .... =. Corunna, Spain. ao aoe Coteau /Oueblec du Lo. Courtwright, Ontaxio. i... Crefeld, Germany... coca an Cronstad,; Russia. = an Cucata, Colombia. ao... ool Cumana, Venezuela...‘ Curacao, West Indies .............__.. Pamascus, Syria... eae al Dantzie, Germany... —-_- uo Dardanelles, Turkey on... Dastmenth, England... o_o. Deloraine, Manitoba. . ven S22 Demerara, British Guiana __.________ Derby, England... 20 PDeseronto, Ontario... one lok Desterro, Brazil: ones Henryl. Amold_-.._. Edward Tuthill. = A. OQ Pothison cia. Alfred W. Street = = _. Miles K. Stone... = _>__. Frank W. Carpenter. ___. Gideon M. Clark... Tail Hesgron ooo ao LL John W. Pate... William S. Preston... __ Maurice Ordonnaud ______ Mavius Byme ___- =... = William -D. Wamer _. ____ Howe Allen Maxwell ___ Hermen Préfontaine ____._ Charles Macdonell _______ William E.Sims —.__-..: Tracy Robinson ©... BD: Manton. oan. Manuel Caballero______... William BB. Hess. William Albert... Charles:Co Bailey... ...... Clare. Catron Henry B. Ryder. -_ Olof Hangen_ co oJ. William:C. Tripler. .- _- H. Villanueya =... T- Woodley... coc. Henry Palazio ._"k. ___ Jom Julialt .- co nor James W: Scott ©. oon. EW. Randi. - Josiah L. Senfor. eho, José: de Carricarte........ Eduarto de Carricarte ____ Oliver Parrent . Frederick W. Baby______ Bvans Blake =... WilliamA. Blake: - =... Peter Vigins _..__-._ = c Christian A Maller... José G. N. Romberg .__... T.eonard B..Smith._.. Yocob Wauister. = ____. 5 N.Meshaka. 0.0. "= Philipp Albrecht ~~. Prank Calvert, =... _. George Hingston... __ AlbértM. Herron. .....-. Philip. Carroll. = ___..c James Thomson .___....- Arthur C. Walthall ______ Oscar Malmros. 2. ._ 2... Ambrose Bordehore______ Charles Kirk Eddowes ___ Charles A. Miiliner ______ Roberts Grant... a... ic. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice and deputy com mercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consular agent. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent, Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. : Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank: Dieppe, France. Loot 0 Bighy, Nova Scotia’... 0. Dio, France. o.oo) Dominica, West Indies... _._._ Dover, England.” | oni 07 Dresden, Germany Oronthelils Norwas oo. ee Dublin, Ireland Dunedin New Zealand Dunfermline, Scotland Dyrefjord, Tecland. «cua co Bast London, Africa _.....°. Eibenstock, Germany Elsinore, Denmark Emerson, Manitoba, Ensenada, Mexico... = Esmeraldas, Ecuador Essen, Germany... asi. 00 Fajardo, PortoRice. ..... 0... Falmouth, England Yarvo, Portugal... o.. _. oop Fayal, Azores. Tol une Do Ferol, Spaity 0... oo Fiume, Austria Florence, lialy Flushing, Netherlands! ____.__ Fogo, Cape Verde Islands Fort Erie, Ontario F amy Quebec Freemantle, Australia Freiburg, Germany Frontera, Mexico Fuchau, China *Do ne = Raoulle Bourgeois _______ William B. Stewart Lucien Bargy oo 24l William Stedman tn thn William Knoop coe =o 00 Hernando de Soto Claus Berg =~. =o Alexander J. Reid = © Stephen M. Mackenzie ___ Wilbur A. Reid Arthur B. Wood... William McIntyre Wenry Driver. ooo 0 James D. Reid James Penman... oJ Benjamin; Morel... Norman E. B. Munro John S. McCaughan A. C. McCaughan D. J. Partello Harpy J. Nason. = io Regner L. Ulstrup Duncan McArthur Fritz Asthorver, jr _______ John V. Lopez Howard Fox Jacintho M. da Silveira Nicasio Perez James Verner Long______ Spirito Bernardi... James McKay, jr PeferSmith__ 1... J. B. V. Vasconcellos _____ Ossian Bedell. Jini Henry I. Iabat coi; Frank H. Mason Alvesto S. Hogue = 05 William F. Moore S. H. L. Whittier Augustus Barney _____.___ William Sandover Felix S. S. Johnson Michael Girard Harry W. Churchill Jom. Healey mo or William J. G. Reid Hiram J. Dunlap F. J. Hirschman Consular agent. Do. Do. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Vice- consul. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent, Do. Consul, Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Deo. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. 1 Consuls and Consulates. 233 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Galt, Ontarie,: . oisivy ee Ganpnogue, Quebec. 0-0. 1 Garita Gonzales, Mexico... __ ._ Gavrucha,; Spain... Gaspt Basin, Quebec... a. D Geestemunde, Germany ....._..._.. Geneva, Switzerland... ~~ Genoa, Italy _____ ier SN ela EE Sa NIA Georgetown, Prince Edward Island __ Gera, Germany, > To 0 Ghent, Belgium =n 00 5 LT ae a A el ei aie Gibara, Cobar 0 Ey pe Gibraltar, Spain... Do Gijon, Spain, nT pe Gioja Tally: © ipicy Li al Giveenti; Taly - 0 0 0 Givgheh, Eogpt oo 02 v2 Glasgow, Scotland. tii IT Se Se GR LEI te RR eS Sa Glanchaw, Germany. p02 700 Glowcester, England _o0.. Goderich, Ontario =... r ° Gondives, Wait oo Gonée-Dakay, Afries. ... .. ._ - @Gothenbery, Sweden i. 0 © Dos i ad Ere Governors Harbor, West Indies______ Gracies, Azores: = oF Toa Cranada, Spam 0 li Ty Grand Canary, Canary Islands_______ Grand Manan, New Brunswick ______ Grae, Spat oa or Greenock, Scotlands 0. ie Green Turtle Cay, West Indies ______ Grenada, West Indies... = Grenokle Byanee ois vii 00 Grenville, Quebec Gretna, BN. A. 0 oo Guadalajara, Mexicot Guadaloupe, West Indies We vo a Guanajuato, Mexico Guantaname,’Cuba o> Guatemala, Central America Guayama, Porto Rico Guayaquil, Ecuador Do ee a Beer he Guben, Germany Guelph, Ontario Do Et EL LE Richard 1ees _. .. Milton P. Townshend ____ Enviqne:Calvet Almar EF. Dickson =. _ JohnCarier. © ~~" Gerhard Thider Roland J. Hammick _____ Peter Naylor... James Fletcher... Frederico Scermi_..._..__... A.J. MacDonald... Charles Neuer’. "V.. - © JohmB. Osborwe George Verhalst ~~. José Homobono Beola____ Horatio]. Sprague. . ~~. Calisto Alvargonzalez ____ L.Giffonle.. Maynard D. Brown ______ Sidney P. Townshend ____ Charles E. Portlock - Robert S. Chilton. William Campbell _______ Pthéart Dupuy. _ Peter Strickland "= Rene D.Potin. «=. ~° Charles Hl. Shepard. __ Urban Xowper- 0 ~~ Jost de C. C.- Mello _____ Peter’ A. Mesa = Jomes A Tove __ 0 1" Jabez Al owe | ~~ Pl. Dean 0... Sebastian Basso __.._ ._ Fredk. A. Newton _______ Charles Bartlett Dwight Furness. Frederick F. Morris Samuel Kimberly John R. Chandler J.C. McCormick =~". William B. Sorsby Martin Reinberg Alex. Willard Wilhelm Kempe_________ Loton S. Hunt Acting commercial ag’t. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Commercial agent. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent, Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Guernsey, Great Britain ____________ Maia, Surin. orl in Halifax, Nova Scola... Bar a ¥anover, Germany =... Havana, Cuba =. 0 aad Hemmingford, Quebec... Hereford, Quebec... ..___ Hinchinbrook, Quebee .._.__ i: ___.. Hilo) Hawniian'Islands .____._.._.. Hobart, Tasmania. _...... _.L Hochelaga and Longueuil, Quebec __ William Carey...........-- Gottlieb Schumacher _____ Wakeheld G. Frye. ___.._. JomesKing oc. ll. Charles. FE. Johnson __>___ Charles H. Burke David H- Burke... __ William Monaghan ______ Charles M. Belknap______ Henry W. Andrews George Fl. Murphy _____ Ramon O. Williams ___. __ Joseph A. Springer ______ A.S. Dolz John RB. Nichols ___.-_ Samuel E. Ames Charles Furneaux Alex. G. Webster Hodeida, Avabla -c Cc: .... us W. FE McComas... Holyhead, England... _....... Jom Jonas. 0... 0 Co Honda, Colombia. - .... eo Hemyy Hallam... Honfleur, France. _.. i... Henry M-Hordy.. Hongkong, China... .. -:cceueee Oliver H. Simons... Beatie] James W. Walker_______. Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands ________ Henry W. Severance_____ gs ern ne odo Athie W, Richardson @ Horgen, Switzerland ___ cena lyellT. Adams. _._. OL a William Strenli IDET dee lle Sd he 1 Emanuel Meyer... Huddersfield, England _..___._______ William P. Smyth ._____. : Po rf To rea wn David]. Bailey © Huelva, Spain coc. oi cece jommB. Catlin __-._.__._ Hull, England neo caer oie msie ep cn mann go mec mm Be real Sver Soderbergh... ..... TR Sr EL 0 Byron G. Daniels __..__.. Huntingdon, Quebec... ...owee-.y Cassius H. Wells ________ Iloilo, Philippine Islands ___________ Ralph D. Wilson... Tmataca Veneznela, - o.oo eens nD Iquique,Chile.___._ 3... Joseph W. Merriam __..___ Bo. or Maximo Rosenstock ._____ Jremel, Haith oc eas Jean Vital... Jafina, Ceylon, Indin. cavemen William M. S. Twynam__ _ Jaluit, Marshall Islands________._..__ E.M-Morzon'.. Jeremie, Balti oC. Co. -.iceaa 1.. Treband Rowzier... TJeres de la Frontera, Spain_________. James A. Hall __- Jersey, Great Britain... cen nanmun PhilipAhier. _.... _____. Jerusalem, Syria... . ... oc vn view mins Selah Merrill... Pot. Herbert BE. Clark... Kahului, Hawaiian Islands _________ August Frederic Hopke___ Kalamata, Greece... 3... D. A. Pantasopolous _ .._. Kanagawa, Japan... cv..- W.D. Tillotson: .....- 1 hr er Se GS SNA George H. Scidmore _____ {OE nl ee Sy Jom Melean. i... _ Korachi; India clo. nat James Currie... Reh, Germany. _...c.ooi 0. 0 Edmund Johnson ________ Des oy, ah Theodore Kruger... Kempt, Nova Scotia .cccneunmmnn-m- John G. Burgess......... Consular agent. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. consul-gen. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Deputy consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice and deputy con, gen. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent, Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. consul-gen, Deputy consul-general, Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent a a SE— Consuls and Consulates. 235 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Kidderminster, England ____________ Kiel, Germony 21. cuimmecs ons Kimberly, Africa... oo. oo ilo Kingston, Ontavio 5 o_o .....- Kirkcaldy, Scotland... cic camsnas Konigsberg, Germany _.---.occeen. Ta Colle; Ouebee. ooo iio Laguayra, Venezuela -. c.count Laguna de Terminos, Mexico________ La Libertad, San Salvador ____ ______ Lanzarotte, Canary Islands __________ 1a Paz, Mexico ti) oc caiaie as Y.araiche, Morocco... ..cane aan = Launceston, Tasmania ________ rennin Teicester, England: _._.._. o_o Leipsic, Germany oo co onnna Lethbridge, Manitoba. ....... ooo = Nevnka M0 ol. cin lel Lille, France ou lv oo nonin ld Limerick, Ireland = = oo. ca’ Limoges, France’ ©. ioc cone Lindsay, Ontarior conan tad Lineborough, Quebec... oo. Lisbon, Portugal 0. oo 80 D Liverpool, Nova Scotia... cece m0 Livingston, Guatemala ________.____ Llanelly, Wales... ... on. ooo. 10 Ere Se SEE SR fie Londonderry, Ireland. cco Lorenzo Marquez, Africa... ......- L Orient; France .. 2.nueivvanos Lubeck, Germany. .......couadins Jomes: Moston. _ oi... August Santor] ....o. oii] Gardner Williams... Marshall H. Twitchell. ___ Mathew H. Folger....... William R. Estes ............ Richard W. Bayley ______ Thomas Wildes... T.S.llaynes. . o.oo PhilipC. Hanna... Thomas D. Golding______ WH. Bell o.oo. I. TC Topham... 225 James Viosca _____ SAE James Viosca, jr... --. Elias Benatuil.. .c.... Lindsay Tulloch ..._-.... JohnB. Comtade.. .... ~~ FrancisiH. Wigfall _.__.. Williom- Ward... Emilio Masi... S.S. Parividge. ..._._... Henry W. Diederich... Frederick Nachod _______ Wallace Bruce. .........= Hueh C. Peacock... . Thomas Carry... oie Andrews A. St. John_____ William’. Bruce... James R. Danforth_______ A Mullender .__... John Gross... nth C.D. Gregoire. ._....ciw Richard Hogan... Walter T..Griftn.-.......... Auguste Jouhannaud._____ Foamy P.DIll__._.- tt .. George A-Robexts___.__._t George 1. Batcheller __ ___ J.B. Wilbor, oo Thomas H. Sherman_____ William. Sulis..._....... JC. Sherman. ......co-x James N. S. Marshall _____ Jolin T. Anderson ....... William Howell. ........ Jon C-. New... Francis W. Frigout _._.__. E.J Moat... ...... Hiram: Z. Leonard _...__. Charles W. Davis. ......... P.LaRodger. ve cis James McIntosh _________ Edouard Broni............ Jacob: Meyer, jr... Lucerne, Switzerland c. cvnnucae Ernest Williams_ _______. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Viceand deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. = Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consular agent. Deo. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. ; Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consular agent. Deo. Do. Do. Do. Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Lunenburg, Nova Scotia... ............. Lungen Schwalbach, Germany Lurgan, Ireland Tuzor,Boypt. Livi iain tadote Lyons, France — Macassar, Celebes Mageio, Brazilian oo has Macoris, San Domingo Madras, British India Madrid, Spain_..(_.__.L...... ~ Magdalen Islands, Canada Mahukona, Hawaiian Islands Majonga, Madagascar Malaga, Spain Malmo, Sweden. ~~" "77 Malta, Malta Island Mensos, Beall Managua, Nicaragua Ol i a a Manchester, England Do Mansourah, Boypt.. Manta, Ecuador_.____ RT Manzanillo. Cubai 2 i in Maracaibo, Venezuela ~ Maranham, Brazil Masala, lealy. oo 0 © Marseilles, France Mazagan, Morocco Mazatlan, Mexico McAdam Junction, New Brunswick ___ Medellin, Colombia Megantic, Fr RE Melbourne, Australia... Daniel M. Owen Ernest Grebert _________._ Frederick W. Magahan___ Aly Mourad... i Edmund B. Fairfield “Ignacio F, Hernandes____ Robert J. Leslie Robert Weichsel, jr Charles IL. Wight Frank Haypvey. Thomas M. Newson Thomas R. Geary... Peter M.. Flensburg John Worthington Joseph F. Balbi James Baird _\. ._.. William Newell ..__ | H. E. Low Emest J. Brideford ILeonard Darbyshire Alexander R. Webb John F. Winter ._________ Carl Funck Eugene H, Plumacher Eduard Beekman William Volger = L. F. da S. Santos George Rayson... = Charles B. Trail Alfred B. Keevil SimonH. David... _. Lonis.S. Maguire... Archibald Mackirdy John B. Richardson John F. Valls... ~~ John'G. Waste ©... _ Elias H. Cheney Henty Heidegger... Daniel D. Sargent Alfred Cristy James II. Smith... _ Rudolph Kraussé Daniel Madden William IL. Zuber James W. Green Henry W. Albro oo ___. George H, Wallace Consular agent. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Commercial agent. Do. Vice-commercial agent, Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. ‘Consular agent, Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul-general, Consuls and Consulates. 237 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Mentone, France... __. ioe Merida, Mexico 2. ool coi nay Mersine, Syriod.. oo Sie Messina, Tally. oo 20 ane 0 -nnn Mier, Mexico... amee aiid utd Milan Waly: ana D Milazzo, Ttaly © 0... ooo Milford Haven, Wales... Milk River, Jamaica, West Indies____ Mirasomne,#laiti = co. Mogador, Morocco... omnia Mollendo, Pergo. woes oye Monaco, Brance "i coon Moncton, New Brunswick __________ Monganui, New Zealand ____________ Monrovia, Liberia J. iv nie oa Monte Christe, San Domingo _______ Montego Bay, Jamaica, West Indies __ Monterey, Mexico... loi Montevideo, Uni Stes RELA MR I _— Afiica Munich, Germany Mytilene, Tuskey 0 ool) Warasalsy flapan 0. oo ion Naguabo, Poller Nanaimo, British Columbia Napatfiee,Ontario______._.......... Naples, Ttaly o.oo ee Neustadt, wil a Nevis, West Indies or eis ' Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England Thomas W. Stanford .____ Tomes TE-Bush. o.oo. AvceCleriey on. oo Edward H. Thompson____ Jom M. Gilkey... a ReBrushi-....... Richard Guenther ....... William M. Edgar_______ PE Pminer: oui Henry Vizeayo loin George W. Pepper. Anthony Richman _______ Pietro Siracusa oii Henry'Relway oz AA Green _. James S. Benedict .______ George McSweeney ______ Robert Wyles o-oo William D. McCoy Beverly Y. Payne A. S. Grullon Ellsworth J. Wiggins Frank D-H nie Thomas W. Howard __ ___ Charles L. Knapp Patrick Gorman W. Augustus Schofield ___ George I. Bradfield J. E. Orr Ar HE) Mice M. M. Fottion Henvy Stout. o-oo; Antonio Roig. -- 0 io W. DB: Denmison- 2. 0. Hermel de S. Dupin Hiram D. Bennett. = William Templeton Jon's. Twells = Robt. O’N. Wickersham __ Philip'S: Twells-oo ra Thomas J. McLain, jr Henry R. Saunders, jr Lyle Nelson oo. «200 S. Kaufmann... 00 Charles H. Simmonds ____ Horace W. Metcalf Francis J. Radford George T. Baggs Henry E. Stokes Robert R. Call Vice-consul-general. Deputy consul-general. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice consul-general. Deputy consul-general. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy Soll, Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Commercial agent. Vice and dep.com. agent. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agent, Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Do. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial ageni. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul. 238 Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. New Chwang, China... = _.__ Frederick Bandinel _______ Vice and deputy consul. Newport, Wales. cal wioioo oo William E. Heard... Consular agent. Nice, France. una tio Jovi on William H. Bradley______ Consul. Vlad medal PR Ue a Alexander Vial. __-._ Vice-consul. Ningpo, Chingl sain iar ooo Shi Johm Powler =. oc. o_ Consul. IHL ee A SRR OS i SI le Vice-consul. Nogales, Mexico fue. ian inves Delos. Smith... ._.. Consul. DO in ant we LE Josiah E. Stone... ..... Vice-consul. Norfolk Island, New South Wales____| Isaac Robinson_________. Consular agent. Noingham, England nei aula Joni. MeKim._ _ . _..- Commercial agent. Dori oo. on. op edie William T. Cartwright____| Vice-commercial agent. Nouméa, New Caledonia _._________ L..leMescam: | _...... Do. Nuevitas, Cuba. ol Cv. ool n. Richmed Gibbs. ........ Consular agent. Nuevo Laredo; Mexico... .......ccmcuae. Warner P. Sutton... -~- Consul-general. REE SR I RS TL SRE Ci ey Vice-consul-general. | BE Ge eR RE Ca Charles A. Andrus__...__ Deputy consul-general. Nuremberg, Germany... i... William}. Black... .. Consul. ia LE Re S. Dunkelsbithler __\..... Vice and deputy consul. Ocos, Guatemala... Jamew Shield oc. oi... Consular agent. Odessa, i SE Na ER Thomas E. Heenan ______ Consul. Asi RT ee Se John H. Volkmann_______| Vice-consul. Old Wateiond England i plein Christian Nielson.._____. Consular agent. Oporto, Portugal. ot cool William Stuve..........cwee Do. Orchilla Island, Venezuela... .... DR Barrell uc icin Do. Orotava, Canary Islands. oo alc = Peter S. Reld. oo oi oo. Do. Oran, Algeria Africa. 0. ooo Benjamin A. Courcelle _ Deo. Orillia, Omarion 1. ou ino iaien cn Charles Carbould .____ i Do. Osaka and Hioge, Japan... i. Enoch J. Smithers... _. Consul. | RO URS Hunter: Sharp... Vice-consul. Dor. i ds eaiec ns George F. Smithers ______ Deputy consul. Oshawa, Ontario... chico uc wionis W.D. Sterricke. ....c.... Consular agent. Ottawa, Oniario vu... iene Richard G. 1 ay ........... Consul-general. ) Be Ea Re Badward ing . eau mne Vice and dep. con, gen. Owen Sound, Ontario__ John R.Fayleor. 0... Consular agent. Padang, Sumatra. nue imma Alfred H. Rilbracht Wes Vice-consul. Pago Pago, Samoa..o. cen odoin Paita, Peru Palma Majorca, Spain Panama, Colombia Paris, Ontario Paris, France Boo vain ess, Borda ro smi ie ang Parrsborough, Nova Scotia Paso del Norte, Mexico Paspebiac, Quebec Patras, Greece Paysandu, Uruguay Penang, India oil iia Perigueax, France. cc... Li Penanbues: Brazil ne ODD 0 om HD 2 pn en wn John F: Hopkins. __.._._ Horace C: Pagh........... C. G. Lagana Ernesto Canut Jose G. Duque... cc... Jomes:M. Ayers. _..... F.B.da$S. Aguiar... .... William Wyndham Henry B. Belknap... Adam E. King... ...... Robert M. Hooper............. Edward P. McLean NH. Upham _........ Archibald J. Sampson____ William B. McLachlen ___ J. Morris Post... __._.. J::G Hufnagle.............. Frederick Lederer _______ mo mp = = On nn Edward P. T. Hammond _ Youis Gerster... .. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen, Deputy consul-general. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. go eo - Consuls and Consulales. 