4 KSU LIBRARIES § Miu Al1l1900 502351 oe Congression] Directory Im SESSION, 56rx CONGRESS | BBB Cw ABA ND Kansas State Agricultural College. V.56 Ed. XA LIBRARY REGULATIONS. 1. Phe use of the Library is free: (a) To all stu- dents in attendance at College. (b) To alumni of the College. (c) To persons officially connected with the College, and to members of their families. 2. Members of the third and fourth-year classes can have out but three, and other persons but one, book at a time, except by permission of the Librarian. 3. Books must not be kept out more than two weeks. : 4. Anyone desiring a book that is drawn may re- cord, in the Library, his name and the title of the book wanted, and he will be entitled to the book as soon as returned. If there is no application on re- cord, a book may be once redrawn by the person re- turning it. The request for renewal must be made before the expiration of the first two weeks. 5. A fine of three cents a day shall be paid on each volume which is not returned according to the provisions of the preceding rules. Anyone failing to return a book within one week after due will te de- prived of the privilege of drawing books from the Library. Instructors needing books for class work, and post-graduate students upon recommendation of the instructor, may, by arrangement with the Libra- rian draw such books for a term. 6. Volumes marked “BOOK OF REFERENCE” cannot be drawn. 7. Books, when returned, are to be left upon the Librarian’s desk. \ 8. All damage to books must be reported to the Librarian. | 8 RJ du PIETY-SIXTH CONGRESS. [FIRST SESSION—BEGINNING DECEMBER 4, 1899. ] OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY For the use of the United States Congress. PREPARED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE CLERK OF PRINTING RECORDS. SECOND EDITION. CORRECIED TO JANUARY IO, IQOO. WASHINGTON : GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1000. ~r NOTE. The vacancy in the Senate caused by the death of Hon. Monroe I. Hayward, Senator-elect from Nebraska, was filled by the appointment of Hon. William V. Allen, a former Senator from that State. He was sworn in December 19, 1899. Hon. J. W. Gayle has been elected to fill the vacancy in the House of Representa- tives caused by the death of Hon. E. E. Settle, Representative from the Seventh Kentucky district. The contested-election cases in the House of Representatives have been assigned for investigation and report, as follows: To Elections Committee No. 1: William F. Aldrich ». Gaston A. Robbins, Fourth Alabama district; Walter Evans v. Oscar Turner, Fifth Kentucky district; Geo. M. Davison 7. G. G. Gilbert, Eighth Kentucky district; James A. Walker v. William F. Rhea, Ninth Virginia district. To Elections Committee No. 2: John D, White z. Vincent Boreing, Eleventh Kentucky district; Cornelius J. Jones z. Thomas C. Catchings, Third Mississippi dis- trict; Oliver Ho Dockery 2. John D. Bellamy, Sixth North Carolina district. To Elections Committee No. 3: Richmond Pearson z. Wm. F. Crawford, Ninth North Carolina district; R. R. Tolbert ». Asbury C. Latimer, Third South Carolina district; Richard A. Wise z. William A. Young, Second Virginia district. IIT \4864 MEETING DAYS OF CONGRESSIONAI, COMMITTEES. [Committees not given below have no regular meeting days, but meet upon the call of the chairmen.] SENATE. Acricultwwerand Forestry... .0 cv. can een Tuesday. En er ONC Ca i Ld SE ah BOD Wednesday. COMINBICE: ia ol i vi hs Sa a a Swe hr aT dys Thursday. District of Columbia... arin ln oP Sy Friday. Bdueationand Tabor...» 0h. ol ong noi Tuesday. Lt eR SRE Sel CS SR SA RR DLE Sn Tuesday. Pishenmes rca oda at all le el Friday. Boreign Relations... ui 0 or i Se re a ee Wednesday. Geological Snrvey 0... Tel as Thursday. Ina ARIE hs re a an RE Thursday. Interstate Commerce... 0... 0 iii imi eve Thursday. Yudiciany =< Doan i hl AT Monday. Military Affairs... ....... RR TO SR Thursday. Penalomge or a ee LR a US Tuesday. Posi-Officegand Post-Roads. +. .......... ot... 0 Wednesday. Privilegesand Elections... . \ no oti va i aL, Friday. Public Buildingsand Grounds... ..... ...... 0000 0 Friday. Bablic lames: oi a A aa Monday. enltorlen kh. rs Dh eR Pe Friday. HOUSE Accoumts. ua a EE CE le Thursday. MonleWliea co. hs Le a ee oe Wednesday. EN in hE ae a Friday. Coinage, Weights, and Measures... ......0 ouvir in.: Thursday. District of Columbia... os os ve fas Sd eh Wednesday. Education: o- oons wa a RN Monday. Indian Mffaive rose ont on Bl sa a Ge Thursday. Insular Affaive Dos oo a ar a Monday. ADOT. i A BRT AT Thursday. Militany Affaires ois, ar ne a Tuesday and Friday. hee ee rR aE ee Da Thursday. > Naval Affairs, 0 0s es La ala REE Tuesday and Friday. Post-Officeand Post-Roads .... ...... 0. . lol ive. Tuesday and Friday. Private Land Clalme. i... Jo ae she ei Wednesday. Public Buildings'and Grounds. ..........0. co. evo NL Friday. Bubliclands. oil rn an AR ee Tuesday and Friday. MoeClaimg. a a Ee th Tuesday. Vv CALENDAR FOR 1900. JANUARY. JULY: SUNIL Mm. (TU. lW. | TH. | F. |SAT.JISUN.| M. {TU.{| W. | TH..| BE. {SAT. I gig ai] oF 6 I a foal a big 60 7 8 o [10 ITF 12 13 8 gl zo {31 Laz iagih 14 a4 vs fF 1604 77. | 18 1 39 | 90 ¥5 [161 17 | 38 To | 20 | 271 ay Vion | as: [oq] og [a6 ay 22 | 25. 24 | 25 | 26] 27 | 28 28. 20 30 | 3% 20 | 30: 31 FEBRUARY. AUGUST. T 2 3 bi 2 3 4 4 5 6 7 8 9g | 70 5 6 7 8 9 | 10 | 11 II 12 13 4 [15 16 17 12 13 141 15 6 17: 18 IS | 70:| 20 | 21 | 22° 23 | 24 IQ. noi |r 2120 [Las | 24 Kas gsi 26.27 | 28 26: 27 P28 ag 30 fiat MARCH. SEPTEMBER. | : [ | I 2 3 6 : TE ae | 13 14 15 16 17 2 10 i 12 3 14 15 1810" 20 | 21 {22 [23 | 24 1 17s l 1s 26 21 22 25 | 26 | 27 28 | 29 | 30 (S21 2 24 25 2 27.42 29 APRIL. OCTOBER. I 2 3 4:03 6 7 I | 2 | 3 4 5 6 8 oo 17] 213) 7 S| 9 | Io [1% 12 | I3 5 [1617-18 [1g | 20 |.21 4 | 15 | 6 v7 | 18S | To | 220 22 fi 23 a4 | 25 26 [27 | nS 21 22 | 23 24 | 25 26 | 27 29 | 30 28 |: 29 | 30 | 3¥ MAY. NOVEMBER. gz 2 3 4 5 I 2 3 6 7 8 g [F10 | 31 | 12 4 5 6 7 8 9 | Io 13034 | 15] 16 | 77 | 18H 19 II 2 | 13 14] 15 16. 17 20 | ov | aa aa gael as lak IBilirg {ize | 21 22 [23] 24 27 28 | 29: | zo" 31 a5 1 26° | 27 | 28 fog. il 30 JUNE. DECEMBER. Pa | k ! \ § = Hy I, _ LS GENERAL SUBJECT INDEX. Page. | Accounts and disbursements, Division of, Agricultural Department..........cooouuiieniesnnnns 228 = Addresses of Members of Congress, home and local, HSt of .............cveesvevnnsorsraevainenns 326 f Adjutant-General's Office, War Department... .. i ve. coi ss saic sia cms sss vive sis nveinisiviuintols 214 Admiraliof the Navy, Office of, Navy Department. . oo i ie tee so sae sins a saisisis vs vine siouin's 218 ! Agricultural Department, Assistant Secretary, duties of ......... co. heidi ai ee. 252 Blography of Secretary oo. i a i Cn se a 226 { Biological Survey dutiesiof-...... or. sv. vn do ee oe 254 OCR OF a rs Pee tn we a a oT eT 227 Re Bureau of Animal Industry, dutiesiof ..........L. o.oo 253 officersiof i fign ce i nL ae 226 chief clerk Ques of. 5 oi ih Ta ie at alee a attra awl 252 Division of Accounts and Disbursements, dutiesof .................. 253 iy officersiof... iin 228 Agrostology, duties of... ui. ei da tent ea aa 254 officers of rn Sr NES ; SUR 227 Botany, dulled of i. var sasha na as i SS 254° Offeers of uso na Ta A a Btu ea 227 Chemistry, AulieSiof. nie: coin iS en, 253 CO CeEB Oa I GR 227 Entomology, duliesof o.oo a 2S a ann sa 254 officersolt ri sail Ne ss Eas) 227 Forestry, duties of. conoid 00a Sa oi a LE 254 OI CES Of A EL 227 Pomolegy,dutiesof... i... 0h. 00, eR 254 offfcersiafls. ou na en IR a Sn 227 Publications, dutiesof ..... 0... 5... re a 254 I Lt EE Se A ee nt ns 228 2 Seedn, dulles of. x I ne 255 4 officers ol. i a a ha Ae 227 Solis, duties of in re EN any offiestmal. an sn a a TS se Th 227 J Statistics duflesiof. 0 i a Nes 253 : TE RE A EP RR 227 Vegetable Physiology and Pathology, dutiesof...................... 254 officersof. ina STs 227 i Garden-and Grounds, dutliesof.. ou... ooo i ee 255 { officerSoli os rs SN a a . 223 TAY oer of i a a re RR a aa k Office of Experiment Stations; dutiesof... ci... coi. i... 253 v officersiof ia. Roo Sr dain Lani in Fan Public Road Inquiries, dutiesofi..... oo. 20.0. LoL 254 ! officersof.- 0 inl rio on ae 227 officers of ir. ie Se 226 Secretary, Dography of... i film ah A is ee Shi he 226 dutiesof i...... rate a SRE a ee 252 Section of Foreign Markets, duties of..... oe. on. av a ae, 253 officers of . i a a SA 227 | Weather Bureaw,dutles oft... 0 al, oii Th 8 aaa dn 252 Officers of foi i an Sl FU RRL SL HE ans | ab Capitol Bo eh a EI SE eT 194 Agrostology, Division of Agricultural Department.......co. ve. ie iii ch tieesaneans es else 227 | Almanac, Nautical, Navy Department. oats vi sa sive srs aia woah iehinle ae mials 220 Alphabetical list of Representatives and Delegates, showing beginning and length of service.. 177 i committee service ........... oi. 154 3 Senators, showing committee SERVICE... iii. serv inet sna sion aisha vines 134 Xx Congressional Directory. Page. American Ethnology, Burean of, Smithsonian Institution ........ coin ih i i a Historical Association, officersoli. iii ili. ie fs 232 Republics, Burean of tHe 0. oy Sb en ee I a 230 Animal Industry, Bureau of, Agricultural Department. ..oovvees savss ise soto 226 Apportionment of Representatives in Congress among the various States under the several CENBHEOR I tate su re mali os Ses a ras iene wR mes See ate Ll Ly 204 Architectiofithe Capitol, oflige of oR fr id deri oie dy nde aia Tod a 194 Army, Headquariers of the, War Department... coo ov oon oo ln Ls ary Arrival and departure of mails from the Capitol ..... I Se TR A 317 Assignment of rooms on basement floor of the Caplio. on. ro a a Se 197 gallery Aooreofthe CapHols. iis alu nn ny on on tis 201 principal floorofthe Capitol... 0. os a Cn on 199 seats in Hall of House of Representatives... .o. i. oo. Liisa li ie, 187 Algeramiof. Sul a ae 186 SEH Ry See ee BL ee le 185 dlagramol ooo aE OS En 184 Assistant Attorneys-General, utlesiof . ov os rt LL a a 245 Attorney-General for Interior Department, dullesiof ......... ... hs nmin kh, 245 Secretary of Avriculturepduties of 0. nln ca a a a 252 the Intevioryduties ol... rs Sh EE SR aa 251 Navy, Quiles of or a an A AR ea 248 State, dutiesof ..... .... Be NRE Re 233 War, AulleS OD. a i a Re A SR CG 243 Secretaries of the Preasury,dulles of... ol hve rr lo ra oa Ea 234 Astrophysical Observatory, Smithsonian Institution... ..... coo. Cin bh ol 0 Coa aa Attorney:GenerBl, Blogmphy of i i a Si ie Fra a ae SE 216 duties of. i 4 sino nnn ns h en das Se a a Es al a Auditor forthe Interior De Parle nt a a a Ves Thr i] 210 dutiesof ... = 236 Navy. Department... oo al shi acta el a CS a 210 dues of i bo med i ST 236 Post-Office Department. or oo inn i i ii Cr asi 211 duties ol rr NS Ea a 236 State and ether Departments... i rr a si i SR iG 210 : duties ofl. cr on He a hans 236 ER EL TT LS I I Es SER IN ET eine yh oe 210 datles af, ve or a ee 235 War Departed ee > Rel 210 dutiesiofl fn, A. Cri Sl a Ne a aa 235 Basement floor of the Capitol, assicnment of TOOMBION.L.. ls vrs siotn insite: siren TOT QIRSEAIT OF, sh Sao rs coh va sss Aa en ida Ere et DL DU 196 Biographies: Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States .. .........c...0 veins 263 Senators, Representatives, and Delegates in Congress ...........o.cvvuuvnnen.... 1-123 Biography of Attorney=Generals. oi. oi don ve atte vn en ones Maison Ua eas re a Aan aang a 216 Postmaster-Ceneral. aos. vivir. hn. shits Sun cinta OLE Li LC aye President nr se Di at ei ae Ae wa a eh Sl he see set Te 207 Secrefary of Aerleullure ue. na a re NR NE 226 State... oa naan rie eB wee TARR i ee ER aE sR Se SE Aare 208 the Interior sas des a et hides Noh SAENGER, 222 NAN. st ao CE a iam nia lense ae Cr ta on mies 218 EE SL ee se De ee en Er 208 tothe President... i rv. oe eit vide et ame ln wer A den es on 207 Biological Survey, "Agricultural Department... ... oh. ive hi sie i Stahl seh Ses rns mins ol 227 dutlesof i. i a een i ee a Ra Ra 254 Board on Geog taPRNIC NAICS i... a fr Ses sini va irs sabaiel se ain wiasiaialilalea as sheial ars bantu nie le 229 duties of. ES I ee ee rs 262 of: Commissioners, SolAlers’ THOME. i. cura sie ainis suisse vsic aes voiossnis inayenins fouins 230 Inspectiomand Survey, Navy Department. i... ie cet cree ali nv ais mio va ivnraly 220 Managers:National Soldiers’ HOME... ci 7, a ti i ste es ard piss ran a a ore 230 Medical Examiners, Navy Department, .. .c...covvsdsiensss sori en alee 222 Botanic Garden, NaloNal sco iii, cies cain ss asis sian fs donne oe sa tn sles sie bis vise wu mien d 194 Botany, Division of, Agricultural Department... . icici ou visisivatsn tin cia sls vain vtisinioinls aniniseiie'nie 227 Burean of Accounts, State Department, duties of... cai ve iii sian dy sd sewn ee 233 American Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution. J... vo vii doi iieec vies valonianinos 231 Republics dutlesiof 2 0 tt vi di i rn i Sn ie pattie ele amie 202 OHICETS OF oils cvs vias es chad aims wary ev yl aw sn san ay ne na 280 J General Subject Index. Bureau of Animal Industry, Agricultural Department... ... ic... ore dissin nannies vn nnies Appointments, State Department, duties Of Lu... oh cs coi oad ve oy rieaaive seye ee Constructioniand Repair, Navy: Depatiment: ... ih tun, oii siea cn aiah ani esis mnie Bngraving and Printing, Treasury Department... GL. na SA davon do ooo, Eanipment, Navy Department's. 0. ie dow vo 0 Sri Jf ouisilieiictiehinn oto seddete swale ais Foreign Commerce, State Department... ov hur ne. oi. te, a Tir als Immigration, Freasury Department... i is. Ji wl eda ea Indexes and Archives, State Department, dutiesof..................... Ey a Medicine and Surgery, Navy Department ............... rE A Te Naval:Intelligence, Navy DepPatiment. .. cee ciao ci.'s cce sum sins sisiaivis aia site's visita siateieisioe | Navigation, Navy Department... iv. ee coe doce couse sisal bist aia Sorte 219 | Ordnance, Navy Department. ... . u.slld nis ines linens 315 fie she vallafsbeis iat lintels wall waits 218 ji Pensions, Interior Department coe. ~All Sinn Anh eh dn th Ls 224 | Rolls and Library, State Department, dutlesof {.... 0... wnt ie de dean Jo 233 Steam Engineering, Navy Department. /...o.... ves. orca nS SLL 219 Statistics, Ireasury: Department. ........ vous. civics shh fale vivndvin tials sini msinisistseraiute 209 Suppliesiand Accounts, Navy Deparfment ........... on ai. sade slay 219 Weather, Agricultural Department... cu. sb do hii vi dis Johlv sala sists gia lela atoaintaty 226 Vards and Docks, Navy Department. c......... ior dinisn sie hati crn sowed “21g Capitol, The, assignmentiof rooms on basement floor OF... iu vi. iv ernisnnsivniveisioieh sislente sis 197 gallery floonof... civil. oh Sh A a ar 20: principal feorof. . iu Se sr dee 199 description and history Of. i. Lie, fakes tamys vere rive wie 23 safelsiintuis: Shr gibini datos al olury 195 diagram of basement floor i ad i ie Se SRO ae en lr etal ya Siena 196 a RR wR EE a Se BBE md Be Ra De 200 principal oor. oii ih nh a a Sa aR en a BR SO TOS POLICE, or hh Swi aa ae SE A A ns AAA a Sirol Census Office; Interior Department i El ciao duis vs vio fe nies esi ulv is iifue sain vin meals, owivia ate iat 225 Chaplain of the Honse:of Representatives. i... ius iil sales is sie shea ndoaiats ie 190 rE EEE Sl EN Ae SR nS BT i a SI 188 Chemistry, Division of, Agricultural Department... oc. co. i Sail ara he ide ete 227 Chieficlerk, ‘Agricultural Department; duties of... 0 cali i sh Li ahaa dsreneninsh seins 1252 Interior Department duties of. il ian a aa Sa sada Sree anise 250 State: Department duties of. tcl re sir h anion aries asin sve nina iv miaiviai istoleietots 233 Treasury Department duties of. i vn cn es es sea a 234 War Department, duties of ...... I NAG Cr SA Se Se 243 Chief of Engineers office of War Deparimefils i.e iver vais nian rites waits sie ioias int slab eros ianiatate 215 Ordnance, officeiof War Department. vo dives orem olivats aes veisiionisi tina sins sto sisipte 215 Signal Officer;office of War Department... viii oe an ee ea at 215 Civil Service Commission, classified positions or employees excluded in part................... 260 Bleions of Be er U Cr e arr aee e a A wie nike 257 Aut ed Oa ss a Tea ay vs aide en 257 exceptedipositions. oo Le GL 257 extent ofthe service... ol vs, SATIRE Ne ERNE LC La SE 257 ORRCELS Of rl i a Bn ah a eee BU Se Sa rl es, 228 provisionsiconcerning removal vio. oi an LS a aa 261 < Classified positions or employees in the civil service exempted in part.............c.oooiiin. 260 Clerkof the Tlouse of Representatives. 00. is oi mr i aba ae ao hein 190 Clerks to committees of the House of Representatives... Jo. sea suns ensoiioendaomniismounn sina 192 \ and messengersito:Senate commitiees ... cin le Se 188 Coast and Geodetic Survey, Treasury Department Jo. cout, iil ea i a 213 Columbia Institution for Deaf and Dumb, Gallaudet College, facultyof...................ooL. 314 school: faculty of Kendall... ... cc. chivalrous 314 officersiof oi. Jo. oss ae Se Seen 313 Commencement and expiration of Senators’ terms of service..............o ueeev ciel 124 and length of terms of service of Representatives and Delegates.............. 177 Commissary-General of Subsistence, Office of, War Department... ...oeeveeeeiieaeneeinian.... 215 Commission Cull Service. oe Sms van so a ares ate fe ets wn ee as 228 Ey EEE Ee hele a TE Cs EL a IE A ih SEE 229 Interstate Commerce... ov aise sais HE SR Ee RY 228 Special Tariff Siale-Depastmient, J. be. i no hn LL i roti ost i on i20B of Bishiand:Bisherles. oo Sirs a en in an a 229 5h RUTY oY en en A I SH ER ASE i 262 _§ tothe Philippines, State Department... i. oi dei cane dh fois oie eta, 208 Commissioner of Education, Interior Department, dutiesof............coovinnns eh aa rs 251 | Indian Affairs, Interior Department, duties of... ...c.enu rir. evisu eennen 251 XII Congressional Directory. a } Page Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Treasury Department. ........ovoseevaiasessvann ssasnn sis 211 utes of i a NY 240 Navigation, Freasusy Depatiment.. co... 3 cies ata a os 212 dutiesol ol 241 Patents, Interior Depariment, dutiesiof. ces ss te dn 251 Pensions, Interior Department, dutiesof ..... a 0 oa al), 251 Railroads, Interior Department oi. on. ra nie an rg 225 the General Tand Office; duties of i... nove saves mos a I 251 Commissioners of Immigration, Treasury Department........ J. i i oh, 214 Committee service of Representatives and Delegates, alphabetical list showing ............... 154 Senators, alphabetical listishowing .... 0 oan, 134 ¢ Committees of the House of Representatives, ClerkS to... coos is cece 192 | membersiipol. rl a Se 144 Hu official stenographersito ........................ 190 Senate, clerks and MESSENGEES EO ui liu nv. drhinals ais ianini st a a Er 188 TH TEE Ly Ee A a eS 126 Comptroller:of the Currency, Treasury Departillent ... ave: risen tate ab da Sis, 211 Treasury, Treasury Department... lh. od bi Ses 210 Congressional Library, description and history of. .. cc ue. sieviondeinins nude ey EE 205 officers of i oa Ed Bh El, eT 206 Record, clerk inl chiavrge at €@aplioli. nuh iin. Covet ivi at oh A or has Sores 194 Construction and Repairs, Bureanof, Navy Department............. 0... 0 oo ia, 220 Consular Bureau, State Department, dutiesiof.. oa anor ivr. esas seein artes emt 233 LE 204 officers of the United States, location, name, and rank.......... ce. iireves - 276 Corcoran Callery of Ant rolficers of. un ra i dS nore es ie Se ain 314 Court of Appeals, District of Columbia, justices and officers of.............. ... A Ih 267 Clalme ITISQICHOM i ea Een Bee ve Ars Eh a al Sa eas a ee i ab 266 residences of justices ........ A Ed sre a ie TS i SE LR SU Re 266 Currency, Comptroller of the, Treasury Department ..:.............. Le RET 211 Deaf and Dumb Institution, Kendall GFEEM iv... sessions onisiosie ssnsina nisi sionle sis lodiaieslainaisnes 313 Delegates and Representatives’ committee service, alphabetical list showing .................. 154 Representatives and Senators’ biographies..................... Ei een we 1-123 Delegations in Congress DY SALES. (0 Jyh vec tes toasts anes sion meieninntelhonie att eh nth Lr SE 169 Deseriptionand history of the Capitol... ....... Lo... 0a edo a LE 195 Libratyiof CoNgress:, ow mmile anil. Sulioars ms i ay 205 Department of Justice, Assistant Attorneys-General, duties of............cccvveveneeiiiiiiaan 245 Attorney-General for the Interior Department, dutiesof............... 245 Attorney-General iblographyiof, nahh OR. 216 | ditties of a ee ea Ei 245 officersof ...... Fr i a Nr I lS ST SO 216 | Solicitor for the State Department dutiesof-.-......................... 245 General dutlestof i Sr nee was 245 of the Ireasury, Qutlesof..-.... o.oo Ve AIL 245 offieersiof =. nt te a 217 aber utlesior a a 256 Cero a a a 228 Pepartmentalindex, th. ede a BR a eR SB 335 re Sl 194 | Bepartureof through trains, times of. iv... or. coin i Sr NR RE ee a 318 Diagram ofibasement floor'of the Capitol... o.oo 0 oli ae cs 196 gallery floorof the Capitol... on i i a an aa aa 200 principal leosof the Capitol... .. nh deh .o, nn dai ies oe di hols dais es 198 showing assignment of seats in the Hall of the House of Representatives ........... 186 Senate Chamber i. 0 i or na sadist 184 Diplomatic Bureau, Sinte Department, duties of .......... tv... coi nee LoL Sn 233 | Corps in: Washington, members of... =. ic nas 269 | Director. of Census, Interior: Department, AULIES OF... oo. vues eis Saisis sin vsinains sniminsn as snlsinisnissios 252 | the Geological Survey, Interior Department, duties of ........ .................... 252 \ Mint, Breasnry. Department... i ii aay heals is Deine sa iat ed vies 212 | Directory.of NOLEIS, CIPS, €1€ civ vr veisui sv sininminims chins cvshie ninivs suis nin vain ines i pron ey 334 roons:of- United States Senators. .....o ls 5. J hear ren ais fat ales wa wise stink sir eli as 202 the Hall of the House of Representatives. tur. ol. ov c esis snbinmeisriveseios sine 187 | YT al 185 3 Dispensary, Naval, Navy Department ...........ceeu tert itirennierseessnecereosreonstoesnsye ve 221 io General Subject Index. | XIII Page District of Columbia, District government ................. a a ET eS i Te 311 five department: ir PELE 312 healihvdepartmient.. fv mn a a i Si i 313 Metropolitan POIICE. vi hl rs Lr te i te a Ss es Ha mie a ee Set ara are 312 CU i ER Le A Bs ee Se 311 OMe COTE, wos ed a Ss RE Sy SER a Th 312 Division, Secret Service, Treasury Department. iu... iu de. Sa easier Sraislanie ss isms anise ns 207 f Accounts and Disbursements, Agricultural Department ................. ah 228 Agrostology, Agricultural Department... . os. sive in oh hos seis ieiivas eae ia als 227 Botany; Azricultural DeParbment tii sad fh Ta sr vlan ion soe alii Sat 227 Chemistry, Agricnltural De naTEmEnl. ory Jos vn siniiss sininion a0 test ws fin alae wale Ve Sia tetas 227 Entomology, Agricultural Depasiment. co... S00 na 227 Forestry, Aoricnlinral Department: i... in vv valeshivion wish Sains tenis 2s ait is 227 Pombology, Agricultural Department... . 5... ooo mda a NS 227 Publications, Agricultural Departmenst:..............ciu. uns.» ER NC 228 Seeds, Apriculiural DepamimIEnt oe sind st sto sles ote euios ae io states eile se Bs an 227 Soils tAericulinral Departmen... oh nih a hn aes hhh oa pe sat tea ek 227 Statistics) Agricultural PDepantment, 0 i Sa et as 227 Vegetable Physiology and Pathology, Agricultural Department ................... 227 Divisions ofthe Clvi-Service hr dG 257 Document room of the House of Representatives, officers of...............c.coouin.. EA 191 Senate oflICers Of i i or ne a was Ba on an ae a ns ee oer ie es 190 Doorkeeper, House of Representatives... .............0...... NE ee 191 Education; Office of Interiom Department... i a a dio tei ois saints wisn 0s wiatatwit in aia 225 Embassies and legations, foreign, Inthe United States. .... .. cuit secrserihvir sensi dineinne 269 of the United States abroad ar. fn a is Ihe ai 273 Engraving and Printing, Bureau of, Treasury Department. ............. iuuevassisne sadnnisviasnies 209 Entomology, Division of, Agricultural Department... iu. in aes oh ie a isiess oh sich 227 Equipment, Bureau of; Navy Department. a. ns ae, 219 Examining Board, Naval Navy Department. oor a a Sr a i a as 221 Excepted positionsiinithe clviligenvice . ar a ns, 257 Executive Mansion, offices and rales OF... i. fo that vrei vivsisins Bas salebe ots soles ole esl wintsir Cn 207 Experiment.Stations, Office of, Agricultural Department... ....0 oo. on Sa, 227 Extent of the civil service...... I a a Bn Bee 257 Faculty of Gallaudet College, Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb... ................. 314 Kendall School, Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb ................. Seah = ald Rire department, District of Columbia: or 5 oR visa snes ns aiinis seis n Salatuinbsinsicy tole ote 312 First Assistant Postmaster-General, Office of, Post-Office Department....... Se re A es 217 Secretary of the Interior, QULIESOf ... . . - con dee vs sect in ss assis sieian isn ein sie 250 RSH ComMUSSION. or esi ars Se aa SN ate sar inh ST 229 Folding room of the House of Representatives, officersof....... cc... i... vr esicissvaensens 191 Senaterofficersiof. Ti onic it rnin ar Sd ne aT pe 190 Foreign consnlsiin the United States, HST OR .. a cr i si es 25 srs sain cle widiin wins 2 hn 205 embassies and legations tothe United States... ...... cr. oi ies ios serianionia 269 Markets, section of, Agricultural Department... occ vee cs ce eralesats alll, 227 Forestry, Division of, Agricnltural Department... .c.c ci so seo eee ens earls de saneie 227 Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General, Office of, Post-Office Department... ..................... 218 Gallery floor of the Capitol assignment of TOOMBS ON ....v essen cscs sss iasisisniaissiviaiainimisiannninnie 201 diagramiol. oo. ed ee NS Rd 200 OA CO TCNTEATIE rn hed a e T 314 Gallaudet College, Columbia Institution for Deaf and Dumb, faculty of........................ 314 Garden and Grounds, Agricnltural DepATIMENL.... o.. i ies sais vias ss sis rsivaisisissinsins sissies sates sina 228 General Land Office, Interior Departiient vc as... cu ivos ve eons sins ssinsimsides sass sine sensi 223 Superintendent Life-Saving Service, Treasury Department, duties of.................. 242 GeographiciNames, Boardion. oo. a a ihe anaes 229 Geological Survey, Office of, Interior Department ........ tvs vsiesiss snssissssisines wnsenssisanininanseh 225 Government Hospital for Insane, officers of. oi io . is oi vs sniv rics insissiesisiissisnianianiniisinian saluialeisls 314 Government Printing Office; dues Of 5 iy sin i se iivies sian oss Tein ss Abin Sie ier one 261 re i Ya i Je, 228 Governorsiof the States and Tertiiories, Hot Of... nce de es seer nearer 268 Hall of the House of Representatives, assignment of Seats in ........ ec. ce oveitv.soivnsasens 187 diagram showing assignment of seats........ccoeveveans 186 XIV Congressional Diveclory. Page. Headquarters of the Army, War Department... ovo teenth cide Fai ie eee seis 214 Marine Corps, Navy Department St a Rr Se ab NE SER ag RR Se en en 222 Health department, District of Columbia... cv. isl lie ins vais sein na nish vas os a Bets Rt, ny 313 Heating and ventilation of the House of Representatives, officers of .................... cL. 192 Senate, officersof. Gr. i a Ee a 190 Hospital, Naval, Navy Department .............. cv ss inns ss shni sms nna siaiaiivsisis siesie sean valvinie 221 for Insane (St. Blizabethis). i... i. tee tire oi Sn do Si ST oe eh 314 Hotels; clubs, ete, Airectory Of... vss dui st cco snaie lls cotistis ui aw wats aleio ls sims sletapiaiale'y sais ule 334 House of Representatives, classification of members politically. ............cooiiiiiiiiin... 333 committees clerk 0, i til i oi ie ah oh kaa 192 membershipiofs Jo. a CE a es ve 144 Document room, officersol nif thei sr hha Lae CIOL RBolding room; officerSof../. ci ii it srhiis su sivivnls » maim sa sian drives 191 heating and ventilation, officersiof.-.......... 0. cco cvs vis 192 Elbrany, officers of. . ih sano coe es Ls ER 191 officers of, Chaplain. sie 8 i EL Ws ei we savin 190 CIE a re SRR Se oR RS Be el 190 Doorkeeper!. ht. chides eran ato Te are ale ky 191 Postmasfer........ IE Raa ety ie wate 192 Sergeant-at-ATmS. ...... over va. in a se irate 191 Speaker it he es FP A A 190 Stenographers to comimitices EB Sp 190 official reporters of debates... .... 0. Joo aim So ae Ce 194 Howard University, officersiand faculties of ............ cc... Lo cabbie hl 315 Hydrographic Office, Navy Department ........cveeiiuienat ennui aianiiiiitiat a iieiiannns 219 Hygiene, Museum of, Navy Department... ........c..ioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiaiee 221 Immigration, Bureau of, Treasury Department. ..............oiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiennn, 214 commissionersof, Treasury Department ............c.00h 0. cei vasa banal, 214 Index of Congressional and Departmental employees ............. en ey ee 335 Indian Affairs, Office of, Interior Department .................ccivitiiseiesaraeniecansis, pea 225 IndustriaCommission,; Gites of. ir. re Saha re sis sities dene Te his ls en ts 262 Br Le ee a mB Ee Ee SN i NR Te TE 229 Inspection and Survey, Board of, Navy Department. .............ooouiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin ieee. 220 Inspector-General, Office of, War Department ..............oo.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin ieee 214 Interior Department, Assistant Secretary, dutiesof......... ......ooo iii 251 Auditor for, Treasury Department ................... ceo Loe, 210 Biography of Secretary. ... ov. or velss ts oodivion said abc les elie wreints s 222 Bureau of Pensions, officersof ....... SERENE Ee ST Se 224 Censts Office, officer8iol 1.5 os ih i ine ves ss tin £5 wiv sinte Sa ety wera trea va tatie 225 chicficlerk Antles of. ui ono ce viele css sass ata hs Sale etiia a ia dos mle len 251 Commissioner of Education, duties of . SER SR 251 General Land Office, ditles or Se 251 Indian Affairs, dutlesiof oo. . ii OL aisha daa es 251 Patents, duties of ............ ke Sd OR TT SE 2571 Pensions, ube of oi his a ian ese av ims 251 Railroads dutlesof .--.. 5 vue deine ds 251 Director of Census, duties of ...... ee a a aT a 252 Geological Survey, duties of. ............ no 252 Pirst Assistant Secretary, duties of .................00 La aL 250 General IL.and Office, officersiof. .... .cv.. ide amish nL, 223 Office of Commissioner of Railroads, officersof.................cooiin.. 225 Bducation, OfACera OF... iui. Soir fama vin ai waists nia a te latmit vials 225 Geological Survey, officers of ................. oie a0 Indian Affairs, officers of ........co..0 coiiiiiiiiiilLL 225 ICE BIOL s.r a vs ainsi tole inlets a ei ate e's wa slat sith eta a wate) Flytat bi 0 a slate tole ala as 222 Patent Office, officers of... voices ser ln lei essere sla 223 Pension Agency,officers of.......... cc ities ae, 225 Secretary, duties of... 0. 0 cis er anions caine y subs siaimis ia seis sistem vena 250 Internal Revenue, Commissioner of, Treasury Department..... at ne tty oe ne A AR 211 Interstate Commerce Commission, AUtIes Of... cus ssices cvs isnitsinin on sivd isis visit waiainsiois satiiaiaie's 255 OfACEIBIOf ee se ys ese sea 228 International Exchanges, Smithsonian Institution ...........cccoiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaian... 236 Money Orders, Washington City post-office. ............cooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiien. 316 Judge-Advocate-General, office of, Navy Department ...........c...ooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiieann. 220 War Department... ..... csevenesnssensesassousinesesnssoss 215 ] I hs General Subject Index. XV Page. Judges of United States circuit courts. ........oooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiie elaiee oieie piel 265 Justices and officers of the court of appeals, District of Columbia... ......ccovviiniieiaeinn... 267 supreme court, District of Columbia ............ eer A 267 Kendall Green, Columbia Institution for Deaf and Dumb .......ciiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinienannen 313 School, Columbia Institution for Deaf and Dumb, faculty of .................. 314 Tabor, Depaftment of. ec... civics ci lh Lessee eis sles vs nei s iv satin sess 228 T.and Office, General, Interior Department... ...... /oceves. sit vnhvn sivas maasiosime ns srine suse onives 223 Library, Agricultural Department. .co.oeu. iii ae ieee iit tete tte teeta ieee 228 the, of Congress, description and history of ......c.coii viii. 205 | OTRCCTB OF ovis soos a ives dans ie A ra aia esti wl piniuie: Pitan ala o md alate ule 206 A House of Representatives, officersof..... cco iii 191 Senate, OFICEET ON. i ess iro shiv jain vs inn dee slo aisinininirs's sine pulsars sialb nies = sisimios we ais 4 alu atejeieinin nse . 138 Life-Saving Service, Treasury Department. c.count aii iiiiiiiirieteaeaaionens 209 Iight-House Board, Treasury Department, officers and members of ..............cooiiiiiinn. 212 List of consular clerks......... SARE SSR Se RE CI Ce Sn en 204 foreign consuls in the United States ............. RE 295 governors of States and Territories... . eevee iiiniee rate es ase ea eae 268 home and local addresses of Senators, Representatives, and Delegates ................. 326 newspapers represented in press galleries. .......oiiiiieieeiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii iii. 319 persons entitled to admission to press galleries .....c.oeveiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin... 322 Iocation, name, and rank of United States consularofficers ..............ooiiiiiiiiiiiL. 276 Mails, arrival at and departure fromthe Capitol. ........c.ci.0 ciiieiniie initia enns 317 Marine Barracks, Navy Department... ..o. ccoctoessesans vonsissaisa sisivnisinn enleosiosnsisnssmisiseivevios 222 Corpsydutiesiof ... 0... ca a SR a ed 250 headquarters of, Navy Department................... BRC Se Re a fe 225 Hospital Service, Treasury Department... .. ot. cai iia ii oe Se eee 213 Medical Examiners, Board of, Navy Department. ........ccoueiiitiuiininereraaierniaresesanaes 222 Medicine and Surgery, Bureau of, Navy Department .......0.cceiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniieni ania. 220 Members of the press entitled to admission to the press galleries ...............ooooiiiiiin... 322 Membership of House comrmitiees...... vee een re cee cece dees stl tna enniseive 144 Senate COMMILIEE:. «ih coi avi ais is eivieleiain sale ini ain mings sininiainia sia totais feial sho iaiuloraiaitte fo 126 Metropolitan police, District of Columbia... .......cooiiivr iain coin A 312 Military bureaus of War Department, duties of ...... coool 243 Mint, Director of, Treasury Department... co. oeeenesrais sistas iee isons sna sis saves 212 Money-order division, Washington City post-office. .......c.coiieiiiiiiii iii... 316 Museum, National, Smithsonian Institution. ....c..ceceiiiiei iii ite ei eeststerannse 231 Museum of Hygiene, Navy Department .....c..vuiiiiiiinntiiiiiiiiiiiiitineiieiniiicancencnns 221 National Academyof Sciences, officers of... Lu. coh iii nid a se a ee 232 Bank Redemption Agency, Freasury Department... ..........0. o.oo nL 211 BotaNIC CATAL. alters cron sists sins sites vsision sin divioviamivmle sain visi Sa ails clo iotets Jia in a ineiede 194 Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, officers of .......................... oui, 229 Museum, Smithsonian Institution......c.iceiie. cain vas EEA Re RE 231 Nautical Almanac, Navy Department ....c...vottans adie inal Sh se ele ete 220 Naval Dispensary, Navy Department. ............ cotinine sib dven dienes es Ta ea 221 Examining Beard, Navy Department ...... coon. ite ve ee cs eee 221 Hospital: Navy: Department ...... J. ce. sian ooo ova aon EE ie SN 221 Intelligence, Bureau of, Navy Department...............cvaeoi tein oe tse e sneeess 219 Observatory, Navy Department oc... cece ve vosinnissivs vavassvs staisvesaisisissiveis siuisissss soils sine 220 Retiring’ Board, Navy Department... ..vic.recvrson. vh tise BL esis abel es ciate 222 War Records Office and library, Navy Department .......c...oieieiiiiiiiiieneanae.n. 220 Navigation, Bureau of, Navy Department. ......ccoeeuiieiiiiniitiiiieuinieieiiiineieai anne. 219 Commissioner of, Treasury Department. .s.........coiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinn., 212 Navy Department, Assistant Secretary, duties of ......iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iia 248 Auditor for Treasury’ Department «.-...... cose isco iri sn ssa a 210 Board of Inspection and Survey, officers of .............ici iinet, 220 Medical Examiners,officersof :.................o0. coche oe ni 222 Bureau of Construction and Repair, Auties of. ......ooveveerrererienneiannns 249 officers Of. i. dE hn se 220 Equipment, duties of... c.coeeeeeensns en 248 OFACEE8 OF [Vil oie ah ee sh tbh vats seiaa late aT nto ie sivas 219 B Medicine and Surgery, dutiesof ................... de 249 officergofi io i ve vl eat 220 Naval Intelligence, officers of ...c..vvvvviiiiineiiiai ionic, 219 XVI Congressional Directory. . Page. Navy Department, Bureau of Navigation, duties of... . 0000 in. ibe a hn ih 248 OEE Of i a RE on Sn Rn Sey OrANGHCE, AUCs OF od Se te aa be Seas hata ae aaa 249 rH A et a SR Re ol Sr BC 218 Steam Engineering, duties of... ic ve citi n vehis shies 2x aie tists 249 officersof..... a Ca 219 Suppliesand Accounts, duties of ...5. ....0i ua 249 OfICerS OF a a i Ch 219 Nardsand Docks dutlésof, lair Pali vastness en) 248 OmcerSol. Sr dn a Re er RR 219 Headquarters of Marine Corps, officersof........ nu. aa nats PR) Hydrographic Office, offleers of i. a yo se, 219 Manine Barracks ;officensof x: vu dm a a 222 Corps Atlas Ol oh i Se Te a Se A Le a Sl 250 Musenmof Elygiene officers ofr... oo. ahi Ln nn Se LB a, 221 Nautical Almanac, Of COTTON. ne» ies a hloisiaals elo lh loi sete di ls ame ala owes 220 Naval Dispensary, OfICers Of... ru. ss ssa ans iss sin -aiseinise Deh aaa te Eb tia ae 221 Examining Beard officers ofl. si. cian aie niin ain, Sarit Shi, 221 Hospital oflceisiof, ois ih an sen grass Se ll, 221 Observatory, ofeersion: it. a or a er ee Re 220 Retiring Board, oficers of i lve n dn sda ass ba betes ated os Sails 222 ‘War Records Office and Library, officersiof...... .....0.. .... a0. 220 navy yard and station, Washington, D.C., officers of ........................ 221 office of the Admiral officers of... aa. al re Lo oi ee a 218 Judge-Advocate-General officers of .\.....-.. .......... i... 220 duiiestof.t. ov. all Ll rn Sn 249 CEE a Ee a SE LB Rl rr Rl 218 Pay: Office, OCers Of. i a iain oe Sl eet ea va a a 221 Secretary, blography off... vt Lon ei adh eS i Bee Reis ses 218 ANIERIOT a ST i ae ee Se eT 248 State, War, and Navy Department building, officers of ..................... 222 Pay Office; Navy Department... ci... i. ovis s dain s nvanie's stein onineiesss 221 yard and station, Washington, D. C., Navy Department... 221 Newspapers represented in pressigalleries, Hstof ...... voeoeeecenied UL iL 319 Observatory, Astrophysical, Smithsonian Institution....... . cc. coer evvsni voi, LW LL 232 Naval, NavyiDepartmemt. oat hy a i Er Se ie veo, 220 Office, Government PRRTING os eo ii hen oo Ses Saas al we ava a tee 228 Hydrographic, Navy Department ................. rR eR 219 Record and Pension, War Department ou. ih ii se ava iss sii sietats siaieiiiuis oiasitiatale wit 216 Supervising Architect, Ureasury Department ..... i... 0. oon LLL DL LL 209 of Education; Inferior Department... 0... oo lo a da a an a, 225 Experiment Stations, Agricultural Department ............................ iL... 227 Indian Affairs, Interior Department... ... 0... .. ui. oon a oo TE a 225 Steamboat Inspection, Treasury Depastment. oo. ...c. aden LL LL LL 212 the Adjutant-General, War Department ......... co ood lh ou DL LL 214 Admiralof the Navy, Navy Department... oi. ct. 0 tulsa soe Sy ob hi nh aha olniens 218 Architect of te Caplio. fh sae se ove a wt sw oe ian tn awe ye dp ss eal was 194 Chief of Engineers, War Department... .... 0.0. lon. GL Lf a, 215 Ordnance, War Department... i. i. coe denies sainnss si winiats ies ate vibileins 215 Sional Officer, War Department... ... act... Jie tn nah als 215 Commissary-General of Subsistence, War Department ............c.c.ooinn. oo... 215 Commissioner of Railroads, Interior Department...................oo. usu 225 First Assistant Postmaster-General, Post-Office Department ...................... 217 Geological Survey, Interior Department .........c cc iviecisaveeiaenviorananeass 225 Inspector-General, War Department. .......cveavievaineerencassnecaosisacssniosnenss 214 Judge-Advocate-General, Navy Department ......oueeeeeiiiineeiiiiieinianennn 220 War Department... .... LL... LLL Lh eh. es 215 Paymaster-General, War Department ..........oouiiiiiiiiii iii iii, 215 Public Buildings and Grounds and Washington Monument, War Department... 216 Road Inquiry, Agricultural Department. ...........ioleiiiiieiiiinnnnnnn 227 Quartermaster-General, War Department ........cooiiieiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniae... 215 Second Assistant Postmaster-General, Post-Office Department. ................... 217 Solicitor of the Treasury, Department of Justice .........cccivieiiennniaiiineenn. 217 Surgeon-General, War Department..........coiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii... A Se 215 Third Assistant Postmaster-General, Post-Office Department..................... 218 Washington Aqueduct, War Department. ........coueuiiiiieieiinreieeaninnaanns 216 | ¥ General Subject Index. XVII f Page. Officers and faculties of Howardi University ov. 0 vo nt 28 iG Se a Sh. 315 members of the Light-House Board, Treasury Department... cc... ii 00 liars of the District government. oo. codon voile iii ahile (ninth co biuailis is feels sles Welemieiste 311 3 document room of the House of Representatives ............ oi vn ign Executive Mansion i... dur lus asiis nh sidan son eat eA A AR a i a 207 fire department, District of Columbia. ni... b... ois 312 folding room of the House of Representatives... i... nov ein Lhe Sol To BEIT Fra Me A SS eS 160 health depariment, District of Columbia... 0.0 ood ai a, ili. 313 heating and ventilation of the House of Representatives........................ 192 Senate. al attr I SE SE SS SER Ton Holse LT ADra ny rs a a ard ae es Ie Ln SEs oy J of Representatives, Chaplain......... Fat Ee ER a 190 CL a aT a a he ae A RG A SY] 190 RE a SC a ee 191 } SAT Ee Er i RR EE Sergeant-al-ATMS Ci... vc. hi atin sas fas hee Tae 191 Speaker, oa he en ee ae SR a 190 stenegraphers tocommittees.... oc oo. Loe 190 Abra ry of COE ERE a Th a Bui Cy hn eta 206 Metropolitan police, District of Columbia. iii. oi Ls a ra, 312 Police court Districtiof Colwmblal no. ros nl in 312 Senate; chaplaln hohe a SR SL aR 188 clerks and messengers fo committees’. . i rnin Lo 188 Secrelanyii. Lok Cina A I a LDR 188 Sergeant-at-Arms:................. rr EP on AE be 190 AECHIMENL POON J. find rr i aa Le BER ea Ss, SRR, Sen Beton, ET TS I al Ti 190 Supreme Court of the United States... ou id ied am esis 263 Washington ely post-Olliee. 1. i. oo hs aa Seats a aE 316 @fficiak reporters. of debates, HOUSE © ii ii i i a Ra Sia a ES 194. Semate. lh Cn Le Eh nn es RR rs Ss 194. stenographers to committees of the House of Representatives.............. ae 190 Ordnance, Bureaw of, Navy Deparment ci... ce i ri da a aa Rh ea an sls 218 Patent Office dntertor Departmen i 223 Pay Office, Navy, Navy Department. i ao awa 221 Paymaster-General, Office of, War Department.................. Rs en 215 Pensioniagency; Interior Bepartment. a a he 225 Eenslons Biirean of Interior Department oi i ea ss seas ale sins Deemed tales hott es 224 Philippine Commission, State Department... in oi LL ates dluie ois lela sina 208 Pal ae a OE id Far on 194 const District of Columbia. or a a A ar vi 312 Political classification of members of the House of Representatives. ...........coieiuiniiin... 233 : Seated cs a SE Le aa Pomology, Division of, Agricultural Pepartmient ae aaa 227 Postmaster-General, blography of o.oo rk, Sr SET Spas a 217 Tn Be ree SC RN SE Ba A SRE ION 246 Post-office of the House of Representatives, officers of ................. rt Ss Ee 192 Senate mee EO 190 Post-Office Department, Auditor for, Treasury Department. ....... LL. cit. area ieee 211 First Assistant Postmaster-General,dutiesof.......................... 246 officergol as 217 Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General, duties of ....................... 247 officersiofe a 218 I To SR a Se 217 Postmaster-General, biography of 0. ho a al T dudes ofr oo i a ES oy a 246 Second Assistant Postmaster-General, duties of ................ ...... 246 officesgiol ln Sal nN 217 Third Assistant Postmaster-General,dutiesof................. ........ 247 officers of 0. 5 th a an 218 Postal deliveries, from main office, Washington City, hours of ............ce. oo... Ll 317 Pressigalleries, membersientitledito admission to: or a ol a 322 jz papers represen rs ay SLE eR el RN BA al tie Ne Te SE 56-1ST—2D ED—I XVIII Congressional Directory. Page Principal floor of Capitol, assignment of rooms on........ En I Sn TR SL Te diggramyol.. tin Lr Sa Ga Ee SE 198 Provisions concerning removalsifrom civil service ... oo. vi U0 iL nl a SE LL 261 Public Buildings and Grounds and Washington Monument, office of, War Department ....... 216 Road Inquiry, office of, War Department >... coin ho da i a 22 Publications, Divisiom of, Agricultural Department iv. co ih i vrei sirei i iov sis vite diene luisiois 228 Quartermaster-General, office of, War Department... .. nal hone nine Lh il SS Lei aYs Railroad time tables, departures of through trains... cif 0b bE Bde a BE, isang Rates of postage, Washington City post-office......... et BF A ee SE ee BRC eS Record and Pension: Office; War Department... 0... uo doa ad ii ia einn a on Se or6 Recorderof Deeds office ar i his a a a a a Ra MR 267 Registepof the Treaghfy! Sito on uiinve ls hr ee i nh Se i CEG YO dutfegiof. a a SA Ee Se eR ety Wills office... 7 A a eR St ahy Registry Division, Washington City ists office SHE ee 317 Representation of States in Congress under the Tenth and Eleventh censuses................. 204 Representatives, apportionment of, among States under the several censuses ........ sna 20d and Delegates, terms of service, alphabetical list showing beatnring ‘and length Of ris tnt rns a sr ta El Ce RE 177 committee service, alphabetical list showing ............. ... 154 Senators’ and Delegates! biographies, - 5.0 a ili innit ae 1-123 Residences of justices of Court of Claims . Ss FR AER SRO SE Sh Supreme Court of the United States. See 0 Cele Ber EE 265 Retiring Board, Noval Movs Depnetmeht © SRE ER SE Re Rules governing press galleries... cn ol Aan La a RL SL See cf RscentiveMansion: 0 ns ee RE ne ss 207 St ElizabethsHespltal for Insane Ua sul oon ai aint its LL RS 314 Second Assistant Postmaster-General, duties of... ..... 0. on ian ah a a EG onG Office Of Fn Ee 217 Secret Service Division, Treasury: Department... |... woo du. aii oad in ToL 209 Secretary of Agriculture, biography of................ EE eS La dutlesiol: 7 oa SP SE Le Lh eae State biography olin. ii ra sv ae Sti an nn aad nL LL UL El aoal) dutiesiof. =... aN RR ae Sm a NR SE a el Dna War, biography of... 50 Sn td os aur ri is en ES REAR se 1) dutiesof....... La I ES Ra ht, thelnterior blogiiphy oh a Rr IA SE i Lh Anes Or a a a A i RR RE 250 Navy blography of oi. laa loa, En Rr LN Ct a AN SE BSR i duties of. i a a ES aS Ee SR ea Freasgury; blography of oc nba on Aen dh sh ra a 208 dutiesiof iL rn a a Ri 234 Secretary's office ofthe Sepatel.. Lol Ln ons ee ee 188 Section! of foreign markets, Agricultural Department... ou. oo lols SAUL LL ae Seeds, Division of, Agricultural Department ...........0. LoL di dang a RE TN Senate, classification of members of, politically... .. ne. hun Ll SL ns eR 333 officers of . Sadie RE NS RR a i SE TBE Chamber, psttenimenber set I. a, Ee rear 185 diagramof....... EE Se I ee Se ERE Lr, Re aR A Sa EY i committees, clerks and messengers 10. i... 0. hie vd ube si ae 188 membershipof tio oh vine 2 A a a ep document ¥oom, officers of oils i Ua Sa eR ee Wh Gen folding room, officers OF. +5 Si or sh sb Ss Se eae HOO heating and ventilation, officersiof. ovals ASR a es LL a 190 Yibrany, officersof ol i rn ha i LS Ss Official Reporters of Debates ici uh iin ies i a i sn Sa ne a post-office, officers of . REL ep re EL Set, Set ee 190 Senators, Representatives, and Delos: ales frographics AS Ne Ree hE SHI Le ET SES I-12; list of, with home and Tool addresses ie eat a 326 Senators, committee service, alphabetical list showing ................ 0c. coi ernie 134 rooms, directory of . Saas I a a COD terms of service, COrtnatastadat and expliation of A i A oh eA Reh evel 12 Seren Aris of Hone of Beptesenintvgs o.oo = a NEEL a SO a rE Tr An SS eS SI SS TR ICE RR RA ee I General Subject Index. XIX =a Service, Iife-Saving, Treasury Department .... ........0 th La an 209 Marine-Hospital, Navy Department... o.oo al enens, Ls 213 Smithsonian Institution, Astrophysical Observatory, officersof.................o.oiiilt. 231 Bureau of American Bihnology.officersof i... a. cio no 231 International Exchanges/officersiof oo. nai oL din Zoe itn ons 231 National Museum joffleers of. vin i. oe vcd nin al ss a ie aa Zoological! Park officersof nina la 231 = OERCETRIOT vos a is oS a rr Eh a ps RT a, 230 Soils, Division of Agricultural Department: 50.0 bil odo LL cl a a 227 Soldiers’ Home, Board of Commissionersiof ......o. Lin on Lo ata LR Le 230 officers of. . Seelals NRE LE se CR i Solicitor for State Devartiget, Deartment of Justice, ies of RET re al 245 / General; Department of Justice, duties of ... coe. oui SL LLL SRL 245 of the Treasury, Department of Justice,dutiesof ........... ccc... evi oiienle "245 Speaker of the House of Representatives, office of ................. oii. 217 Special Tariff Commission, State Department.................o iii 208 State delegations in Congress... oi ih iar haa Te LL ye ese 16 Department, Assistant Secretary, duties of... .... cian Lael a C233 Burean ofiAccounts,dutiesofion nur il ci. Bh 233 Appointments, dutlesoft at cn an cn Say GRRE ae Foreign 'Commeree, dutiesrof.... 0 oo nc 00h LLL LovaL nal dane Indexesiand Archivesidubiestof. oo iin ail SA SLi a 233 Rolland Library dutiesof i. oud. luo arch coined Lys Sass Chief Clerk duties of oot i i LE i Ue 00% hie vio nia ian y i080, Consular Bure dutiesiofs ss fo. hicieron Gea 233 Diplomatic Buream, dufiesof 0 oan Lae 233 Philippine Commissions suo. ain ond nL Sd aia ol LL 208 Secretary, biography oft. 0 nt 208 dubles oli: a ES Re a it Asa Special Tatil Conmniision. . ee DE RE CL Cana Ue and other Departments, Auditor for Tr eastity Depattment a a LE SNC SR War, and Navy building efficersdp charge... Fi. iin lon ais ad i se 222 States, the representation of, under Tenth and Eleventh Censuses. .............c..civiiinnn... 204 Statistics, Bureau of, Treasury Department......... at a RE pe Gh Se San ee Lagan Divisioniof, Agricultural Department =. ool ln. oa. bil. an vaso al 227 Steam Engineering, Bureau of, Navy Department... . oi Ln ino Las aL nL, 219 Steamboat Inspection, Office of, Treasury Department... .. I... ... SL ne Ln. 212 Supervising Architect’'sioffice, Treasury Department. ............0... coi nnn in ens 209 Inspector-General, Marine-Hospital Service, dutiesof............................. 241 steams vessels dutiesof ...... oo. Lo un ci aL 241 Superintendent Coast and Geodetic Survey, dutiesof ......... ....... Sl Ae PL i Se Ea ST Supplies'and Accounts, Bureau of, Navy Department...........o fui wn, cools aso, 219 Supreme Court of the United States, biographies of the justices... .............0............... 263 OiCeraor a RR aL Se 265 résidences of justices; ©... rio ToL Re als District of Columbia, justices and officers oF Sn De Sah Surgeon-General Office'of, War Department... ........ocoi. lo cnn lL oiieh an. tr als Survey, Biological, Agricultural Department... .... ..... ov odo a 237 Coast and Geodetic, Treasury Department. on i... nnn an ae 213 Geological ‘Interior Department i. 0. a oN or a sash cree 225 ‘Bhird Assistant Postmaster-General, office of. oi. vi rn fi ens vnaiaie a iivniaivie sims slants 218 Freasurer of the United States, Treasury Department............... cc. convivial, 211 Bren sURY ComMpIrOller Of. vs vue sss via nl le Tala sels hate atobatal ia sia io (ssa Tn 210 TS Ea a re Ta a Se Ey in Er IR rs I in AR 210 Department, Assistant Secretaries, duties of... ........... Joao cle 234 Auditor for the Interior Department, duties of ........-............ 0, 236 officersiof.. i. one. ee, 210 Navy Department, dutiesof..... ........... 00 Ln oi, 236 offlcens oly. is io th Ss Rl 210 Post-Office Department,dutiesof .-........ &. 00g. L0n 236 officers of is v. Son haan 211 State and other Departments, dutiesof ................. 236 OCErS Of... ove vis sisi 210 ~§ ’Freasury Department, dutiesof................... LL. 235 Officers Of tl as ol a eR ai 210 XX Treasury Department, Auditor for the War Department, duties of United States attorney's office Vegetable Physiology and Pathology, Division of, Agricultural Department Congressional Directory. Statistics, duties'of........... OCCT OF Bt pa Rr SR i Ia Ssh chief clerk duties of i is oi: in na in le se shee sitet tin So sis Coast. andiGeodetic Survey, officersof .........o..... on LL Commissioner of Internal Revenue, duties of ............. 0 ........ officers of om an ane Navigation, dutlesiol ... J. ao hui nL aint, OCEER OF sn Sl a AE EE a, Commissioners of Tmmigration. .. ti a eo Comptrolleriof the Currency, dutiesof ....c 0... oo cove DL. OHACETBON ris vy Ls vA Sean ies a iaiats ET CABUEY is ho tials bieinle dis Hae ait ats i Coimtarate Director of the Mint, duties of -......... 0... officensiofi ys Sn aS ons General Superintendent Life-Saving Service, duties of Office of Steamboat Inspection, officers of Register of the Treasury. . Secret Service Division, officers of Secretary, biography of duties of... oe Yaya: Supervising Architect’ Ss Office, ofeers or Inspector-General of Steam Vessels, dutles of. eRe Surgeon-General Marine-Hospital Service, duties of ........ Superintendent of the Coast and Geodetic Survey, dutiesof ........ .... Freasurer of the United States, duties of i. ive. oii iat i ness, officers of (0. iu ya War Department, Assistant Secretary, dutiesof.....................oo A GN Auditor for, Treasury Depastment........c.. 0... oun oa Leh oe Chief Clerk, duties of. . arial Headquarters of the Ariy, officers of. military bureaus of, duties of.. nn Office of the Adjutant-General, offices a Chief of Engineers, officers of. AO Re A Ordnance, officers Off: i. ir. cit de cvs 5 od Sls vie Signal Officer, officers 6f cv. vee: on vat Commissary-General of Subsistence, duties of ...... i RAR Inspector-General,officersof ............. hoon on Judge-Advocate-General, officers of ......... coat iiiia Paymaster-General, officers of . Public Buildings and Grads nd nsnington Mousinent, OI COTE Of so mat i ae oa ne ae ar ANON Ne Ty nid Quartermaster-General, officers of ..............L... con Surgeon-General; officers of... ..L Lh ULL LLL LL Washington Aqueduct, officers of ............................ officersiol. Jian cu a Rn Bureau of Engraving and Printing, dutiesof......................... officersiol Crit isl eas Immigration, dutiesiof. i 0. 0. Ctrl na officersiof.. art os a RS as en a Life:Saving Service officers of Li... oon Lia Ln LL 1 ight-House Board, dutiesiof.........o. coil ninth LL sy, officersiand membessiof oo. oases : Marine-Hospital: Service, officersiofs... via ooh. ia. fot nn nl nu. oe National-Bank Redemption Agency, officersof ...................... Ate or ht i a LC RS oo ciremit court Juages ou mt ee A A A ee a a consular officers, location, name, and rank embassiesand legationgabroad .... oii la Le marshal’soffice it. . 0 . 0, Jia ot an Treasurer, Treasury Department 215 216 215 215 216 rns Fx General Subject Index. War Department, Record-and Pension Office, officers of... 0. cu ii di on dl es iivearesons Seeretany, blograply of a a SH Sa Sh . Atle SiO or ET a Washington Aqueduct, Office of, War Department.................c...... RR Pe Sel City post-office; city deliveries from main office. io co i i ca a at international money orders... Si un isso Anan sso oney-order AVIS on A RR SCE Oe rates of postage.........: vegistey AIVISIOn (eS SR National Monument Society, officersiof.. ..... nil in vn bean Navy-Vard and Station, Navy Department... .-.. 00a vein oes i i ii sl oa Weather Bureanw; Agricultural Department... co tod oh shies valu sss sisson a viata sisal win nin ie at he Capa) a Ee i a mt Er NEA SS A Re El a a Ce TI es Yards and Docks, Bureau of, Navy Department..... rire nN A I RR SS Zoological Park, Smithsonian Institution... . en. lindo oR a sn XXI Page. 216 214 243 216 317 316 316 219 iE PIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES ALABAMA, SENATORS. JOHN I. MORGAN, Democrat, of Selma, was born at Athens, Tenn., June 20, 1824; received an academic education, chiefly in Alabama, to which State he emigrated when g years old, and where he has since resided; 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 afterwards 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 join 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 a Presidential elector for the State at large in 1876 and voted for Tilden and Hendricks; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed George Goldthwaite, Democrat; took his seat March 5, 1877; was reelected in 1882, in 1888, and again in 1894; was a member of the commission appointed to prepare a system of laws for the Hawaiian Islands. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. EDMUND WINSTON PETIUS, Democrat, of Selma, was born in Limestone County, Ala., July 6, 1821; is the youngest child of John Pettus and Alice T. Pettus, who was a daughter of Capt. Anthony Winston, of Virginia, a Revolutionary soldier; was educated at the common schools in Alabama and at Clinton College, in Smith County, Tenn.; studied law in the office of William Cooper, then the leader of the bar in north Alabama; was admitted to the bar in 1842, and commenced the practice of law at Gainesville, Ala., as the partner of Hon. Turner Reavis; in 1844 was elected solicitor for the seventh circuit; served as a lieutenant in the Mexican war; in 1849 resigned the office of solicitor and went, with a party of his neighbors, on horseback to California; was elected judge of the seventh circuit after his return to Alabama in 1855, but resigned that office in 1858, and removed to Dallas County, where he now resides; resumed the practice of law as a member of the firm of Pettus, Pegues & Dawson; in 1861 went into the Confederate army as major of the Twentieth Alabama Infantry, and soon afterwards was made lieutenant-colonel of that regiment; in October, 1863, was made a brigadier-general of infantry, and served till the close of the war, and was in many battles; after the war returned to his home and to the practice of law, which he has continued to this time; ever since he became a voter has been a member of the Democratic party; in November, 1896, was nominated by that party, and elected by the legislature of Alabama United States Senator for the term commencing March 4, 1897; after his nomination the opposition to his election was merely nominal; received the entire vote of his party, and more; never was, before, a candidate for any political office; has been a delegate to all of the Demo- cratic national conventions, except the first and last, since the war, and when a delegate was chairman of the Alabama delegation. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. 1 2 Congressional Directory. [ALABAMA. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUuNTIES.—Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, and Washington (6 counties). GEORGE WASHINGTON TAYLOR, Democrat, of Demopolis, Marengo County, Ala., was born January 16, 1849, in Montgomery County, Ala.; was educated at the South Carolina University, Columbia, S. C.; is a lawyer, and was admitted to practice at Mobile, Ala., November, 1871; entered the army as a Confederate soldier at the age of 15 years, in November, 1864, being then a student at the academy in Columbia, S. C.; served a few weeks with the South Carolina State troops on the coast near Savannah, and then enlisted as a private in Company D, First Regiment South Caro- lina Cavalry, and served as a courier till the end of the war; left the South Carolina University at 18, having graduated in Latin, Greek, history, and chemistry; taught school for several years, and studied law at the same time; was elected to the lower house of the general assembly of Alabama in 1878, and served one term as a member from Choctaw County; in 1880 was elected State solicitor for the First judicial cir- cuit of Alabama, and was reelected in 1886; declined a third term; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-Sixth Congress, receiving 5,986 votes, to 1,061 for Anthony M. Johnson, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Baldwin, Butler, Conecuh, Covington, Crenshaw, Escambia, Montgomery, Pike, and Wilcox (9 counties). JESSE F. STALLINGS, Democrat, of Greenville, was born near the village of ‘Manningham, Butler County, Ala., April 4, 1856; graduated from the University of Alabama in 1877; studied law at the Law School of the University of Alabama and in the office of the Hon. J. C. Richardson, of Greenville, and was admitted to practice in the supreme court in April, 1879; commenced the practice of law in Greenville, where he has since resided; was elected by the legislature of Alabama solicitor for the Second judicial circuit in November, 1886, for a term of six years; resigned the office of solicitor in September, 1892, to accept the Democratic nomination for Congress; was a dele- gate to the national Democratic convention which was held in St. Louis in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 9,345 votes, to 1,610 for Frank Simmons, Republican, and 209 for J. A. Giddings, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Barbour, Bullock, Coffee, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Lee, and Russell (8 counties). HENRY DE LAMAR CLAYTON, Democrat, of Eufaula, was born in Barbour County, Ala., February ro, 1857; is a lawyer by profession; was elected to the Fifty- fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 8,287 votes, to 262 scattering. FOURTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Calhoun, Chilton, Cleburne, Dallas, Shelby, and Talladega (6 counties), GASTON A. ROBBINS, Democrat, of Dallas County, was born September 26, 1859; his father, Capt. Julius A. Robbins, a member of the Selma, Ala., bar, was killed in the Confederate service in 1864; the family then removed to North Carolina, the native State of both his parents. The subject of this sketch was reared on the ««Robbins farm,” in Randolph County, N. C., attending Trinity College during the sessions and working on the farm in vacation; he entered the University of North Carolina in 1877, and graduated in 1879; studied law with Dick & Dillard, at Greensboro, N. C., and was admitted to practice law by the supreme court of North Carolina in 1880; returning immediately to Selma, Ala., he devoted himself to the practice of his chosen profession; was Presidential elector on the Cleveland and Hendricks ticket in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-third Congress; reelected to the Fifty-fourth Congress, but was unseated on a contest in favor of his Republican opponent; and was reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 6,915 votes, to 5,685 for William F. Aldrich, Republican. ALABAMA.] Senators and Representatives. 3 FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Autauga, Chambers, Clay, Coosa, Elmore, Lowndes, Macon, Randolph, and Tallapoosa (9 counties). WILLIS BREWER, Democrat, of Hayneville, is a native Alabamian; entered the military service of the Confederate States at the age of 18 years; has been a journalist, has practiced law, and has written books; is now a planter; in 1871 was county treasurer of Lowndes; was State auditor from 1876 to 1880; was State legislator from 1880 to 1882; State senator from 1882 to 18go; State legislator from 18go to 1894; State sen- ator from 1894 till he resigned in 1897; was elector for the State at large on the Democratic ticket in 1892, and was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 8,842 votes, to 2,504 for Douglas Smith, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNnTIES.—Fayette, Greene, Lamar, Marion, Pickens, Sumter, Tuscaloosa, and Walker (8 counties). JOHN H. BANKHEAD, Democrat, of Fayette, was born in Moscow, Marion County (now Lamar), Ala., 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 general assembly, sessions of 1865, 1866, and 1867; ‘was a member of the State senate 1876-77, and of the house of representatives 1880-81; was warden of the Alabama penitentiary from 1881 till 1885; was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty- first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 7,009 votes, to 2,943 for Daniel N. Cooper, Re- publican, and 94 for William Turner, colored Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Cherokee, Cullman, Dekalb, Etowah, Franklin, Marshall, St. Clair, and Winston (8 counties). JOHN LAWSON BURNETT, Democrat, of Gadsden, Etowah County, Ala., was born at Cedar Bluff, Cherokee County, Ala., January 20, 1854; was educated in the common schools of the county, at the Wesleyan Institute, Cave Springs, Ga., and Gaylesville High School, Gaylesville, Ala.; was elected to the lower house of the Alabama legislature in 1884, and to the State senate in 1886, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 7,035 votes, to 3,066 for Oliver Street, Populist, and 3,836 for Frank H. Lathrop, Republican. FIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Colbert, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and Morgan (7 counties). JOSEPH WHEELER, Democrat, of Wheeler, was born in Augusta, Ga., September 10, 1836; graduated 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 suc- cessively 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 Con- federate 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, Louisiana State Seminary, in 1866, which he declined; was lawyer and planter; was appointed major-general of volunteers by President McKinley May 4, 1898, and was assigned to command of Cavalry Division, United States Army; on June 24, with goo men, fought and defeated Iieutenant- General Linares at Las Guasimas, the enemy having over 2,000 regular Spanish troops; at the battle of San Juan, July 1 and 2, was senior officer in immediate com- mand on the field, and was senior member of commission which negotiated the surrender of Santiago and 23,000 Spanish soldiers; August 18 was assigned to com- mand of United States forces at Montauk, Tong Island, and on October 5 was assigned to the command of the Fourth Army Corps; August 31, 1899, in command of First Brigade, Second Division, Eighth Corps, in the Philippines; was engaged with enemy at Santa Rita, September g, and also on September 16, also in capture of Porac September 28, and was in the various engagements with the enemy at Angeles October 10 to 17 inclusive; was elected to the Forty-seventh, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, 56-18T—2D ED 2 4 Congressional Directory. [ALABAMA. Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving the unanimous vote of the district in a primary election for nomination and being unanimously chosen at the polls, 6,368 votes being cast for him. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Bibb, Blount, Hale, Jefferson, and Perry (5 counties). OSCAR W. UNDERWOOD, Democrat, of Birmingham, was born in Louisville, Jefferson County, Ky., May 6, 1862; was educated at Rigby School, Louisville, Ky., and the University of Virginia; commenced the practice of law at Birmingham, Ala., September, 1884; was chairman of the Democratic executive committee of the Ninth district in the campaign of 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 7,155 votes, to 160 for I. F. Schwartz, colored Republican, and 1,051 for John T. MclIniry, Republican. ARKANSAS. SENATORS. JAMES H. BERRY, Democrat, of Bentonville, was born in Jackson County, Ala., May 15, 1841; removed to Arkansas in 1848; received a limited education at a private school at Berryville, Ark.; 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, Miss., October 4, 1862; was elected to the legislature of Arkansas in 1866; was reelected 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, to succeed A. H. Garland, appointed Attor- ney-General, and took his seat March 25, 1885, and was reelected in 1889 and 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 190I.- JAMES K. JONES, Democrat, of Washington, Hempstead County, was born in Marshall County, Miss., 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 reelected under the new government, and in 1877 was elected president of the senate; was elected to the Forty-seventh Congress; was reelected to the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Con- gresses; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed James D. Walker, Demo- crat, and took his seat March 4, 1885; was reelected in 1890 and 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. Counties.—Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Greene, Jackson, Lawrence, Tee, Mississippi, Phil- lips, Poinsett, Randolph, Sharp, St. Francis, and Woodruff (15 counties). PHILIP DODDRIDGE McCULILOCH, Democrat, of Marianna, was born in Mur- freesboro, Tenn., June 23, 1851; was removed by his parents to Trenton, Tenn., when 3 years of age, where he was reared; was educated at Andrew College of that place, admitted to the bar in August, 1872, and has been actively engaged in the practice of his profession since that time; removed to Marianna, Ark., in February, 1874, where he has since resided; was elected as the Democratic nominee to the office of prosecut- ing attorney of the First judicial district of the State in September, 1878; was renom- inated and elected three successive terms; at the expiration of his third term he declined to offer again; was elected Democratic Presidential elector of the First Congressional district of the State in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress without opposition, receiving 4,103 votes. ARKANSAS] Senators and Representatives. 5 SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bradley, Cleveland, Dallas, Drew, Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Jefferson, Lincoln, Montgomery, Polk, Saline, Scott, and Sebastian (14 counties). JOHN S. LITTLE, Democrat, of Greenwood, was born at Jenny Lind, Sebastian County, Ark., March 15, 1853; was educated in the common schools and at Cane Hill College, Arkansas; was admitted to the bar in 1874; in 1877 was elected district attor- ney for the Twelfth circuit of Arkansas, composed of Sebastian, Scott, Crawford, and Logan counties, and was reelected for four successive terms; was elected a repre- sentative to the legislature in 1884; in 1886 was elected circuit judge for a term of four years; in 1893 was chosen as chairman of the State judicial convention; in September, 1894, was elected, without opposition to fill the unexpired term of C. R. Breckinridge in the Fifty-third Congress; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty- fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress without opposition, receiv- ing 3,415 votes. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Ashley, Calhoun, Chicot, Clark, Columbia, Desha, Hempstead, Howard, Lafayette, Tittle River, Miller, Nevada, Ouachita, Pike, Sevier, and Union (16 counties). THOMAS CHIPMAN McRAE, Democrat, of Prescott, was born at Mount Holly, Union County, Ark., December 21, 1851; received a limited education at the private schools at Shady Grove, Columbia County, Mount Holly, Union County, and Falcon, Nevada County, Ark.; in boyhood he worked on a farm, and one year in a wholesale mercantile establishment at Shreveport, La., and one year in a retail store at Falcon, Ark.; received a full course of instruction at Soulé Business College, New Orleans, Ia., 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, Ark., 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 legis- lature 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 Prescott in 1879; was a Presidential elector for Hancock and English in 1880; was chairman of the Democratic State con- vention in 1884; was delegate to the national Democratic convention in 1884, and is now the Democratic national committeeman for Arkansas; was elected to the Forty- ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress without opposition, receiving 3,866 votes. : FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Conway, Franklin, Johnson, I,ogan, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, and Yell (8 counties). WILLIAM LEAKE TERRY, Democrat, of Little Rock, was born in Anson County, N. C., September 27, 1850; when 7 years of age removed with his parents to Tippah County, Miss., 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 Baxter 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 the Fifty-second, Fifty- third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress without opposition, receiving 3,665 votes. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Benton, Boone, Carroll, Crawford, Faulkner, Madison, Newton, Searcy, Van Buren, and Washington (10 counties). HUGH ANDERSON DINSMORE, Democrat, of Fayetteville, was born in Benton County, Ark., December 24, 1850; was educated in private schools in Benton and Washington counties; studied law at Bentonville under Samuel N. Elliott; in April, 1873, was appointed by the governor clerk of the circuit court for Benton County, and served in that office until the autumn of 1874, when he was admitted to the bar; 6 : Congressional Directory. [ARKANSAS. in April, 1875, he moved from his native county of Benton to Fayetteville, where he has since resided, and engaged in the practice of law; in September, 1878, he was elected prosecuting attorney of the Fourth judicial district of Arkansas; was reelected in 1880, and again without opposition in 1882; was chosen a Presidential elector in 1884 on the Democratic ticket, and voted for Cleveland and Hendricks; in January, 1887, he was appointed by President Cleveland to be minister resident and consul-general of the United States in the Kingdom of Korea and served in that capacity until May 25, 1890, when he was relieved by Mr. Augustine Heard, appointed by President Harrison; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 6,423 votes, to 2,706 for V. J. T. Hopper, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Arkansas, Baxter, Cleburne, Fulton, Independence, Izard, I,onoke, Marion, Monroe, Prairie, Stone, and White (12 counties). STEPHEN BRUNDIDGE, JRr., Democrat, of Searcy, was born in White County, Ark., January I, 1857; was educated in the private schools of the county; studied law at Searcy with the firm of Coody & McRae, and in 1878 was admitted to the bar, and has since resided in Searcy, where he has been engaged in the practice of law; in September, 1886, was elected prosecuting attorney for the First judicial district of Arkansas, and reelected in 1888 without opposition; since 18go has served a term as member of the Democratic State central committee of Arkansas; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress without opposition, receiving 3,500 votes. CALIFORNIA. SENATORS. GEORGE CLEMENT PERKINS, Republican, of Oakland, was born at Kenne- bunkport, Me., in 1839; was reared on a farm, with limited educational advantages; atthe age of 12 went to sea as a cabin boy; followed this calling and that of a sailor for several years; in 1855 shipped ¢‘ before the mast’ on a sailing vessel bound for San Francisco, Cal., where he arrived in the autumn of that year; engaged in mer- cantile business at Oroville and was very successful; subsequently engaged in bank- ing, milling, mining, and the steamship business, in which he has been engaged during the past twenty-five years, operating steamships on the coasts of California, Oregon, Washington, British Columbia, Alaska, and Mexico; in 1868 was elected to the State senate, serving eight years; has been president of the Merchants’ Exchange in San Francisco; also of the San Francisco Art Association; is a director California Academy of Sciences, and other public institutions; in 1879 he was elected governor of Cali- fornia, serving until January, 1883; was appointed, July 24, 1893, United States Senator, to fill, until the election of his successor, the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Leland Stanford, and took his seat August 8, 1893. In January, 1895, having made a thorough canvass before the people of his State, he was elected by the legislature on the first ballot to fill the unexpired term. In the fall election of 1896 he was a candidate before the people of California for reelection, and received the indorse- ment of the Republican county conventions that comprised a majority of the sena- torial and assembly districts in the State. When the legislature convened in joint convention (January, 1897) for the purpose of electing a United States Senator, he was reelected on the first ballot, although at the time he was absent from the State attending to his Congressional duties. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Del Norte, Humboldt, Lassen, Marin, Mendocino, Modoc, Napa, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Sonoma, Tehama, and Trinity (14 counties). JOHN A. BARHAM, Republican, of Santa Rosa, was born in Missouri July 17, 1844; removed with his parents to California in 1849; was educated in the common schools and at the Hesperian College, in Woodland, Cal.; taught in the public schools of CALIFORNIA.] Senators and Representatives. 7 California for three years; studied law and was admitted to practice in 1868, and has practiced his profession since; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,598 votes, to 18,244 for Emmet Seawell, Fusionist. SECOND DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Eldorado, Inyo, Mariposa, Mono, Nevada, Placer, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Sutter, Tuolumne, and Yuba (15 counties). ‘MARION DE VRIES, Democrat, of Stockton, San Joaquin County, Cal., was born near Woodbridge, in said county, August 15, 1865; was educated in the public schools of said county until 15 years of age, at which time he entered San Joaquin Valley College, at Woodbridge, which school he attended and graduated from in 1886, having conferred upon him there the degree of Ph. B.; he then entered the University of Michigan, law department, whence he graduated in 1888, with degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the supreme court of Michigan in 1887 and of California in the same year; commenced the practice of law in Stockton, January 1, 1889, with John B. Hall; August 1, 1889, formed a copartnership with W. B. Nutter; under Mr. Nutter acted as assistant district attorney for San Joaquin County from January, 1893, to February, 1897; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, indorsed by the People’s Party, receiving 25,196 votes, to 20,400 for Frank D. Ryan, Republican. 1HIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Alameda, Colusa, Contra Costa, Glenn, Lake, Solano, and Yolo (7 counties). VICTOR HOWARD METCALF, Republican, of Oakland, was born in Utica, Oneida County, N. Y., October 10, 1853; graduated from the Utica Free Academy, also from Russell’s Military Academy, New Haven, Conn., and then entered the class of 1876, Yale; during the college vacations he studied law in the office of Sena- tor Francis Kernan, as also in the offices of Horatio and John F. Seymour, Utica, N. Y.; left the academical department of Yale in his junior year and entered the Yale Law School, graduating therefrom in 1876; was admitted to practice in the supreme court of Connecticut in June, 1876, and in the supreme court of New York in 1877; practiced law in Utica, N. Y., for two years, and then moved to California, locating in Oakland; formed a law partnership in 1881 with George D. Metcalf (who is also a graduate of Yale) under the firm name of Metcalf & Metcalf; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,592 votes, to 14,051 for John Aubrey Jones, Democrat and People’s Party, and 1,309 for Thomas F. Burns, Socialist Labor. FOURTH DISTRICT. ASSEMBLY DISTRICTS OF CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FrANcCIsco.—Twenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, Thirtieth, Thirty-first, Thirty-second, Thirty-third, Thirty-ninth, Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, and Forty-fifth. JULIUS KAHN, Republican, of San Francisco, was born at Kuppenheim, Grand Duchy of Baden, on the 28th day of February, 1861; removed with his parents to California in 1866; was educated in the public schools of San Francisco, having been a member of the class of 1878 of the Boys’ High School. After leaving school he entered the theatrical profession, which he followed for ten years, playing with Edwin Booth, Joseph Jefferson, Tomasso Salvini, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Florence, Clara Morris, and other well-known ‘‘stars.”” In 1890 he returned to San Francisco, and began studying law; in 1892 was elected to the legislature of the State of California, serving during the thirtieth session; in July, 1893, was elected secretary of the finance committee of the California Midwinter International Exhibition; in January, 1894, was admitted to the bar by the supreme court of California; and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 13,695 votes, to 12,084 for James H. Barry, Democrat, 100 for W. J. Martin, Socialist Labor, and 594 for Joseph P. Kelly, Independent emocrat. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—San Francisco, San Mateo, and Santa Clara (3 counties). EUGENE FRANCIS LOUD, Republican, of San Francisco, was born in Abington, Mass., March 12, 1847; at the age of 13 went to sea and to California; in 1862 enlisted in California Cavalry Battalion, which formed a part of Second Massachusetts Cavalry; 8 Congressional Directory. [CALIFORNIA. 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; followed mercantile business; was member of California legislature in 1884, and was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,254 votes, to 17,352 for William Craig, Democrat, and 1,532 for E. T. Kingsley, Socialist Labor. SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—L,0s Angeles, Monterey, San Tuis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, and Ventura (6 counties). RUSSELL JUDSON WATERS, Republican, of Los Angeles, was born June 6, 1843, at Halifax, Vt.; removed at the age of 4 to Franklin County, Mass., where he grew to manhood; his early life was spent in factory and on the farm, attending district schools as he could find time; learned the machinist trade at Sherburne Falls, Mass. ; taught school at Charlemont Center, Mass.; graduated at Franklin Institute, same State, where he was later engaged as professor of Latin and mathematics; studied law with Rich & Waterman, Chicago, and was admitted to the bar in 1863, continuing in the practice of his profession there until 1886; went to California for his health, and has since been actively and prominently engaged in the development of the southern part of the State; located at Redlands, and removed to Los Angeles in 1894; is a director of the Columbia Savings Bank, president of the Pasa- dena Consolidated Gas Company, president of the Los Angeles Directory Company, treasurer of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, vice-president of the Citizens’ Bank, and connected with many other public institutions; was married in 1869 to Mary Adelaide Ballard, daughter of Hon. Jonathan Ballard, of Charlemont, Mass., and has four children; was unanimously nominated for the Fifty-sixth Congress, and elected, receiving 24,050 votes, to 20,508 for C. A. Barlow, Fusionist, and 1,132 for J.T. Van Rensselaer, Prohibitionist, fusion being for the first time defeated in the district. SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Stanislaus, Merced, San Benito, Madera, Fresno, Kings, Tulare, Kern, San Bernardino, Riverside, Orange, and San Diego (12 counties). JAMES CARSON NEEDHAM, Republican, of Modesto, was born September 17, 1864, in Carson City, Nev., in an emigrant wagon, his parents being at the time en route across the plains to California; his early education was received in the public schools of California; graduated at the San Jose High School, and subsequently took a collegiate course at the University of the Pacific at San Jose, graduating in the year 1886 with the degree of Ph. B.; he then entered the law department of the University of Michigan and spent one year, at the end of which time he was appointed, under civil-service rules, to a clerkship in the Adjutant-General’s Office at Washington, D. C.; resigning from the War Department, he returned to the University of Michigan and completed his law course, graduating with the class of 1889 with the degree of LIL. B.; began the practice of law in November, 1889, at Modesto, where he has ever since resided; in 1890 was nominated by the Republican party for State senator, but the district being overwhelmingly Democratic, was defeated; has been chairman of the Republican county committee, member of the State central committee, and member of the Congressional committee; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,793 votes, to 20,680 for C. H. Castle, Fusion- ist, and 35 scattering. ; COLORADO. SENATORS. EDWARD OLIVER WOLCOTT, Republican, of Denver, was bornin Longmeadow, Mass., 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; is a lawyer; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed Thomas M. Bowen, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1889; was reelected in 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 190I, COLORADO] Senators and Representatives. 9 HENRY MOORE TELLER, Silver Republican, of Central City, was born in the town of Granger, Allegany County, N. Y., May 23, 1830; educated in the common schools, Rushford Academy, and Alfred University; taught school several years; studied law at Angelico, Allegany County; was admitted to practice at Binghamton, N.Y. In January, 1858, removed to Illinois and practiced law there until April, 1861, when he removed to Colorado and resumed the practice of law; received the degree of IL. D. from Alfred University in 1886; never held an office until he was elected to the United States Senate from Colorado on the admittance of that State; took his seat in the United States Senate December 4, 1876, and drew the term ending March 3, 1877; was reelected December 11 for the full term, and served until April 17, 1882, when he resigned to enter the Cabinet of President Arthur as Secretary of the Interior, and served until March 3, 1885; was reelected to the Senate in January, 1885, and took his seat March 4, 1885; was reelected in 1891, a Republican in politics, but withdrew from the national Republican convention at St. Louis in June, 1896, because of dis- satisfaction at the financial plank of the platform; was reelected in January, 1897, as an Independent Silver Republican, receiving 94 votes out of a total of 100; took hi seat March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Arapahoe, Boulder, Jefferson, Lake, Larimer, Logan, Morgan, Park, Phillips, Sedg- . wick, Washington, Weld, and Yuma (13 counties). JOHN F. SHAFROTH, Silverite, of Denver, was born in Fayette, Mo., June 9, 1854; entered the University of Michigan in the fall of 1872, and graduated in the literary department in the class of 1875; studied law in the office of Hon. Samuel C. Major, in his native town; was admitted to the bar in August, 1876, and soon thereafter formed a partnership with his preceptor; practiced law at Fayette, Mo., until October, 1879, when he removed to Denver, Colo., where he has ever since pursued his profession; in April, 1887, he was elected city attorney of Denver, and was reelected to the same position in April, 1889; in 1887 he formed a partnership with Judge Platt Rogers, of Denver; was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress as a Republican, and reelected to the Fifty-fiftth and Fifty-sixth Congresses as a Silver Republican, receiving 43,II1 votes, to 18,850 for Charles Hartzell, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Archuleta, Baca, Bent, Chaffee, Cheyenne, Clear Creek, Conejos, Costilla, Custer, Delta, Dolores, Douglas, Fagle, Elbert, El Paso, Fremont, Garfield, Gilpin, Grand, Gunnison, Hins- dale, Huerfano, Kiowa, Kit Carson, I,a Plata, I,as Animas, Lincoln, Mesa, Mineral, Monte- zuma, Montrose, Otero, Ouray, Pitkin, Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Blanco, Rio Grande, Routt, Saguache, San Juan, San Miguel, Summit, and Teller (44 counties). JOHN C. BELL, Populist, of Montrose, was born' in Grundy County, Tenn., December 11, 1851; attended the public schools of his native county in early youth, and further pursued his studies for two years at Alto and two years at Boiling Fork, Franklin County, Tenn.; read law in Winchester, Tenn.; was admitted to the bar of that State in 1874, and the same year moved to Colorado and commenced the practice of law at Saguache in June, 1874; was appointed county attorney of Saguache County and served until May, 1876, when he resigned and removed to Lake City, Colo., then the most thriving city in the great San Juan mining region; was elected county clerk of Hinsdale County in 1878, but did not perform the duties personally; was twice elected mayor of Lake City, and in August, 1885, resigned that position, and, forming a law partnership with Hon. Frank C. Goudy, removed to Montrose, where he has since resided; in November, 1888, was elected judge of the Seventh judicial district of Colorado for a period of six years; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fiftth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 52,728 votes, to 27,335 for B, C. Wheeler, Republican, IO + Congressional Directory. [CONNECTICUT. CONNECTICUT, SENATORS. ORVILLE H. PLATT, Republican, of Meriden, was born at Washington, Conn., July 19, 1827; received 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 1855-56; was secretary of state of Connecticutin 1857; was a member of the State senate in 1861-62; was a member of the State house of repre- sentatives in 1864 and 1869, serving the last year as speaker; was elected to the United States Senate 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 reelected in 1885, 1890, and 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. : JOSEPH ROSWELL HAWLEY, Republican, of Hartford, was born at Stewarts- ville, Richmond County, N. C., October 31, 1826; graduated at Hamilton College, New York, in 1847; was admitted to the bar in 1850 at Hartford, Conn., where he has since resided; practiced law six and a half years; became editor of the Hartford Evening Press in February, 1857, which, in 1867, was consolidated with the Hartford Courant, of which he became editor; enlisted in the Union Army as a captain April 18, 1861; became brigadier and brevet major general; mustered out January 15, 1866; was elected governor of Connecticut in April, 1866; was a delegate to the Free Soil national con- vention of 1852, Presidential elector in 1868, president of the Republican national convention of 1868, and delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1872, 1876, and 1880; was president of the United States Centennial Commission from its organization, in March, 1873, to the completion of the work of the Centennial Exposition; is a trustee of Hamilton College; received the degree of doctor of laws from Hamilton College, Yale University, and Trinity College; was elected in Novem- ber, 1872, a Representative in the Forty-second Congress to fill a vacancy caused by the death of J. I,. Strong; was reelected to the Forty-third and Forty-sixth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed William W. Eaton, Democrat; took his seat March 4, 1881; was reelected in 1887, 1893, and 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Hartford and T'olland, including the cities of Hartford, New Britain, and Rockville. E. STEVENS HENRY, Republican, of Rockville, is of Scotch-Irish ancestry, and was born in Gill, Mass., in 1836, removing when 12 years old with his parents to Rockville, Conn.; was educated in the public schools and grew up in and with ° that prosperous manufacturing city; a successful business man, his fellow-citizens have in many ways shown their confidence in him; has been and is connected with several of the local financial institutions; is also a farmer and breeder of thoroughbred stock, and is a director in the American Jersey Cattle Club; has served his town and city in various capacities, and last as mayor of Rockville; was a repre- sentative in the lower house of the Connecticut general assembly of 1883; State sen- ator from the Twenty-third senatorial district in 1887-88; delegate at large to the Chicago national Republican convention in 1888; treasurer of the State of Connecti- cut from 1889 to 1893; in 1894 was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress by a majority of 5,207 over his Democratic opponent, running over 700 votes ahead of the State ticket in that election; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, receiving a plurality of 16,764; was nominated by acclamation and elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,818 votes, to 13,520 for Robert J. Vance, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—MidAdlesex and New Haven, including the cities of New Haven, Meriden, Waterbury, Ansonia, Derby, and Middletown. NEHEMIAH DAY SPERRY, Republican, of New Haven, was born in Woodbridge, New Haven County, Conn., July 10, 1827; received hiseducation in the common schools and at the private school of Prof. Amos Smith, at New Haven; worked on the farm and CONNECTICUT] Senators and Representatives. 17 in the mill; taught school for several years; learned the trade of a house builder; com- menced business on his own account in 1847; was elected a member of the common council in 1853; in 1854 was elected an alderman of the city; was elected selectman of the town of New Haven in 1853; was elected secretary of state in 1855; was reelected in 1856; was a member of the convention that renominated Abraham Lincoln in 1864; was made a member of the Republican national committee, was elected a member of the executive committee, and was chosen secretary both of the national and executive committees; was chairman of the Republican State committee for a series of years; was president of the State convention that nominated Grant electors; was chairman of the recruiting committee of New Haven during the war; was nomi- nated postmaster by Abraham Lincoln in 1861 and continued in office until the first election of Grover Cleveland; was renominated by President Harrison for postmaster and served until the reelection of President Cleveland, making in all twenty-eight years and two months; was appointed a member of the commission to visit England, Germany, and France to look into their system of post-offices, but declined service; was nominated for Congress in 1886, but declined the same; was president of the Chamber of Commerce of New Haven; was bondsman for building the Monitor; was nominated for Congress again in 1894; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 27,004 votes, to 23,556 for James H. Webb, Democrat, 380 for M. I. Kerr, Prohibitionist, and 1,125 for G. Mansfield, Socialist Labor. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIES.—New I,ondon and Windham, including the cities of New Iondon and Norwich. CHARLES ADDISON RUSSELL, Republican, of Killingly, was born in Worces- ter, Mass., 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, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty- third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 12,218 votes, to 8,507 for Charles F. Thayer Democrat, and 315 for S. Crane, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Fairfield and Litchfield (2 counties). EBENEZER J. HILL, Republican, of Norwalk, was born in Redding, Conn., August 4, 1845; prepared for college at the public school in Norwalk and entered Yale with the class of 1865, where he remained two years; in 1892 he received from Vale University the honorary degree of master of arts; isnow vice-president of the National Bank of Norwalk; has served twice as burgess of Norwalk, twice as chairman of the board of school visitors of Norwalk; was the Fourth district delegate to the national Republican convention of 1884; was a member of the Connecticut senate for 1886-87; served one term upon the Republican State central committee; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 23,707 votes, to 17,754 for Charles P. Lyman, Democrat, 301 for C. G. Beach, Prohibitionist, and 491 for S. Murgotroyd, Socialist Labor, and scattering. DELAWARE. SENATORS. RICHARD ROLLAND KENNEY, Democrat, of Dover, was born in Sussex County, Del., September 9, 1856; graduated from ILaurel Academy, Delaware, June, 1874; attended Hobart College, Geneva, N. V.; read law under the tuition of the late Senator Willard Saulshury, of Dover; was admitted to the bar October 19, 1881, and has prac- ticed his profession since; was elected State librarian in January, 1879, and held that office for two terms; was appointed adjutant-general of the State by Governor B. T. - Biggs, January, 1887, and retired from that office at the end of his term, January, 1891; was delegate to the national Democratic convention at Chicago in 1892; was made a member of the national Democratic committee in 1896, which position he still holds; 12 Congressional Directory. [DELAWARE. was elected to the United States Senate January 19, 1897, to fill the vacancy caused by the legislature of 1895 failing to elect a Senator to succeed the Hon. Anthony Higgins, whose term expired March 4, 1895. He took his seat February 5, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 190I. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. JOHN HENRY HOFFECKER, Republican, of Smyrna, was born September 12, 1827, at Mansion House, on a farm near that town; attended public and pri- vate schools in Smyrna, Del., graduated in civil engineering and trained in field practice with Nehemiah Clark, esq., public surveyor; in 1853 opened an office in Smyrna, Del., as surveyor and conveyancer, and pursued the business continuously to 1889; was elected delegate to the Republican national convention at Cincinnati in 1876, and at Chicago in 1884; was elected a member of the general assembly in 1888, and on the 1st day of January, 1889, was chosen speaker of the house of representatives; was elected president of town council in 1878, and served continuously by reelection to 1898; was elected director of the Fruit Growers’ National Bank of Smyrna at its organization in 1876; has been reelected each year since; was chosen president of the institution in 1891, and is still holding that position; was instrumental in the estab- lishment of a large factory in Smyrna for hermetically sealed goods, which are largely exported to Europe; the factory bears date 1867, and gives employment largely to women and children during the fruit season of each year; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,566 votes, to 15,053 for IL. Irving Handy, Democrat, and 398 for I,., W. Brosius, Prohibitionist. FLORIDA. SENATORS. STEPHEN RUSSEILI, MALI ORY, Democrat, of Pensacola, was born November 2, 1848; entered Confederate army in Virginia in the fall of 1864; in the spring of 1865 was appointed midshipman in the 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 at New Orleans in 1873; removed to Pensacola, Fla., in 1874, and began practicing law, was elected to the lower house of the legislature in 1876; was elected to the senate of Florida in 1880, and was reelected in 1884; was elected to the Fifty- second and Fifty-third Congresses from the First district of Florida, and was elected to the United States Senate by the legislature of Florida for the term beginning March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. JAMES PIPER TALIAFERRO, Democrat, of Jacksonville, was born at Orange Court-House, Va., September 30, 1847, and there spent his boyhood days; isa descend- ant of Robert Taliaferro, who came from England about 1650 and settled in Essex County, Va., of the Blenheim branch of what has since become a numerous family; his father was Edmund Pendleton Taliaferro, a physician, of Orange County, Va., who resided there all of his life. He was educated in Virginia, leaving the school of William Dinwiddie, at Greenwood, in 1864, to volunteer in the Confederate army, in which he served from that time until the war ended; returned to his home after the war and resumed his studies, removing about a year later to Jacksonville, Fla., where he engaged in the lumber business, with which and other commercial enterprises he has since been connected; is now president of the First National Bank of Tampa and vice-president of the C. B. Rogers Company, of Jacksonville; was elected on the first joint ballot of the Florida legislature to the United States Senate April 19, 1899, to succeed Samuel Pasco; prior to that election he had never been a candidate for any political office, but has always been an active worker in the Democratic party; has been a member of the State Democratic executive committee for ten years, and for three years was its chairman; was a member of the Florida State board of health up to the time of his election. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. FLORIDA.] Senators and Representatives. 13 REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Calhoun, Citrus, De Soto, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Hernando, Hillsborough, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Lafayette, Lee, Leon, Levy, Liberty, Manatee, Monroe, Pasco, Polk, Santa Rosa, Taylor, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington (25 counties). STEPHEN M. SPARKMAN, Democrat, of Tampa, was born July 29, 1849, in Her- nando County, Fla.; was educated in the common schools of Florida, and taught school for about three years, from the age of 18 to 21, for the purpose of assisting in his edu- cation; read law under H. I. Mitchell, ex-governor of Florida, and was admitted to | practice in October, 1872; notwithstanding his duties in Congress is still engaged in the practice of law in the various courts of his State; was State attorney for the Sixth judicial circuit for nine years, from 1878 to 1887; was a member of the State and Congressional committees from 1890 to 1892, when he was elected chairman; was ten- dered the circuit judgeship for the Sixth judicial circuit of Florida by Governor Perry in 1888, and the position of associate judge on the supreme court bench in 1891 by Governor Fleming, both of which were declined; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 13,506 votes, to 2,513 for E. R. Gunby, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Brevard, Clay, Columbia, Dade, Duval, Hamilton, Take, Madison, Marion, Nassau, Orange, Osceola, Putnam, St. Johns, Sumter, Suwannee, and Volusia (20 counties). ROBERT WYCHE DAVIS, Democrat, of Palatka, was horn in Lee County, Ga., March 15, 1849; was educated in the common schools of his native State; entered the Confederate army at 14 years of age, and surrendered with the army of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston at Greensboro, N. C., at the close of the war; worked on a farm in Georgia after the war for several years; read law, and was admitted to the bar at 20 years of age; removed to Florida in 1879; was elected to the legislature from Clay County of the latter State in 1884; was elected speaker of the house of representatives at the session of 1885; was balloted for for governor of Florida in the State convention held in St. Augustine in 1888, and, though he had a large following, failed to receive the nomination; was made general attorney for the Florida Southern Railroad Company in 1885, which position he resigned when elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress; was re- elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress receiving 12,150 votes, to 4,773 for H. 1.. Ander- son, Republican. GEORGIA. SENATORS. AUGUSTUS OCTAVIUS BACON, Democrat, of Macon, was born in Bryan County, Ga., October 20, 1839; received a high-school education in Liberty and Troup counties; graduated at the University of Georgia, in the literary and classical department in 1859, and in the law department in 1860; entered the Confederate army at the beginning of the war and served during the campaigns of 1861 and 1862 as adjutant of the Ninth Georgia Regiment in the Army of Northern Virginia; subsequently thereto was commissioned as captain in the Provisional army of the Confederate States and assigned to general staff duty; at the close of the war resumed the study of law, and began practice in 1866 at Macon, from which date he has actively con- tinued the same both in the State and Federal courts; was frequently a member of State Democratic conventions; was president of the State Democratic convention in 1880, and was delegate from the State at large to the national Democratic conven- tion in Chicago in 1884; in 1868 he was elected Presidential elector (Seymour and Blair) on the Democratic ticket; in 1871 was elected to the Georgia house of repre- sentatives, of which body he served as a member for fourteen years; in this time, during two years he was the speaker pro tempore, and during eight years he was the speaker of the Georgia house of representatives; was several times a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor of Georgia, and in the Democratic State convention of 1883 he came within one vote of a nomination for governor, when the 14 Congressional Directory. [GEORGIA, nomination was equivalent to an election; was elected to the United States Senate in November, 1894, for the term beginning March 4, 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. ALEXANDER STEPHENS CLAY, Democrat, of Marietta, Cobb County, Ga., was born September 25, 1853, ona farm in Cobb County; received his primary and prepara- tory education in the country schools and the high school at Palmetto, Ga.; graduated from Hiawassee College in 1875; taught school for two years; studied law under Judge David Irwin, of Marietta, and was admitted to the bar in September, 1877, and has been engaged actively in the practice of law since; was elected a member of the city council in 1880 and reelected in 1881; in 1884-85 and 1886-87 represented Cobb County in the general assembly of the State; in the latter term was elected speaker pro tem- pore; was reelected for 1889-90, and served as speaker for two years; in 1892 was elected to the State senate, and served as president of that body for two years; in 1894 was elected chairman of the State Democratic executive committee, and con- ducted the State campaign between the Democrats and Populists that year; was reelected to the same position in 1896, and still occupies the place; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed John B. Gordon, in October, 1896, and took his seat March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COoUNTIES.—Burke, Bulloch, Bryan, Chatham, Emanuel, Effingham, Liberty, McIntosh, Screven, and Tattnall (10 counties). RUFUS E. LESTER, Democrat, of Savannah, was born in Burke County, Ga., 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, 1870-1879; was president of the senate during the last three years of service; was mayor of Savannah from January, 1883, to January, 1889; was elected to the Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty- fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 5,348 votes, to 876 for J. E. Myrick, Independent Populist. SECOND DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Baker, Berrien, Calhoun, Clay, Colquitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Karly, Miller, Mitchell, Quitman, Randolph, Terrell, Thomas, and Worth (15 counties). JAMES M. GRIGGS, Democrat, of Dawson, was born at Lagrange, Ga., on March 29, 1861; was educated in the common schools of Georgia and at the Peabody Normal College, at Nashville, Tenn., from which institution he was graduated in May, 1881; after graduation taught school and studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1883, and commenced the practice of law in 1884 at Alapaha, Berrien County, Ga.; was for a short while engaged in the newspaper business; removed to Dawson in 1885; was elected solicitor-general (prosecuting attorney) of the Pataula judicial circuit in 1888, and was reelected in 1892; in 1893 resigned; was appointed judge of the same circuit, and was twice reelected without opposition; resigned this office in 1896 to make the race for Congress; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention of 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 8,298 votes, to 2,071 for the Republican candidate. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Crawford, Dooly, Houston, Lee, Macon, Pulaski, Schley, Stewart, Sumter, Twiggs, Taylor, Webster, and Wilcox (13 counties). ELIJAH BANKS LEWIS, Democrat, of Montezuma, was born in Dooly County, Ga., March 27, 1854; removed to Montezuma, his present home, at the age of 17 years; was educated in the common schools of Dooly and Macon counties; has had a busi- ness training, his father making him his partner in the banking and mercantile business before his maturity, and is still in the banking and mercantile business; always took an active interest in politics, working for his friends and political party, but never accepted any office until 1894, when he was elected to the State senate for the years 1894-95; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress to succeed Hon. Charles F. - Crisp, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 3,539 votes, to 141 for F. W. Gano, Republican. GEORGIA. ] Senators and Representatives, 15 FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Carroll, Chattahoochee, Coweta, Harris, Heard, Marion, Meriwether, Muscogee, Talbot, and Troup (10 counties). WILLIAM CHARLES ADAMSON, Democrat, of Carrollton, was born at Bowdon, Ga., August 13, 1854; spent his youth alternately in working on the farm and in hauling goods and cotton between Atlanta and Bowdon; took the collegiate course at Bowdon College, graduating with the degree of A. B. in 1874, the degree of A. M. being con- ferred a few years later by the same institution; read law in the office of the Hon. Sampson W. Harris; was admitted to the bar October, 1876, and has lived at Carroll- ton, Ga., ever since, practicing law in the circuit and supreme courts of the State and the Federal courts; was judge of the city court of Carrollton from 1885 to 1889, and was attorney for the city of Carrollton for a number of years; was Presidential elector in 1892; had never held nor sought any other office until elected to the Fifty- fifth Congress; was renominated and reelected without opposition to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 3,218 votes, 29 scattering. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounNTIiES.—Campbell, Clayton, Dekalb, Douglas, Fulton, Newton, Rockdale, and Walton (8 counties). . LEONIDAS FELIX LIVINGSTON, Democrat, of Kings,-was born in Newton County, Ga., April 3, 1832; is of Scotch-Irish descent; his grandfather emigrated to this country from North Ireland, and served under General Washington during the Revolutionary war; 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 for two terms a member of the house of representatives and one term a member of the State senate; was chairman of the com- mittee on agriculture in both the house and senate ; was vice-president of the Georgia State Agricultural Society for eleven years and president of the same for four years; was president of the Georgia State Alliance for three years, but resigned when elected to Congress; has been prominentin all political struggles in his State for many years; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Rifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress without opposition, receiving 3,027 votes, 64 scattering. SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTiEs.—Baldwin, Bibb, Butts, Fayette, Henry, Jones, Monroe, Pike, Spalding, and Upson (Io counties). CHARLES LAFAYETTE BARTLETT, Democrat, of Macon, was born at Monti- cello, Jasper County, Ga., on January 31, 1853; removed from Monticello to Macon, Ga., in 1875, and has resided in Macon since then; was educated in the schools at Monticello, the University of Georgia, and the University of Virginia; graduated at the University of Georgia in August, 1870; studied law at the University of Virginia and was admitted to the bar in August, 1872; was appointed solicitor-general (prosecuting attorney) for the Macon judicial court January 31, 1877, and served in that capacity until January 31, 1881; was elected to the house of representatives of Georgia in 1882 and 1883, and again in 1884 and 1883, and to the State senate in 1889, from the Twenty-second senatorial district; was elected judge of the superior court of the Macon circuit January 1, 1893, and resigned that office May 1, 1894; was nominated by the Democrats as a candidate for Congress, and was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, there being no opposing candidate in the Democratic primary in June, nor in the election in November, 1898, receiving 3,008 votes—all the votes cast, except 3. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield (13 counties). JOHN W. MADDOX, Democrat, of Rome, was born on June 3, 1848, in Chattooga County, Ga.; received a common-school education; enlisted in the service of the Con- federate States at the age of 15 and served as a private until the end of the war between the States; read law in Summerville, Ga.; was admitted to the bar at the September 16 Congressional Directory. [CEORGIA. term, 1877, and practiced law there until 1886; was elected county commissioner in January, 1878; was elected to the State legislature in October, 1880, and reelected in 1882; was elected to represent the Forty-second senatorial district in 1884; was elected judge of the superior court, Rome circuit, in November, 1886, and reelected in November, 1890; resigned that office September 1, 1892, to accept the Democratic nomination for Congress; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 5,296 votes, to 1,252 for S. B. Austin, Populist. FIGHTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Clarke, Elbert, Franklin, Greene, Hart, Jasper, Madison, Morgan, Oglethorpe, Oconee, Putnam, and Wilkes (12 counties). WILLIAM MARCELLUS HOWARD, Democrat, of Lexington, was born at Berwick City, La., of Georgia parents, December 6, 1857; was graduated from the University of Georgia; began practice of law February, 1850; was elected solicitor- general of the northern circuit of Georgia by the State legislature in 1884; was reelected to that office in 1888 and in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 4,399 votes, to 861 for J. N. Neese, Populist. NINTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Banks, Cherokee, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Gilmer, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Jack- son, Tumpkin, Milton, Pickens, Rabun, Towns, Union, and White (17 counties). FARISH CARTER TATE, Democrat, of Jasper, was born at Jasper, Pickens County, Ga., November 20, 1856, where he now resides; was educated in the common schoolsand inthe North Georgia Agricultural College, at Dahlonega, Ga.; wasadmitted to the bar in 1880, since which time he has been in the active practice of the law; was a member of the general assembly of Georgia six years, during which time he was chairman of the judiciary committee, of the railroad committee, and was a member of the special committee to redistrict the State; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 9,275 votes, to 3,456 for Jefferson P. Brooke, Populist. TENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Columbia, Glascock, Jefferson, Hancock, Lincoln, McDuffie, Richmond, Taliaferro, Warren, Washington, and Wilkinson (11 counties). : WILLIAM HENRY FLEMING, Democrat, of Augusta, was born at Augusta, ‘Richmond County, Ga., on October 18, 1856; was brought up in the country a few miles from the city, and for a number of years after the war worked on the farm; was educated at Summerville Academy, Richmond (County) Academy, and the State University at Athens, Ga., from which institution he received the degrees of civil engineer and master of arts; was chosen private anniversarian of the Phi Kappa Society in 1873; was awarded junior debaters’ medal in 1874; was awarded the col- lege medal for the best essay and was chosen commencement orator for the Phi Kappa Society in 1875; in the military department of the college was appointed captain of the first company, and for two years held the battalion prize for the best drilled company; while in college earned a small salary for part of the time by acting as college postmaster, and afterwards was appointed a salaried tutor while an undergraduate; also received assistance from Alexander H. Stephens by a loan of money, which was afterwards repaid with interest; was elected superintendent of the public schools of Augusta and Richmond County, Ga., in January, 1877, and resigned in August, 1880; was admitted to the bar in November, 1880, having studied law in the office of Hon. John T. Shewmake, and has continued in regular practice since; was elected to the State legislature from Richmond County in 1888, 1890, and 1892, and was chairman of the finance committee; again elected in 1894, and was speaker of the house; in April, 1894, sustained a severe and almost fatal injury by a kick in the face by a runaway horse; was elected president of the Georgia State Bar Association in 1894, and at the annual meeting in 1895 delivered an address on the ‘‘Hthics of the bar in relation to the state;”’ was chosen in 1895 grand commander of the Knights Templar for the State of Georgia; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Con- gress by a majority of 2,914 votes, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress without opposition, receiving 2,290 votes. x GEORGIA. ] Senators and Representatives. 17 ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Appling, Brooks, Camden, Charlton, Clinch, Coffee, Echols, Dodge, Glynn, Irwin, Johnson, Laurens, Lowndes, Montgomery, Pierce, Telfair, Ware, and Wayne (18 counties). WILLIAM GORDON BRANTLEY, Democrat, of Brunswick, was born at Black- shear, Pierce County, Ga., on September 18, 1860, and lived there until his removal to Brunswick in 1889; was educated in common schools, with two years at University of Georgia; read law with ex-Congressman John C. Nicholls, and was admitted to the bar in October, 1881; represented Pierce County in Georgia house of representatives in 1884-85; represented Third senatorial district in Georgia senate in 1886-87; was elected solicitor-general (prosecuting attorney) of Brunswick circuit in 1888 for a term of four years, and reelected in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 8,368 votes, to 3,886 for J. M. Wilkinson, Republican-Populist. ID AH O. SENATORS. GEORGE LAIRD SHOUP, Republican, of Boise, was born at Kittanning, Arm- strong County, Pa., 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 Galesburg 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 com- missioned second lieutenant; during the autumn and winter of 1861 was engaged in scouting along the base of the Rocky Mountains; was ordered to Fort Union, N. Mex., in the early part of 1862; was kept on scouting duty on the Canadian, Pecos, and Red rivers until the spring of 1863, and during this time was promoted to a first lieutenancy; was then ordered to the Arkansas River; had been assigned in 1862to the Second Regiment Colorado 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 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 expi- ration of term of service; engaged in the mercantile business in Virginia City, Mont., in 1866, and during the same year established 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 1880; was a mem- ber of the Republican national committee from 1880 to 1884; was United States com- missioner for Idaho at the World’s Cotton Centennial Exposition at New Orleans, La., in 1884-85; was again placed on the Republican national committee in 1888, reelected in 1892 and again in 1896; was appointed governor of Idaho Territory in March, 1889, which position he held until elected governor of the State of Idaho, October 1, 1890; was elected to the United States Senate December 18, 1890, and took his seat December 29, 1890; was reelected in 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. HENRY HEITFELD, Populist, of Lewiston, was born in St. Louis, Mo., January 12, 1859; received his early education in the schools of that city; removed to Seneca, Kans., at the age of 11 years, where he continued to reside till the year 1882, in which year he emigrated to the State of Washington; located in Idaho in 1883, where he has been engaged in farming and stock raising since; was elected State senator in 1894 and reelected in 1896; was elected United States Senator, January 28, 1897; took his seat March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. 18 Congressional Directory. [IDAHO. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. EDGAR WILSON, Silver Republican, of Boise City, was born in Armstrong County, Pa., February 25, 1861; attended Michigan University, at Ann Arbor, for three years and graduated in the law department of that institution in the class of 1884; went to Idaho the same year and located at Boise City, commencing the practice of law; was elected city attorney of Boise City in 1887, and district attorney in 1888; served as a member of the constitutional convention which framed the State constitu- tion in 1889; was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress as a Republican on a free-coinage platform; was nominated for justice of the supreme court of the State in 1896 by the Silver-Republican party, running several hundred votes ahead of the ticket, but was defeated by a fusion of the opposition; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, having been nominated by acclamation by the Silver Republicans and indorsed by the Demo- crats, receiving 17,693 votes, to 13,056 for W. B. Heyburn, Republican, 7,428 for James Gunn, Populist, and 914 for W. J. Boone, Prohibitionist. ILLINOIS. SENATORS. SHELBY M. CULLOM, Republican, of Springfield, was born in Wayne County, Ky., November 22, 1829; his father removed to Tazewell County, Ill, 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, 1860, 1872, and 1874, 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 delegation; 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 to succeed David Davis, Independent Democrat ; took his seat December 4, 1883, and was reelected in 1888 and again in 1894; was a member of the commission appointed to prepare a system of laws for the Hawaiian Islands. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. WILLIAM E. MASON, Republican, of Chicago, was born in Franklinville, Cat- taraugus County, N. Y., July 7, 1850; removed with his parents to Bentonsport, Iowa, in 1858; attended school at the Bentonsport Academy and Birmingham College; taught school from 1866 to 1870, the last two years at Des Moines, Iowa; entered the law office of Hon. Thomas F. Withrow, and was admitted to practice law in Des Moines; went to Chicago in 1873, and has practiced law there ever since; was elected to the general assembly in 1879, to the State senate in 1881; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate January 20, 1897, by a strict party vote, receiving 125 votes, to 78 votes for John P. Altgeld, Democrat. He took his seat March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNnTy.—Part of Cook; embracing the Third, Thirty-first, Thirty-second, Thirty-third, and Thirty- fourth wards, and part of the Fourth Ward of the city of Chicago, with the townships of Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, Orland, Rich, Thornton, and Worth. JAMES R. MANN, Republican, of Chicago, was born in 1856; educated in the public schools; a graduate of the University of Illinois, and the Union College of Law in Chicago; member of the law firm of Mann & Miller; has been attorney for Hyde Park and the South Park commissioners of Chicago; also a master in chancery; - ILLINOIS.) Senators and Representatives. 19 was for four years a member of the city council of Chicago; was elected to the Fifty- fifth, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 37,506 votes, to 20,424 for Rollin B. Organ, Democrat, 404 for James Hogan, People’s Party, 414 for Theo- dore I. Neff Prohibitionist, and 586 for B. Berlyn, Socialist Labor. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTY.—Part of Cook; the Tenth, Twenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, and Thirtieth wards of the city of Chicago, and the towns of Cicero, Elk Grove, Hanover, Lamont, Leyden, Lyons, Maine, Norwood Park, Palos, Proviso, Riverside, and Schaumburg. WILLIAM LORIMER, Republican, of Chicago, was born in Manchester, England, April 27, 1861, and is of Scotch parentage; came to this country with his parents when 5years old and settled in Chicago in 1870; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty- fifth Congresses; reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 27,151 votes, to 23,354 for C. Porter Johnson, Democrat; 700 for C. O. Sherman, Populist; 421 for Her- man Glaser, Socialist Labor; 407 for Thomas H. Conpropst, Prohibition, and 106 for Michael Healy, Independent. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTy.—Part of Cook; that part of the Fourth Ward west of the center line of Wentworth avenue and all of the First, Second, Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh wards of the city of Chicago. GEORGE P. FOSTER, Democrat, of Chicago, was born in Dover, N. J., April 3, 1860; came to Chicago when 7 years of age, where he attended the public schools, and also took a course of instruction at the old University of Chicago; graduated from Union College of Law of Chicago in 1882; was admitted to the bar the same year and began the practice of law in Chicago; in 1891, on the recommendation of the judges of the circuit, superior, county, and probate courts of Cook County, he was nominated by Governor Joseph W. Fifer and confirmed by the State senate, and, after confirmation, was commissioned justice of the peace for the town of South Chi- cago; while acting as justice of the peace he also acted, under the appointments of Mayors Washburne, Harrison, sr., Hopkins, and Harrison, jr., as police magistrate of the principal police court of the city of Chicago; was nominated Presidential elector on Democratic ticket in 1896, but resigned in order to permit a fusion between Democratic and People’s parties; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,463 votes, to 15,659 for Hugh R. Belknap, Republican, 206 for James FE. McGrath, People’s Party, 65 for William Kellet, Prohibitionist, and 242 for Henry O. Dreis- vogt, Socialist Labor. FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTY.—Part of Cook; the Fighth, Ninth, Twelfth, and Nineteenth wards of the city of Chicago. THOMAS CUSACK, Democrat, of Chicago, was born in Ireland, October 5, 1858 came to New York with his parents when 3 years of age; after the death of his parents, at the age of 5 years, he moved to Chicago; attended private and public schools in Chicago and New York; learned the sign-painting trade, and started in the advertising sign painting business, December, 1875, under the firm name of Thomas Cusack & Co., which business extends over the entire country; was a mem- ber of the board of education from 189r1 until 1898, and was vice-president during the yearsof 1896, 1897, and 1898; served on Governor Altgeld’s staff with the rank of colonel; was a member of the State central committee from 1896 to 1898; is a mem- ber of the county central committee, and first vice-chairman; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,876 votes, to 16,656 for D. W. Mills, Repub- lican, 210 for John P. Buchanan, Populist, and 130 for Thomas H. Gault, Prohi- bitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNnTy.—Part of Cook; the Eleventh, Thirteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth wards of the city of Chicago. EDWARD T. NOONAN, Democrat, of Chicago, was born in Macomb, Ill., Octo- ber 23, 1861; studied law with Judge Van H. Higgins and Hon. C. C. Bonney, of Chicago; was admitted to the bar in 1882; received the degree of LL. B. from the University of Michigan in 1883; was a member of the State senate of Illinois from 1890 to 1894; was one of the ‘‘ 101” who voted nine weeks for Gen. John M. Palmer for Senator; was colonel on the staff of Governor Altgeld from 1893 to 1897; was 56-IST—2D ED——3 20 Congressional Directory. (ILLINOIS. annually elected attorney for the board of West Chicago park commissioners from 1893 to 1898. During the years 1893 and 1894 Mr. Noonan’s modesty was the sub- ject of newspaper comment, as he held three public offices at the same time, viz, State senator, colonel, and park attorney, and was a candidate for Congress. In 1894 and 1896 he received by acclamation the Democratic nomination for Congress, and in 1898 was elected as a member of the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,186 votes, to 16,018 for George E. White, Republican, 334 for William I.eague, Populist, 176 for Thomas Haines, Prohibitionist, and 301 for J. Collins, Socialist I,abor. SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTy.—Part of Cook; the Twentieth, Twenty-first, Twenty-second, Twenty-third, and Twenty- fourth wards, that part of the Twenty-fifth Ward south of the center line of Diversey street and west of the center line of Halstead street, and that part of the T'wenty-sixth Ward south of the center line of Belmont avenue, of the city of Chicago. HENRY SHERMAN BOUTELL, Republican, of Chicago, son of Maj. Lewis Henry and Anna Greene-Boutell ; was born in Boston, Mass., March 14, 1856 ; gradu- ated from Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill., in 1874, and from Harvard Uni- versity in 1876; received the degree of A. M. from Harvard in 1877; was admitted to the bar of Illinois in 1879, and to that of the Supreme Court of the United States in 1885: was elected a member of the Illinois general assembly in 1884, and was one of the “103” who elected General Logan tothe United States Senate ; elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress to fill the unexpired term of Edward Dean Cooke, deceased, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,286 votes, to 17,167 for Emil Hoechester, Democrat, 225 for Roy M. Goodwin, Populist, 86 for John G. Battershill, Prohibitionist, and 86 for George Henderson, Socialist Labor. SEVENTH. DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Part of Cook; the Fourteenth, Fifteenth, and Twenty-seventh wards and part of the Twenty-fifth and Twenty-sixth wards of the city of Chicago, and the towns of Barrington, Evanston, New Trier, Niles, Northfield, Palatine, and Wheeling, of Cook County, and all of the county of Lake. GEORGE EDMUND FOSS, Republican, of Chicago, was born at Berkshire, Franklin County, Vt., July 2, 1863; graduated from Harvard College in 1885; attended the Columbia Law School and School of Political Science in New York City, and graduated from the Union College of Law of Chicago in 1889, receiving the degree of LL.B.; admitted to the bar the same year and began the practice of law in Chicago; never held any political office until elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress; was reelected to the Fifty-fifth and Fifty-sixth Congresses, receiving 30,903 votes, to 18,592 for Frank C. Rogers, Democrat, 403 for Henry H. Hardinge, Populist, 394 for Vasscher B. Barnes, Prohibitionist, and 566 for Charles Schmitt, Socialist Labor. EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Dekalb, Dupage, Grundy, Kane, Kendall, and McHenry (6 counties). ALBERT J. HOPKINS, Republican, of Aurora, was born in Dekalb County, Ill., August 15, 1846; graduated at Hillsdale (Mich. ) College in June, 1870; studied law and commenced practice at Aurora, Ill.; 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 I,ogan ticket, 1884; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty- fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,592 votes, to 8,000 for John W. Leonard, Democrat, and 1,142 for S. W. Johnson, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Boone, Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, and Winnebago (7 counties). ROBERT ROBERTS HITT, Republican, of Mount Morris, was born at Urbana, Ohio, January 16, 1834; removed to Ogle County, Ill., in 1837; was educated at Rock River Seminary (now Mount Morris College) and at De Pauw University ; was first secretary of legation and chargé d’affaires ad interim at Paris 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 vacancy occasioned by the ILLINOIS.] Senators and Representatives. 21 death of Hon. R. M. A. Hawk; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,165 votes, to 11,020 for William H. Wagner, Democrat, and 930 for J. E. Countryman, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Henry, Knox, Mercer, Rock Island, Stark, and Whiteside (6 counties). GEORGE W. PRINCE, Republican, of Galeshurg,was born March 4, 1854, in Taze- well County, Ill; attended the public schools and graduated from Knox College, Galesburg, Il1., in 1878; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1880; was elected city attorney of Galesburg in 1881; was chairman of the Republican county central committee of Knox County in 1884; was elected a member of the lower house of the general assembly of Illinois in 1888; was reelected in 1890; was the candidate for attorney-general of Illinois on the Republican ticket in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Gen. Philip Sidney Post; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 24,469 votes, to 12,042 for Francis E. Andrews, Democrat, and 509 for Fugenio K. Hayes, Prohibitionist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Bureau, Lasalle, Livingston, and Woodford (4 counties). WALTER REEVES, Republican, of Streator, was born September 25, 1848, near Brownsville, Pa.; removed to Illinois in 1856; lived on a farm; became a teacher and a lawyer; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,600 votes, to 16,564 for M. I' Moloney, Dem- ocrat, 277 for Archibald Storrie, Populist, and 629 for John W. Hosier, Prohibitionist. TWELFTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Iroquois, Kankakee, Vermilion, and Will (4 counties). JOSEPH G. CANNON, Republican, of Danville, was born at Guilford, N. Cy May 7, 1836; is a lawyer; was State’s attorney in Illinois, March, 1861, to December, 1868; was elected to the Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty- seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 2r,484 votes, to 14,178 for John M. Thompson, Democrat, and 682 for Samuel S. Jones, Prohibitionist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Champaign, Dewitt, Douglas, Ford, McILean, and Piatt (6 counties). VESPASIAN WARNER, Republican, of Clinton, was born at- Mount Pleasant, (now Farmer City), Dewitt County, IL, April 23, 1842; in 1843 removed to Clinton, Ill.; attended common and select schools there, and I,ombard University, Gales- burg, Ill; was studying law at Clinton when, on June 13, 1861, he enlisted as a pri- vate soldier in Company F, Twentieth Illinois Volunteer Infantry; remained an enlisted man and carried a musket in that company until February 5, 1862, when he was commissioned a second lieutenant; remained in the service until July 13, 1866, when he was mustered out, then being a captain and brevet major; served in the Army of the Tennessee, receiving a gunshot wound at Shiloh, until the evacuation of Atlanta, when, being disabled, he was ordered North; from there, early in 1865, he was ordered on the plains, where a campaign was being conducted against hos- tile Indians, where he served until mustered out; immediately on leaving the service he entered the law department of Harvard University, from which he graduated in 1863; he then returned to Clinton and commenced the practice of law; was colonel and judge-advocate-general of Illinois through the administrations of Governors Hamilton, Oglesby, and Fifer; was elected a Republican Presidential elector in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 20,635 votes, to 14,977 for Jerome G. Quiesenberry, Dem- ocrat, and 863 for James M. Shaw, Prohibitionist. 22 Congressional Directory. [ILLINOIS. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Fulton, Marshall, Mason, Peoria, Putnam, and Tazewell (6 counties). JOSEPH V. GRAFF, Republican, of Peoria, Peoria County, was born at Terre Haute, Ind., July 1, 1854; graduated at the Terre Haute High School at the age of 16 years; also attended Wabash College, at Crawfordsville, Ind., one year, but never completed a collegiate course; studied law and was admitted to the bar while living at Delavan, Ill, in 1879; was a delegate to the national Republican convention at Minneapolis in 1892; had never before held a public office, except president of the board of education, which position he held at the time of his election to the Fifty- fourth Congress, but has engaged in the practice of the law ever since his admission to the bar; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,417 votes, to 19,431 for C. N. Barnes, Demo- crat, and 696 for Stephen Martin, Prohibitionist. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. CounrtIiES.