239 Consular offices. ~ Consular officers. Rank. Peterborough, Ontario... - - cee oe Petit Gogve, Haitv oo CL. ooo Picton; Ontario: wo ban oan cd Pictou, Nom Scotian: ioater nn Piura, Pera =n der bo SS go uin oy Plaven, Germany oy fot -co x Allon V.R. Young... BE. Merantle .. - oo. Jacob T. Barranger ______ Alonzo Spencer... John R. Noonan... ._.. Fugene O. Fechét ___... .. Samuel M. Simmons _____ Arthur C. McDowall _____ Emilio Clark... oo oil: rls SER LS scar Goitschalle _ .____._. Plymouth, England. _.o.. .ccnenin.. Thomas W. Fox_._...... yr De Cl RR a De a To Te Point Arena, Costa Rica (cocci... Point de: Galle, India . =... ...... Point Teeviioi il seb aa ennmate Porice; Porto: Ricoto iota. on nus Port Antonio, Jamaica, West Indies__ Port Arthur, Manitoba so... Portau Prince, Haiti... ho Portde Paix, Haiti ooo oe Loo. Port of Marbella, Spain _:.. ___=__=. Port Elizabeth, South Africa ____.____ Port Hawkesbury and Mulgrave, N. S_ Port:llope, Ontario... oof. soso Dot toh de tian ini Port Joggins, Nova Scotia__________ Port'Limon, Costar Rica: “=... ... Port Louis, Mauritius _ _-. - ©... Port Mahon, Spain... .. 0 Port Maria, West Indies 0... Port Marant, West Indies! . ._.. i... ‘Port Natal, South Africa: a. oc... Porto. Alegre, Brazil o_o... Port Rowan, Ontario. co... Port Said, Boypt ne asiaco is Port St: Mary's, Spain. oo... Port Sarin, Ontario. oor. o.oo. Do Portsmouth, England . ol o.oo. Portsmouth, West Indies. _....5...5. Port Stanley, Falkland Islands 3 BRE A Se A RC Potton, Quebec Prague, Austria mm mn mn ne mt 2 ef nn ne ve Pugwash and “Wallace, ‘Nova Scotia__ Quebec, Canada RW. Preston... co c= George A. Davis... Andrew M. Wylie ______. Jom S. Durham... _-. Jor B. Temes -_-_.. Theodore Behrmann _____ Miguel Calzado. ._- = John A. Chabaud ._....... Alexander Bain __.__.__. Norton McGiffin_________ Henry White... William Moffat ____.______ W. KK. Uncles = -...L.0n Thomas T. Prentiss ______ A. Povah Ambrose__.__... LlLyonai) onion Lorenzo D. Baker, jr... W.S. Hollis or. iL... TE Marphy. Ciao Rs Broadbent! i... George M. Daniels_.._..... Samuel. Pace, .... no Jom Chester conta John Main. io) ooo. AlexanderRiviete. ...... Henry:'S. Lasar.....c.cunn Thomas Rowell _____...__ Ferdinand A. Husher ____ Willlam H. King _......... Juliug'S. Dorman ___._._.. William A. Rublee Emil Kubinzky . «...... George R. Wright _____:. Jornss Buckly Willlam G. Riley ._...... William H. Volkmar _____ William‘E. Alger.......... Thomas Simpson_.__..____ Washington Lithgow. ____ Conrad W. Morris... Frederick W. Ryder ____. Robert McD. Stocking ___ Edward A. Hansen W. G. Reddie Consular agent. Do. Do. Cousul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Deo. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Deo. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consular agent. Deo. Do. Do. Commercial agent. Viceand dep. com. agent. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Deo. Do. Do. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent, Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Deo. Consul. Vice-consul. . Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. * San Felin de Guixols, Spain ‘ 240 : Congressional Directory. Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Redditch, England = 00 (o_o 00 Reichenberg, Austria Bo a sa LOT Rennes, France Russia Richibaco, N.B Riga, Russia oo 0 ooo ood Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Rio Hacha, Colombia... ... Ritzebiittel and Cuxhaven, Germany __ Rodi, Unly. oo bbc clans Rome, Italy Rostoff and Taganrog, Russia Rotterdam, Netherlands Sal, Cape Verde Islands Salonica, Turkey... flo loo Salt Cay, West Indies Saltillo, Mexico on. ou Samana, Santo Domingo Bos tel aii. va Samavang, Javai Lor. a Samsoun, Turkey. luc. ooo San Benito, Mexico San Blas, Mexico San José, Costa Rica_ Si San José and Cape St. Lucas, Mexico. San Jos¢ de Guatemala... ._. San Juan de los Remedios, Cuba Ee San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua San i Puerto Rico H. C. Browning John B. Hawes Fritz Wagner... _.....0. Charles D. Huret E. von Glehn Alton Augier,. io... Jacob Getsmar i... George V. McInerney ___ Niels P. A. Bornholdt____ Oliver H. Dockery Claudius Dockery Charles Negley, __.._._.. William August Preller _ T. V. Henriquez J. G. F. Starcke TL. del Giudice i... Augustus O. Bourn Charles M. Wood Charles’ Bistrapi.. o_o = Willis E. Baker... i...» Augustus M. Barnes Jom Martin... Walter E. Gardner Ay Motte ___.____ Charles P. Williams Henry C. Powell Wm. C. Burchard... Philip S. Burchard Henry Stephenson Joh Russid_ o_o 00 Daniel M. Mullen _______ Francisco P. Machado Jean M. Villain... A.J. A. Kleeblad Henri Hoelzer F. A. Quinby James W. Stephens J. A. Lallemant. 0. Campbell L. Maxwell William A. Read José'Sibills: Cl ooonlo Beckford Mackey Harrison N. Rudd. ______ Abraham Puy Robert H. May James H. Springer S. C. Braida R:P.Haydon | .o-i... Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Consul-general. Viceand dep. consul-gen. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. consul-gen. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and depiity consul. Consular agent. Vice commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent, Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, James P. Turnbull _____.. Consular-agent. Consuls and Consulates. : 241 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. San Pedro Sula, Honduras_________. SwRemo, aly =. oa Santa Cruz, Cuba... or Santa Cruz Point, Mexico _____....__ Santa Craz, West Indies ©... c= Santa-Martha, Colombia... ....> SenSalvadeor oe San Sebastion, Spain... one. Samionder, SPAIN i Do SL te i Le TA Lhe Lo ERR Santos, Brazile os. cr cane ry DO on ap Sault St. Marie, Onfario co“ L _ Savannah la Mar, West Indies. _..___. Scarboro, West Indies SE Scheidam, Netherlands -.__..__.._ Scilly Islands, England. ........... Seoulilkores. oil inoue nas aE ae he SEE Seville, Spall. . Stans intra Setubal, Portugal... ._o.. Shanghat, China _ cov ennnun. nk Da Shelburne, Nova Scotia... =. Sherbrocke,Quebec..._. = Simonstown, South Africa __________ Singapore, Straits Settlements _______ | DER maRRa el a Sivas, Tarkey 7 0. ol, Smyrna, aarkey Loo | IES a ae Sohag, Foypt . ........ .: Yemeni Semneberg, Germany... ol D Scerabaya, Java Sorel, Quebec .__.o.... 0... t. Souris, Prince Edward Island _______ Southampton, Fngland. ____.. .... Do St. Ann’s Bay, West Indies _________ St. Andrews, New Brunswick St. Bartholomew, West Indies St. Catharine’ s, Ontario St. Eustatius, West Indies St. Gall, Switzerland J.-M. Mitehell,ix ....... Albert Ameglio. 2... 4 William Voigt Conrad Cloetta. 0 Joseph I. Taylor... Mgl-Mier = = =e James W, Love... .._. . José M. de Brunet... Clodomiro Perez ___._____ Modesto Pineiro... __._. Hemy Pease... ov. Jos¢ PD. Borjas... ‘Otto BE, Reimer . Robert Mason L.H.Kuderling .. _... Charles S. Farquharson. _ Fdward Keens. .. _..._. Leonard Rook. dunes John Banfield, jr Augustus Heard Horace N. Allen Julius Schmide. ____. _ Joaquim FT. O'Neil .._____ Josepii A. Leonard... ... Walter S. Emens i... Mark B. Dunnell .....L Benjamin Folsom________ George A. Branson ......_ NooW. White... James. A. Wood _._._.__. Edward B. Worthington __ Bolding Bowser .__._.._. John E. Jadequest.. _... John:R. Black, jr... i Rounsevelle Wildman ....... Jomes Lyall 0 rie Henry M.. Jewell ........... William C. Emmet ........ Bora]. Davee... .cuune Abdel Shaid John iy MATIN Arthur Bruneau ARLE Caleb C. Carlton... Jasper P. Bradley. ...c.... Jom BH. Cooksey... Michael Solomons _____._ George F. Stickney ._.___ R. Burton Dinzey J. Oscar Florandin_ ..___. Leonard H. Collard Stephen W. Parker GS. Delisle 270s Edouard Rayeur _______. Francis B. Toomis_..____ Hastings Burroughs J. G.C. Every. 0 SH. M. Byers..co wes viv Consular agent, Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul.. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. ” Commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Deo. Do. Consul-general. Deputy consul-general, Consular agent. *~ Deo. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Deputy consul-general, Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent, Consular agent, Consul, Congressional Directory. Rank. Consular offices. Consular officers. St. Gall, Switzerland... ico ty TH. Tollikofer 5... St, George, A70TES. io Lt duck Y.-J °Cavdoza,. onion St. George, New Brunswick ________ Hushimdgate . ......- Sti:Georges, Barmnda oC cron ba SR a LR A A Re Ee St. Helena (island of)... <=. caC. James B. Coffin... Ce Rey LT od Thomas E. Fowler. ....... St. Helens, England ooo ol John Hammill. o_o. St. Hyacinthe, Quebec... oc. ‘Thomas E. Moore... Do. Francis Bartels St. John, New Brunswick. ._...._... Mason D. Sampson ______ i GR SR Ce William C. Jordon ....._... St. Johns, Newfoundland ___________ Thomas N. Molloy_______ |B RE Cr William L. Donnelly. ____ St. Johns, Quebed neon va Henry C. Fisk»... DG John Dondghy St. Lomis, Africa. ©... io Cook Francis Lawton. ........ St. Lucia, West Indies... 0 William Peter... _....+ St. Malo, France. Lu. Raymond Moulton_____.__ St. Mave, Hlattl 0. ei. CharlessMiot. io 2. St. Martin, West Indies’... ......... D, C.von Romondt.._... Ea SN SER BOR SR Lewis H. Percival... .. St. Michaels, Azores 0 oo ul William W. Nicholls. ____ St, Paul de Loanda, West Africa_____| Heli Chatelain .________. Bo ta er To ae L.C. Boling... aio St. Plerre, Miquelon. __ > ci ._.. TP. Precker vio ncil Pens 1 ears eal George T, Steer... St. Petersburg, Russia. _--_____: Jom M. Crawford _..._.: : Boe Fo ia ya, William H. Dunston ..J_._ St. Stephen, New Brunswick________ Albert E.Neill o.oo: {eR eRe hE I RL H.E. Purington.......-.. St. Thomas, West Indies... ......[.. Samuel B. Home... ._ 2. | Ba a (I Ee Fa Joseph Ridgeway, jr _____ St. Vincent, Cape Verde Islands _____ Joseph Ef. Hasty... St Vincent, West Indies. o_o. =. _ Weston J. Shearman _____ Stonbridoe, Quebec. . noc rool ' Willard Farrington _..___._ Pe i ese G. M. Hastings _______.. Stanstead, Quebec... ..___ Benjamin F. Bufterfield __ Stavanger, Norway o-oo. Lol. ol OR TE Dn 4 Stettin, Gevmany =... Lio a aaa James C. Kellogg... ...._. IER ee ME Paul Grischow co... Stockholm, Sweden... 7 Charles W. Erdman _____ BDoLiaty ool he ana Axel'Georghi cou Li. Siratiovd, Ontario... 0 2.000 Woolman J. Halloway____ | Dl Ama eR Ne Alfved Hivsh -..-. ~..% Stuttgart, Geemany Sanh mi ai Louis Gottschalk __ _. _.__ Cn Sa Se EI Ferdnind C. Gottschalk _ __ Suez, Baopt LI ER Alfred W. Haydn. ......... Summerside, Prince Edward Island __| John Gaffney_____._______ Sunderland, England... .... Thomas A. Horan ....... Suiton, Quebec... oii Melville B. Marsh ______. Swansea, Wales... 0 ro Charles M. Holton_______ Swatow, China 2 0% “lua ie on ann lea a Sydney, New South Wales... 1 Jt. ci eudsaanainioa- Gr LC Alexander Cameron. ____. Sydney, Nova Scotia. .... 0 Jo E-Burchell __..__.._. SyrajGreece . 0 niin ooo Basil Padova... _._._ Tahiti, Society Islands __.._........ Jacob L. Doty -. oct. Dp. asi aoe 2 Jom Bart: orc ooo Takao and Taiwanfoo, China_.._____._ Pelham C. Warren... ..- Talealmono, Chile ____..-.... Jom FB. Van Ingen... Oe ae le a ins Tamatave, Madagascar ATI SER A: John L. Waller__........- Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. y-- Do; Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent, Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Commercial agent. Viceand dep. com. agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. : Vice-consul. Consular agent Do. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agent. Consular agent. De. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Consular agent. Commercial agent. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent, Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. ¥Tampico, Mexico... uno bi oo) ‘ / Consuls and Consulates. 243 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. d Tamatave, Madagascar... __.. __ .° Tarragons, Spain... o_o Tegucigalpa, Honduras__________.__ Do Tehuantepec and Salina Cruz, Mexico Teneriffe, Canary Islands Torreviela, Spain. o.oo... Toulon, France Trap, Tally. oo vebizond, Turkey: = 0 0 Trenton, Ontario a ia Trieste, "Austria Truxillo, Peru Tumbez, Peru win, Italy. _ oo in Turks Island, West Indies Tuxpan, Merion 2 on nny Utilla, Honduras Verviers, Belgivm 0.0. 0 © Vevey, Switzerland Victoria, Brazil 1 Gaston Baltet Vicor PuevioRico. ioc Richard M. Whitney _____ Adam Tieberknecht.__._._ Nell BE. Pressly. 0-0 Pelix A: Mathews... .. Robert:Stalker 0) Pelayo i i CAR James G. Peterson... George Bernhard Truxton Beale Henrique de Castro Issac 1. Cohen... i... Nicholas: Smith... i W., W. Braman, jr William Bowman Charles BR. Pope... ln C. A. Hirschfelder Fran: Grieg oo. v0 Louis J. B. V. Jouve ____. Max W. Rehbein ________ William V. Brown I. Marrone Stephenl. Young. __. _ James F. Hartigan BasilBrvee. on. Coli William P. Pierce James 8S. Toppin_.._.. .... José P. y Magdaleno Andrew McMurray Manuel J. Izagiurre Edward Gottfried William Baldini William Burgess... John H. Copestake ______ St. Leger A. Touhay _... Joseph I. Hance. _..___ Jeremiah D. Murphy Jon Drayton... 0 Robert Woodville M. Bodeiker cc William B. McCreery ____ August Moller, jr T. H. Grosewisch Frank H. Pierce Henry A. Johnson... ___ Frederick Rechsteiner____ W. W. Apperson Paul Guma HenryDodt, ...... 0" Phileppe Genton JeenZinzen o_o. Lic Levi W. Myers Oak P. Myers..." M.C.Cameron. >... H. Néron Longpré Julius Goldschmidt Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul, Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Commercial agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. / Congressional Directory. 244 Consular offices. Consular officers. Rank. Vieng, Austria. oot cma OitoManss in l. Vice-consul-general. Dos be dda Laas W.B. Murphy.....s.=-_.> | Deputy consul-general. Vigo, Spain......e.- i a a Camilo Molins.....--._< Consular agent. Vivero, Spain. o.oo mie nmeiinmne Volo, Greece coi e i: Liana nna Warsaw, Russia... come Waterford, Jrelond. o.oo. Waterloo, Quebec... Co fvcunanms ‘Waubaushene, Ontario ___.__._____ Wellington, New Zealand ________.__ Weymouth, England. ocean Wiartoh, Onfarion ol cninnawmn- Windsor, Nova Scotia... ceo ‘Winterthur, Switzerland ___________ Woodstock, New Brunswick ________ Joaquin Mufiiz.__-_._.. Charles W. Borrell Isaac G. Worden ©... Charles B. Jackson Joseph Rawicz_ ~~... William H. Farrell ______ Arthur S. Newell Renel W. Soule F. G. Burton W H.I%vine > oo Richard Cox... ESE J. H. Tibeando Edward Young... cee Charles E. Hobart Charles D. Joslyn... _ Thomas A. Bourke "Heinrich Langsdorf______ Walter T. Townshend ____ Charles D. Jordan Deo. Do. Commercial agent. Viceand dep. com. agent. Consul. ; Consular agent. Do. : Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Commercial agent. Viceand dep. com.agent. Wolverhampton, England ____.______ Jom Neve ooo... vias Consular agent. Wyborz, Russia... .coswmmmmensar Lndwizg Pacius o_o. Do. Nala, Syria, ot denne KE. Hardese | oo. doo ia Do. Yarmouth, Nova Scotia_______..___ Dean. Currie =. Commercial agent. Do aiireswee ai Robert S. Eakins ........ Vice and dep. com. agent. Zacatecas: Mexico... i anan.. T. Howard Hatch _ _.....| Consular agent. Zanzibar, Bast Africa. =. co. Edward D. Ropes, jr..__. Consul. BE LY SE Edward DD. Vialle......_. Vice-consul. Zante, Greece. ooo Cio allol AL. Crowe. oo lo Consular agent. Toga, Cuba dna a a Sinesio Ballesta __.__..___ Do. Zittan, Germmmy ..... oe oitn rsd Paul Emrich. =. 1 Do. Zurich,Switzerland..... co... 2. George 1. Catlin oo... Consul. BR RR AS re CN Bd. von Orelli .......o 5 Vice-consul. CONSULAR CLERKS. Authorized by the act of Congress approved June 20, 1864. Joseph A. Springer .......--=i-- Havana. Arthur W. Richardson____.._ Honolulu. Chorles' I. Thirion’ oo... 200 Marseilles. | W. Porter Boyd _.._..... co. Bd P. Maclean co =... Paris. William Dulany Hunter _____ Paris. Charles M. Wood eo one Rome Cart A. Hansmann'____...... Lyons. George H. Scidmore..cemmee eo - Kanagawa. | Henry W. Martin _.___..... Liverpool St. Leger A. Touhay. ........... Turin. Donnell Rockwell oc. ccau-. George H. Murphy . ane ceee ae Berlin, ERS bo GS LRT Co Sk = Ras - The District Government. | | 245 THE DISTRICT GOVERNMENT. (Offices First street, between B and C streets, N. W.) COMMISSIONERS, President.—John W. Douglass, 1816 F street, N. W, John W. Ross, National Hotel. Capt. Wm. T. Rossell, 2037 F street, N. W. Assistants to Engineer Commissioner.—Capt. Jas. L. Lusk, 2002 R street, N. W. Capt. G. J. Fiebeger, 2017 Q street, N. W. Secretary —William Tindall, corner California avenue and Connecticut avenue extended. Clerks.— James Campbell, 1010 S street, N. W. : Roger Williams, 18 Third street, N. E. ; / Daniel Curry, 602 A street, N. E. Clifford Howard, 928 T street, N. W. William F. Meyers, 220 I street, N. W., THE DISTRICT OFFICERS. Attorney. —George C. Hazelton, 11 B street, N. W. Office, 338 Indiana avenue, N. W, Assistant Attorney.—Sidney T. Thomas, 1726 Twentieth street, N. W. Collector of Taxes.—E. G. Davis, 2211 R street, N. W, Assessor—Matthew Trimble, 614 Thirteenth street, N. W, Auditor —]. T. Petty, 3331 O street, N.W. Coroner.—De Witt C. Patterson, M. D., 919 I street, N. W. Surveyor —William Forsyth, 1424 Ninth street, N. Ww. Inspector of Buildings.— Thomas B. Entwisle, 3267 N street, N. W. Superintendent of Public Schools.— William B. Powell, 1702 F street, N. W. Superintendent of Colored Schools.—George F. T. Cook, 1212 Sixteenth street, N., w. Superintendent of Lamps.—G. L. Plympton, 16 Tenth street, N, E. Chemist. —Clifford Richardson, 1818 Jefferson Place, N. W. Superintendent of Streets.—H. N. Moss, 607 T street, N. E., THE POLICE COURT. (Sixth and D streets, N. W.) Judges.—Thomas F. Miller, Takoma Park, D. C. - 1. G. Kimball, 620 North Carolina avenue, S. E. Clerk.—Joseph Y. Potts, go8 New York avenue, N. W. Deputy. — Joseph Harper, 412 B street, N. E. Deputy—N. C. Harper, 213 E street, N. W. Assistant U. S. Attorney.—Alex. R. Mullowny, 1716 Q street, N. W. Special Assistant Attorney for D. C.—Neill Dumont, 632 Massachusetts avenue, N. E. Deputy U. S. Marshal—]James B. McCaffrey, 519 East Capitol street. THE METROPOLITAN POLICE. (Headquarters Fifth and D streets, N. W.) Major and Superintendent — William G. Moore, 1710 L street, N. W. Captain.—M. A. Austin, 611 Sixth street, N. W. y Chief, also Property Clerk. ——Richard Sylvester, 1107 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. Clerk.—]. Arthur Kemp, Rockville, Md. Police Surgeons.—Dr. S. A. H. McKim, corner Fifth and A streets, S. E.; Dr. G. Hender- son, Ninth and T streets; Dr. C. H. A. Kleinschmidt, 3113 N street, N. W.; and Dr. M. B. Strickler, 512 East Capitol street. Sanitary Officer—]. A. Frank, 308 Fourth street, S. E. Hack Inspector —S. A. Groff, 520 D street, N. E. Officer of Humane Society.—Samuel Wilson, 1220 Pennsylvania avenue, S. E. Detective Headguarters—501 D street, N. Ww. J. A. Swindells, Chief of Detectives, 3328 R a street, N. W.; Night Inspector, Isaac Pearson, 1514 T street, N. W. | Station Houses. First precinct, Twelfth, between C and D streets, N, W.; Lieut. T. B. Amis. : Second precinct, Fifth street, between M and N streets, N. W.; Lient. D. H. Teeple. 2hird precinct, K street, between Twentieth and Twenty-first streets, N. W.; Lieut. John F. Guy. Fy 246 Congressional Directory. Station Houses.— Fourth precinct, E street, between Four-and-a-half and Sixth streets, S. W. Lieut. C. R. Vernon. ; Fifth precinct, E street, between Fifth and Sixth streets, S.E. ; Lieut. F. F. McCathran. j Sixth precinct, New Jersey avenue, between D and E streets, N.W.; Lieut. John F. Kelly. Th, Seventh precinct, (High) Thirty-second street, Georgetown, between M street and canal; Lieut. Louis H. Hollinberger, 106 Seventh street, N. E. ge Eighth precinet, U street, between Ninth and Tenth streets, N.°W.: Lieut 4 J. W. Gessford. . 1 ie Ninth precinct, Ninth, near Maryland avenue, N. E.; Lieut. J. E. Heffner. | THE FIRE DEPARTMENT. Chief Engineer.—Joseph Parris, 416: Massachusetts avenue, N. W. : Assistant Chief Engineers.—Louis P. Lowe, 1240 Twenty-eighth street, N. W. ) William T. Belt, 55 D street, N. E. Clerk.~]. D. Entwisle, 1315 Thirty-fifth street, N. W. a) i Five Marshal—William O. Drew, 1337 Thirtieth street, N. W. i | Engine House—No. 1, K, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets, N. W. i 8 No. 2, D, near Twelfth street, N. W. : No. 3, Delaware avenue and C street, N. E. ! No. 4, Virginia avenue, between Four-and-a-half and Sixth streets, S. W. No. 5, M street, near Thirty-second street, West Washington. No. 6, Massachusetts avent.c, between Fourth and Fifth streets, N. W. No. 7, R street, between Ninth and Tenth streets, N. W. No. 8, North Carolina avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets, S. E. Truck A, North Capitol, near C street, N. E. ° Truck B, New Hampshire avenue and M street, N. W. Truck C, Ohio avenue and Fourteenth street, N. W, TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE SERVICE. (Office, 501 D street, N. W.) Superintendent.—Henry R. Miles, 1418 Rhode Island avenue, N. W. THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT. 8 : (Office, Department Building, 503 D street, N. W.) |B 1 Health Officer —C. M. Hammett, M. D., 644 F street, S. W. “iit | Chief Clerk.—S. P. Bayley, jr,, 127 Maryland avenue, N. E. : Clerfe.—B. F. Peters, 212 Fifth street, N. E. Sanitary Inspectors.—T. W. Parsons, 1304 Corcoran street, N. W. | E. H. Hume, 230 North Capitol street. # » Thomas M. Shepherd, 720 Thirteenth street, N. W. - C. H. Welch, 619 1 street, N. E. | A. J. Heird, 604 M street, N. W. | . : 'W. D. Hughes, 8o7 H street, N. E. 8 Food Inspectors—Wm. Calvin Chase, 1212 Florida avenue, N. W. 4 J. R. Mothershead, 1322 Sixth street, N. W. | a Inspector of Marine Producis—Gwynn Harris, 218 Eighth street, S. W. Be Pound Master —Samuel Einstein, 2502 Pennsylvania avenue, Physicians to the Poor.—R. A. Pyles, Anacostia, D. C. Henry Darling, Brightwood, D. C, P. S. Roy, 6 I street, N. W. [| F. C. Ewing, 1102 New Hampshire avenue, N. W, | R. A. Neale, 1808 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W, 8 S. F. Hannon, 206 D street, N. W. : 78 W. M. Sprigg, 911 H street, N. W. | 3 E. C. C. Winter, 815 Four-and-a-half street, S. W. | | | J. V. Carraher, 820 E street, S. E. D. Olin Leech, 631 Maryland avenue, N. E. C. R. Collins, 1125 Fourteenth street, N. W. Louis Mackall, jr., 1203 Thirty-first street, N. W. B. Frank Gibbs, 1608 Seventeenth street, N. W., M. A. Custis, 631 East Capitol street. J W. Chappell, Tennallytown, D. C, a; ) A { ; ; \ Supreme Court District of Columbia— Smithsonian Institution. 247 { SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. (Old City Hall Building, opposite north end Four-and-a-half street, between Third and Fifth streets, N.W.) Chief-Justice Edward F. Bingham, 1907 H street, N. W. Associate Justice Alexander B. Hagner, 1818 H street, N. W, Associate Justice Walter S. Cox, 1636 I street, N. W. Associate Justice Charles P. James, 1824 Massachusetts avenue. Associate Justice Martin V. Montgomery, 1429 Euclid Place. Associate Justice Andrew C. Bradley, 2013 Q street, N. W, Clerk.—John R. Young, 1314 B street, 5S. W. Retired. ‘A Andrew Wylie, 1205 Fourteenth street, N. W. | Arthur MacArthur, 1201 N street, N.. W. U. S. ATTORNEY'S OFFICE, (In City Hall Building.) U. S. Attorney —Charles C. Cole, 1705 N street, N. W. j Assistant U. S. A#t—H. T. Taggart, 3249 N street, N. W. / Assistant U. S. Att.—Howard C. Clagett, 1006 Sixteenth street, N. W, Assistant U. S. Att— Assistant U. S. Att—Charles H. Armes, Mount Pleasant. Assistant U. S. A#t.—A. R. Mullowney, 1724 Q street, N. W. UNITED STATES MARSHAL’S OFFICE. (In City Hall Building.) United States Marshal.—Daniel M. Ransdell, Riggs House. U. S. Deputy Marshal—John R. Leonard, 240 North Capitol street, N. W. REGISTER OF WILLS’ OFFICE. (In City Hall Building.) Register of Wills.—Levi P. Wright, Hotel Oxford. Assistant.—M. J. Griffith, 1401 Fifth street, N. W. i RECORDER’S OFFICE. (In City Hall Building.) Recorder of Deeds.—Blanche K. Bruce, 2010 R street, N. W. . Deputy Recorder of Deeds.—Geo. F. Schayer, 1346 Seventh street, N. W. THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. we ' (Washington, opposite Tenth street.) Presiding officer, ex officio—BENJAMIN HARRISON, President of the United States. = Chancellor.—Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. | Secretary of the Institution —S. P. Langley, Cosmos Club, H street. Assistant Secretary. —G. Brown Goode, in charge of National Museum, Cosmos Club; house Lanier Heights. Assistant in Charge—William C. Winlock, 2005 O street. MEMBERS OF THE INSTITUTION. Benjamin Harrison, President of the United States. Levi P. Morton, Vice-President of the United States. Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. James G. Blaine, Secretary of State. ; \ / 243 Congressional Directory. Charles Foster, Secretary of the Treasury. Stephen B. Elkins, Secretary of War. Benjamin F. Tracy, Secretary of the Navy. John Wanamaker, Postmaster-General. W. H. H. Miller, Attorney-General. W. E. Simonds, Commissioner of Patents. REGENTS OF THE INSTITUTION. i Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, Chancellor. 0 Levi P. Morton, Vice-President of the United States. I J. S. Morrill, member of the Senate of the United States. S. M. Cullom, member of the Senate of the United States. Randall Lee Gibson, member of the Senate of the United States. Joseph Wheeler, member of the House of Representatives. H. Cabot Lodge, member of the House of Representatives. W. C. P. Breckinridge, member of the House of Representatives. Henry Coppée, citizen of Pennsylvania. (Bethlehem.) James C. Welling, citizen of Washington. , citizen of Washington. J. B. Angell, citizen of Michigan. (Ann Arbor.) And. D. White, citizen of New York. Executive Committee.— James C. Welling, of Washington, D.C, Henry Coppée, of Bethlehem, Pa. D.C. J THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. (Under the direction of the Smithsonian Institution.) Director —S. P. Langley, Cosmos Club. Assistant Secretary in Charge.—G. Brown Goode, Cosmos Club; house, Lanier Heights. | Curators—F. W. True, W. O. Atwater, Frank Baker, Tarleton H. Bean, C. E. Bendire, F. fh W. Clarke, J. W. Collins, W. H. Dall, R. E. Earll, B. E. Fernow, Paul Haupt, W. H. | Holmes, S. R. Koehler, O. C. Marsh, O. T. Mason, G. P. Merrill, Richard Rathbun, Robert Ridgway, C. V. Riley, R. E. C. Stearns, L. Stejneger, George Vasey, C.D, Walcott, L. F. Ward, J. E. Watkins, Charles A. White, Thomas Wilson, W. C. Win- lock. Chief Clerk.—W.V. Cox, 611 H street, N. W. | i oR THE BUREAU OF ETHNOLOGY. 8. (Under the direction of Smithsonian Institution; office, in Hooe Building, 1330 F street.) 8 Director.—John W. Powell, 910 M street, N. W. Ii Chief Clerk.—Henry C. Rizer, 1606 Q street, N. W. (Columbia road.) Under the direction of the Smithsonian Institution. | | | NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK. 3 | | | | Acting Manager.—Frank Baker, | THE WASHINGTON NATIONAL MONUMENT SOCIETY. 1 y : (1833. Incorporated 1859. Acts of August 2, 1876; October 1, 1888.) i President, ex officio.—BENJAMIN HARRISON, President of the United States. First Vice- President.—John Sherman, 1319 K street. i : Second Vice- President.—Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, Boston, Mass. Treasurer.—Daniel B. Clarke, President National Bank of the Republic. 4 | Secretary. —Horatio King, 707 H street, N. W. ga : Clerk —F. L. Harvey, jr., 1123 Seventeenth street, N. W. « | y James G. Berret, D. A. Watterston, Walter S. Cox, Edward Clark, Joseph M. Toner, James J i | C. Welling, Hugh McCulloch, William Strong, Arthur MacArthur, Thomas Lincoln Casey, A. R. Spofford, J. C. Bancroft Davis, C. C. Augur. J VICE PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES. 3 g . Age at J : Bp ie! El p E 3 “ > Jouth, Name. v g E |IZE2| a az > dg x oss og 3 21% kG 8 8 Slt 8 > § 18 Z sa 7 8 |< > A {> |= Yi JoimAdams.. __¥ Cl. Mass.| 1735 | Mass.| 1789 | 54 8 | 1826 | go 8 2! Thomas Jefferson. __-__. Va. 1743 | Va. 1797 | 54 4 | 1826 | 83 3 Sy Aaron Burr. oC. N.J. 11756 | N.Y.| 1801 | 45 4 | 1836 | 80 7 4! George Clinton... __... NY. 1730 | N.V.| 1305 | 66 7 | 1852 | 72 9 5.1 Bloridoe Gerny 2... 00 Mass.| 1744 | Mass.| 1813 | 69 | 124 | 1814 | 70 4 6 | Daniel D. Tompkins____.__ N.V.{ 1774 N.V.| 18517 | 43 SA 18accgi |. 7 Tom C.Calhown.___._. _. 8. C.{1wS2 S.C. {1835 "13 w 118501 63:1... S| Martin Van Buren ___..__ N.Y. l=1782 F N.V.] 1873) 31 4 | 1862 | 79 7 9 | Richard M. Johnson______ Ky. | 1781 | Ky. | 1837 | 56 4 | 1850 | 66 I x0. Tem Tyler cl 0% Va. 1790 | Va. 1841 1 51 | 1 m |/1862 | 71 10 11 | George M. Dallas. _______ Pa, 1792 | Pa. 1845 | 53 4 | 1864 | 72 5 12 | Millard Filmore... N.Y.| 1800 | N.Y. ! 1849 | 49 I | 1874 1 74 2 13 [William R. King ..____ INC. {1786 | Alsi | 18531671 x m 1353] 67 {..- 14 | John C.Breckinridge ......| Ky. | 1321 | Ky. 1857 | 36 41 1895 | 54 4 15 | Hannibal Hamlin... Me. | 1809 | Me. | 1861 | 52 411801 | 82 1... 16 | Andrew Johnson ......_.__ N.C. | 1808 | Tenn.| 1865 | 57 | 1 m | 1875'| 66 7 17 | Schuyler Colfax... _......[| N.Y. | 1823 | Ind. { 1860 | 46 4 | 1885 | 64 9 13 Henry’ Wilson... _...... N.H.| 1812 | Mass.| 1873 | 61 224 | 1875 | 63 9 19 | William A. Wheeler_____ N.Y. | 1819 | N.Y. | 1877 | 58 4% 1837. 1681. 20. Chester A. Arthur ______. Vt. 1830 | N.Y. | 1881 | 51 | 6 m | 1886 | 56 I 21 | ThomasA. Hendricks ____| Ohio | 1819 | Ind. | 1885 | 65 | 8 m | 1885 | 65 IO 2z |: Levi P. Morton... ... -.. Vt. 1324 1 N.Y. {1830 1-68 | 1. __... me i PRESIDENTS PRO TEMPORE OF THE UNITED STATES ; SENATE. ; The Constitution (Art. 1, Sec. 3) provides that when the Vice-President is absent or exer- cising the office of President of the United States, the Senate shall choose a President pro tempore. When the First Congress met, April 6, 1789, and chose John Langdon, of New Hampshire, President pro fempore, he held his office until the Vice-President elect, John Adams, was installed in office and took his seat in the Senate, April 21, 1789, when the office of President pro tembore ceased. The custom of the Vice-President to vacate the chair before the close of a session, to enable the Senate to choose a President pro tempore, did not begin until after the passage of the act of March 1, 1792, and was obviously instituted to meet that portion of the act which related to cases of removal, death, resignation, or ina- bility of the President and Vice-President of the United States to act. There has been cone siderable friction in the Senate relating to the tenure of office of the President pro fempore of the Senate. Since the first session of the Forty-fourth Congress, 1876, the practice of the Senate has been uniform, and the following questions seem now to be settled : (1) That the office of President pro tempore is held at the pleasure of the Senate; (2) that the tenure of a President pro tempore does not expire at the meeting of Congress after the first recess, the Vice-President not having appeared to take the chair; (3) that the death of the Vice-Presi- dent does not have the effect to vacate the office of President pro Zempore. - Vice- Presidents of the United States. 249 Congressional Directory. Presidents pro tempore of the United States Senate--Continued. Served. Name. - State. Born.| Died. Congress. Time. | John Langdon _____ New Hampshire_| 1stand 2d________._ 1789-1792 | 1739 | 1819 Rich’d Henry Lee._| Virginia________ 2 a 1792-1792 | 1732 | 1794 John Langdon _____. New Hampshire_| 2d and 3d _________ 1792-1794 | 1739 | 1819 Rolph leaxd 0... South Carolina. [3d 0. 1794-1795 | 1742 | 1804 Henry Tazewell ____| Virginia _______ 3 endathe oo 1795-1796 | 1753 | 1799 Samuel Livermore __| New Hampshire | 4th_______________ 1796-1797 | 1732 | 1803 William WL --| Pennsylvania _ _ i Gt andisth._._.... 1797-1797 | 1751 | 1804 William Bradford.__| Rhode Island. __| sth ____.______ ___ 1797-1797 | 1729 | 1808 Jacob Read...____. South: Carolina. 05th... ooo... 1797-1798 | 1752 | 1816 Theodore oy Massachusetts __ pth co aii 2s 1798-1798 | 1746 1813 John Laurence _ ____ New York______ Sth ai 1798-1799 | 1750 | 1810 James Ross... Pennsylvania...) Sthe. ooo oi i) 1799-1799 | 1762 | 1847 Samuel Livermore__| New Tompshize 6thi. "1. - 1799-1800 | 1732 | 1803 Uriah Tracy... Connecticut_ ____ Gt lr 1800-1800 | 1755 | 1807 John E. Howard___| Maryland ____ __ Oth i 1800-1801 | 1752 | 1827 James Hillhouse .___ Connecticut. .___ Gth cl loan .iin. 1801-1801 | 1754 | 1832 Abraham Baldwin __ George cic Poth iy 1801-1802 1754 1807 Stephen R. Bradley_| Vermont _______ 1 REE SO Th 1802-1803 | 1754 | 1830 John Brown________ Kentucky ______ Bh. 1803-1804 | 1757 | 1837 Jesse Franklin. ___._ NorthCavolina.. fp Sth... _ 1804-1805 | 1758 | 1823 Joseph Anderson.____| Tennessee ______ 3 A Men 1805-1805 | 1757 | 1837 Samuel Smith ...... Maryland _______ oth and 1oth _______ 1805-1808 | 1752 | 1839 Stephen R. Bradley_| Vermont _ _____ Yolo. or 1808-1809 | 1754 | 1830 John Milledge _____ Georgia ______ fj rothendivath 1... 1809-1809 | 1757 | 1818 Andrew Gregg... Pennsylvania... f 11th... .. _. ~-| 1809-i810 | 1755 | 1835 John Gaillard. __.. South Carolina ch avth no - .... 1810-1811 |... ... 1826 John Pope... Kentucky ____.__ rithond sath... 1811-1812 1770 | 1845 Wm. H. Crawford__| Georgia ________ 12th and 14th_____. 1812-1813 | 1772 1834 Joseph B. Varnum._| Massachusetts _..| 13th ______________ 1813-1814 | 1750 | 1821 John Gaillard. South Carolina. _| 13th, 14th, and 15th_| 1814-1819 |_____ 1826 James Barbour _.___ Viginia.. 1Sthamd 16th... 1819-1820 | 1775 | 1842 John Gaillard ______ South Carolina __| 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th.| 1820-1826 |_____ 1826 Nathaniel Macon ___{ North Carolina_ _ 1gth and zoth 1826-1828 | 1757 | 1837 Samuel Smith... Maryland... ._ 20th, 21st, and 22d __| 1828-1832 | 1 752 | 1839 L. W. Tazewell .__ | Virginia._____.. mad 1832-1832 | 1774 | 1860 Hugh LI. White ____| Tennessee ______ z2dand 23d... 1832-1834 1 1773 | 1840 George Poindexter__| Mississippi_.___. 2 SR RR 1834-1835 | 1779 | 1853 John Tyler AEE Virginia... ... 2 Ll 1835-1836 | 1790 | 1862 William R. King ___| Alabama _______ 24th, 25th, and 26th_| 1836-1841 | 1786 | 1853 Samuel L. Southard_| New Jersey_____ 26th and 27th. ____. 1841-1842 | 1787 | 1842 Willie P. Mangum __| North Carolina__| 27th, 28th, and 20th _ 1842-1846 | 1792 | 1861 David R. Atchison__| Missouri ______. 29th, 30th, and 31st_| 1846-1850 | 1807 | 1891 William R. King ___| Alabama _______ jistand 32d... 1850-1852 | 1786 | 1853 David R. Atchison. _! Missouri _______ 32dand 3d... 1852-1854 | 1807 | 1891 Jesse D! Bright... _ Indiana... .. 33dand 34th 1 ____ 1854-1857 | 1812 | 1875 James M, Mason... | Virginia_______. ath 1857-1857 | 1798 | 1871 Benj. Fitzpatrick _._.[ Alabama... 35thand 36th... 1857-1861 | 1802 | 1869 Solomon Foot______ Vermont’... ... ig 37th, and 38th_| 1861-1864 | 1802 | 1866 Daniel Clarke... New Hampshire.| 38th _.___________. 1864-1865 | 1809 |... Lafayette S. Foster. | Connecticut__ __ gob. ah 1865-1867 | 1806 | 1830 Benj. F. Wade. _ ____ Ohio. ........ goth 0 ni: 1867-1869 | 1800 | 1878 Henry 'B. Anthony__| Rhode Island ___| 41st and 42d_______ 1860-1873 | 1815 | 1884 Matt. H. Carpenter..| Wisconsin _____. 430 at 1873-1875 | 1824 | 1881 Thomas W. Ferry__.| Michigan______._ 44th and 45th ______ 1875-1879 | 1827 |. __.__ Allen G. Thurman. 1 Ohio... A0thooo fle ou 1879-1881 | 1813]. .__. Thomas F. Erpard,. Delaware... Hi I ER 1881-1881 | 1828 |. .__. Dovid Davie. ol) Wines. 0 th 1881-1883 | 1815 | 1886 Geo. F. Edmunds, _ Vermont i... ARN LoL or a 1883-1885 | 1828 | ___. John Sherman. v4 Ohio. ol 4qoth'and soth__._._. 1885-1887 | 1823 |.__.. John J. Ingalls .... | Kansas ..._.._ | sothandgist_ ____. 1887-1891 | 1833 |... Chas. F. Manderson_| Nebraska _____. Sistand 52d... .... 1891— | 1837 |- oo. 4 \ Secretaries, etc., of the United States Senate. gg SECRETARIES OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE. The following is the list of Secretaries who have filled the office since the organization of the Government from 1789 to 1892: : Samuel A. Otis, Massachusetts, from the First to the Fourteenth Congress, inclusive, April 8, 1789, to April 18, 1814. Charles Cutts, New Hampshire, Fourteenth to the Eighteenth Congress, inclusive, October 11, 1814, to December 12, 1825; Chief Clerk, Thirteenth Congress; acted as Secretary from April 18, 1814, to October 14, 1814. ; : Walter Lowrie, Pennsylvania, Nineteenth Congress to the beginning of the second session of the Twenty-fourth Congress, December 12, 1825, to December 5, 1836; resigned Chief Clerk; acted as Secretary Twenty-fourth Congress, second session, from December 5, 1836, to December 12, 1836. : Asbury Dickins, North Carolina, second session, Twenty-fourth Congress, to the first ses- sion, Thirty-seventh Congress, December 12, 1836, to July 15, 1861. William Hickey, Chief Clerk, Thirty-seventh Congress; was appointed acting Secretary March 22, 1861, to July 15, 1861. John W. Forney, Pennsylvania, Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, and Fortieth Congresses, from July 15, 1861, to June 4, 1868. George C. Gorham, California, second session, Fortieth Congress, to the first session of the ~ Forty-sixth Congress, June 6, 1868, to March 24, 1879. John C. Burch, Tennessee, first session, Forty-sixth Congress, to the first session Forty- seventh Congress, from March 24, 1879, to July 28, 1881. Died in office. From July 28, 1881, to December 18, 1883, the Chief Clerk, Francis E. Shober, acted as Secretary of the Senate. - Anson G. McCook, New York, first session, Forty-eighth Congress, December 18, 1883. Still in office. . SERGEANTS-AT-ARMS OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE. List of persons who have filled the office of Sergeant-at-Arms United States Senate. The offi- cial designation was fixed March 3, 1805; prior to that date the officer was known as Ser- geant-at-Arms and Doorkeeper.” : James Mathers, First to Twelfth Congress, from April 7, 1789, to date of death in summer of 1811. Mointjoy Bailey, Maryland, Twelfth to Twenty-third Congress, from November 5, 1811, to December 9, 1833. John Shackford, New Hampshire, Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth Congresses, from De- cember 9, 1823, to September 5, 1837. Stephen Haight, New York, Twenty-fifth and Twenty-sixth Congresses, from September 5, 1837, to June 8, 1841. Edward Dyer, Maryland, Twenty-seventh and Twenty-eighth Congresses, from June 8, 1841, to December 9, 1845. : Robert Beale, Virginia, T'wenty-ninth, Thirtieth, Thirty-first, and Thirty-second Congresses, from December 9, 1845, to March 17, 1853. Dunning R. McNair, Pennsylvania, Thirty-third, Thirty-fourth, Thirty-fifth, and Thirty- sixth Congresses, from March 17, 1853, to July 6, 1861. George T. Brown, Illinois, Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, and Fortieth Con- - gresses, from July 6, 1861, to March 22, 1869. John R. French, New Hampshire, Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, and Forty-fifth Congresses, from March 22, 1869, to March 24, 1879. Richard J. Bright, Indiana, Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh Congresses, from March 24, 1879, to December 18, 1883. William P. Canaday, North Carolina, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty- 5rst Con- gresses, from December 18, 1883, to June 30, 1890. ; Edward K. Valentine, Nebraska, Fifty-first Congress, elected June 11 to take effect June 30, 18go. Still in office. CHIEF CLERKS OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE. The following persons have filled the office of Chief Clerk of the Senate: William Hickey, Maryland, from December 5, 1855, to January 5, 1866. William J. McDonald, District of Columbia, from January 9, 1866, to June 8, 1878. William E. Spencer, Wisconsin, from June 15, 1878, to March 24, 1879. Francis E. Shober, North Carolina, from March 24, 1879, to December 18, 1883. Charles W. Johnson, Minnesota, from December 18, 1883, to date. Still in office. 