—Adams, Brown, Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Schuyler, and Warren (7 counties). BENJAMIN F. MARSH, Republican, of Warsaw, Hancock County, was born in Wythe Township, in said county, and reared on his father’s farm; was educated in pri- vate schools until 14 years old, when he was sent to Jubilee College and entered upon a classical course, pursuing the same for four years, lacking one year of graduation; entered the law office of his brother, Judge J. W. Marsh, at Warsaw, and was admitted to the bar in 1860; same year was a candidate on the Republican ticket for the office of State’s attorney in the district then composed of Hancock and Adams counties; the district being Democratic, he was defeated by the late Calvin A. Warren, one of the best lawyers in western Illinois; under Mr. Lincoln’s first call for volunteers, in 1861, he enrolled a company of cavalry and went to Springfield and tendered the same for and during the war of the rebellion to Governor Yates, but as cavalry was not included in the call, the company was not then accepted; on his way home he enlisted as a private in the Sixteenth Illinois Infantry Volunteers, then at Quincy, and served in said regiment in northern Missouri until, on the 4th day of July, 1861, while at Monroe Station, he received a telegram from Governor Yates accepting his cavalry company; immediately going home, he in a few days recruited a company of cavalry, was commissioned captain, and assigned to the Second Regiment Illinois Cavalry; he was finally commissioned colonel of this regiment and served contin- uously until January, 1866, having campaigned in every seceding State except Vir- ginia and the two Carolinas; he received four gunshot wounds and carries in his body rebel lead; returning to Warsaw, he resumed the practice of law until 1877; in 1869 he was the Republican candidate for the constitutional convention; in 1876 he was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress from the then Tenth district and was reelected to the Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh Congresses; in 1882 he was again a candidate for Congress, but was defeated; returning home in 1883, at the expiration of his term in Congress, he engaged in general farming and stock raising, and is still so engaged; in the spring of 1889 he was appointed by Governor Oglesby rail- road and warehouse commissioner, and held the same four years; he was a delegate to the Republican national convention in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 21,143 votes, to 20,901 for Joseph A. Roy, Democrat, and 411 for M. W. Greer, Prohibitionist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. CounNTIiES.—Calhoun, Cass, Greene, Jersey, Macoupin, Morgan, Pike, and Scott (8 counties). WILLIAM ELZA WILLIAMS, Democrat, of Pittsfield, was born at Detroit, 7 miles from his present home; was educated in the district school and at Illinois College, at Jacksonville, Ill. He lived upon the farm until he arrived at age, when he commenced the study of law, since which time he has followed the legal pro- fession; was elected to the office of State’s attorney, in his native county of Pike, in 1886, for an unexpired term, and reelected to a full term in 1888; has held minor offices, member of Democratic county committee, alderman, etc.; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,682 votes, to 17,021 for James H. Danskin, Repub- lican, 514 for A. C. Wood, Populist, and 494 for H. C. Bliss, Prohibitionist. A ———) ILLINOIS.) Senators and Representatives. sia3 SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Christian, I,ogan, Macon, Menard, and Sangamon (5 counties). BEN FRANKLIN CALDWELI, Democrat, of Chatham, was born on a farm near Carrollton, Greene County, Ill., August 2, 1848; removed with his parents in April, 1853, to near Chatham, in Sangamon County, Ill., where he now resides; has a high-school education; was a member of the board of supervisors of Sangamon County 1877-78; during the year 1878 was chairman of the board of supervisors; was a member of the Illinois house of representatives 1882-1886; while a member of the house of representatives was chairman of the finance committee; was a member of the Illinois State senate 1890-1894; while a member of the State senate was chair- man of the committee on banks and banking; was renominated for the State senate in 1894 and defeated by 87 votes; lives on a farm 9 miles from Springfield and 2 miles from the village of Chatham, where he has resided continuously since April, 1853; assisted in the organization of the Farmers’ National Bank of Springfield, from the presidency of which he resigned since his election to Congress and of which he had been president thirteen years; also assisted in the formation of the Caldwell State Bank of Chatham, of which he has been president since its organization and to che presidency of which he was reelected January, 1899; was the Democratic candi- date for Congress in the Seventeenth Illinois district in 1896—which district gave at the preceding general electionin 1894 a Republican majority on Congressman of 2,938— and was defeated by James A. Connolly, Republican, by gg votes, receiving 23,714 votes to 23,813 cast for Connolly; was renominated by the Democrats for Congress in 1898 and defeated Isaac R. Mills, of Macon County, by a plurality of 2,240, receiving 23,293 votes, to 21,053 cast for Mills, and 573 for David I,. Bunn, Prohibitionist. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bond, Fayette, Madison, Montgomery, Moultrie, and Shelby (6 counties). THOMAS M. JETT, Democrat, of Hillsboro, was born on a farm in Bond County, I1l., May 1, 1862; attended the common schools of the counties of Bond and Mont- gomery, in the said State of Illinois, until he was 20 years of age; after that he attended college two years at the Northern Indiana Normal School, Valparaiso, Ind.; taught school for three terms; read law with Judge Phillips, of Hillsboro, Ill., and was admitted to practice in May, 1887; was elected State’s attorney of Montgomery County, Ill, in 1889, and served two terms, covering a period of about eight years; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,834 votes, to 18,109 for B. F. Johnston, Republican, 501 for J. T\. Killian, Prohibitionist, 477 for F. Morse, Middle-of-the-Road Populist, and 138 for W. W. Cox, Socialist Labor. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. CounTties.—Clark, Coles, Crawford, Cumberland, ¥dgar, Effingham, Jasper, Lawrence, and Rich- land (9 counties). JOSEPH B. CROWLEY, Democrat, of Robinson, was born July 19, 1858, in Coshocton, Ohio; in 1859, removed with his parents, while less than a year old, to Ste. Marie, Jasper County, I1l., thence to Newton, I1l., in 1868, and thence to Robinson in 1872, and was educated in the common schools; engaged in mercantile business from 1876 to 1880; studied law with George N. Parker; was admitted to the bar in May, 1883, and has followed the practice of law ever since as partner of George N. Parker; was elected county judge of Crawford County in November, 1886, and reelected in 1890; in April, 1893, was appointed United States special Treasury agent in charge of the seal fisheries of Alaska, resigning this position in April, 1898; served two terms as president of the Robinson city school board, and two terms as master in chancery of his county; served. three terms as member of the Democratic Congressional com- mittee of his district, and twelve years as a member of the Democratic county central committee of Crawford County; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Con gress, receiving 21,520 votes, to 20,006 for William W. Jacobs, Republican, 597 for Dickson T. Harbison, Populist, and 483 for William Smith, Prohibitionist. 4 24 Congressional Directory. LINO, TWENTIETH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Clay, Fdwards, Franklin, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Jefferson, Wabash, Wayne, and White (10 counties). JAMES R. WILLIAMS, Democrat, of Carmi, was born in White County, Ill, December 27, 1850; graduated from the State University of Indiana and the Union College of Law, Chicago; has been in the practice of law at Carmi since 1876; was master in chancery from 1880 to 1882, and county judge from 1882 to 1886; was a member of the Fifty-first, Fifty- second, and Fifty-third Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18, 321 votes, to 16,307 for Theodore S. Risley, Republican, 552 for Wiley N. Green, Middle-of-the-Road Populist, and 387 for William Bedall, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Clinton, Marion, Monroe, Randolph, Perry, St. Clair, and Washington (7 counties). WILLIAM A. RODENBERG, Republican, of Fast St. Louis, was born near Ches- ter, Randolph County, Ill., October 30, 1865; was educated in the public schools and was graduated from Central Wesleyan College, Warrenton, Mo., in the spring of 1884; engaged in the profession of teaching for seven years; attended the St. Louis Law School, and was admitted to the bar; was a delegate to the Republican national convention of 1896 at St. Louis; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,461 votes, to 19,956 for Frederick J. Kern, Democrat, 466 for William F. Quellmalz, Populist, 433 for John T. Nixon, Prohibitionist, and 340 for Gustav Surber, Socialist Labor. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Alexander, Jackson, Johnson, Massac, Pope, Pulaski, Saline, Union, and Williamson (9 counties). GEORGE W. SMITH, Republican, of Murphysboro, was born in Putnam County, Ohio, August 18, 1846; was raised on a farm in Wayne County, Ill., to which his father removed in 1850; learned the trade of blacksmithing; attended the common Shoots; graduated from the literary department of McKendree College, at Lebanon, IIl., 1868; read law in Fairfield, Ill., after which he entered the law department of i university at Bloomington, nd. from which he graduated in 1870; was admitted to the practice of law by the supr eme court of Illinois the same year, since which time he has resided in Murphysboro, 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 Arthur; is married; was elected to the Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,200 votes, to 14,131 for A. B. Garrett, Democrat, and 219 for Andrew J. Dougherty, jr., Prohibitionist. INDIANA. SENATORS. CHARLES WARREN FAIRBANKS, Republican, of Indianapolis, was born on a farm near Unionville Center, Union County, Ohio, May 11, 1852; was educated in the common schools of the neighborhood and at the Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio, graduating from that institution in 1872 in the classical course; was admitted to the bar by the supreme court of Ohio in 1874; removed to Indianapolis in the same year, where he has since practiced his profession; never held public office prior to his election to the Senate; was elected a trustee of the Ohio Wesleyan Uni- versity in 1885; was chairman of the Indiana Republican State conventions in 1892 and 1898; was unanimously chosen as the nominee of the Republican caucus for United States Senator in the Indiana legislature in January, 1893, and subsequently received his entire party vote in the legislature, but was defeated by David Turpie, Democrat ; was a delegate at large to the Republican national convention at St. Louis in 1896, and was temporary chairman of the convention; was appointed a member of the United States and British joint high commission which met in Quebec in 1898, for the adjustment of Canadian questions, and was chairman of the United States high commissioners; was elected to the United States Senate January 20, 1897, by a majority of 21 on joint ballot, over Daniel W. Voorhees and Leroy Templeton, and took his seat March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. — INDIANA] Senators and Representatives. 25 ALBERT JEREMIAH BEVERIDGE, Republican, was born on a farm in Highland County, Ohio, October 6, 1862; his father and brothers were soldiers in the Union Army; he was married to Miss Katherine Maude Langsdale on November 24, 1887; was elected to the Senate of the United States by the sixty-first general assembly of the State of Indiana January 17, 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Gibson, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburg, and Warrick (6 counties). pe, JAMES A. HEMENWAY, Republican, of Boonville, was born March 8, 1860, at = Boonville, Ind., and, with the exception of a few years, has continued to reside at Boonville; was educated in the common schools; commenced the practice of law in 1885; in 1886 and again in 1888 was elected prosecuting attorney of the Second judicial circuit of Indiana; in 1890 was selected as the member of the Republican State com- mittee from the First district; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fiftth Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,383 votes, to 19,337 for Thomas Duncan, Democrat, and 475 for Josephus Lee, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Daviess, Greene, Knox, Lawrence, Martin, Monroe, Owen, and Sullivan (8 counties). ROBERT W. MIERS, Democrat, of Bloomington, was born in Decatur County, Ind., January 27, 1848; is a graduate of both the literary and the law departments of Indiana University; commenced the practice of law at Bloomington, Ind., in April, 1872; was elected prosecuting attorney for the Tenth judicial circuit of Indiana in 1875 and reelected in 1877; was elected to the house of representatives of the Indiana legislature in 1879; was a trustee of the Indiana University from 1881 to 1893; was appointed judge of the Tenth judicial circuit of Indiana in 1883 to fill an unexpired term; was elected judge of the same circuit in 18go and served as judge until Sep- tember, 1896, when he resigned and accepted the nomination of the Democratic Congressional convention for the Second district of Indiana; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress; unanimously renominated by the Democrats and reelected a member of the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,245 votes, to 18,656 for William R. Gardner, Republican, and 1,333 for William J. Trout, Populist. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Clark, Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Orange, Perry, Scott, and Washington (9 counties). WILLIAM TI. ZENOR, Democrat, of Corydon, was born in Harrison County, within 3 miles of his present place of residence; was educated in the common schools and at the seminary of Prof. James G. May; at the age of 22 commenced the study of law under the direction of the late Judge D. W. La Follette, of New Albany; was admitted to the bar and formed a law partnership with Judge Fred Mathes in 1870, at Corydon; in 1871 removed to Leavenworth, Crawford County, Ind., where he established a successful practice; was appointed by Governor Williams prosecuting attorney for the district, which office he held by this appointment and two succeed- ing elections till 1882; in 1884 was elected judge ofthe judicial circuit without oppo- bo sition; was reelected in 1890; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,111 votes, to 16,741 for Isaac F. Whitesides, Republican, and 118 for G. T. Mayfield, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Bartholomew, Brown, Dearborn, Decatur, Jackson, Jefferson, Jennings, Ohio, Ripley, and Switzerland (10 counties). FRANCIS MARION GRIFFITH, Democrat, of Vevay, was born on a farm in Switzerland County, Ind., August 21, 1849; was educated in the common schools of the county, the high school at Vevay, and at Franklin College; taught school in 1868, 1869, and 1870; was county school superintendent one year; served one term as county treasurer; was admitted to the bar in May, 1877, and has practiced law continuously ever since; served as State senator from 1886 to 1894, during all of » which time he served on the judiciary committee; was chairman of said committee bs during two sessions, and during two sessions was president pro tempore thereof; in 26 Congressional Directory. IDIANA, 1894 was nominated by the Democratic State convention for the office of attorney- general, but was defeated by the landslide of that year; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress at the special election held August 10, 1897, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. William S. Holman, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 22,968 votes, to 20,790 for Charles W. Lee, Republican, and 318 for Jasper N. Hughes, Populist. FIFTH DISTRICT. CountiEs.—Clay, Hendricks, Morgan, Parke, Putnam, Vermilion, and Vigo (7 counties). GEORGE W. FARIS, Republican, of Terre Haute, was born on a farm in Jasper County, Ind., June 9, 1854; his early life was spent on a farm in Pulaski County, Ind., where he worked until 18 yearsof age; in 1872 he entered Asbury University, and gradu- ated with his class in 1877; his father having met with financial reverses, the son was obliged to make his own way at college, which he did by teaching school, keeping up with his college studies in the meantime, and spending part of each year with his class; read law, was admitted to the bar, and has since practiced his profession; in 1880 removed to Terre Haute, where he has since resided; in 1884 was the Republican nominee for the circuit judgeship, but was defeated by a slender majority; has been active in Republican politics, but never held any public office; was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress from the Eighth district, and elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress from the present Fifth district, the State having been reapportioned in 1895, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,557 votes, to 22,305 for Samuel R. Hamill, Democrat, 647 for William FE. Carpenter, Prohibitionist, and 195 for A. J. Farrow, Populist. SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Fayette, Franklin, Hancock, Henry, Rush, Shelby, Union, and Wayne (8 counties). JAMES E. WATSON, Republican, of Rushville, was born in Winchester, Ran- dolph County, Ind., November 2, 1864; graduated from the Winchester High School in 1881; entered De Pauw University the same year, and remained in that institution until the year 1885, when he returned home and’ took up the study of law in the office of Watson & Engle; was admitted to the bar in 1886, and has since been engaged in the practice of his profession; is a member of the Knights of Pythias and has been grand chancellor of the order; was elected president of the State Epworth League of the Methodist Episcopal Church in ‘1892 and was reelected in 1893; in 1892 he was a candidate on the Republican ticket for Presidential elector; in 1893 he removed to Rushville and formed a partnership in the practice of law with Hon. Gates Sexton; contested for the nomination for secretary of state in 1894 and was second in a list of strong candidates before the convention; was elected to the Fifty- fourth Congress over the veteran William S. Holman, and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 21,048 votes, to 18,804 for Charles A. Robinson, Democrat, and 121 for Samuel Walker, Populist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.— Johnson and Marion (2 counties). JESSE OVERSTREET, Republican, of Indianapolis, was born in Johnson County, Ind., December 14, 1859; received a common-school and collegiate education, and was admitted to the bar in 1886; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 25,868 votes, to 23,269 for Leon O. Bailey, Democrat, 567 for W. B. Campbell, Prohibitionist, 235 for Henry U. Kuerst, Socialist Labor, and 2 for W. B." Smith, Populist. FIGHTH DISTRICT. CountTieEs.—Adams, Blackford, Delaware, Jay, Madison, Randolph, and Wells (7 counties). GEORGE WASHINGTON CROMER, Republican, of Muncie, was born May 13, 1856, in Madison County, Ind.; his parents removed with him while quite young into Salem Township, Delaware County, Ind.; was educated in the common schools, in Wittenberg College, of Springfield, Ohio, and in the State University at Bloomington, Ind., from which University he graduated in the year 1882 with the degree of A. B.; after graduating was for a short time editor of the Muncie Times; then read and began the practice of law in 1886; was elected prosecuting attorney of the forty-sixth judicial circuit of Indiana in 1886, reelected in 1888; was member of the State Republican committee from the Sixth Congressional district of Indiana in 1892 and 1894; was elected mayor of Muncie in 1894; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 25,388 votes, to 24,021 for Orlando J. Lotz, Democrat, 397 for James A. Thompson, Populist, and go8 for G. M. Martin, Prohibitionist. ik he NN i I HTS J A a Aa I IPH ASS AS: Dam aes b= 4 INDIANA} Senators and Representatives. 27 NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Boomne, Carroll, Clinton, Fountain, Hamilton, Montgomery, and Tipton (7 counties.) CHARLES B. LANDIS, Republican, of Delphi, was born July 9, 1858, in Millville, Butler County, Ohio ; was educated in the public schools of Logansport, and graduated from Wabash College, at Crawfordsville, Ind., in 1883; served for four years, from 1883 to 1887, as editor of the Logansport (Ind.) Journal, and at the time of his first nomination for Congress was the editor of the Delphi (Ind.) Journal; in 1894 was elected president of the Indiana Republican Editorial Association and reelected in 18095; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 22,447 votes, to 21,357 for Joseph B. Cheadle, Democrat, 327 for George M. Thompson, Populist, and 621 for Frank H. King, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Benton, Jasper, ILake, Iaporte, Newton, Porter, Tippecanoe, Warren, and White (9 counties). EDGAR D. CRUMPACKER, Republican, of Valparaiso, was born May 27, 1851, in Laporte County, Ind.; was educated in the common schools and at the Valparaiso Academy; was admitted to the bar in 1876, and has been in the practice of law at Valparaiso, Ind., since; was prosecuting attorney for the Thirty-first judicial district of Indiana from 1884 to 1888; served as appellate judge in the State of Indiana, by appointment, under Governor Hovey, from March, 1891, to January 1, 1893; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 24,656 votes, to 20,206 for John Ross, Democrat. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Cass, Grant, Howard, Huntington, Miami, and Wabash (6 counties). GEORGE W. STEELE, Republican, of Marion, was born in Indiana; was educated in the common schools and at the Ohio Western University, Delaware, Ohio; read law, was admitted to the bar, and practiced in Hartford City, Ind., from April 11 to 21, 1861, when he enlisted in the Eighth Indiana Regiment, but could not be mustered into this regiment on account of excess in numbers; was mustered into the Twelfth Indiana on May 2, 1861, and served in this regiment and the One hundred and first Indiana until the close of the war—the first year in the Army of the Potomac, the latter three in the Army of the Cumberland and with Sherman to the sea; was mus- tered out as lieutenant-colonel in July, 1865; commissioned and served in the Four- teenth United States Infantry from February 23,1866, to February 1,1876, in California, Arizona, Montana, Nebraska, Wyoming, and Utah; resigned and engaged in farming and pork packing; established the First National Bank of Marion, Ind., and became its president; was the first governor of Oklahoma, and resigned after serving twenty months; is president of the Philadelphia Land Company, and a member of the Board of Managers of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; was a member of the Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty- fifth Congresses, and was reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 24,367 votes, to 20,281 for George W. Michael, Democrat, 1,057 for E. A, McDowell, Pro- hibitionist, and 278 for E. I,. Wilson, Populist. TWELFLH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Allen, Dekalb, I,agrange, Noble, Steuben, and Whitley (6 counties). JAMES M. ROBINSON, Democrat, of Fort Wayne, was born in 1861 on a farm; attended country school and later the public schools in Fort Wayne till he was 15; for several years during his school age was a newsboy; was employed in a shop at 15 and began to keep house with and support his mother, and worked in the shop till 1881; during his employment there he studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1882; in 1886 and 1888 was unanimously nominated for prosecuting attorney and elected; was defeated in 1892 for the Congressional nomination; was unanimously nominated in 1896 and 1898 and elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,484 votes, to 18,044 for Christian B. Stemen, Republican, and 448 for Henry C. Schrader, Prohibitionist. 28 5 Congressional Directory. [INDIANA., i. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—FKlkhart, Fulton, Kosciusko, Marshall, Pulaski, St. Joseph, and Starke (7 counties). ABRAHAM LINCOLN BRICK, Republican, of South Bend, St. Joseph County, was born May 27, 1860, on his father’s farm in Warren Township, St. Joseph County, Ind.; his early life was spent on the farm, his birthplace; later on, burdened by the weight of declining years, his father retired from agricultural life to live in South Bend, and the subject of this sketch went with him and has made South Bend his home ever since; his education was obtained first in the usual course of the common schools; next, he completed the four years’ course of the high school at South Bend, and was graduated from there, after which his education was completed in the uni- | versities of Cornell, Yale, and Ann Arbor; his father died while he was at Yale, and = he, on account of the expense at Yale, finished at Ann Arbor, which was nearer | home, and was graduated from that institution in 1883; began to practice law in South Bend in March, 1883, which has been thie sole and uninterrupted business of his life | ever since; in 1886 he ran on the Republican ticket for prosecuting attorney in the counties of St. Joseph and La Porte, and was elected by 6 majority; these two coun- | ties went about 1,200 Democratic at that election; in 18go he was elected as the com- mitteeman from his district to serve on the Republican State central committee of Indiana, and as such was ex-officio chairman of his district; in 1896 was a delegate to the Republican national convention at St. Louis, which resulted in the nomina- tion of William McKinley for President of the United States; for the last eight or | ten years has been on the faculty of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, in the law department, and holds the degree of LIL. M., conferred upon him by that institution; in 1898 he was nominated on the Republican ticket, and elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 23,368 votes, to 20,886 for M. M. Hathaway, Dem- ocrat, 970 for I. Webb, Prohibitionist, and 217 for J. I. Komer, Populist. IOWA. SENATORS. | JOHN HENRY GEAR, Republican, of Burlington, was born in Ithaca, N. Y., | April 7, 1825; received a common-school education; removed to Galena, Ill., in 1836, to Fort Snelling, Iowa Territory, in 1838, and to Burlington in 1843, where he en- | gaged in merchandising; was elected mayor of the city of Burlington in 1863; was a HH member of the Iowa house of representatives of the Fourteenth, Fifteenth, and | Sixteenth general assemblies of the State, serving as speaker for the last two terms; | was elected governor of Iowa in 1878-79 and again in 1880-81; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses; was beaten for the Fifty-second; was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under President Harrison, and was elected to the Fifty- third Congress; was elected January 23, 1894, a Senator in Congress from the State of Towa for six years, beginning March 4, 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. WILLIAM BOYD ALLISON, Republican, 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 Iowa in 1857; served on the staff of the governor [| of Towa and aided in organizing volunteers in the beginning of the war for the suppression of the rebellion; was elected a Representative in the Thirty-eighth, Thirty- ninth, Fortieth, and Forty-first Congresses, and was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed James Harlan, Republican; took his seat March 4, 1873, and was reelected in 1878, 1884, 1890, and 1896. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. FIRST DISTRICT. | i | | : REPRESENTATIVES. 1 | | CoUNTIES.—Des Moines, Henry, Jefferson, Iee, Louisa, Van Buren, and Washington (7 counties). : THOMAS HEDGE, Republican, of Burlington, was born in the town of Burling- H ton, Territory of Iowa, June 24, 1844; prepared for college at Phillips Academy, il Andover, Mass., graduating in 1861; was graduated from Yale College in 1867 and Ce i\ ® ¥ i IOWA] Senators and Representatives. 29 from Columbia College Taw School, New York, in 1869; served as private in Com- pany E, and as second lieutenant in Company (, One hundred and sixth New York Infantry, in 1864 and 1865; been engaged in the practice of law in Burlington, Iowa, from 1869 to the present time; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,817 votes, to 14,568 for D. J. O’Connell, Democrat, and 456 for J. W. Glasgow, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Clinton, Towa, Jackson, Johnson, Muscatine, and Scott (6 counties). JOE R. LANE, Republican, of Davenport, was born at Davenport, Towa, May 6, 1858; was educated in the common schools of that city and at Knox College, Gales- burg, I11.; studied law at the State University of Towa, and has been in practice at Davenport since June, 1880; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,790 votes, to 17,508 for John J. Ney, Democrat, 260 for Eli Elliott, Prohibitionist, 193 for Allan W. Ricker, Populist, and 396 for J. B. Welzenbach, Socialist Labor. THIRD DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Blackhawk, Bremer, Buchanan, Butler, Delaware, Dubuque, Franklin, Hardin, and Wright (9 counties). DAVID BREMNER HENDERSON, Republican, 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 admitted to the bar in the fall of 1865; was reared on a farm until 21 years of age; enlisted in the Union Army in September, 1861, as private in Company C, Twelfth Regiment Towa 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 26, 1863; in May, 1863, was appointed commis- sioner of the board of enrollment of the Third district of Iowa, serving as such until June, 1864, when he reentered the Army as colonel of the Forty-sixth Regiment Towa Infantry Volunteers and served therein until the close of his term of service; was collector of internal revenue for the Third district of Towa 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 north- ern division of the district of Iowa about two years, resigning in 1871; is now a member of the law firm of Henderson, Hurd, Ienehan & Kiesel; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to’the TFifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,512 votes, to 15,493 for J. H. Howell, Democrat, and 78 for E. J. Dean, Populist. FOURTH DISTRICT. COoUNTIES.—Allamakee, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Clayton, Fayette, Floyd, Howard, Mitchell, ‘Winneshiek, and Worth (10 counties). GILBERT N. HAUGEN, Republican, of Northwood, Worth County, was born April 21, 1859, in Rock County, Wis.; received a common-school education, and at the age of 14 began the career of an active business man, working through the summer and diligently studying during the winter; at the age of 18 purchased a farm in Worth County, continuing his studies in Decorah, Towa, finishing with a business course in the business college at Janesville, Wis.; in connection with farming engaged in the implement business, soon adding hardware, grain, live stock, real estate, and importa- tion of horses; after holding various township offices, was elected treasurer of Worth County in 1887, serving six years; while serving his last term as treasurer was nomi- nated and elected to the Towa legislature, serving in the Twenty-fifth and Twenty- sixth general assemblies, as well as the special session, being honored with important chairmanships and serving on leading committees; in 1890 was one of the organizers of the Northwood Banking Company, operating banking institutions at Northwood and Kensett, of which concern he is now president; has large farming interests as well as large real-estate holdings in Towa, Minnesota, and the Dakotas; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,468 votes, to 13,849 for T.T. Blaise, Fusion- “ist, 462 for Wooding, Prohibitionist, and 117 for Tracy, Populist. 30 Congressional Directory. [IOWA. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Benton, Cedar, Grundy, Jones, Linn, Marshall, and Tama (7 counties). ROBERT G. COUSINS, Republican, of Tipton, was born in Cedar County, Iowa, in 1859; graduated at Cornell, Iowa, in 1881; was admitted to the bar in 1882, and has been engaged in the practice of law since that time; in 1886 was elected to the Iowa legislature, and was elected by the house of representatives as one of the prosecutors for the Brown impeachment, tried before the senate during 1887; in 1888 was elected prosecuting attorney and also Presidential elector for the Fifth Congressional dis- trict; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,335 votes, to 15,970 for I. J. Rowell, Democrat, 719 for J. G. Van Ness, Prohibitionist, 76 for J. W. Whitmer, Populist, and 42 for I. G. Wood, People’s Party. \ SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Davis, Jasper, Keokuk, Mahaska, Monroe, Poweshiek, and Wapello (7 counties). JOHN FLETCHER ILACEY, Republican, of Oskaloosa, was born at New Martins- ville, Va. (now West Virginia), May 30, 1841; removed to Iowa in 1855; received a common-school and academic education; enlisted in Company H, Third Iowa Infantry, in May, 1861, and afterwards served as a private in Company D, Thirty- third Towa Infantry, as sergeant-major, and as lieutenant in Company C of that regi- ment; was promoted to assistant adjutant-general on the staff of Brig. Gen. Samuel A. Rice, and after that officer was killed in battle was assigned to duty on the staff of Maj. Gen. Frederick Steele; served in the Iowa legislature one term, in 1870; was temporary chairman of Iowa Republican convention in 1898; served one term in city council; one term as city solicitor of Oskaloosa; is a lawyer and author of TLacey’s Railway Digest and Lacey’s Iowa Digest; was a member of the Fifty-first, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,738 votes, to 18,267 for Gen. James B. Weaver, Fusionist, 294 for I,. M. Morris, Middle-of-the-Road Populist, and 518 for Robert I, Turner, Prohibitionist. ! SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIiES.—Dallas, Madison, Marion, Polk, Story, and Warren (6 counties). JOHN A. T. HULL, Republican, of Des Moines, was born at Sabina, Clinton County, Ohio, May 1, 1841; removed with his parents to Iowa in 1849; was educated in public schools, Asbury (Ind.) University, and Iowa Wesleyan College, at Mount Pleas- ant; was graduated from the Cincinnati (Ohio) Law School in the spring of 1862; enlisted in the Twenty-third Iowa Infantry July, 1862; was first lieutenant and captain; was wounded in the charge on intrenchments at Black River May 17, 1863; resigned on account of wounds, October, 1863; was elected secretary of the Iowa State senate in 1872 and reelected in 1874, 1876, and 1878; was elected secretary of state in 1878 and reelected in 1880 and 1882; was elected lieutenant-governor in 1885 and reelected in 1887; is engaged in farming and banking; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty- third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fiftth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 19,913 votes, to 12,261 for C. O. Holly, Democrat, 892 for T. G. Orwig, Prohibitionist, and 501 for C. M. Iams, Populist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Adams, Appanoose, Clarke, Decatur, Fremont, Lucas, Page, Ringgold, Taylor, Union, and Wayne (11 counties). WILLIAM PETERS HEPBURN, Republican, of Clarinda, was born November 4, 1833, at Wellsville, Columbiana County, Ohio; was taken to Iowa (then a Territory) in April, 1841; was educated in the schools of the Territory and in a printing office; was admitted to practice law in 1854; served in the Second Iowa Cavalry as captain, major, and lieutenant-colonel during ,the war of the rebellion; was a delegate from Towa to the Republican national conventions of 1860, 1888, and 1896; was a Presiden- tial elector at large from the State of Towa in 1876 and in 1888; served as Solicitor, of the Treasury during the Administration of President Benjamin Harrison; was elected 5 IOWA.] Senators and Representatives. 31 to the Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty- fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,327 votes, to 18,503 for George 1,. Finn, Fusionist; 817 for C. L. Parsons, Prohibitionist, and 402 for D. C. Cowles, Middle-of-the-Road Populist. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Adair, Audubon, Cass, Guthrie, Harrison, Mills, Montgomery, Pottawattamie, and Shelby (9 counties). - SMITH McPHERSON, Republican, of Red Oak, Montgomery County, was born near Mooresville, Morgan County, Ind., February 14, 1848; received a common- school and academical education; worked on a farm until he attained his majority; attended law school at Iowa State University, at Towa City, from which he graduated in June, 1870; has been in the general practice of Taw at Red Oak, Iowa, since 1870, excepting when filling the offices of district attorney of the Third Iowa judicial dis- trict, from August, 1874, to December, 1880, and that of attorney-general of Iowa, from January, 1881, to January, 1885; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,976 votes, to 17,484 for James A. Lyon, Democrat, 296 for Luke McDowell, People’s Party, and 378 for S. M. Blackman, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Boone, Calhoun, Carroll, Crawford, Emmet, Greene, Hamilton, Hancock, Humboldt, Kossuth, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Webster, and Winnebago (14 counties). JONATHAN PRENTISS DOLLIVER, Republican, of Fort Dodge, was born near Kingwood, Preston County, Va. (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 elected to the Fifty- second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 25,180 votes, to 17,777 for Edwin Anderson, Democrat- Fusionist; 613 for P. J. Shaw, Prohibitionist, and 155 for A. Novelius, Populist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Ida, Lyon, Monona, O’Brien, Osceola, Plym- outh, Sac, Sioux, and Woodbury (13 counties). 1,OT THOMAS, Republican, of Storm Lake, was born on the 17th of October, 1843, on a farm in Fayette County, Pa.; remained on the farm until August, 1864, attending district school during the winter, when he entered Vermillion Institute at Hayesville, Ohio; remained in that institution until the fall of 1868, when he came to Towa and taught school a couple terms at New Virginia, Warren County. During this time he purchased some law hooks and spent his spare time in reading law, and on the 1st of January, 1870, entered the law department of the Iowa State University, at Towa City; remained in that institution two terms, and in August of that year came to Buena Vista County and located at Storm Take for the practice of the law, having been admitted to the bar while in Iowa City. He continued in the practice until January, 1885, when he went on the bench of the Fourteenth judicial district of Towa, having been elected to that position at the November election pre- vious thereto. By successive reelections he continued on the district bench until the 26th day of August, 1898, when he resigned to accept the Republican nomina- tion for Representative in Congress, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,400 votes, to 16,117 for A. S. Garretson, Fusionist, 723 for J. M. Hoffman, Prohibitionist, and 353 for J. O. McElroy, People’s Party. KANSAS. SENATORS. LUCIEN BAKER, Republican, of Ieavenworth, was born in Ohio in 1846, and shortly thereafter removed with his parents fo Michigan; in 1869 he removed to Kansas and settled in Ieavenworth, where he has since resided, engaged in the prac- tice of law; was elected to the United States Senate in 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. : 32 Congressional Directory, [KANSAS. WILLIAM A. HARRIS, Populist, of Linwood, Leavenworth County, was born in Loudoun County, Va., October 29,1841, his home being in Luray, Va., where he attended school ; graduated at Columbian College, Washington, D. C., in 1859, and at the Vir- ginia Military Institute in 1861 ; served three years in the Confederate army as assistant adjutant-general of Wilcox’s brigade and ordnance officer of D. H. Hill’sand Rodes’s divisions, Army of Northern Virginia; removed to Kansas in 1865 and was employed as civil engineer in the construction of the Union Pacific Railroad, Kansas Division, for three years; in 1868 accepted the agency for the sale of the Delaware Reservation and other lands, in connection with farming and stock raising ; since 1876 has been a . farmer and breeder of pure-bred shorthorn cattle; was elected to the Fifty-third Con- gress, at large, as a Populist, and indorsed by the Democrats; was renominated for the Fifty-fourth Congress, but was defeated at the election; elected to the State senate November, 1896, and was elected in January, 1897, to the United States Senate and took his seat March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE. WILLIS J. BAILEY, Republican, of Baileyville, was born October 12, 1854, in Carroll County, Ill.; was educated in the common schools, the Mount Carroll High School, and the University of Illinois, at Champaign; moved with his father to Nemaha County, Kans., in 1879, and engaged in farming and stock raising; is unmarried; has always been an active, working Republican; was elected a member of the Kansas State board of agriculture, serving two terms, from 1895 to 1899; was elected to the Kansas legislature from Nemaha County in 1888; was nominated by his party again in 18go, but was defeated by the tidal wave of Populism that swept over Kansas that year; was elected president of the Republican State League in 1893; was a leading candidate for Congressnfan from the First Kansas district in 1896 and 1898, but in the interest of Republican harmony sacrificed his personal ambition in both conventions; defeated Richard W. Blue for the nomination for Congressman- at-large before the Republican State convention at Hutchinson in June, 1898, and on the 8th day of November following was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 147,691 votes, to 130,801 for J. D. Botkin, Fusionist; 2,021 for Mont. Williams, Prohibitionist, and 630 for F. FE. Miller, Socialist. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Atchison, Brown, Doniphan, Jackson, Jefferson, Ieavenworth, Nemaha, and Shaw- nee (8 counties). CHARLES CURTIS, Republican, of Topeka, was born in what is known as North Topeka, Shawnee County, Kans., January 25, 1860; received his education in the com- mon schools of the city of Topeka; studied law with A. H. Case, esq., at Topeka; was admitted to the bar in 1881; entered into a partnership with Mr. Case in 1881 and remained with him until 1884; was elected county attorney of Shawnee County in 1884 and reelected in 1886; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty- fifth Congresses from the Fourth Kansas district. In 1897 Shawnee County was taken out of the Fourth districtand placed in the First district; Mr. Curtis was nom- inated by the Republicans of the First district, and elected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 23,809 votes, to 16,183 for W. W. Price, Fusionist. SECOND DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Douglas, Franklin, Johnson, Linn, Miami, and Wyandotte (9 counties). : JUSTIN DE WITT BOWERSOCK, Republican, of Lawrence, was born in Colum- biana County, Ohio, September 19, 1842; was married in 1866 to Miss Mary Gower, at Towa City, Iowa; moved from Iowa City to Lawrence, Kans., in 1877; built the dam across the Kansas River and entered upon the business of manufacturing and banking; is president of Lawrence National Bank, Kansas Water Power Company, Bowersock Milling Company (flour), Lawrence Gas and Electric Light Company, Griffin Ice Company, Lawrence Iron Works, and vice-president Consolidated Barb Wire Company; was twice elected mayor of Lawrence; served in the Kansas house of representatives in 1877; State senate in 1895, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,029 votes, to 19,024 for M. S. Peters, Fusionist. Mr. Bowersock has six children, two boys and four girls. The sons are both lawyers, graduates of the University of Kansas and of Harvard. - | i 1 " KANSAS. ] Senators and Representatives. 33 THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Chautauqua, Cherokee, Cowley, Crawford, Elk, Labette, Montgomery, Neosho, and Wilson (9 counties). EDWIN REED RIDGELY, Populist, of Pittsburg, Crawford County, was born May 9, 1844, in a log cabin on his parents’ timber farm near Tancaster, Wabash County, I1l.; education was acquired in the local district school during the winter months; during his early life his time was devoted to farm labor; early in 1862, at the age of 18, enlisted as a private in Company C, One hundred and fifteenth Illi- nois Volunteer Infantry; served continuously to the end of the war; in 1869, in com- pany with his brother, Stephen S. Ridgely, moved to Girard, Kans., where they engaged in general merchandising under the firm name of Ridgely Bros., and have con- ducted this business almost continuously since; in the early seventies he engaged in the Texas cattle trade, personally sharing in and directing the gathering of cattle on the range and driving them to the Kansas markets; subsequently he extended his cat- tle operations to the Pacific coast, including Washington Territory, Oregon, and Cali- fornia; lived in Ogden, Utah, from 1889 to 1893; his first vote was cast for U. S. Grant in 1868; quit the Republican party in 1876 because of its financial policy; has continuously from that date advocated the exclusive issue of all money by the Gov- ernment by using all the gold and silver offered as material on which to print the money power, supplementing these with paper to regulate and control the total volume; that no money should be a promise to pay, to be redeemed by some other money, but all money should be full legal tender, the volume to be limited and its value kept uniform by keeping the volume up to a fixed ratio to the volume of all property ih the nation; is an earnest advocate of public ownership and operation of all public utilities, and thinks it both a necessity and duty of the state to supply all unem- ployed people voluntary access to all the necessary means of production and distribu- tion among themselves of food, fuel, clothing, shelter, and education; that all such labor above these needs should be utilized by the state in creating public improvements. I'o meet demands for revenue, also to undo and prevent the dangerous centralization of wealth in the hands of a few people, he advocates a graduated property and income tax; was nominated by the People’s and Democratic parties and elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,739 votes, to 20,589 for S.'S. Kirkpatrick, Republican. ! FOURTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Butler, Chase, Coffey, Greenwood, Iyon, Marion, Morris, Osage, Pottawatomie, Wabaun- see, and Woodson (11 counties). JAMES MONROE MILLER, Republican, of Council Grove, was born at Three Springs, Huntingdon County, Pa.; educated at Dickinson Seminary, Williamsport, Pa.; is a lawyer; was elected county attorney of Morris County, Kans., in 1880 for a term of two years, and reelected in 1884 and 1886; was elected a member of the Kan- sas legislature in 1894, and also a Republican Presidential elector for Kansas in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,312 votes, to 17,410 for Hender- son S. Martin, Fusionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Clay, Cloud, Dickinson, Geary, Marshall, Ottawa, Republic, Riley, Saline, and Wash- ington (10 counties). WILLIAM A. CALDERHEAD, Republican, of Marysville, was born in Perry County, Ohio, September 26, 1844; received his education in the common schools and from his father, Rev. KE. B. Calderhead, a minister of the United Presbyterian Church; spent the winter of 1861-62 in the preparatory department of Franklin College, New Athens, Ohio; enlisted in August, 1862, as a private in Company H, One hundred and twenty-sixth Ohio Infantry; was transferred to Company D, Ninth Veteran Reserves, for disability incurred in the service, and discharged June 27, 1865; spent two years recovering health, then one session at school; went to Kansas in the fall of 1868 and engaged in farming; in 1872 settled on a homestead near Newton, Harvey County, Kans.; taught school one year in Newton; read law in the office of Hon. J. W. Ady, and was admitted before Hon.-S. R. Peters, in 1875; went to Atchi- son, Kans., during that year and spent four years there reading law and teaching country schoofs during the winters; settled in Marysville in November, 1879, and engaged in the general practice of law; was elected county attorney in the fall of 34 Congressional Directory. [KANSAS. 1888 and served two years; was for several years clerk of the board of education of the city; was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress; was renominated by acclamation in 1896 for the Fifty-fifth Congress, and received 19,101 votes, to 19,735 votes for his opponent, the Fusion Populist-Democrat candidate; was renominated for the third time by acclamation in the same district in 1898, and elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,991 votes, to 16,508 for William D. Vincent, Fusionist. SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Cheyenne, Decatur, Ellis, Ellsworth, Gove, Graham, Jewell, Lincoln, I,ogan, Mitchell, Norton, Osborne, Phillips, Rawlins, Rooks, Russell, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Thomas, T'rego, and Wallace (22 counties). WILLIAM AUGUSTUS REEDER, Republican, of Logan, Phillips County, was born August 28, 1849, in Cumberland County, Pa.; when 4 years of age emigrated with his parents to Ipava, Fulton County, I11., where, at the age of 14 years, he began teach- ing in the public schools, a vocation he followed until 33 years of age, the last ten years of his work being in Kansas, where he was principal of the Beloit public schools; during his residence at Beloit was married to Miss Eunice H. Andrews, and shortly after the date of their marriage, August'18, 1876, engaged in the banking busi- ness in the city of Logan, Kans., where he at present resides; in 189o, in partnership with A. H. Ellis and J. J. Wiltrout, purchased an extensive tract of land on the Solo- mon River and established the largest irrigation farm in the State of Kansas, which is now operated as a cattle and hog ranch; in 1898 was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,831 votes, to 14,731 for N. B. McCormick, Populist, and 2,333 for W. G. Hoffer, Democrat. . SEVENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Barber, Barton, Clark, Comanche, Edwards, Finney, Ford, Grant, Gray, Greeley, Hamilton, Harper, Harvey, Haskell, Hodgeman, Kearney, Kingman, Kiowa, Lane, McPher- son, Meade, Morton, Ness, Pawnee, Pratt, Reno, Rice, Rush, Scott, Seward, Sedgwick, Stafford, Stanton, Stevens, Sumner, and Wichita (36 counties). CHESTER I. LONG, Republican, of Medicine Lodge, was born in Perry County, Pa., October 12, 1860; removed with his parents to Daviess County, Mo., in 1865, where he resided until 1879, when he removed to Paola, Kans.; received an academic education; studied law and was admitted to the bar March 4, 1885, and located at Medicine I,odge, where he has since resided, engaged in the practice of his pro- fession; was elected to the State senate in 1889; was elected to the Fifty-fourth Con- gress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 26,662 votes, to 24,834 for Jerry Simpson, Fusionist. KENTUCKY. SENATORS. WILIIAM IINDSAY, Democrat, of Frankfort, was born in Rockbridge County, Va., September 4, 1835; settled in Clinton, Hickman County, Ky., in November, 1854; com- menced the practice of law in 1858; served in the Confederate army continuously from July, 1861, till May, 1865; was paroled as prisoner of war at Columbus, Miss., May 16, 1865; resumed the practice of law in Hickman County, Ky., in the autumn of 1865; was elected State senator for the Hickman district in August, 1867; was elected judge of the Kentucky court of appeals in August, 1870, and served till September, 1878; from September, 1876, until September, 1878, was chief justice of the court; has prac- ticed law in Frankfort, Ky., since September, 1878; was elected State senator for the Frankfort district in August, 1889; was appointed and served as a member of the World’s Columbian Commission for the country at large from the organization of the commission until February 20, 1893; was appointed and confirmed as member of the Interstate Commerce Commission in January, 1892, but declined to accept the appointment; was elected United States Senator on February 14, 1893, to fill the _ vacancy caused by the resignation of John G. Carlisle, and was reelected in January, 1894, for the full term commencing March 4, 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. WILLIAM J. DEBOE, Republican, of Marion,was born in Crittenden County, Ky., in 1849; his father was a Baptist minister and came to Kentucky front Virginia; his great-grandfather served seven years in the Revolutionary war; received his education \ = H i i | ! EnNTvcEy] Senators and Representatives. 35 in ‘the public and academic schools of the State, and Hwing College, Illinois; studied law in early life, but afterwards studied medicine and graduated from the Med- ical University of Louisville, and practiced a few years until his health failed; he then renewed the study of the law and was admitted to the bar; has always been a Repub- lican, and was superintendent of schools of Crittenden County; in 1888 was a dele- gate to the Chicago convention which nominated General Harrison; has been a member of the Republican State central committee seven years; made the race for Congress in 1892, and in 1893 was elected to the State senate; in 1896 was a. dele- gate from the State at large to the St. Louis convention, and chairman of the delegation; when the Republicans carried the legislature he entered the race for United States Senator, but withdrew in favor of W. G. Hunter, who failed to be elected at that session; in 1896 he again entered the race for Senator, and again withdrew in the interest of Hunter, who failed of an election, and who himself with- drew, when Deboe was nominated and elected after one of the most sensational and memorable sessions of the legislature of the State. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Carlisle, Crittenden, Fulton,Graves, Hickman, Livingston, I,yon, Marshall, McCracken, and Trigg (13 counties). CHARLES KENNEDY WHEELER, Democrat, of Paducah,was born in Christian County, Ky., about 5 miles from Hopkinsville, on a farm, April 18, 1863; worked on the farm during the summer and attended neighborhood schools until the age of 13; matriculated at the Southwestern University, of Clarksville, Tenn., and graduated from that institution in the winter of 1879, and graduated from the Lebanon Law School, of Lebanon, T'enn., in the summer of 1880; located at Paducah, Ky., his present residence, in August, 1880, and has since that date been engaged in the active practice of his profession; has never held any office except the position of corporation counsel for the city of Paducah, Ky., for the years 1894 and 1895; was Democratic elector for the First Congressional district of Kentucky in 1892, and was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 10,580 votes, to 5,036 for G. W. Reeves, Fusionist. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Christian, Daviess, Hancock, Henderson, Hopkins, McIean, Union, and Webster (8 counties). HENRY D. ALLEN, Democrat, of Morganfield, Union County, was born in Henderson County, Ky., June 24, 1854; removed with his parents to Union County in 1855, where he has ever since resided; was reared on a farm and educated in the common schools and at Morganfield Collegiate Institute; taught for five years in the public schools of Union County; was admitted to the bar in July, 1878; served as common-school commissioner for three years; was then elected county attorney, and served in that capacity for nine years; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 8,939 votes, to 4,463 for W. T. Fowler, Republican, 1,641 for George W. Jolly, Independent Republican, and 569 for Samuel James, Populist. THIRD DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Allen, Barren, Butler, Edmonson, I,ogan, Metcalfe, Muhlenberg, Simpson, Todd, and Warren (10 counties). JOHN S. RHEA, Democrat, of Russellville, was born in Russellville, Logan County, Ky., March 9, 1855; educated at Bethel College, Russellville, Ky., and Washington and Iee University, Lexington, Va.; licensed to practice law in the fall of 1873, and has been in constant practice since; was elected prosecuting attorney for Logan County in 1878, and again elected in 1882; was elected Presidential elector on the Democratic ticket in 1884 for the Third district of Kentucky, and elector for the State at large in 1888; was a delegate from the Third district to the Democratic national convention in 1892; was delegate from the State at large to the Democratic national convention in 1896, and put the name of Senator J. C. S. Blackburn in 56—-1ST—2D ED—4 Congressional Directory. [KENTUCKY. nomination before the convention for President; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Con- gress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving the support of the Popu- lists, receiving 14,771 votes, to 11,748 for M. P. Creel, Republican, and 394 for J. S. Dorsey, Populist. 3 FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Breckinridge, Bullitt, Grayson, Green, Hardin, Hart, Tarue, Marion, Meade, Nelson, Ohio, Taylor, and Washington (13 counties). DAVID HIGHBAUGH SMITH, Democrat, of Hodgensville, Larue County, Ky., was born December 19, 1854, in Hart County, Ky., near Hammonville; was educated in the public schools of that vicinity and at the colleges at Horse Cave, Leitchfield, and Hartford, all in Kentucky; has been practicing law since March, 1876; was elected county attorney for Larue County at the August election, 1878, for the term of four years; was elected superintendent of common schools for Larue County in Octo- ber, 1878; resigned the office of county attorney in August, 1881, and at the August, 1881, election was elected to represent Larue County in the house of representatives of the general assembly for two years; at the August, 1885, election was elected to represent the Thirteenth senatorial district, composed of the counties of Green, Hart, and Larue, in the State senate for the term of four years; reelected at the August, 1889, election for four years; while in the State senate was chairman of general statutes committee and member of committees on rules and judiciary; the new con- stitution, adopted by the State in 1891, created the office of president pro tempore of the senate; at the first meeting of the senate thereafter was chosen nnanimously by the Democratic members for that position, and was elected for the term of two years, at the end of which term he was again the unanimous choice of the Democrats for the place, and was again elected for a second term of two years; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,696 votes, to 12,826 for Charles M. Blandford, Republican, and 689 for R. H. Mullen, Populist. IFIFEIH DISTRICT. County.—Jefferson. OSCAR TURNER, Democrat, of Jefferson County, was born at Woodlands, his father’s plantation, in Ballard County, Ky., October 19, 1867; attended the common schools of the neighborhood till some time after his father was elected to Congress, when he came to Washington and attended the public schools for two or three ses- sions; then returned to Kentucky, where he attended the Louisville Rugby School for three or four years, while his father reinained in Congress; studied law at the University of Louisville and the University of Virginia, receiving his degree when 19 years old; traveled very extensively, and began the practice of law in 1891 at Louis- ville, Ky., in which profession he was engaged when elected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 14,770 votes, to 14,202 for Walter Evans, Republican, 421 for J. H. Hambrick, Independent Republican, and 394 for A. Schmutz, Socialist Labor. SIXTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Pendleton, and Trimble (8 coun- ties). ALBERT SEATON BERRY, Democrat, of Newport, was born in Campbell County, Ky.; educated at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio; attended Cincinnati Law School; served two terms in the State senate and five terms as mayor of Newport; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 13,136 votes, to 8,962 for J. M. Donaldson, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Bourbon, Fayette, Franklin, Henry, Oldham, Owen, Scott, and Woodford (8 counties). JUNE W. GAYLE, Democrat, of Owenton, was born at New Liberty, Owen County, Ky., February 22, 1865; received his early education at Concord College, New Liberty, Ky., afterwards finishing his course at Georgetown College, George- town, Ky.; served as deputy sheriff for several years, and in 1892 was elected high sheriff of Owen County; reelected in 1894, and in 1899 was a prominent candidate for auditor of State; upon the death of Hon. E. E. Settle became a candidate for Con- gress to fill Settle’s unexpired term, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress at the special election December 18, 1899, receiving 14,637 votes to 10,501 for W. C. Owens, Fusion, KENTUCKY.] Senators and Representatives. : 37 EIGHTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Anderson, Boyle, Garrard, Jessamine, Lincoln, Madison, Mercer, Rockeastle, Shelby, and Spencer (10 counties). GEORGE GILMORE GILBERT, Democrat, of Shelbyville, was born in Spencer County, Ky., December 24, 1849; was educated in the common schools of the neighborhood until 18 years of age; went to Cecilian College in 1868 and 1869; after- wards studied the Latin, Greek, and French languages at ILyndland Institute, in Kentucky; taught school for several years and studied law at the same time; attended University of Louisville and graduated from the law department in 1873; began practicing law in Taylorsville, Ky., in 1874, and has been an active, busy lawyer ever since; was elected county attorney of Spencer County in 1876 and held that office for four years; was elected to the State senate from the counties of Shelby, Spencer, and Nelson in 1885, and held that position for four years; was made chairman of the judiciary committee of the Kentucky senate in 1887; was a delegate from the Eighth Congressional district of Kentucky to the Democratic national convention held at Chicago in 1896, and was Kentucky’s representative on the committee on perma- nent organization at that convention; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 13,047 votes, to 12,206 for George M. Davidson, Republican, and 435 for W. H. Ziegler, Independent. NINTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bath, Boyd, Bracken, Carter, Fleming, Greenup, Harrison, Lawrence, Lewis, Mason, Nicholas, Robertson, and Rowan (13 counties). SAMUEL JOHNSON PUGH, Republican, of Vanceburg, was born in Greenup County, Ky., January 28, 1850; resided in Lewis County since 1852; was educated at Chandler’s Select School, Rand’s Academy, and Centre College, Danville, Ky.; has been practicing law since 1872, and has held successively the offices of city attorney, 1872-73; master commissioner of the circuit court, 1874-1880; county attorney, 1878- 1886; county judge, 1886-1890; delegate to the Kentucky constitutional convention, 1890-91, and State senator, 1893-94; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,742 votes, to 16,732 for Mordecai Williams, Democrat. TENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Breathitt, Clark, Elliott, Estill, Floyd, Johnson, Knott, I,ee, Martin, Magoffin, Menifee, Montgomery, Morgan, Pike, Powell, and Wolfe (16 counties). THOMAS YOUNG FITZPATRICK, Democrat, of Prestonburg, was born in Floyd County, Ky., September 20, 1850; was educated in the common schools; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1877; has filled the positions of circuit and county court clerk, county judge, county attorney, and representative in the State legislature; was Democratic elector in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 13,456 votes, to 11,406 for W, J. Seitz, Republican. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Adair, Bell, Casey, Clay, Clinton, Harlan, Jackson, Knox, Laurel, Ietcher, I eslie, Metcalfe, Owsley, Perry, Pulaski, Russell, Wayne, and Whitley (18 counties). VINCENT BOREING, Republican, of London, Laurel County, was born Novem- ber 24, 1839, in Washington County, Tenn.; removed with his father, Murry Bore- ing, to Laurel County, Ky., in 1847; was educated at Laurel Seminary, London, Ky., and Tusculum College, Greenville, Tenn.; volunteered in the Union Army, in Com- pany A, Twenty-fourth Kentucky Volunteer Infantry, November 1, 1861, as private soldier; on account of meritorious conduct was commissioned first lieutenant from the ranks by Governor Bramlett, of Kentucky; was severely wounded in the battle of Resaca, Ga., May 14, 1863; elected county superintendent of public schools in 1868, and reelected in 1870; founded (as editor and publisher) the Mountain Echo, at London, Ky., in 1875, the first Republican newspaper published in southeastern Kentucky, now the oldest local Republican paper published in the State; was elected county judge in 1886, president of the Cumberland Valley Tand Company in 1887, and president of the First National Bank of Ioondon, Ky., in 1888—the latter two positions he still holds; represented the Kentucky conference as a lay delegate in the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church at Cincinnati, Ohio, in 38 Congressional Directory. [KENTUCKY. 1880, and in 1896 at Cleveland, Ohio; was department commander of the Depart- ment of Kentucky, Grand Army of the Republic, in 1889; was elected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 15,706 votes, to 11,244 for J. D. White, Independent Repub- lican, 122 for A. J. Bowman, Populist, and 3,319 for H. H. Tye, Democrat. LOUISIANA. SENATORS. DONELSON CAFFERY, Democrat, of Franklin, St. Mary Parish, was born in the parish of St. Mary, La., September 10, 1835; was educated at St. Mary’s College, Maryland; studied law in Louisiana and was admitted to the bar; served in the Con- federate army, first in the Thirteenth Louisiana Regiment and subsequently on the staff of Gen. W.W.Walker; practiced law and engaged in sugar planting after the war; was a member of the constitutional convention of 1879; was elected to the State senate in 1892; was appointed United States Senator to succeed Randall Lee Gibson, deceased, and took his seat January 7, 1893. He was elected by the legislature in 1894 to fill out the term of Randall Lee Gibson, which expired March 4, 1895, and also to succeed himself for the long term, expiring March 4, 1901. SAMUEL DOUGLAS McENERY, Democrat, of New Orleans, was born at Monroe, La., May 28, 1837; was educated at Spring Hill College, near Mobile, Ala., the United States Naval Academy, and the University of Virginia; graduated from State and National Law School, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; served in the Confederate army, in the war between the States, as lieutenant, inVirginia, under Magruder, and in the Trans- Mississippi Department; is a lawyer by profession; was nominated by the Democratic party and elected lieutenant-governor, with L. A. Wiltz as governor, in 1879; on the death of Governor Wiltz, October, 1881, succeeded him in the executive office; was nominated by the Democratic party for governor and elected in 1884; was a candi- date for renomination and was defeated by Gen. Francis T. Nicholls for the nomina- tion; General Nicholls was elected in 1888 and appointed his opponent, S. D. Mc- Enery, to be associate justice of the supreme court in 1888 for the term of twelve years; was nominated by the Democratic party in 1892 for governor and defeated by the Anti-Lottery party; was nominated by Democratic caucus for Senator at the ses- sion of the legislature in 1896, and elected to the Senate, to succeed the Hon. N. C. Blanchard, May 28, 1896; Walter Denegre, of New Orleans, was his opponent, sup- ported by Republicans, Populists, and a faction from the Democratic party known as the Citizens’ League. The vote was as follows: S. DD. McEnery—senate, 20; house, 48; total, 68; against—senate, 16; house, 50; total, 66, for Walter Denegre. This was the vote as originally called, but before it was announced 1 vote changed from McEnery to Denegre and 2 votes from Denegre to McEnery, making the vote stand, McEnery, 70; Denegre, 64; took his seat March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CITY OF NEW ORLEANS.—Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Kighth, Ninth, and Fifteenth wards. PARISHES.—Orleans, St. Bernard, and Plaquemines, extending from Julia street, in the city of New Orleans, to the Gulf of Mexico. ADOLPH MEYER, Democrat, of New Orleans, was born October 19, 1842; was a student at the University of Virginia until 1862, during which year he entered the Confederate army and served until the close of the war on the staff of Brig. Gen. John S. Williams, of Kentucky, holding finally the position of assistant adjutant-general,; at the close of the war returned to Louisiana, and has been engaged largely in the culture of cotton and sugar since; has also been engaged in commercial and financial pursuits in the city of New Orleans; was elected colonel of the First Regiment of I,ouisiana State National Guard in 1879, and in 1881 was appointed brigadier-general to command the First Brigade, embracing all the uniformed corps of the State; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 5,422 votes, to 806 for W. C. Keating, Republican. pe | . LOUISIANA] Senators and Representatives. 39 SECOND DISTRICT. ° City oF NEW ORLEANS.—First, Second, Tenth, Eleventh, ‘Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth wards. Parisues.—Jefferson, St. Charles, St. James, and St. John the Baptist. ROBERT C. DAVEY, Democrat, of New Orleans, was born in that city Octo- ber 22, 1853; received his early education in the schools of his native city; entered St. Vincent's College, Cape Girardeau, Mo., in 1869, and graduated in 1871; waselected a member of the State senate December, 1879, and reelected April, 1884, and again elected in April, 1892; was president pro tempore of the senate during the sessions of 1884 and 1886; was elected judge of the first recorder’s court November, 1880, reelected November, 1882, reelected April, 1884, and served until May, 1888; was defeated for mayor of the city of New Orleans in April, 1888; was elected to the Fifty-third Congress, positively declined renomination for the Fifty-fourth Congress, was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 6,802 votes, to 974 for Frank N. Wickes, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. PARISHES.—Ascension, Assumption, Calcasieu, Cameron, Iberia, Iberville, Lafayette, Lafourche, St. Martin, St. Mary, Terrebonne, and Vermilion (12 parishes). ROBERT F. BROUSSARD, Democrat, of New Iberia, was born August 17, 1864, near New Iberia, parish of Iberia, La.; attended various public and private schools, and in 1879 entered Georgetown University, West Washington, D. C., where he remained until 1882; was appointed inspector of customs December 27, 1885, at the port of New Orleans, and, upon passing civil-service examination, was promoted to assistant weigher, and subsequently to export statistician at that port; during the time he was in the Government service he entered the law school of Tulane Univer- sity, of Louisiana, at New Orleans, and graduated in 1889; immediately after the appointment of H. C. Warmouth as collector of the port of New Orleans under Har- rison’s Administration, he tendered his resignation as statistician and moved to New Iberia, where he commenced the practice of law, in partnership with T. Donelson Foster, under the firm name of Foster & Broussard, and is still a member of that firm; shortly after locating in New Iberia was elected a member of the Democratic parish executive committee, the Democratic Congressional executive committee of the Third district, and the Democratic State central executive committee, which latter position he still holds; in 1890 took active part in the controversy over the lottery question on the Anti-Lottery side, and canvassed the State in that memorable campaign, which resulted in the destruction of the Louisiana State Lottery Company; became the nominee of the Anti-Lottery wing of the Democratic party for the district attorneyship of the nineteenth judicial district of Louisiana, to which position he was elected at the State election of 1892, he being the only one of that wing of the Democratic party elected in the district at that election; in 1894 was unanimously renominated to the same position by the Democratic party and reelected at the election of that year; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, being unanimously renominated by the Democratic convention of hjs district, and receiv- ing 4,929 votes, to 974 for Charles Fontelieu, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. PARISHES.—Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, De Soto, Grant, Natchitoches, Rapides, Red River, Sabine, Vernon, Webster, and Winn (12 parishes). PHANOR BREAZFEATLE, Democrat, of Natchitoches, was born in Natchitoches Parish, La., December 29, 1858; lived on a plantation, attending private school until the age of 14; removed to the town of Natchitoches, La., in 1877; clerked in a dry- goods store for two years; studied law in Col. W. H. Jack’s office for sixteen months; then secured a clerkship in the supreme court of the State, and attended law lectures at Tulane University; received his diploma as a lawyer in 1881; returned to Natchi- toches and entered into the practice of law as a member of the firm of Chaplin, Breazeale & Chaplin; edited a newspaper in that town for two years; was president of the school board of his parish for four years; was elected district attorney of the Tenth judicial district in 1892, and was reelected in 1896 without opposition; was a member of the constitutional convention of 1898, and took a leading part in fram- 40 Congressional Directory. [LOUISIANA, ing the judiciary and railroad commission ordinances; received the nomination of the Democratic party for Congress, after a spirited contest in two primaries, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 4,524 votes, to 1,478 for Hardy IL. Brian, Populist. FIFTH DISTRICT. PArIsHES.—Caldwell, Catahoula, Claiborne, Concordia, Fast Carroll, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, West Carroll, and Union (15 parishes). JOSEPH E. RANSDELIL,, Democrat, of Lake Providence, was born in Alexandria, A a., on October 7, 1858, of John H. Ransdell and Amanda Terrell; received his early education in the public schools of Alexandria and graduated at Union College, Schenectady, N. VY., in June, 1882; was admitted to the bar in June, 1883, and has been engaged in the active practice of his profession since; was elected district attorney of the Fighth judicial district of Louisiana in April, 1884, which place he held for twelve years; was a member of the levee board of the Fifth Louisiana levee district from May, 1896, until after his election to Congress on August 29 last; was a prominent member of the State constitutional convention of Louisiana, in the spring of 1898, which framed a new constitution for the State; is interested in cotton planting as well as law, and has taken a most active interest in levee building on the Mississippi River for many years; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress to fill the unexpired term of Hon. S. T. Baird, who died on April 22, 1899, receiving 3,282 votes, to 1,046 for A. T. Nelson, Populist. SIXTH DISTRICT. PARISHES.—Acadia, Avoyelles, Fast Baton Rouge, Hast Feliciana, Iivingston, Pointe Coupee, St. Helena, St. Landry, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, West Baton Rouge, West Feliciana, and Washington (13 parishes). SAMUEL MATTHEWS ROBERTSON, Democrat, of Baton Rouge, was born in the town of Plaquemine, La., January 1, 1852; received his preparatory education in the Collegiate Institute of Baton Rouge; was graduated from the Louisiana State Uni- versity in 1874; completed a course of law study and was admitted to practice in 1877; was elected a member of the State legislature from the parish of Fast 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 Mechanical College; 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, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and unanimously reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 2,494 votes. MAINE. SENATORS. WILLIAM PIERCE FRYE, Republican, of Lewiston, was born at Lewiston, Me., September 2, 1831; graduated at Bowdoin College, Maine, 1850; studied and practiced law; was a member of the State legislaturein 1861, 1862, and 1867; was mayor of the city of Lewiston in 1866 and 1867; was attorney-general of the State of Maine in 1867, 1868, and 1869; was elected a member of the national Republican executive committee in 1872 and reelected in 1876 and 1880; was elected a trustee of Bowdoin College in June, 1880, received the degree of LI. 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, 1876, and 1880; 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 Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of James G. Blaine, appointed Secretary of State; took his seat March 18, 1881; was reelected in 1883, in 1888, and again in 1895, receiving every vote, with one exception, in both branches of the legislature, at the latter election; was elected President pro tempore of the Senate February 7, 1896; was a member of the commission which met in Paris September, 1898, to adjust terms of peace between the United States and Spain. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. ~ a i | MAINE. ] Senators and Representatives. 41 EUGENE HALE, Republican, of Ellsworth, was born at Turner, Oxford County, Me., June 9, 1836; received an academic education; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1857, and commenced practice at the age of 20; was for nine successive years county attorney for Hancock County; was a member of the legislature of Maine in 1867, 1868, and 1880; was elected to the Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Con- gresses; was appointed Postmaster-General by President Grant in 1874, but declined; was reelected to the Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth Congresses; was tendered a Cabinet appointment, as Secretary of the Navy, by President Hayes, and declined; was chair- man of the Republican Congressional committee for the Forty-fifth Congress; received the degree of 1I,. D. from Bates College, from Colby University, and from Bowdoin College; was a delegate to the Cincinnati convention in 1876 and the Chicago con- ventions in 1868 and 1880; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed Hanni- bal Hamlin, Republican (who declined a reelection), and took his seat March 4, 1881; was reelected in 1887, 1893, and in 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. ’ FIRST: DISTRICT. CounTtIES.—Cumberland and York (2 counties). AMOS I. ALLEN, Republican, of Alfred, was born in Waterborough, York County, Me., March 17, 1837; attended the common school, and entered Whitestown Semi- nary, Whitestown, N. Y., in 1853, and the sophomore class of Bowdoin College in 1857, graduating in 1860; studied law at Alfred, and attended the Columbian Law School in Washington, D. C.; was admitted to the bar of York County in 1866; served as clerk in Treasury Department for about three years; was elected clerk of the courts for York County in 1870 and reelected three times and served twelve years, until January 1, 1883; was clerk of the Judiciary Committee, House of Representatives, in 1883-84, and a special examiner under the Pension Bureau for a year in 1884-85; was member of the Maine legislature in 1886-87; was private secretary to Speaker Reed in the Fifty-first, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses; was a delegate at large from Maine in the Republican national convention at St. Louis in 1896, and member of the committee on resolutions; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress November 6, 1899, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Hon. T. B. Reed, receiving 12,339 votes, to 7,704 for Luther F. McKinney, Democrat, and g scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Androscoggin, Franklin, Knox, I,incoln, Oxford, and Sagadahoc (6 counties). CHARLES E. LITTLEFIELD, Republican, of Rockland, was born June 2I, 1851, in Iebanon, York County, Me.; received a common-school education and studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1876; was a member of the Maine legisla- ture in 1885, and speaker of the house in 1887; was attorney-general of the State from 1889 to 1893; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress June 19, 1899, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Nelson Dingley, receiving 11,624 votes, to 2,736 for John Scott, Democrat, and 10 scattering. THIRD DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Hancock, Kennebec, Somerset, and Waldo (4 counties). EDWIN C. BURLEIGH, Republican, of Augusta, was born at I.inneus, Aroostook County, Me., November 27, 1843; was educated in the common schools of his native town and at Houlton Academy; has been for many years largely interested in the timber lands of his State; enlisted in the cavalry during the rebellion, and, being rejected by the examining surgeon on account of ill health, was given a place in the Adjutant-General’s Office, where he served till the close of the war; was State land agent in 1876, 1877, and 1878; was elected treasurer of State in 1885; reelected in 1887, and in the same year acquired a controlling interest in the Kennebec Journal, daily and weekly, published at Augusta, which he still retains; resigned the office of treas- urer in 1888, having received the Republican nomination for governor; was governor of Maine in 1889, 1890, 1891, and 1892; wasa delegate to the national Republican convention at St. Louis in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress at a special election held June 21, 1897, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Seth L. Milliken, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 12,854 votes, to 6,634 for Frederick W. Plaisted, Democrat; 503 for Oliver S. Pillsbury, Prohibitionist; and 4 scattering. | t f | 42 : Congressional Directory. [MAINE. FOURTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Aroostook, Penobscot, Piscataquis, and Washington (4 counties). CHARLES ADDISON BOUTELLE, Republican, of Bangor,was born at Damaris- cotta, Lincoln County, Me., February 9, 1839; was educated in the public schools at Brunswick and at Yarmouth Academy; early adopted the profession of his father, a shipmaster, and on returning from a foreign voyage in the spring of 1862 volunteered and was appointed acting master in the United States Navy; he served in the North and South Atlantic and West Gulf squadrons; took part in the blockade of Charleston and Wilmington, the Pocotaligo expedition, the capture of St. Johns Bluff, and occupa- tion of Jacksonville, Fla., and while an officer of U. S. S. .Sassacus was promoted to lieutenant ‘‘ for gallant conduct in the engagement with the rebel ironclad .4/be- marle,” May 5, 1864; afterwards, in command of U. S. S. NVyanza, 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; 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 (Me.) Whig and Courier; was a district delegate to the national Republican convention in 1876; was delegate at large and chairman of Maine delegation in the national Republican con- vention of 1888; was unanimously nominated in 1880 as Republican candidate for Congress in the Fourth Maine district; was elected Representative at Targe to the Forty-eighth Congress; was elected as Representative from the Fourth district to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 12,480 votes, to 5,534 for Andrew J. Chase, Democrat, 451 for George W. Park, Prohibitionist, and 244 for W. D. Littlefield, Populist. MARYLAND. SENATORS. GEORGE I. WELLINGTON, Republican, of Cumberland, was born of German parentage at Cumberland, Allegany County, Md., January 28, 1852; attended a Ger- man school for a brief period, otherwise self-educated ; at the age of 12 began work in a canal store in Cumberland ; in 1870 was appointed to a clerkship in the Second National Bank of Cumberland ; later became teller; was appointed treasurer of Alle- gany County in 1882 and served until 1888; was again appointed in 1890; was delegate to the national Republican conventions of 1884 and 1888; was nominated by the Repub- lican party for comptroller of Maryland in 1889 and was defeated after an active canvass, though he received the largest vote ever given a candidate of his party on the State ticket ; was appointed by President Harrison assistant treasurer of the United States at Baltimore in July, 1890; was nominated for Congress by the Republicans of the Sixth Congressional district in 1892 and was defeated by W. McM. McKaig; was renominated in 1894 and elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress; was elected to the United States Senate and took his seat March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. LOUIS EMORY McCOMAS, Republican, of Williamsport, was born in Washing- ton County, Md.; was educated at St. James College, Maryland, and at Dickinson College, Pennsylvania, graduating from the latter in 1866; studied law, and was admitted to the bar at Hagerstown, Md., in 1868, and practiced law there until 1892; was the Republican candidate for the Forty-fifth Congress; was elected to the Forty- eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was defeated for reelec- tion to the Fifty-second Congress; was a delegate-at-large to the Republican national convention in 1892, and during the Presidential campaign was the secretary of the Republican national committee; on November 17, 1892, he was appointed by Presi- dent Harrison an associate justice of the supreme court of the District of Columbia, which office he held until he was elected to the Senate to succeed Arthur P. Gorman, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. : REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIiES.—Caroline, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne, Somerset, Talbot, Wicomico, and Worcester (8 counties). I a Vn sv + a am MARYLAND] Senators and Representatives. 43 SECOND DISTRICT. CITY OF BALTIMORE.—T'welfth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth wards. CounNTIES.—Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, I'welfth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth districts of Baltimore County, Carroll, Cecil, and Harford. WILLIAM B. BAKER, Republican, of Aberdeen, was born near Aberdeen, Md., July 22, 1840; was educated at public and private schools; worked upon a farm until 32 years of age, when he commenced fruit packing, and has been engaged.in that business ever since; is President of the First National Bank of Aberdeen, and a director in the First National Bank of Havre de Grace; has frequently been a delegate to State and Congressional conventions, and although his county (Harford) is strongly Democratic, he was elected to the house of delegates as a Republican in 1881 and to the State senate in 1893; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,806 votes, to 20,436 for Charles B. Tippett, Democrat, and 1,772 for Harrie J. Hollingsworth, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. CITY OF BALTIMORE.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth wards. FRANK C. WACHTER, Republican, of Baltimore, was born in that city, Septem- ber 16, 1861; was educated at private schools; learned the trade of clothing cutter, and afterwards engaged in the business, which he now conducts, of examining, adjust- ing, sponging, and refinishing woolens, cloths, etc.; was appointed by Mayor Hooper in 1896 a member of the jail board of Baltimore City, and served as such for the full term of two years; was a candidate for police commissioner of Baltimore City before the legislature of 1898, and succeeded in getting the Republican caucus nomination; his election, however, was prevented by fourteen members, who combined with the Democrats not to go into a joint convention, thus preventing the election of a com- missioner and resulting in the Democratic commissioner holding over; his loyalty to his party and his devotion to his friends during that contest won him the admiration and respect of the Republicans of the Third Congressional district, who unanimously tendered him the nomination in 1898 as Representative to the Fifty-sixth Congress, to which he was elected, receiving 17,508 votes, to 17,386 for Dr. John B. Schwatka, Democrat, 718 for John F. Hicks, Prohibitionist, 32 for William Whipkey, Independ- ent, and 2 scattering. : FOURTH DISTRICT. CITY OF BALTIMORE.— Tenth, Eleventh, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Nineteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, and Twenty-second wards. . JAMES W. DENNY, Democrat, of Baltimore, was born in the valley of Virginia, and is 58 years old; is a son of the late Robert I. Denny, a prominent farmer, whose country seat was near White Post, in Clarke County, Va.; attended the Male Academy of Rev. William Johnson, in Berryville, the county seat, and assisted him for two years as a teacher; was three years at the University of Virginia, and was then elected principal of Osage Seminary, Osceola, St. Clair County, Mo., and at once entered upon its duties; before the first year had expired the war broke out, the town destroyed, and he returned to his native State, where he enlisted in Company A, Thirty-ninth Virginia Battalion of Cavalry, in which company he served until, in 1863, he was detailed for service at Gen. R. E. Lee’s headquarters, where he contin- ued until the surrender at Appomattox Court-House; then returned to his home in Clarke County, and shortly thereafter began the study of law in Judge Richard Parker’s law school in Winchester, and after his graduation and admission to the bar, in 1868, removed to Baltimore and began the practice of law, which he has suc- cessfully pursued to the present time, at 209 St. Paul street; has always been a Dem- ocrat, and has served the public in various capacities; in 1881 he was elected to the first branch of the city council and reelected in 1882, and became the president thereof by a unanimous vote; has always taken much interest in public schools, and served as a commissioner for eight years; was a member of the house of delegates of Maryland in 1888, and served on the judiciary, election, and military committees; Governor Jackson, for his efficient service as chairman of the military committee, conferred on him the rank of colonel on his staff. It was due to his untiring efforts as chairman of the city extension committee that the city was enlarged. He was nominated by a unanimous vote of the convention, and elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,260 votes, to 16,664 for W. W. McIntire, Republican, 1,134 for T. S. Creney, Prohibitionist, and 289 for T. Meyer, Socialist Labor. 44 Congressional Directory. [MARYLAND,. FIFTH DISTRICT. CountiEs.—Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince George, and St. Mary (6 counties). SYDNEY EMANUEL MUDD, Republican, of Laplata, was born February 12, 1858, in Charles County, Md.; was educated at Georgetown (D. C.) College and St. John’s College, Annapolis, Md., graduating from the latter in 1878; read law privately and attended the law department of the University of Virginia; was admitted to the bar in 1880, and has practiced since; was elected to the State house of delegates in 1879 and reelected in 1881; was an elector on the Garfield and Arthur ticket in 1880; was elected to the Fifty-first and defeated for the Fifty-second Congress; was elected to the State house of delegates in 1895, and was speaker of that body; was delegate to the national Republican convention, 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,748 votes, to 14,672 for John S. Cummings, Democrat; 913 for J. E. Wetherold, Prohibitionist, and 277 for C. T. Parker, Independent Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, Montgomery, and Washington (5 counties). GEORGE ALEXANDER PEARRE, Republican, of Cumberland, was born in that city July 16, 1860; is the son of Hon. George A. Pearre, a distinguished judge, and for many years a leading lawyer in Maryland, and Mary Worthir.gton, 4 member of the old Worthington family of Maryland; his early education washad at private schools, and the Allegany County Academy in Cumberland, whence he went to St. James Col- lege, near Hagerstown, Md., a grammar school for preparation for college, completing his education at Princeton College and the University of West Virginia; after studying law for a year in the office of his father, Judge Pearre, he entered the law school of the Maryland University at Baltimore, taking the two-year course in one, and received the diploma of that institution in 1882, when he was admitted to the bar upon exam- ination in the superior court in Baltimore City; his health failed from overwork at about the same time, and hé traveled for several years to reestablish it, and in 1887 opened a law office in his native town, Cumberland; his practice soon became active and varied; in 18go was elected to the State senate of Maryland by a majority of over 400 over De Warren H. Reynolds, attorney at law, and served in the sessions of 1890 and 1892, taking a prominent and active part in all discussions and legislation; in 1895 was nominated prosecuting attorney by the Republican party, and was elected by a majority of about 1,400 over his opponent, A. A. Wilson, which office he held until his term as Congressman began; in 1887 he became a member of the Maryland National Guard, having had previous military training as a student, and shortly thereafter became adjutant of the Second Battalion Infantry, and on the 11th day of January, 1889, was commissioned as lieutenant-colonel, commanding the said independent battalion; resigned his commission in 1892 by reason of increasing business demands; is married, and has no children; in 1898, after a stubborn contest in convention, was nominated on the one thousand four hundred and seventy- fifth ballot as the Republican candidate for Congress, and elected by the unprec- edented plurality of 4,506, receiving 18,878 votes, to 14,372 for C. T. Poffenberger, Democrat, and 1,167 for J.T. Baker, Prohibitionist; carried all the counties in the district for the first time in its history, and Allegany County by the largest major- ity it ever gave for a candidate, except when his father was a candidate for judge; carried the Democratic town of Cumberland by over 600 also unprecedented in the history of either party. MASSACHUSETTS. SENATORS. GEORGE FRISBIE HOAR, Republican, of Worcester, was born at Concord, Mass., 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 Univer- sity; 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 1852and of the State senate in 1857; was elected Representative to the Forty-first, Forty- second, Forty-third, and Forty-fourth Congresses; declined a renomination for Repre- sentative in the Forty-fifth Congress; was an overseer of Harvard College, 1874-1880; declined reelection, but was reelected in 1896; is president of the Association of the Alumni of Harvard; presided over the Massachusetts State Republican conventions MASSACHUSRITS.) Senators and Representatives. 45 of 1871, 1877, 1882, and 1885; was a delegate to the Republican national conven- tions of 1876 at Cincinnati, and of 1880, 1884, and 1888, at Chicago, presiding over the convention of 1880; was chairman of the Massachusetts delegation in 1880, 1884, and 1888; was one of the managers on the part of the House of Representatives of the Bel- knap 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 Antiquarian Society, president of the American Historical Association, trustee of the Peabody Museum of Archeology, trustee of Ieicester Academy, is a member of the Massachusetts Historical Society, of the American Historical Society, the Historic-Genealogical Society, the Virginia Historical Society, and corresponding member of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences; is a trus- tee of the Peabody fund; has received the degree of doctor of laws from William and Mary, Amherst, Yale, and Harvard colleges; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed George S. Boutwell, took his seat March 5, 1877, and was reelected in 1883, 1889, and 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. HENRY CABOT LODGE, Republican, of Nahant, was born in Boston, Mass., May 12, 1850; received 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 1I,. B.; was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1876; profession, that of literature; served two terms as member of the house of representatives of the Massachusetts legislature; was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, and Fifty-third Congresses; was elected to the Senate January 17, 1893, to succeed Henry I,. Dawes; resigned his seat in the House and took his seat in the Senate March 4, 1893, and was reelected in 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. BERKSHIRE CountTY.—Cities of North Adams and Pittsfield; towns of Adams, Alford, Becket, Cheshire, Clarksburg, Dalton, Egremont, Florida, Great Barrington, Hancock, Hinsdale, Ianesboro, Lee, Lenox, Monterey, Mount Washington, New Ashford, New Marlboro, Otis, Peru, Richmond, Sandisfield, Savoy, Sheffield, Stockbridge, Tyringham, Washingon, West Stockbridge, Williamstown, and Windsor. FRANKLIN CounTv.— Towns of Ashfield, Bernardston, Buckland, Charlemont, Coleraine, Conway, Deerfield, Gill, Greenfield, Hawley, Heath, I,eyden, Monroe, Rowe, Shelburne, and Whately. HAMPDEN CouNtTv.—City of Holyoke and towns of Agawam, Blandford, Chester, Granville, Mont- gomery, Russell, Southwick, T'olland, Westfield, and West Springfield. HAMPSHIRE COoUNTY.— Towns of Chesterfield, Cummington, Goshen, Hatfield," Huntington, Mid- dlefield, Plainfield, Southampton, Westhampton, Williamsburg, and Worthington. GEORGE PELTON LAWRENCE, Republican, of North Adams, was born in Adams, Mass., May 19, 1859; graduated at Drury Academy, 1876, and at Amherst Col- lege, 1880; studied law at Columbia Law School; was admitted to the bar in 1883, and has since practiced law at North Adams; was appointed judge of the district court of northern Berkshire in 1885; resigned in 1894 upon being elected to the Massachusetts senate; was a member of the Massachusetts senate in 1895, 1896, and 1897; was pres- ident of that body in 1896 and 1897, being elected each year by unanimous vote; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress (to fill the unexpired term caused by the death of Hon. A. B. Wright on August 14, 1897), and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 14,415 votes, to 8,803 for Charles P. Davis, Democrat, and 1,602 for HE. A. Buckland, Socialist Labor. SECOND DISTRICT. FRANKLIN CounTv.— Towns of Krving, Leverett, Montague, New Salem, Northfield, Orange, Shutesbury, Sunderland, Warwick, and Wendell. HAMPDEN CoUNTY.—Cities of Chicopee and Springfield and towns of Brimfield, Hampden, Hol- land, T,ongmeadow, I,udlow, Monson, Palmer, Wales, and Wilbraham. HAMPSHIRE CounTy.—City of Northampton and towns of Amherst, Belchertown, Easthampton, Enfield, Granby, Greenwich, Hadley, Pelham, Prescott, South Hadley, and Ware. WORCESTER CounTvy.— Towns of Athol, Batre, Brookfield, Dana, Hardwick, New Braintree, North Brookfield, Oakham, Petersham, Phillipston, Royalston, Templeton, Warren, West Brook- field, and Winchendon. FREDERICK HUNTINGTON GILLETT, Republican, of Springfield, was born at Westfield, Mass., October 16, 1851; graduated at Amherst College in 1874 and at Har- vard Law School in 1877; was admitted to the bar in Springfield in 1877; was assistant 46 Congressional Directory. [MASSACHUSETTS. attorney-general of Massachusetts from 1879 to 1882; was elected to the Massachusetts house of representatives in 1890 and 1891; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 13,327 votes, to 8,054 for R. FE. Bisbee, Democrat, and 707 for G. H. Wrenn, Socialist Labor. THIRD DISTRICT. MIDDLESEX CouNTY.—Town of Hopkinton. WORCESTER CoUNTY.—City of Worcester and towns of Auburn, Blackstone, Charlton, Douglas, Dudley, Grafton, Holden, Leicester, Mendon, Milbury, Northbridge, Oxford, Paxton, Rutland, Shrewsbury, Southbridge, Spencer, Sturbridge, Sutton, Upton, Uxbridge, Webster, Westboro, and West Boylston. JOHN R. THAYER, Democrat, of Worcester, was born in Douglas, Mass., March 9, 1845; attended the common schools in Douglas; later fitted for college at Nichols Academy, in Dudley, Worcester County; entered Yale College in 1865, and gradu- ated in the class of 1869; after leaving college began the study of law with the late Judge Henry Chapin, in Worcester; was admitted to the bar in 1871, and at once began the practice of his profession in Worcester, where he has remained ever since; was elected to both branches of the city government; was trustee of the Worcester City Hospital for eight years, and has been one of the trustees of Nichols Academy, in Dudley, for fifteen years; was elected representative to the general court of Massachusetts for two terms, in 1830 and 1881, and was elected to the Massachusetts senate for two terms, in 18go and 1891; has been one of the leading lawyers in Wor- cester County for many years, giving especial attention to the trial of causes before juries; has had a large number in the civil and criminal courts, in the latter of which-he has appeared for the defense in six capital cases; was elected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 11,167 votes, to 11,008 for Joseph H. Walker, Republican, and 4 scattering. The vote for governor in the same district was, for Roger Wol- cott, Republican, 13,350; Alexander B, Bruce, Democrat, 7,155; George R. Bean, Socialist Labor party, 1,147; Winfield B. Porter, Democratic Socialist, 200; Samuel B. Shapleigh, Prohibition, 279; scattering, 2. : FOURTH DISTRICT. WORCESTER CouNTY.—City of Fitchburg and towns of Ashburnham, Berlin, Bolton, Boylston, : Clinton, Gardner, Harvard, Hubbardston, I.ancaster, I,eominster, Lunenburg, Northboro, Princeton, Southboro, Sterling, and Westminster. MIDDLESEX COUNTY.—City of Waltham and towns of Acton, Ashby, Ashland, Ayer, Bedford, Bil- lerica, Boxboro, Burlington, Carlisle, Chelmsford, Concord, Dunstable, Framingham, Groton, Hudson, Lexington, Lincoln, Littleton, Marlboro, Maynard, Natick, Pepperell, Shirley, Stow, Sudbury, Townsend, Tyngsboro, Wayland, Westford, and Weston. NORFOLK COUNTY.—Welleslev. GEORGE WARREN WEYMOUTH, Republican, of Fitchburg, Mass., was born August 25, 1850, at West Amesbury, now Merrimac, Mass. ; was educated in the public schools, graduating from the high school of that place; is interested in several differ- ent enterprises, giving most of his time to the Fitchburg Steel Ball Company as president and general manager; is director of the Fitchburg National Bank and trustee of the Fitchburg Savings Bank; is director of the Fitchburg and Leominster Street Railway, and also of the Orswell Mills and Nockege Mills; is ex-president of the Fitchburg Board of Trade; was one year in the city council of Fitchburg, in the State legislature of 1896, and a delegate to the Republican national convention at St. Louis in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 14,411 votes, to 8,485 for I. Porter Morse, Democrat. FIFTH DISTRICT. EssEx CouNTy.—City of Lawrence and towns of Andover, Lynnfield, Methuen, North Andover, and Peabody. MIDDLESEX CouNTy.—Cities of Lowell and Woburn and towns of Dracut, North Reading, Read- ing, Tewksbury, and Wilmington. WILLIAM SHADRACH KNOX, Republican, of Lawrence, was born in Killingly, Conn,, September 10, 1843; went to Lawrence when 9 years of age, and has resided there since; graduated at Amherst College in class of 1865; admitted to Essex bar in November, 1866, and has since practiced law in Lawrence; was a member of the Massachusetts house of representatives in 1874-75, serving on the judiciary committee; / MASSACHUSETTS.] Senators and Representatives. 47 was city solicitor of Lawrence in 1875, 1876, 1887, 1888, 1889, and 1890; is president of the Arlington National Bank of Lawrence; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty- fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 14,736 votes, to 13,717 for Joseph J. Flynn, Democrat. SIXTH DISTRICT. EssEX CouNTy.—Cities of Gloucester, Haverhill, Newburyport, and Salem, and towns of Ames- bury, Beverly, Boxford, Bradford, Danvers, Essex, Georgetown, Groveland, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester, Marblehead, Merrimac, Middleton, Newbury, Rockport, Rowley, Salisbury, Swampscott, Topsfield, Wenham, and West Newbury. WILLIAM H. MOODY, Republican, of Haverhill, was born in Newbury, Mass., December 23, 1853; he was graduated at Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., in 1872, and from Harvard University in 1876; is a lawyer by profession; was district attor- ney for the eastern district of Massachusetts from 18go to 1895; he was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress, at a special election, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Gen. William Cogswell, and to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 13,494 votes, to 6,035 for E. M. Boynton, Demo- crat, and 1,390 for A. I, Gillen, Democrat Socialist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Essex County.—City of Lynn and towns of Nahant and Saugus. MIDDLESEX CouNtTy.—Cities of Everett and Malden and towns of Melrose, Stoneham, and Wake- field. SUFFOLK CoUNTY.—Fourth and Fifth wards of the city of Boston, the city of Chelsea, and town of Revere. ERNEST W. ROBERTS, Republican, of Chelsea, was born in East Madison, Me., November 22, 1858; was educated in the public schools of Massachusetts and High- land Military Academy, of Worcester, Mass.; graduated at Boston University Law School, and was admitted to the bar in 1881, and has since practiced law in Boston; was a member of the city council of Chelsea in 1887 and 1888; was elected a member of the Massachusetts house of representatives of 1894, 1895, and 1896; was elected a member of the Massachusetts senate of 1897 and 1898; and was elected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 16,559 votes, to 12,338 for Walter I,, Ramsdell, Democrat, and 781 for Joseph F. Malloney, Socialist Labor. EIGHTH DISTRICT. MIDDLESEX CouNTY.—Cities of Cambridge, Medford, and Somerville, and towns of Arlington and Winchester. SUFFOLK CounNTy.—Tenth and Eleventh wards of the city of Boston. SAMUEL WALKER McCALL, Republican, of Winchester, was born in Fast Prov- idence, Pa., February 28, 1851; graduated at New Hampton (N. H.) Academy in 1870, and at Dartmouth College in 1874; was admitted to the bar, and since 1876 has practiced law in Boston, except one year when he was the editor of the Boston Daily Advertiser; was elected a member of the Massachusetts house of representatives of 1888, 1889, and 1892; was a delegate to the Republican national convention of 1888; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 14,935 votes, to 5,486 for G. A. Perkins, Demo- crat, and 593 for W. E. Stacey, Socialist Labor. NINTH DISTRICT. SUFFOLK CoUNTY.—First, Second, Third, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, and Thirteenth wards of the city of Boston, and the town of Winthrop. z JOHN FRANCIS FITZGERALD, Democrat, of Boston, was born in Boston Feb- ruary 11,1865; he received his education in the Eliot Grammar and the Boston Latin schools and Boston College, after which he pursued a short course of study at Harvard College; is engaged in real estate and insurance; was a member of the Boston common council of 1892; was elected a member of the Massachusetts State senate in 1893 and 1894; was vice-president of the Democratic city committee of Boston in 1892 and 1893; is a member at large of the Democratic State committee of Massachusetts and a member of its executive committee; was elected to the Fifty- fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 10,303 votes, to 5,450 for F. H. Krebs, jr., Republican, 5,000 for J. A. Gallivan, Independent Democrat, and 412 for F. K. Bradman, Republican-Citizens. 48 Congressional Directory. [MASSACHUSETTS. TENTH DISTRICT. SUFFOLK CouUNTY.—T'welfth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nine- teenth, T'wentieth, and T'wenty-fourth wards, and the First, Fifth, Seventh, Highth, and Ninth precincts of the Nineteenth Ward of the city of Boston. NoRFOLK CounTy.—City of Quincy and town of Milton. HENRY FRANCIS NAPHEN, Democrat, of Boston, was born in Ireland August 14, 1847; came to Massachusetts when a child; was educated in the public schools and under private tutors; obtained the degree of LI. B. from Harvard University in 1878, and afterwards pursued a course as a resident LI. B.; also attended a course in the Boston University Taw School; was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1880, and has since devoted himself to the practice of his profession in Boston; was elected a member of the school committee of the city of Boston in 1882 for the term of three years, and declined to be a candidate for a second term; was State senator for the years 1885 and 1886 from the Fifth Suffolk district; was appointed bail commissioner by the justices of the superior court; during his term in the State senate served on several important committees, two of which he was chairman; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,149 votes, to 13,909 for Samuel J. Barrows, Repub- lican, and 11 scattering. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. SUFFOLK CouNTY.— Twenty-first, Twenty-second, Twenty-third, and Twenty-fifth wards of the city of Boston. MIDDLESEX CouNTY.—City of Newton and towns of Belmont, Holliston, Sherborn, and Watertown. NORFOLK CouNTY.—Towns of Bellingham, Brookline, Dedham, Dover, Foxboro, Franklin, Hyde Park, Medfield, Medway, Millis, Needham, Norfolk, Norwood, Sharon, Walpole, and Wren- tham. BrisToL CouNTy.— Town of North Attleboro. WORCESTER CoUNTY.— Towns of Hopedale and Milford. CHARLES FRANKLIN SPRAGUE, Republican, of Brookline, was born in Bos- ton, Mass., June 10, 1857; was fitted for college in the Boston schools and graduated from Harvard University in 1879 ; subsequently studied law at the Harvard Law School and Boston University, and is a member of the Suffolk bar; in 1889 and 1890 was a member of the common council of the city of Boston; in 1891 and 1892 was in the Massachusetts house of representatives; in 1893 and 1894 was a member of, and latterly chairman of, the board of park commissioners of the city of Boston; in 1895 and 1896 was a member of the Massachusetts senate, serving as chairman of the committee on metropolitan affairs; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,001 votes, to 10,709 for William H. Baker, Free Silver Democrat, and 13 scattering. TWELFTH DISTRICT. BrisToL CounTy.—City of Taunton and towns of Attleboro, Berkley, Dighton, Kaston, Mansfield, Norton, Raynham, Rehoboth, and Seekonk. NORFOLK CouNTY.— Towns of Avon, Braintree, Canton, Cohasset, Holbrook, Randolph, Stough- ton, and Weymouth. PrymouTH CounNTy.—City of Brockton and towns of Abington, Bridgewater, Carver, Duxbury, Fast Bridgewater, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Lakeville, Marsh- field, Middleboro, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rockland, Scituate, West Bridge- water, and Whitman. WILLIAM C. LOVERING, Republican, of Taunton, was born about sixty years ago in Rhode Island; waseducated in Cambridge, Mass., at the Cambridge High School and the Hopkins Classical School; has been engaged in cotton manufacturing nearly all of his life, being the president and chief manager of the Whittenton Manufacturing Company, in Taunton; is also interested in many other manufactories, in which he is director and manager; served for a short period in the war as engineer at Fort Monroe; retired from the service an invalid; was State senator for two years, 1874-75; was a delegate to the national Republican convention that nominated Garfield in 1880; was nominated by acclamation in the Congressional convention of the Twelfth district September 22, 1896, and elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, rceiving 13,653 votes, to 6,310 for P. E. Brady, Democrat, and 647 for J. O’Fihelly, Socialist Labor. MASSACHUSETTS. ] Senators and Representatives. 49 THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. BARNSTABLE CoUNTY.— Towns of Barnstable, Bourne, Brewster, Chatham, Dennis, Eastham, Fal- mouth, Harwich, Mashpee, Orleans, Provincetown, Sandwich, Truro, Wellfleet, and Yarmouth. BRISTOL COUNTY.—Cities of Fall River and New Bedford and towns of Acushnet, Dartmouth, Fair- haven, Freetown, Somerset, Swansea, and Westport. DUKES CouNTY.— Towns of Chilmark, Cottage City, Edgartown, Gay Head, Gosnold, and Tisbury. NANTUCKET CouNTyv.—Town of Nantucket, PLYMOUTH CouNTv.— Towns of Marion, Mattapoisett, Rochester, and Wareham. WILLIAM STEDMAN GREENE, Republican,of Fall River,was born in Tremont, Tazewell County, I11., April 28, 1841; removed to Fall River with his parents in 1844; was educated in the public schools of that city, and was a clerk in the insurance busi- ness from 1858 to 1865; commenced business as auctioneer, real estate and insurance agent in 1866; was elected member of common council in 1876,1877,1878, and 1879, and was president of the body the latter three years; elected mayor in 1880; also alternate delegate to Republican national convention which nominated President Garfield; was reelected mayor in 1881, but resigned the same year, being appointed postmaster by President Garfield; in 1886 was again elected mayor; was a candidate in 1887 and 1888, but was defeated; in July, 1888, was appointed by Governor Ames general superintendent of prisons for the State, and served until 1893, when he was removed by the Democratic governor for political reasons; was again candidate for mayor in 1894 and defeated; elected mayor in 1895 by 734 majority, in 1896 by 1,514 majority, and in 1897 by 3,121 majority, and declined a reelection in 1898; was appointed postmaster by President McKinley, and entered upon his duties April 1, 1898; resigned this position and was elected to Congress May 31, 1898, to fill the unexpired term of the late John Simp- kins for the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 13,463 votes, to 4,868 for Charles T. Luce, Democrat, and 1,277 for Thomas Stevenson, Socialist Labor. MICHIGAN. SENATORS. JAMES McMILLAN, Republican, of Detroit, was born in Hamilton, Ontario, May 12, 1838; removed to Detroit in 1855, where he entered upon a business life; in 1863 he became interested in the manufacture of railroad cars, and, with others, was suc- cessful in building up several large manufacturing establishments in Detroit; he is also interested in railroads and steamboats; when elected to the Senate he was presi- dent of the Michigan Car Company, the Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic Railroad Company, and the Detroit and Cleveland Steam Navigation Company; in 1876 he was a member of the Republican State central committee, and on the death of Zachariah Chandler was made chairman; in 1886, 1890, 1892, and 1894 he was reelected chair- man; 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 Presi- dential elector in 1884; received the unanimous nomination of the Republican mem- bers of the legislature and was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Thomas Witherell Palmer, and took his seat March 4, 1889; was reelected in 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 19oI. JULIUS C. BURROWS, Republican, of Kalamazoo, was born at Northeast, Erie County, Pa., January 9, 1837; received a common-school and academic education; by profession a lawyer; was an officer in the Union Army, 1862-1864; prosecuting attorney of Kalamazoo County, 1865-1867; appointed supervisor of internal revenue for the States of Michigan and Wisconsin in 1867, but declined the office; elected a Represent- ative to the Forty-third, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses; appointed Solic- itor 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 Repub- lican 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 dur- ing the Fifty-first Congress, and was elected to the Fifty-second and Fifty-third Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-fourth Congress by over 13,000 plurality; resigned his seat in the House January 23, 1895, to assume the office of United States Sen- ator from Michigan, to which he had been elected by the legislature to fill out the unexpired term of Francis B. Stockbridge, deceased, and took his seat in the Senate the same day; was reelected in 1899, Histerm of service will expire March 3, 1905. 50 Congressional Directory. [MICHIGAN. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CountTvy.—Part of Wayne, JOHN B. CORLISS, Republican, of Detroit, was born at Richford, Vt.; waseducated at the Vermont Methodist University; studied law at the Columbian Law School, Wash- ington, D. C., and graduated from that institution in 1875; in September of the same year he settled in Detroit and engaged in the practice of law, which he has since continued; was elected city attorney of Detroit in 1881 and reelected in 1883; during his four years’ incumbency of the office of city attorney he prepared the first complete charter of Detroit, which was passed by the legislature in 1884, and is still the funda- mental law of the municipality; has always been active in Republican politics; was _ elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,659 votes, to 15,401 for James H. Pound, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe, Washtenaw, and part of Wayne. HENRY CASSORTE SMITH, Republican, of Adrian, was born in Canandaigua, N. VY., June 2, 1856; in the panic of 1857 his father met with financial reverses and moved to a farm in Palmyra, I,enawee County, Mich., where the son remained, attending district school until 13 years of age; worked on farm and in factories until 1874, when he entered Adrian College, doing chores for a farmer for his board and teaching school in vacation until he graduated in June, 1878; was chosen orator for his college at the State intercollegiate contest, at Kalamazoo, 1877; the repetition of his effort on that occasion at Adrian brought him into public notice, and he went into the greenback campaign under Zach. Chandler, then chairman of the Repub- lican State central committee; has taken part in every campaign since; read law with Geddes & Miller, of Adrian, and was admitted to the bar September 25, 1880; was appointed city attorney October 2, 1880, and assistant prosec'.ting attorney by Judge Watts January 1, 1881; was alternate to the Republican national convention at St. Louis in 1896; married Emma, daughter of Judge R. A. Watts, December 20, 1887; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,912 votes, to 19,999 for Orrin R. Pierce, Democrat, 779 for Porter Biel, Prohibitionist, and 126 for Byron E. Niles, Populist. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties). WASHINGTON GARDNER, Republican, of Albion, was born on a farm in Morrow County, Ohio; when 16 years of age entered the Union Army, serving in the ranks of the Sixty-fifth Ohio Volunteer Infantry from October, 1861, to Decem- ber, 1865; was severely wounded in action at Resaca, Ga.; graduated from the Ohio Wesleyan University, 1870; studied in the school of theology, Boston University, 1870-71; graduated from the Albany Law School, 1876; practiced law one year in Grand Rapids, Mich., and then entered the ministry of the Methodist Episcopal Church, in which he served twelve years; was commander of the Department of Michigan, Grand Army of the Republic, in 1888; was made professor in and public lecturer for Albion College, 1889; was appointed by Governor John T. Rich secretary of state, in March, 1894, to fill out an unexpired term, and was subsequently twice nominated by acclamation and elected to succeed himself; was elected to the Fifty- sixth Congress against the combined opposition of the Democratic, Union Silver, People’s, and National parties, receiving 21,182 votes, to 19,864 for Albert M. Todd, Democrat. FOURTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren (6 counties). EDWARD LA RUE HAMILTON, Republican, of Niles, was born in Niles Town- ship, Berrien County, Mich., December 9, 1857; was admitted to the bar in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-fiftth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 21,740 votes, to 17,146 for Roman I. Jarvis, Democrat, 321 for John K. Cunning- ham, Populist, and 474 for George ¥, Cummings, Prohibitionist, av MICHIGAN.] ; Senators and Representatives. 51 | FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Ionia, Kent, and Ottawa (3 counties). WILLIAM ALDEN SMITH, Republican, of Grand Rapids, was born at Dowagiac, Mich., May 12, 1859; received a common-school education; removed with his parents to Grand Rapids, Mich., in 1872; was appointed page in the Michigan house of repre- sentatives by the speaker, John T. Rich, in 1879; was assistant secretary of the Mich- igan State senate in 1882; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1883; was appointed General Attorney of the Chicago & West Michigan Railway and the Detroit, Grand Rapids & Western Railroad Companies in 1886; was a member of the Republican State central committee in 1888, 1890, and 1892; is president of the Grand Rapids Herald Co.; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Con- a gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,021 votes, to 16,064 for George R. Perry, Democrat, 586 for C. Oldfield, Prohibitionist, and 97 for T. J. Haynes, Populist. SIXTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Genesee, Ingham, Iivingston, Oakland; townships of Iavonia, Redford, Greenfield, Dearborn, and Springwells, of tae county of Wayne, and the Twelfth, Fourteenth, and Six- teenth wards of the city of Detroit. SAMUEL W. SMITH, Republican, of Pontiac, was born in the township of Inde- pendence, Oakland County, Mich., August 23, 1852; was educated at Clarkston and Detroit, and, after admission to the bar of Oakland County, graduated in the law department of the University of Michigan; in 1880 was elected prosecuting attorney of Oakland County, and reelected in 1882; in 1884 was elected State senator; was elected to the Fifty-fiftth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 22,981 votes, to 17,171 for Charles Fishback, Democrat; 892 for M. Voorhies, Prohibitionist, and 165 for J. N. Houghton, Populist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. JoUNTIES.—Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, and St. Clair, and Grosse Pointe, Gratiot,and Ham- tranck townships of Wayne County. EDGAR WEEKS, Republican, of Mount Clemens, Macomb County, was born at Mount Clemens, August 3, 1839; received his education in the public schools of Mount Clemens; learned the trade of a printer and followed that business until about 18 years of age, when he began the study of law in the office of Eldredge & Hubbard, at Mount Clemens, and was admitted to the bar in January, 1861; at the outbreak of the civil war enlisted in Company B of the Fifth Michigan Volunteer Infantry, June 19, 1861, and was made first sergeant of the company; in 1862 was promoted to first lieutenant and adjutant of the Twenty-second Michigan Volun- teer Infantry (Col. Moses Wisner, ex-governor of the State); in 1863 was promoted to be a captain in the same regiment; in December of that year, on account of inju- ries received in the service, was mustered out. During his service he participated in the army movements in Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee, and in 1863 was appointed assistant inspector-general of the Third Brigade, Second Division, Reserve Corps, Army of the Cumberland, under Gen. Gordon Granger, and participated in the movements from Nashville to Chattanooga until after the battle of Chicka- “mn mauga; on returning to civil life first became one of the proprietors of a Republican newspaper, of which he was editor; in 1866 resumed the practice of law at Mount Clemens, which he has pursued ever since; was twice elected prosecuting attorney, ] and was afterwards appointed judge of probate of Macomb County; is a past com- mander in the Grand Army of the Republic; was a candidate for Congress in 1884, ) but was defeated; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,623 votes, | 0 12,888 for Fred E. Burton, Democrat, and 279 for Dr. James Henderson, Populist. FIGHTH DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Clinton, Saginaw, Shiawassee, and Tuscola (4 counties). | JOSEPH W. FORDNEY, Republican, of Saginaw, W. S., was born in Blackford 1 County, Ind., November 5, 1853; received a common-school education, living with his ‘ parents on a farm until 16 years of age; came to Saginaw in June 1869; began life in -— the lumber woods, logging and estimating pine timber, thus acquiring a thorough knowledge of the pine land and lumber industry, which has occupied his attention g P y P | 56—-1ST—2D ED——5 : 52 : Congressional Directory. [MICHIGAN. since; is also interested in an artificial ice plant at Hartford City, Ind.; was vice- president of the Saginaw Board of Trade; was elected alderman in 1895 and reelected in 1897; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,798 votes, to 15,089 for Ferdinand Brucker, Democrat. NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Benzie, Lake, I,eelanaw, Manistee, Mason, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, and Wexford (9 counties). ROSWELL P. BISHOP, Republican, of Ludington, was born at Sidney, Delaware County, N. Y., January 6, 1843; worked on a farm until August 3, 1861, when he enlisted as a private in Company C, Forty-third New York Volunteer Infantry; April 28, 1862, he was wounded at Lees Mills, Va., necessitating the amputation of his right arm; was discharged in the field near Fredericksburg, Va., December, 1862; subse- quently attended school at Unadilla Academy, Cooperstown Seminary, and Walton Academy, New York; taught school several years, and entered Michigan University in September, 1868, where he remained until December, 1872; was admitted to the bar in May, 1875, at Ann Arbor; commenced practicing law at Ludington, Mich., soon after, where he has since resided; was elected prosecuting attorney of Mason County, 1876, 1878, and 1884; was elected to the Michigan legislature, 1882 and 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 15,687 votes, to 9,291 for C. J. Chaddock, Democrat, 505 for G. M. Sprout, Prohibitionist, and 127 for N. B. Farnsworth, People’s Party. TENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Alcona, Alpena, Arenac, Bay, Cheboygan, Crawford, Emmet, Gladwin, Tosco, Midland, ~ Montmorency, Ogemaw, Oscoda, Otsego, and Presque Ile (15 counties). ROUSSEAU O. CRUMP, Republican, of West Bay City, was born in Pittsford, Monroe County, N. Y., May 20, 1843, and received his education in the Pittsford and Rochester schools; his parents were of English birth and came to the United States in 1842, settling in Pittsford, N. Y.; he has always followed the lumber business; estab- lished his first home in Plainwell, Mich.; in June, 1881, while making a tour of the lakes and northern Michigan, stopped in Bay City; impressed with the business push and energy of the two Bay Cities, he decided to locate there, and built his first mill in September, 1881; in the fall of 1883 he purchased his partner’s interest in the business, and in February, 1884, the corporation of the Crump Manufacturing Com- pany was formed by him; is an active Mason, having been one of the first trustees of the Masonic Temple Association; is a member of the Wenona I,odge, Blanchard Chapter, Bay City Commandery, the Michigan Sovereign Consistory of Detroit, and Moslem Temple; also a member of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, Royal Arcanum, and Knights of Pythias; in politics he is a Republican of the stalwart type; cast his first vote for Lincoln; has served West Bay City as alderman for four years, and in the spring of 1892 was nominated and elected mayor of West Bay City and was reelected in 1894; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fiftth Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,482 votes, to 13,230 for Robert J. Kelly, Fusion Democrat, and 117 for J. J. Miller, Prohibitionist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Antrim, Charlevoix, Clare, Grand Traverse, Gratiot, Isabella, Kalkaska, Mecosta, Missaukee, Montcalm, Osceola, and Roscommon (12 counties). WILLIAM S. MESICK, Republican, of Mancelona, Antrim County, was born August 26, 1856, at Newark, Wayne County, N. Y.; was educated in the common schools, Kalamazoo (Mich.) Business College, and the University of Michigan; admitted to the bar in 1881; has been in active practice of the law since; held the office of prosecuting attorney of Antrim County, Mich., for one term; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,545 votes, to 11,799 for Alva W. Nichols, Democrat-Populist, and 610 for Harvey M. Lowell, Prohibitionist. TWELFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Alger, Baraga, Chippewa, Delta, Dickinson, Gogebic, Houghton, Iron, Isle Royal, Ke- weenaw, Luce, Mackinac, Marquette, Menominee, Ontonagon, and Schoolcraft (16 counties). CARLOS DOUGLAS SHELDEN, Republican, of Houghton, Houghton County, ‘was born in Walworth, Walworth County, Wis., June 10, 1840; seven years later he : EE I MICHIGAN.] Senators and Representatives. 53 moved with his parents to Houghton County, Lake Superior district, Michigan, where his father was the pioneer general merchant of the ‘‘ copper country; ’’ was educated in the Union School, Ypsilanti, Mich., and returned to his home in the fall of 1861; served through the war of the rebellion as captain in the Twenty-third Michigan Infantry; at the close of the war he returned to Houghton and entered mercantile life with his father; always took an active interest in the political affairs of his State and nation, and served his fellow-townsmen in various offices of trust and honor; for this service was selected to represent his district in the lower branch of the Mich- igan legislature in 1892, and was promoted to the State senate in 1894, where he was assigned to the most important committees; for his services in this capacity was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 19,895 votes, to 8,921 for S. S. Curry, Democrat, 825 for H. B. Hatch, Prohibition- ist, 68 for E. D. Cox, Populist, and 28 scattering. MINNESOTA. SENATORS. KNUTE NELSON, Republican, of Alexandria, was born in Norway February 2, 1843; came to the United States in July, 1849, and resided in Chicago, I11., until the fall of 1850, when he removed to the State of Wisconsin, and from there he removed to Minnesota in July, 1871; was a private and noncommissioned officer in the Fourth Wisconsin Regiment during the war of the rebellion, and was wounded and taken prisoner at Port Hudson, La., June 14, 1863; was admitted to the bar in the spring of 1867; was a member of the assembly in the Wisconsin legislature in 1868 and 1869; was county attorney of Douglas County, Minn., in 1872, 1873, and 1874; was State senator in 1875, 1876, 1877, and 1878; was Presidential elector in 1880; was a member of the board of regents of the State University from February 1, 1882, to January 1, 1893; was a member of the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses for the Fifth district of Minnesota; was elected governor of Minnesota in the fall of 1892 and reelected in the fall of 1894; was elected United States Senator for Minnesota January 23, 1895, for the term commencing March 4, 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 19oT. CUSHMAN KELLOGG DAVIS, Republican, of St. Paul, was born in Henderson, Jefferson County, N.Y, June 16, 1838; received a common-school and collegiate educa- tion, graduating from the University of Michigan in June, 1857; is a lawyer by profes- sion; was first lieutenant in the Twenty-eighth Wisconsin Infantry, 1862-1864; was a member of the Minnesota legislature in 1867; was United States district attorney for Minnesota, 1868-1873; was governor of Minnesota, 1874-75; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed S. J. R. McMillan, Republican, and took his seaf. March 4, 1887; was reelected in 1893 and in 1899; was a member of the commission which met at Paris September, 1898, to arrange terms of peace between the United States and Spain. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT, CounTIiES.—Dodge, Fillmore, Freeborn, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Steele, Wabasha, Waseca, and Winona (10 counties). JAMES A. TAWNEY, Republican, of Winona, was born in Mount Pleasant Township, near Gettysburg, Adams County, Pa., January 3, 1855; at the age of 15 entered the blacksmith shop of his father as an apprentice; subsequently learned the trade of machinist; on July 6, 1877, left Pennsylvania, arriving at Winona, August I, where he was employed as a machinist until January 1, 1881, when he commenced the study of law in the office of Bentley & Vance, of that city, having devoted morn- ings and evenings to the study of that profession for about two years previous; was admitted to the bar July ro, 1882; entered the law school of the Wisconsin University September following, it being the only school he attended after reaching the age of 14; was elected to the State senate of Minnesota in 18go, and was elected to the Fifty- third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 18,939 votes, to 11,931 for Milo White, Democrat, 54 Congressional Directory. [MINNESOTA. SECOND DISTRICT. , CounTIES.—Blue arth, Brown, Chippewa, Cottonwood, Faribault, Jackson, Lac qui Parle, Iin- coln, Lyon, Martin, Murray, Nicollet, Nobles, Pipestone, Redwood, Rock, Watonwan, and Yellow Medicine (18 counties). JAMES THOMPSON McCLEARY, Republican, of Mankato, was born at Inger- soll, Ontario, February 5, 1853; was educated at the high school there and at McGill University, Montreal; taught for some years in Wisconsin; in 1881 resigned the super- intendency of the Pierce County, Wis., schools to become State institute conductor of Minnesota and professor of history and civics in the State Normal School at Mankato, continuing in this position until June, 1892; during summer vacations conducted institutes in Wisconsin, Dakota, Virginia, Tennessee, and Colorado; in 1888 published Studies in Civics, and in 1894 a Manual of Civics, which are used in the best schools of the country; in 1891 was chosen president of the Minnesota Educational Association; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,296 votes, to 14,784 for David H. Evans, Fusionist, and 1,265 for T. P. Grout, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Carver, Dakota, Goodhue, Lesueur, McLeod, Meeker, Renville, Rice, Scott, and Sibley (10 counties). ! JOEL PRESCOTT HEATWOLE, Republican, of Northfield, was born in Indiana, August 22, 1856; is a printer; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,271 votes, to 13,183 for C. G. Hinds, Democrat, and 1,446 for J. R. Lowe, Populist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Chisago, Isanti, Kanabec, Ramsey, and Washington (5 counties). FREDERICK CLEMENT STEVENS, Republican, of St. Paul, was born in Boston, Mass., January 1, 1861; educated in common schools of Rockland, Me.; graduated from Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me., in 1881; from law school of the State Uni- versity of Iowa in 1884; was admitted to the bar in 1884, and commenced practice in St. Paul; was elected to the State legislature of Minnesota in session of 1888-Sg and 1890-91; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 15,952 votes, to 11,602 for John W. Willis, Democrat, 779 for Henry Carling, Socialist, 694 for N. S. Beardsley, Independent Populist, and 461 for N. W. Bray, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTY.—Hennepin. LOREN FLETCHER, Republican, of Minneapolis, was born at Mount Vernon, Kennebec County, Me.; was educated in public schools and Maine Wesleyan Seminary, Kents Hill, Me.; in 1853 removed to Bangor, where he was employed as clerk by a mercantile and lumber company; in 1856 removed to Minneapolis, Minn., where he has since resided, engaged in manufacturing and mercantile pursuits, largely in the manufacture of lumber and flour; was elected to the State legislature in 1872 and reelected seven times; the last three terms served as speaker, having been unanimously elected the last term; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,736 votes, to 12,986 for T. J. Caton, Democrat, 885 for Way, Prohibitionist, 912 for Harshfield, Socialist Labor, and 399 for Blackburn, Independent Republican. : SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Aitkin, Anoka, Beltrami, Benton, Carlton, Cass, Cook, Crow Wing, Hubbard, Itasca, Lake, Millelacs, Morrison, Pine, St. Louis, Sherburne, Stearns, Todd, Wadena, and Wright (20 counties). PAGE MORRIS, Republican, of Duluth, was born June 30, 1853, at Lynchburg, Va. ; educated at a private school and at William and Mary College and the Virginia Mili- tary Institute; graduated at the latter institution in 1872, and was at once appointed MINNESOTA.] 2 Senators and Representatives. 