253 Congressional Directory PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE CLERKS OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE. [4 The following persons have filled the office of Principal Executive Clerk of the Senate: J. H. Nicholson, 1858. | De Witt C. Clarke, , from July 9, 1861, to March 22, 1869. John M. Morris, Vermont, from March 22, 1869, to December 8, 1873. James R. Young, Pennsylvania, from December 8, 1873, to March 24, 1879; also from December 18, 1883, to date. Still in office. - Henry E. Peyton, Virginia, from March 24, 1879, to December 18, 1883. ASSISTANT DOORKEEPER OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE. The following persons have filled the office of Assistant Doorkeeper of the Senate: Henry Tims, Pennsylvania, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, Twentieth, and Twenty-first Con- gresses, to December 20, 1831. John Shackford, New Hampshire, Twenty-second Congress, from December 20, 1831, to December 9, 1833. Stephen Haight, New York, Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth Congresses, from December 9, 1833, to September 5, 1837. Edward Wyer, Massachusetts, Twenty-fifth Congress, from September 5, 1837, to Decem- ber 19, 1839. Robert Beale, Virginia, Twenty-sixth, Twenty-seventh, and Twenty-eighth Congresses, from December g, 1839,to December 9, 1845. Isaac Holland, Maryland, Twenty-ninth to Thirty-fourth Congresses, inclusive, from De- cember 9, 1845. Died during summer of 1858, in office. Charles S. Jones, District of Columbia, Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth Congresses, from De- cember 9, 1858, to July 6, 1861. Isaac Bassett, District of Columbia, Thirty-seventh to the Fifty-first Congress, from July 6, 1861, to date. Still in office. SPEAKERS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Speakers of the House of Representatives from 1789 to the beginning of the Fifty-second Congress, 1892: : Frederick A. Mulhenberg, Pennsylvania, First Congress, April 1, 1789, to March 3, 1791; / also Third Congress, October 2, 1793, to March 3, 1795. Jonathan Trumbull, Connecticut, Second Congress, October 24, 1791, to March 2, 1793. Jonathan Dayton, New Jersey, Fourth and Fifth Congresses, December 7, 1795, to March » 1799. : George Dent, Maryland, third session, Fifth Congress; pro fempore. Theodore Sedgwick, Massachusetts, Sixth Congress, December 2, 1799, to March 3, 1301. Nathaniel Macon, North Carolina, Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth Congresses, December 7, 1801, to March 3, 1807. Joseph B. Varnum, Massachusetts, Tenth and’ Eleventh Congresses, October 26, 1807, to March 3, 1811. Henry Clay, Kentucky, Twelfth and Thirteenth Congresses, November 4, 1811, to Janu- ary 19, 1814. Resigned during the second session of the Thirteenth Congress; also Four- teenth, Fifteenth, and Sixteenth Congresses, December 4, 1815, to November 13, 1820. Resigned by letter October 20, 1820; also Eighteenth Congress, December 1, 1823, to March 3, 1825. Langdon Cheves, South Carolina, second session, Thirteenth Congress, January 19, 1814, to March 2, 1815. John W. Taylor, New York, second session, Sixteenth Congress, November 15, 1820, to March 3, 1821; also Nineteenth Congress, December 5, 1825, to March 3, 1827. Philip P. Barber, Virginia, Seventeenth Congress, December 3, 1821, to March 3, 1823. Andrew Stevenson, Virginia, Twentieth, Twenty-first, Twenty-second, and Twenty-third Congresses, December 3, 1827, to June 2, 1834. Resigned during first session. Henry Hubbard, New Hampshire, first session, Twenty-third Congress, May 19, 1834; elected for one day pro tempore. John Bell, Tennessee, Twenty-third Congress, first session, June 2, 1834, to March 3, 1835. James K. Polk, Tennessee, Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth Congresses, December 7, 1835, to March 3, 1839. Js SSial ad us ic, Gis Cid EE RA eS hn Clerks of the House of Representatives. 253 Robert M. T. Hunter, Virginia, Twenty-sixth Congress, December 16, 1839, to March 3, 1341. : John White, Kentucky, Twenty-seventh Congress, May 31, 1841, to March 3, 1843. John W. Jones, Virginia, Twenty-eighth Congress, December 4, 1843, to March 3, 1845. George W. Hopkins, Virginia, second session, Twenty-eighth Congress, February 28, 1845; 4 elected for one day pro tempore. : 8 John W. Davis, Indiana, Twenty-ninth Congress, December I, 1845, to March 3, 1847. Robert C. Winthrop, Massachusetts, Thirtieth Congress, December 6, 1847, to March 3, 1849; also during first session, Thirty-first Congress, April 18, 1850, to April 21, 1850; elected pro tempore. : Armistead Burt, South Carolina, Thirtieth Congress, first session, June 19, 1848, to June 22, 1848, elected pro tempore. Howell Cobb, Georgia, Thirty-first Congress, December 22, 1849, to March 3, 1851. Linn Boyd, Kentucky, Thirty-second and Thirty-third Congresses, December I, 1851, to March 3, 1855. : : Nathaniel P. Banks, Massachusetts, Thirty-fourth Congress, February 2, 1856, to March 3, 1857. \ Hones L. Orr, South Carolina, Thirty-fifth Congress, December 7, 1857, to March 3, 1859. William Pennington, Thirty-sixth Congress, February 1, 1860, to March 3, 1861. Galusha A. Grow, Pennsylvania, Thirty-seventh Congress, July 4, 1861, to March 3, 1863. Schuyler Colfax, Indiana, Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, and Fortieth Congresses, December 1 w, 1863, to March 3, 1869. § Elihu B. Washburn, Illinois, first session, Thirty-ninth Congress, January 27, 1866, one oy day, elected pro tempore. Theodore M. Pomeroy, New York, second session, Fortieth Congress, March 3, 1869, one day, elected pro tempore. James G. Blaine, Maine, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses, March 4, 1869, to March 3, 1875. Michael C. Kerr, Indiana, Forty-fourth Congress, December 6, 1875, to August 10, 1876. Died August 19, 1876. Samuel S. Cox, New York, Forty-fourth Congress, first session, February 17, 1876, to Febru- ! ary 22, 1876; also May 2, 1876, to May 23, 1876; also June 8, 1876, to June 23, 1876; elected pro tempore. Milton Saylor, Ohio, Forty-first Congress, first session, June 24, 1876,to August 15, 1876; elected pro tempore. ; Samuel J. Randall, Pennsylvania, Forty-fourth Congress, second session, Forty-fifth, Forty- a sixth Congresses, December 4, 1876, to March 3, 1881. i: J. Warren Keifer, Ohio, Forty seventh Congress, December 5, 1881, to March 1, 1333. J : John G. Carlisle, Kentucky, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses, December i: 3, 1883, to March 3, 1889. | Thomas B. Reed, Maine, Fifty-first Congress, December 2, 1889, to March 3, 1891. 4 Julius C. Burrows, Michigan, Fifty-first Congress, first session, May 26, 1890, and Septem- ber 3, 1890; elected pro tempore. : Lewis E. Payson, Illinois, Fifty-first Congress, second session, February 19,1891; elected pro tempore. Charles F. Crisp, Georgia, Fifty-second Congress, December, 1891. Still in office. ~ CLERKS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. oC Clerks of the Iduse of Representatives of the United States from 1789 to the beginning J of the Fifty-second Congress, 1891: John Beckley, Virginia, from April I, 1789, to May 15, 1797, First, Second, Third, and Fourth Congresses; also from December 7, 1801, to October 26, 1807, Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth Congresses. Jonathan Williams Condy, Pennsylvania, from May 15, 1797, to December 9, 1800, Fifth, and part of Sixth Congress. Resigned. John Holt Oswold, Pennsylvania, from December 9, 1800, to December 7, 1801, second session, Sixth Congress. Patrick Magruder, Maryland, from October 6, 1807, to January 28, 1815, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, and Thirteenth Congresses. Resigned. 8 Thomas Dougherty, Kentucky, from January 30, 1815, to wie, 1322, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, and Sixteenth Congresses, and part of Seventeenth Congress. Died during recess of ) Seventeenth Congress. Matthew St. Clair Clarke, Pennsylvania, from December 3, 1822, to December 2, 1833, part of Seventeenth, and Eighteenth, Nineteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, and Twenty-second Congresses; also from May 31, 1841, te December 6, 1843, Twenty-seventh Congress, ) 254 Congressional Directory. Walter S. Franklin, Pennsylvania, from December 2, 1833, to September 20, 1838, Twenty- third, Twenty-fourth, and Twenty-fifth Congresses. Died. Hugh A. Garland, Virginia, from December 3, 1838, to May 31, 1841, third session, Twenty-fifth, and Twenty-sixth Congress. Caleb J. McNulty, Ohio, from December 6, 1843, to January 18, 1845. Twenty-eighth Congress. Dismissed. Benjamin B. French, New Hampshire, from January 18, 1845, to December 7, 1847, third session, Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Congresses. Thomas Jefferson Campbell, Tennessee, from December 7, 1847, to April 13, 1850, Thir- tieth Congress. Died. Richard M. Young, Illinois, from April 17, 1850, to December 1, 1851, Thirty-first Congress. John W. Forney, Pennsylvania, from December 1, 1851, to February 4, 1856, Thirty-second and Thirty-third Congresses; also from February 3, 1860, to July 4, 1861, Thirty-sixth Congress. William Cullom, Tennessee, from February 4, 1856, to December 7, 1857, Thirty-fourth Congress. rg C. Allen, Illinois, from December 7, 1857, to February 2, 1860, Thirty-fifth Congress. Emerson Etheridge, Tennessee, from July 4, 1861, to December 8, 1863, Thirty-seventh Congress. 5 McPherson, Pennsylvania, from December 8, 1863, to December 6, 1875, Thirty- eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses; also from December 35, 1881, to December 3, 1883, Forty- seventh Congress; also from December 2, 1889, to date, Fifty- first Congress. George M. Adams, Kentucky, from December 6, 1875, to December 5, 1881, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, and Forty- -sixth Congresses. John B. Clark, Missouri, from December 3, 1883, to December 2, 1839, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses. James Kerr, Pennsylvania, Fifty-second Congress. Still in office. SERGEANTS-AT-ARMS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Sergeants-at-Arms of the House of Representatives from the First Congress, 1789, to the beginning of the Fifty-second Congress, 1891: Joseph Wheaton, First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth * Congresses, from May 12, 1789, to October 27, 1807. Thomas Dunn, Maryland, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Congresses, from October 27, 1807, to December 5, 1823. John O. Dunn, District of Columbia, Nineteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, and Twenty- second Congresses, from October 27, 1807, to December 3 2, 1833. Thomas B. Randolph, Virginia, Twenty-third Congress, from December 3, 1833, to Decem- ber 15, 1835. Roderick Dorsey, Maryland, Twenty-fourth, Twenty-fifth, and Twenty-sixth Congresses, from December 15, 1835, to June 8, 1841. Eleazor M. Townsend, Connecticut, Twenty-seventh Congress, from June 8, 1841, to December 7, 1843. Newton Iane, Kentucky, Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Congresses, from December 7, 1843, to December 8, 1847. N. Sargent, Vermont, Thirtieth and Thirty-first Congresses, from December 8, 1847, to December 1, 1851. No election during Thirty-first Congress. Adam J. Glossbrenner, Pennsylvania, Thirty-second, Thirty-third, Thirty-fourth, and Thirty-fifth Congresses, from December 1, 1851, to February 3, 1860. Henry W. Hoffman, Maryland, Thirty- sixth Congress, from February 3, 1860, to July 5, 1861. Edward Ball, Virginia, Thirty-seventh Congress, from July 5, 1861, to December 8, 1863. Nathaniel G. Ordway, New Hampshire, Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses, from December 8, 1863, to Décember 6, 1875. John G. Thompson, Ohio, Forty- fourth, Forty-fifth, and Forty- ‘sixth Congresses, from De- cember 6, 1875, to December 5, 1882. George W. Hooker, Vermont, Forty-seventh Congress, from December 5, 1881, to Decem- ber, 3. 1883. John P. Leedom, Ohio, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses, from December 3, 1883, to December 2, 1889. Adoniram J. Holmes, Iowa, Fifty-first Congress, from December 2, 1889. S. S. Yoder, Ohio, F ifty-second Congress, from December, 1891. Still in office. Doorkeepers and Postmasters of the House of Representatives. 258 DOORKEEPERS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. List of Doorkeepers of the House of Representatives from 1789, First Congress, to 1892, Fifty-second Congress: Gifford Dalley, First, Second, and Third Congresses, from April 4, 1789, to December 7, 1795. Thomas Claxton, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, and Sixteenth Congresses, from December 7, 1795, to December 4, 1821. Benjamin Birch, Maryland, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, Twentieth, and Twenty- first Congresses, from December 4, 1821, to December 7, 1831. Overton Carr, Maryland, Twenty-second, Twenty-third, Twenty-fourth, and Twenty-fifth Congresses, from December 7, 1831, to December 23, 1839. Joseph Follansbee, Massachusetts, Twenty-sixth and Twenty-seventh Congresses, from December 23, 1839, to December 7, 1843. * Jesse E. Dow, Connecticut, Twenty-eighth Congress, from December 7, 1843, to December 3, 1845. Cornelius S. Witney, District of Columbia, Twenty-ninth Congress, from December 3, 1834, to December 8, 1847. Robert E. Horner, New Jersey, Thirtieth and Thirty-first Congresses, from December 8, 1847, to December 1, 1851. : 7. W. McKnew, Maryland, Thirty-second and Thirty-third Congresses, from December 1, 1851, to February 5, 1856. Nathan Darling, New York, Thirty-fourth Congress, from February 5, 1856, to December 7, 1857. Robert B. Hackney, Virginia, Thirty-fifth Congress, from December 7, 1857, to May 17, 1858. Dismissed. : J. L. Wright, New Jersey, Thirty-fifth Congress, from May 18, 1858, to February 6, 1860. George Marston, New Hampshire, Thirty-sixth Congress, from February 6, 1860, to July 5, 1861. Tra Goodnow, Vermont, Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, and Thirty-ninth Congresses, from July 5, 1861, to March 5, 1867. Charles E. Lippincott, Illinois, Fortieth Congress, from March 5, 1867, to December 7, 1868. Resigned. Otis S. Buxton, New York, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Congresses, from December 7, 1868, to December 6, 1875. La Fayette H. Fitzhugh, Texas, Forty-fourth Congress, from December 6, 1875, to May 22, 1876. Office declared vacant. John H. Patterson, New Jersey, Forty-fourth Congress, from May 26, 1876, to October 15, 1877. : : John W. Polk, Missouri, Forty-fifth Congress, from October 15, 1877, to April 4, 1878. Dismissed. Charles W. Field, Georgia, Forty-fifth and Forty-sixth Congresses, from April 8, 1878, to December 5, 1881. Walter P. Brownlow, Tennessee, Forty-seventh Congress, from December 5, 1881, to December 3, 1883. James W. Wintersmith, Texas, Forty-eighth Congress, from December 3, 1883. Died. Samuel Donaldson, Tennessee, Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Congresses, from December 5, 1887. A. B. Hurt, Mississippi, Fiftieth Congress, from December 5, 1887, to December 2, 1889. Charles E. Adams, Maryland, Fifty-first Congress, from December 2, 1889. Charles H. Turner, New York, Fifty-second Congress, from December, 1891. Still in office. to POSTMASTERS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Postmasters of the House of Representatives from the creation of the office, April 5, 1828, to the beginning of the Fifty-second Congress. William J. McCormic, District of Columbia, Twenty-fifth, Twenty-sixth, Twenty-seventh, and Twenty eighth Congresses, from April 5, 1828, to December 4, 1845. John M. Johnson, Virginia, Twenty ninth, Thirtieth, Thirty-first, Thirty-second, and Thirty- third Congresses, from December 4, 1845, to February 5, 1856. Robert Morris, Pennsylvania, Thirty-fourth Congress, from February 5, 1856, to December 7, 1857. Michael W. Clusky, Georgia, Thirty-fifth Congress, from December 7, 1857, to February 6, 1860, 256 Congressional Directory. Josiah M. Lucas, Illinois, Thirty-sixth Congress, from February 6, 1860, to July 5, 1861. William S. King, New York, Thirty-seventh and Thirty-eighth Congresses, from July 5, 1861, to December 4, 1865; also Fortieth, Forty-first, and Forty-second Congresses, from March 5, 1867, to December 1, 1873. Josiah Given, Ohio, Thirty-ninth Congress, from December 4, 1865, to March 5, 1867. Henry Sherwood, Michigan, Forty-third Congress, from December 1, 1873, to December 6, 1875 ; also Forty-seventh Congress, from December 5, 1881, to December 3, 1883. Lycurgus Dalton, Indiana, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses, from De- cember 3, 1883, to December 2, 1889. James L.. Wheat, Wisconsin, Fifty-first Congress, from December 2, 1889, to October 1, 18go. Office declared vacant. James W. Hathaway, Montana, Fifty-first Congress, from December 10, 1890. Lycurgus Dalton, Fifty-second Congress, from December, 1891. Still in office. REGULATIONS AS TO FRANKING PRIVILEGE. FREE MATTER. Matter which may be franked—All public documents printed by order of Congress may be sent by Senators, Representatives, Territorial Delegates, the Secretary of the Senate, and Clerk of the House, and received through the mail free. The word free’’ must be written or printed thereon, the name of the sender and his official designation must be written thereon. (P. L. & R., 33409-413.) The Congressional Record, or any part thereof, or speeches or reports therein contained, may be sent under the frank of a Senator, Member, or Delegate, to be written by himself. (P. L. & R., 4410.) Seeds and agricultural reports sent from the Department of Agriculture or by Senators, Members, or Delegates pass free. The frank- ing privileges of Members of Congress and Delegates, as above indicated, continue until the first Monday of December following the expiration of their terms of office. (P. L. &R., 34 409~ 411.) Special franking privileges have been granted to Lucretia R. Garfield, widow of the late President James A. Garfield, and to Julia D. Grant, widow of the late President Ulysses S. Grant, and all mail matter carried to or sent by them under their respective written autograph signatures will be carried free during their respective natural lives. (P.L.& R., $412.) Section 413 of the Postal Laws and Regulations of 1887 has becn so amended as to read as follows: 1. No matter can be transmitted under the franking privilege unless admissible to the mails under the provisions of chapter eleven, of the act of Congress approved March 3, 1891. 2. Public documents printed by order of Congress, including complete numbers or series of the Congressional Record, with the name of a Senator, Representative, Delegate, or the Secretary of the Senate or Clerk of the House written thereon as the addressee, or written thereon for the purpose of franking the same, shall be transmitted free in the mails, accord. ing to the provisions of section 409. 3. Upon the wrapper or cover inclosing part of the Congressional Record or speeches or reports therein contained, transmitted under the provisions of section 410, the character of the matter must be indicated by written or printed words, or the word “free’’ must be written or printed over the signature of the Senator, Member, or Delegate franking the same. 4. Upon matter franked under the provisions of section 409, the name of the person frank- ing the same may be written by himself or any one duly deputed by him for the purpose. 5. Upon extracts from or speeches or reports contained in the Congressional Record, trans- mitted under the provisions of section 410, the frank of the Senator, Member, or Delegate must be written by himself, as required by statute. "When the name of such Member is writ- ten by himself with a facsimile hand-stamp, the signature will be deemed written by the person entitled to frank the same; but should the postmaster know or have good reason to believe that the frank of any Senator, Member, or Delegate is being unlawfully written, stamped, or printed on such extracts, speeches, or reports taken from the Congressional Record, or upon any matter, he will notify the Senator, Member, or Delegate whose name is supposed to be un- lawfully used, and also report to the Third Assistant Postmaster-General the facts relating to such supposed unlawful use. But the matter will not be withheld upon mere suspicion that the frank is unlawfully used until so directed by the Department. 6. Translations of extracts from or speeches or reports taken from the Congressional Record into other than the English language may be sent free under the provisions of section 410, Regulations as to Franking Privilege. J! 257% 7. A Senator, Member, or Delegate who holds his certificate of election is entitled to the ranking privilege from the commencement of the term. 8. All franked matter may be forwarded like any other; but such matter, when once deliv- ered to the addressee, can not be remailed unless properly franked again. 9. A bulk package of franked articles may be sent to one addressee, who, on receiving and opening the package, may place addresses on the franked articles, and remail them for car- riage and delivery to the respective addiesses. 10. Seeds sent from the Department of Agriculture may be sent under the proper penalty label or in official envelopes of that Department. When transmitted by a Senator, Member, or Delegate they may be sent under the official label or official envelope of the Department of Agiiculture, or under the frank of the sender, thus, seeds,” ¢“free,” or merely the word “free,” followed by the name and official designation of the sender. Extension of the [ranking privilege.— The attention of postmasters and postal employés is hereby called to the provisions of section 3 of the act of Congress of March 3, 1891, extend- ing the franking privileges, as follows: “Sec. 3. That the Members and Members elect of Congress shall have the privilege of J sending free throuch the mails, aud under their frank, letters to any officer of tne Govern- ment, when addressed officially.” In carrying out this enactment, which is now operative, the following rules must be ob- served : 1. The privilege conferred applies to members of both branches of Congress— Senators, Representatives, and Delegates—including not only those who have taken their seats as such, : but those who have been elected, have received their certificate of election, and hold the A prima facie rigi.t to seats, Senators and Representatives whose terms have expired are not E entitled to the benefits of this act. 2. Letters to be entitled to free transmission under the act must in every case be addressed to a Government officer—not necessarily at Washington, but anywhere in the United States— whose office title must be given in the subscription of the latter, either with or without his name: for example, “Brig. Gen. Samuel B. Holabird, Quartermaster-General, U. S. A., Washington, D. C.;”’ “ Postmaster, New York, N. Y.;”” “Hon. David M. Key, U. S. District Judge, Chattanooga, Tenn.” The term “Government officer” includes only officers of the = United States. 3. The name of the franking Senator, Representative, or Delegate, written by himself, must appear on the envelope of the letter, in connection with the initial of his office, and ] preceeded by the word “Free,” for example, “Free—John R. Smith, U. S. S.;”’ or “Free— Ei Richard Roe, M. C.” * 1 4. The privilege given by the act applies only to letters on official business, each letter to i a Government officer to be separately enveloped and separately franked. 4 5. The term ¢ letters’ as used in this law means communications wholly or partly in writ- ing relating to official matters and sent under seal, such communications as are denominated I in the laws mail matter of the first class. i 6. Where some other person than a Senator, Representative, or Delegate is suspected of | using a frank improperly or where it is suspected that a frank is forged, the facts must be . reported promptly to the Chief Post-Office Inspector. But franked letters must not be de- tained at mailing or delivery post-offices on the mere suspicion that the franks are not genuine. 7. These instructions must not be held to interfere with those relating to the franking of seeds and public documents comprehended in section 413 of the Postal Regulations, as amended, and which will be found in full in ruling 116. Unpaid matter addressed to the Departments and bureaus at Washington, D. C.—“Any part- ef paid letter or packet addressed ‘to either of said Departments (Executive Departments or bureaus thereof) may be delivered free; but where there is good reason to believe the omis- sion to prepay the full postage thereon was intentional such letter or package shall be re- ] turned to the sender.” (Act of July 5, 1884.) go Mail matter addressed to officers of the Government (except that addressed to officers of i the Census Office) deposited in a post-office by private individuals, with no payment of post- age thereon and not inclosed in penalty envelopes or penalty card furnished by the officer 2 addressed for return information, should be ¢ held for postage.’ Such matter can not be forwarded uhder cover of a penal envelope or slip, subsequently furnished, by the officer addressed ; it must be returned to the sender or sent to the Dead Letter Office, as private ¥ individuals have no right to send matter in the mails free of postage except as above indi- ; cated. 4 : 2D BD——17 ERE BLS dori Congressional Directory. WASHINGTON CITY DIRECTORY. American Republics, Bureau of.— Northwest corner Pennsylvania avenue and Jackson Place. Arlington Hotel —V ermont avenue, northwest corner H street, N. W. Army Dispensary. —1814 G street, N. W, The Arno.—916 Sixteenth street, N. W. ; - Arsenal.—Southern extremity of Four-and-a-half street, W. Census Office—Inter-Ocean Building, Ninth street, between E and F streets, N. W. Chamberlin’s Hotel.—825 Fifteenth street. Children’s Hospital.—Corner of Thirteenth and W streets. ; Coast Survey Buildings—New Jersey avenue, south of the Capitol. Cochran Hotel—Corner Fourteenth and K streets. Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb.—Kendall Green. Columbia Hospital for Women. —Pennsylvania avenue, corner of Twenty-fifth street. Commissioner of Public Buildings —Office, corner of Seventeenth street and Pennsylvania ave. Congressional Hotel —Capitol Hill, southeast of Capitol. Corcoran Gallery of Art.—Corner of Seventeenth street, W., and Pennsylvania avenue. Court of Claims.—1509 Pennsylvania avenue. Department of Agriculture—South Washington, opposite Thirteenth street. Department of Justice—1509 Pennsylvania avenue. Department of Labor —1429 New York avenue, N. W. District Courts—At the City Hall, Four-and-a-half street. Ebbitt House—Corner of F and Fourteenth streets, N. W. Executive Mansion —Pennsylvania avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets. Government Hospital for the Insane—~—Across the Navy-Yard Bridge. Government Printing Office—Corner of North Capitol and H streets, N. Grand Army of the Republic Halls.—1412 Pennsylvania avenue and Seventh and L streets, N. W., and Third and Pennsylvania avenue, S. E. ; Hamilton House—Corner of Fourteenth and K streets. Indian Office.— Atlantic Building, 930 F street, N. W. Interior Department —F street north, between Seventh and Ninth streets. Interstate Commerce Commission.—Sun Building, 1317 F street. The Langham.—Fourteenth and H streets, N. W. Lexington Hotel —Corner of New York avenue and Fifteenth street. Masonic Hell —Corner of Ninth and I streets. Metropolitan Hotel —Pennsylvania avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets, W. National Capital Press Club.—1347 Pennsylvania avenue. National Hotel —Corner of Sixth street, W., and Pennsylvania avenue. National Museum.—South Washington, near the Smithsonian Institution. National Observatory.—E street, N., opposite Twenty-third street W. Navy Department. —Seventeenth street, W., opposite F street, N. Navy- Yard.—On the Eastern Branch, three-fourths of a mile southeast of the Capitol. Normandie Hotel—Northeast corner Fifteenth and I streets, N. W. 0dd Fellows Hall—Seventh street, W., between D and E streets, N. Odd Fellows’ Hall (Navy- Yard ).—Eighth street, E., south of Pennsylvania avenue. Osborne Flats.—809 Fourteenth street, N. W. Pension Office—G street, between Fourth and Fifth streets, in Judiciary Square. Portland Flats.—Corner of Fourteenth street and Vermont avenue. Post-Office Department. —E street, N., between Seventh and Eighth streets. Providence Hospital.—Corner of Second and D streets, S. E. Randall Hotel —Pennsylvania avenue and Fifteenth street, N. W. Reform-School for Boys—On the turnpike to Bladensburg. Riggs House.—Corner of G and Fifteenth streets. Scottish Rite Masonic Hall.—1007 G street, N W. Shoreham, The.—Fifteenth and H streets, N. W. Smuthsonian Institution. —South Washington, opposite Tenth street. State Department. —Corner Seventeenth street and New York avenue. St. James Hotel.—Corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Sixth street, W. Supreme Council Headquarters.—433 Third street, N. W. Supreme Court of the District of Columbia.— Louisiana avenue, opposite Four-and-a-half street, N. W. » : Supreme Court of the United States—At the Capitol, in the old Senate Chamber. Treasury Department. —VFifteenth street, W., opposite I street, N. United States Botanical Ga: den.—Between First and Third streets, W. Union Veteran Union Hall—923 F street. : War Department.—Seventeenth street, opposite F street, N. The Washington Press. 259 Washington Gas-Light Company —Office, 411 Tenth street, W. Washington Monument—On the Mall, near the Potomac. - Welcker’s Hotel.—727 Fifteenth street. Willard’s Hotel.—Corner of Fourteenth street, W. and Pennsylvania avenue, Woodmont Flats.—lowa Circle. Wormley’s Hotel —Corner of H and Fifteenth streets. Young Men's Christian Association.—New York avenue, near Fifteenth. THE WASHINGTON PRESS. Annals of the Deaf, published quarterly at mB is” Congress, published monthly at 306 Ninth street, N. W. Farm and Fireside, weekly, 359 Pennsylvania avenue. Gourick’s Washington Digest, Atlantic Building, 930 F street, N. W. J Home Journal, weekly, 1416 Florida avenue. Kate Field's Washington, published every Wednesday at 59 Corcoran Building, U. S. Journal of Oratory, monthly, 618 Twelfth street. : Woman's Tribune, weekly, 1308 Pennsylvania avenue. The African Repository, quarterly, Third street and Pennsylvania avenue. The Army and Navy Register, published weekly at the National Theater Building. The Bee, published weekly at 1003 I street, N. W. The Building Register, published weekly at 1010 F street, N. W. The Canteen, published monthly at 616 I street, N. W. The Chranicle, published every Sunday morning at 509 Eleventh street, N. W. The Church News, published every Sunday at 1108 G street, N. W. The Evening Star, published every afternoon, except Sundays, at 1101 Pennsylvania avenue. The Free Press, weekly, 616 F street. The Gazette, published every Sunday morning at 935 D street, N. W. The Gazette of the Patent Office, published every Tuesday at the Patent Office. The Hatchet, published every Sunday morning at 1010 Pennsylvania avenue. The Sunday Herald and Weekly National Intelligencer, published every Sunday at Eleventh and E streets, N. W. The Home Magazine, published monthly, Eleventh and G streets, N. W. The Inventive Age, published at Eighth and H streets, N. W. The Law Reporter, published every Wednesday morning at 503 E street, N. W. The National Democrat, published weekly at 359 Pennsylvania avenue. The National Economist, published weekly at 129 North Capitol street. The National Free Press, published every Sunday, 633 F street, N. W. The National Guard, monthly, 640 D street, N. W. The National Tribune, published weekly at 1716 New York avenue, N. W. The National View, published weekly at Twelfth street and Pennsylvania avenue. The Opera Glass, published every Saturday at 1012 Pennsylvania avenue. The Patent and Court Record, published monthly at the Le Droit Building, IF street, N. W. Zhe Patentee, published weekly at 505 D street, N. W. The People’s Advocate, 490 Louisiana avenue, N. W. The Program, published daily at 1308 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. Public Opinion, published every Saturday at Washington Loan and Trust Building, Ninth and F streets. The Republic, published every Sunday morning at 1308 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. 7 he Sentinel, published every Saturday at 518 Tenth street, N W. The United States Gazette, published monthly at 719 Market Space. 7 he United States Government Advertiser, 1420 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W. The Vidette, published monthly at 339 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W, The Volks Tribun, published every Saturday at 808 E street, N. W. The Washington Journal (German), tri-weekly, corner of Seventh and G streets, N. W, The Washington Post, published every morning at the corner of Tenth and D streets. The Weekly National Republican, published every Thursday at Ninth street and Pennsylvania avenue. The Working Woman, published monthly at 1222 F street, N. W, Congressional Directory. WASHINGTON CITY POST-OFFICE. [Louisiana avenue, near Seventh street, N. W.] Postmaster —HENRY SHERWOOD, 1017 East Capitol street. Assistant- Postmaster.—S. H. Merrill, 920 P street, N. W, MONEY ORDER DIVISION. | | | { | | | | | | [Money should always be sent by money-order to insure safe delivery.] | Money orders issued and paid as follows, Sundays excepted : | At main office, 9g a. m. to 5 p. m. : ! At Georgetown, East Capitol, and Stations C,D,E,F,G,H,K,1,M,0,P,R,S, and South- | west Station, 8a. m. to 6p m. | International money orders issued and paid at main office, East Capitol, Georgetown, Station | C, and Southwest Station. | MONEY ORDER RATES. In the United States: | On orders not exceeding $5_____..__- $0. 05 | Over $40 and not exceeding #50_.___ $o. 25 |8 Over $5 and not exceeding $10___.... .08 | Over $50 and not exceeding $60_____ . 30 | aE Over $10 and not exceeding $15. ____ .10 | Over $60 and not exceeding $70_____ daz i Over $15 and not exceeding $30... . 15 : Over $70 and not exceeding $8o_____ . 40 Over $30 and not exceeding $40. ____ . 20 | Over $30 and not exceeding $100____ .45 A single money order may include any amount from one cent to one hundred dollars, inclu- sive, but must not contain the fractional part of a cent. : | WAIVER OF IDENTIFICATION. | The remitter who desires to relieve the payee or his endorsee or his attorney from the in- | convenience of proving identity, at the office of payment, by the testimony of another person, may do so, at Ais own risk, by signing the following form on back of the application : Identification of payee, indorsee, or attorney waived. : Es eR eee mm mem mm me sm ve mm nm ; | Remitter. | Postal notes, payable to bearer, for any sum from one cent to $4.99, inclusive, may be | obtained at any money-order office, and payable at any money-order office in the United States. The fee for a postal note is three cents. Special forms of application for foreign money orders will be furnished to persons who de- sire them. The domestic form should not be used in sending orders to foreign countries. The value of the British pound sterling in United States money is fixed by convention at $4.87. The German markat 24% cents. French and Swiss franc and Italian lire at 1934 cents. Swedish and Norwegian kroner at 27 cents, Netherland florin at 41 cents. To Africa, Algeria, Arabia, Austro-Hungary, Azores, Bahamas, Belgium, Bermuda, British Bechuanaland, Canada, China, Cape Colony, Ceylon, Danish West Indies, Denmark, Egypt, Falkland Islands, France, Germany, Gibraltar, Great Britain and Ireland, Hawaiian Islands, | - 4 Iceland, India (British), Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Leeward Islands, Luxemburg (Grand Duchy), ! Madeira Islands, Netherlands, Newfoundland, New South Wales, New Zealand ,Norway, Orange Free State, Panama, Persia, Portugal, Queensland, Roumania, Saint Helena, Straits Settlements, Sweden, Switzerland, Tangier (Morocco), Tasmania, Tripoli, Tunis, Turkey, Victoria, West Indies, and Windward Islands: ; Notexceeding S10... o.oo, %0.30 | Not exceeding$6o. __....... _2--_ . 60 A Not exceeding $20... oot canis +20. Notexceeding $70... Loon abs ‘vo HE Notexceeding So... oo. ol i oa +30 | Not exceeding £80. J... col i ol . 80 I Notexceeding $40... -..o. to... 40 [| Notexceeding $00... 0. Lo. . 90 | Not exceeding $50 _______ Ee ats 50. | Notexceeding $100... oC ooo. 1.00 The maximum amount for which a single International Money Order may be drawn is-- | a for orders payable in : | The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the Cape Colony, and Jamaica i {as heretofore)... .... Rea ee GR eR £10 5s. 4d= $50.00 | GEFRIaNY oo ins ie an dan ER Mark, 400 Pfg.—= 97.00 18 Fraweceand Algeria o.oo Li ol esha sen Francs 500 = 98.75 i Belohum. c.f lc: ian ia on cht cip abn tmnt a anne ata dh “il Eon == 08.75 | Switzerland ooo oo ce Sl En al Francs 506. 30 Centimes — 100. 00 Yoally seb. oo i rE a Lire or Francs 506. 30 Centimes = 100. 00 = 100.00 o j Portugal oo. io a el aa nd Milreis 92.590 Reis | R \ The Washington City Post-Ofice. Florins 243.90 Cts. = Kroner 370.00 = New Zealand id oot 0 a Sefasomian £20 10s 8d New South Wales Queensland Newfoundland Victoria 1 1 1 1 ) i } 1 ] 1 } } 1 1 ) ] 1 J} 1 1 1 1 [} } [} [} i } L} 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 [} 1 1) 1 [] | 1 1 i ' . [] ll 1 t |) 1 ] } 1 [} L] 888338888888 00 00 00 OO oo © [III TR I REGISTRY DIVISION (Second floor, Louisiana avenue, front.) Registered matter.