55 assistant professor of mathematics; in 1873 was appointed professor of mathematics in the Texas Military Institute, and removed to Austin, Tex.; in 1876 was elected pro- fessor of applied mathematics in the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, located near Bryan, in that State, where he remained for three years; studied law while teaching in college, and was admitted to the bar at Lynchburg, Va., whither he had returned, in 1880; in 1884 was nominated by the Republicans and ran for Congress in the Sixth district of Virginia against John W. Daniel, Democrat, and was defeated; in 1886 removed from I,ynchburg-to Duluth, where he has resided since; in Feb- ruary, 1889, was elected municipal judge of the city of Duluth; in March, 1894, was elected by the city council of Duluth city attorney; in August, 1895, was appointed by the governor district judge of the Eleventh judicial district of Minnesota; in July, 1896, was unanimously nominated by the Republican Congressional convention for Congress, accepted the nomination, and immediately sent to the governor his resig- nation of the office of judge, to take effect September 1, so that he might make the campaign; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,194 votes, to 21,731 for Charles A. Towne, Democrat-Populist, and 412 for Edward Kriz, Socialist Labor. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Becker, Bigstone, Clay, Douglas, Grant, Kandiyohi, Kittson, Marshall, Norman, Otter- tail, Polk, Pope, Red I,ake, Roseau, Stevens, Swift, Traverse, and Wilkin (18 counties). FRANK MARION EDDY, Republican, of Glenwood, was born in Pleasant Grove, Minn., April 1, 1856, and is the first Representative of Minnesota who is a native of that State; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,409 votes, to 16,715 for Peter M. Ringdal, Fusionist; and 1,693 for E. E. Lobeck, Prohibitionist. MISSISSIP PT. SENATORS. WILL, VAN AMBERG SULLIVAN, Democrat, of Oxford, was born December 18, 1857, near Winona, Miss. ; received his education near Sardis, in Panola County, at a country school, at the University of Mississippi, and at the Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.; graduated from the latter institution in 1875; completed the two years’ law course during his university period; began the practice of law in the fall of 1875 at Austin, in Tunica County, where he continued to reside till March, 1877, when he moved to Oxford, Miss., at which place he has continued in the practice of law since; has never been a candidate for any office; was a member of the Democratic national convention in 1892, and was by the national Democratic convention of 1896, at the request of the State of Mississippi, elected a- member for Mississippi of the national Democratic executive committee, which position he now holds; was nomi- nated for Congress, though not a candidate for the position, but a deadlock between the four aspirants having continued for several days, the nomination was tendered to and accepted by him; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress; was appointed and sworn in as United States Senator from the State of Mississippi on May 30, 1898, as successor of Senator KE. C. Walthall, deceased; elected by the legislature January, 1900, to fill out the term which expires March 3, 1901. HERNANDO DE SOTO MONEY, Democrat, of Carrollton, was born August 26, 1839, in Holmes County, Miss.; was educated at the University of Mississippi, at Oxford, Miss.; is a lawyer and planter; served in the Confederate army from the beginning of the war until September 26, 1864, when he was forced to retire from service by defective eyesight; was elected to the House of Representatives in the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Fifty-third, and Fifty-fourth Congresses; in January, 1896, was elected to the Senate for the term beginning March 4, 1899; was appointed to the Senate October 8, 1897, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. J. Z. George on August 14, 1897; elected by the legislature to fill out the unexpired term ending March 3, 1899; and reelected in 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. Congressional Directory. LC (MISSISSTREL, REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Alcorn, Itawamba, Lee, Lowndes, Monroe, Oktibbeha, Prentiss, and Tishomingo (8 counties). JOHN M. ALLEN, Democrat, of Tupelo, was born in Tishomingo County, Miss., July 8, 1847; received 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 hos- tilities attended the law school at the Cumberland University, in Lebanon, Teun., and graduated in law in the year 1870 at the University of Mississippi; commenced the practice of his profession at Tupelo, Lee County, Miss., in 1870; in 1875 was elected district attorney for the First judicial district of Mississippi; served a term of four years and retired from that office; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and unanimously reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 2,469 votes. SECOND DISTRICT. : CounNTIES.—Benton, De Soto, Lafayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchie, Tate, T'ippah, and Union (9 counties). THOMAS SPIGHT, Demccrat, of Ripley, was born and reared on a farm in Tippah County, Miss., and has lived in that county all his life; attended the common and high schools of the county, and in 1859 entered college at Purdy, Tenn., and at the end of ome year entered the La Grange ( Tenn.) Synodical College, but the death of his father, in March, 1861, and the breaking out of the war compelled him to return home; entered the Confederate army as a private, and became captain of his com- pany before he was 21 years old, being the youngest officer of that rank in the famous ‘Walthall Brigade,” commanded by the late distinguished Senator from Missis- sippi; participated in nearly all the battles fought by the Army of Tennessee, and was severely wounded on the 22d of July, 1864, at Atlanta, Ga.; was in command of what was left of his regiment (the Thirty-fourth Mississippi Infantry) in April, 1865, when he surrendered with the army under Gen. Joseph E. Johnston at Greensboro, N. C.; returned home to find all the property of his father’s estate swept away as a result of the war, and commenced teaching school and farming, and at the same time studying law; was admitted to the bar and has practiced his profession since at Ripley; is a member of the Baptist Church; represented his county in the Mississippi legislature from 1874 to 1880, and in the latter year was district Presidential elector on the Hancock ticket; established the Southern Sentinel in 1879, which he continued to own and edit until 1884, when he was elected district attorney of the Third judi- cial district, composed of seven counties, which position he held until 1892, when he voluntarily retired; he was a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Con- gress in 1894, but was defeated by Hon. J. C. Kyle, who was then serving his sec- ond term; was again a candidate in 1896, but was defeated in convention by a com- bination of the opposition on Hon. W. V. Sullivan, who was elected and afterwards appointed United States Senator to succeed Senator Walthall, deceased; was elected for the unexpired term in the Fifty-fifth Congress, July 5, and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 2,949 votes, to 167 for C. M. Hanie, Populist, and 58 for S. M. Howry, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Bolivar, Coahoma, Issaquena, I.eflore, Quitman, Sharkey, Sunflower, Tunica, Warren, and Washington (10 counties). THOMAS CLENDINEN CATCHINGS, Democrat, of Vicksburg, was born in Hinds County, Miss., 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, Mississippi, 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 1863, 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 = MISSISSIPPL] Senators and Representatives. 57 August, 1881, and elected in the following November, resigning February 16, 1885; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 2,068 votes, to 373 for C. J. Jones, colored Republican. POURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Clay, Grenada, Kemper, Montgomery, Noxubee, Pontotoc, Webster, Winston, and Yalobusha (13 counties). ANDREW FULLER FOX, Democrat, of West Point, Clay County, was born April 26, 1849, in Pickens County, Ala.; studied law in the office of Gen. E. C. Walthall, at Grenada, Miss., in 1876 and 1877; was admitted to the bar in 1877, and has since that time been constantly engaged in the active practice of law in Mississippi; was a dele- gate to the Democratic national convention in 1888; was elected State senator in 1891, which position he resigned to accept the office of United States attorney for the northern district of Mississippi, to which he wasappointed June 27, 1893; resigned the latter office September 1, 1896, and was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 3,431 votes, to 1,020 for Raleigh Brewer, Populist. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Attala, Clarke, Holmes, Jasper, Lauderdale, I,eake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott, Smith, Wayne, and Yazoo (12 counties). JOHN SHARP WILLIAMS, Democrat, of Yazoo, was born July 30, 1854, at Mem- phis, Tenn.; his mother having died, his father, who was colonel of the Twenty- seventh Tennessee Volunteers, Confederate States Army, being killed at Shiloh, and Memphis being threatened with capture by the Federal Army, his family removed to his mother’s family homestead in Yazoo County, Miss.; received a fair education at private schools, the Kentucky Military Institute, near Frankfort, Ky., the University of the South, Sewanee, T'enn., the University of Virginia, and the University of Heidelberg, in Baden, Germany; subsequently studied law under Professors Minor and Southall at the University of Virginia and in the office of Harris, McKisick & Turley in Memphis; in 1877 got license to practice in the courts of law and chancery of Shelby County, Tenmn.; in December, 1878, removed to Yazoo City, Miss., where he engaged in the practice of his profession and the varied pursuits of a cotton planter; was a delegate fo the Chicago convention which nominated Cleveland and Steven- son; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 4,943 votes, to 142 for J. R. S. Pitts, Republican, and 20 for L. I. Caldwell, Independent. SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Adams, Amite, Covington, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Jones, Lawrence, Marion, Pearl River, Perry, Pike, and Wilkinson (14 counties). FRANK ALEXANDER McLAIN, Democrat, of Gloster, was born January 29, 1853, and reared on a farm in Amite County, Miss.; attended the common schools of the county and graduated in the A. B. course at the University of Mississippi in June, 1874; commenced the practice of law in Liberty, Miss., 1880; was elected to the State legisla- ture in 1881 for a term of two years; was elected district attorney for his judicial district in 1883, in which capacity he served for three consecutiye terms of four years each; was elected to the constitutional convention of Mississippi in 18go as floater delegate from the counties of Amite and Pike; retired voluntarily from the office of district attorney January 1, 1896, and resumed his law practice at Gloster, Miss., where he now resides; was unanimously nominated by the executive committee, and elected, without opposition, receiving every vote cast, to fill out the unexpired erm in the Fifty-fifth Congress of William Franklin Love, who died October 17, 898, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 3,227 votes, to 1,390 for M. M. Evans, Democrat, 998 for N. C. Hathorn, Populist, and 327 for H. C. Turley, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Hinds, Jefferson, Lincoln, Madison, Rankin, and Simpson (9 counties). PATRICK HENRY, Democrat, of Brandon, was born in Madison County, Miss., February12,1843; entered Mississippi College, at Clinton; afterwards Madison College, at Sharon, and when the war commenced was at the Nashville (Tenn. ) Military Col- 58 Congressional Directory. [MISSISSIPPI lege; in the spring of 1861 enlisted in the Confederate service in the Sixth Mississippi Infantry Regiment; served through the war, and surrendered at Greensboro, N. C., April 26, 1865, as major of the Fourteenth (consolidated) Mississippi Regiment; returning home, farmed until 1873 in Hinds and Rankin counties, when he com- menced the practice of law at Brandon; was a member of the legislature in 1878 and 1890, and delegate from the State at large to the constitutional convention in 1890; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 3,278 votes, to 156 for E. F. Brennan and 171 for J. B. Yellowby, Republicans. MISSOURI. SENATORS. GEORGE GRAHAM VEST, Democrat, of Sweet Springs, was born at Frankfort, Ky., December 6, 1830; graduated at Centre College, Kentucky, in 1848, and in the law department of Transylvania University, at Lexington, Ky., in 1853; removed the same year to Missouri and began the practice of law in the central part of that State; was a member of the Missouri house of representatives in 1860-61; was elected to the United States Senate, in the place of James Shields, Democrat (who had been elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Lewis V. Bogy, Demo- crat); took his seat March 18, 1879; was reelected in 1885, 1890, and 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. FRANCIS MARION COCKRELI, Democrat, of Warrensburg, was born in John- son County, Mo., October 1, 1834; received his early education in the common schools of his county; graduated from Chapel Hill College, Lafayette County, Mo., in July, 1853; studied law and has pursued that profession, never having held any public civil office prior to his election to Congress; was elected to the Senate, to succeed Carl Schurz, Independent Republican; took his seat March 4, 1875, and was reelected four times. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Adair, Clark, Knox, Lewis, Macon, Marion, Putnam, Schuyler, Scotland, and Shelby (10 counties). JAMES TIGHLMAN LLOYD, Democrat, of Shelbyville,was born at Canton, Lewis County, Mo., August 28, 1857; graduated from Christian University at Canton, Mo., in 1878; taught school for a few years thereafter ; was admitted to the bar, and then prac- ticed his profession in Lewis County until 1885, when he located at his present home, where he has since resided ; has held no office except that of prosecuting attorney of his county from 1889 to 1893, until his election to Congress; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress at a special election held June 1, 1897, to fill the vacancy occa- sioned by the death of R. P. Giles, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 20,048 votes, to 15,460 for A. N. Seaber, Republican, and 738 for John M. Landon, Populist. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Carroll, Chariton, Grundy, Linn, Livingston, Monroe, Randolph, and Sullivan (8 counties). WILLIAM W. RUCKER, Democrat, of Keytesville, was born February 1, 1855, near Covington, Va.; at the beginning of the war moved with his parents to West Virginia, in which State he attended the common schools; at the age of 18 he moved to Chariton County, Mo., and for two years engaged in teaching district schools, during which time he continued the study of law; was admitted to the bar in 1876; in 1886 was elected prosecuting attorney of Chariton County, which office he held for three consecutive terms and until he was nominated for circuit judge of the Twelfth judicial circuit; in 1892 was elected circuit judge for a term of six years, which position he held at the time he was nominated for Congress; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,768 votes, to 15,627 for W. C. Irwin, Repub- lican, and 499 for Hugh Tudor, Populist. a RR { 2 a = MISSOURI] Senators and Representatives. 59 THIRD DISTRICT. CounTiEs.—Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, Daviess, Dekalb, Gentry, Harrison, Mercer, Ray, and Worth (10 counties). JOHN DOUGHERTY, Democrat, of Liberty, was born in Platte County, Mo., February 25, 1857; a few months subsequently his parents removed to Liberty, Mo., which has, practically, been his place of residence ever since; was educated in the public schools and William Jewell College; studied law under Judge William H. Martin, of Indiana; was admitted to the bar in 1880; was elected city attorney of Liberty, Mo., in 1881, and served as such five years; was editor and proprietor of the Liberty Tribune from 1885 to 1888; was elected prosecuting attorney of Clay County, Mo.,in 1888, and twice reelected, serving in that capacity six consecutive years; was a candidate before the Democratic Congressional Convention, Third district, in 1896, but was defeated; was nominated and elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,560 votes, to 16,440 for James E. Goodrich, Republican, and 8og for Ulysses A. Towns, Populist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Holt, Nodaway, and Platte (6 counties). CHARLES F. COCHRAN, Democrat, of St. Joseph, was born in Kirksville, Adair County, Mo., September 27, 1848; resided in Atchison, Kans., from 1860 till 1885; was educated in the common schools; is a practical printer and newspaper man and a lawyer; served four years as prosecuting attorney of Atchison County, Kans., and four years as a member of the Missouri senate; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,294 votes, to 16,261 for Arthur W. Brewster, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIiES.— Jackson and Lafayette (2 counties). WILLIAM STROTHER COWHERD, Democrat, of Kansas City, was born Sep- tember 1, 1860, in Jackson County, Mo.; was educated at the public schools in the town of Lees Summit, and the University of Missouri; took the degree of A. B. in 1881 and LL. B. in 1882; was appointed assistant prosecuting attorney of Jack- son County in 1885, and served four years in that capacity; was appointed first assistant city counselor of Kansas City in 1890; was elected mayor of Kansas City in 1892, was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,487 votes, to 17,144 for John Welborn, Republican, 317 for George Wil- son, Populist, and 305 for William H. Stripe, Socialist Labor. SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Bates, Cass, Cedar, Dade, Henry, Johnson, and St. Clair (7 counties). DAVID A. DE ARMOND, Democrat, of Butler, was born in Blair County, Pa., March 18, 1844; was brought up on a farm; educated in the common schools and at Williamsport Dickinson Seminary; was State senator, circuit judge, and Missouri supreme court commissioner; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 16,645 votes, to 13,595 for Samuel W. Jurden, Republican, 1,510 for S. C. Brooks, Populist, and 290 for J. E. Stevenson, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Benton, Boone, Greene, Hickory, Howard, Pettis, Polk, and Saline (8 counties). JAMES COONEY, Democrat, of Marshall, was born in Ireland in 1848, and came to the United States with his family in 1852; was educated in the public schools and at the State University of Missouri; taught school for a few years after he left the university, and in 1875 located in Marshall, Mo., and engaged in the practice of law; in 1880 was elected to the office of probate judge of his county; in 1882, and again in 1884, was elected prosecuting attorney of his county; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,586 votes, to 17,642 for W. G. Robertson, Republican, and 666 for D. T. Mitchell, Populist. 60 Congressional Directory. [MISSOURL EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Callaway, Camden, Cole, Cooper, Dallas, Iaclede, Maries, Miller, Moniteau, Morgan, Osage, Phelps, and Pulaski (13 counties). DORSEY W. SHACKLEFORD, Democrat, of Jefferson City, was born August 27, 1853, in Saline County, Mo.; was educated in the public schools of the State, and was a teacher in 1877, 1878, and 1879, during which period he carried on the study of law; began the practice of that profession at Boonville, Mo., May 9, 1879; served as prosecuting attorney of Cooper County two terms, from 1882 to 1886 and from 1890 to 1892; was elected and served as judge of the fourteenth judicial circuit of Missouri from June 1, 1892, to September 9, 1899; was married December 7, 1887, to Miss Florida Hall, of Saline County, Mo., and has one son and one daughter; resigned his judicial position to take his place in the Fifty-sixth Congress, to which he had been elected August 29, 1899, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Richard P. Bland, receiving 19,331 votes to 15,858 for John W. Vashall, Repub- lican, and 850 for William R. Hale, People’s Party. NINTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Audrain, Crawford, Gasconade, Iincoln, Montgomery, Pike, Ralls, St. Charles, and Warren (9 counties). CHAMP CLARK, Democrat, of Bowling Green, was born March 7, 1850, in Ander- son County, Ky.; educated in the common schools, Kentucky University, Bethany College, and Cincinnati Law School; 1873-74 was president of Marshall College, West Virginia; worked as a hired farm hand, clerked in a country store, edited a country newspaper, and practiced law; was city attorney of Louisiana and Bowling Green; deputy prosecuting attorney and prosecuting attorney; Presidential elector; delegate to Trans-Mississippi Congress at Denver; married Miss Genevieve Bennett; has had four children born to him: Little Champ, Ann Hamilton, Bennett, and Gene- vieve, the two latter still living; served in the Fifty-third and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and was reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,463 votes, to 14,449 for Robert Shackleford, Republican, 144 for Hay Bell, Prohibitionist, and 4o scattering. TENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—St. T,ouis, Franklin, and part of the city of St. Louis, embracing the Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, and Eleventh wards, and fifteen precincts of the Twelfth Ward. RICHARD BARTHOLDT, Republican, of St. Loouis,was born in Germany, Novem- ber 2, 1853; came to this country when a boy; received a classical education; learned the printing trade and has remained a newspaper man ever since; was connected with several Eastern papers as reporter, legislative correspondent, and editor, and was at the time of his election to Congress editor in chief of the St. Louis Tribune; was elected to the board of public schools of St. Louis, and in November, 1891, was chosen its president; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,850 votes, to 13,254 or M. J. Gill, Democrat, 247 for C. E. Keefer, Socialist Democrat, and 126 for J. J. Ernst, Socialist I,abor. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. City OF ST. Louris (part of), embracing the First, Second, Third, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eight- eenth, Nineteenth, Twentieth, I'wenty-sixth, and T'wenty-seventh wards, three precincts of the Fifteenth, eleven precincts of the Twenty-first, seven precincts of the Twenty-fifth, and . twelve precincts of the Twenty-eighth wards. CHARLES FREDERICK JOY, Republican, of St. Louis, was born in Morgan County, Ill., December 11, 1849; received his early education in the schools of that county and in 1870 entered the academic department of Yale College, from which he graduated with the degree of bachelor of arts June 25, 1874; engaged in the practice of law in St. Louis in September, 1876, and since that time has devoted him- self exclusively to his profession; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,315 votes, to 18,657 for E. A. Noonan, Democrat, 520 for J. H. Rabe, Independent, 144 for Peter Schweite, Socialist Labor, and 149 for Charles F. Gebelein, Socialist Democrat. MISSOURI] Senators and Representatives. 61 TWELFTH DISTRICT. City OF ST. Louis (part of), embracing the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fif- teenth, Twenty-second, Twenty-third, Twenty-fourth, and parts of the Seventh, Twelfth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, Twenty-fifth, and Twenty-eighth wards. CHARLES EDWARD PEARCE, Republican, of St. Louis, was born in Whites- boro, Oneida County, N.Y., and subsequently became a resident in the city of Auburn, county of Cayuga; was educated at Fairfield Seminary and Union College; enlisted into the army immediately after graduating; was commissioned captain, Battery D, Sixteenth New York Heavy Artillery, in 1863; was promoted to the rank of major in June, 1864; served in the Army of the James, also that of the Potomac; was appointed to the staff of Maj. Gen. A. H. Terry after the capture of Fort Fisher, and on the occupation of Wilmington was detailed as provost-marshal-general of the Eastern district of North Carolina; quit the army in the fall of 1865; settled in St. Louis in 1866, where he was admitted to the bar, and began the practice of law in 1867; became commander St. Louis National Guard in 1875; organized the First Regi- ment in 1877 and was elected its colonel; resigned in 1878; was delegate to the Repub- lican national convention of 1888; in 1891 was appointed chairman Sioux Indian Commission; in 1894 went to India and Japan to investigate the industries of the Orient; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and in 1898 was unanimously nomi- nated as the Republican candidate, and was reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 15,300 votes, to 12,989 for Robert H. Kern, Democrat, 638 for D. W. Scott, colored Republican, 61 for L. C. Fry, Socialist Labor, and 100 for I. P. Thompson, Socialist Democrat. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Carter, Dent, Iron, Jefferson, Madison, Perry, Reynolds, Shannon, Ste. Genevieve, St. Francois, Texas, Washington, Wayne, Webster, and Wright (15 counties). EDWARD ROBB, Democrat, of Perryville, was born at Brazeau, in Perry County, Mo., March 19, 1857; his father was Dr. Lucius F. Robb; was educated in the common schools, Brazeau Academy, Fruitland Normal Institute, and the Missouri State Uni- versity; graduated from the law department of the Missouri State University in March, 1879, and the May following located in Perryville, where he has since been engaged in the practice of his profession; was elected prosecuting attorney of Perry County in 1880, and reelected in 1882; was elected a member of the legislature in 1884, and reelected in 1886; was appointed assistant attorney-general of the State in January, 1889, by Gen. John M. Wood, which position he held for the term of four years; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 20,601 votes, to 18,314 for John H. Reppy, Republican, and 702 for Joseph B. Dines, People’s Party. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Bollinger, Butler, Cape Girardeau, Christian, Douglas, Dunklin, Howell, Mississippi, New Madrid, Oregon, Ozark, Pemiscot, Ripley, Scott, Stoddard, Stone, and Taney (17 counties). : WILLARD DUNCAN VANDIVER, Democrat, of Cape Girardeau, was born in Hardy County, Va. (now West Virginia), March 30, 1854; waseducated in the common schools and at Central College, Fayette, Mo.; his early days were spent on the farm, but after graduation he was elected professor of natural science in Bellevue Institute, and three years later became its president; in 1889 he accepted the chair of science in the State Normal School at Cape Girardeau, and in 1893 became its president; he has been a lifelong Democrat, and in 1896 was nominated for Congresson a free-coin- age platform by the Fourteenth district convention, after which he made an exten- sive canvass of the district, which is a very large one, embracing seventeen counties and containing a population of about 250,000, and was elected to the Fifty-fifth Con- gress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,771 votes, to 18,650 for George M. Miley, Republican, and 2,025 for De Witt Eskew, Populist. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Barry, Barton, Jasper, Lawrence, McDonald, Newton, and Vernon (7 counties). MAECENAS E. BENTON, Democrat, of Neosho, was born in Obion County, Tenn., January 29, 1849, but was brought up in Dyer County, in that State; received his literary education in two West Tennessee academies and in St. Louis University; was gradu- 62 Congressional Directory. [MISSOURL ated from the law department of Cumberland University in June, 1870, and immedi- ately removed to Missouri, settling in Neosho, where he has since lived; beginning with 1872 (with three exceptions) has been a delegate to every Democratic State convention held in Missouri, and was president of the conventions held in 1890 and 1896; also president of State convention of 1898; was elected prosecuting attorney in 1878 and in 1880, and declined reelection in 1882; was attorney of the United States from March, 1885, to July, 1889; is the original ‘‘ offensive partisan’’ who was charged with ‘‘pernicious activity ’’ in politics; has served as a member of the Democratic State committee for the State at large; was a delegate to the national Democratic convention held in Chicago in July, 1896, and was a member of the committee on credentials in that body; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,400 votes, to 16,949 for F. E. Williams, Repub- lican, and 81 scattering. MONTANA. SENATORS. THOMAS HENRY CARTER, Republican, of Helena, was born in Scioto County, Ohio, October 30, 1854; received a common-school education in Illinois; was engaged in farming, railroading, and school-teaching for a number of years; studied law and was admitted to the bar; in 1882 removed from Burlington, Iowa, to Helena, Mont. ; was elected Delegate from the Territory of Montana to the Fifty-first Congress, and upon the admission of the State was elected its first Representative in Congress; was Commissioner of the General Land Office from March, 1891, to July, 1892, when he was elected chairman of the Republican national committee; in January, 1895, was elected to the United States Senate by the legislature of Montana for the term beginning March 4, 1895, and ending March 3, 1901. WILLIAM ANDREWS CLARK, Democrat, of Butte, was born on a farm near Connellsville, Fayette County, Pa., January 8, 1839; received a common-school edu- cation; moved to Jowa with his father in 1856, and assisted in farm work for a short time; taught school, and studied law at Mount Pleasant, Iowa; worked in the quartz mines around Central City, Colo, in 1862, and went to Montana in 1863, where he has since resided; was State orator at the Philadelphia Centennial in 1876; was elected grand master of the Masonic Fraternity in 1877; was major of a battalion that pursued Chief Joseph and his band in the Nez Perces invasion of 1877; was president of the constitutional convention of the State in 1884; was also president of the second constitutional convention in 1889; was the candidate for Congress in 1888, but was defeated because of a schism in his own party; was elected to the United States Senate by the Democratic legislature in 1890, but was not seated owing to the muddle growing out of the organization of two legislatures in the State, the Republican Senators being seated; was the caucus nominee of his party for the Sen- ate in 1893; assisted materially in retaining the State capital at Helena in a mem- orable contest between that city and Anaconda in 1892; is extensively engaged in banking, mining, manufacturing, and various other business enterprises; in politics has always been a consistent and active Democrat; was elected United States Senator - January 28, 1899, to succeed Hon. Lee Mantle, Republican. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. ALBERT J. CAMPBELL, Democrat, of Butte, was born at Pontiac, Mich., Decem- ber 12, 1857; educated at the Agricultural College, Lansing, Mich.; read law with Colvin & Harrington and Robbins & Colvin, Pontiac, Mich.; was admitted to the bar in 1881; by professionis a lawyer; waselected prosecuting attorney for Lake County, Mich., in 1886, and reelected in 1888; resigned and removed to Montana November 16, 1889; in 1897 was a member of the legislature from Park County; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 23,351 votes, to.14,829 for Thomas Marshall, Repub- lican, and 11,607 for Thomas S. Hogan, Silver Republican and Populist. NEBRASKA. ] Senators and Representatives. 63 NEBRASKA. SENATORS. JOHN MELLEN THURSTON, Republican, of Omaha, was born at Montpelier, Vt., August 21,1847; his ancestors were Puritans; their settlement in this country dates back to 1636; his grandfather Mellen and great-grandfather Thurston were both soldiers in the Revolutionary war; his parents removed to Wisconsin in 1854; his father was a private soldier in the First Wisconsin Cavalry and died in the service in the spring of 1863; was educated in the public schools and at Wayland University, Beaver Dam, Wis., supporting himself by farm work, driving teams, and other manual labor; was admitted to the bar May 21, 1869, and in October of the same year located in Omaha, where he has since resided; was elected a member of the city council in 1872, city attorney of Omaha in 1874, and a member of the Nebraska legislature in 1875; was a member of the Republican national convention in 1884 and temporary chairman of the Republican national convention in 1888; was president of the Republican League of the United States, 1889 to 1891; was selected as permanent chairman of the Repub- lican national convention held in the city of St. Louis, June 16, 17, and 18, 1896, which nominated Maj. William McKinley, of Ohio, for President; in 1877 he became assistant attorney of the Union Pacific Railway Company, and in February, 1888, was appointed general solicitor of the Union Pacific system, and held that position at the time of his election to the Senate; was the Republican caucus nominee for United States Senator in the Nebraska legislature in January, 1893, and received the entire party vote, lacking 5 votes of election; January 1, 1895, was tendered in writing the unanimous vote of the entire Republican membership in the legislature, and was elected January 15, 1895, for the term commencing March 4, 1895. His term of serv- ice will expire March 3, 1901. WILLIAM VINCENT ALLEN, Populist, of Madison, was born in Midway, Madi- son County, Ohio, January 28, 1847; removed with his family to Iowa in 1857; was educated in the common schools of Ohio and Iowa, and attended the Upper Iowa University, at Fayette, for a time, but was not. graduated; was a private soldier in Company G, Thirty-second Iowa Volunteer Infantry, during the war of the rebellion, being on the staff of Brig. Gen. James I. Gilbert the last few months of his service; read law at West Union, Towa, and was admitted to the bar May 31, 1869; practiced law from that time until elected judge of the district court of the ninth judicial dis- trict of Nebraska in the autumn of 1891; was married May 2, 1870, to Miss Blanche Mott, by whom he has one son and three daughters; was permanent president of the Nebraska Populist conventions in 1892 and 1894; was permanent president of the National Populist Convention held at St. Louis, Mo., July, 1896; was elected to the United States Senate February 7, 1893, to succeed Hon. Algernon Sidney Pad- dock, and served through the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses; was appointed judge of the district court of the ninth judicial district of Nebraska March 9, 1899, to fill a vacancy; was elected judge November 7, 1899, for the full term to begin on the first Thursday in January, 1900; was appointed United States Senator December 13, 1899, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. M. I. Hayward; resigned his judgeship three days later and took his seat in the United States Senate December 19, 1899. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Cass, Johnson, Iancaster, Nemaha, Otoe, Pawnee, and Richardson (7 counties). ELMER JACOB BURKETT, Republican, of Lincoln, was born in Mills County, Iowa, on a farm, December 1, 1867; attended public school and afterwards Tabor Col- lege, at Tabor, Iowa, from which institution he graduated in June, 18go; upon his graduation was elected principal of schools at Leigh, Nebr., which position he held two years, when he entered the State University of Nebraska for a law course; received from this institution the degrees of LL. B. in 1893 and LI. M. in 1895; was admitted to the bar at Lincoln in June, 1893, and has practiced law there ever since; was also elected trustee of his alma mater, Tabor College, in 1895; was elected a member of the State legislature in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,960 votes, to 14,466 for James Manahan, nominated by Democrats, Populists, and Free Silver Republicans, 50 for Fred Herman, running by petition, and 2 scattering. 64 Congressional Directory. [NEBRASKA, SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Douglas, Sarpy, and Washington (3 counties). DAVID HENRY MERCER, Republican, of Omaha, was born in Benton County, Iowa, July 9, 1857; removed with his parents to Adams County, Ill., the following year; his father was captain of Company E, Seventy-eighth Regiment Illinois Volunteer Infantry, and marched with Sherman to the sea; at close of the war he removed with his parents to Brownville, Nebr., where he attended the public schools; entered the Nebraska State University in 1877 and graduated in 1880; during the summer vaca- tions he taught school, clerked in a store, worked on a farm, and edited a newspaper; studied law one year and then entered senior class of the law department of Michigan State University, graduating in 1882, after which he returned to Brownville to practice his profession; served one term as city clerk and police judge; was twice elected secre- tary of the Republican State central committee; moved to Omaha in 1885 and for several years was chairman of the Republican city and county committees; was elected secretary of the national Republican Congressional committee in 1896, and in 1897-98 was chairman of the Republican State central committee of Nebraska; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 11,951 votes, to 10,723 for Gilbert M. Hitch- cock, Fusion candidate nominated by Silver Republicans, Democrats, and Populists. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Antelope, Boone, Burt, Cedar, Colfax, Cuming, Dakota, Dixon, Dodge, Knox, Madison, Merrick, Nance, Pierce, Platte, Stanton, Thurston, and Wayne (18 counties). JOHN S. ROBINSON, Democrat, of Madison, was born at Wheeling, W. Va., May 4, 1856; received his education in the public schools of that city, and from 1875 until the spring of 1879 worked as a mechanic in the Wheeling hinge factory; in 1879 commenced the study of law in the office of John O. Pendleton; was admitted to the bar by the supreme court of West Virginia in 1880, and continued to practice in the city of Wheeling until the spring of 1884, when he removed West and settled at Madison, Nebr., his present home, where he again took up the practice of his pro- fession; was elected county attorney of Madison County in 1886, and reelected in 1890; in 1893 was elected judge of the Ninth judicial district of Nebraska, and reelected in 1895, which office he was still holding at the time of his election to the Fifty-sixth Congress in 1898, to which he was nominated by both the Democratic and Populist conventions; he received 18,722 votes, to 17,333 for Wilbur F. Norris, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Butler, Fillmore, Gage, Hamilton, Jefferson, Polk, Saline, Saunders, Seward, Thayer, and York (11 counties). WILLIAM LEDYARD STARK, Populist, of Aurora, was born in Mystic, New London County, Conn., July 29, 1853, of Pilgrim stock; had the usual experiences of a town boy of that locality, going to school and following the sea; graduated from the Mystic Valley Institute, at Mystic, Conn., in 1872; afterwards went to Wyoming, Stark County, Ill.; taught school and clerked in a store; attended the Union College of Law, Chicago, Ill, for eighteen months, during which time he was connected with the office of the late G. Gilbert Gibbons; was admitted to the bar by the supreme court of Illinois in January, 1878; removed to Aurora, Nebr., in February, 1878; was superintendent of the city schools for nearly two years; deputy district attorney for two years; appointed once and elected five times judge of the county court of Ham- ilton County, Nebr.; declined a sixth nomination for that office in 1895; served as major and judge-advocate-general of the Nebraska National Guard; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, being the candi- date of the Populist, Democratic, and Silver Republican parties, receiving 18,904 votes, to 18,377 for E. H. Hinshaw, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Adams, Chase, Clay, Dundy, Franklin, Frontier, Furnas, Gosper, Hall, Harlan, Hayes, Hitchcock, Kearney, Nuckolls, Perkins, Phelps, Red Willow, and Webster (18 counties). RODERICK DHU SUTHERI, AND, Populist, of Nelson, was born April 27, 1862, at Scotch Grove, Jones County, Iowa; received his education principally at the common NEERASEA] Senators and Representatives. 65 schools, attending a few terms at College Springs, Iowa; was admitted to the bar in Nuckolls County, Nebr., in 1888; was elected county attorney in 189o, and reelected in 1892 and 1894; was chosen chairman of the Populist State convention of 1899, and was also one of the delegates appointed by Governor Poynter to the trust conference held in Chicago in September, 1899; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, as a Populist, receiving the nomination from the Populist and Democratic parties, receiv- ing 18,332 votes, to 15,621 for William E. Andrews, Republican; was the unanimous nominee of the Populist, Democratic, and Silver Republican parties for the Fifty- sixth Congress, his opponent being C. E. Adams, a banker of Nuckolls County, and was reelected, receiving 16,354 votes, to 15,487 for C. E. Adams, Republican, and 27 votes for J. A. Armstrong, Prohibitionist. v SIXTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Banmner, Blaine, Box Butte, Boyd, Brown, Buffalo, Cherry, Cheyenne, Custer, Dawes, Dawson, Detel, Garfield, Grant, Greeley, Holt, Howard, Keith, Keya Paha, Kimball, Lincoln, ILogan, Loup, McPherson, Rock, Scott’s Bluffs, Sheridan, Sherman, Sioux, Thomas, Valley, and Wheeler (32 counties). ’ WILLIAM NEVILLE, Populist, of North Platte, was born in Washington County, I11., December 29, 1843, and removed to Chester, in Randolph County, in 1851; was educated at McKendree College, Lebanon, Ill.; was second sergeant Company H, One hundred and forty-second Illinois Infantry in the civil war; was elected to the Illinois legislature as a Democrat in the fall of 1872; moved to Nebraska in May, 1874; was elected to the Nebraska legislature from Omaha in the fall of 1876; moved to North Platte in April, 1877, and has since resided there; was the Democratic and antimonopoly candidate for Congress in 1884 and defeated by Hon. G. W. E. Dorsey; in 1891 Mr. Neville was elected judge of the thirteenth judicial district for a four years’ term; was nominated and elected supreme judge by 15,000 majority in 1896, but the office being contingent upon the adoption of a constitutional amendment, which failed to carry, he did not take a seat upon the supreme bench; was nomi- nated by the Populists, Democrats, and Silver Republicans and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. W. I. Greene, receiving 18,750 votes, to 16,396 for Moses P. Kinkaid, Republican. ~ NEVADA. SENATORS. JOHN PERCIVAL JONES, of the Silver party, of Gold Hill, was born in Hereford- shire, 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; 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, asa Republican, to succeed J. W. Nye, Republican; took his seat March 4, 1873, and was reelected in 1879, 1885, 1890, and 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. WILLIAM MORRIS STEWART, of the Silver party, of Carson City, was born in Lyons, Wayne County, N. Y., August 9, 1827; removed with his parents while a small child to Mesopotamia Township, Trumbull County, Ohio; attended I,yons 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 accumu- lated 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 removed to Virginia City, Nev., where he was largely engaged in early mining litigation and in the development of the Com- stock lode; was chosen a member of the Territorial council in 1861; in 1863 was 66 Congressional Directory. [NEVADA. elected a member of the constitutional convention; was elected United States Senator in 1864 and reelected 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, Demo- crat, and took his seat March 4, 1887; was reelected in 1893 and 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. FRANCIS GRIFFITH NEWLANDS, of the Silver party, of Reno, was born in Natchez, Miss., August 28, 1848; entered the class of 1867 at Yale College and remained until the middle of his junior year; later on attended the Columbian College Law School at Washington, but prior to graduation was admitted to the bar by the supreme court of the District of Columbia and went to San Francisco, where he entered upon the practice of law; continued in the active practice of his profession until 1886, when he became a trustee of the estate of William Sharon, formerly United States Senator from the State of Nevada; in 1888 he became a citizen of the State of Nevada; engaged actively in the agitation of the silver question and was for years vice-chairman of the national silver committee; was also active in the irrigation development of the arid region and other questions relating to the West; he was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and, having received his nomination from both the Silver party and the Democratic party, was reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 5,796 votes, to 3,111 for Thomas Wren, Populist. NEW HAMPSHIRE. SENATORS. WILLIAM EATON CHANDLER, Republican, of Concord, was born in Concord, N. H., December 28, 1835; received a common-school education; studied law; gradu- ated at Harvard Law School and was admitted to the bar in 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, 1863, and 1864, serving as its speaker during the last two years; on March 9, 1865, became Solicitor and Judge-Advocate-General of the Navy Department; was appointed First Assistant 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 a member of the New Hamp- shire 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, to fill the unexpired term of Austin F. Pike, which ended March 3, 1889; was reelected June 18, 1889, and again January 16, 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 190I. JACOB H. GALLINGER, Republican, of Concord, is of Dutch ancestry, his paternal great-grandfather having emigrated from Holland previous to the Revolutionary war, first settling in New York, where his grandfather was born, and afterwards going to Canada; his mother (Catharine Cook) was of American stock; was born on a farm in Cornwall, Ontario, March 28, 1837; received a common-school and academic educa- tion; was a printer in early life; studied medicine and was graduated in 1858, and fol- lowed the profession of medicine and surgery in the city of his present residence from April, 1862, until he entered public life, having a practice which extended beyond the limits of his State; was connected with various medical societies, and made frequent contributions to medical literature ; was a member of the house of representatives of New Hampshire 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 1879-80; received the honorary degree of A. M. from Dart- mouth College; was chairman of the Republican State committee from 1882 to 189o, when he resigned the place, but was again elected to the position in 1898; was chair- man of the delegation from his State to the Republican national convention of 1888, and made a speech seconding the nomination of Benjamin Harrison; was elected » NEW HAMPSHIRE] Senators and Representatives. 67 to the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses, and declined renomination to the Fifty- first Congress; was elected United States Senator tosucceed Henry W. Blair, and took ‘his seat March 4, 1891, and was reelected in 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Belknap, Carroll, Rockingham, and Strafford. HILLSBORO CoUNTY.—Towns of Bedford, Goffstown, Merrimack, Hudson, Litchfield, Manchester, and Pelham. MERRIMACK COoUNTY.—Towns of Allenstown, Canterbury, Chichester, Epsom, Hooksett, London, Northfield, Pembroke, and Pittsfield. CYRUS ADAMS SULLOWAY, Republican, of Manchester, was born at Grafton, N. H., June 8, 1839; received a common-school and academic education; studied law with Austin F. Pike at Franklin, N. H.; was admitted to the bar in 1863 and has practiced law at Manchester since January, 1864; was a member of the New Hamp- shire house of representatives in 1872-73 and from 1887 to 1893, inclusive; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 21,373 votes, to 18,518 for KE. J. Knowlton, Democrat, 550 for Isaac B. Vail, Prohibitionist, 309 for I,. Arnstein, Socialist Labor, and 194 for C. H. Mellen, Socialist Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan. HILLSBORO CouNTvY.—Towns of Amherst, Antrim, Bennington, Brookline, Deering, Francestown, Greenfield, Greenville, Hancock, Hillsboro, Hollis, ILyndeboro, Mason, Milford, Mount Ver- non, Nashua, New Boston, New Ipswich, Peterboro, Sharon, Temple, Weare, Wilton, and Windsor. MERRIMACK CoUNTY.—Townsof Andover, Boscawen, Bow, Bradford, Concord, Danbury, Dunbarton, Franklin, Henniker, Hill, Hopkinton, Newbury, New London, Salisbury, Sutton, Warner, Webster, and Wilmot. FRANK G. CLARKE, Republican, of Peterboro, was born in Wilton, N. H., September 10, 1850; was educated at Kimball Union Academy, Meriden, N. H., and at Dartmouth College; was admitted to the bar in 1876, and has practiced law ever since; was a member of the State house of representatives of 1885; of the State senate in 1889; reelected to the former in 1891, and was chosen speaker of that body, which consisted of 357 members; was appointed colonel on the military staff of Governor Hale, and served in that capacity from 1885 to 1887; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,395 votes, to 17,266 for Warren F. Daniell, Democrat, 580 for John C. Berry, Prohibitionist, 56 for Elias M. Blodgett, People’s Party, and 74 for Edward E. Southwick, Socialist Democrat. NEW JERSEY. SENATORS. WILLIAM J. SEWELL, Republican, of Camden, was born in Ireland in 1835, and came to this country at an early age; engaged in mercantile pursuits, and at the out- break of the civil war was commissioned as captain in the Fifth New Jersey Volun- teers; served during the war and was brevetted brigadier-general for distinguished services at Chancellorsville and major-general for gallant services during the war; was wounded at Chancellorsville and Gettysburg; after the war he became connected with the railroads in New Jersey, branches of the Pennsylvania Railroad system; was elected State senator from Camden County in 1872, reelected in 1875 and again in 1878, and was president of the senate in the years 1876, 1879, and 1880, when his party was in power; while yet a member of the legislature he was elected to the United States Senate in 1881, as the successor of Senator Theodore F. Randolph, and served until the close of his term, in 1887; was elected as a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1876, 1880, 1884, 1888, 1892, and 1896, and on each occasion was made chairman of his delegation; was one of the national commissioners for New Jersey of the World's Fair at Chicago; is vice-president of the Board of Mana- gers of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; is in command of the 56-1S8T—2D ED——6 68 Congressional Directory. [NEW JERSEY, National Guard of New Jersey, and also connected with the management of various banks, trust companies, and philanthropic societies; was appointed major-general upon the declaration of war against Spain, but, at the unanimous request of the Republican members of the Senate, did not take the field; was again elected to the United States Senate in 1895, to succeed Hon. John R. McPherson, Democrat. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. JOHN KEAN, Republican, of Ursino, was born at Ursino, near Elizabeth, N.]J., December 4, 1852; studied at private school and entered Yale College in the class of 1876; did not graduate, but left to study law; graduated at Columbia College Law School 1875; was admitted to the New Jersey bar 1877; was elected to the Forty- eighth and Fiftieth Congresses; was chairman of the Republican State committee 1891-92, and Republican candidate for governor 1892; received the degree of M. A. from Yale University in 1890; was member of the committee to revise the judiciary system of the State; is president of the National State Bank of Elizabeth, N. J., and vice-president of the Manhattan Trust Company, of New York; was nominated by acclamation by the Republican caucus, and elected to the United States Senate Jan- uary 25, 1899, to succeed James Smith, jr., Democrat. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, and Salem (5 counties). HENRY C. LOUDENSLAGER, Republican, of Paulsboro, was born in Maurice- town, Cumberland County, N. J., May 22, 1852; removed with his parents to Paulsboro in 1856, where he has resided since; was educated in the common schools of his county; after leaving the home farm he engaged in the produce commission business in Philadelphia, Pa., in 1872, and continued in it ten years; was elected county clerk in 1882 and reelected in 1887; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty- fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 23,864 votes, to 18,092 for Samuel Iredell, Democrat, 1,859 for G. J. Haven, Prohibitionist, and 164 for Frank F. Mills, Socialist Labor. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Atlantic, Burlington, Mercer, and Ocean (4 counties). JOHN J. GARDNER, Republican, of Atlantic City, was born in Atlantic County in 1845; was reared a waterman until 16 years of age, when he enlisted for three years in the Sixth New Jersey Volunteers; in March, 1865, enlisted for one year in the United States Veteran Volunteers; is a farmer and conveyancer; is also connected with insur- ance business; was elected alderman of Atlantic City in 1867 and mayor in 1868; reelected mayor seven times; was coroner of the county one year; city councilman one year; member of the New Jersey State senate fifteen years, from 1878 to 1893; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 24,035 votes, to 17,367 for John ¥. Hall, Democrat, 1,294 for Joseph J. Currie, Prohibitionist, and 153 for John P. Weigel, Socialist Labor. THIRD. DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Middlesex, Monmouth, and Somerset (3 counties). BENJAMIN F. HOWELL, Republican, of New Brunswick, was born in Cumberland County, N. J., January, 1844; in 1862 enlisted in the Twelfth New Jersey Volunteers and served until the close of the war; engaged in business in South Amboy until 1882, when he was elected surrogate of Middlesex County, and was reelected in 1887 for a second term; was a delegate to the Republican national convention at Minneapolis in 1892; is president of the People’s National Bank of New Brunswick, vice-president of the First National Bank of South Amboy, and director of the New Brunswick Savings Institution; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,512 votes, to 18,676 for Patrick Convery, Democrat, 670 for O. B. Bird, Prohibitionist, and 183 for F. Williams, Socialist Labor. - NEW JERSEY] Senators and Representatives. 69 FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Hunterdon, Morris, Sussex, and Warren’ (4 counties). JOSHUA S. SALMON, Democrat, of Boonton, Morris County, was born near Mount Olive, in that county, February 2, 1846; attended the seminaries at Charlotte- ville, N.Y., and Schooleys Mountain, N. J.; also took a course at the Albany Law School, and was graduated therefrom in 1873; upon his graduation was admitted by the supreme court of New York as an attorney and counselor at law of that State; after spending a time in the office of Charles E. Scofield, of Jersey City, he returned to his native county and settled at Boonton; was admitted as an attorney in New Jersey in 1875, and afterwards as a counselor, and on December 21, 1894, was admitted as an attorney and counselor of the Supreme Court of the United States; was prose- cutor of the pleas for Morris County from April, 1893, to April, 1898; was elected to the State legislature in 1877, and was the Democratic candidate for State senator in 1883; was one of the organizers of the Boonton National Bank in 18go, and has been a director of the bank ever since; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,866 votes, to 15,206 for John I. Blair Reiley, Republican, 1,571 for Franklin P. Lefferts, Prohibitionist, and 70 for F. Campbell, Socialist Labor. FIFTH DISTRICT. CoUuNTIES.—Bergen and Passaic (2 counties). JAMES FLEMING STEWART, Republican, of Paterson, was born at Paterson, N. J., June 15, 1851; attended public and private schools in Paterson and the Univer- sity of the City of New York, and graduated at the law school of the latter institu- tion in 1870, taking the first prize for best examination; practiced law in New York City until 1875, since which time he has followed his profession in his native city; was three times appointed recorder of Paterson (the criminal magistrate of the city), which office he occupied at the time of his election to Congress; never held or ran for any other office; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fiftth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,367 votes, to 16,342 for Francis J. Marley, Democrat, 354 for. C. H. Stocking, Prohibitionist, and 1,270 for I. Magnat, Socialist Labor. . SIXTH DISTRICT. County.—Part of Essex, comprising the city of Newark (15 wards) and the township of East Orange (5 wards). RICHARD WAYNE PARKER, Republican, of Newark, was born August 6, 1848; graduated from Princeton College in 1867 and from the law school of Columbia College in 1869; was admitted to the bar of New Jersey in June, 1870; was a member of the house of assembly of New Jersey in 1885 and 1886; was the Republican candi- date for the Fifty-third Congress; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 23,843 votes, to 20,150 for Henry G. Atwater, Democrat, 395 for Daniel B. Raub, Prohibitionist, and 1,035 for Henry Carless, Socialist I,abor. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Countv.—All of Hudson, except the city of Bayonne. WILLIAM D. DALY, Democrat, of Hoboken, was born at Jersey City, N. J., June 4, 1851; is a lawyer by profession, being admitted as an attorney in 1874; was for- merly a moulder by trade; as a criminal lawyer stands at the head of the New Jersey bar, and has, through his professional and legislative career, become familiar with every detail of constitutional and municipal law affecting New Jersey; was assistant United States district attorney for New Jersey for three years, 1885-1888, during the first Cleveland Administration; was an alternate delegate to the Democratic national convention in 1888, and in 1889 was elected to the house of assembly from the Eighth district of Hudson County; although a new member, was made leader of his party on the floor of the house, and upon the close of his term as assemblyman was nomi- nated by Governor Abbett judge of the district court of Hoboken, and was unani- mously confirmed; resigned as judge in 1892 to accept the nomination of his party for State senator to represent Hudson County, and after an exciting canvass was elected by a majority of 5,645; in 1892 was again a delegate to the Democratic national convention at Chicago; in 1895 wasrenominated for the office of State senator 70 Congressional Directory. [NEW JERSEY, and elected, contrary to all precedent in that district; during five years of his sena- torial career was the leader of his party on the floor, and during the same time was a delegate to, and invariably an officer of, the county and State conventions of the Democratic party; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention in 1896, and was the New Jersey member of the committee on notification of candidates; was chairman of the State Democratic convention in 1896 and member at large of the State committee, 1896-1898; in 1898 was prominently mentioned as the Demo- cratic candidate for governor, and at the State convention received on the first ballot 364 votes, to 441 for Crane, who received the nomination; was nominated without opposition and elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 30,270 votes, to 20,230 for Z. KX. Pangborn, Republican, 258 for J. W. Brown, Prohibitionist, and 1,723 for G. P. Herrasaft, Socialist Labor. This was the largest majority ever given a Con- gressional candidate in this district. FIGHTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Part of Essex, part of Hudson, and Union. CHARLES NEWELI, FOWLER, Republican, of Elizabeth, was born at Lena, I11., November 2, 1852; graduated from Yale University in 1876 and from the Chi- cago Law School in 1878; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,230 votes, to 15,878 for Edward H. Snyder, Democrat, 561 for J. C. Davis, Prohibitionist, and 740 for W. J. Campbell, Socialist Labor. : NEW YORK. SENATORS. : THOMAS COLIIER PLATT, Republican, of Owego, was born in Owego, N.Y} July,15,1833; was prepared for college atthe Owego Academy; was amember of the class of 1853 of Yale College, but was compelled to give up the course in that institution on account of ill health; received the honorary degree of M. A. from that college in 1876; entered mercantile life soon after leaving school, and has been in active business since; was president of the Tioga National Bank at its organization; became largely interested in the lumbering business in Michigan; was county clerk of the county of Tioga in 1859, 1860, and 1861; was elected to the Forty-third and Forty- fourth Congresses; was elected United States Senator January 18, 1881, and resigned that office May 16 of the same year; was chosen secretary and director of the United States Express Company in 1879, and in 1880 was elected president of the company; was member and president of the board of quarantine commissioners of New York from #880 till 1888; was delegate to the national Republican conventions of 1876, 1880, 1884, 1888, 1892, and 1896; has been a member of the national Republican committee; was elected United States Senator in 1896, and took his seat March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. CHAUNCEY MITCHELL DEPEW, Republican, of Peekskill, was born in that city April 23, 1834; was graduated from Yale College in 1856, and in 1887 received the degree of LI. D. from his alma mater; read law with Hon. William Nelson, of Peekskill, and was admitted to the bar in 1858, beginning the practice of his pro- fession the next year; in 1861 was elected to the assembly, and reelected in 1862, serving as chairman of the committee on ways and means in the latter term; in 1863 led the Republican campaign in New York as candidate for secretary of state, and reversed the Democratic success of 1862, being elected by 30,000 majority; refused a renomination; was appointed minister to Japan, and was confirmed by the Senate, but declined to accept the office; in 1866 was appointed attorney for the New York & Harlem Railroad Company, and has since continuously been identified with that and the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Company, the successor of the former corporation, and with the various railroads comprising and allied to the Vanderbilt system as general counsel; became president of the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad in 1885; resigned in 1899 to become chairman of the boards of directors of the New York Central, the I.ake Shore, the Michigan Central, and the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad companies; in 1867 was appointed county clerk of Westchester County by Governor Fenton and resigned; in 1870 was made emigration commissioner by the New York legislature, but declined to serve; in 1875 was appointed and served as boundary commissioner, fixing the State line with adjoining States; in 1872 was candidate for lieutenant-governor on the ge Y a ame NEW YORK.] : Senators and Representatives. 71 Iiberal Republican, or Greeley, ticket, but acted with the Republican party the next year, and has canvassed the State and country for the party every year since 1872, as he had every year before 1872, beginning the year he graduated from Yale College; in 1874 was elected regent of the State University, and appointed one of the commissioners to build the State capitol; in 1881 was a candidate for United States Senator to sueceed Thomas C. Platt, who had resigned, and after a protracted and exciting contest, in which he received the votes of a large majority of the Republican legislators, he withdrew and Warner Miller was chosen; in 1885 the Senatorship was tendered him, but his business and professional engagements at that time prevented acceptance; was a candidate for the Presidential nomination at the Republican national convention at Chicagoin 1888, and received 91 votes; was delegate at large to the conventions in 1892 and 1896, presenting the name of Presi- dent Harrison for renomination to the former and that of Governor Morton to the latter; has been the orator on three great national and international occasions—the unveiling of the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor, the statue having been pur- chased by the contributions of the people of France and brought over here by the members of the cabinet, of the legislature, and of the army and navy of the French Republic; the centennial celebration of the inauguration of the first President of the United States, George Washington; the opening of the great World’s Fair at Chicago, in 1892, celebrating the discovery of America by Columbus; was also selected by the legislature to deliver the oration at the centennial celebration of the formation of the constitution of the State of New York, at Kingston; at the centennial of the organi- zation of the legislature of the State of New York; at the services in the legislature in memory of General Sherman, General Husted, and Governor Fenton, and at the memorial services of President Garfield in New York; also selected as the orator for the unveiling of the statue of Alexander Hamilton in Central Park, and at the cen- tennial celebration of the capture of Major Andre at Sleepy Hollow; was married November 9, 1871, to Elise Hegeman, and has one son; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Edward Murphy, jr., Democrat. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Queens, Nassau, and Suffolk (3 counties). TOWNSEND SCUDDER, Democrat, of Glen Head, in the town of Oyster Bay, Nassau County, was born at Northport, Suffolk County, N. Y., July 26, 1865; was educated mainly abroad; graduated from Columbia Law School, New York, in the class of 1888; was admitted to the bar of New York in 1889, and has made a specialty of municipal law; has served four terms as counsel for Queens County; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,893 votes, to 22,483 for Joseph M. Belford, Republican, 84 for Charles W, McCullough, Socialist Labor, and 557 for Henry M. Randall, Populist. SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTY OF KINGS.—First, Second, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eleventh, and Twentieth wards of the borough of Brooklyn. JOHN J. FITZGERALD, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in that city March io, 1872, and has always resided there; received his preliminary education in the schools in the city; entered Manhattan College, New York City, and was graduated there- from, receiving the degrees of bachelor and master of arts; studied law at the New York Iaw School; was admitted to the bar at the age of 21, and the same year received from the regents of the State of New York the degree of bachelor of laws, cum laude; at present is a member of the law firm of Griffin & Fitzgerald, with offices in New York City; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,431 votes, to 14,323 for Denis M. Hurley, Republican, 246 for Peter Larsen, Socialist I.abor, 109 for W. W. Passage, Prohibitionist, and 70 for T. W. F. Scanlon. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTY OF KiNGgs.—Third, Fourth, Ninth, Tenth, T'wenty-second, Twenty-third, and Twenty- ninth wards of the borough of Brooklyn. EDMUND HOPE DRIGGS, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in Brooklyn May 2, 1865; was educated at Adelphi College, Brooklyn, and is by profession a fire insur- v2 : Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. “2 ance surveyor; is of Revolutionary stock, two of his ancestors having served in the Revolutionary war, one as a captain the other as a surgeon of the Connecticut militia; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,995 votes, to 19,872 for William A. Prendergast, Republican, 376 for Jacob Gauss, Socialist Tabor, and 137 for Asa F. Smith Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. County OF KIN Gs.