— First, third, and fourth class matter may be registered at an expense of 10 cents each package, in addition to the proper postage. Letters or parcels can be registered for a fee of 10 cents in addition to postage. At main office, from 8.30 a. m. to 6 p. m., Sundays excepted. : At all sub-stations during such hours as they are open. Carriers are not allowed to receive mail matter for registration. Before a letter or package is offered for registration the name and address of the sendet must be noted on the envelope and the proper amount of stamps for postage and fee affixed. Letters for abroad, to be registered here and to go by steamer from New York, should be presented for registration in the main office not later than 11 a. m. of the day before sailing of steamer. CITY DELIVERY. [Postage on local matter 2 cents for each ounce or fraction thereof. ] Mair Office, Louisiana avenue, near Seventh street. Delivery by carriers on five-trip routes, 7.30 and 10.30 a. m., 12.15, 3, and 4.30 p. m. Delivery by carriers on three-trip routes, 7 a. m., 12.15 and 3.30 p. m. Delivery by carriers on’ two-trip routes, 7 a. m. and 2.30 p. m. Delivery by carriers to the Departments, 8 a. m., 12 m., and 2.30 p. m. Delivery by carriers to hotels, 7.30 and 10.30 a. m., 12.15, 2.30, 4.30, 7.30, and 10.45 p. m. Collections commence at 5.00, 9.00, and 10.30a. m., 12.15,1.30, 3, 4.30, 7,and 9p. m. Sun- days at 5 p.m. Holidays, 5 a. m. and 5 p. m The carriers’ window is open from 6 to 7 p. 0.30 to IT a.m. Georgetown Station, Thirty-first street, above m. daily, except Sunday, when it is open from Station G, corner Connecticut avenue and L M street. East Capitol Station, corner Fourth and East Capitol streets. Southwest Station, 714 Four-and-a-half st., Ww Station C, No. 1413 F street, N. W. Station D, Fourteenth and P streets. Station E, No. 426 Seventh street, S. W. Station F, No. 1921 Pennsylvania avenue N. street. Station H, No. 2004 Seventh street, N. W. Station K, No. 85 H street, N. W. Station L, No. 751 Eighth street, S. E. Station M, No. 701 Fifteenth street, N. E. Station O, 1525 Connecticut avenue, N. W. Station P, corner Fourteenth and Stoughton streets, N. W. Station R, Ninth and H streets, N. E. W. Station S, 1501 Ninth street, N, W. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF MAILS. Alexandria —Close, 4, 9.20, 10.30, and 10. 8.20, 10.35 a. m., 1.20, 5.25, 7.25, 9.35 40 a. m., 1.35, 3.30, 4.35, 5.30 p.m. Arrive, p.m. Annapolis.—Close, 4.15, 6.05, 11.40 a. m., 4 p. m. Arrive, 8.30 a. m., 1.55, 5.20 p. m. Atlanta, Northern Georgia, and Alabama 8.38 a. m., 9.45 p. m. Baltimore.—Close, 3.30, 4.15, 6.05, 6.50, 4, 5, 5.50, 7.30, 8.30, 9.30, 11.05 p. m. .—Close, 8, 10.30 a. m., 10.30 p. m. Arrive, 8.30, 9.10, 10.30, 11.20 a. m., I.I5, 2.40, 3.50, Arrive, 4.10, 6.30, 7.30, 8.55, 10.30, II.IO, I1.20a. m,, 12.55, 1.15, 3.20, 5.20, 6.35, 6.45, 8.05, 8.35, 8.55, 10.35, [1.30 p. m, id i el a i a I # Rd : i 1y - { ’ She 35 < ( 262 Congressional Directory. . Boston.—Close, 7.20, 8.30 a. m., 2.40, 3.30, 3.50, 5.10, 9.30, 10.50 p.m. Arrive, 4.10, 8, 10.42 a. m., 1.42, 8.15, 10.35 p. m. California, Minnesota, Nevada, and Manitoba—Close, 10.20, 11 a. m., 3, 7.10, 8.15, I1.10 p- m. Arrive, 3.50, 7.30, 11.51 a. m., 2.10 p.m. Charleston and Eastern South Carolina.—Close, 4, 10.30 a. m., 3.30 p.m. Arrive, I1.3I, I1.70p. m. Cleveland and Northern Ohio.—Close, 11 a.m., 7.10, 8.25, 9.30, 11.10 p.m. Arrive, 7.30, 11.51 a. m., 5.55 p- Mm. Cincinnati and Southern Ohto.—Close, 11 a.m, 3, I1.I0 p. m. Arrive, 3.50 a. m., 2.10, .45 p. m. ¢ : Columbia and Western South Carolina.—Close, 4, 10.10, a. m., 10.30 p. m. Arrive, 8.38 a.m., 9:45 p. m. Columbus and Western Ohio.—Close, 10.20, 11 a. m., 3, 8.15, 11.10 p. m. Arrive, 7.30 a. m., 2.10, 2.20, 4.45 p- m. Eastern Tennessee,via Virginia Midland Railroad. —Close, 8, 10.402. m., 10.30 p.m. Ar- rive, 8.38 a. m., 9.45 p. m. New Orleans.—Close, 10.40 a. m., 3, 10.30 p. m. Arrive, 8.38 a. m., 9.45 p. m. New York City—Close, 3.30, 6.50, 8.30,9.10, 10.30, a. m., 1.15, 2.40, 3.30, 3.50, 5.10, 7.30, 9.30, 11.05 p. m. Arrive, 4.10, 8, 10.42 a. m., 3.30, 3.50, 4.30, 8.15, 8.25, 10.35 p. m. Philadelphia —Close, 3.30, 6.50, 8.30, 9.10, 10.30, a. m., I.I5 2.45, 3.15, 5.10, 9.30, 11.05 p. m. Arrive, 4.10, 8, 10.42, 11.40 a. m,, 1.42, 3.30, 3.50, 4.30, 5.55, 6.45, 8.15, 8.40, 10.35 p.m. : Raleigh, Eastern North Carolina and Florida—Close, 4, 10.30 a. m., 3.30 p.m. Arrive, 1.31, TL.I0p. Mm. Tn Richmond. —Close, 4, 10.30 a. m., 3.30, 4.35, 10.40 p. m. Arrive, 6.35 a. m., 1.31, 4.10, I1.I0 p. m. Savannah and Eastern Georgia.—Close, 4, 10.30 a. m. Arrive, 1.31, 11.10 p. m. Western North Carolina.—Close, 10.40 a. m., 10.30 p.m. Arrive, 8.38, a. m., 9.45 p. m. Western Tennessee—Close, 3, 11.10 p.m. Arrive, 3.50 a. m,, 2,10 p. m. UNITED STATES POSTAL REGULATIONS. RATES OF POSTAGE. First-Class Matter.—Letters, matter wholly or partly in writing, drawings, and matter which is sealed against inspection, are first-class matter, and subject to the postage rate of fwo cents for each ounce or fraction thereof. On local or drop letters, wo cents for eack ounce or fraction thereof. Postal cards having anything attached, or having writing or printing on the face, other than the address, are subject to letter rates of postage. : Second- Class Matter.—TEmbraces all newspapers and other periodical publications which are issued at stated intervals, and as frequently as four times a year. On newspapers and period- ical publications of the second class, when sent by others than the publisher or news agent, the postage shall be prepaid at the rate of one cent for each four ounces or fractional part thereof. Third-Class Matter —Embraces books, circulars, photographs, proof-sheets, corrected proof- sheets with manuscript copy accompanying the same, seeds, cuttings, roots, scions, and plants, and postage shall be paid thereon at the rate of one cent for each two ounces or fractional part thereof. Fe Fourth-Class Matter —Embraces labels, patterns, playing cards, visiting cards, ornamented paper, and all other matter of the same general character, the printing upon which is not de- signed to instruct, amuse, cultivate the mind or taste, or impart general information. This class also includes merchandise, and samples of merchandise, models, samples of ores, metals, minerals, and any other matter not included in the first, second, or third classes, and which is not liableto destroy or otherwise damage the contents of the mail-bag. Postage rate thereon, one cent for each ounce or fractional part thereof. The sender’s name and address should in all cases appear upon the wrapper of third and fourth class matter. MAIN OFFICE. Money-order division open from 9 a. m.to 5 p. m. Registry division open from 8.30 a. m. to 6 p. m. General-delivery window never closed. Stamps can be purchased at any time, day or night. Money-order and registered-letter business transacted at all of the branch post- offices in this city. SPECIAL-DELIVERY MESSENGERS. Special-delivery messengers can be obtained from the Senate and House of Representatives post-offices, or any of the branch stations of the Washington City Post-Office. i 5 peo o 3 x 7 List of United States Senators, showing Term of Service. | 263 LIST OF UNITED STATES SENATORS, SHOWING COM- MENCEMENT AND EXPIRATION OF TERMS OF SERVICE. CLASS I.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1893. (Twenty-nine Senators in this class.) Name. Residence. Commencement of service. Termination of service. . Nelson W. Aldrich __ John B. Allen . William B. Bate . Rufus Blodgett . Lyman R. Casey... . Horace Chilton (a)___ . Francis M. Cockrell _ . John W. Daniel (5) .. . Cushman K. Davis __ . Henry L: Dawes .._. . Charles J. Faulkner. . . Charles N.'Felton __.. t ~ RI Oph LW N= . James Z. George (4)_._| D . Arthur P. Gorman (6). . George Gray . Eugene Hale . Joseph R. Hawley __.. . Frank Hiscock . Algernon S. Paddock .- Samuel Pasco... ._. . Redfield Proctor (¢) . 2. Matthew S. Quay __.__ . Wilbur S. Sanders __ . Philetus Sawyer . John Sherman (4) ____ . William M. Stewart __ . Francis B. Stockbridge . David Turpie . Francis E. Warren ___ Providence, R. I Walla Walla, Wash Nashville, Tenn Long Branch, N. J Jamestown, N. Dak Tyler, Tex Warrensburg, Mo Lynchburg, Va St. Paul, Minn _ Pittsfield, Mass Martinsburg, W. Va _ San Francisco, Cal Carrollton, Miss Laurel, Md Wilmington, Del Ellsworth, Me Hartford, Conn Syracuse, N. Y Beatrice, Nebr Monticello, Fla Proctor, Vt Beaver, Pa Helena, Mont Oshkosh, Wis Mansfeld, Ohio Virginia City, Nev Kalamazoo, Mich Indianapolis, Ind Cheyenne, Wyo Oct. Dec. Mar. Dec. Apr. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Nov. Mar. Apr. Mar. Mars 4, 1887 5, 1881 2, 1889 4, 1887 4, 1887 4, 1889 25, 1891 4, 1875 4, 1887 4, 1875 4, 1887 19, 1891 4, 1881 4, 1881 19, 1885 4, 1881 4, 1881 4, 1887 4, 1337 4, 1887 I, 1801 4, 1887 16, 1890 4, 1881 4, 1881 4, 1887 4, 1887 4, 1887 1, 1890 Crass IL—-SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE (Thirty Senators in this class.) EXPIRE IN 1895. . John S. Barbour James H. Berry . Matthew C. Butler ___ Joseph: M. Carey ..... . John G. Carlisle . William E. Chandler _ Richard Coke... .... . Alfred H. Colquitt___ . Shelby M. Cullom ___ .. Nathan F. Dixon... . . Joseph N. Dolph... . William P. Frye . Randall L. Gibson _ __ . Isham G. Harris . Anthony Higgins ____ . George F. Hoar © ONT OTP LN ARODRARRARROODROROUOU Alexandria, Va Bentonville, Ark Edgefield, S. C Cheyenne, Wyo Covington, Ky Concord, N. H Waco, Tex Springfield, 11 Westerly, R. I Portland, Oregon Lewiston, Me New Orleans, La Memphis, Tenn Wilmington, Del _ Worcester, Mass May June Mar. Mar. Apr. Mar. Mar. Mar. . 25, 1885 Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. 4, 1889 4, 1877 i, 1890 20, 1890 19, 1889 4, 1877 4, 1883 4, 1883 10, 1889 4, 1833 8, 1881 4, 1883 4, 1877 4, 1839 4, 1877 Mar, Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. 3, 1895 3, 1895 3, 1895 3, 1895 3, 1895 3, 1895 3, 1895 3, 1895 3, 1895 3, 1395 3, 1895 3, 1895 3, 1395 3, 1895 3, 1895 3, 1895 (a) Appointed by the governor, till the election of a successor, to fill the vacancy caused by the resig nation of Hon. John H. Reagan. (6) Reélected January 1892; expiration of this term of service, March 3, 1899. : (c) Appointed by the governor, till the election of a successor, to fill the vacancy caused by the resig- nation of Hon. George F. Edmunds. 264 Crass II.—_SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1895— Cont'd. Congressional Directory. {i : Commencement| Termination Nowe, Residence of service. of service. 37. John E. Kenna DD. Ronowla W.Va = Mar. * 4, 1883 | Mar. 3, 1895 18. James McMillan_____ Rel Detroit, Mich. io. Mar. 4,1889 | Mar. 3, 1895 19. John R.-McPherson ..| ID | Belle Meade, N. J... .... Mar. 4,1877 | Mar. 3,1895 20. Charles F. Manderson | R | Omaha, Nebr _ ___.______ Mar. 4,1883 | Mar. 3,1895 2%. John TF. Morgan. =. Salm, Ala. oo Mar. 4,1877 | Mar. 3,1895 22. R.F Peltigrew o__¢ R | Sioux Falls, S. Dak _._...] Dec. 2,1889 | Mar, '3,1305 23. Bishop W. Perkins (2)|- R | Oswego, Kans __._._._____ You. r.eSaz 24. Thomas C. Power... |'R | Heleva, Moni: -5.. ~~ Apr. 16,1890 | Mar. 3,1895 25. Matt W. Ransom... .[((D | Weldon, N.C _-. =... Apr. 24,1872 | Mar. 3, 1895 26. George S. Shoup .__ | R \| Salmon City, Idaho. ___- Dec. 29,1890 | Mar. 3, 1895 27. Edward C. Walthall(46)| D | Grenada, Miss___________ Mar. 12,1885 | Mar. 3,1895 28. William D. Washburn| R | Minneapolis, Minn______.| Mar. 4,1839 | Mar. 3,1895 20, Jomes BE. Wilson... / Rj Fairfield; Town. .0_ Mar. 4,1883 | Mar. 3,1895 30. Edward O, Wolcott _.[ RV Denver,Colo. >... Mar. 4,1889 | Mar. 3, 1895 (a) Appointed January 1, 1892, by the governor, till the election of a successor, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Preston B. Plumb. (6) Reélected January, 1892; this term will expire March 3, 1gor. Crass III.-SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1897. (Twenty nine Senators in this class.) . William B. Allison___ . Jos. C. S. Blackburn__ vw Calviv:S. Brice... ___ . Wilkinson Call _____. . Jas. Donald Cameron. «.lyedT. Dubois... . Jacob H. Gallinger __ . Charles H. Gibson__. Jom B. Gordon... 10. Henry C. Hansbrough 1. David B. Hill. _. 12. Tohnil. M. Irby’... 13. James K. Jones. [| 14. Jom P. Jones... : 15. James H. Kyle © ON QU hy N= 116. John H. Mitchell =... ¥7. Justin Morell. =. 18. John M. Palmer _._. 19. William A. Peffer_._._ 20. Orville H. Platt gt. James I. Pugh © 22. Watson C. Squire 23. Leland Stanford. ____ 24. HentyM. Teller». 25. Zebulon B. Vance |__ 26, George G. Vesti. __ 27. William F. Vilas ____ 28. Daniel W. Voorhees _ 29. Edward D. White gx Dubuque, Iowa... -. Versailles, Ky." 2 Lima, Ohio. + oS =. Jacksonville, Fla Harrisburg, Pa Blackfoot, Idaho Concord, NH... Easton, Md: .. SLT SN Atlanta Ga. 000 Devils Lake, N.Dak Blmira, No YN =a Yoarens, SC. == Washington, Ark Gold Hill, New... Aberdeen, S. Dak Portland, Oregon Strafford, Vt... 1 Springfield, 111 Popeka, Kans... = Meriden, Conn Eofoula, Ala 22 v0 Seattle, Wagh =. = San Francisco, Cal Central City, Colo Charlotte, N.C___.._...- Kansas City, Mo Madison, Wis © Terre Haute, Ind New Orleans, La Mar. 4,1873 Mar. 4, 1885 Mar. 4, 1891 Mar. 4,1879 Mar. 21,1377 Mar. 4, 1891 Mar. 4, 1891 Nov. 19, 1891 Mar. 4, 1891 Mar. 4, 1891 Mar. 4,1891 Mar. 4,1891 Mar. 4, 1885 Mar. 4,1873 Mar. 4, 1891 Dec. 4, 1885 Mar. 4, 1867 Dee. 7, 1307 Mar. 4, 1891 Mar. 4,1879 Nov. 24, 1880 Dec. 2, 1889 Mar. 4, 1885 Mar. 4, 1885 Mar. 4,1879 Mar. 4,1879 Mar. 4,1891 Nov. 6, 187% Mar 4, 1891 dis £3 Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1397 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1897 3, 1397 3, 1897 3, 1897 Population of the United States. 2635 VERIFIED POPULATION OF THE UNITED STATES. States and Territories. Population. States and Territories. - Population, | THE UNITED STATES ___..__| 62,622,250 || Northern Central division— | ==————-ll' “Continued. : i North Atlantic division .____. 17, 401, 545 Missouri. oo uses 2, 679, 184 ; ~ North Dakota. i... .. 182, 719 Maine or oa ol 661, 086 South Dakota. _.... 5. 328, 808 New Hampshire __.____. 376, 530 Nebraska io. laos 1,058,910 Vermont os aa 332,422 Bansss ooo ooo 0d 1,427,096 | Massachusetts. ____..__ 2, 238,943 nai oon H Rhode Island il... 345, 506 || Southern Central division ___.| 10,972,893 ! Connectigut. . "oo... 746, 258 re re 1 New York ©. b....nooc- 5,997, 853 Renmeky ov "ou. 1,858,635 New Jersey oi cous 1,444,933 Tennessee __Z... i. 1,767,518 Pennsylvania... 5, 258, 014 Alsbamin oie. i 1,513,017 ' 1 Mississippi ooo. vnna 1, 289, 600 ; E South Atlantic division ____.._. 8, 857,920 Touiglana {2c von. 1,118,587 1 - Mesa oui o_o 2, 235, 523 A Delaware ..._.. a 168, 493 Indian Tersliory. 0. coca: 1 Mayland o.oo 0 1,042, 390 Oklshoma oo *61, 834 i District of Columbia _.._. 230, 392 Arkansas: Leow 1,128,179 | Nivginle._ o.oo 1,655,980 | West Virginia... 762,704 | Western division.......oumnwem- 3,027, 613 North: Carolina... _._:. 1,617,047 . | South Cavolina. . 2: 1, 151,140 Montana o-oo ot) 132, 159 1 Geotgla haa 1,337,352 Wyonting 22... ne 60, 705% Movida Soo wT. 391, 422 Colorado sao ons 412,198 I a New Mexicon._: _- 0 153, 593 of Northern Central division____| 22,362,279 Avizonay.. io. .... Na 59, 620 | = Utah) a La 207, 90% | Ohio: =. Sia Sen 3,672, 316 Nevada ol. Roe 45, 761 | Yadiong .. oo on 2, 192, 404 Ydoho!, on aie. 0a, 84, 385 i Tilineist od 3,826, 351 Alaska ri ee | Michigan oo 2,003, 889 Washington 0... 349, 390 1 Wisconsin... C.onnii.. 1, 686, 880 Oregon viii 313, 767 | Mimnebota. __L. L I, 301, 826 California: «.- > _% I, 208, 130 i Towa =. vu 5 1,911, 896 } | * Including 5,338 persons in Greer County (in Indian Territory), claimed by Texas. § RECAPITULATION. THEN STATES CL ol ronan aed Sues 62, 622, 250 | EE A North Atlantic division Jo: ee or 0 oo al cule 17, 401, 545 South Atlantic division... ©... oo oie 8, 857,920 | Northern Central division... cosine sees mis 22, 362, 279 ] Southern Central division ______.__ Seon hw aR el 10,072,393 ° : | Western division = Ceca a Llu 3,027,613 SOUTHERN LOBBY wes COAT ROOM = O o oo = < [©] Oo Congresstony Lrectory, Agg0T Nd3lsv3 SENATORS’ LOBBY V. P., Vice-President. Sec. , Secretary. L. C., Legislative Clerk. D. + Doorkecper and Assistants. J. C., Journal Clerk. Hon. Levi P. MORTON, Vice-President and President of the Senate. DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE. C. C., Ckief Clerk. R., Official Reporters. P., Press Reporters. S., Sergeant-at-Arms. CHARLES F. MANDERSON, President pro tempore. . Aldrich, Nelson W., Rhode Island. . Allen, John B., Washington. . Allison, Wm. B., Iowa. . Barbour, John S., Virginia. . Bate, William B., Tennessee. . Berry, James H., Arkansas. . Blackburn, Joseph C. S., Kentucky. . Blodgett, Rufus, New Jersey. . Brice, Calvin S., Obio. . Butler, M. C., South Carolina. . Call, Wilkinson, Florida. . Cameron, J. I. , Pennsylvania. . Carey, Joseph M., Wyoming. . Carlisle, John G., Kentucky. . Casey, Lyman R., North Dakota. . Chandler, William E., New Hampshire. . Chilton, Horace, Texas. . Cockrell, Francis M., Missouri. . Coke, Richard, Texas. . Colquitt, Alfred H., Georgia. . Cullom, Shelby M., Illinois. . Daniel, John W., Virginia. . Davis, Cushman K., Minnesota. Dawes, Henry L., Massachusetts. . Dixon, Nathan F., Rhode Island. . Dolph, Joseph N., Oregon. 5. Dubois, Fred T., Idaho. . Faulkner, Charles J., West Virginia. . Felton, Charles N., California. . Frye, William P., Maine. 74- 38. a7. 60. 69. 35. 64. 28. 79- 15. 55. 48. 86. 51. 27. 42. 17. 52. 65. 70. 23. . McPherson, John R., New Jersey. . Manderson, Charles F., Nebraska. . Mitchell, John H., Oregon. . Morgan, John T., Alabama. . Morrill, Justin S., Vermont. . Paddock, Algernon S., Nebraska. . Palmer, John M., Illinois. . Pasco, Samuel, Florida. . Peffer, William A., Kansas. Gallinger, Jacob H., New Hampshire, George, James Z., Mississippi. Gibson, Charles H., Maryland. Gibson, Randall Lee, Louisiana. Gordon, John B., Georgia. Gorman, Arthur P., Maryland. Gray, George, Delaware. Hale, Eugene, Maine. Hansbrough, Henry Clay, North Dakota. Harris, Isham G., Tennessee. Hawley, Joseph R., Connecticut. Higgins, Anthony, Delaware. Hill, David B., New York. Hiscock, Frank, New York. Hoar, George F., Massachusetts. Irby, John L. M., South Carolina. Jones, James K., Arkansas. Jones, John P., Nevada. Kenna, John E., West Virginia. Kyle, James H., South Dakota. McMillan, James, Michigan. 44. 78. Perkins, Bishop W., Kansas. Pettigrew, R. F., South Dakota. . Platt, Orville H., Connecticut. . Power, Thomas C., Montana. . Proctor, Redfield, Vermont. . Pugh, James L., Alabama. . Quay, M. S., Pennsylvania. . Ransom, Matt W., North Carolina. . Sanders, Wilbur F., Montana. . Sawyer, Philetus, Wisconsin. . Sherman, John, Ohio. . Shoup, George L., Idaho. . Squire, Watson C., Washington. . Stanford, Leland, California. . Stewart, William M., Nevada. . Stockbridge, Francis B., Michigan. . Teller, Henry M., Colorado. . Tui pie, David, Indiana. . Vance, Z. B., North Carolina. . Vilas, William F., Wisconsin. . Vest, George Graham, Missouri. . Voorhees, Daniel W., Indiana. . Walthall, E. C., Mississippi. . Warren, Francis E., Wyoming. . Washburn, William D., Minnesota. . White, Edward D., Louisiana. . Wilson, James F., Iowa. . Wolcott, Edward O., Colorado. I ssoppuss [fo uoyvIoy 268 Congressional Directory. i A SSH AMS ol \a\ale REPO Ss |, CLERKS : SS NORTHERN DOOR [108] {1 lb [el NS NN WN | [54] [=] [1] I,m, RD 7 7 7 Nn , mmm DIRECTORY OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Republicans in Roman. CHARLES F. Democrats in Italic. CRISP, Speaker. Farmers’ Alliance in Small Caps. 110 Alderson, ¥. D. 133 Andrew, ¥. F. 92 Atkinson, L. E. 2 Bailey, ¥. W. 52 BAKER, WM. 161 Bartine, H. F. 23 Belden, J. J 149 Belknap, CG. E. 121 Bergen, C. A. g Bingham, H. H. 140 Bland, R. P. 75 Blount, ¥. H. £27 Boutelle, C..A, 63 Bowers, W.W. 106 Brawley, Ww. H. 55 Breckinridge, C.R. 59 Bretz, 7. L. 37 Brickner, G. H. 38 Broderick, Case. 3 Brookshire, Zr. 42 Brosius, Marriott 24 Buchanan, James x35 Bullock, Robert 28 Burrows, J.C. 101 Bynum, Ww. D. 147 Caldwell, J. A. 32 Campbell, T. 5%. xo4 Castle, ¥. IV. 111 Chapin, A. C. 119 Cheatham, H.P, 125 Clark, C. D; 15 CLOVER, B.H. g2 Cockran, W.B. 86 Cogswell, Wm. 58 Cooper, G. W., 305 Cox, I. Vi 136 Crain, W.H. 66 Curtis, N.M. 6 Cutting, J. T. Ph Dalzell, John 49 Davis, Joun 11 Dingley, No, jr. 44 Doan, R.E, 18 Dockery, A.M, WEST 27 Dolliver, J. P. 6 Dunphy, E. ¥. 82 Durborow,A.C..77. 100 Kreloe, B. A. 122 Enochs, W, H., 34 Fitch, 4.7 a3 KF lick, James P. 128 Funston, E. H. 109 Goodnight, I. H. 8g Griswold, M. 118 Grout, W. W. 102 Hall, 0. M. st Havrvorsen, K. 40 Harmer, A. C. 103 Harries, W. 1. 144 Harter, M.D. 142 Harvey, D. A. 97 Haugen, N. P. 7a Hemphill, ¥. ¥. 12 Henderson, D. B. 45 Henderson, T. J. 36 Herbert, H. A. 160 Hermann, Binger 159 Hitt, R. R. gr Hooker, W. B. 61 Hopkins, A. C. 6o Hopkins, A. J. S$ Houk. J. C. 39 Huff, G. F. 136 Hull, J. A. T. 94 Johnson, H. U. 146 Johnson, M., N. 150 Jolley, J. L. 16 Kem, O. M. 113 Kendall, ¥, W. 5 Ketcham, J. H. 165 Lane, Edward 56 Lester, R. E. 1 Lewis, Clarke 41 Lind, John 70 Lodge, H.C. 153 Loud, E. F. 19 Magner, IT. F. 4 Mansur gC. H. SIDE. | 20 Martin, A. N. 132 McCreary, ¥. B. 143 McClellan ,C.A.O. 84 McGann, L. E. so McKEigHaN,W. A. 69 McKenna, Joseph 114 McK rene LF 168 McRae, 7. 138 Meredith, z Z. 3x Miller, L. M. 26 Milliken, S. L. 21 Morse, E. A. 81 Newberry, W. C. 167 Cates, W. C. 64 O'Donnell; James 48 O'Neill, Charles 163 O'Neill, &. F. 29 OT18, J. G. 131 Outhwaite, ¥. H. 134 Page, Henry 137 Parveriy W. F. 112 Pattison, §¥. M. 68 Payne, S. E. 35 Peel, S. W, 126 Perkins, G. D. 123 Pickler, J. A. 33 Plerce,-R. A. 98 Post, ET 23 Powers, H. 1. 74 Price, Andrew 67 Raines, Jno. 62 Randall, C. S. 65 Ray, G. W. 71: Reed, T. B. 22 Reyburn, J.E. 154: Rife, J. W. 130 Robertson, S.M. 87 Robinson, J. B. 14 Rusk, H. Ww, 8s Russell, C. A, 53 Sanford, John 166 Scott, Owen 157 Scull, Edward 117 Quackenbush 'JA. 78 Shell, G. WW. 155 Shonk, G. W., 13 S1MPSON, J. 25 Smith, G. W. 30 Stackhouse. E. T. 148 Stephenson, S. M. 116 Stewart, Andrew 139 Stewart, Charles 54 Stockdale, T. R. 115 Stone, Charles W. 143 Stone, W. A. gs Storer, Bellamy 83 Stump, Herman 141 Sweet, Willis 79 Tarsney, F.C. 10 Taylor, Abner g6 Taylor, A. A. 120 Taylor, Ezra B. go Taylor, J. D. 152 Taylor, V. A. 96 Terry, W. L. 151 Townsend, Hosea 57 Tracey, Charles 99 Zurner, HH. G 164 Turpin, L. W. 77 Wadsworth, J. W, 129 Walker, J. H. 80 Warwick, ¥.G. 17 Watson, T. E. 108 Waugh, Dan 7 Wever, J.M, 47 Wilson, J. H. 124 Wilson, J. L. 162 Wolverton, S.P. 88 Wright, M.. B. 107 118 Abbott, Fo 63 Alexander, S. B. 168 Allen, ¥. M. 25 Amerman, Lemuel 137 Arnold, Marshall 91 Babbitt, Clinton 32 Bacon, Henry 86 Bankhead, ¥. H. 161 Barwig, Charles 18 Beeman, F. H. 10 Beltzhoover, F. E. 117 Bentley, H. W. 70 Blanchard, N. C. 127 Boatner, C. 3. 138 Bowman, Thomas 38 Branch, W. A. B. 72 Brown, ¥. B. 03 Brunner, D. B. 75 Bryan, W. 9. 6o Buchanan, ¥. A. 37 Bunn, B. H. 141 Bunting, 7. L. 84 Busey, S. T. go Bushnell, 4. R. 26 Butler, W. H. 144 Byrns, Saul 54 Cable, B. Z. 53 Cadmus, C. A. 115 Caine, A Z. 56 Caminetti \ Anthony 79 Capehart, ‘SYames 35 Caruth, A. G. 50 Ca atchings, Z.C 14 Cate, W. H. 140 Causey, ¥. W. 39 Chipman, ¥. L. 76 Clancy, ¥. M. os Clarke, R. H. 160 Cobb, <. on 159 Cobb, S. Ww. 66 Coburn, Z2 6 Compton, Barnes 110 Coolidge, F. S 154 Breckinridge, W. C. P. EAST SIDE. |ro7 Coombs, W. ¥. 59 Covert, ¥. W. 108 Cowles, W. H. H. 164 Cox, N. IV. 85 Crawford, W. 7. 122 Crosby, 7. C. 129 Culberson, D. B. 28 Cummings, A. ¥. 57 Daniell, WF. 125 De 4 ramond, DA. 42 De Forest, R. E. 27 Dickerson, W. W, 119 Dixon, W. WW. 131 Donovan, D. D. 102 Dungan, Irvine 147 Edmunds, P. C. 96 Elliott, William 88 Ellis, W. T. 1 Engi stigh, | 7D. 112 Epes, SAT) 134 Everett, R.W. 45 Fellows, TR, 157 Fithian, G. Ww. 47 Forman WW. S. 94 Forney, W. H. 15 Fowler, Samuel 46 Eyan, R. WW. g7 Gantz, M. K. 24 Geary, T. ¥. 16 ir, ¥.A4 92 Gillespie, E. P. 62 Gorman, ¥. S. 13 Grady, BE, 82 Greenleaf, H. S. 87 Hallowell, Edwin i Hamilton, FZ. are, D. D 2 Hatch w.H. 100 Hayes, W. I. 51 Haynes, WwW. E. 7 Heard, ¥. T. 123 Henderson, ¥. S. 49 Hoar, Sherman. 140 Holman, W. S. 83 Hooker, C. E. 73 Houlk, G. W. 152 Johnson, 1. L. 166 Johnstone, George 124 Jones, W. oA 64 ose, Antonio 167 Kilgore, C. B 23 Kribbs, G. F. 163 Kyle, ¥. C. 150 Lagan, M.D. 128 Lan’am,S. W. T. 120 Lapham, Oscar 146 Lawson, ¥. W. 17 Lawson, 7. G. 58 Layton, FF. C. 113 Lester, P. G. 139 Little, ¥.'F. 103 Livingston, L. F. 40 Lockwood, D. N. 136 Long, Fohn B. 165 Lynch, Thomas 111 Mallory, S. R. 22 McAleer, Win. s McDonald, E. F. 98 McKaig, W.M. 116 McMillin, Benton 12 Meyer, Adolph 153 Melis, R. Q. 20 Mitchell, ¥. L. 30 Montgomery, A. B. 69 Moore, L., W. 135 Moses, Cc. LZ: 81 Muichler, Wm. 126 Norton, RH, - 156 Patterson , Yosiak gr Patton, D. A. 145 Paynter, T. H. 101 Pearson, A. 104 Pendleton, 2 0. 34 Rayner! Isidor 9 Reilly, ¥. B. 68 RicLardson, ¥. D. 106 Rockwell, H. H. 105 Sayers, ¥. D. 11 Seerley, ¥. F. 65 Shively, B. F., 149 Sweitlh, M. A. 162 Snodgrass, H. C. 48 Snow, H. W. 43 Sperry, Lewis 44 Springer, W. MM. 77 Stakinecker, W. G. 67 Stevens, M. T. 31 Steward, Lewis 155 Stone, WW. ¥. 99 Stout; B. G. 3 Zillman, G. D. 74 Tucker, SG 36 Van Horn, Coorg 142 Warner, SD 29 Washington, [2 £, 89 Weadock, I. A. E. 151 Wheeler, TA 19 Wi Treeler. Foseph 4 White, FE. 33 Whiting, TR 148 Wike, Soit 143 Willcox, W. F. 61 Williams, A. H.A. 121 Williams, G. F, 158 Williams, TR, 52 Wilson, R. P, C. 78 Wilson, Ww.L, 133 Winn, r Zz. I14 Wise, G. D. 55 Youmans, H, M. Republicans...... go Democrats... .... es} Ind’s,F. A’s, Pro. Total... 336 SIAYVIUIS24J2)] JO 1u03DIOT Congressional Directory. ALPHABETICAL LIST OF SENATORS, REPRESENTATIVES, AND DELEGATES, WITH THEIR HOME POST-OFFICES AND RESIDENCES IN WASHINGTON. The * designates those whose wives. accompany them; the § designates those whose daughters accompany them; the | designates those having other ladies with them. * 8 § Vice-President, LEVI P. MORTON, 1800 Rhode Island ave. *|| President pro tem., CHARLES F. MANDERSON, 12883 Seventeenth st., N, VV, SENATORS, N H . + Biog- ame. ome post-office. Washington address. raphy. : Page, A% Aldrich, Ne W_.._... Rl Providence, BR. I. __.___ 1828 I.street, N. W______ 103 * Allen; Jom B__...._.. R | Walla Walla, Wash __...| 10 Bstreet, NN E........ 118 Allison, William B____._ R | Dubuque lowa.......... 1124 Vermont avenue.____ 41 || Barbour, John S.......| D | Alexandria, Va..._.._. 144 Bistreet, N. Eo... I15 *Bate, William'B ...._ D |" Nashville “Tenn ____..._ Ebbitt House _— 0 108 *2 Berry, James BI __.___ D | Bentonville, Ark __..... Metropolitan Hotel ______ 20 * 4 4 Blackburn, Jos. C. S_| D | Versailles, Ky. __.____. Ebbjtt House .........0. 47 Blodgett, Rufus ©... DY Long Branch N.'J ....[ 13v1 M siveet, NW... 1 76 *2 Brice, Calvin 8... Dif Tima, Ohio... Arlington Hotel i 90 $M Butler, MMC... Dl Wdgeheld, S.C... 1434 N street, NW... ____ 104 *2 || Call, Wilkinson _____ DD Jacksonville, Fla... _..__ 1312 Nineteenth st., N. W_ 27 #2 Cameron, J.D... Rel Horrisbwrg, Pa... 21 Lafayette Square. _____ 96 * Carey, Joseph M____.__ R Cheyenne, Wyo J... Arlington Tetel . ........ 123 24 || Carlisle, John G._.._| D'| Covington, Ky........ 1426 K street, N. Wi... _. 47 #1] Casey, Lyman R .____. R | Jamestown, N. Dak____| Cliffburn, Columbia Road. 89 * || Chandler, William E__| R | Concord, N. H________ 14211 streey NOW 0 75 * Chilton, Horace... ... Dylon, ex: aia. Metropolitan Hotel ______ III * || Cockrell, Francis M__.| D | Warrensburg, Mo______ IES Ro street, N. WW, 0 67 Coke, Richard v= PD Waco, Tex «oo 270i» 420: Sixth street, N. W_ III Colquitt, Alfred © ___.__ Dil-Atlants, Gav... 228 New Jersey ave., S.E._ 28 % 2 4 || Cullom, Shelby M _| R | Springfield, Ill ________ 1413 Massachusetts ave___ 32 *2 Daniel, John W______ DD: Lynchburg, Va_.._.._. 1700 Nineteenth st., N. W_ 115 * Davis, Cushman K_____ R-St. Paul, Minn... .... 1428 Massachusetts ave___ 63 *2 Dawes, Henryl. _____ R | Pivtsheld, Mass... 1454 Rhode Island ave___ 56 ¥ Dixon, Nathan F __'____ Riz Westerly, RT. C...% The Amo ooo 0 103 ¥ Dolph, Joseph N ____... R | Portland, Oregon... 8 Lafayette Square.______ 95 Dubois, Fred "To... R | Blackfoot, Idaho... 1230 Thirteenth st., N. W_ 32 ¢ 2 || Faulkner, Charles Jas| D | Martinsburg, W.Va. ___| 1900 R street, N.W _____ 119 Felton, Charles'N_.___.: _. R | San Francisco, Cal. : 1730. H street, N.W - = 22 * Frye, William P_____.. R{ Lewiston,/Me'_ ........ Thelamilion.._.. 52 *Gallinger, Jacob H_____ Ri Concord, N.H ._......... I Bestyeety NW oe 75 *George, James ZI Df) Camollton, Miss... 1508 P street, N. W._.._... 65 *Gibson, Charles H _ Di Baston Md... >= The Cochran’. oo = i 54 Gibson, Randall Lee_____ D | NewOrleans, la... 1723 Rhode Island avenue. 50 * Gordon, Johm'B._ 0D -Reynolds, Ga... The Shoreham =. i 28 e524 Gorman, Arthur P__{ D | Lauvel, Md. ........c.... 1701 Rhode Island avenue. 53 % Cray, George... [DD | Wilmington, Del... ___ 1421 Kistreet, N- W __ ._ 26 * Hale, Fugene Ri Blsworth,Me __. 1001 Sixteenth st., N. W__ 52 - = Hansbrough, Henry C_I'R| Devils Lake, N. Dak _ | TheCochran__.._._ .._ _.. 89 Harris, Isham G _ 20 Di Memphis, Tenn... 13 Fivststreet, N.E_.._ 108 *|Hawley, Joseph R____| R | Hartford, Conn.___.___. 2030: 1 street; N. W_. __«_ 25 | Higgins, Anthony ______ R | Wilmington, Del ______ 1524 Eighteenth st., N. W_ 27 Tl DavidiB 1 oo Dl Elmira, N.¥V Arlington Hotel... .._._. 78 * Hiscock, Frank... | Ri Syracuse, N.Y. =... Arlington Hotel. _..___ 78 * Hoar, George F.__.._. R'| Worcester, Mass_____._ 4. Lafayette Square... _... 56 Irby, John, M .__..... Dilaurens, S.C... ..... Metropolitan Hotel _____. 104 Jones, James B2. ____.__. D | Washington, Ark ______ 915 M street, N. W _____._ 20 Home and City Residences. 271 Name. Home post-office Washington address Blog: : P ? : ! raphy. Page. Jones, John Poco... Ri Gold Hill, Nev_.-2__.. Chamberlin’s ....._.. 74 *2 || || Kenna, John E___| D Charleston, W. Va__..__ 130 B street, N.E_...... 119 *Rvle, James IH ..2- Ind| Aberdeen, 8. Dak ._... 212 N, ‘Capitol street. .__. 107 *% McMillan, James_____ RY“ Demoit, Mich... .. .... 1114 Vermont avenue ____ 60 %|| McPherson, John R____| D | Belle Mead, N. J ______ 1014 Vermont avenue. __. 76 %|| Manderson, Chas. F ___j R | Omaha, Nebr _________| 1233 Seventeenthst. N. W_| 42 Mitchell, Jom HH. __ R j ‘Portland, Oregon ._._._. Chomberlin’s 2. 95 *252 Morgan, John T _____ DilsSelma, Ala 2. 0120 315 4%; street, NN. W_____ 17 *|| Morrill, Justin S ._..... Ri Strafford, Vi +. = No. 1, Thomas Circle ____ 114 Paddock, Algernon S .___| R | Beatrice, Nebr ________ The Portland: ooo... 72 %2|| Palmer, John McAuley | D | Springfield, Ill ._______ The Elsmere Co oC Jo 32 Basco,Samuel __...... D| Monticello, Fla. .......__ 220 North Capitol street __ 27 Peffer, Wm. Alfred ______ FA| Topeka, Kans... ... » Beireet No. Wo in... 44 ¥ Perkins, Bishop W.R__| R | Oswego, Kans ___.____ 1815 Sixteenth 'st., N. W__ 45 *Pettigrew, RW... __c BR {Sioux Falls,S. Dak ....| joo Bstrect N.E__.._... 107 Platt, Orville H_........ R | Metiden, Conn... 0. Arlington Hotel _._____.__ 25 * Power, Thomas C_.____. R| Helena, Mont. .......... Wormley's iu mms 72 *21||| Proctor, Redfield____| R | Proctor, Vt_____.____ | 1701 Mass. ave.,, N. W___. 114 #iiPugh, James L._....... D.}Bufoula, Ala... i... 1333 Rostreet N.W ______ 1&8 ®e2 Quay, M.S. Loi 0 R | Beaver Court-House, Pa| 1829 I street NNW ______ 96 Ransom, Matt W_____.__ DiiWeldon, N.C... . Metropolitan Hotel ______ 86 *Sanders, Wilbur F__..._ Ri Helena, Mont... ._..C Arlington Hotel... 71 4% Sawyer, Philetus______ Rils«Oshlzosh, Wis. _. 1701 Connecticut avenue__| 120 *¢|| Sherman, John _____. R | Mansheld, Ohio _ __.._. 1319 Kistreet, N-W._. __. 90 * Shoup, George L._____._. R | Salmon City, Idaho __._| Hotel Richmond ___. ____ 31 * Squire, Watson C_____. Ri Seattle, Wash __. ____. Arlington Hotel _.L_____ 118 * Stanford, Leland ___._.. R.| San Francisco, Cal... 1701 KK street, N.W._____ 22 * Stewart, William M ____| R | Carson City, Nev ____._ 1906 Hstreet, N. W. _... 74 * Stockbridge, Francis B__| R | Kalamazoo,Mich ______ 1800 N street, N. W_____ 60 %f Teller, Henry ML... R | Central City, Colo ...__ 1537 P street, No. W. _._._ 24 ¢ Turple, David: =. ____.__ D | Indianapolis, Ind ______ 1012 Fifteenth st.,, NNW__ 38 *|| Vance, Zebulon B_____ DD}: Charlotte, N. C_._____.. 1627 Massachusetts ave___ 86 * Vest, George Graham __| D | Kansas City, Mo_______ 1204 P street, NM. W. __... 68 *Vilas, Wilham F_____._._ D- Madison, Wis... ..._. The Arno, J. oo oie 121 2 Voorhees, Daniel W____| D | Terre Haute,Ind ______ 1323 New Hampshire ave. 38 #4Walthall, B.C. _____.. Di Grenada; Miss... _:. 1714 Rhode Island ave .__ 65 * Warren, Francis E _.._. R | Cheyenne,/Wyo ......- Arlington Hotel .___._.__ 123 * 2 Washburn, William D_| R | Minneapolis, Minn_____ 2111 Mass. ave.,, N.W____ 63 | White, Edward Douglass | D | New Orleans, La ______ 1716 Rhode Island ave ___ 5G! *3|| Wilson, James F_____ R/| Fairfield, Iowa... __._ The Lincoln. doo 42 *Wolcolt, Edward QO... ..R [ Denver, Colo ...._-..- 1221 Connecticut avenue. 24 REPRESENTATIVES. * Speaker, CHARLES F. CRISP. Name. Home post-office. 2 Washington address. Blog: a raphy. Page. Re Abbott, Joo... ns D | Hillsboro, Tex. .... 6 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ 113 Alderson, John D _____ D | Nicholas, W. Va ____| 3 | 215 East Capitol street ___ 120 Alexander, Sydenham B.| D | Charlotte, N. C______ 6 | Metropolitan Hotel _____.. 88 *Allen, John M _..__.. D.| Tupelo, Miss_.._._ __. I | 243 Delaware avenue, N.E 65 *||Amerman, Lemuel __| D | Scranton, Pa________ 31: National Hotel... _.._. 96 Andrew, Jom FE ___._... D | Boston, Mass... 3 | 1313 Sixteenth st., N.W__ 57 Arnold, Marshall _____ Di} Benton, Mo. 2... 14. Willard’s Hotel _._.._._. 71 ¥Atkinson, Louis E ___| R | Mifflintown, Pa______ 18 | 208 Delaware avenue, N.E 100 *2% Babbitt, Clinton _ ____ Di] Beloit, Wis... ... Yi 52 Bstrect, Nu Boon 121 %*% Bacon, Henry... DD: {:Goshen, N.Y... _._... I5 (1740°Q) street, N. W _____ 81 * Bailey, Joseph W ____| D | Gainesville, Tex_..___ 5 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ I13 Baker, William _.___. PP Lincoln, Kans ..___.. 6.212 Astreel, NB. 5 46 Congressional Directory. Name. Home post-office. afi] + wn = A Washington address. Bankhead, John H ____ Bartine, Horace F *Barwig, Charles Beeman, Joseph H ____ *Belden, James J *Belknap, Charles E___ Beltzhoovet, F. E *Bentley, Henry W ___ *Bergen, Christopher A Bingham, Henry H ____ Blanchard, Newton C __ 44||Bland, Richard P___ *4 Blount, James H ____ Boatner, Chas. | *%Boutelle, Charles A __ *22Bowers, William W_ Bowman, Thomas Branch, William A. B _ Brawley, William H_ __ Breckinridge, C.R _.... *2 Breckinridge, Wm. C. E. *Bretz, John L *%Brickner, Geo. H _._ 44 Broderick, Case *Brookshire, Elijah V.(a) Brosius, Marriott Brown, Jason B Brunner, David B_ ._ Bryan, William J Buchanan, John A ____ *Buchanan, James Bullock, Robert Bunn, Benjamin H ____ *4 Bunting, Thomas I.__ *Burrows, Julius C ____ Busey, Samuel T *¢ Bushnell, Allen R___ *Butler, Walt H._.__. *¢ Bynum, William D__ *Byrns, Samuel Cable, Benjamin T ____ Cadmus, Cornelius. A _ _ *Caldwell, John A ____ *Caminetti, Anthony __ *Campbell, Timothy J _ *9||Capehart, James ___ *Caruth, Asher G ___ Castle, James N *||Catchings, Thomas C *¥{|Cate, William H ._.. Causey, John W Chapin, Alfred C *Cheatham, Henry P __ Chipman, J. Logan .__. Clancy, John M *Clark, Clarence D1. *22 Clarke, Richard H . Clover, Benjamin H___ Cobb, James E *Cobb, Seth W ¥Coburn, Frank P_ ¥Cockran, W. Bourke __ Fayette, Ala Carson City, Nev ____| Mayville, Wis Syracuse, N.Y Grand Rapids, Mich _ Carlisle, Pa Boonville, N. Y Camden, N. J... a... Philadelphia, Pa Shreveport, La ILebanon, Mo Macon, Ga Monroe, La Bangor, Me San Diego, Cal Council Bluffs, Towa _ Washington, N. C Charleston, S. C Pine Bluff, Ark Lexington, Ky Sheboygan Falls, Wis _ Holton, Kans Crawfordsville, Ind __ Lancaster, Pa Seymour, Ind Reading, Pa Lincoln, Nebr Abingdon, Va Trenton, N. J Ocala, Fla Rocky Mount, N. C__ Hamburg, N.Y... Kalamazoo, Mich____ Urbana, 111 Madison, Wis West Union, Iowa ___ Indianapolis, Ind Potosi, Mo Rock Island, Ill Paterson, N. J Cincinnati, Ohio Jackson, Cal Point Pleasant, W.Va._ Louisville, Ky Stillwater, Minn Vicksburg, Miss Jonesboro, Ark Milford, Del Brooklyn, N. Y Littleton, N. C Detroit, Mich Brooklyn, N. Y Evanston, Wyo Mobile, Ala Cambridge, Kans __ _. Tuskegee, Ala St. Louis, Mo West Salem, Wis ___. New York, N.Y __.__| 10 (a) Wife after March Metropolitan Hotel 211 A street, S. B National Hotel 1526 P street, N. W Arlington Hotel 1101 K street, N. W Metropolitan Hotel Riggs House The Elsemere_..... = Metropolitan Club Metropolitan Hotel 1008 M street, N. W 1326: street, N.W.___.__.. Willard’s Hotel The Hamilton 806 Tenth street, N. W___ Willard’s Hotel 621 Thirteenth st., N.W __ 1708 H street, N. W 218 North Capitol street __ 929 Seventeenth st., N. W. 719 Eighth street, N. W __ 1408 H street, N. W 506 East Capitol street ___ Metropolitan Hotel 1234 1 street, N.W Riggs House 6 Grant Place... 131 Bstreet, S.E Metropolitan Hotel The Hamilton 123 B street, S. E Metropolitan Hotel The Lincoln 1408 H street, N. W 1021 Connecticut avenue _ 31 C street, N. I 1325 G street, N. W 1314 Nineteenth st., N.W._ Willard’s Hotel 1705 Connecticut avenue. _ Arlington Hotel 918 Fourteenth st., N. W_ 510 Thirteenth st., N. W__ Congressional Hotel 922'M street, N.' W Riggs House 631 Pennsylvaniaave.,N.W. 1722 Q street, N. W Riggs House The Cochran Arlington Hotel 1013 Nineteenth st.,, N. W. The Belmont Riggs House 102 B street, N. E 4 B street, N. E 221 First street, N. BE... Metropolitan Hotel The Cochran 52 B street, N. E 1333 Sixteenth street, N.W. + / Home and City Residences. ; 273 Name Home post-office a Washington address Poy . : A > raphy. Page. * Cogswell, William _._| R | Salem, Mass _______. 7 | 1224 Fourteenth st., N. W_ 58 *¢ 2 Compton, Barnes__| D | Laurel, Md ________. 5 | 825 Vermont avenue _____ 55 *¢ Coolidge, Fred. S___} D | Ashburnham, Mass___| 11 | 1422 K street, N. W _____ 59 * ¢ Coombs, William J__| D | Brooklyn, N.Y ______ 3 «The Hamilton 78 Cooper, George W _ ___| D | Columbus, Ind ______ 5 | 211 N. Jersey ave., N. W__ 39 Covert, James W _ ____| D |. Long Island City,N.Y.| 1 | Congressional Hotel HALA 78 Cowles, Wm. H. H ....[ D{ Wilkesboro, N.C/. | 8 National Hotel. -____ 38 #Cox, Isaac N {5 D | Ellenville, N.Y ____._ 17 Yeillargy siHotel tual 32 Cox, Nicholas: N_ = Dif Franklin, Tenng. 21% 32 Indiana avenue, N. W. 110 Crain, William t{ ___.. Dl Cuero, Tex... "1. 7 The Randall =. Dear 113 Crawford, William T _.| D | Waynesville, N.C ___| 9 | 415 Sixth street, N. Ww Fea, 89 *Crisp,Charles I _.___! D | Americus, Ga....... 3 | Metropolitan Hotel _.__.._ 29 Crosby, John C. _.___. D | Pittsfield Mass _____._ IZ; Rises House. o.oo. uu 59 ° * || || Culberson, David B| D | Jefferson, Tex. ______ 4 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ 112 Cummings, Amos J. ....{ D{| New York, N.Y ____{ 0 {1312 1 street, NN. W-._____ 30 44Curtis, N.M R | Ogdensburg, N.Y ___| 22 | 2017 G street, N. W______ 83 Cutting, John Tyler ___| R | San Francisco, Cal___.| 4 | 1730 H steeet, N.W _____ 23 *¢Dalzell, John -.__.. Ri Pittsburg, Pa ....... 22 | 1207 Connecticut avenue __ 101 * Daniell, Warren F__ {| D | Franklin, N.H._____ 2. Riggs House 0.0 20 0. 76 * Davis, John. .......- P| Junction City, Kans. .| 5 Li2i5 A street, NJ Eo. 46 * DeArmond, David A.D | Butler, Mo _._______ 12 | 222 Third street, N.W._.___ 71 DeForest, Robert E...| D| Bridgeport, Conn ......| 4 | 315 First street, S. Eo... 26 * Dickerson, W. W____| D | Williamstown, Ky __| 6 | 1828 Jefferson Place, N. W_ 48 #*Zi[ Dingley, Nelson, jr.| R;} Lewiston, Me ._......|: 2] The Hamilton... i0iiil 52 ¥*Dixon, William W__._.] D | Butte City, Mont ....| .. | TheElsmere __...__. i:.. 73 *Doan, Robert BE... R | Wilmington, Ohio _ 10: The Fredonia . 5... 92 * Dockery, Alexander M| D | Gallatin, Mo ____"_!__ 3 Willmd's Hotel: mC... 68 || Dolliver, Jonathan P _| R | Fort Dodge, Iowa. 10 Theamilton.. . i... 44 # Donovan, D. Duo = D: Deshler, Ohio... 6:0 633 Mass. ave. NE... 91 ¥ 24 Dungan, Irvine .___| D | Jackson, Ohio. ______ 13 | 911 N. Carolina ave., S. E_ 93 Dunphy, Edward J... D| New York, N. Y ....| 7 | Arlington Hotel _.