—Eighth, Twelfth, Twenty-fourth, Twenty-fifth, T'wenty-sixth Thirtieth Thirty-first, and Thirty-second wards; districts Twenty-seven to Thirty of Twenty-second ward, and districts Ten to Thirty of the Twenty-third ward borough of Brooklyn. BERTRAM TRACY CLAYTON, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in Clayton, Ala., October 19, 1862; was educated at the University of Alabama and at the United By States Military Academy, West Point, N. Y.; was graduated from the Academy June, 1886, and appointed a second lieutenant in the Eleventh United States Infantry; served till April 30, 1888, then resigned to go into business as civil engineer in Brooklyn; was first lieutenant and adjutant, Thirteenth Regiment, National Guards, New York, from May 12, 1890, to December 2, 1892; captain Company I, same regiment, to July 17, 1893; major and engineer Second Brigade, National Guards, New York, to December 16, 1895; on this latter date was elected captain of Troop C, which he had organized in Brooklyn and which was that day mustered into the State service; was mustered into United States volunteer service as captain of Troop C, New York Vol- anteers, May 20, 1898, and served through.the Porto Rican campaign, taking part in the action at Coamo August 9, and in several skirmishes in Arbonito Pass August 9 to 12, 1898; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 24,581 votes, to 20,893 for Israel F. Fischer, Republican, 880 for Joseph B. Cooper, Socialist Labor, 136 for Benjamin Larzelere, Prohibitionist, and 46 for H. A. Goulden. FIFTH DISTRICT. County OF KINGS.—Highteenth, Nineteenth, Twenty-first, Twenty-seventh, and I'wenty-eighth wards of the borough of Brooklyn. FRANK E. WILSON, M. D., Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in 1857, at Rox- bury, Delaware County, N. Y.; his father was Robert F.Wilson; he lived at Roxbury until he was 12 years old, when his parents moved to Poughkeepsie, Duchess County, N. Y.; received his preliminary education at the Poughkeepsie Military Academy; graduated from the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, in 1882, and practiced his profession in Duchess County until 1889, when he removed to his present home in Brooklyn; is a member of the Kings County Medical Society, and is attached to the staff of the Bushwick Hospital; is affiliated with Ridgewood Lodge, F. A. M., and all the bodies of the Scottish Rite and Mystic Shrine, Kismet Temple; was fore- most in the organization of Bushwick Council, Royal Arcanum, and assisted in the organization of Court Bushwick, Foresters of America, of which he has been since medical examiner; also, a member of the Bushwick.Club, the Empire Democratic Club, and the Horatio Seymour Democratic Club of the Twenty-eighth Ward; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,579 votes, to 16,669 for Charles G. Bennett, Republican, 1,782 for Gustav Rosenblath, Socialist Labor, and 71 for Horatio Berry, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT. CoUuNTY OF KINGS. —Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth wards of the borough of Brooklyn. : MITCHELL MAY, Democrat, of the borough of Brooklyn, was born July rr, 1871, in said borough; was educated in the public schools and in the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, later entering the law school of Columbia College, graduating in 1892; was admitted to the bar in 1893, and is actively engaged in practice in Brooklyn; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,215 votes, to 11,899 for Henry C. Fischer, Republican, 1,029 for William Spoerner, Socialist Labor, 75 for Isaac Carhart, Prohibitionist, and 71 for Frederick W. Jobelman, Chicago Plat- form Democrat. : SEVENTH DISTRICT. ht CounTy.—Richmond, and the First and Fifth assembly districts of the county of New York. NICHOLAS MULLER, Democrat, of New Brighton, Staten Island, Richmond y County, was born in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, November 15, 1836; attended hd NEW YORK] Senators and Representatives. 7s the Luxembourg Athenzeum; is engaged in the railroad and steamship forwarding business; was a member of the State assembly in 1875 and 1876; was president of the board of police commissioners of Richmond County from 1888 until 1897; also excise commissioner from 1892 until 1895; in 1892 was appointed State quarantine commis- sioner by Governor Roswell P. Flower; was a member of the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-eighth, and Forty-ninth Congresses, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 14,122 votes, to 6,639 for C. Wilmot Townsend, Republican, 308 for Julius Loos, Socialist Labor, and 157 for W. P. ¥. Ferguson, Prohibitionist. FIGHTH DISTRICT. CiTY OF NEW YORK.—Parts of the Second, Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Fighteenth, and Twenti- eth assembly districts of the county of New York. DANIEL J. RIORDAN, Democrat, of New York, was born in Hester street, in the Eighth Congressional district, twenty-eight years ago; attended the public schools of the district until 1886, when he entered Manhattan College and was grad- uated therefrom in 1890; then became a partner in the real estate business conducted by his father; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress by a majority larger than was ever given to a candidate from the Eighth Congressional district, receiving 10,716 votes, to 7,347 for John Murray Mitchell, Republican, 160 for John Nagel, Socialist Labor, and 33 for Dr. M. W. Palmer, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT. CIiTY OF NEW YOoRrK.—Fourth, Eighth, and Twelfth and parts of the Second, Sixth, Tenth, and Six- teenth assembly districts of the county of New York. THOMAS J. BRADLEY, Democrat, of New York City, was born January 2, 1870, at No. 81 Lewis street, in the city of New York ; attended public schools until June, 1882, when he was graduated to the College of the City of New York, from which he was graduated with the degree of bachelor of arts in June, 1887 ; taught in the public schools of New York City from 1887 until 1891, at the same time attending the University Law School, from which institution he was graduated as a bachelor of laws in 1889; in 1891 was appointed a deputy assistant district attorney of the county of New York, which position he held till July, 1895, when he resigned to attend to his private law practice ; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 11,694 votes, to 6,447 for John Steibling, Republican, and 2,396 for Lucien Saniel, Socialist I.abor. TENTH DISTRICT. City oF NEW YORK.—Ninth, Thirteenth, and parts of the Third, Fifth, Fifteenth, and Twenty- fifth assembly districts of the county of New York. AMOS J. CUMMINGS, Democrat, of New York City, was born in Conkling, Broome County, N. Y., May 15, 1841; received a common-school education; entered a printing office as an apprentice when 12 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-major in the Twenty-sixth New Jersey Regiment of Infantry, Second Brigade, Second Divi- sion, Sixth Corps, Army of the Potomac; received the Congressional medal of honor for gallantry on the battlefield; was a delegate to the Democratic national conven- tions in 1892 and in 1896; 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 Congress; declined a renomination, preferring to give his whole attention to editorial work; was elected to the Fifty-first Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Samuel Sullivan Cox; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,859 votes, to 10,620 for Elijah M. Fisher, Republican, 457 for Thomas Ceely, Socialist I.abor, and 87 for George Gethin, Prohibitionist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. City oF NEw York.—Tenth, Twelfth, and Fourteenth assembly districts of the county of New York. WILLIAM SULZER, Democrat, of New York City, was born March 18, 1863; was educated in the public schools; was admitted to the bar in 1884: was a member of the New York legislature in 1890, 1891, 1892, 1893, and 1894; in 1893 he was speaker 74 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. of the assembly; was a delegate to the Chicago convention in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 14,364 votes, to 6,178 for William Volkel, Republican, 2,310 for Howard Valkan, Socialist Labor, and 27 for George N. Mayer, Prohibitionist. TWELFTH DISTRICT. City OF NEw YOrRK.—Eleventh, Sixteenth, and Eighteenth assembly districts of the county of New York. GEORGE B. McCLELLAN, Democrat, of New York City, was born November 23, 1865, in Dresden, Saxony, where his parents had gone on a visit; graduated from Princeton College in 1886; worked as a reporter and in editorial positions on several New York newspapers; is a lawyer by profession; was president of the board of aldermen of the city and county of New York in 1892 and 1893; was elected to a the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, i receiving 15,108 votes, to 7,710 for Howard Conkling, Republican, 509 for Dow Hos- ; man, Socialist Labor, and 35 for W. E. Shelden, Prohibitionist. | | THIRTEENTH DISTRICT, “| 4 f City oF NEw YORK.—Embracing portions of the Thirteenth, Fifteenth, Seventeenth, Twenty- i second, Twenty-fourth, Twenty-seventh, and Twenty-ninth assembly districts of the county ¢ of New York, JEFFERSON M. LEVY, Democrat, of New York City, was born in New York, the son of Capt. Jonas P. Levy, and a nephew of Commodore Uriah P. Levy, a dis- tinguished naval officer of the last generation, and author of the abolition of flogging in the United States Navy; was educated in the public schools, and was graduated from the University of the City of New York; studied law with the late Clarkson N. Potter; was admitted to the bar of the State of New York, and was associated with | him in various important litigations; although active in public affairs and prominent ¥ | in party work, has never before held public office; is a member of the Chamber of Commerce, of the Board of Trade and Transportation, of the Real Estate Exchange, and of numerous clubs and other organizations; was for many years vice-president of the Democratic Club. Commodore Levy, in 1830, at the suggestion of President Jackson, became the owner of Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson, and at his death Mr. Levy became and still remains the owner. The homestead is maintained by Mr. Levy in keeping with its distinguished traditions. Mr. Levy was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,985 votes, to 11,393 for James W. Perry, Repub- lican, 643 for John J. Flick, Socialist Labor, and 58 for John McKee, Prohibitionist. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. City oF NEw YorK.—Embraces all of that territory on the west side of New York lying north of Fifty-second street and west of Seventh avenue to Fifty-ninth street, and then west of Eighth avenue and north to Spuyten Duyvil Creek, and all territory on the east side between Fifty- ninth and Seventy-ninth streets and Central Park and East River, WILLIAM ASTOR CHANLER, Democrat, of New York City, was born June 11, 1867, in Newport, R. I., son of John Winthrop Chanler, who served several terms in the legislature of New York State and represented the Seventh Congres- sional district of that State for three terms; was educated at St. John’s School, Sing i Sing, Phillips Academy, Exeter, N. H., and Harvard University, which he left to . undertake explorations in Africa, the result of his travels having been published in a book; had conferred upon him the degree of A. M. by Harvard University, and became a member of two European geographical societies; was elected to the assem- bly in the New York State legislature in 1897 from the Fifth district, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 31,604 votes, to 25,209 for Lemuel E. Quigg, Republican, 1,307 for Emile Neppel, Socialist Labor, and 104 for Albert Wadhams. Prohibitionist. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. CITY oF NEW YORK.—That portion of the Twenty-first assembly district between the center of Seventy-ninth street and the center of Fighty-sixth street, that portion of the T'wenty-second district above the center of Seventy-ninth street, in the city of New York, and the Twenty- third assembly district of the county of New York. JACOB RUPPERT, Jr., Democrat, of New York City, was born August 5, 1867, in the city of New York; was educated at the Columbia Grammar School; by occupa- SEN y= i ; : 14 NEW YORK.] Senators and Representatives. 75 tion is a brewer at No. 1639 Third avenue; was a member of the Seventh Regiment, National Guard of New York, before his appointment as aid-de-camp (with the rank of colonel) on the staff of Governor Hill, and subsequently as senior aid on the staff of Governor Flower; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 31,292 votes, to 20,848 for Philip B. Low, Republican, 1,922 for William F. Ehret, Socialist Labor, and 83 for J. I. Brooks, Prohibitionist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTY.—Westchester and the borough of Bronx, New York County. JOHN QUINCY UNDERHILL, Democrat, of New Rochelle, was born in that place February 19, 1848; was educated in private and public schools and at the Col- lege of the City of New York; has been engaged in the business of fire insurance all his life, and for twenty years has been an officer of the Westchester Fire Insur- ance Company; has been president and trustee of his native village several times; has always been identified with the Democratic party; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 32,578 votes, to 26,130 for James Irving Burns, Republican, 647 for John J. Kinneally, Socialist Labor, 302 for Collin F. Jewell, Prohibitionist, and 33 for William A. Cox, Chicago Platform Democrat. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Orange, Rockland, and Sullivan (3 counties). ARTHUR SIDNEY TOMPKINS, Republican, of Nyack, was born August 26, 1865, in Schoharie County, N. Y.; his parents moved to Rockland County about 1870, where he has resided ever since, with the exception of about one year spent at Tarrytown; attended the public schools of Clarkstown and Nyack until 1878; studied law in the offices of Hon. Seth B. Cole and Abram A. Demarest, at Nyack, and of Henry C. Griffin, at Tarrytown; was admitted to the bar as an attorney and coun- selor at law of the State of New York in 1886; in 1887 was elected police justice of the village of Nyack and served until 1889; was elected member of assembly of Rockland County, and served in the assembly of 1890; was elected county judge of Rockland County in 1893, which office he held until his election to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,195 votes, to 15,564 for Samuel D. Roberson, Democrat, 143 for Samuel P. Felter, Prohibitionist, and 549 for James C. Rider. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.— Ulster, Dutchess, and Putnam (3 counties). JOHN H. KETCHAM, Republican, of Dover Plains, was born at Dover, N. Y., December 21, 1832; received an academic education; became interested in agricultural pursuits; was supervisor of his town in 1854 and 1855; was a member of the State assem- bly of New York in 1856 and 1857; was a member of the State senate of New York in 1860 and 1861, and a member of the war committee for his senatorial district; entered the Union Army as colonel of the One hundred and fiftieth New York Volunteers in October, 1862, and was appointed brigadier-general by brevet, afterwards brigadier- general, serving until he resigned, in March, 1865, to take the seat in Congress to which he had been elected; was afterwards appointed major-general by brevet; was elected to the Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, Forty-first, and Forty-second Congresses; was often a delegate to Republican State conventions, and was a delegate to the Repub- lican national conventions in 1876 and 1896; 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, Fifty-first, and Fifty-second Congresses, when, owing to impaired health, declined a renomination; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Con- gress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 23,276 votes, to 18,348 for T. E. Benedict, Democrat, and 641 for Lester Howard, Prohibitionist. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Columbia and Rensselaer (2 counties). AARON V. S. COCHRANE, Republican, of Hudson, was born March 14, 1858, at Coxsackie, N. Y.; is a son of Francis Cochrane ; was brought up on a farm; was edu- cated in a district school and at Claverack Academy, in Claverack, N.Y.; entered Yale College in 1875, and was graduated in 1879; he then removed to Hudson and entered 76 Congressional Directory. [NEW Yor: on the study of law; was admitted to the bar in 1881, and has ever since practiced his profession in Hudson; is a member of the law firm of Brownell & Cochrane; in 1887 and 1888 was police justice of Hudson; was elected district attorney of Columbia County in 1889 and served three years; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,593 votes, to 19,565 for John Henry Livingston, Democrat, 210 for Lawrence A. Boland, Socialist Labor, and 517 for Adam Y. Myers, Prohibitionist. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. CouNTy.—Albany. MARTIN H. GLYNN, Democrat, of Albany, was born in the town of Kinderhook September 27, 1871; was educated in the public schools and graduated from St. John’s College, Fordham, at the head of the class of 1894; four years later this institution honored him with the degree of master of arts; after graduation he studied law and is now a member of the Albany County bar and the New York State Bar Association; did journalistic work on several papers until he became managing editor of the Albany Times-Union, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,026 votes, to 19,475 for George N. Southwick, Republican, 265 for Jacob E. Alexander, Socialist Labor, and 189 for Ovier H. Blodgett, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Greene, Montgomery, Otsego, Schenectady, and Schoharie (5 counties). JOHN KNOX STEWART, Republican, of Amsterdam, was born in the town of Perth, Fulton County, N. Y., October 20, 1853, removing to Amsterdam with his parents in early life, where he was educated in the public schools and at Amsterdam Academy; left school to take charge of his father’s estate, who had been proprietor of the Forest Paper Mills in Amsterdam, which business he continued until 1885, when he entered the knitting mill of Schuyler & Blood to assist his father-in-law, Mr. James H. Schuyler, who was in failing health; in 1888 purchased the half interest formerly owned by Mr. Schuyler, and at the death of Mr. Blood became sole proprietor of the Chuctanunda Hosiery Mills, Amsterdam; was one of the original sewer com- missioners of the city; has for a long time been a director of the Farmers’ National Bank of Amsterdam, and the Chuctanunda Gas Light Company, also vice-president of the Amsterdam Board of Trade; in 1889 was elected member of the assembly from Montgomery County, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 25,561 votes, to 23,347 for Stephen I. Malgham, Democrat, 362 for Arthur Playford, Socialist Tabor, and go4 for Smith C. Niles, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Fulton, Hamilton, Saratoga, and St. Lawrence (4 counties). LUCIUS NATHAN LITTAUER, Republican, of Gloversville, was born January 20, 1859, in that city; removed to New York City in 1865; was educated there until he entered Harvard University, and was graduated in 1878; immediately engaged in the glove-manufacturing business of his father at Gloversville, to which he suc- ceeded in 1882, and is at present engaged extensively therein; never held public office until elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress; was reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 27,083 votes, to 15,448 for D. B. Lucey, Democrat, 1,342 for W. E. Whitney, Prohibitionist, and 331 for Miles FE. Wilcox, Socialist Labor. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Warren, and Washington (5 counties). LOUIS W. EMERSON, Republican, of Warrensburg, Warren County, was born at Warrensburg July 25, 1857; was educated at Warrensburg Academy; has been engaged in the banking and manufacturing business since 1878; was State senator from the Nineteenth district for two terms, commencing 1891; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress practically without opposition, receiving 25,662 votes, to 993 for Jonathan E. Hoag, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTiEs.—Jefferson, Iewis. and Oswego (3 counties). CHARLES A. CHICKERING, Republican, of Copenhagen, was born in Harrisburg, Lewis County, N. Y., November 26, 1843; educated in the common schools and at Low- NEW YORK.] Senators and Representatives. 77 ville Academy, and was for a time a teacher in that institution; was school commis- sioner of Lewis County, 1865 to 1875; member of assembly in 1879, 1880, and 1881; was elected clerk of the assembly in 1884 and reelected in 1885, 1886, 1887, 1888, 1889, and 1890; has been chairman of the Republican county committee of Lewis County, secretary of the Republican State committee, and also a member of the executive committee of that body; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 23,991 votes, to 15,724 for Eber T. Strickland, Democrat, and 1,034 for Eugene M. Crabb, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Omneida and Herkimer (2 counties). JAMES SCHOOLCRAFT SHERMAN, Republican, of Utica, was born in Utica, N. Y., October 24, 1855; received an academic and collegiate education, graduating from Hamilton College in the class of 1878; was admitted to the bar in 1880, becom- ing a member of the firm of Cookinham & Sherman; was elected mayor of Utica in March, 1884, as a Republican, receiving a substantial majority in a Democratic city; was chairman of the Republican State convention in Saratoga in 1895; was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,368 votes, to 19,160 for Walter Ballou, Democrat, and 858 for T. Clinton Brockway, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Broome, Chenango, Delaware, Tioga, and Tompkins (5 counties). GEORGE W. RAY, Republican, of Norwich, was born in Otselic, Chenango County, N. Y., February 3, 1844; was brought up on a farm and educated in the com- mon 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; was discharged at the close of the war; studied law, was admitted to practice in November, 1867, and has practiced his profession 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; in July, 1899, was offered the appointment as justice of the supreme court of the State of New York in place of Justice David L. Follett, deceased, which position he declined; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 30,007 votes, to 19,199 for Edward E. Pease, Democrat, and 2,001 for Isaac C. Andrews, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Madison and Onondaga (2 counties). MICHAEL E. DRISCOLL, Republican, of Syracuse, was born in Syracuse, N. Y., February 9, 1851; when about 1 year old his parents removed to the town of Camillus, Onondaga County; was educated in the district schools, Munro Collegiate Institute, at Elbridge, Onondaga County, and Williams College; is a lawyer, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 26,025 votes, to 14,207 for George H. Gilbert, Democrat, 2,443 for Thomas Crimmins, 932 for Charles M. Tower, and 2,433 for John McCarthy. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Cayuga, Cortland, Ontario, Wayne, and Yates (5 counties). SERENO E. PAYNE, Republican, of Auburn, was born at Hamilton, N. Y., 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; is now a member of the firm of Payne, Van Sickle & Payne; was city clerk of Auburn, 1868-1871; was supervisor of Auburn, 1871-72; was district attorney of Cayuga County, 1873-1879; was president of the board of education at Auburn, 1879-1882; was appointed a member of the American-British joint high commission in January, 1899; was elected to the Forty- eighth, Forty-ninth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 29,536 votes, to 18,831 for John H. Young, Democrat, and 1,375 for John W. Berrus, Prohibitionist. 78 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Chemung, Schuyler, Seneca, and Steuben (4 counties). CHARLES W. GILLET, Republican, of Addison, was born at Addison, N. V., November 26, 1840; graduated at Union College, Schenectady, N. Y., class of 1861; enlisted as a private in the Fighty-sixth Regiment New York Volunteers, August, 1861; was made adjutant of the regiment November, 1861, and served as adjutant until dis- charged the service for disabilities in 1863; was elected to the FRifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 22,348 votes, to 18,311 for Albert I. Childs, Democrat, and 1,737 for Casper G. Decker, Prohibitionist. THIRTIETEL DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Genesee, Livingston, Niagara, Orleans, and Wyoming (5 counties). JAMES WOLCOTT WADSWORTH, Republican, of Geneseo, was born in Phila- delphia, Pa., October 12, 1846; was preparing at New Haven, Conn., to enter Yale College, but left in the fall of 1864 and entered the Army, serving on the staff of Gen. G. K. Warren to the close of the war; was supervisor of the town of Geneseo during 1875, 1876, and 1877; was member of the assembly in 1878 and 1879, and comptroller of the State of New York in 1880 and 1881; was elected to the Forty-seventh, Forty- eighth, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth;and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 25,799 votes, to 18,911 for James T. Gordon, Democrat, and 1,523 for Alvah Carpenter, Prohibitionist. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT. CounTy.—Monroe. . JAMES M. E. O'GRADY, Republican, of Rochester, was born at Rochester, N. Y., March 31, 1863; was educated in the Rochester schools; graduated from the University of Rochester, 1885; was admitted as a lawyer in the fall of 1885, and bas since practiced his profession in Rochester; was school commissioner of the city of Rochester from 1887 to 1892; member of the New York State assembly from the Second Monroe district in 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896, 1897, and 1898, and was speaker of the New York State assembly in 1897 and 1898; has always been a Republican, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,717 votes, to 17,227 for John R. Fanning, Democrat, 1,165 for Frank A. Sieverman, Socialist Labor, and goo for Benson H. Roberts, Prohibitionist. : THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT. ERIE COUNTY (part of), embracing the First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, T'welfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Nineteenth, and Twentieth wards of the city of Buffalo. WILLIAM HENRY RYAN, Demoérat, of Buffalo, was born in Hopkinton, Mass., May 10, 1860; came to Buffalo with his parents in 1866; was educated in the public schools and high school; has been for years and now is associated with his father in conducting a successful boot and shoe business; has always taken an active part in politics; was elected to represent the Second Ward of Buffalo in the board of supervisors of Erie County in 1894, by a large majority, and was reelected in 1897; on the organization of the board of supervisors in 1898 his associates gave evidence of their regard by electing him chairman; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 15,546 votes, to 14,858 for Rowland B. Mahany, Republican, 848 for August Miller, Socialist Labor, and 127 for Stephen Lockwood, Prohibitionist. PHIRTV- THIRD DISTRICT, ERIE COUNTY (part of), embracing the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Twenty- first, Twenty-second, Twenty-third, T'wenty-fourth,and I'wenty-fifth wards of the city of Buffalo, and Fourth and Fifth assembly districts of the county of Hrie. DE ALVA STANWOOD ALEXANDER, Republican, of Buffalo, wasborn July 17, 1846, in Richmond, Me.; at the age of 15 entered the Army, serving three years, and until the close of the war, as a private soldier; upon leaving the service prepared for college at Edward Little Institute, in Auburn, Me., and took his bachelor’s degree from Bowdoin College in 1870; afterwards located at Indianapolis, Ind., where he NEW YORK.] Senators and Representatives. 79 studied law and practiced in partnership with Hon. Stanton J. Peelle, now judge of the Courtof Claims in Washington; was a delegate to the national Republican convention in 1872; was secretary of the Indiana Republican State committee from 1874 to 1878; in 1881 was appointed Fifth Auditor of the Treasury Department, and during his resi- “dence in Washington was elected and served one term as commander of the Depart- ment >f the Potomac, Grand Army of the Republic; on leaving Washington, removed to Buffalo, forming a law partnership with his college classmate, Hon. James A. Roberts, formerly comptroller of the State of New York; in 1889 was appointed United States attorney for the northern district of New York, holding the office until December, 1893; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 22,924 votes, to 17,233 for Harvey W. Richardson, Demo- crat; 493 for Boris Bornstein, Socialist Labor; and 451 for Joseph W. Grosvenor, Prohibitionist. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua (3 counties). EDWARD B. VREELAND, Republican, of Salamanca, was born at Cuba, Alle- gany County, N. V., in 1857; received an academic education and served as superin- tendent of the schools of Salamanca from 1877 to 1882; was admitted to the practice of law in 1881; since 1891 has been president of the Salamanca National Bank, and is engaged principally in the banking and oil business; was elected to the Fifty- sixth Congress November 7, 1899, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of the Hon. Warren B. Hooker, receiving 21,773 votes, to 11,347 for Lewis, Democrat, and 1,653 for Nicholson, Prohibitionist. NORTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. MARION BUTLER, Populist, of Elliot, Sampson County, was born on a farm in Honeycutts Township, Sampson County, N. C., May 20, 1863; was prepared for college by his mother and at a neighboring academy, but chiefly by his mother; graduated at the University of North Carolina in 1885; began the study of law, but was called home, being the eldest boy, by the sudden death of his father, to run the farm and to look after the education of his younger brothers and sisters, and taught at a neigh- boring academy for three years; in 1888 he joined the Farmers’ Alliance and bought the Clinton Caucasian; was elected to the State senate in 18go; was the leader of the Alliance forces in that body; was chairman of the joint committee on railroad com- mission, and succeeded in passing the present railroad-commission law of North Carolina and in securing a number of other needed reforms; was elected president of the State Farmers’ Alliance in 1891 and reelected in 1892; was elected vice-president of the National Farmers’ Alliance and Industrial Union in 1893 and elected presi- dent of that organization in 1894; immediately after adjournment of the Chicago con- vention in 1892 he publicly declared that he would not support Grover Cleveland, and at once severed his connection with the Democratic party and went to work to organize and build up the People’s Party; in the winter of 1893-94 he conceived the plan of campaign which resulted in such a triumphant success at the fall election of 1894; was chairman of the Populist State committee during that campaign; is a trustee and a member of the executive board of the State University, his alma mater; his paper, the Caucasian, has been removed to Raleigh, N. C., and has probably the largest circulation and is one of the most influential papers in the State; was elected chairman of the national executive committee of the Populist party in 1896, and was an earnest and ardent supporter of William J. Bryan for President; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Matt W. Ransom, Democrat, in 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. JETER CONNELLY PRITCHARD, Republican, of Marshall, was born in Jones- boro, Tenn., July 12, 1857; received a common-school education at Martins Creek Academy; was apprenticed in the Jonesboro Tribune-Herald office; removed to Bakers- ville, Mitchell County, N. C., in 1873; was joint editor and owner of the Roan Moun- tain Republican until 1887, when he removed to Marshall, Madison County; was a Garfield elector in 1880; was elected to the legislature in 1884, 1886, and 1890; was the Republican candidate for lieutenant-governor in 1888 and was the Republican caucus nominee for United States Senator in 1892; was delegate at large to the Minneapolis 80 Congressional Directory. [NORTH CAROLINA. convention in 1892; was elected president of the North Carolina Protective Tariff League in 1891; was a candidate for Congress in 1892; was licensed to practice law in 1887; in April, 1894, he became prominent in the cooperation movement in North Carolina, and the success of that movement resulted in his election to the United States Senate to fill the unexpired term of the late Senator Z. B. Vance; was reelected in 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CounTIEs.—Beaufort, Camden, Carteret, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Martin, Pamlico, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington (16 counties). JOHN HUMPHREY SMALL, Democrat, of Washington, was born August 29, 1858, in Washington, N. C.; was educated in the schools of Washington, and at Trinity College, North Carolina; is a lawyer in active practice; left college in 1876 and taught school from 1876 to 1880; was licensed to practice law in January, 1881; was elected reading clerk of the State senate in 1831; was elected superintendent of public instruction of Beaufort County in the latter part of 1881; was elected and con- tinued to serve as solicitor of the inferior court of Beaufort County from 1882 to 1885; was proprietor and editor of the Washington Gazette from 1883 to 1886; was attorney of the board of commissioners of Beaufort County from 1888 to 1896; was a membes of the city council from May, 1887, to May, 1890, and for one year during that period was mayor of Washington; was chairman of the Democratic executive committee of the First Congressional district in 1888; was chairman of the Democratic executive committee of Beaufort County from 1889 to 1898; was the Democratic Presidential elector in the First Congressional district in 1896; has been for several years and is now chairman of the publ ¢ school committee of Washington, and was elected .to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,732 votes, to 18,263 for Harry Skinner, Fusion Populist, and g7 for Joshua I,, Whidbee, Independent Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bertie, Hdgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Lenoir, Northampton, Warren, Wayne, and Wilson (9 counties). GEORGE HENRY WHITE, Republican, of Tarboro, was born at Rosindale, Bladen County, N. C., December 18, 1852; attended the public schools of his State, and later was trained under Prof. D. P. Allen, president of the Whitten Normal School, at Lumberton, N. C.; afterwards entered Howard University, Washington, D. C.; he graduated from the eclectic department of that institution in the class of 1877; received the degree of M. A. from his alma mater, June, 1898, and that of LI,. D. from Livingston College, Salisbury, N. C., and from Biddle University, Charlotte, N. C., in 1896; read law while taking academic course, and completed his reading under Judge William J. Clarke, of North Carolina, and was licensed to practice in all the courts of that State by the supreme court, January, 1879; was principal of one of the State normal and other schools in the State; was elected to the house of repre- sentatives in 1880 and to the State senate in 1884 ; was elected solicitor and prosecut- ing attorney for the second judicial district of North Carolina for four years in 1886, and for a like term in 1890; was a candidate for Congress in the Second district in 1894, and was nominated, but withdrew in the interest of harmony in his party; was a delegate at large to the St. TLouis convention, and voted for the nomination of President McKinley; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,561 votes, to 14,947 for W. E. Fountain, Inde- pendent Democrat, 2,447 for James B. Lloyd, Populist, and 324 for B. F. Aycock, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bladen, Craven, Cumberland, Duplin, Harnett, Jones, Moore, Onslow, and Sampson (9 counties). CHARLES RANDOLPH THOMAS, Democrat, of New Bern, was born at Beau- fort, N. C., August 21, 1861; is a son of the late Judge Charles R. Thomas, who was a member of the Forty-second and Forty-third Congresses; was educated at the New Bern Academy, the school of Prof. Charles B. Young, known as the Emerson Insti- NORTH CARCLINA.] Senators and Representatives. 81 tute, Washington, D. C., and the University of North Carolina, graduating in 1881; studied law, first with his father, and then at the law school of Judges R. P. Dick and John H. Dillard, at Greensboro, N. C.; was admitted to the bar in October, 1882, and since that time has continuously practiced his profession; was a member of the house of representatives of the North Carolina legislature in 1887; served six years as attorney for the county of Craven, from 189o to 1896; was elected by the State legislature a trustee of the University of North Carolina in 1893; has been a member of the State Democratic executive committee; was elected in 1896 Democratic Presi- dential elector for the Third Congressional district of North Carolina, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,008 votes, to 15,819 for John E, Fowler, Populist. FOURTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Chatham, Franklin, Johnston, Nash, Randolph, Vance, and Wake (7 counties). JOHN WILBUR ATWATER, Populist, of Rialto, was born in Chatham County, N. C., December 27, 1840; received a common-school and academic education; was brought up on a farm and has continued that occupation until the present; joined the Confederate army, Company D, First North Carolina Volunteers, and was with the army of Gen. R. E. Lee until the end; joined the Farmers’ Alliance in 1887; was elected the first president of his county Alliance; was elected State senator in 1890 as an Alliance-Democrat, and again in 1892 and 1896 as a Populist; was elected chairman of the Populist caucus; did all he could to keep the charters of the towns and cities from being changed and to keep them from being dominated by negroes; ran as an Independent Populist, representing true Populist principles, and was indorsed by the Democrats; was a great admirer of William J. Bryan, and was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,419 votes, to 18,581 for Joseph J. Jenkins, Populist-Republican Fusionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Alamance, Caswell, Durham, Granville, Guilford, Orange, Person, Rockingham, and Stokes (g counties). : WILLIAM WALTON KITCHIN, Democrat, of Roxboro, N. C.,was born near Scot- -land Neck, N. C., October 9, 1866; was educated at Vine Hill Academy and Wake Forest College, where he graduated in 1884; edited the Scotland Neck Democrat in 1885; after studying law, first under his father, Hon. W. H. Kitchin, and then under Hon. John Manning, at the University of North Carolina, was admitted to the bar in 1887; located at Roxboro in January, 1888, where he still practices his profession; was chairman of the county executive committee in 1890; was the nominee of his party for the State senate in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,869 votes, to 18,607 for S. B. Adams, Repub- lican. ; SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES,—Anson, Brunswick, Columbus, Mecklenburg, New Hanover, Pender, Richmond, Robeson, and Union (9 counties). JOHN DILLARD BELLAMY, Democrat, of Wilmington, was born in Wilmington, N. C., March 24, 1854; was educated at the Cape Fear Military Academy, presided over by Gen. Raleigh FE. Colston, of Confederate war fame, at Davidson College, North Car- olina, a Presbyterian college, where he graduated with the degree of A. B. in 1873, and at the University of Virginia, graduating in several of the schools in 1874, and with the degree of bachelor of law in 1875; has practiced the profession of law for twenty-three years with marked success, and has one of the largest and most lucra- tive practices in the State; is the author of a number of historical essays and sketches; has been the city attorney of Wilmington, State senator from the Twelfth senatorial district, and one of the delegates at large to the Democratic national con- vention of 1892; is a progressive business man and largely interested in business and industrial enterprises; has been grand master of the Independent Order of Odd Fel- lows of North Carolina and representative to the Sovereign Grand Lodge of the United States, and is also a prominent Knight of Pythias; was elected to the Fifty- oth Congress, receiving 23,212 votes, to 17,359 for Oliver H. Dockery, Populist and usionist, 32 Congressional Directory. [RORTH (CAROLING, SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Cabarrus, Catawba, Davidson, Gaston, Iredell, Lincoln, Montgomery, Rowan, Stanly, and Yadkin (Io counties). “THEODORE F. KLUTTZ, Democrat, of Salisbury, was born in Salisbury, Rowan County, N. C., October 4, 1848; received his education in schools of his native county; is a lawyer in full practice; was presiding justice of the inferior court in 1884, and resigned; was Democratic elector in 1880, and again in 1896; was chairman of the North Carolina delegation to the Chicago convention in 1896, and seconded the nomination of W. J. Bryan; is president of the Davis & Wiley (State) Bank, vice-presi- dent of the Salisbury Cotton Mills, and holds other responsible business positions; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, carrying every county in his district, receiv- ing 20,763 votes, to 14,661 for M. H. H. Caldwell, Populist-Republican Fusionist. FIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Burke, Caldwell, Cleveland, Forsyth, Gaston, Surry, Watauga, and Wilkes (11 counties). ROMULUS Z. LINNEY, Republican, of Taylorsville, Alexander County, was born in Rutherford County, N. C., December 26, 1841; was educated in the common schools of the county, at York’s Collegiate Institute, and at Dr. Millen’s school at Taylors- ville; served in the Confederate army as a private soldier until the battle of Chancellors- ville, where he was severely wounded; having been discharged from the army because of his wound, he returned to Taylorsville and joined the class in Dr. Millen's school of which Hon. William H. Bower was a member; studied law with Judge Armfield; was admitted to the bar by the supreme court in 1868; was elected to the State sen- ate in 1870, 1873, and again in 1882; is by profession a lawyer; was elected to the Rifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,414 votes, to 16,137 for Edward F. Lovell, Democrat, and 158 for John M. Brower, Independent Republican. NINTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Macon, Madison, McDowell, Mitchell, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, Transylvania, and Yancey (16 counties). WILLIAM THOMAS CRAWFORD, Democrat, of Waynesville, was born in Haywood County, N. C., June 1, 1856; was educated in the public schools and at Waynesville Academy; was elected to the legislature in 1884, and reelected in 1886; was elector on the Cleveland and Thurman ticket in 1888; read law at the State University in 1889-9o and obtained license; was elected to the Fifty-second and Fifty-third Congresses; was defeated in 1894, and elected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 19,606 votes, to 19,368 for Richmond Pearson, Republican, and 93 for George E. Boggs, Populist. NORTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. HENRY C. HANSBROUGH, Republican, of Devils Lake, was born in Randolph County, I1l., January 30, 1848; received a common-school education; learned the art of printing, and engaged in journalism in California, Wisconsin, and Dakota Terri- tory, becoming a resident of the latter in 1831; was twice elected mayor of his city; was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1888; was national com- mitteeman for eight years; nominated for Congress by the first Republican State convention in North Dakota, and was elected, receiving 14,071 majority, and was elected to the United States Senate January 23, 1891. He took his seat March 4, 1891; was reelected in 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1603. PORTER JAMES McCUMBER, Republican, of Wahpeton, was born in Illinois February 3, 1856; removed to Rochester, Minn., the same year; was brought up on a farm and educated in the district schools, afterwards in the city schools; taught school for a few years, and took the law course in the University of Michigan, un pF 4 GREER Tn Fa me NORTH DAKOTA] Senators and Representatives. 83 graduating in 1880; removed to Wahpeton, N. Dak., in 1881, where ‘he has since practiced his profession; was a member of the Territorial legislature in 1895 and 1897, since which time he refused to accept any public office in the State except that which was in line with his profession—State’s attorney—until he became a candidate for Senator; was elected to the United States Senate January 20, 1899, and took his seat March 4, 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. BURLEIGH FOLSOM SPALDING, Republican, of Fargo, was born in Crafts- bury, Orleans County, Vt., December 3, 1853; at 11 years of age left home to earn his ‘own living and_educate himself; worked on a farm until 16 years of age and went to school three months each winter; clerked in stores four years in Glover and St. Johnsbury, Vt.; was subsequently educated at the Lyndon Literary Institute, Lyndon, Vt., and Norwich University, the military college of the State of Vermont, where he graduated in 1877; read law in Montpelier, Vt., and, after admission to the bar in March, 1880, moved to Fargo, where he has ever since resided and prac- ticed his profession; was superintendent of public instruction of Cass County, Dakota Territory, from 1882 to 1884; was member of commission elected by the legislature of 1883 to relocate capital of the Territory of Dakota and build capitol; was a mem- ber of the North Dakota constitutional convention in 1839, and a member of the joint commission provided by the enabling act, to divide the property and archives of the Territory of Dakota between the States of North and South Dakota; was twice elected chairman of the Kepublican State central committee, and also served as chairman of the Cass County Republican committee; the degree of master of arts was conferred on him in 1897; in the State convention of 1896, which elected the _ delegates to the Republican national convention of that year, he led the Sound Money and McKinley forces, and, as chairman of the committee on resolutions, reported the resolutions indorsing sound money; served in a like capacity and made a like report at the convention of the same year for nomination of the State ticket; no man in the State took a more active part in the cause of sound money; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 27,776 votes, to 17,844 for H. M. Creel, Populist, Democrat, and Silver Republican. OHI1I0. SENATORS. JOSEPH BENSON FORAKER, Republican, of Cincinnati, was born July 5, 1846, on a farm near Rainsboro, Highland County, Ohio; enlisted July 14, 1862, as a private in Company A, Eighty-ninth Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry, with which organ- ization he served until the close of the war, at which time he held the rank of first lieu- tenant and brevet captain; was graduated from Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y., July 1,1869; was admitted to the bar and entered upon the practice of the law at Cincinnati, Ohio, October 14, 1869; was elected judge of the superior court of Cincinnati in April, 1879; resigned on account of ill health May 1, 1882; was the Republican candidate for governor of Ohio in 1883, but was defeated; was elected to that office in 188s, and reelected in 1887; was again nominated for governor and defeated in 1889; was chairman of the Republican State conventions of Ohio for 1886, 1890, and 1896, and a delegate at large from Ohio to the National Republican conventions of 1884, 1888, 1892, and 1896; was chairman of the Ohio delegation in the conventions of 1884 and 1888, and presented to both of these conventions the name of Hon. John Sherman for nomination for the Presidency; in the conventions of 1892 and 1896 served as chairman of the committee on resolutions, and as such reported the platform each time to the convention; presented the name of William McKinley to the convention of 1896 for nomination to the Presidency; was elected United States Senator January 15, 1896, to succeed Calvin S. Brice, and took his seat March 4, 1897. His term will expire March 3, 1903. MARCUS ALONZO HANNA, Republican, of Cleveland, was born in New Lisbon (now Lisbon ),Columbiana County,Ohio, September 24, 1837; removed with hisfather’s 56-1ST—2D ED 7 84 Congressional Directory. [OHIO. family to Cleveland in 1852; was educated in the common schools of that city and the Western Reserve College, Hudson, Ohio; was engaged asan employee in the wholesale grocery house of Hanna, Garretson & Co., his father being senior member of the firm; his father died in 1862 and he represented that interest in the firm until 1867, when the business was closed up; then became a member of the firm of Rhodes & Co., engaged in the iron and coal business; at the expiration of ten years the title of this firm was changed to M. A. Hanna & Co., which still exists; has been identified with lake carrying business, being interested in vessels on the lakes, and in the con- struction of such vessels; is president of the Union National Bank of Cleveland; presi- dent of the Cleveland City Railway Company; was director of the Union Pacific Railway Company in 1885, by appointment of President Cleveland; was a delegate to the national Republican conventions in 1884, 1888, and 1896; was elected chair- man of the national Republican committee in 1896, and still holds that position; was appointed to the United States Senate by Governor Bushnell, March 5, 1897, to fill the vacancy caused by the retirement of Hon. John Sherman, who resigned to accept the position of Secretary of State in President McKinley's Cabinet; took his seat March 5, 1897; in January, 1898, he was elected for the short term ending March 4, 1899, and also for the succeeding full term. His term of service will end March 4, 1905. . REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. HAMILTON COoUNTY.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Highth, Ninth, ‘T'enth, Eleventh, Righteenth, T'wenty-sixth, Twenty-seventh, and Thirty-first wards of the city of Cincinnati, Anderson, Columbia, Spencer, Sycamore, and Symmes townships, and Bond Iill, Carthage, Hast, Carthage, West, Norwood-Ivanhoe, Norwood, West, St. Bernard, North, and St. Bernard, South, precincts of Mill Creek Township. WILLIAM B. SHATTUC, Republican, of Madisonville, a suburb of Cincinnati, was born at North Hector, N.Y., June 11, 1841; removed to Ohio when 11 years old, and received his education in the public schools of the State; was a commissioned officer in the Union Army during the rebellion, in the Army of the Frontier; for thirty years previous to 1895 was an officer in the railway traffic service and is now retired from business; lives at Madisonville, Hamilton County, Ohio; in 1895 was elected one of the State senators from Hamilton County to the Seventy-second general assembly; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 20,132 votes, to 13,980 for John F. Follett, Democrat, and 295 for Will T'. Cressler, Union Reform. SECOND DISTRICT. HAMILTON CoUNTY.— Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Nine- teenth, T'wentieth, Twenty-first, Twenty-second, Twenty-third, Twenty-fourth, Twenty-fifth, T'wenty-eighth, T'wenty-ninth, and Thirtieth wards of the city of Cincinnati, the townships of Springfield, Colerain, Greene, Delhi, Storrs, Miami, Whitewater, Harrison, and Crosby, and Elmwood, College Hill, Western, and Winton Place precincts of Mill Creek Township. JACOB H. BROMWELL, Republican, of Wyoming (post-office address, Cincin- - nati), was born May 11, 1847, in Cincinnati, Ohio; received his education in the public, schools of that city; taught in the Cincinnati high schools for seventeen years; grad- nated from the Cincinnati Law College in 1870; was assistant county solicitor of Ham- ilton County for four years; was elected to the Fifty-third Congress to fill an unex- pired term; was also at the same time elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 22,506 votes, to 15,998 for Charles I,. Swaine, Democrat, and 276 for J. D. Stuckey, Union Reform. THIRD DISTRICT. CoOUNTIES.—Butler, Montgomery, and Preble (3 counties). JOHN I. BRENNER, Democrat, of Dayton, was born in Wayne Township, Mont- gomery County, Ohio, in 1832; received a common-school education; worked on the farm summers and attended school winters until 20 years old, when he attended the Springfield, Ohio, Academy; was engaged in farming until 1862, when he engaged in the nursery business, which pursuit he followed quite successfully until 1874; he then engaged in the leaf-tobacco business, his present occupation; was married in . y » y OHIO. ] Senators and Representatives. : 85 the fall of 1866, and then made Dayton his home; never held any public office except police commissioner; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,449 votes, to 21,327 for J. W. White, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, and Shelby (5 counties). ROBERT B. GORDON, Democrat, of St. Marys, was born in Auglaize County, Ohio, August 6, 1855; received his education in public schools at St. Marys; after his graduation he assisted his father in flouring mills and general grain business, in which he later succeeded his father; in 1889 was elected by the Democratic party as auditor of Auglaize County, in which capacity he served for six years; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,020 votes, to 12,276 for Phillip M. Sheets, Republican, and 962 for William H. Murphy, Union Reform. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIEs.—Defiance, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, and Williams (6 counties). DAVID MEEKISON, Democrat, of Napoleon, was born November 14, 1849, at Dun- dee, Scotland, and emigrated with his parents from that country in 1855 to Napoleon, Ohio, where he has since resided, except three years’ service in the Fourth United States Artillery; attended the common schools until his fourteenth year, and then ~ entered a printing office; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1873; although always a Democrat, has been twice appointed to office by Republican authorities, first as town clerk and afterwards as county prosecuting attorney for the county to fill a vacancy; was afterwards elected and reelected to the same office; in 1881 was elected probate judge, and served two terms; in 1886 established a banking business in Napoleon, Ohio, under the name of Meekison Bank, to which he has given his principal attention, except that required by the duties of mayor of Napo- leon, Ohio, to which office he was elected four consecutive terms; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,264 votes, to 15,612 for A. M. Wilcox, Republican, and 710 for F. S. Dunakin, Union Reform. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Brown, Clermont, Clinton, Greene, Highland, and Warren (6 counties). SETH W. BROWN, Republican, of Lebanon, was born January 4, 1843, near Waynesville, Warren County, Ohio; was brought up on a farm and educated in the ~ public schools; was a member of Company H, Seventy-ninth Ohio Volunteer Infantry; read law with Judge George R. Sage, and was admitted to the bar by the supreme court in 1873; was elected prosecuting attorney for Warren County in 1880 and reelected in 1882; was elected representative in the general assembly in 1883 and reelected in 1885, being a member of the finance committee of the house for four years and chairman of that committee during his second term; was chosen Presi- dential elector on the Harrison ticket in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,896 votes, to 16,206 for Lewis H. Whniteman, Democrat, and 761 for Perry McLaughlin, Union Reform. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.- —Clark, Fayette, Madison, Miami, and Pickaway (5 counties). WALTER L. WEAVER, Republican, of Springfield, was born in Montgomery County, Ohio, April 1, 1851; son of Rev. John S. and Amanda Hurin Weaver; was edu- cated at the public schools, Monroe Academy, and Wittenberg College, graduating from the latter institution in 1870; immediately pursued the study of law, and was admitted to the bar by the supreme court of his native State in 1872, since which time he has continuously practiced his*profession; was elected prosecuting attorney for Clark County in 1874, and again elected to the same office in 1880, 1882, and 1885; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,565 votes, to 17,159 for J. I.. Zimmermann, Democrat, and 745 for R. Rathbun, Union Reform. FIGHTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Champaign, Delaware, Hancock, Hardin, I,ogan, and Union (6 counties). ARCHIBALD LYBRAND, Republican, of Delaware, was born in Tarlton, Pick- away County, Ohio, May 23, 1840; removed to Delaware in 1857; was educated at - 86 : Congressional Directory. [OHIO. the Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio; at the breaking out of the civil war enlisted, April 26, 1861, as a private in Company I, Fourth Ohio Volunteer Infantry; from this regiment was transferred to Company E, Seventy-third Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and promoted to first lieutenant; remained in service with the Seventy-third Ohio Volunteer Infantry for three years; the last two years was captain of his com- pany, and participated in the battles of Rich Mountain, Cross Keys, Second Bull Run, Cedar Mountain, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg; served a portion of his time as aid-de-camp on the staffs of Generals Steinwehr and Sigel; went west with Gen. Joseph Hooker, and took part in the battle of I,ookout Moun- tain, known as Hooker’s fight above the clouds; also participated in the battles of Chattanooga and the battles of the Atlanta campaign, receiving two slight wounds, one at the battle of Peach Tree Creek and the other at Dallas, Ga.; at the close of the war returned to Delaware; in 1869 was elected mayor; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1871; in 1873 became an active partner in the Delaware Chair Company, and from that time until the present has been engaged in the affairs of that company; is also a landowner and interested in farming; was appointed post- master at Delaware, December 20, 1881, by President Chester A. Arthur, and served one term of four years; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,560 votes, to 19,156 for H, Walter Doty, Democrat, and 1,099 for Spencer W. Garwood, Union Reform. NINTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Fulton, Lucas, Ottawa, and Wood (4 counties). JAMES HARDING SOUTHARD, Republican, of Toledo, was born on a farm in Washington Township, Lucas County, Ohio, January 20, 1851; is the son of Samuel and Charlotte Southard. Samuel Southard came to this country from Devonshire, Eng- land, about 1833 and located in Iucas County, where he has since resided; Charlotte Southard came to Lucas County from central New York with her parents at a later date. He attended Hopewell district school, Toledo public schools, and studied at Adrian, Mich., and Oberlin, Ohio, preparatory to entering Cornell University, where he graduated in 1874; began to study law in 1875 and was admitted to practice in 1877; in 1882 was appointed assistant prosecuting attorney of Lucas County; after- wards was twice elected prosecuting attorney of said county and served in that office six years; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,913 votes, to 18,081 for Samuel R. Niece, Democrat and 16 for David Miley, Union Reform. TENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Adams, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, and Scioto (6 counties). STEPHEN MORGAN, Republican, of Oak Hill, was born in Jackson County, Ohio, January 25, 1854; was reared on a farm and educated in the country schools and at Worthington and Lebanon, Ohio; taught in the public schools of Jackson County for a number of years; was school examiner for nine years, and principal of the Oak Hill schools for fifteen years; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 19,297 votes, to 13,769 for Alva Crabtree, Democrat. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Perry, Ross, and Vinton (6 counties). CHARLES HENRY GROSVENOR, Republican, of Athens, was born at Pomfret, Windham County, Conn., September 20, 1833; his grandfather was Col. Thomas Gros- venor, of the Second Connecticut Regiment in the Revolution, and his father was Maj. Peter Grosvenor,who served in the Tenth Connecticut Regiment in the war of 1812; his father carried him from Connecticut to Ohio in May, 1838, but there was no school- house near where he settled until he was 14 years old, when he attended a few terms in a country log schoolhouse in Athens County, Ohio; taught school and studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1857; was chairman of the executive committee of the Ohio State Bar Association from its organization for many years; served in the Union Army, in the Eighteenth Ohio Volunteers, from July,1861, to November, 1865; was major, lieutenant-colonel, colonel, and brevet brigadier-general of volunteers, commanding a brigade at the battle of Nashville, in December, 1864; has held divers township and village offices; was a member of the State house of representatives of Ohio, 1874-1878, serving as speaker of the house two years; was Presidential elector for the Fifteenth district of Ohio in 1872, and was chosen to carry the electoral vote of A NF OHIO.] Senators and Representatives. 87 the State to Washington; was Presidential elector at large in 1880; was a member of the board of trustees of the Ohio Soldiers and Sailors’ Orphans’ Home, at Xenia, from April, 1880, till 1888, and president of the board for five years; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 19,806 votes to 16,434 for C. E. Peoples, Democrat, and 17 for G. W. Dillison, Union Reform. TWELFTH DISTRICT. CounTtIES.—Fairfield and Franklin (2 counties). JOHN JACOB LENTZ, Democrat, of Columbus, was born near St. Clairsville, Bel- mont County, Ohio, January 27, 1856; attended district school and the St. Clairsville High School; taught school four years, and graduated from the National Normal University, Lebanon, Ohio, in 1877; attended University of Wooster one year, and grad- uated from University of Michigan with degree of A. B. in 1882; took both law courses at Columbia College, New York City, receiving the degree of LL.B. in 1883; admitted to the bar at Columbus in October, 1883, and since 1887 has been a member of the law firm of Nash & Lentz; for five years was one of the examiners of the city teachers, and was appointed a trustee of Ohio University by Governor McKinley; in the Dem- ocratic State convention at Cincinnati, 1893, received votes for governor from a dozen or more counties; also received votes for governor at the conventions held in Colum- bus, 1897, and Zanesville, 1899, although not a candidate and refusing to permit his name to be presented to either of the three conventions; was elected national presi- dent of the American Insurance Union in 1896, 1897, 1898, and again in 1899; was permanent chairman of the Democratic State convention held at Dayton August 23 and 24, 1898; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, defeating D. K. Watson, the Republican incumbent, by a plurality of 49 votes out of 47,000 votes cast, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress by a plurality of 702 votes, receiving 21,232 votes, to 20,530 for Edward N. Huggins, Republican, 233 for Alexander M. Smith, Union Reform, and 293 for W. W. Johnson, Prohibitionist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Crawford, Erie, Marion, Sandusky, Seneca, and Wyandot (6 counties). JAMES ALBERT NORTON, Democrat, of Tiffin, Seneca County, Ohio, was born in Seneca County, Ohio, on November 11, 1843; was educated in the Tiffin schools; enlisted in United States service in August, 1862, sergeant Company K, One hundred and first Ohio Volunteer Infantry; was promoted to first lieutenant and adjutant One hundred and twenty-third United States Colored Infantry in 1864; mustered out of service at close of the war, in 1865; began the practice of medicine in 1867; con- tinued that profession until 1879; was admitted to the bar in 1879; served six years in the Ohio house of representatives from 1873 to 1879; was speaker pro tempore of that body for two years; was appointed commissioner of railroads and telegraphs by Governor James E. Campbell, and served in that capacity during Governor Camp- bell’s, and part of the first term of Governor McKinley's, administration, when he resigned to accept position in railroad service; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,410 votes, to 17,606 for Henry L. Wenner, Republican, 484 for Orrin J. Fry, Union Reform, and 42 for Walter S. Payne, Prohibitionist. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Ashland, Huron, Knox, Lorain, Morrow, and Richland (6 counties). WINFIELD S. KERR, Republican, of Mansfield, is a graduate of the law depart- ment of the University of Michigan, and is by profession a lawyer; served four years in the Ohio State senate; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,464 votes, to 19,134 for Thomas Gruber, Democrat. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. * COUNTIES.—Guernsey, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, and Washington (5 counties). HENRY CLAY VAN VOORHIS, Republican, of Zanesville, was born in Licking Township, Muskingum County, Ohio, May 11, 1852; was educated in the public schools and at Denison University; was admitted to the bar in 1874; was chairman of the Republican county committee from 1879 to 1884; was a delegate to the Republican national convention at Chicago in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,404 votes, to 16,509 for Henry R. Stanbery, Democrat. 38 Congressional Directory. (OHIO. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Belmont, Carroll, Harrison, Jefferson, and Monroe (5 counties). JOSEPH J. GILL, Republican, of Steubenville, was born September 21, 1846, at Barnesville, Belmont County, Ohio; was reared at Mount Pleasant, in Jefferson County, to which place his parents returned when he was about two years old: received an academic education; graduated from the law school of the University of Michigan in 1868; practiced law at the Jefferson County bar; subsequently engaged in banking and later in manufacturing and iron mining; has been a large employer of labor and as a candidate for Congress was indorsed by labor organizations through- out the district; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress November 7, 1899, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Lorenzo Danford, receiving 19,368 votes, to 15,302 for Lavosier Spence, Democrat, 239 for William H. Smyth, Union Reform. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Coshocton, Holmes, Licking, Tuscarawas, and Wayne (5 counties). JOHN ANDERSON McDOWELL, Democrat, of Millersburg, was born in Kill- buck, Holmes County, Ohio, September 25, 1853; his father’s family moved to a farm in Monroe Township, Holmes County, where he received his first years of schooling in a country school; later, the family returned to Killbuck, where he clerked in his father’s store, and attended the village school in the winters; attended the Millers- burg High School and Lebanon Normal University; was graduated from Mount Union College; began teaching a country school at 17; taught seven winter terms; was principal of Millersburg High School two years and superintendent of Millers- burg schools for seventeen years; was county school examiner for seven years; has been engaged as instructor in teachers’ institutes in several counties in Ohio, also instructor in the summer school of Wooster University; has been directly interested in agricultural pursuits for several years; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,989 votes, to 16,016 for George E. Brown, Republican. FIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. CounNTIiES.