__.__.. 79 Durborow, jr., Allan C'] D | Chicage, I ' ___._ __ 3| 1325 G street, N.W__ 1. ¢ 34 Edmunds, Paul C _____ Di Halifax, Va... ..... 6 | gog Thirteenth street, N.W_ 117 * 9 Elliott, William _ D:l-Beaufor(,S. C_-c_ v5 7: 1602 K street, N, W..1~ 106 Ellis, William at og D | Owensboro, Ky _____ 2 ThelCochran J ii: > 48 2 English, Thomas D...tD: | Newark, N. J... .. 6. (LEbbitt: House... 0. 5 * Enloe, Benjamin A___| D | Jackson, Tenn _____. Si 1527 Teresi, NW 0 110 * Enochs, William H___| R | Ironton, Ohio _______ 12 i. The tlamilion_ ..._.._ 93 Z.Epes, James EF. ...... D:| Blackstone, Va... .... 4 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ 116 Everett, Robert Wo. ...{ DI. Fish, Ga........0.. 7 | 611 East Capitol street ___ 30 Fellows, John R _____. D.[ New York; N.Y... | 6 | Chamberlin’s Hotel... .~_ 79 * Fitch, Ashbel P_____. D | New York, N.Y ____| 13 | 527 Eighteenth st., N. W _ 81 * Fithian, George W._.{ D | Newton, T1l _______. 16 | Willavd’s Hotel... .. 37 %*4 24 Flick, James P. __| Re Bedford, Iowa _____. 8) 205. C street, N.W.. ©... 43 Forman, William S ___| D | Nashville, 111 _______ 18 | 1114 G street, N. W.____. 37 Forney, William Henry | D | Jacksonville, Ala ____| 7 | Metropolitan Hotel _____. 19 Fowler, Samuel. __. Di: Newton, N. J........ 4 The Randall: _ .. = 77 * Funston, Edward H..| R|:lola, Kans...........{ 21036 K street, NW... 45 Fyan, Robert W _____. D | Marshfield, Mo... 13 14zAstreet, N.E © © 71 *Gantz, Martin Ko Df Troy, Ohio... 0 4 otolsireet, No. W. 0 91 Geary, Thomas | _ __ D | Santa Rosa, Cal _____ ti“ The Albany. .o..oal 23 * 4Geissenhainer, Jac. A.| D | Freehold, N.J ______ 3 1 Arlington Hoteli =... .[. 77 Gillespie, Eugene P ___| D | Greenville, Pa ______ 25. | Willaxd’s Hotel. oo. 0. 102 * Goodnight, Isaac H __| D | Franklin, Ky _______ Z| The Cochian. “oat 48 Gorman, James 5. .._.}D,| Chelsea, Mich.......} 2{ 0420 street, NNW. _._ 60 Grady, Benjamin F____| D | Albertson, N.C ____. 34 213 Sixth street, NOE. 87 * Greenleaf, Halbert S__| D | Rochester, N.Y_____ 30 | 109 First street, N. E ____ 85 * Griswold, Matthew | R1 Brie, Pa... _.__... 26 |The Shoreham __....}... 102 Grout, William W_____ Ri: Barton, Vt. >. 2. | Arlingtoni'Heotel 2 1 115 *Hall,Osee M _______|D | Red Wing, Minn ____| 3 | 924 Fourteenthst., N. W _ 64 Hallowell, Edwin N __| D | Willow Grove, Pa___| 7 | National Hotel ____ _.__. 98 Halvorson, Kittel «._._|FA| Belgrade, Minn _____ 5 | 246 Delaware ave.,, N. E__ 64 2D ED 274 Name. Home post-office. Z ‘Washington address. * Hamilton, John T ___| D | Cedar Rapids, Towa__| 5 | 939 K street, N. W______ * 3 Hare, Darius D ____| D | Upper Sandusky,Ohio| 8 | 201 East Capitol street ___ 3 3 Harmer, Alfred C__| R | Philadelphia, Pa ___.| 5 | 201 North Capitol street__ Harries, William H ___{ D | Caledonia, Minn .___| 1 | The Langham ....._._._. *2 ||| Harter, Michael D| D | Mansfield, Ohio ____. 15 { Hotel Richmond ___..__. * 2 Hatch, William H__| D | Hannibal, Mo_______ 12-1322 G sireet, N. W.__._ * Haugen, Nils P ....L R | River Falls, Wis ____| 8 | 813 Twelfth street, N. W__ * Hayes, Walter 1. ... Di} Clinton, Towa =... 2ilix325 G street, N. W-_____ Haynes, William E____|{ D | Fremont, Ohio ._____ 2.1 Ebbitt House... ._...... a * Heard, Jon T ...__. Dy Sedalia,Mo_.___._.. 61 Riggs'House......... * 2 Henderson, David B_| R | Dubuque, Iowa _____ 317923 K street, NNW ___.. Henderson, John S____| D | Salisbury, N.C_____.| 7 | Metropolitan Hotel _____. *Henderson, Thomas J_|{ R | Princeton, I1l _______ 7 | 210 North Capitol street __ 3 Herbert, Hilary A ___| D | Montgomery, Ala____| 2 | The Cochran _ _________ * Hemphill, John] .__{'D{ Chester, S. C........ 54 The Shoreham 1... _. Hermann, Binger _ ____ R|'Roseburg,Oregon.....| .. {922 1 street, N. W___.__. * Hitt, Robert R_..... R | Mount Morris, Ill____| 6 | 1507 K street, N. W_____ Hoar, Sherman... .......... D | Waltham, Mass _____ 5 1iorg:I'sireet, N. W._______ * 3 Holman, William S_| D | Aurora, Ind ____.___ 4. The Hamilton weeeian ¥|| || Hooker, Charles E_| D | Jackson, Miss_______ w eg Bistreet, N.W i... * Hooker, Warren B___| R | Fredonia, N.Y ______ 34¢ TheBlsmere,. _ ll. 00 * Hopkins, Albert C___| R | T.ock Haven, Pa____| 16 | 1918 H street, N. Wolo. *Hopkins, Albert J Z| R | Aurora, Wl . _....... 5:4 Willard’s Hotel __ 2 2 * Houk, George W ____| D | Dayton, Ohio ______. 3{ 1210 L street, NNW. __.. *Houk, Jom C_._.__.. R | Knoxville, Tenn ____| 2 | 215 East Capitol street ___ *Huff, George ¥.._... R| Greensburg, Pa_._.... 21 | 1502 Twentieth street, N.W *2| Hull, John A. T __| R | Des Moines, Iowa___| 7 | 1744 Kistreet, NNW... Johnson, Henry U ____| R | Richmond, Ind_____. 6 | 1435 L street, N.W.______ * Johnson, Tom L____. | D | Cleveland, Ohio _.._. _| 21 | 926 F' ifteenth street, N. W_ * Johnson, Martin N___| R | Petersburg, N. Dak__| __ | 123 Maryland ave., N.E__ Johnstone, George ____| D | Newberry, S. C _____ 3 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ Jolley, Jom Li... Ri Vermillion, S. Dak... | .. 58 Bstreet, NE _._. i. * Jones, William A ____| D | Warsaw, Va ..__.... I | 117 Maryland ave., N. E__ Kem, Omer M ______.| I | Broken Bow, Nebr __| |3 | 246 Delaware ave., N. E__ * Kendall, John W____| D | West Liberty, Ky ___| 10 | 116 Maryland ave., N. E__ Ketcham, John H_ __.__ R | Dover Plain, N. Y___| 16 | 1329 K street, N. W_____ Kilgore, Constantine B_| D | Wills Point, Tex ____| 3 | 423 C street, NNW ______ ¥Rribbs, G. FT. -._ DiiClarion, Pa =. 0... 1 28 | 245 Delaware avenue, N.E %¥Ryle,Jom C......... Di} Sardis, Miss ..._.....c 2:{ National Hotel... _..._. 4 4 Lagan, Matt D_____ D | New Orleans, La____| 2 | 232 New Jerseyave., N. W *¢ Lane, Edward _____ iD: Hillsboro, Ill __..... 17 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ ¥ Lanham, Samuel W.T | D | Weatherford, Tex ___| 11 | The Lincoln _____.______ * || Lapham, Oscar_____ Di{ Providence, R. 1... "1 {|The Cochran .__________ *| Lavon John W._._ | D | Isle of Wight, Va_._.| 2: 512 M street, N. W______ * Lawson, Thomas G __| D | Eatonton, Ga ______. 8 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ * Layton, Fernando C._| D | Wapakoneta, Ohio...| 5 | The Lincoln ____________ Lester, Posey CG. .........- Di Floyd, Va. .......... 5 :1"National Hotel... _____ %*¢ Lester, Rufus’E.__.{ D | Savannah, Ga....... 14 -The:Cochran |... .... * Lewis, Clarke... _._. D | Cliftonville, Miss _.__.| 4 | g12 I street, NNW _______ | 1ind, Jobm. oc... R | New Ulm, Minn ___._ 2 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ *% 4 Little, Joseph J... D| New York, N.Y... 12:{ The Cochran... ... 2. *¢ Livingston, Leon. F.| D | Atlanta, Ga_.______. 5 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ * ¢ Lockwood, Daniel N| D | Buffalo, N. Y ______. 32 4 The Shoreham ........._: %2 Lodge, Hemry C___{ R | Nahant, Mass....... 6 | 1721 Rhode Island avenue Tong,johnB-__ ..... DilcRusk, Tex i .-. ¢ 2 3 The Fredonia oc 5 *2% Loud, Eugene F___| R | San Francisco, Cal._.| 5 | 1730 H street, NNW. _____ *|li Lynch, Thomas_..__{D | Antigo, Wis __...... 9 | 318 Indiana ave, N.W __ ¥ Magner, Thomas F___| D | Brooklyn, N. ¥ _.___. sl TheCochran ._,_..- _ Mallory, Stephen R ___| D | Pensacola, Fla ______ 1 | National Hotel... # Mansur, Charles H. __| D | Chillicothe, Mo _____ 2 “Willard’s Hotel... 0. * Martin, Augustus N __| D | Bluffton, Ind ________ 11 r308 Kistreet, N.W'___ *¥ Meredith, Elisha E __| D/| Brentville,Va._____._ 5. “National Hotel =~... .. ¥¢|| Meyer, Adolph____| D | New Orleans, La____| 1 | Hotel Richmond ________ rr Home and City Residences. 275% Name Home post-office a Washington address Blog: : ls Es raphy. : Page. * 2 Miller, Lucas M....| D | Oshkosh, Wis _.___.._ 6 | National Hotel. __._... 122 ¢ Milliken, Seth L_____ Rel: Belfast; Me io. 3 | 1017 Fourteenth st., N. W. 53 * 2 Mills, Roger Q ....| D | Corsicana, Tex __.__. 0 aWillard’s Hotel ... cv... 7 113 * Mitchell, John L ___.j D | Milwaukee, Wis ____| 4 1725 I street, NNW _____ " 122 Moore, Littleton W ___{ D | La Grange, Tex____. S| 34 Cstreel, N. Wai. 113 * Montgomery, Alex. B_| D | Elizabethtown, Ky___| 4 | 248 Delaware ave.,N. E__ 43 Morse, Elijah A... ... R Canton, Mass... 2 The Shoreham 0. = 57 Moses, Charles L _____ DilsTurin, Ga. 5. sis. 4 | 606 East Capitol street ___ 29 * Mutchler, William .__{ D/{ Easton, Pa _________ 811333 CG sireet, N.W.__.- 93 McAleer, William____. DD} Philadelphia, Pa_.. 3 iThe Randall... ...... 97 %2| McClellan, C. A. OID: :Auburn, Ind .. ........ 12 | 210 First street, N.E__.._. 41 * McCreary, James B __| D | Richmond, Ky ______ 8 {The Shoreham’. ........- 49 McDonald, Edward F _{ D | Harrison, N. J .____. 7 | Congressional Hotel _____ 77 McGann, Lawrence E _| D | Chicago, 111 ________ gl Willavd’sHotel .._. .....: 33 McKaig, William M___| D | Cumberland, Md _.___| 6 | The Randall ____________ 55 ¢ McKeighan, William A|Ind| Red Cloud, Nebr____| 2 | 246 Delaware ave.,, N. E__ 73 %* McKenna, Joseph... |i R | Suisun, Cal . 2. __.. 3 1918 I street, No. W ____.. 23 * McKinney, Luther F_| D | Manchester, N. H___| 1 | 1213 R. I. avenue, N. W__ 75 McMillin, Benton ____. D | Carthage, Tenn ___.. 4 | Metropolitan Hotel _____._ 109 % McRae, Thomas C.._ =! D'}: Prescott, Ark... _ 319012 Mistreet, No. W__ LL 21 Newberry, Walter C_._| D{ Chicago, W....._...: | 4 The Cochran. uc’ 1 34 * Norton, Richard H.__|:D | Troy,:Me _._.._ + _ wil Willord’s Hotel .......-- 69 *|| || || Oates, William C| D | Abbeville, Ala ______ g | 1743. Q street, N.W _ 18 *|| O'Donnell, James __| R | Jackson, Mich ______ 3'{ The Hamilton Li. ...... 61 * O’Ferrall, Charles T _| D | Harrisonburg, Va____| 7 | 909 Thirteenth st., N. W__ 117 * O’Neil, Joseph H_...| D | Boston, Mass .______ 4 TheCochitan....o..o.2 57 O'Neill, Chorles..._.. R | Philadelphia, Pa ____{ 2 | 1326 New York avenue __ 97 *2280 Neill, John J..| D | St. Louis, Mo........... 8 | 1226 Fourteenth st., N. W_ 70 *Otis, Ton, G........ 72 Pi Topeka, Kans. ...... 4.223 Astreet, NE _._.... 46 * Outhwaite, Joseph H_| D | Columbus, Ohio _____ 9 | No. 4 Dupont Circle _____ 92 Owens, James W _____ D | Newark,Ohio.___._.. v4 {National Hotel... 93 Page, Charles’ Hl. __.... Da) *Seituate, RT oi 0c. 2 | Congressional Hotel __..__. 104 Page, Henry ........" Dy | "Princess Anne, Md i: | 2 The Cochran_..___....... 54 4 ¢ Parrett, William F__{ D | Evansville, Ind______ 1| National Hotel... ... 38 * § Patterson, Josiah. __| D | Memphis, Tenn _____ 10 | Metropolitan Hotel ...... III Ill || Pattison, John M__|{ D | Milford, Ohio _______ 1x | Ebbitt House 0... 93 Patton, David H.____. D | Remington, Ind _____ 10 | 310 Indiana avenue, N. W_ 40 * Payne, Sereno E_ _._. RiViAubormn, N. VY... =. 27:|vThe Cochrane 0. har. 84 * Paynter, Thomas H ..}D | Greenup, Ky... __ 9 | Metropolitan Hotel .____. 49 ¥ || Pearson, A.J _.____| D | Woodsfield, Ohio.___| 17 | 207 N. J. avenue, N. W __ 94 Peel, Samuel WW. ..- . Di| Bentonville, Ark ___ lig 325 Bstreet,S. BE. .0.. 22 * Pendleton, John O ___| D | Wheeling, W. Va ___| 1 | 215 East Capitol street __._ 119 * 4 ¢ Perkins, George D_| R | Sioux City, Iowa ____| 11 | 1332 R street, NNW _____ 44 Pickler, Jom A... R | Faulkion, S. Dak. _...| .. | 10Grant place ...........o 107 Pierce; Rice Ao... D | Union City, Tenn____| ¢ | National Hotel .________. III %g | Post, Philip S.....|R | Galesburg, Tl......... 10 1308 R street, N.W.___.. 35 * ¢ Powers, H. Henry__| R | Morrisville, Vt ______ 1 {i The Cochran. un. ane 115 * ll Price, Andrew... D | Thibodeaux, La _____ 34: TheShorcham ............ 51 Quackenbush, John A _| R | Stillwater, N. Y_____ 15] Riggs House... conan 82 Raines, John __.. oc. R | Canandaigua, N.Y __| 29 | 23 Ninth street, N.E_____ 85 * Randall, Charles S___| R | New Bedford, Mass__| 1 | Arlington Hotel _________ 57 Ray, George W._._._.. R | Norwich, N.Y ______ 26 | 918 Fourteenth st.,, N. W _ 84 Rayner, Isidor.. ...... D | Baltimore, Md ______ 4 ‘The Shoreham’... 55 Reed, Thomas B______ Rl: Portland, Me... ._ © |:The Shoreham... ..: 52 Reilly, James’ B..._... Di Poitsville, Pa... 13'{ National Hotel........... 99 * Reyburn, John E ____| R | Philadelphia, Pa ____| 4 | 1211 Connecticut avenue._._ 97 2 || || || Richardson, Jas.D.| D | Murfreesboro, Tenn__| 5 | National Hotel. _________ 109 ®Rife, JomW...__.... R | Middletown, Pa _____ 14 | 1202 Twenty-first st., N. W. 99 * Robertson, Samuel M_| D | Baton Rouge, La ____| 6 | Metropolitan Hotel _____. 51 X || Robinson, Jom B ..| R{ Media, Pa.._._ _.._ 6 | 1708 R. I. avenue, N. W__ 08 * Rockwell, Hosea H__.{D | Elmira, N.Y _______ 28-6: Towa Circle oo Lio 84 * || Rusk, Harry Welles_| D | Baltimore, Md ______ 3 | 2109 E. Balt. st., Balt., Md. 55 *Russell, Charles A ___} R | Killingly, Conn 3 | The Hamilton 26 Ciba 276 Congressional Directory. ‘Name Home post-office 7 Washington address Blog: Sisk gl * |raphy Page. Sanford, Jobin... 3 R | Amsterdam, N.Y ___| 20 | 14 Lafayette Square_____. 83 *Sayers, Joseph D ____| D | Bastrop, Tex..__.._. 10/{ Willard’s Hotel ___..._--. 114 XSeott Owen... . D | Bloomington, IIl_____ 14 | 1115 G street, N. W ____. 36 Scull, Edward... R{ Somerset, Pa. i. 20] Ebbitt House _....-..... 101 *Seerley, John] D | Burlington, lowa ____| I | 1325 G street, NoWeoo 42 Shell, George W .__._. Dil Jmorens, S. Co. ios: 4 | Metropolitan Hotel ._____ 106 Shively, Benjamin F___{ D | South Bend, Ind io 131 Willardls Hotel cool. 41 *2Shonk, George W ___| R | Plymouth, Pa _______ fz: The Randall. oo... 99 *Simpson,- Jerry... - P | Medicine Lodge, Kans| 7 | 208 First street, N.E ____ 46 *¥Smith, George W ____| R | Murphysboro, Ill ____} 20 | 1012 Fourteenth st., N. W_ 37 Snodgrass, Bl..C ooo D | Sparta, Tenn..._____| 3! 312 Indiana avenue... __. 109 *7||Snow, Herman WD Sheldon, IL... oli64z Cstreet, N. E_..... 35 *Sperry, Lewis (a) ____| D | Hartford, Conn______ 1 Riocedlouses. ci... oo.. 25 *{||l|Springer, Wm. M __| D | Springfield, Il _..__..} 13 | 43 Batreet, 5. B._____1.0 36 Stackhouse, Eli 'D..___= D | Little Rock, S. C____| 6 | Metropolitan Hotel .____. 106 ¥Stahlnecker, Wm. G __| D | Yonkers, N. ¥ ._____ T4/ The Randall. ______._. 81 Stephenson, Samuel M . | R | Menominee, Mich ___| 11 | Ebbitt House ulin. 63 *349Stevens, Moses T_.| D | North Andover,Mass.| 8 | Arlington Motel. x cos 58 *7Stewart, Andrew____| R | Uniontown, Pa_____. 2a} 1420 Q street, N. W..____ 102 *Stewart, Charles ____. Di] Elouston, Tex... 11112 Gslreet, NOW. 2 112 Steward, Lewis_______ DiiPlano, To» olen] 8 | 252 Delaware ave.,, N. E_. 35 *3||Stockdale, Thos. R_| D Summitt, Miss ..__.. 6.1 National Hotel ov... 67 *24| Stone, Charles W__} R Warren, Pa... 0 co 274146 B street, N. Tp ou... 102 *2Stone, William A____| R | Allegheny, Pa____._.| 23 | 1721 Q street, NNW ___-_. 102 Stone, William J ___.__ Dif Kutiawa, Ky... ._... | 1| 248 Delaware ave.,, N.E__ 47 *3Storer, Bellamy _____ R | Cincinnati, Ohio_..__| 1 | 1629 Mass.ave., N. W____ 90 #*Stout, Byron'G_ BD | Pontiae, Mich _:_->- 6 | Hotel Richmond ___.____ 61 Stump, Herman ._.... Di Belaie, Md. ..... 2 | 1433 Lostreet, NW____.. 54 *Sweet, Willis ___. ____ R | Moscow, Idaho______ solmorAstreet, NB LL. 32 #Tarsney, John C_._L. D:| Kansas City, Mo.’ i} 5 Willard’s Hotel ........-. 69 Xaylor, Abner «... SC. Ri} Chicago, IN. lu. vj The Arne. ol Loos: 33 Taylor, Alfred A... R | Johnson City, Tenn __| 1 | 937 K street, NNW ______ 108 | Taylor, Ezra B_.._....| R'| Warren, Ohio__..._.. yo} The Elsemere. cme 94 Naylor, Joseph Di_.___ R {“Cambridge, Ohio. oS {coc SAR TE Son 94 *Taylor, Vincent A ___| R | Bedford, Ohio.______ 20] 1521 KR street, NW =. 94 Terry, William L _._ ['D'{ Pulaski, Ark_........ 4 | Metropolitan Hotel __.._. 22 Tillman, George D .___| D | Clark’s Hill, S.C ___| 2] 412 Sixth street, N. W ___ 105 *2 Townsend, Hosea __| R | Silver ChLff, Colo _.__| 1 | 945 K street, NW. 25 *Pracey, Charles... Dl Albany, N.Y... 19 (> Arlington Hotel. ........ 82 *|| Tucker, Henry St.Geo.| D | Staunton, Va _______ 10 | 1150 Eighteenth st., N. W 118 Turner, Henry GL... Di Quinn, Ga... 2 | 217 East Capitol street ___ 29 Turpin, LonisW._____. D | Newberne, Ala ___.._ 4 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ 19 Van Horn, George ____| D | Cooperstown, N.Y __} 24 | Congressional Hotels 84 *Wadsworth, James W_{ R | Genesee, N. Y ______ st 1730 T street, NW , 85 *Walker, Jcseph H____| R | Worcester, Mass ____| 10 The Shoreham =... _... 59 *Warner, John De Witt| D | New York, N.Y ____| 11 | The Blsemere. =... 80 *¥Warwick, John G .__.| D | Massillon, Ohio _____ 16 Rigos House. L. ui. 94 *Washington, Joseph E_| D | Cedar Hill, Tenn ____| 6 | 1906 Sunderland Pl, N.W.| 110 Watson, Thomas E____| D| Thompson, Ga _..__. 10 | 129 Fourth street, S. E___ 31 *¥24Waugh, Dan ___..__ Ri{ Tipton, Ind... . g | 201 Delaware ave.,, N. E__ 40 Weadock, Thos. A. E__| D | Bay City, Mich... yo.) The Cochran. __._..:.. 62 *3[Wever, Jom M __._| R | Plattsburg, N.Y... 21} Arlington Hotel ..._ 0, 83 Wheeler, Harrison H __| D | Ludington, Mich ____| ¢ | 222 East Capitol street ___ 62 #742 Wheeler, Joseph ._| D | Wheeler, Ala ____.__ 8 | 915 Sixteenth street, N. W. 20 4 White, Frederick E __| D | Webster, Iowa .__._. O45 Cetreet, N. Wo lio 0 43 %#Whiting, Justin R_.._| D | St. Clair, Mich..._.. wih The'Cogliran..o 02s Lo0... 62 Wike, Scott 2a: Di. Pittsfield, 10..." 12 | 13 First street, N.E___.. 36 #eWillcox, W.F.____.: DD | Chester, Conn......... 2 | Congressional Hotel _____ 26 Williams, Archibald H. | D | Oxford, N.C_______. 5 | Metropolitan Hotel ______ 87 A. Williams, George F ___| D | Dedham, Mass_____. g{ The Albany ___..... cums 59 *Williams, James R.__ ID { Carmi, TN... ...... 19 The Cochran: oC... 37 a Wife until March 1. mee Home and City Residences. 24% Name. Home post-office. 2 Washington address. Bley a . raphy Page. Wilson, Jom H........ R | Barboursville, Ky... _.{ 11] 215 Cstreet, NN. W._____. 49 Wilson, Jon 1... .. R | Spokane Falls, Wash] __ | 18 Grant place... _.: 119 *Wilson, Rebert P..C__| DI Platte City, Mo. ___. 4 | 252 Delaware avenue, N.E 69 Wilson, William L____| D | Charlestown, W, Va__| 2 | 1008 N street, N. W_____ 120 Winn, Thomas E____ { 2 Lawrenceville, Ga___| 9 | 606 East Capitol street ___ 31 Wise, George D ._.... Di{-Richmond, Va. gags Hetreet NW ____. 116 *g Wolverton, Simon P_| D | Sunbury, Pa.__.__.. 17 Hotel Oxford... _ i. 100 *' Wright, Myron B____| R | Susquehanna, Pa ____| 15 | 1110 P street, N. W______ 100 *Youmans, Henry Me D | Saginaw, Mich... .... Sh 621 Kstreet, N.W _____ 62 DELEGATES. . ; Biog- Name. Home post-office. Washington address. raphy. Page. - Smith, MarcastA. 1D {- Tombstone, Ariz... _... Riggs House... = 124 * li Joseph, Antonie oD { Olo Caliente, NW. Mex | oni nonin — 124 *Harvey, David A_.._. R | Oklahoma City, Okla. ____ 1300 Lstreet, NW. __ 124 Raine, Join To. Ind| Salt Lake City, Utah_____ 214 New jersey ave., N. W. 125 | S| ATR bf OEE FH) 54 Gal EIESSEIE 5 "5 SQ EE 75 EE mS ov EEC APE CREENS EERSTE CII] Joerg FE BNE EHEEIE] EH] 2H EEE ERR HERS HI EIEN A&E BN EE Hl ENS EREEIET FEE SHE IZESICIIENGDS yt A (7/4 FR FERN Le fh BY aE [m8 See HI me Ah A EI Ad = 1 fae SEE TO ee sae =U AEE diz) - ey N Sai NESE SE A] yaar Eo al SABIE Se goin [2]l=] {EE MAP OF THE CITY OF WASHINGTON REFERENCES. b3 \ =n 1 3 ™ 2 + a g 4 B gg 2 |&] 8A Tm 7 E28 5 giiiab 3 E52 [ EE SHEER EE FEM L 14 ie Tm |: FEES 85008850 EERE ¢ I wy oon hm EF o NESE EEE EEE EEE EE f eo] ; sz % 2r3iiidsasiiiiiiiaaid Say FON TRE ER AAI NIRLNRSISLD no BA BEYARELYLL, ABN x C hWEE BEY A RERD 2) (RRUER UE EY EEA Jd £8 dg a - Rr x % TE AENEE RS NPY EE be : BE Ss .3 i FEN (3 ol ® A i= EREER SE 4. BITING ee ZINE EEN ELE EEE Ey FER RSG R] [ESE WAR] PEER Ef ep 528 to AR era 4 MEET CREE 3 IER GEHsH ERE HE Pla (EEE EE EE A 5 SEE 0 WARE EEEY See CEEEEERIEppERE: 73 [BE SEE Pal Lani in 4a EE BLERFZAZOOV & EB