—Columbiana, Mahoning, and Stark (3 counties). ROBERT WALKER TAYLER, Republican, of Lisbon, was born at Youngstown, Ohio, November 26, 1852; graduated at Western Reserve College, June, 1872; in Sep- tember of that year commenced teaching in the high school at New Lisbon (now Lisbon), and was elected superintendent of schools in 1873 and reelected in 1874; from January, 1875, to November, 1876, he was editor of the Buckeye State newspaper at New Lisbon; in April, 1877, he was admitted to the bar, and was elected prose- cuting attorney of Columbiana County in 1880, reelected in 1882, and served until January, 1886; since his admission to the bar has been actively engaged in the prac- tice of his profession; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 22,635 votes, to 19,575 for Charles C. Weybrecht, Democrat, 614 for George C. Harvey, Prohibitionist, and 212 for I,. B. Logan, Union Reform. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Ashtabula, Geauga, Portage, Summit, and Trumbull (5 counties). CHARLES DICK, Republican, of Akron, was born at Akron, Ohio, November 3, 1858; lawyer; upon the death of Stephen A. Northway in 1898 was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 23,358 votes, to 12,512 votes for I. H. Phelps, Democrat. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. CountiES.—Lake, Medina, and the townships of Bedford, Brecksville, Brooklyn, Chagrin Falls, Dover, Kast Cleveland, Euclid, Independence, Mayfield, Middleburg, Newburg, Olmstead, Orange, Parma, Rockport, Royalton, Solon, Strongsville, and Warrensville, of Cuyahoga County, and the Twenty-sixth, Twenty-eighth, T'wenty-ninth, Thirtieth, Thirty-first, Thirty- second, Thirty-third, Thirty-fourth, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-sixth, Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, and Forty-first wards of the city of Cleveland. FREMONT ORESTES PHILLIPS, Republican, of Medina, was born in Lafayette, Medina County, Ohio, March 16, 1856; moved to Medina in 1873, which has ever p h p. f OHIO.] Senators and Representatives. 89 since been his home; received his education in the Medina High School, Medina Normal School, and Kenyon College; was admitted to the bar in 1880, and has been engaged in the practice of law ever since, with the exception of six years, during which he held the office of probate judge of Medina County; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,894 votes, to 11,992 for W. J. Hart, Democrat, 975 for R. Barthels, Socialist Labor, and 17 for M. O. Morton, Union Reform. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTY OF CUYAHOGA.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, Twenty-second, Twenty-third, Twenty-fourth, Twenty- fifth, and Twenty-seventh wards of the city of Cleveland. THEODORE E. BURTON, Republican, of Cleveland, was born at Jefferson, Ashta- bula County, Ohio, December 20, 1851; studied at Grand River Institute, Austinburg, Ohio, at Iowa College, Grinnell, Iowa, and at Oberlin College, from which last insti- tution he graduated in 1872; began the practice of law at Cleveland in 1875; was a member of the Fifty-first Congress, but was. defeated for reelection in 1890; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,599 votes, to 10,823 for I. A. Russell, Democrat, and 1,324 for J. J. Koler, Socialist Labor. ORE GON. SENATORS. GEORGE W. McBRIDE, Republican, of St. Helens, was born in Yamhill County, Oreg., March 13, 1854; received his primary education in the public schools and in the preparatory department of Willamette University; was a student at Christian College, Monmouth, Oreg., for two years; studied law and was admitted to the bar, but has not been engaged in the active practice of his profession; was engaged in mercantile business for ten years; was elected a member of the house of representatives of the legislative assembly of Oregon in June, 1882; was elected speaker of the house in September, 1882; was elected secretary of state in 1886; was reelected in 18go and served eight years, his second term ending January 14, 1895; was elected United States Senator February 23, 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 190I. JOSEPH SIMON, Republican, of Portland, was born in Germany in 1851, and came to this country with his parents when but 1 year old; has resided in the city of Portland since 1857; obtained his education in the public schools of Portland; in 1872 was admitted to the bar; was elected to the city council of Portland in 1877, and served as a member of that body three years; was appointed secretary of the Republican State central committee in 1878, and managed the State campaign of that year; was chosen chairman of the Republican State central committee of Oregon 1n 1880, 1884, and 1886, and had charge of the State and national campaigns of those years in Oregon; was a delegate to the Republican national convention which met at Minneapolis in 1892, and was there selected as the member of the national com- mittee for Oregon; was elected to the State senate from Multnomah County in 1880, 1884, 1888, 1894, and 1898; was chosen president of the senate at the sessions of 1889, 1891, 1895, and 1897, and at the special session of 1898; was elected to the United States Senate October 6, 1898, to fill a vacancy that had existed since March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST ‘DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Benton, Clackamas, Coos, Curry, Douglas, Jackson, Josephine, Klamath, I.ake, I.ane, Linn, Marion, Polk, Tillamook, Washingten, and Yamhill (16 counties). THOMAS H. TONGUE, Republican, of Hillsboro, was born in Lincolnshire, Eng- land, June 23, 1844; removed with his parents to Washington County, Oreg., Novem- ber 23, 1859, where he has since resided; was educated at Pacific University, Forest- grove, Oreg., graduating from that institution in June, 1868; removed to Hillsboro, his present home, in September of that year; was admitted to the bar in September, 1870, and has ever since been engaged in active practice of his profession; is also 90 Congressional Directory. [OREGON. interested in farming and the raising of live stock; has always been a Republican, but was not active in political affairs until 1888; in that year was elected a member of the State senate, serving a term of four years; served as a member of the judiciary committee, and during the last two years was chairman of that committee; in 1890 was the chairman of the State Republican convention; in February, 1892, was elected president of the State organization of Republican clubs, and served for a term of two years; was a delegate to the Republican national convention in Minneapolis in 1892, and was the Oregon vice-president of that convention; in 1894 was again permanent chairman of the State Republican convention; was a member of the State central committee from 1886 to 1896, and chairman of the Congressional committee of the First Congressional district from the time of its organization until his own nomina- tion; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 21,324 votes, to 19,287 for R. M. Veatch, Fusionist, 1,833 for J. I. Hill, Middle-of-the-Road Populist, and 1,113 for I. H. Pedersen, Prohibitionist. z / 5 SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Baker, Crook, Clatsop, Columbia, Gilliam, Grant, Harney, Malheur, Morrow, Mult- nomah, Sherman, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, and Wasco (15 counties). MALCOLM A. MOODY, Republican, of The Dalles, was born in Brownsville, Linn County, Oreg., November 30, 1854; was educated in the public schools of Oregon, and at the University of California; upon leaving college entered mercantile businsess at The Dalles with his father, Zenas F. Moody, ex-governor of Oregon, who had resided there with his family since 1862; in 1887 the mercantile business was merged into The Dalles National Bank, of which he was elected cashier; from 1885 to 1889 was a member of the city council of The Dalles, and in 1889 was elected mayor, serving two terms; was a member of the Republican State central and Con- gressional committees continuously from 1888 to 1898; hasbeen Oregon’s member of the executive committee of the Republican League of the United States since 1895, and also a member of the executive committee of the Republican League of Oregon; on April 13, 1898, received by acclamation from the Republican convention, the nomination of Congressman, and on June 6, 1898, was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,291 votes, to 14,634 for Charles M. Donaldson, Fusionist (People’s, Democratic, and Silver Republican parties), 2,273 for H. E. Courtney, Reg- ular People’s Party, and 1,120 for G. W. Ingalls, Prohibitionist. PENNSYLVANIA. SENATORS. BOIES PENROSE, Republican, of Philadelphia, was bora in Philadelphia Novem- ber 1, 1860; was prepared for college by private tutors and in the schools of Phila- delphia; was graduated from Harvard College in 1881; read law with Wayne McVeagh and George Tucker Bispham, and admitted to the bar in 1883; practiced his profes- sion in partnership with S. Davis Page and Edward P. Allinson under the firm name of Page, Allinson & Penrose; was elected to the Pennsylvania house of representa- tives from the Eighth Philadelphia district in 1884; in connection with Edward P. Allinson, wrote, at the request of Johns Hopkins University, for the university studies in historical and political science, a History of the City Government of Phila- delphia; was elected to the Pennsylvania State senate from the Sixth Philadelphia district in 1886, reelected in 1890, and again in 1894; was elected president pro tem- pore of the senate in 1889, and reelected in 1891; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed J. Donald Cameron, and took his seat March 4, 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE. GALUSHA A. GROW, Republican, of Glenwood, Susquehanna County, was born in Ashford (now Eastford), Windham County, Conn., August 31, 1823; his father died when he was 3 years old; his mother, with her six children, removed to Susquehanna County, Pa., in May, 1834; worked on a farm summers and went to the common school winters until the summer of 1837, when he began a regular course of study at Franklin Academy, Susquehanna County, and entered the freshman class, Amherst a. We “ul EE ar a Sama tt Ty ere PENNSVLVANIA.] Senators and Representatives. 9I College, September, 1840; graduated July, 1844; was admitted to the bar of Susque- hanna County April 19, 1847; declined a unanimous nomination for the legislature in August, 1850; was elected to Congress the following October, succeeding David Wil- mot; was elected from the same district six consecutive terms, once by a unanimous vote; was defeated in a new district, composed of Susquehanna and Luzerne counties, in 1862; was elected the first three times as a Free Soil Democrat, the last three as a Republican; entered Congress in December, 1851, being the youngest member of that Congress; was chairman of the Committee on the Territories in the Thirty-fourth - and Thirty-sixth Congresses; was Republican nominee for Speaker in 1857; swas elected Speaker of the Thirty-seventh Congress July 4, 1861; was a delegate to the national Republican conventions of 1864, 1884, and 1892; was chairman of the Penn- sylvania State Republican committee in 1868; from 1871 to 1876 was president of the International and Great Northern Railroad Company of Texas; in the fall of 1879 declined the mission to Russia, tendered by President Hayes; February 20, 1894, at a special election to fill the vacancy in the Fifty-third Congress caused by the death of William Lilly, was elected Congressman at Large, receiving 486,260 votes, to 297,966 votes for James D. Hancock, Democrat; was reelected to the Fifty-fourth Congress by a plurality of 246,462, and a majority over all of 204,715, receiving 571,085 votes, to 324,623 Democratic votes, 22,980 Prohibition, 17,299 Populist, and 1,465 Socialist Labor; was reelected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, receiving 711,246 votes, to 413,800 votes for De Witt C. De Witt, Democrat, 18,091 for George Alcorn, Prohibitionist, 7,482 for John P. Corriell, People’s Party, 1,432 for Fred. W. Long, Socialist Labor, and 663 for Isaac G. Pollard, National Democrat. His plurality over De Witt, Demo- crat, was 297,446; majority over all, 269,778, which was the largest ever given in any State of the Union to any candidate for any office; was reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 532,898 votes, to 350,213 for Franklin P. Tams, Democrat, 47,543 for Pennock E. Sharpless, Prohibitionist, 3,995 for Dennis E. Johnson, Populist, 4,300 for Donald S. Monro, Socialist Labor, and 837 for Charles P. Shaw, Liberty. S. A. DAVENPORT, Republican, of Erie, was born January 15, 1834, in Schuyler County, near Watkins, in the State of New York; since 1839 has lived in Erie, Erie County, Pa.; was educated at the Erie Academy, read law, and graduated at the Harvard Law University in 1855; in 1860 was elected district attorney for the county of Erie, and is now a practicing attorney; in 1888 was elected district delegate to the Republican national convention at Chicago; in 1892 was elected one of the delegates at large to the national Republican convention at Minneapolis; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress from the State at large by a majority of 293,445, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 520,773 votes, to 350,213 for Franklin P. Iams, Democrat. FIRST DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA. —First, Second,Seventh, T'wenty-sixth, Thirtieth, Thirty-sixth, and Thirty- ninth wards. HENRY H. BINGHAM, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., December 4, 1841; was graduated at Jefferson College in 1862; studied law; entered the Union Army as a lieutenant in the One hundred and fortieth Pennsylvania Volun- teers; was wounded at Gettysburg, Pa., in 1863, at Spottsylvania,Va., in 1864, and at Farmville, Va., in 1865; mustered out of service July, 1866, as brevet brigadier-general of volunteers; was appointed postmaster of Philadelphia in March, 1867, and resigned December, 1872, to accept the clerkship of the courts of oyer and terminer and quarter sessions of the peace at Philadelphia, having been elected by the people; was reelected clerk of courts in 1875; was delegate 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, at Chicago in 1884 and 1888, at Minneapolis in 1892, and at St. Louis in 1896; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty- third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 25,665 votes, to 8,213 for M. F. Doyle, Democrat, 1,091 for J. H. Holz, Prohibitionist. and 653 for J. E. Lennon, Independent. SECOND DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—FKighth, Ninth, Tenth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Twentieth wards. ROBERT ADAMS, JRr., Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., February 26, 1849; graduated at the University of Pennsylvania in 1869; studied and practiced law for five years; was member of the United States Geological Survey from 1871 to 1875, engaged in explorations of the Yellowstone Park; member of the 92 Congressional Directory. (PENNSYLVANIA, State senate of Pennsylvania from 1883 to 1887; graduated in 1884 from the Wharton School of Economy and Finance of the University of Pennsylvania; was appointed United States minister to Brazil April 1, 1889, and resigned June 1, 1890; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 19,547 votes, to 3,850 for Herman V. Hetzel, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Sixteenth, and Seven- teenth wards. WILLIAM McALEER, Democrat, of Philadelphfa, was born in County Tyrone, Ireland, January 6, 1838; emigrated with his parents to Philadelphia 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 councils from the Fifth Ward in 1871 for a term of two years; was elected by select and common councils in 1873 a member of the board of guardians of the poor for a term of three years, and reelected five consecutive terms; was vice-president and president of the board; was president of the First District Charity Organization for a number of years; was presi- dent of the Hibernian Society, which was organized in 1771; is president of the Board of Presidents of the Benevolent Societies of Philadelphia; is a member of the Commercial Exchange; was vice-president and president of the same; was a director of the Chamber of Commerce; was unanimously elected to the State senate 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 and Fifty-third Congresses; was not a candidate for the Fifty-fourth Congress; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, unanimously supported by the Republican and Democratic parties, receiving 18,321 votes, to 340 for E. M. Marsh, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. City oF PHILADELPHIA.—Fifteenth, Twenty-first, Twenty-fourth, Twenty-seventh, Twenty- eighth, Twenty-ninth, Thirty-second, Thirty-fourth, Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, and Fortieth wards. JAMES RANKIN YOUNG, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in Philadel- phia March 10, 1847; was.educated in the public schools of his native city, entering - the Central High School in 1862; enlisted with a number of the professors and stu- dents of the high school as a private soldier, in June, 1863, in the Thirty-second Pennsylvania Infantry, and served during the Gettysburg campaign as a part of Gen. William F. Smith’s division of Gen. Darius N. Couch’s command; made a six- months’ tour of the Southern States soon after the war as a correspondent of the New York Tribune; served as chief of the Washington bureau of the New York Tribune from June, 1866, to December, 1870; was chief executive clerk of the United States Senate from December, 1873, to March, 1879; chief clerk of the Department of Justice from September, 1882, to December, 1883; again chief executive clerk of the United States Senate from December, 1883, to April, 1892; was one of the founders of the Philadelphia Evening Star in 1866, and has been a constant contributor to its columns from that date to the present time, writing over the signature of S. M.; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress; receiv- ing 41,627 votes to 12,250 for Gideon Sibley, Democrat, and 3,372 for C. C. Han- cock, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. ~ City OF PHILADELPHIA.—Kighteenth, Nineteenth, Twenty-second, Twenty-third, Twenty-fifth, Thirty-first, Thirty-third, and Thirty-fifth wards. ALFRED C. HARMER, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in Germantown (now part of the city of Philadelphia), Pa.; was educated at public schools and at Germantown Academy; was engaged in mercantile pursuits; is identified with railroad enterprises and is largely engaged in mining and land operations; was elected to the city councils of Philadelphia 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, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 39,239 votes, to 9,942 for Frank D. Wright, Democrat. y / f | | aiid PENNSYLVANIA ] Senators and Representatives. 93 SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Chester and Delaware (2 counties). THOMAS S. BUTLER, Republican, of West Chester, was born in Uwchlan, Ches- ter County, Pa., November 4, 1855, where he was educated at the public schools, and also at Wyers’s and Worrall’s academies, and at the normal school at West Chester; is a member of thé Chester County bar; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 15,169 votes, to 6,537 for John B. Robinson, Republican and candidate of the Honest Government Party, and 6,513 for William H. Berry, Democrat. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Bucks and Montgomery (2 counties). IRVING PRICE WANGER, Republican, of Norristown, was born in North Cov- entry, Chester County, Pa., March 5, 1852; commenced the study of law at Norristown in 1872, and wasadmitted to the bar December 18, 1875; was elected burgess of Norris- town in 1878; was a delegate to the Republican national convention in 1880; was elected district attorney of Montgomery County in 1880 and again in 1886; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 21,567 votes, to 17,872 for Clinton Rorer, Democrat, and 1,195 for H. Leopold, Prohibitionist. FIGHTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Carbon, Monroe, Northampton, and Pike (4 counties). LAIRD HOWARD BARBER, Democrat, of Mauch Chunk, was born near Mifflin- burg, Union County, Pa., October 25, 1848; prepared for college at the Mifflinburg Academy, and graduated from Lafayette in 1871; was principal of the Mauch Chunk public schools for several years; read law with Frederick Bertolette, Fsq., of Mauch Chunk, and was admitted to the bar in Carbon County June 20, 1831; has * served for a number of years as a member of the committee on admissions to the bar in Carbon County, and is now a member of the committee on legal education of the Pennsylvania Bar Association; was the Democratic candidate for Congress in 1896, but was defeated by the Hon. William S. Kirkpatrick by 329 votes; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 16,400 votes, to 13,516 for William 8. Kirkpatrick, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Berks and Iehigh (2 counties). HENRY DICKINSON GREEN, Democrat, of Reading, was born at Reading, Berks County, Pa., May 3, 1857, and has since continued to reside there; was edu- cated in the public schools of his native city (graduating at the Reading High School in 1872) and at Yale University, graduating from the latter with the class of 1877; admitted to practice law at the Berks County bar in November, 1879, and is now engaged in that profession; was a representative of the city of Reading in the house of representatives of Pennsylvania in the sessions of 1883-84 and 1885-86; was a member of the senate of Pennsylvania from 188g to 1896, being originally elected in November, 1888, and reelected in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress November 7, 1899, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the Hon. Daniel Ermentrout, receiving 17,584 votes, to 11,749 for Jeremiah S. Parvin, Republican. TENTH DISTRICT. CouNtTy.—Lancaster. 2 MARRIOTT BROSIUS, Republican, of Lancaster, was born in Colerain Township, Lancaster County, Pa., March 7, 1843; received a common-school and academic edu- cation; enlisted as a private in Company K, Ninety-seventh Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, in November, 1861, for three years, and March 6, 1863, while engaged on the Fdisto River, was promoted to sergeant; participated in the siege of Charleston and the assault on Fort Wagner, and on the 28th of February, 1864, reenlisted 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 lifelong sufferer; no bone now connects his right arm with his shoulder; was discharged December 28, 1864, and on February 28, 1865, was 94 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA. 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 the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; 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 was defeated, although running over 7,600 votes ahead of his ticket; in 1893 he received the honorary degree of LIL. D. from Ursinus College, Pennsylvania; was elected to the Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 17,482 votes, to 7,083 for A. J. Steinman, Democrat, and 1,202 for William I. Jackson, Prohibitionist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNnTy.—Lackawanna. WILLIAM CONNELL, Republican, of Scranton, was born at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, September 10, 1827, his parents being of Scotch and Irish descent; hiseducation was self-won; when he was yet young, his parents moved to what is now Hazleton, ILuzerne County, Pa., where he worked in the mines as a driver boy at 75 cents a day; in 1856, having shown the ability to rise in life, he was placed in charge of the mines of the Susquehanna and Wyoming Valley Railroad and Coal Company, with offices at Scranton; in 1870, the charter of that company lapsing, he purchased the plant with his savings and organized the firm of William Connell & Co.; from this beginning he has developed into one of the largest individual coal operators in the Wyoming coal region; is president of the Third National Bank; is at the head of or actively identi- fied with the management of most of the industries and large commercial enterprises of Scranton, and has been prominent in charitable and religious work; is a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church; in politics he has always been a Republican; was a delegate to the Republican national convention of 1896, and is a member of the Pennsylvania Republican committee; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 11,404 votes, to 9,861 for M. F. Sando, Democrat, 2,952 for Mr. Leach, Prohibitionist, 392 for J. Purschel, Socialist Labor, and 212 for F. Leach, Honest Government. TWELFTH DISTRICT. CounNTY.—Luzerne. STANLEY WOODWARD DAVENPORT, Democrat, of Plymouth, was born at Plymouth, Luzerne County, Pa., July 21, 1861; attended the public schools in his native town and Wyoming Seminary, and was graduated from the Wesleyan Uni- versity, Middletown, Conn., in 1884; read law with the Hon. George W. Shonk; was admitted to the Luzerne County bar in June, 1890; in 1893 was appointed a director of the poor of the central poor district of Luzerne County, and still holds that office; is secretary and treasurer of the poor district; was elected register of wills of Luzerne County in 1893, by a majority of 1,255; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,220 votes, to 15,772 for Morgan B. Williams, Republican, and 1,498 for J. B. Hunter, Prohibitionist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. County.—Schuylkill, JAMES W. RYAN, Democrat, of Pottsville, was born in Norwegian Township, Schuylkill County, Pa., October 16, 1858; moved to Mahanoy City with his parents when a small boy, where he attended the public schools during the winter and was employed about the coal mines as a mule driver until he reached the age of 16, at which time his father engaged in farming in Butler Township, Schuylkill County; then attended the high school of Frackville, and after graduating taught in the pub- lic schools of his native county for four years; commenced the study of law in the office of Hon. James B. Reilly, Pottsville, Pa., and was admitted to the bar in 1884, immediately beginning the practice of law; was elected district attorney in 1892, and served until January, 1896; was nominated for Congress by acclamation, and elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 15,042 votes, to 12,542 for Charles N. Brumm, Republican, and 176 for Pierce Walker, Socialist Labor. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Dauphin, I.ebanon, and Perry (3 counties). MARLIN EDGAR OLMSTED, Republican, of Harrisburg, was born in Ulysses Township, Potter County, Pa.; educated in common schools and Coudersport Acad- emy; at an early age was appointed assistant corporation clerk by Auditor-General @ PENNSYLVANIA.] Senators and Representatives. 95 (afterwards Governor ) Hartranft; one year later was promoted to corporation clerk, in charge of collection of taxes from corporations under Pennsylvania’s peculiar rev- enue system; was continued in same position by Harrison Allen, auditor-general; read law with Hon. John W. Simonton (now president judge of Twelfth judicial dis- trict) at Harrisburg; was admitted to the bar of Dauphin County November 25, 1878, to the bar of the supreme court of Pennsylvania May 16, 1881, and to the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States November 12, 1884; was elected to represent Dauphin County in the proposed constitutional convention in 1891; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, leading the entire State and county tickets in nearly every election division in the three counties, and receiving 19,352 votes, to 9,026 for Wilson W. Gray, Democrat, 2,564 for Lee L. Grumbein, Prohibitionist, and 1 for Jerry N. Weiler. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bradford, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming (4 counties). CHARLES FREDRICK WRIGHT, Republican, of Susquehanna, Susquehanna County, was born in Forest Lake Township, Susquehanna County, Pa., May 3, 1856; spent his time on a farm and in attending school until 1870; attended the Montrose Academy, graduating in 1874; in 1875 was elected teller of the First National Bank of Montrose, Pa.; resigned in 1881 to take charge of other interests; in 1882 was elected assistant cashier of the First National Bank of Susquehanna Depot, and on the death of his brother in 1894 was promoted to be cashier, which position he still holds; was delegate to the St. Louis Republican convention in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 14,541 votes, to 9,331 for A. B. Gammell, Demo- crat, and 2,416 for C. S. Russell, Prohibitionist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTtIES.—Clinton, I,ycoming, Potter, and Tioga (4 counties). HORACE B. PACKER, Republican, of Wellsboro, was born in Wellsboro, Pa.; isa son of the late Dr. Nelson Packer; was educated at Wellsboro Academy and Alfred University, New York; was admitted to the bar and has continued in practice of law since; waselected district attorney for three years, and served one year by appointment just prior to his election; in 1884 was elected to the Pennsylvania house of repre- sentatives, and reelected in 1886; in 1888 was elected to the State senate; has pre- sided over two Republican State conventions; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Con- gress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 15,839 votes, to 12,858 for Jonathan F. Streiby, Democrat; and 3,378 for Lewis P. Thurston, Prohibitionist. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, and Sullivan (4 counties). RUFUS KING POLK, Democrat, of Danville, was born in Maury County, Tenn., August 23, 1866; was educated at Webb’s Academy, Culleoka, Tenn., and Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa., graduating as mining engineer; served as first lieutenant, Company F, Twelfth Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, in the war with Spain; is interested in the manufacture of iron and steel as general mana- ger of the Danville Bessemer Company, and is a member of the firm of Howe & Polk; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 14,792 votes, to 12,487 for William H. Woodin, Republican, and 1,265 for J. M. Caldwell, Prohibitionist. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. - CounTIES.—Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Snyder, and Union (7 counties). THADDEUS MACLAY MAHON, Republican, of Chambersburg, was born at Greenvillage, Franklin County, Pa., in 1840; received a common-school and academic education; enlisted as a private in Company A, One hundred and twenty-sixth Penn- sylvania Volunteers, in August, 1862; after term of service in this regiment reenlisted as a veteran in January, 1864, in Twenty-first Pennsylvania Cavalry; served until Sep- tember, 1865; participated in most of the engagements with Army of the Potomac, Fifth Corps; was seriously wounded at Boydton Plank Road, Virginia, on November 4, 1864; 96 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA. S read law, and was admitted to practicein 1871; has been actively engaged in his profes- sion in southern Pennsylvania ever since his admission to the bar; was a member of Pennsylvanialegislaturein 1870, 1871, and 1872; served as chairman of general judiciary committee; was a candidate for Congress in the Eighteenth district in 1876 and was defeated by Hon. W. S. Stenger (who received the support of the Greenbackers) by the small majority of 49; has always been a Republican and has always taken an active part in State and national politics; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,722 votes, to 12,921 for R. McKeen, Democrat. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. CoUuNTIES.—Adams, Cumberland, and York (3 counties). EDWARD DANNER ZIEGLER, Democrat, of York, York County, was born March 3, 1844, in Bedford, Bedford County, Pa.; was educated at Pennsylvania Col- lege, Gettysburg, and was graduated with the class of 1865; after devoting two years to teaching in the York County Academy was admitted a member of the York County bar on the 4th day of November, 1868, since which date has followed the practice of the law; on the 1oth day of October, 1871, was elected commissioner’s clerk, and served two years; on the 2d day of November, 1880, was elected district attorney of York County, and served three years; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 20,126 votes, to 19,016 for Robert J. Lewis, Republican. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Bedford, Blair, Cambria, and Somerset (4 counties). JOSEPH EARLSTON THROPP, Republican, of Everett, was born at Valley Forge, Chester County, Pa.; was educated in the public schools, then sent to the Friends Central High School, Philadelphia, and in 1868 graduated as a civil engineer from the Polytechnic College of the State of Pennsylvania; engaged in his profes- sion in Minnesota, reaching the rank of division engineer within sixteen months, although the youngest engineer on the I. S. & M. Railroad; entered the iron busi- ness in 1870; became a partner in January, 1872; and in 1889 purchased the large iron and coal and ore properties of the KEverett Iron Company, Bedford County, Pa.; was one of the committee of legislation of the Eastern Pig Iron Association, one of the organizers of the American Protective Tariff League and now second vice- president of same, and is a member of the committee on legislation of the Manufac- turers’ Club of Philadelphia; has. always been an active Republican; when about 28 years of age was asked to be a candidate for Congress and declined; in 1881 was asked to be an independent candidate and declined; in 18go and 1892, though not a candidate, was voted for by the conferees in the Twentieth Pennsylvania district; in 1896 there was no regular Republican nominee in the Twentieth district, and Mr. Thropp was a candidate on nomination papers; in 1898 was regularly nominated and elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 19,358 votes, to 17,858 for James M. Walters, Democrat, 2,091 for John J. Irwin, Prohibitionist, and 244 for John McMahon, Socialist Labor. ; TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Armstrong, Indiana, Jefferson, and Westmoreland (4 counties). SUMMERS MELVILLE JACK, Republican, of Indiana, was born at Summers- ville, Jefferson County, Pa., July 18, 1852; was educated in the public and private schools of Jefferson County, and in the Indiana Normal School of Pennsylvania; was registered as a student at law in June, 1877, with Hon. Silas M. Clark, of Indiana, and was admitted to practice September 10, 1879; has been actively engaged in law prac- tice since admission to the bar; was elected district attorney for Indiana County in 1883, and reelected without opposition in 1886, serving six years; formed a law part- nership with D. B. Taylor in 1885, under the firm name of Jack & Taylor, which still continues; in 1886, was appointed a member of the board of trustees of the Indiana Normal School of Pennsylvania, to represent the State, and reappointed in 1889, 1892, 1895, and 1898; was chairman of the Congressional conference for the Twenty-first dis- trict in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 23,277 votes, to 16,191 for Jacob R. Speigle, Democrat, and 2,360 for Thomas J. Baldridge, Prohibitionist. PENNSYLVANIA] Senators and Representatives. 97 TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. City OF PITTSBURG and all townships and boroughs lying between the Monongahela and Alle- gheny rivers, except the borough of McKeesport and boroughs and townships lying between the Youghiogheny and Monongahela rivers, in the county of Allegheny. JOHN DALZEL]L, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in New York City April 19, 1845; removed to Pittsburg in 1847; received a common-school and collegiate educa- tion, graduating from Vale College in the class of 1865; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in February, 1867; has since practiced his profession; never held any office until he was elected to the Fiftieth Congress; was elected to the Fifty- first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 25,693 votes, to 11,049 for George W. Acklin, Democrat, 1,219 for H. I. Castle, Prohibitionist, 527 for V. Remmel, Socialist Labor, and 121 for Thomas H. Grundy, Union. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT. CITY OF ALLEGHENY and all the townships and boroughs lying north of the Allegheny and Ohio rivers in the county of Allegheny. WILLIAM H. GRAHAM, Republican, of Allegheny, was born in Allegheny, Pa., August 3, 1844; attended the public schools of that city until 13 years of age, when the death of his father forced him to leave school in order to aid his mother in the support of a family of younger children; while employed in a brass foundry the civil war broke out, and at the age of 17 he enlisted in a Pittsburg com- pany, but Pennsylvania’s quota being full, they chartered a steamer, went down the river to Wheeling, and were accepted there, becoming Company A, Second Virginia Infantry; after a service of two years the regiment was mounted, becoming the Fifth West Virginia Cavalry; saw very active service under Generals Averill, Crook, and Sheridan; was in service until close of the war, witnessing the surrender of General Lee at Appomattox; was wounded in engagement at White Sulphur Springs, Va.; after the war engaged actively in business and has been very successful; is now the president of the Mercantile Trust Company and Central Accident Insurance Com- pany of Pittsburg; has also been active in Republican politics; served three suc- cessive terms as recorder of deeds Allegheny County; represented his city during four sessions of the Pennsylvania legislature; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress ata special election held November 29, 1898, to fill vacancy caused by the resignation of William A. Stone, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 14,008 votes, to 5,608 for John H. Stevenson, Democrat, 619 for ¥. C. Brittain, Prohibition- ist, and 258 scattering. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Fayette, Greene, and Washington, all boroughs and townships lying south of the Monongahela and Ohio rivers, the boroughs and townships lying between the Youghiogheny and Monongahela rivers, and the borough of McKeesport, in the county of Allegheny. ERNEST F. ACHESON, Republican, of Washington, was born in Washington, Pa., September 19, 1855; educated at Washington and Jefferson College; admitted to the bar in 1877; in 1879 purchased the Washington Observer, of which he has since been editor; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions at Chicago in 1884 and at St. Louis in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 25,524 votes, to 21,290 for Mark M. Cochran, Democrat. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Beaver, Butler, Lawrence, and Mercer (4 counties). JOSEPH B. SHOWALTER, Republican, of Butler, was born in Fayette County, Pa., February 11, 1851; received a public school and academic education, and taught school for six years; studied medicine at Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, and at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore, graduating from the lat- ter institution; practiced medicine for a number of years at Chicora, Pa.; is engaged in the production of petroleum and natural gas; was elected to the Pennsylvania house of representatives in 1886 asa Republican for a term of two years; elected to the Penn- sylvania State senate in 1888 for a term of four years; was chairman of committee on 98 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA, health and sanitation; secured the passage through the senate of the medical exam- iners’ bill and other important measures, one of which was his bill founding the Home for the Training in Speech of Deaf Children under school age in Philadelphia; has been a trustee of said institution since its organization; was elected to the Fifty- fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 18,220 votes, to 15,271, for M. I,. Lockwood, who ran on the Democratic, People’s, and Prohibition tickets. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Crawford and Erie (2 counties). ATHELSTON GASTON, Democrat, of Meadville, was born in Castile, N. Y., April 24, 1838; when 16 years of age his parents moved to Crawford County, Pa., where he has resided continuously ever since, with the exception of four years spent on a farm in Iowa; received a common-school education; engaged in farming until 35 years of age; since that time has been a manufacturer and dealer in lumber; was elected mayor of the city of Meadville in 1891; reelected in 1892 for a term of three years; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 13,516 votes, to 13,482 for George H. Higgins, Republican, and 1,291 for Francis A. Loveland, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Cameron, McKean, Venango, and Warren (4 counties). JOSEPH CROCKER SIBLEY, Democrat, of Franklin, Venango County, was born in Friendship, Allegany County, N. Y., February 18, 1850; was educated in the com- mon schools and at Springville and Friendship academies; is extensively engaged in farming and stock raising, also in the production and manufacture of petroleum and its products; residing in the Twenty-seventh district, he was elected to represent the Twenty-sixth district in the Fifty-third Congress; in 1898 was tendered the nomina- tion by both the Twenty-sixth and Twenty-seventh districts, accepting in the Twenty- seventh; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 14,138 votes, to 11,757 for C. W. Stone, Republican, and 1,233 for W. W. Hague, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTiEs.—Center, Clarion, Clearfield, Elk, and Forest (5 counties). JAMES KNOX POLK HALL, Democrat, of Ridgway, Elk County, was born September 30, 1844, at Milesburg, Center County, Pa., and educated at Pittsburg, Pa.; ' was admitted to the bar November 8, 1866; elected district attorney of Elk County in 1867; reelected in 1870 and in 1873; retired from practice in 1883, and has since devoted himself to his coal, lumber, railroad, and banking interests; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 17,550 votes, to 14,209 for William Carlile “Arnold, Republican, and 1,898 for George W. Reems, Prohibitionist. RHODE ISLAND, = SENATORS. GEORGE PEABODY WETMORE, Republican, of Newport, was born during a visit of his parents abroad, at London, England, August 2, 1846; was graduated from Vale College in 1867, receiving the degree of A. B., and that of A. M. in 1871; studied law at Columbia College Law School, and was graduated in 1869, receiving the degree of I.1..B.; was admitted to the bar of Rhode Island and of New York in 1869; is a trustee of the Peabody Museum of Natural History in Vale University, and was nominated a fellow of the university in 1888, but declined; is a trustee of the Peabody educa- tion fund, and a director of other associations; was first Presidential elector of Rhode Island in 1880 and in 1884; was a member of the State committee to receive the representatives of France on the occasion of their visit to Rhode Island in 1881; is a member of the commission to build a new statehouse; was governor of Rhode Island \ ¥ RHODE ISI,AND.] Senators and Representatives. 99 in 1885-86, 1886-87, and was defeated for a third term in 1887, receiving, however, a greater number of votes than at either of the two preceding elections when successful; was defeated on the eighth ballot for United States Senator in 1889; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Nathan F. Dixon June 13, 1894, receiving the unanimous vote of the general assembly in the senate, house, and joint assembly. His term of service will expire March 3, IgoI. NELSON WILMARTH ALDRICH, Republican, of Providence, was porn at Fos- ter, R. 1., November 6, 1841; received an academic education; was president of the Providence common council in 1871-1873; 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 reelected to the Forty-seventh Congress; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Ambrose E. Burnside, Republican, took his seat December 5, 1881, and was reelected in 1886, in 1892, and in 1898. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. Yio 40 FIRST DISTANT COUNTIES. —Bristol, Newport, and part of Pr oilRince, including the city of, Providence. MELVILLE BULL, Republican, of Middletown, was born at Newport, R. I1., 1854; prepared for college at Philips Academy, Exeter; graduated at Harvard Eri : in 1877; upon g graduation engaged in farming and is still so engaged; was repr esent- “ative from Middletown i in State legislature 188 3-1885, senator 7885- 1892, lieutenant- governor 1892-1894; member of Republican State central committee 1885 to 189s; was delegate to the Republican national convention in 1888; while in the legislature was chairman of the militia committee, on the joint special committee to investi- gate State institutions, and chairman of the special committee to select, purchase, . and fit up permanent camp grounds for the State militia; took an active part in estab- lishing the naval reserve militia of the State; has been one of board of managers of the Rhode Island College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts and Experiment Station’ since its establishment in 1388; in November, 1892, was.a candidate for Congress, receiving 640 plurality, but, the laws of Rhode Island requiring a majority at that time, was not elected; was elected to the Fifty y-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 12,268. votes, to 6,714 for John W.: Hogan, Democrat, 482 for C. Hq Tilley, Prohibitionist, 1,117 for- E. W. Theniert, Socialist A ahon SECOND, DISTRICT. CITIES AND Towns. —Cities of Pawtucket and Woonsocket and the towns of Lincoln, Cumber- . land, North Providence, Smithfield, North Smithfield, Burrillville, Gloucester, Scituate, Foster, Johnson, Cranston, Warwick, Coventry, West Greenwich, East Greenwich, North Kingston, , South Kingston, Exeter, Richmond, Charlestown, Hopkinton, and Westerly. ADIN BALLOU CAPRON, Republican, of Stillwater, Providence County, son of Carlile W. and Abby (Bates) Capron, was born in- Mendon, Mass. , January 9, 1841; educated at Woonsocket High School and Westbrook Seminary, néat Portland, Me. ; is engaged in milling and ‘dealing in grain; enlisted as sergeant. iu Second Rhode Island Infantry May, 1861; pr omoted to ser geant-major July | 11, 1861; commissioned lieutenant’ September, 1 1861, and ordered on detached service in the Signal Corps December, 1861; served in the Signal Corps until the close of the war, having been commissioned first lieutenant in the Signal Corps, United States Army, March 3,:1863, and receiving promotion to the rank of captain and major by brevet; elected repre- sentative to the general assembly of Rhode Island in 1887, and reelected in 1888, 1889. 1890, 1891, and 1892; was speaker of the house in 1891 and 1892; was Repub. lican candidate for Congress in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty- sixth Congress, receiving 9,041 votes, to 6,492 for TLucius F. C. Garvin, Democrat, 1,462 for Charles H. Dana, Socialist Labor, and 517 for Frank B. Smith, Prohibitionist. 56-18T—2D ED——8 100 Congressional Directory. [SOUTH CAROLINA. f SOUTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. BENJAMIN RYAN TILLMAN, Democrat, of Trenton, was born in Edgefield County, S. C.; August 11, 1847; received an academic education under the instruction of George Galphin at Bethany, in the same county; quit school in July, 1864, to join the Confederate army, but was stricken with a severe illness, which caused the loss of his left eye and kept him an invalid for two years; followed farming as a pursuit and took no active part in politics till he began the agitation in 1886 for industrial and technical education which culminated in the establishment of the Clemson Agricul- 2 tural and Mechanical College, at Calhoun’s old home, Fort Hill; the demand for educational reform broadened into a demand for other changes in State affairs, and he was put forward by the farmers as a candidate for governor in 189o; after an excit- ing and heated canvass he received the nomination in the Democratic convention by a vote of 270 to 50 for his opponent, and was elected in November following; this was his first political office, and he was reelected in 1892 by an overwhelming vote; his term as governor was signalized by the passage of the dispensary law for the con- trol of the liquor traffic by the State and by the establishment of another college, the Winthrop Normal and Industrial College for Women, at Rock Hill, an institution which bids fair to lead all similar schools in the South; entered the race for the Sen- at® against General Butler and the two canvassed the State, county by county, with the result that Tillman was elected by the general assembly by a vote of 131 to 21 for Butler. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. JOHN LOWNDES McLAURIN, Democrat, of Marlboro County, was born at Red Bluff, that county, May 9, 1860; was educated at the village school of Bennettsville, at Bethel Military Academy, near Warrenton, Va., at Swarthmore College, Phila- - delphia, at the Carolina Military Institute, and at the University of Virginia; studied law at the last-named school, and was admitted to the bar in 1882; in 18go was elected to the general assembly of South Carolina; was elected attorney-general of that State | the following year; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, and Fifty-fourth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-fifth Congress; was appointed United States Senator May 27, 1897, by Governor Ellerbe, of South Carolina, to fill the vacancy | caused by the death of Joseph H. Farle, and took his seat June 1: after a cam- paign, in which the question was submitted to the people of the State, was elected | to fill out the unexpired term ending March 3, 1903, and was sworn in January 31, | . 1898. REPRESENTATIVES. | | FIRST DISTRICT. | Kings, Laws, Mingo, Penn, Ridge, Sutton, and Turkey, of the county of Williamsburg, the townships of Collins, Adams Run, Glover, Frazier, Lowndes, and Blake, of the county of Col- leton, and all of the county of Berkeley except such townships as are embraced in the Seventh Congressional district. WILLIAM ELLIOTT, Democrat, of Beaufort, was born in Beaufort, S. C., Septem- ber 3, 1838; was educated at Beaufort College, Harvard University, and the University of [ Virginia; 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 South Carolina legislature and intendant of Beaufort; was a delegate to the national Democratic convention at St. Louis in 1876 and 1888; was Democratic Presidential elector for the State at large in 1880; was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty- | first, Rifty-second, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 3,030 votes to 1,529 for G. W. Murray, Republican. | : CouNTIES.—Charleston, Georgetown, and Beaufort, and the townships of Anderson, Hope, Indian, f | SECOND DISTRICT. } CounTiESs.—Aiken, Barnwell, Edgefield, and Hampton (4 counties). | | W. JASPER TALBERT, Democrat, of Parksville, was born in Edgefield County, % S. C., in 1846; was educated in the schools of his native county and Due West Academy, SOUTH CAROLINA.] Senators and Representatives. 101 Abbeville; served in the Confederate army throughout the war; after the war engaged in farming, to which he gave personal attention and labor; in 1880 was elected to the legislature, and reelected in 1882; was elected to the State senate in 1884; was presi- dent of the Democratic convention which nominated the farmer governor; was chosen superintendent of the State penitentiary, which position he held when elected to Congress; has held various positions in the Farmers’ Alliance and helped formulate the “Ocala demands;”’ is a staunch Democrat; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 4,073 votes, to 122 for B. P. Chatfield, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Abbeville, Anderson, Greenwood, Newberry, Oconee, and Pickens (6 counties). ASBURY C. LATIMER, Democrat, of Belton, was born July 31, 185I, near Lowndesville, Abbeville County, S. C.; was brought up on his father’s farm; spent . much of his life in active participation in agricultural pursuits; was educated in the common schools then existing; took an active part in the memorable campaign of 1876; removed to Belton, Anderson County, his present home, in 1880; devoted his energies to his farm; was elected county chairman of the Democratic party of his county in 1890 and reelected in 1892; was urged to make the race for lieutenant- governor of his State in 1890, but declined; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiv- ing 4,029 votes, to 332 for R. R. Tolbert, jr., Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Fairfield, Greenville, and Taurens, all of the county of Spartanburg except the town- ships of White Plains and Limestone, all of the county of Union except the townships of Gow deysville and Draytonville, and the townships of Center, Columbia, and Upper, of the county of Richland. STANYARNE WILSON, Democrat, of Spartanburg, was born 1859 in Yorkville, S. C.; educated at Kings Mountain Military School, South Carolina, and Washington and Lee University, Virginia; is a lawyer; was elected to the legislature in 1884, to the senate in 1892, and to the constitutional convention of 1895; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 4,467 votes, to 165 for Pratt S. Suber, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIiEs.—Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Kershaw, I,ancaster, and York (6 counties). DAVID EDWARD FINLEY, Democrat, of Yorkville, was born at Trenton, Ark., February 28, 1861; since September, 1865, has resided in York County, S. C.; was educated in the schools at Rock Hill and Ebenezer, S. C., and the South Carolina College; is a lawyer; was a member of the house of representatives of South Caro- lina in 1890-91, and of the State senate 1892-1896; in the house of representatives was a member and chairman of the committee on ways and means; in the senate was a member of the judiciary committee and chairman of the finance committee; since 1890 has been a trustee of the South Carolina University; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress without opposition, receiving 4,230 votes. SIXTH DISTRICT. : CounrtiEs.—Clarendon, Darlington, Florence, Horry, Marion, Marlboro, and four townships of Williamsburg. : JAMES NORTON, Democrat, of Mullins, was born October 8, 1843, in Marion County, S. C.; received an academic education; left school in 1861 to enter the army; served through the war in the Army of Northern Virginia. He was more than once wounded, a ball at one time passing through the body and right lung. From this wound he had sufficiently recovered to be able to return to the army just in time, with Petersburg, to be captured. After the war he reentered school, but did not finish regular course; in 1870 was elected county school commissioner and reelected in 1872, but did not serve ; served as a member of the house of representatives of South Carolina 1886-87 and 1890-91; was elected comptroller-general of the State in 1894 and reelected in 1896, which office he resigned to accept a seat in the Fifty-fifth Con- 102 Congressional Directory. [SOV CAROLINA, gress, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. John I,. McLaurin, having been elected after nomination, without opposition, October 12, 1897; was reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 1,765 votes, to 151 for J. H. Evans, Independent Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTtIes.—Dorchester, Iexington, Orangeburg, Sumter, the townships of Bells, Heyward, Sheri- dan, Verdier, Broxtons, and Warren, of the county of Colleton, and the townships of St. James, Goose Creek, St.. Johns, Berkeley, and St. Stevens, of the county of Berkeley, and Lower Township, of the county of Richland. J. WILLIAM STOKES, Democrat, of Orangeburg, was brought up to farm life, attending the ordinary schools of his county and town until he was 19 years of age; graduated from Washington and Lee University, Virginia, in 1876, and taught school for twelve years, graduating meantime in medicine from Vanderbilt University, Ten- nessee; in 1889 he returned to the farm, assisted in organizing the farmers, and was president of the State Farmers’ Alliance two terms; was elected to the State senate in 1890; was a delegate at large to the national Democratic convention at Chicago in 1892 and was Presidential elector on the Democratic ticket the same year; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 4,433 votes, to 505 for James Weston. SOUTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. RICHARD FRANKLIN PETTIGREW, of the Silver Party, of Sioux Falls, was born at Ludlow, Vt., July, 1848; removed with his parents to Evansville, Rock County, Wis., 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 office in 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 reelected in 1879; was elected to the Forty-seventh Con- gress as Delegate from Dakota Territory; was elected to the ‘Territorial council of 1884-85; was a member of the South Dakota constitutional convention of 1883; was chairman of the committee on public indebtedness, and framed the present provisions of the constitution on that subject; was elected United States Senator October 16, 1889, under the provisions of the act of Congress admitting South Dakota into the Union; took his seat December 2, 1889; was reelected in 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. JAMES HENDERSON KYLE, Independent, of Aberdeen, was born near Xenia, Ohio, February 24, 1854; entered the University of Illinoisin 1871, taking a course in civil engineering; entered Oberlin College in 1873 and was graduated from classical course in 1878; prepared for admission to the bar, but afterwards entered Western Theological Seminary, Allegheny, Pa., graduating in 1882. During these years was teacher of mathematics and engineering; and subsequently engaged for several years in educational and ministerial work in Utah and South Dakota. At the time he entered political life was financial secretary of Yankton College, Yankton, S. Dak. Was elected to the State senate as an Independent in 1890; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Gideon C. Moody; took his seat March 4, 1891; was reelected in 1897. His term of service will expire March 3, 1903. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE. ROBERT JACKSON GAMBLE, Republican, of Yankton, was born near Akron, N. VY., February 7, 1851; removed to Fox Lake, Wis., in 1862; was reared on a farm, and received a common-school and collegiate education, graduating from Lawrence University, Appleton, Wis., in 1874; is a lawyer by profession; located at Yankton in November, 1875, where he has since been engaged in the practice; was district \ » N SOUTH DARODA] Senators and Representatives. 103 attorney for the Second judicial district of the Territory in 1880; city attorney of Yankton for two terms; State senator in 1885, under the constitution adopted that year; was a member of the Fifty-fourth Congress, and a candidate for reelection in in 1896, but defeated by a plurality of 182 out of a total vote of 83,000; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 38,780 votes, to 32,240 for Freeman Knowles, Populist, and 882 for A. Jamison, Prohibitionist. CHARLES H. BURKE, Republican, of Pierre, Hughes County, was born April I, 1861, in Genesee County, N. Y.; was educated in the public schools of Batavia, N.Y.; removed to Dakota Territory in 1882 and settled upon a homestead; read law and was admitted to the bar in 1886, but has never been engaged actively in the practice of law, having had charge of the affairs of a large loan company, and being generally engaged in the real estate business; was elected to the legislature in 1894, and reelected in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 36,295 votes, to 32,314 for J. E. Kelley, Populist, and 856 for M. D. Alexander, Prohibitionist. TENNESSEE. SENATORS. THOMAS B. TURLEY, Democrat, of Memphis, was born in Memphis April 5,1845; served through the civil war as a private in the Confederate army; was graduated from the law department of the University of Virginia in 1867 and immediately began the practice of law at Memphis; held no civil office until appointed to the United States Senate, July 20, 1897, to succeed Senator Isham G. Harris, deceased; was elected by the legislature to fill out the unexpired term, and sworn in February 14, 1898. His term of service will end March 3, 1901. WILLIAM B. BATE, Democrat, of Nashville, was born near Castalian Springs, Tenn., and received an academic education; when quite a youth served as second clerk on a steamboat between Nashville 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 Tennessee legislature; graduated from the Leba- non Law School in 1852 and entered upon the practice of his profession at Gallatin, Tenn.; 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-Iane ticket; was private, captain, colonel, briga- dier-general, and major-general in the Confederate service, surrendering with the Army of 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 Demo- cratic national convention in 1868; served on the national Democratic executive committee for Tennessee twelve years; was an elector for the State at large on the Tilden and Hendricks ticket in 1876; in 1882 was elected governor of Tennessee and reelected in 1884 without opposition in his party; in January, 1887, was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed Washington C. Whitthorne, and took his seat March 4, 1887; was reelected in 1893 and again in 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hancock, Hawkins, Johnson, Sullivan Unicoi, and Washington (12 counties). WALTER PRESTON BROWNLOW, Republican, of Jonesboro, was born in Abingdon, Va.; he attended common school for three years; because of the death of his father he earned his support from the age of 10; he served an apprenticeship at the tinner’s trade, and as a locomotive engineer, working at these trades for several years; he entered the newspaper business as a reporter for the Knoxville Whig and Chronicle (edited by his uncle, the late Hon. William G. Brownlow, United States Senator) in 1876; in the same year he purchased the Herald and Tribune, a Repub- lican newspaper, published at Jonesboro, of which he has since been the editor and proprietor; was a delegate from his district to the Republican national conventions of 1880 and 1896, and a delegate from the State at large to the national convention of 1884; in 1880 was chairman of the campaign committee of his district; in 1882 was elected a member of the Republican State committee and served as such for eight years, two of which he was its chairman; was appointed postmaster at Jonesboro in March, 1881, and resigned in December to accept the doorkeepership of the House of Representatives of the Forty-seventh Congress; in 1884 and 1896 he was elected by the delegations from his State to the national conventions as Tennessee’s mem- ber of the Republican national committee, and was unanimously elected chairman of the Republican State executive committee by the members of that body for 1898-99; in 1898 was chosen at a primary election as the nominee for Congress, receiving 13,332 votes, to 4,010 for W. E. F. Milburn; was elected to the Fifty-fifth 104 Congressional Directory. (TENNESSEE, Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, as a Protectionist Republican, in a district which was represented from 1843 to 1853 by the late President Andrew Johnson as a Free-Trade Democrat, receiving 14,616 votes, to 11,732 for Hugh H. Guchenour, Democrat, and 245 for J. W. Crumley, Prohibitionist. " SECOND DISTRICT. CountTies.—Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Jefferson, Knox, Loudon, Morgan, Roane, Scott, Sevier, and Union (11 counties). | | | HENRY RICHARD GIBSON, Republican, of Knoxville, was born on Kent Island, | Queen Anne County, Md., in 1837; was educated at Bladensburg, Md., and at Hobart College, Geneva, N.V., from which institution he graduated in 1862; served in the Com- missary Department of the Federal Army from March, 1863, to July, 1865; in Septem- ber, 1865, entered the Albany, N.Y., Law School; in December, 1865, was licensed to practice law by the supreme court of New York, at Albany; in January, 1866, removed to Knoxville, Tenn., and there began the practice of law; in October, 1866, removed to | Jacksboro, Campbell County, Tenn.; in 1868 was appointed commissioner of claims by Governor William G. Brownlow; in 1869 was elected a delegate to the constitu- | tional convention which framed the present constitution of the State, but refused to sign or vote for the constitution because of some obnoxious provisions, especially one making the prepayment of a poll tax a qualification for voting; in 1870 was | elected a member of the State senate; in 1872 was a Republican nominee for Presi- » dential elector; in 1874 was elected a member of the Tennessee house of representa- | tives; in 1876 moved back to Knoxville and formed a law partnership with Judge [| L. C. Houk, afterwards Congressman; in 1879 founded the Knoxville Republican | and became its editor; in 1880 was a Republican nominee for Presidential elector; | in 1881 was appointed post-office inspector and as such investigated the postal serv- : ice on the Mississippi River and its tributaries and the star-route service west of Eo the Rocky Mountains; in 1882 became editor of the Knoxville Daily Chronicle, 3 then the only morning Republican daily south of the Ohio River; in 1883 was appointed United States pension agent at Knoxville for the Southern district, com- posed of twelve States; in 1886 was elected chancellor of the Second chancery divi- sion of Tennessee for a term of eight years, receiving 18,828 votes, to 5,225 votes for his opponent; in 1891 published Suits in Chancery, a book that has become an i authority in the courts of Tennessee and other States; in 1892 the degree of LL. D. i was conferred upon him by Hobart College, his alma mater; was elected to the | Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 13,848 votes, to 6,908 for John M. Davis, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bledsoe, Bradley, Franklin, Grundy, Hamilton, James, Marion, McMinn, Meigs, Mon- roe, Polk, Sequatchie, Van Buren, Warren, and White (15 counties). JOHN AUSTIN MOON, Democrat, of Chattanooga, was born in Albemarle County, Va., April 22, 1855; removed with his parents to Bristol, Va., in 1857, and to Chattanooga in January, 1870, where he has since resided; was educated at King College, Tennessee; admitted to the bar in Alabama and Tennessee in March, 1874, and to the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States in 1878; was elected attor- ney for the city of Chattanooga for 1881-82; was a member of the Democratic exec- utive committee of the State in 1888; at the unanimous request of the bar of the Fourth judicial circuit was commissioned by the governor in May, 1889, as special | circuit judge and twice reappointed, and held the office until January 3, 1891, when he was appointed regular judge for the Fourth circuit, and served until August, 1892, when he was elected circuit judge; was reelected in 1894 for a term of eight years; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, receiving 13,347 votes, to 9,209 for Gus Cate, Republican, and 161 for W. A. =» Wetmore, Populist. TENNESSER.] Senators and Representatives. 705 FOURTH DISTRICT. CountiEs.—Clay, Cumberland, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Overton, Pickett, Putnam, Rhea, Smith, Sumner, Trousdale, and Wilson (13 counties). CHARLES EDWARD SNODGRASS, Democrat, of Crossville,was born in Sparta, White County, Tenn., December 28, 1866; was educated in the common schools of Tennessee and by self-effort at home; studied law under Hon. H. C. Snodgrass, at Sparta, Tenn., and was admitted to the bar; commenced practice of law at Cross- ville, Tenn., in the year 1888; never held or sought any other elective office until elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 13,413 votes, to 8,122 for George H. Morgan, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, Dekalb, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore, and Rutherford (8counties). JAMES DANIEIL, RICHARDSON, Democrat, of Murfreesboro, was born in Ruther- ford County, Tenn., March 10, 1843; was educated at good country schools; was at Franklin College, near Nashville, when the war began, and entered the Confederate army at 18 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 Ten- nessee Infantry; read law after the war and began practice January 1, 1867, at Mur- freesboro; 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 28 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 the Grand Chapter, Royal Arch Masons, of the State, 1882; is inspector-general (active mem- ber) Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, thirty-third degree, in Tennessee, -and Lieutenant Grand Commander of the Supreme Council; was a delegate to the St. Louis Democratic convention in 1876, and also to the Chicago Democratic conven- tion in 1896; editor and compiler of Messages and Papers of the Presidents; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 12,059 votes, to 4,860 for W. Y. Elliott, Republican. © SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Cheatham, Davidson, Houston, Humphreys, Montgomery, Robertson, and Stewart (7 counties). JOHN WESLEY GAINES, Democrat, of Nashville, was born near that city August 24, 1861 ; was educated and taught in the public country schools; was graduated in medicine from the University of Nashville, and Vanderbilt University in 1882, and began the study of law upon the day of his graduation, and was admitted to the bar in 1884; was a Cleveland elector in 1892, and led the ballot, and afterwards became the leading exponent of free silver in his district; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Con- gress; renominated without opposition and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 11,539 votes, to 2,088 for J. C. Napier, Republican, and 1,021 for N. P. Gill, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTtiES.—Dickson, Giles, Hickman, I,awrence, Lewis, Maury, Wayne, and Williamson (8 coun- ties). NICHOLAS NICHOLS COX, Democrat, of Franklin, was born in Bedford County, Tenn., 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, Tenn., from which institution he graduated in 1858, and was licensed to practice at the same time; was a Confederate colonel and served during most of the war with Gen- eral Forrest; after the war he located in Franklin, Williamson County, Tenn., 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 college of electors met, he cast his vote for Hendricks, of Indiana, for President; was elected to the Fifty- second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 9,590 votes, to 4,055 for J. A. Cunningham, Gold- Democrat. 106 Congressional Directory. . (TENNESSEE. FEIGHTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Benton, Carroll, Chester, Decatur, Hardin, Henderson, Henry, Madison, McNairy, and Perry (10 counties). THETUS WILLRETTE SIMS, Democrat, was born April 25, 1852, in Wayne County, Tenn.; was reared on a farm; was educated at Savannah College, Savannah, Tenn.; graduated in the law department of the Cumberland University at Lebanon, Tenn., June, 1876; located at Linden, Tenn., where he has resided ever since in the practice of his profession; was elected county superintendent of public instruction for Perry County, Tenn., in 1882, and held that office for two years; was chosen an elector on the Cleveland and Stevenson ticket in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 10,747 votes, to 6,579 for W. F. Hinkle, Republican, and 524 for T. J. Brooks, Populist. NINTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Crockett, Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion, and Weakley (8 counties). RICE ALEXANDER PIERCE, Democrat, of Union City, was born on a farm in Weakley County, Tenn., July 3, 1849; was a member of the Eighth Tennessee Cavalry, Confederate States army; was wounded and captured in a cavalry fight near Jackson, Tenn., in 1864, and was a prisoner till close of the war; attended the common schools of the county, and was two and one-half years at the London High School, London, Ontario; read law at Halifax, N. C., in the office of Judge Edward Coingland; was licensed to practice by the supreme court of North Carolina in July, 1868; was elected district attorney-general of the Twelfth judicial circuit in 1874 and reelected in 1878 for full term of eight years; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, and Fifty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 9,860 votes, to 2,728 for Isaac Revelle, Republican, and 246 for E. F. Falley, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Fayette, Hardeman, Shelby, and Tipton (4 counties). EDWARD WARD CARMACK, Democrat, of Memphis, was born near Castalian Springs, Sumner County, Tenn., November 5, 1858; received an academic education; studied law and began practicing at Columbia, Tenn. ; was elected to the legislature as a Democrat in 1884; in 1886 joined the editorial staff of the Nashville American; in 1888 founded the Nashville Democrat; afterwards became editor in chief of the Nash- ville American when the Democrat was merged into that paper; in 1892 became editor of the Memphis Commercial; was delegate for the State at large to the Dem- ocratic national convention in 1896; was nominated for Congress by the Democrats of the Tenth Congressional district, the convention being presided over by Hon. Isham G. Harris, as chairman, and elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, receiving 8,489 votes, to 1,873 for J. W. Vernon, Repub- lican, and 43 for J. T. Brooks, Populist. THE XAS, SENATORS. HORACE CHILTON, Democrat, of Tyler, was born in the county in which he now lives (Smith County, Tex. ) December 29, 1853; is an attorney at law; was a delegate at large from Texas to the national Democratic convention at St. Louis in 1888; served one term as assistant attorney-general of Texas by appointment of Governor O. M. Roberts; was appointed United States Senator by Governor Hogg, to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Hon. John H. Reagan, in April, 1891, but failed of election when the legislature convened; became a candidate again in 1894, made a canvass of the State, and was elected to the United States Senate without practical opposition, as the successor of Hon. Richard Coke (who did not desire reelection), on January 23, 1895. His term of service will expire March 3, 1901. CHARLES A. CULBERSON, Democrat, of Dallas, was born in Dadeville, Talla- poosa County, Ala., June 10, 1855; is the eldest son of David B. Culberson, for twen- ty-two years a member of the House of Representatives from Texas, and Eugenia Kimbal Culberson, daughter of the late Dr. Allen Kimbal, of Alabama; removed py i EE py a — ——— aN : Naghville, Tenn... 0... ... Mar. 4, 1887 Beveridoe, Albert J... 0 0... Ri Indianapolis, Ind... 0... Mar. 4, 1899 Barrows, Juling C.... nish R. | Kalamazoo, Mich ..::....... Jan. 23, 1895 Clark, Clarence D....0.o i. 0b Rj’ Bvanston, Wyo... .i....... Feb. 6, 1895 Clark, Willlam A Jo. iiss, Df Butte Mont... sii 0 on Mar. 4, 1899 Coekrell, Francis M.... ...-.... =. D. | Warrensburg, Mo ....... ..... | Mar. 4, 1875 Culberson, Charles A... ........ 1D. Dallng Tew of Solio nh Mar. 4, 1899 =Dantel, John W. .-.. ... in. Dy Lynchburg, Va... 0... Mar. 4, 1877 Davis, Cushman K................. RSE Paul, Minn... 200. 000 Mar. 4, 1887 Depew, Chauncey M.- ..... ..... ..... R NewYork City... vo... 0 Mar. 4, 1899 Poster, Addison: (Goo. 2 Ro [Tacoma, Wash ........-. .... Mar. 4, 1899 Hale! Fugene rio 0 a 2s R {| BlHsworth, Me. i 0.00 Mar. 4, 1881 Hanna, Marcas Ac. 000, Ry | Cleveland, Ohio -... 5 Mar. 5, 1897 Hawley iTosepli RB. 0. coco 0 BR. ["Hartford, Conn... vos Mar. 4, 1881 Kean, Jou... oii. lui de nan ve Rel Blhsbeth No Jo... 00 7. Mar. 4, 1899 Lodge, Henry Cabot... -.... R. |: Nahant Mass... Wiialt va ioe CL ae eS EE a Sn Mar. 4, 1899 Roberts, B. W..... ... Massachusetts .. [56th Coin a, aire Mar. 4, 1899 Robertson, S. v...... Louisiana ........ *soth, 51st, 52d, 53d, 54th, | Aug. 3, 1887 55th, 56t Robinson, J.S....... Nebraska ........ Both a a a a, Mar. 4, 1899 Robinson, J. M. ..... Indiana. .... 00h sthasbthict fourm nn Mar. 4, 1897 Rodenbere, W. A....| Illinois... ... 6th. en Mar. 4, 1899 Rucker, W.W....... Missonri. ........% TIE heen Sl EE Mar. 4, 1899 Ruppert, Jacob, jr ..:| New York ....... nl Raman RR Se ls Mar. 4, 1899 Russell oC A Lon Connecticut ..... soth, 51st, 52d, 53d, 54th, | Mar. 4, 1887 55th, 56th. Ryan, J. W ......-.... Pennsylvania LL a Mar. 4, 1899 Ryan, W. Hol New Nork:....... goth ou aE Rena Mar. 4, 1899 Salmon, Joshua ..... New. Jersey... .. I TES Se Ce Eee Mar. 4, 1899 Scudder, Townsend. .| New York....... i Ee Ce Sr Mar. 4, 1899 Shackleford, D. W...| Missouri. ........ WROHIE e E e June 16,1899 Shafroth, J. F....... Colorado... ... gh ssthysethe: Loo Mar. 4, 1895 Shattuc, W.B....... Ode ie Eel sath es Mar. 4, 1897 Shelden, C.D... .... Michigan. ....... Ce ae Se Mar. 4, 1897 Sherman, J.S....... New York. ..... soth, 51st, 53d,54th,55th,56th | Mar. 4, 1887 Sheppard, J-L, ......- Texas. oi Ca ee SE En Se Mar. 4, 1899 Showalter, J.B...... Pennsylvania ....[ #55th, 56th J... ..... ooo oid .| Mar. 4, 1897 Sibley, J. & dean haa sads6th. eee Mar. 4, 1893 Sing, LL Wo. oo, os Tennessee ...... .. gethostthni or ino padi ly Mar. 4, 1897 Slayden, J. 1... ...... Wemds i iim meth sth Mar. 4, 1897 Small RH ...... North Cavelina . .{'56tly. co Mar. 4, 1899 Smith, DEL... Remtucky .... Ara Re IE Mar. 4, 1897 Smith,G. W........ Hlinels.. . 5... 52d, 53d, 54th,55th,56th | Mar. 4, 1889 Smith, FRG Michigan. ...... She ER ee Mar. 4, 1899 Smith, Se Wr... doy iii sstislile oo ono 0, Mar. 4, 1897 SuRtheW- An do a 54th, Seri mth ana Mar. 4, 1895 Snodgrass, CB ....| Tennessee....... Sotho lene, Mar. 4, 1899 Southard, J. H ...... Olle. soi a on sathasaihy i ue Mar. 4, 1895 Spalding, B.F ...... North Dakota. + 0 g6th. 5%, aeons, Mar. 4, 1899 Sparkman, S. M..... Florida. =s2.7 sath, 55th, 56th... oo Mar. 4, 1895 Sperry, N.D......- .. Connecticut ..... sally ath, 56th cy van Mar. 4, 1895 Spight, Thomas. .... Mississippi .... CH a Se Oct.17, 1898 Sprague, C.F... ..%. Massachusetts... 55th, 56th... 5. 5. a is. Mar. 4, 1897 Stallings, J.B ....... Alabama .:... sad, 54th, 55th, s6th.. 0. Mar. 4, 1893 Stark, WT, 0. Nebraska ........ sslle sth Gr a Mar. 4, 1897 Steele, G.W ........ Indiana . 0.0. 47th, 48th, 49th, 50th, 54th, | Mar. 4, 1881 55th, 56t Stephens; J. H ...... Texas: ii... 00 goth, 56th Ln Mar. 4, 1897 Stevens, B,C. ......... Minnesota ....... sotteabth or, Soon on era i Mar. 4, 1897 Stewart, Alex ....... Wisconsin ,...... sath, sathois6ile. ooo... oo Mar. 4, 1895 Stewart, I.E ........ New Jersey ...... 54th, sath woth ani Mar. 4, 1895 Stewart, |. K........ New York ......, 26th a Oe Mar. 4, 1899 Stokes, JW... ...... South Carolina... .| s4th, 55th, 56th... =... ... Mar. 4, 1895 Sulloway, C. A ....... New Hampshire. .| 54th, 55th, 56th. ............ Mar. 4, 1895 Sulzer, William ..... New York ....... sath saths6th. coo. Mar. 4, 1895 Sutherland, R.D ....| Nebraska. ....... A a ee Mar. 4, 1897 Swanson, C. A. ...... Virginia ofa, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th. ... 0... Mar. 4, 1893 Talbert, Wo I. South Carolina. ..| 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th......... Mar. 4, 1893 Tafa, BC. Georgin: +... 0. 53d, 54th, 55th 56th...... ... Mar. 4, 1893 Tayler, RB. W........ Ohio... via nn sath, sail 56th oo Mar. 4, 1895 Taylor, CG. W........ Alabama’ ....... sath ably. Jon sh Mar. 4, 1897 Tawney, T.A:....... Minnesota ....... sad, 54th sath, 56th. oo Mar. 4, 1893 Netey, Wo lyon Arkansas... ....;. 52d, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th ....| Mar. 4, 1891 Thayer, I.R .......- Massachusetts... Ji560l 0. 0 ov vw, a es Mar. 4, 1899 * Vacancy. = List of Members of the House of Representatives. 183 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Commence- Name. State. Congresses. ment of service. Thomas C. Rv... ... North Carolina . 2: 56th. caf irr. aa oe ovis, Mar. 4, 1899 Thomas, Lot ........ .. Towa oi kv 56h co RE Mar. 4, 1899 Thompkins, A.S....| New York ....... BOM Zh i eh a Mar. 4, 1899 Thropp, LX... x Pennsylvania ER Rel Be a Mar. 4, 1899 Tongue, I. H ....... Oregon... i... 5 3th, seth. vo LL an Mar. 4, 1897 Turner, Oscar....... Bentucky:. «oso 56th. conn vy Sa i Mat. 4, 1899 Underhill, T.O . ...... New York....... it A Pal Mar. 4, 1899 Underwood, O. W ...| Alabama ........ 54th sath, 56th... nnn Mar. 4, 1895 Vandiver, W.D ..... Migsourt:.. i... sail saihe iin ra Mar. 4, 1897 Van Voorhis, F.C... Ohio... ......... 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th ........ Mar. 4, 1893 Vreeland, E.B...... New York....... ebthe Se a ee. Mar. 4, 1899 Wachter, B.C... ... Maryland... .. BOI sn SR Mar. 4, 1899 Wadsworth, J. W....| New York....... 47th, 48th, 52d, 53d, 54th, | Mar. 4, 1881 Wanger, LE ..-..o Warner, Vespasian . . Waters, R.J............ Watson, I.E ........ Weaver, W. 1, ........ Weeks, B.R .....%%. Weymouth, G. W.... Wheeler, C.K... ...;. Wheeler, Joseph .... White, GC. H ........ Williams, J. R.... .... Williams, J. S...... Williams, W. E..... Wilson, Edgar. ..... Wilson, E. E........ Wilson, Stanyarne . . Wright, C.F ........ Flynn, D.T......... Pennsylvania . ... Xinols: «ng Colorado... = Indiana ...= 0... Ohio sila ng Michigan. ....... Massachusetts ... Kentucky ..-...- Alabama ......... 55th, 56th. 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th... ... he sth seth... no rT a CR a 47th, 49th, soth, 51st, 52d, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th. Mar. 4, 1893 Mar. 4, 1895 Mar. 4, 1899 Mar. 4, 1895 Mar. 4, 1897 Mar. 4, 1899 Mar. 4, 1897 Mar. 4, 1897 Mar. 4, 1881 Mar. 4, 1897 Mar. 4, 1889 Mar. 4, 1893 Mar. 4, 1899 Mar. 4, 1895 Mar. 4, 1899 Mar. 4, 1895 Mar. 4, 1899 Mar. 4, 1897 Mar. 4, 1897 Mar. 4 1897 Mar. 4, 1899 Mar. 4, 1893 Mar. 4, 1899 Mar. 4, 1899 North Carolina... .[ 55th, 56th... co... Hinols... ........ sist sod, 53d; 56h... 0 Mississippi ...... 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th. ......... Hlinels rio vl sth er dL ara. Idaho. 0.0 5 hs a SE New York ..... ..% Le SRE a So South Carolina. . . 54th, 55th, 56th... ee Pennsylvania... 56th. Cv ciara, 2a do. rina Virginia. oi on ssi sail. vila rs Indinng:. .. >... grisea sas Som Pennsylvania AR ate SE Mh SE Oklahoma........ oe sath, BOLI. a New. Mexico... :.. Sn Ee Cl Ra Sl Arizomm. i... Jo Cs aR Re * Vacancy. 184 Congressional Directory. Ee pa! cy aan - COAT ROOM SOUTHERN LOBBY SENATOR'S LOBBY 0 a (2 V/Sf IN rag COAT ROOM Ag9g07 NY3Llsv3 " .s3iavi P. P. T., President pro tempore. Sec., Secretary. C.'C., Chief Clerk. L. C., Legislative Clerk. (Democrats in Roman. Republicans in ZZaZis. . ALLEN, WILLIAM V., Nebraska. . Aldrich, Nelson W., Rhode Island. . Allison, William B., Towa. . Bacon, Augustus O., Georgia. . Baker, Lucien, Kansas. . Bate, William B., Tennessee. . Berry, Tames H., Arkansas. . Beveridge, Albert J., Indiana. . Burrows, Julius C., Michigan. . BUTLER, MARION, North Carolina. . Caffery, Donelson,-Iouisiana. . Carter, Thomas H., Montana. . Chandler, William E., New Hampshire, . Chilton, Horace, Texas. . Clark, Clarence D., Wyoming. . Clark, William A., Montana. . Clay, Alexander S., Georgia. . Cockrell, Francis M., Missouri. . Culberson, Charles A., Texas. . Cullom, Shelby M., Illinois. . Daniel, John W., Virginia. . Davis, Cushman K., Minnesota. . Deboe, William J., Kentucky. . Depew, Chauncey M., New York. . Elkins, Stephen B., West Virginia. . Fairbanks, Charles W., Indiana. . Foraker, Joseph B., Ohio. . Foster, Addison G., Washington. . Frye, William P., Maine, . Gallinger, Jacob H., New Hampshire. . Gear, John H., Iowa. DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE. R. D. i C., Reading Clerk. , Doorkeeper and Assistants. C., Journal Clerk. R., Official Reporters. P., Press Reporters. S., Sergeant-at-Arms. \ WILLIAM P. FRYE, President pro tempore of the Senate. Populists, Fusionists, and Independents in SMALL CAPITALS. Silver Party in CAPITAL ITALICS.) 28. . Hanna, Marcus A., Ohio. . Hansbrough, Henry Clay, North Dakota. . HARRIS, WILLIAM A., Kansas. . Hawley, joseph R., Connecticut. . HEITFELD, HENRY, Idaho. 27. Hoar, George F., Massachusetts. . Jones, James K., Arkansas. . JONES, JOHN P., Nevada. . Kean, John, New Jersey. . Kenney, Richard R., Delaware. . KYLE, TAMES H., South Dakota. . Lindsay, William, Kentucky. . Lodge, Henry Cabot, Massachusetts. . Mallory, Stephen R., Florida. . Martin, Thomas S., Virginia. . Mason, William E., Illinois. . McBride, George W., Oregon. . McComas, Louis E., Maryland. . McCumber, Porter J., North Dakota. . McEnery, Samuel D., Louisiana. . McLaurin, John I,., South Carolina. . McMillan, James, Michigan. . Money, H. D., Mississippi. . Morgan, John I'., Alabama. . Nelson, Knute, Minnesota. . Penrose, Boies, Pennsylvania. . Perkins, George C., California. . PETTIGREW, RICHARD F., South Dakota. . Pettus, Edmund W., Alabama. . Platt, Orville H., Connecticut. Hale, Eugene, Maine. . Platt, Thomas C., New York. . Pritchard, Jeter C., North Carolina. . Proctor, Redfield, Vermont. . Quarles, Josep’ V., Wisconsin. . Rawlins, Joseph IL., Utah. . Ross, Jonathan, Vermont. . Scott, Nathan B., West Virginia. . Sewell, William J., New Jersey. . Shoup, George L., Idaho. . Simon, joseph, Oregon. . Spooner, John C., Wisconsin. . STEWART, WILLIAM M., Nevada. . Sullivan, Will V., Mississippi. . Taliaferro, James P., Florida. . TELLER, HENRY M., Colorado. 22. Thurston, John M., Nebraska. . Tillman, Benjamin R., South Carolina. . Turley, Thomas B., Tennessee. . TURNER, GEORGE, Washington. . Vest, George Graham, Missouri. . Warren, Francis E., Wyoming. . Wellington, George L., Maryland. . Wetmore, George P., Rhode Island. . Wolcott, Edward O., Colorado. . Vacant. . Vacant. . Vacant. . Vacant. . Vacant. . Vacant. a a amet Dae ys he SL0pPUIS' JO U0YWIOT ggI 186 Congressional Directory. mm foe 705) [18] [85] [B61 [80] 7 io [Bs] [54] [Ze] Es io SIE ea N REPORTERS NORTHERN DOOR 2 BN | [34] Masa © S$ Els [50] [58] [55] o(~]o(v] N N \ \ N \ N N \ \ N S SN i NN DIAGRAM OF SEATS OF THE HALL OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. i hk A TT emer Smt g RS ee DIRECTORY OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. DAviD B. HENDERSON, Speaker. Republicans in Roman. Democrats in ZZalics. Populists and Silver Party in SMALL CAPS. 58 Acheson, E. F. 12 Adams, Robt., jr. 35 Alexander, DeA.S 86 Allen, A.L,. 72 Babcock, J. W. 143 Bailey, W. J. 54 Baker, W. B. 6 Barham, J. A. 106 Barney, 'S.’s. 53 Bartholdt, Rich’d 28 Bingham, H. H. 36 Bishop, R. P. 170 Boring, Vine 52 Boutell, H 156 Boutelle, C. i 69 Bowersock, J. D. 124 Brick, A. L. 139 Bromwell, J. H. 10 Brosius, M. 67 Brown, S. W. 32 Brownlow, W. P. 22 Bull, Melville, 163 Burke, C. H, 28 Burkett, E. J. 135 Burleigh, B.C 136 Burton, T. E. 110 Butler, I. S. 127 Calderhead, W. A. 74 Cannon, J. G. 112 Capron, A. B. 17 Chickering, C. A. 44 Clarke, F. G. 45 Cochrane, A.V. S. 61 Connell, W. 95 Cooper, H. A. 63 Corliss, J. B. 175 Cousins, R.G. 167 Cromer, G. W. 108 Crump, R. O. 82 Crumpacker, .D. 51 Curtis, Charles. 133 Cushman, FEF. W. 1 Dahle, H. 'B. 49 Dalzell, john. 2 Davenport, S.A. 100 Davidson, J. H. WEST SIDE. 15 Dayton, A. G. 140 Dick, Charles. 27 Dolliver, J. P. 171 Dovener, B. B. 55 Driscoll, M. E. 104 Eddy, F. M 88 Emerson, I. W. 113 Esch, J.J. 153 Faris, G. W. 13 Fletcher, Loren, 119 Fordney, J. W. 158 Foss, G. E. 42 Fowler, C. N. 169 Freer, R. H. 179 Gamble, R. J. 105 Gardner, J. J 37 Gardner, W. 21 Gibson, H. R. 138 Gill, J. 1 56 Gillet, © C. W. 174 Gillett, F.H. 126 Graff, 3. V. go Graham, W. H. 23 Greene, W. S. 40 Grosvenor, C. H. 20 Grout, W. W. 93 Grow, G. Ax 141 Hamilton, E. I. 5 Harmer, A. C, 46 Haugen, G. N. 24 Hawley, R. B. 50 Heatwole, J. P. 120 Hedge, Thomas. 101 Hemenway, J. A. 31 Henry, E. S. 41 Hepburn, W. P. Io HiIl E. J. 76 Hitt, R. R. 29 Hopkins, A.J. 34 Howell, B. F. 147 Hull, J.A.T. 60 Jack, S. M. 99 Jenkins, J. J. 134 Jones W. TL. 115 Joy, C 70 Kahn, Julius. 66 Kerr, W. S. 9 Ketcham, J. H. 57 Knox, W. S. 30 Lacey, J. F. 85 Landis, C. B. 121 1,ane, J. R. 125 Lawrence, G. P. 148 Linney, R-Z. 8o Littauer, I,. N. 83 Littlefield, C.E. 96 Long, C. I 98 Lorimer, Wm. 7 Loudenslager, H.C. 144 I,overing, W.C. 81 Lybrand, A. 68 McCall, S.W. 132 McCleary, J.T. 150 McPherson, S. 172 Mahon, T. M. 160 Mann, J. R. 155 Mercer, DH. 130 Mesick, W. S. 176 Metcalf, Y EL. 75 Miller, JN 164 Minor, E. 2 128 Mondell, F. W. 129 Moody, Ww. H. ; 180 Moody, M. A. 166 Morgan, S. R. 11 Morris, Page. oI Mudd, S. E. 177 Needham, J. C. 116 O'Grady, J. M. E. 94 Olmsted, M. E. 16 Otjen, Theo. 73 Overstreet, Jesse. 3 Packer, H. B. 43 Parker, R.'W. 8 Payne, S. E. 157 Pearce, C. EK. 79 Pearre, G.A. 154 Phillips, F.O. 146 Powers, H. H. 173 Prince, G.W. 71 Pugh, 5 J: 117 Ray, G. W. 159 Reeder, W. A. 11I Reeves, W. 142 Roberts, E. W. _ |161 Rodenberg, W. A. 84 Russell, C. A. 14 Shattuc, W. B. 62 Shelden, C. D. 109 Sherman, J. S. 4 Showalter, J.B 149 Smith, G. W. 102 Smith, H. C. 77 Smith, S. W. 118 Smith, W. A. 25 Southard, J. H. 162 Spalding, B. F. 64 Sperry, N. D 59 Sprague, C. F 48 Steele, G. W. 103 Stevens, F.C. 122 Stewart, J. F. 107 Stewart, D. K. 97 Stewart, A. 92 Sulloway, C. A. 38 Tawney, J. A 89 Tayler, R. W. 131 Thomas, T,ot. 145 Thropp, J. E. 18 Tompkins, A. S. 178 Tongue, T. H. 65 Van Voorhis, H.C. 87 Vreeland, E. B. 168 Wachter, F. C. 151 Wadsworth, J. W. 33 Wanger, I. P. 152 Warner, V. 78 Waters, R. J 123 Watson, J. E. 39 Weaver, W. IL,. 165 Weeks, Edgar. 47 Weymouth, G.W. 137 White, G. H. 114 Young, J.R. 67 Adamson, W. C. 44 Allen, H. D. 34 Allen, J. M. 161 Atwater, J. IV. 128 Bailey, J. W. 96 Ball, 7. H. 71 Bankhead, J. H. 60 Barber, L. H. 68 Bartlett, C. L. 172 BELL, J. C. 47 Bellamy, J. D. 141 Benton, M. E. 13 Berry, A. S. 163 Bradley, 7. J. 104 Brantley, W. G. 73 Breazeale, P. 84 Brenner, J. L. 122 Brewer, Willis. 125 Broussard, R. F. 124 Brundidge, \S., jr. 151 Burke, R. E 92 Burleson, A. S. 70 Burnett, J. L. 176 Caldwell, B. F. 25 Campbell, A. J. 61 Carmack, E. W. 33 Catchings, T. C. 42 Chanler, W. A. 131 Clark, Champ. 101 Clayton, H. D. 29 Clayton, B. T. 133 Cochran, C. F. 175 Cooney, James. 75 Cooper, \S. B. 17 Cowherd, W. S. 22 Cox, IN. IV. 55 Crawford, W. 7. 116 Crowley, J. B. 30 Cummings, A. J. 177 Cusack, Thomas. 23 Daly, W. D. 168 Davenport, S. W. 36 Davey, R. C. 148 De Armond, DA 1164 De Grajffens eid, TC EAST SIDE. 31 Denny, J. W. 24 De Vries, Marion. 32 Dinsmore, H. A. 132 Dougherty, John. 113 Driggs, E. H. 53 Le, William. 112 pes, |S. 166 Finley, D.E 9 Fitzgerald, J. F. 178 Fitzgerald, J. J. 1 Fitzpatrick, 7. Y. 169 Fleming, W. H. 77 Flynn, D. T. 50 Foster, G. P. 136 Fox, A. F. 18 Gaines, J. W. 59 Gaston, A. 38 Gilbert, G. G. 41 Glynn, M. H. 6 Gordon, R. B. 56 Green, H. D. 40 Griffith, F. M. 102 G7188S 7 MM. 56 Grout, W. W. 58 Hall, J. K. P. 88 Hay, James. 143 Henry, Patrick. 154 Henry, R. L. 138 Hoffecker, J. H. 162 Howard, W. JM. 121 Jett, 71. M. 120_ Johnston, D. E. 157 Jones, W. A. 127 Kitchin, W. W. 39 Kleberg, Rudolph. 99 Kluttz, T. F. 142 Lamb, John. o4 Lanham, S. W. 7. 108 Latimer, A. C. 81 Lentz, J. J. 109 Lester, R. E. 156 Levy, J. M. 45 Lewis, E. B. 119 Little, J. S. 103 Livingston, L. F. 95 Lloyd, James T. 105 Loud, E. EF. 83 McAleer, Wm. 86 McClellan, Geo. B. 43 McCulloch, P. D. 85 McDowell, J. A. 129 McLain, F. A. 123 McRae, T. C. 10 Maddox, J. W. 15 Marsh, B. F. 37 May, Mitchell. 80 Meekison, D. 35 Meyer, Adolph. 2 Miers, R. W. 117 Moon, J. A. 57 Muller, IN. 3 Naphen, H. F. 11 NEVILLE, WM. 26 NEWLANDS, F. G. 51 Noonan, E. 7. 14 Norton, J. A. 180 Norton, James. 158 Otey, P. 139 Perea, “Pedro. 118 Pierce, R.A. 144 Polk, R. K. 174 Quarles, J. M. 126 Ransdell, J. E. 8 Rhea, J. 5 107 Rhea, Ww. F. 69 Richardson, ID. 167 RIDGELY, HK. R. 66 Riordan, D.J. 93 Rixey, J. F. 49 Robb, E. 160 Robbins, G. A. v8 Roberts, 'B.H. 72 Rober tson, S.M. 4 Robinson ie M. 91 Robinson. J. SS: 100 Rucker, W. W. 65 Ruppert, J., jr. 64 Ryan, W. H. 62 Ryan, J. W. 114 Salmon, J. S. 110 Scudder, T. 146 Shackleford, D. W. 170 SHAFROTH, J. F. 76 Sheppard, J. L. 5.Stbley, J. C. 46.Sims, T. W. 27 Slayden, LL 16 Small, J. H. 97 Smith, D. H. 20 Smith, J. W. 179 Snodgrass, C. E. 152 Sparkman, S. M. 135 .Spight, F. 159 Stallings, J. F. 90 STARK, W. L,. 150 Stephens, J. H. 48 Stokes, J. WW. 140 Sulzer, William. 12 SUTHERLAND, R.D. 155 Swanson, C. A. 171 Talbert, W. J. 115 Zale, F. C. 82 Taylor, G. W. 149 Terry, W. L. 21 Thayer, J. R. 130 Zhomas, C. R. 111 Turner, Oscar. 63 Underhill, J. Q. 98 Underwood, O. W. 173 Vandiver, W. D. 52 Wheeler, C. K. 7 Wheeler, Joseph. 153 Williams, J. R. . 79 Williams, W. E. 74 Williams, J..S. 165 WILSON, EDGAR. 89 Wilson, F. E. 145 Wilson, J. F. 134 Wilson, \S. 54 Wright, C.F. 28 Young, W. A. 19 Zenorv, W. 7. 87 Zeigler, E.D. 106 Vacant. 137 Vacant. “SNIVIUISIAGIY] JO U0VICT Lr Congressional Directory. OFFICERS OF THE SENATE. President of the Senate pro lempore.—~WIiLiiaMm P. FRYE, The Hamilton. Secretary to the President pro tempore.—Frederick Evans, Metropolitan Club. Messenger to the President pro tempore.—W. F. Perkins. CHAPLAIN. Rev. William H. Milburn, The Cairo. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY. Secretary of the Senate.—William R. Cox, Shoreham. Chief Clevk.—]John S. McEwan, Congressional Hotel. Principal Legislative Clevk.—Henry H. Gilfry, Olympia Flats. Reading Clerk.—A. C. Parkinson, 147 A street NE. Minute and Journal Clerk.—H. B. McDonald, 1165 Nineteenth street NW. Financial Clerk.—R. B. Nixon, 415 M street NW. Assistant Financial Clerk.—Peter M. Wilson, 1901 Q street NW. Enrolling Clerk.—B. S. Platt, The Victoria. Clervks.—H. R. Wray, The Savoy; William B. Turner, 410 B street NK.; H. R. Cunningham, The Wellington; TI. G. Garrett, Linden, Md.; C. A. Norcross, 2809 Fourteenth street NW.; C. C. Morrow, The Kenmore; W. S. De Wolf, 1 B street NW.; E. IL. Givens, Hotel Varnum; George G. Graves, 1332 New York avenue - NW.; Park Marshall, The Varnum; O. H. Curtis, 1912 I street NW. Keeper of Stationery.—Charles N. Richards, ror Massachusetts avenue NW. Assistant Keeper of Stationery.—Lester C. Baker, 1437 Rhode Island avenue NW. Assistant in Stationery Room .—John 1,. Nichols, 458 C street NW. Messengers.—E,. A. Hills, go3 French street; Lee McMillan, 216 North Capitol street. LIBRARY. Librarian.—A. W. Church, 1706 Oregon avenue NW. Assistant Librarian.—James M. Baker, 1409 Howard avenue NW. Assistant Librarian.—Cliff Warden, goo Twenty-third street NW. CLERKS AND MESSENGERS TO COMMITTEES. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress.—Clerk, W. H. Hyatt, 507 Sixth street NW. Agriculture and Forestry.—Clerk, Brainard Avery, 1816 Jefferson Place NW, Appropriations.—Clerk, Thomas P. Cleaves, 1819 Tenth street NW.; assistant clerk, A. ¥. Dawson, 1017 Twelfth street NW; messenger, John A. Thompson, 1720 H street NW. : Census.—Clerk, Isaac Hamburger, 1432 Staughton street NW. : Civil Service and Retrvenchment.—Clerk, Miles Taylor, 222 F street NW. Claims.—Clerk, Chas. M. Smith, 1848 Wyoming avenue NW.; assistant clerk, C. G. Northup, 318 B street NE.; messenger, S. F. Tappan, corner Eighth and G streets NE Coast Defenses.—Clerk, Edward C. Giltner, 6 B street NE. Coast and Insular Survey.—Clerk, Thomas Sammons. . Commerce.—Clerk, Woodbury Pulsifer, 1432 N' street NW.; assistant clerk, Wallace H. White, jr., 1402 I street NW. Conference of Minority.—Clerk, James K. Jones, jr., 915 M street NW. Contingent Expenses.—Clerk, Eugene Davis, North Takoma, Md. Corporations Organized in District of Columbia.—Clerk, G. Caffery. District of Columbia.—Clerk, Charles Moore, 2013 R street NW.; messenger, C. S. Draper, 325 A street SE. Education and Labor.—Clerk, Alfred D. Tinsley, The Varnum. Engrossed Bills.—Clerk, A. V. Cockrell, 1518 R street NW.; messenger, Walter Mitchell, 216 Delaware avenue NE. Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Henry J. Rumrille, 46 B street NE. Establish the University of the United States.—Clerk, William J. Feaga, The Normandie. a i TDA ib . aie ~ gan, © + REIT 3 * voor TE AHR Officers of the Senate. 189 Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.—Clerk, E. 1,. Nye, 1005 H street NW. Finance.—Clerk, Arthur B. Shelton, 1615 S street NW.; statistical clerk, Benjamin Durfee, 639 East Capitol street; messenger, George M. Taylor, 218 A street SE. Fisheries.—Clerk, Frank H. Sawyer, 114 Maryland avenue NE. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians.—Clerk, Robt. W. Cantrell, 1424 New York avenue NW. Foreign Relations.—Clerk, Farle S. Goodrich, 1301 K street NW.; assistant clerks, Hawkins Taylor, jr., 1623 H street NW., and Peter J. Healy, 216 Delaware avenue NE.; messenger, D. W. Wilson, 221 Massachusetts avenue NE. Forest Reservations and Protection of Game.—Clerk, Geo. J. Langsdale, jr., 1110 Thirteenth street NW. Geological Survey.—Clerk, Colin H. Livingstone, 3521 Thirteenth street NW. Immagration.—Clerk, W. R. Andrews, The Portland. Improvement of Mississippi River and Tributaries.—Clerk, Cleveland H. Hicks, 200 Indiana avenue NW. Indian Affairs.—Clerk, Edgar C. Snyder, 1420 Kenesaw avenue NW. Indian Depredations.—Clerk, Chas. E. Herd, North Capitol and B streets. Industrial Expositions.—Clerk, M. T. Cowperthwaite. Initeroceanic Canals.—Clerk, Edward A. Barbour. Interstate Commerce.—Clerk, Daniel A. Ray, 1311 Roanoke street NW. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands.—Clerk, Geo. Tazwell, 124 E street NW. Judiciary.—Clerk, Edward. C. Goodwin, 1oo5 H street NW.; assistant clerk, William Howard Garland, 1003 H street NW. Library.—Clerk, Henry A. Vale, 1925 Thirteenth street NW.; messenger, James A. Abbott, Ie Grande Flats, 665 Fourth street NW. Manufactures.—Clerk, Calvin K. Lowe, 458 C street NW. Military Affairs.—Clerk, William P. Huxford, 1826 H street NW.; assistant clerk, Royal W. Thompson, 1227 Connecticut avenue NW.; messenger, Charles E. Hooks, 115 Sixth street SE. Mines and Mining.—Clerk, Charles J. Kappler, The Olympia. National Banks.—Clerk, John M. Biddle, The Maury. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, Pitman Pulsifer, 1432 N street NW. Organization, etc., Executive Departments.—Clerk, N. Carroll Downs, 12 B street NE. Pacific Islands and Puerto Rico.—Clerk, Joseph Benson Foraker, jr., 1500 Sixteenth street NW. Pacific Railvoads.—Clerk, Fred. A. Pinney, 1229 N street NW. Philippines.—Clerk, G. C. Lodge, 1765 Massachusetts avenue NW. Printing.—Clerk, Albert H. Howe, The Arlington. Patents.—Clerk, W. S. Hyams, go2 East Capitol street. Pensions.—Clerk, John H. Walker, 1444 Florida avenue NW.; assistant clerks, W. H. Gallinger, The Dewey; S. Cora Smyth, 1354 Yale street NW.; messenger, D. S. Corser, 1304 G street NW. Potomac River Front.—Clerk, John I,. Steele, 1123 Thirteenth street NW. Post-Offices and Post-Roads.—Clerk, Chas. A. Cotterill, The Oxford; assistant clerk, J. W. Shea, 924 Fourteenth street NW.; messenger, Robert S. Hart, 306 Mosher street, Baltimore. Private Land Claims.—Clerk, Thomas F. Dawson, 2572 University place. Privileges and Elections.—Clerk, Clarence Johnson, The Fredonia. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, J. Karl Bain, 116 C street NW. Public Health and National Quarantine.—Clerk, George Pugh Vest, 1620 Twenty- second street NW. Public Lands.—Clerk, Fred. Dennett, 1732 Twenty-first street NW. Railroads.—Clerk, Edmund J. Wells, 306 South Capitol street. Relations with Canada.—Clerk, Elmer Dover, The Savoy. Relations with Cuba.—Clerk, Charles G. Phelps, 1416 K street NW. Revision of the Laws.—Clerk, Henry M. Rose, 201 North Capitol street. Revolutionary Claims.—Clerk, Paul Cooksey. Rules.—Clerk, Horace C. Reed, The Arlington. Territories. —Clerk, Addison T. Smith, 316 B street NE. To Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands.—Clerk, Ormsby McHarg, 1534 Twenty-second street NW. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products.—Clerk, W. S. Bowen, 219 Four-and-a- half street NW. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.—Clerk, T. W. Brahany, 1319 Vermont ave- nue NW. Woman Suffrage.—Clerk, Fred. Harper, 1700 Nineteenth street NW. IGO Congressional Divectory, pt OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS. Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate.—Richard J. Bright, 130 B street NE. Assistant Doorkeeper.—Alonzo H. Stewart, 204 Fourth street SE. Acting Assistant Doorkeeper.—B. W. Layton, Riggs House. Assistant Messenger on floor of Senate—R. H. Riddleberger, 1374 Harvard street NW. POST-OFFICE. Postmaster of the Senate.—James A. Crystal, 108 Fifth street NW. Assistant FPostmaster.—S. A. Jonas, 243 North Capitol street. DOCUMENT ROOM. Superintendent.—Amzi Smith, 117 C street SE. First Assistant.—George H. Boyd, 2406 Fourteenth street NW FOLDING ROOM. Superintendent.—Charles H. Pirtle, 118 Tenth street NE. Assistant.—Walter F. Collins, 912 Pennsylvania avenue SE. a 27% BG HEATING AND VENTILATING. Chief Enginecr.—T. A. Jones, 946 F street SW. Assistants.—E. C. Stubbs, 406 Second street NW.; William H. Prescott, 107 Second street NE.; F. E. Dodson, 519 Sixth street NE.; A. S. Worsley, 123 North Carolina avenue SE. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE, SPEAKER. The Speaker.—DAVID B. HENDERSON, The Normandie. Private Secretary.—Julian W. Richards, The Normandie. Clerk at the Speaker's Table.—Asher C. Hinds, 1005 H streeteNW. Speaker's Clerk.—Leroy J. McNeely, 218 Fourth street SE. Messenger.—Henry Neal, 415 Fifth street SE. CHAPLAIN. Rev. Henry N. Couden, 106 C street SE. OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHERS TO COMMITTEES. Will J. Kehoe, 1620 Eighteenth street NW. George C. Lafferty, 25 Lafayette square. J. E. Johnson, assistant, 1130 Fifteenth street NW. OFFICE OF THE CLERK. Clerk of the House.—Alexander McDowell, 209 A street SE. Chief Clerk.—William J. Browning, The Varnum. Journal Clerk.—Thomas H. McKee, 7 Grant place. Assistant Journal Clerk.—Herman A Phillips, 1320 W street NW. Reading Clerks.—Dennis EF. Alward, 1119 K street NW.; E. I. Lampson, The # Varnum. Tally Clerk.—Frank H. Wakefield, The Dewey. Printing and Bill Clerk.—Charles T. Parker, Hotel Vendome. Di sbursing Clerk.—Henry Robinson, 206 A street SE. Assistant Disbursing Clerk.—Frank 1 Stillman, 3535 O street NW. File Clerk.—Walter H. French, National Hotel. Assistant File Clerk.—]. M. House, 1315 M street NW. Enrolling Clerk.—C. R. McKenney, The Elsmere. Assistant Enrolling Clevk.—C. Carroll Marsh, 121 Maryland avenue NE. Resolution and Petition Clerk. i i Newspaper Clerk.—]. W. H. Reisinger, 602 R street SE Index Clerk.—Thomas Parran, 221 A street SE. Assistant Index Clerk.—D. C. Dinger, The Randolph, 228 New Jersey avenue SE. Distributing Clervk.—A. C. Smith, 612 A street SE. : 4 Stationery Clevk.—John 1,. Morrison, 128 A street NE. err LC a Ethno Officers of the House. I91 Bookkeeper —R. E. Fleharty, 121 Fifth street NE. Locksmith.—Daniel P. Hickling, 232 Third street NW. : Clerks.—Charles S. Hoyt The Varnum; H. I. Overstreet, 416 P street NW.; Ferris D. Mackey, 203 C street NW.; David Moore, 123 Maryland avenue NE.; Hector C. McRae, 1224 New York avenue NW.; J. R. Williams, 209 A street SE. Messengers.—Aaron Russell, 1231 T street NW.; Charles N. Thomas. Messenger to Chief Clerk.—George A. Myers, 2000 Fourteenth street NW. DOCUMENT ROOM. Clerk.—W. P. Scott, 142 A street NE. Assistant Clevk.—]John H. Evans, 231 North Capitol street. LIBRARY. Librarian.—C. B. Brockway, The Varnum. Assistants.—George W. Sabine, 2459 P street NW. ; Henry W. Campbell, Kenmore. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS. Sergeant-at-Arms.—Henry Casson, Congressional Hotel. Deputy Sergeant-at-Arms.—Edwin S. Pierce, 1354 Vale street NW. Cashier.—]. I. White, 1719 Fifteenth street NW. Zeller —W. H. Estey, 405 A street SE. . Bookkeeper. —Edward Reichard, 306 North Carolina avenue SE. Messenger.—James M. Kenney, 146 A street NE. Page.—James HE. Colenso, 18 Third street SE. Laborer.—Charles H. Christian, 621% B street NE. OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER. Doorkecper of the House.—W. J. Glenn, The Dewey. Assistant Doorkeeper.—B. W. Kennedy, 205 New Jersey avenue NW. Department Messenger.—Benjamin Vail, 314 F street NE. Special Employees.—John T'. Chancey, 221 I street NW.; Isaac R. Hill, 408 A street SE = Special Messengers.—Felton B. Knight, Metropolitan Hotel; Ewing C. Bland, 216 Delaware avenue NW.; George Jennison, Hotel Dunbarton; C. W. Coombs, 101 F street NE. Chief Pages.—Griffin Halstead, 1023 Connecticut avenue; Joseph Thompson. Special Chief Page.—]James FE. English, The Wellington. Messengers.—C. H. Mann, 627 A street NE.; A. B. Correll, 811 Second street NW.; I. H. Wiley; Edward P. Landers, 429 Sixth street NW.; John R. Pierce, 501 Second street NE.; James B. Scully, 220 A street SE.; William I. Hemenway; J. B. Potter, 507 B street NE.; C.J. Sumner, 1311 Columbia road; E. S. Eckles; W. R. House- holder, 1410 Columbia street NW.; J. O. A. Remine, 310 Second street SE.; John W. Deardorff, 20 Third street SE.; Charles H. Roberts, Bessler’s Hotel; John E. Cushman, 616 C street NE.; Winthrop C. Jones, 234 New Jersey avenue NW. Messengers on the Soldiers’ Roll.—Samuel H. Decker, 515 A street SE.; James H. Shouse, 1318 Maryland avenue NE.; William Irving, 321 A street NE.; Hugh Lewis, 222 G street NW.; James I. McConnell, go5 Fast Capitol street; Fernando Page, 81 D street SE.; John Rome, 315 First street SE.; E. L. Currier; Elijah Lewis; John A. Travis, 1008 East Capitol street; E. S. Williams, 228 New Jersey avenue SE.; Leroy J. Hooker; J. R. Whitacre, 320 Tenth street SE.; William H. Rich, 252 Delaware avenue NE.; W. A. Forbis, Slater House. FOLDING ROOM. Superintendent. —F. B. Lyon, 925 Twelfth street NW. Chief Clerk.—H. O. Haukness, 1008 Maryland avenue NE. Clerks.—]. W. Herndon, Alexandria, Va.; Silas F. Scott, 334 South Carolina avenue SE. Assistant Clerk.—George C. Randall, 1737 New Jersey avenue NW. Foreman.—]. M. McKay, 2123 K street NW. DOCUMENT ROOM. Superintendent.—C. H. Pierce, The Dewey. Assistant Superintendent.—H. B. Herbert, 220 C street NW. Special Clerk.—Joel Grayson, Vienna, Va. - File Clerk.—]. G. Burrell, 18 Third street SE: Assistant File Clerk.—W. H. H. Wasson, 200 A street SE. 192 Congressional Directory. CLERKS TO COMMITTEES. Accounts.—Clerk, William Tyler Page, Agriculture.—Clerk, Charles A. Gibson, Congressional Hotel. Appropriations.—Clerk, James C. Courts, 1837 Kalorama avenue NW. ; assistant clerk, John D. Cremer, 146 D street SE.; messenger, Kennedy F. Rea, Cutler House. Banking and Currency.—Clerk, Fred. 1. Fishback, 1461 S street NW, Claims.—Clerk, W. D. Williams, Willard’s. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—Clerk, Harry S. Jones, 1411 Thirty-third street bE NW District of Columbia.—Clerk, Harry Wilder Barney, 229 North Capitol street. Education.—Clerk, William J. Pike, Willard’s. Elections No. r.—Clerk, Edward A. King, 9o6 I street NW. Elections No. 2.—Clerk, / Llections No. 3.—Clerk, Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, W. Scott Whiteford, 215 New Jersey avenue NW. Foreign Affairs.—Clerk, Henry Hayes, The Lexington. Immigration and Naturalization.—Clerk, Edward P. Brewster. Indian Affairs.—Clerk, H. E. Devendorf, 115 Maryland avenue NE. Insular Affairs.—Clerk, Ralph B. Horton, 1226 Sixteenth street NW. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Clerk, W. L. Lundy, The Varnum. Invalid Pensions.—Clerk, William H. Topping, The Luxor, New Jersey avenue; assistant clerk, George H. Bailey; principal examiner detailed from Pension Bureau, D. S. Porter, Chevy Chase, Md. Irrigation of Avid Lands.—Clerk, Judiciary.—Clerk, J. Johnson Ray, 702 Tenth street NW, ; | Labor.—Clerk, J. W. G. Shreve, 17 C street NE. : Library.—Clerk, Howard S. Reeside, 1239 Vermont avenue NW Merchant Marine and Fisheries.—Clerk, M. R. Blumenberg, 1708 Q street NW. Military Affairs.—Clerk, Herman D. Reeve, 9 G street NE.; assistant clerk, Wil- liam C. Mentzer. . Militia.—Clerk, Frederic L. Davis, 938 O street NW. Mines and Mining. —Clerk, Mabel A. Crump, 413 A street SE. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, Joseph E. Hall, 1705 Parke street. Patents.—Clerk, C. J. Stevenson, The Dewey. Fensions.—Clerk, Fred. Randolph. Post-Office and Post-Roads.—Clerk, Harry F. Dodge, 1600 Sixteenth street NW. Printing. —Clerk, Charles R. Cushman, 1353 Princeton street NW. Private Land Claims.—Clerk, John D. Morgan, 1338 Yale street NW. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, William H. Wheeler, 1623 H street NW. Public Lands.—Clerk, William M. Reece, 241 North Capitol street. Railways and Canals.—Clerk, J. S. Mitchell, 1016 Fourteenth street NW. Reform in the Civil Service.—Clerk, Revers and Harbors.—Clerk, T,uman M. Ellis, 732 Seventeenth street NW. Rules.—Clerk, Julian W. Richards, The Normandie. Zerritories.— Clerk, C. H. Ridenour, 2027 Q street NW. War Claims.—Clerk, George W. Frye, 20 Third street SE.; assistant clerk, Harry Strickler, 20 Third street SE.; clerk to continue digest of claims, J. B. Holloway, 20 Third street SE. - : Ways and Means.—Clerk, Hull Greenfield; assistant clerk, Arthur E. Blauvelt, 140 1 A street NE, HEATING AND VENTILATING. Chief Engineer.—H. W. Taylor, 100 Fifth street NE. Assistant Engineers.—B. H. Morse, 2138 G street NW. ; FE. B. Burke, 628 Pennsyl- 3 vania avenue NW. i Elevator Conductors.—Leonard B. Cook, 485 Maryland avenue SW.; George W. Winters, 132 C street SE.; John S. Logan, 209 Fast Capitol street; Michael F. O’Donnell, 412 Second street NE. POST-OFFICE. Postmaster.—Joseph C. McElroy, 214 A street SE. i Assistant Postmaster.—Paul S. Bryan, 5 C street SE. { Officers of the House. 193 OFFICE AT CAPITOL. Register Clerk.— Wilfred Jessup, 214 A street SE. Postmaster's Clerk.—1,. Bridgeman, 18 Third street SE. Mail Clevk.— Adrian A. Bennett, 18 Third street SE. OFFICE AT CITY POST-OFFICE. Clerk tn Charge.—Robert J. Duncan, 806 Tenth street NW. Assistants.—John W. Knowlton, 1335 N street NW.; M. Culp. MAIL, DELIVERIES. Route r.—James M. Curtis, 205 D street NW. ; Guy V. Howard, 200 Indiana avenue NW. Route 2.—Edgar Ellis, 200 Indiana avenue NW.; E. Hendricks, 205 D street NW. Route 3.—A. H. Davison, 1221 I street NW.; Cadmus Odor, 86 M street NW. Route 4—~W. P. Shepard, The Kenmore; Joseph Hannum, 222 Indiana avenue NW. Route 5.—Luther Osborn, 1414 S Street NW.; H N. Thornburg, 1525 Tenth street NW. Heavy Mail Wagon. —Daniel B. Webster, 1127 C street SE.; Fred Hedge, 1415 Cor- coran street NW. Mail Contractor.—Fred. S. Young, 204 E street NW, 194 : Congressional Directory. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES. SENATE. Theodore F. Shuey, 2809 Fourteenth street NW. Edward V. Murphy, 2511 Pennsylvania avenue NW. Henry J. Gensler, 1318 Thirteenth street NW. Daniel B. Lloyd, Bowie, Md. Milton W. Blumenberg, 1708 Q street NW. Assistant.—Eugene C. Moxley, 1150 Seventeenth street NW. HOUSE. David Wolfe Brown, The Westminster. John H. White, 2111 Bancroft street NW. A. C. Welch, 222 Third street NW. Fred Irland, 1803 Nineteenth street NW. Reuel Small, The Hamilton. Assistant,—John J, Cameron, 513 Eleventh street NW. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. (Office in Statuary Hall.) Clerk in charge at the Capitol. —W. A. Smith, 2004 Fourteenth street NW. WEATHER BUREAU. Senate.—Clerk in charge, J. H. Jones, 4333 Kansas avenue NW., Petworth. House.—Clerk in charge, H. H. Kimball, 235 R street NE. ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL. (Office in subbasement of Capitol.) Edward Clark, 417 Fourth street NW. Chief Clevk.—Elliott Woods. Clerk.—George H. Williams, 210 E street NW. THE NATIONAL BOTANIC GARDEN. Superintendent.—William R. Smith, at the Garden, west of the Capitol Grounds. Assistant Superintendent.—C. Leslie Reynolds, 927 S street NW. THE CAPITOL, POLICE. Captain.—A. P. Garden, 216 New Jersey avenue NW. Lieutenants.—J]. G. Rodgers, 244 Delaware avenue NE.; J. A. Burrows, 227 Indiana avenue NW.; John Hammond, 302 Maryland avenue NE. Clerk.—G. A. Rahm, 119 Tenth street NE. THE DEPARTMENTAL, TELEGRAPH. (In charge of Col. Theodore A. Bingham, U. S. A.) Senate Operator.—William Jeffers, 318 Fast Capitol street. House Operator.—J. J. Constantine, 707 Fifth street NW. Tal” re The Capitol, 195 THE CAPITOL, The Capitol is situated in latitude 38° 537 20.4’/ north and longitude 77° 00’ 35.777 west from Greenwich. It fronts east, and stands on a plateau 88 feet above the level | of the Potomac. THE ORIGINAI, BUILDING. gg The southeast corner stone of the original building was laid on the 18th of Sep- tember, 1793, by President Washington, with Masonic ceremonies. It is constructed of sandstone from quarries on Aquia Creek, Virginia. The work was done under the direction of Stephen H. Hallet, James Hoban, George Hadfield, and B. H. Latrobe, architects. The north wing was finished in 18co and the south wing in 1811. A wooden passageway 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 com- menced, 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 direction of Thomas U. Walter till 1865, when he resigned. It was completed under the supervision of Edward Clark, the present architect of the Capi- tol. The material used in the walls is white marble from the quarries at Lee, Mass., | and that in the columns from the quarries at Cockeysville, Md. These extensions were first occupied for legislative purposes January 4, 1859. DIMENSIONS OF ‘THE, BUILDING. The entire length of the building from north to south is 751 feet 4 inches, and its greatest dimension from east to west 350 feet. The area covered by the building is 153,112 square feet. THE DOME. 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 by a bronze statue of Freedom, which is 19 feet 6 inches high and weighs 14,985 pounds. It was modeled by Crawford. The height of the dome above the base line of the east front is 287 feet 5 inches. The height from the top of the balustrade of the building is 217 feet 11 inches. The greatest diameter at the base is 135 feet 5 inches. The rotunda is gg feet 6 inches in diameter, and its height from the floor to the top of the canopy is 180 feet 3 inches. The Senate Chamber is 113 feet 3 inches in length by 8o feet 3 inches in width and 36 feet in height. The galleries will accommodate one thousand persons. The Representatives’ Hall is 139 feet in length by 93 feet in width and 36 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. { | The dome of the original central building was constructed of wood, covered with { t f | Tal” 56—18T—2D ED——I4 18] 51 S| 82 N : NEY EER » i NS SU-Q Fee AR 00 © oo S RN TEN i SE Sy HEF REY oot ABET R 1. § = oO 0 N LAS aes NS cco NE ~ Se yr & ¥ S 2) ° N ; A a § Een eae > [7] | Q SO) N NE 70S ln Sy a 3 SEN AEN Io i S § N [Z] H B 1 b [l BASEMENT 961 “M4072242(T JVUO0ISSILSUO) — -— THE BASEMENT OF THE CAPITOL, Room. HOUSE WING. 1. Committee on Invalid Pensions. 2. Committee on Insular Affairs. 3. Committee on Agriculture. Stationery room. . Committee on War Claims. . Official stenographers to committees. . Official Reporters of Debates. . Committee on Elections No. 2. 10. Occupied by the Speaker as a private room. 11. Committee on Library. 12. Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. . House Post-Office. . Committee on Expenditures in War Department. 14. Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads. 15. Clerk’s document room. 15%. Lunch room. 16. Closets. 17. Box room. 18, 19, 20. Restaurant. 21. Merged in restaurant. 22. Committee on Indian Affairs. 23. Committee on Accounts; Committee on Mileage. 24. Committee on KExpenditures in the Post-Office Department. 25. Elevators. HOUSE COMMITTEES. TERRACE, SOUTH SIDE. ‘1. Expenditures in State Department, and Liquor Traffic. 2. Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries. 3. Committee on Expenditures in the Agricultural Department. 5. Committee on Mines and Mining. 6. Comm ttee on Immigration and Naturalization. 7. Committee on the Election of President, Vice- President, and Representatives in Congress. 9. Committee on Irrigation of Arid Iands in the United States. 1. Committee on Expenditures in the T'reasury De- partment. 13. Territories. 3 fCommittee on Manufactures. 5-1Committee on Elections No. 3. 17. Committee on Claims. NoTE.—Rooms occupied by the House Committees on Reform in the Civil Service, Levees and Improvements of Mississippi River, Expenditures in the Department of Justice, and Expenditures in the Navy Department, are not shown on the diagrams. They are located in the subbasement, west front, on the House side of center of building. © 00 OB [= Room. MAIN BUILDING. 49. Senate Committee on Census. 50. Senate Committee on the Library. 51. Senate Committee on Education and Labor. 52. House Committee on Labor. 53. House Committee on the Census. 54. House Coinage, Weights, and Measures. 54%. Committee on Expenditures on Public Buildings. 55. House Committee on Education. 56. House Committee on Revision of the Iaws. 57. House Committee on Ventilation and Acoustics. . Senate Committee on Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. 59. Senate Committee on Pacific Islands and Puerto Rico. 60. Senate Committee on additional accommoda- tions for the Library of Congress. 61. Sforeroom for Library. 62. Storeroom Supreme Court. . Senate bathroom. 64,65. The Supreme Court—consultation room. 66. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Su- preme Court room. 67. Congressional Law Library. 63.3 Office of Doorkeeper of the House, "(Office of superintendent of folding room. 69. House Committee on Private Land Claims. 70. Offices of the Chief Clerk of the House. 71. Committee on Printing. . House Committee on Expenditures in the Inte- rior Department. . House Committee on Militia. . Committee room on Alcoholic Liquor Traffic merged in the Disbursing office. SENATE COMMITTEES. MALTBY BUILDING. I. Sotpomddons Organized in the District of Colum- ia. 3. Revolutionary Claims. . Subcommittee on Pensions. . Subcommittee on Finance. 22. Civil Service and Retrenchment. 24. Trespassers upon Indian Lands. 27. Relations with Canada. 29. Industrial Expositions. 35. Immigration. . Manufactures. 44. Geological Survey. 47. Fisheries. 53. Indian Depredations. 56. Coast and Insular Survey. 58. Contingent Expenses. Room. © MALTBY BUILDING—Continued. 63. National Banks. 69. Mines and Mining. 77. Patents. 81. Subcommittee on Printing. New rooms, Forest Reservations. SENATE WING. 24. Committee on Rules. 25. Committee on the Revision of the Iaws. 26. Committee on Relations with Cuba. 27. Committee on Military Affairs. 28. Committee on the Philippines. 29. Committee on the Judiciary. 30. Committee on Pacific Railroads. 32. Committee on Indian Affairs. 33. Stationery room. 36. Restaurant. 37. Stationery room. 38. Committee on Public I,ands. 39. Police Headquarters. 40. Committee on Pensions. 41. Committee on Territories. . Ladies’ room. 42%. Sergeant-at-Arms’ stores. 43. Committee on Agriculture. 44. Committee on Enrolled Bills. 43-{committee on Post-Offices and Post-Roads. 47. Senate Post-Office. 48. Committee on Foreign Relations. 49. Elevator. 5I. Gentlemen’s room. SENATE COMMITTEES. TERRACE, NORTH SIDE. 1. To Establish the University of the UnitedStates. 2. On Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of Executive Departments. 3. On Potomac River Front. 5. On Coast Defenses. 7. On Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. 6. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. 9. On Railroads. 13. On Improvement of the Mississippi River and its Tributaries. NoTE.—Rooms occupied by Senate Committees on Woman Suffrage, Five Civilized Tribes of Indians, and to Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service, ete., are not shown on the diagrams. They are located in the subbasement, west front, on the Senate side of center building. ‘10124 YL L61 7 7 HALL OF REPRESENTATIVES OLD HALL OF REPRESENTATIVES ON] PRINCIPAL STORY SENATE CHAMBER Q61 2 018SIA4.5UO0 "A40722.40(] JU TTR THE HOUSE WING. Room. I, Jappropsiations 2, , ON Nn AW» . Committee on Rivers and Harbors. . Journal, printing, and file clerks of the House. . Committee on Naval Affairs. . . Closets. .; Members’ retiring room. . Speaker’s room. . Cloakroomis. . Office of the Sergeant-at-Arms of the House. . Committee on Ways and Means. . Committee on Military Affairs. . House Library. . Elevators. Bl a 000 Ea + 3 T OR TR PRINCIPAL. STORY OF THE CAPITOL. ' MAIN BUILDING. Room. 33. 34. 35: 36. 37- 38.} 39- 40.. House document room. : Engrossing and enrolling clerks of the House. Committee on Enrolled Bills. ; Office of the Clerk of the House of Representa- tives. 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. Office of the Clerk of the Supreme Court: Robing room of‘the Judges of the Supreme Court. Withdrawing room of the Supreme Court. Office ofthe Marshal of the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court, formerly the Senate Cham- ber. The Old Hall of the House of Representatives’is now used as a statuary hall, to which each State has been invited .to contribute two statues of its most distinguished citizens. Bn : The Congressional Library contains 590,000 vol- umes and 180,000 pamphlets. SENATE WING. Room. 16. 17. 18. 19. 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. Joommittee on Appropriations. . Closets. . Cloakrooms. . Room of the President. ‘101290 IY] . The Senators’ reception room. . The Vice-President’s room. . Committee on Finance. . Official Reporters of Debates. .- Public reception room. . Committee on the District of Columbia. . Office of the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate. . Elevator. = O O ORE OOQa QR HALL OF REPRESENTATIVES R =) ESENENEN v= == N=; A og og Oo N DART ARNNN NN: NS NBEO ER: EBB Se =N i N LIBRARY YZ oo f 2 oH o 227 i 72 ° EES Zz NEsess SEES Nae NN Srv, N37 SS : N Ns I SN o oN 1 © OLD HALL OF (REPRESENTATIVES [] ROTUNDA 0 N S — > be al N ZA 1 GALLERY STORY 0 gg a g © bo @ a bj N= NSN Vi [ie] SENATE 3 CHAMBER § Bb Od Bo © O_o 00cC na Eda THE CALLERYV STORY OF THE CAPITOL, HOUSE WING. MAIN BUILDING. SENATE WING. Room. Room. Room. 1. Committees on Pacific Railroads and Pensions. 27. Senate Library. 14. Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. 2. Committee on Elections. 28. Senate Iibrary—ILibrarian’s room. 15. ; ; ] \ ; feommittee on Interstate Commerce. 3. Committee on Banking and Currency. 29. Senate Committee on Public Health and National | 16. 4. Committee on the District of Columbia. Quarantine. 17. Committee on Privileges and Elections. Committee on Patents. 30. Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals. 18. Committee on Commerce. ? foo on Railways and Canals. 31. 19. Committee cn Private Land Claims. = | 6. Lobby. 32. Senate document room. 20. Press associations; Western Union and Postal Tel- i 7. Correspondents and journalists’ withdrawing | 33. egraphs. oF room. 34. Superintendent of the Senate documents, 21. Newspaper correspondents’ room. § 8. 35. House Library. 22. Ladies’ room. = fwater-ctoset. : 9. 36. 23. Naval Affairs. 10. Tadies’ retiring room. 37. House document room. 24. Conference room of the minority. 11. Committee on the Public Lands. 38. 25. Committee on Claims. 12. Committee on Commerce. 39. Clerk’s office. 26. Committee on Engrossed Bills. 13. Committee on Foreign Affairs. 40. Senate document room. 27. Flevator. 14. Committee on the Judiciary. 28. Correspondents’ room, 15. Elevators. N Oo = 202 Congressional Directory. DIRECTORY OF ROOMS, UNITED STATES SENATORS. CLARK (Mont.). CLARK (Wyo.) . CIAY sch. CocrRrELL ..... CULBERSON .... CULLOM. .... i. Brains... FAIRBANKS. .... FOoRARER .. .~.. FosTER ..... BRN as GEAR HARRIS. ...... HaAwiEvy....... FIOAR 0 aii Ryle... ........ LOBE a MCBRIDE . 0... Intersiate Commeree ...00.. Woman Suffrage ,............ Foreign Relations... .........: Indian Depredations ......... Industrial Expositions ....... Geological Survey... 0... Public Buildings and Grounds. Pacific Islands and Puerto Rico Coast and Insular Survey..... Commeree....:.... a. Peyisions . =: oan Naval Affairs... 0... = Relations with Canada ....... Public tangs... Judiciary... 2 io vi oi Conference... -.. 7... oo Contingent Expenses. ........ National Banks......0....... Education and Labor......... Revolutionary Claims ........ Philippines... oi 0 0 Coast Defenses........vi 00 Organization of Executive De- partments. Trespassers upon Indian Lands. Senator. Committee. Location. ALDRICH ....... Binanee iyo. 0.000, Senate floor, southeast corner. ARLEN nn rs roa i a Annex, room 68. ALTISON. ..o--. Approprigtions.... v.05 Senate floor, northwest corner. BACON Cl on Rl en aa a Terrace, room I5. BARKER... 50, Civil Service and Retrench- | Annex, room 22. ment. Bares... Five Civilized Tribes of Indians] Old building, subbasement, north side. BERRY... o Additional Accommodations | Old building, basement. for the Library of Congress. BEVERIDGE..... Forest Reservations .......... Annex, new rooms. BURROWS . ..... Revisionof Laws ............ Ground floor, southwest corner. BOEERER Loi Sl, caine i ne a cn Terrace, room II. CAFRERY....... Corporations Organized in the | Annex, room I. District of Columbia. Caner oo Censnes ont on ere Old building, basement, north- west corner. ‘CHANDLER ..... Privileges and Elections. ..... Gallery floor, west side. CulroN vo hE eS rn, Annex, room 59. Annex, room I2. Terrace, room 9g. Annex, room 35. Gallery floor, northeast corner. Annex, room 50. Gallery floor, west side. Old building, subbasement. Ground floor, northeast corner. Annex, room 53. Annex, room 29. Annex, room 44. Gallery floor, southwest corner. Old building, basement. Annex, room 56. Gallery floor, northwest corner. Ground floor, east side. Ground floor, north side. Gallery floor, southeast corner. Annex, room 27. Ground floor, southeast corner. Annex, room 4I. Ground floor, west side. Annex, room 25. Ground floor, northwest corner. Gallery floor, east side. Annex, room 58. Annex, reom 63. Annex, room 61. Old building, basement. Annex, room 3. Ground floor, west side. Terrace, room 5. Terrace, room 2. Annex, room 24. Annex, room 8. Annex, room I3. Directory of Rooms, United States Senators. 203 Prarr {Conn.) . Prarr{N. Y.).. PRITCHARD. ..... PROCTOR. i i" OUARIES....... Ross. = Scorr SHouP. SIMON... loi SPOONER....... SPEWART. SULIIVAN 0. TALIAFERRO ... TELLER Jo. PHURSTON:.. ... TILIMAN:... WARREN. =... WELLINGTON. .. WETMORE. ..... Worcons ..... Agriculture and Forestry ..... Transportation Routes to Sea- board. ‘Examine Branches Civil Serv- ice. : Potomac River Front. ........ Enrolled Bills ono. Lk Ferpitories Jat i. or Lo Tegigation co cu an. Balest s.r ee Private and Claims. ........ Indian Affairs. +... =i. Claimed ie] University of United States. .. Yabragy niin Ea Post-Offices and Post-Roads. .. Senator. Committee. Location. McMILLAN. .... District of Columbia. ........ Senate floor, east side. NVEATYLORY nts i rie hl ee ee i “Annex, room 62. VAR TIN i ar i es te ay a a Annex, room 55. MASON. iv oo Mannfactures.. 5, 00 a Annex, room 39. MONEY Co a a er ia Annex, room 42. MORGAN ....... Interoceanic Canals... ... Gallery floor; back of Document Room. NELSON... lus Improvements of the Missis- | Terrace, room 13. sippi River. : PENROSE... Jwmiigration. ion nn 0. Annex, room 35. PERRINS ....... Fisheries... 0. 0. a Annex, room 47. PETTIGREW ....| Transportation of Meat Prod- | Old building, basement. ucts. Eee en i ee Sr ee i be TR Ch SE Annex, room 73. Ground floor, west side. Gallery floor, southwest corner. Annex, room 76. Ground floor, north side. Terrace, room 7. Annex, room I5. Old building, subbasement. Terrace, room 3. Ground floor, north side. Ground floor, north side. Terrace, room 6. Ground floor, west side. Annex, room 69. Annex, room II. Annex, room 74. Gallery floor, north side. Ground floor, south side. Annex, room 7. Annex, room 45. Terrace, room 17. Gallery floor, back of Document Room. Gallery floor, east side. Terrace, room I. Old building, basement. Ground floor, north side. 204 Congressional Directory. APPORTIONMENT OF REPRESENTATIVES. Census. Apportionment. | Whole number Under— of Rep- Year. | Population. | Year. | Ratio. een ConSTItION. Ui se sie Sie i leita es Sati ea I a A SNR 1789 30, 000 65 Bisst@enansa. ne ts do ee a SEs ph | 1790 3,929, 214 1793 33, 000 105 SecondiCemsus. in oun slab et Sl 1800 5,308,483 | 1803 33, 000 141 Ed Cemens. ee an 1810 7,239,881 | 1813 35, 000 181 Four Cenans, LLL. od nil ain Se ie 1820 9,633, 822 1823 : 40, 000 213 BE Ceneng. co sine 0 an es a, 1830 12, 866, 020 1833 47, 700 240 I Es Sen ie es SS 1840 17,069, 453 1843 70, 680 22; Seventh Census. ot. er, 1850 23, 191, 876 1853 93, 423 233 Bight Censngil. oS i aia 1860 31,443, 321 1863 127, 381 243 Nh Cameleon 1870 38,558, 371 1873 131, 425 293 A I NEE EO Re pe SL a Sl 1880 50, 155, 783 | 1883 151,911 325 Eleventh Census... ou. ol. 0 et os ni, 1890 62,622,250 | 1893 173, GOI 356 REPRESENTATION OF THE STATES UNDER THE TENTH AND ELEVENTH CENSUSES, WITH INCREASE UNDER THE LATTER. Zh Tenth Eleventh Census (356 Census (325 Members). & States. Members). Number. | Number. | Increase. A A a i ad SE 8 9 I AE ANEAS fe el et eS CL RT ae 5 6 I a Se a a 0 6 77 1 Colorants ER Ee Se I 2 I Competent]. le nh EE Re a 4 SEs a SR Yo Ta a a i BE Be RE 1 i A Bord a tn 2 BARR a a CR a De em 10 II 1 so Ll er ll a i Ee Ll as 1 I I re Pl Be a RE RE lr 20 22 2 eS Gh 13 LY Pep a Re i a alls SR a a BIR la Oe en Si Ll II Ee IS SAE SE hb St i ER Me Se a SE) 7 8 I Rehtuelegih oh a Ns Se ey 11 0 a BR LOUISIANA Lu ta. Ss ml a Ee 6 ARE ER RE er A RR Tm SA Be SR 4 is Ea Manvlandi. on ca el La I 6 Fn nr TE a AN en LE i Se 12 13 I Michioan. ae or a SE a 11 12 I Minnesota... =... hs eS a CE a i 5 7 2 re A A a A SL IR Re ae 7 ro el I OE a i A as 14 15 I MaBRAl lint oe. Sie Le an ie ssa LS Sel a I I IE A a Ee A SL ee MR Se ER 3 6 3 Nevado as ee SR I TE aE NEW Aap TEE 2 Pl I a EB SM GE Rn Be Se SE 7 8 1 New Wonk a 34 Cy ee ea North Careling. n.d a ln Na 9 gles Nest Dakofar.... ooo nn D0 i le a ss i ei Liar I I OO rs a ET Ea 21 21 5 TL Re A a a SRN i BL Pa Se DT i 2 I BR eSY AN 28 30 2 Rhodelslamd is. i a SS Sh al 2 Ia NER RE Ee Un EE eR Ca i ed EE 7 a South Dakota ir savas wl ures es a ssa ale a 2 2 I EE de er i 10 TO He diverts I a a ae NSE Gl Conteh Sa SL a Ete, 11 13 2 NV CBONE Li en So lilt, asi rat sary ts le Bath wim ae meee 2 A Negi. cr hn wh se a rahe a 10 XO hr EA GOR rs a es 2 2 BATE by hr a el ee al i hl ST SR 4 He Be a Pa Wisconsin. foo ni Lie Sa A CRE Ee Sn Cn 9 10 1 a yr I ae a a an aie eneeeeeen] 1 I | Since the census of 18go Utah has been admitted as a State with one Representative, making the present membership of the House 357. Library of Congress. 205 THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. (Capitol Hill.) The Library of Congress was established in 1800, destroyed in 1814 by the burning of the Capitol, afterwards replenished by the purchase by Congress of the library of ex-President Jefferson, 6,760 volumes (cost, $23,950); in 1851, 35,000 volumes destroyed by fire; in 1852, partially replenished by an appropriation of $75,000; increased (1) by regular appropriations by Congress; (2) by deposits under the copyright law; (3) by gifts and exchanges; (4) by the exchanges of the Smithsonian Institution, the library of which (40,000 volumes) was, in 1866, deposited in the Library of Congress with the stipulation that future accessions should follow it. Fifty sets of Government publications are placed at the service of the Library of Congress for international exchanges through the Smithsonian. Other special accessions have been: The Peter Force collection (22,529 volumes, 37,000 pamphlets) purchased, 1867, cost $100,000; the (Count) Rochambeau collection (manuscript) purchased, 1883, cost $20,000; the Toner collection (24,484 volumes, numerous pamphlets), gift in 1882 of Dr. Joseph M. Toner; the Hubbard collection (engrav- ings), gift in 1898 of Mrs. Gardiner G. Hubbard. The collection in the main library is now the largest single collection on the Western Hemisphere. It comprises 750,000 printed books, 250,000 pamphlets, 26,500 manuscripts, 52,000 maps and charts, 277,000 pieces of sheet music, and upward of 90,000 photographs, prints, engravings, and lithographs. Of the printed books, prob- ably one-third are duplicates. The law library of 103,000 volumes (which remains at the Capitol) is not included in the above. The main collection is rich in Federal documents, history, political science, juris- prudence, and Americana in general, including important files of American news- papers and original manuscripts (colonial, revolutionary, and formative periods). The exhibition cases on the second floor contain many rare books, including the Records of the Virginia Company. The Smithsonian deposit 1s strong in scientific works, and includes the largest assemblage of the transactions of Jearned societies which exists in this country. In 1897 the main collection was removed from the Capitol to the building erected for it under the acts of Congressapproved April 15, 1886; October 2, 1888, and March z; 18809, at a cost of $6,347,000 ) (limit by law, $6,500,000) exclusive of the land, which cost $585,000. The architects who furnished the original designs were John I. Smith- meyer and Paul J. Pelz. By the act of October 2, 1888, before the foundations were laid, Thomas I,. Casey, Chief of Engineers of the Army, was placed in charge of the construction of the building, and the architectural details were worked out by Paul J. Pelz and Edward P. Casey. Upon the death of General Casey, in March, 1896, the entire charge of the construction devolved upon Bernard R. Green, General Casey’s assistant, and under his superintendence the building was completed in February, 1897; opened to the public November, 1897. The building occupies three and three- quarters acres upon a site ten acres in extent at a distance of 1,270 feet east of the Capitol, and is the largest and most magnificent library building in the world. In the decorations, some forty painters and sculptors are represented —all American citizens. The floor space is 326,195 square feet, or nearly 8 acres. The book stacks contain about 45 miles of shelving, affording space for 2,200,000 volumes. Were the long corridors, now used in part for exhibition purposes, completely shelved, the building would accommodate over 4,000,000 volumes. The Library contains a read- ing room for the blind, open daily. The Library is maintained by annual appropriatiens by Congress for various pur- poses, including the purchase of books. For the year 1899-1900 this amounted to $213,352 for services (including the copyright department, and including, also, the care of the building); $26,500 for fuel, supplies, miscellaneous purposes, including . contingent expenses; $25,000 for printing and binding; $31,680 for books and periodicals. Until 1897 the funds for the purchase of books had been very meager, averaging less than $10,000 a year. The Library was then in the Capitol, and badly cramped For space. Library service.—Library proper, 105 employees; copyright, 29; disbursement and care of buildings and grounds, 100. 206 Congressional Directory. Copyright Office. —The Copyright Office is a distinct division of the Library of Congress and is located on the ground floor, south side; open g to 4. It is under the immediate charge of the Register of Copyrights, who, by the act of February 19, 1897, is authorized, ‘‘under the direction and supervision of the Librarian of Congress,” to perform all the duties relating to copyrights. Copyright registration was trans- ferred to the Librarian of Congress by the act of July 8, 1870. The copyright entries from that date to June 30, 1899, numbered 1,037,399. Of most articles copyrighted two copies, and of some one copy, must be deposited in the Library of Congress to perfect copyright. Books, maps, musical compositions, photographs, periodicals, and other articles deposited in the Copyright Office to complete copyright numbered, during the calendar year 1899, 115,610 articles. Copyright fees applied and paid into the Treasury for the fiscal year 1898-99 amounted to $58,267. The Librarian of Congress and the Superintendent of Building and Grounds are now appointed by the President of the Un ted States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate (act of 1897). These two officials have the appointment of their respective subordinates. Entitled by law to draw books for home use are the following: The President, the Vice-President; Senators, Representatives, and Delegates in Congress (10 books may be given out upon the orders of members in favor of those who are not members); heads of Departments; the justices, reporter, and clerk of the Supreme Court; the judges and clerk of the Court of Claims; representatives at Washington of foreign governments; the Solicitor-General and Assistant Attorneys-General; the Secretary of the Senate; the Clerk of the House of Representatives; the Solicitor of the Treasury; the disbursing agent of the Committee on the Library; ex-Presidents of the United States; the chaplains of the two Houses of Congress; the secretary and Regents of the Smithsonian Institution; the members and secretary of the Interstate Commerce Commission; Chief of Engineers of the Army. LIBRARIANS SINCE THE INCEPTION OF THE LIBRARY. 1800-1814.— THE CLERK OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES (for the time being). 1815-1829. —GEORGE WATTERSTON. 1829-1861.—JOHN S. MEEHAN. 1861-1864. —JOHN G. STEPHENSON. 1864-1897 (June 30).—AINSWORTH R. SPOFFORD. 1897-January 17, 1899.—JOHN RUSSELL, YOUNG. 1899 (April 5). —HERBERT PUI'NAM. Librarian of Congress.—HERBERT PUTNAM, The Albany, 1701 H street NW. Librarian's Secretary.—Allen R. Boyd, 1740 R street NW. Chief Clerk. —Thomas G. Alvord, 2119 R street NW. Chief Assistant Librarian.—A. R. Spofford, 1621 Massachusetts avenue NW. Superintendent of Reading Room .—David Hutcheson, 401 B street NE, Chief Assistants in Reading Room.—John G. Morrison, 811 Thirteenth street NW.; Hugh A. Morrison, jr., 627 Eighth street NE. Assistant in charge of pavilion for the blind, Etta J. Giffin, The Cairo. Chief of Bibliographical Department.—A. P. C. Griffin, 8 B street NE. Chief of Catalogue Department.—]. C. M. Hanson, Brookland, D. C. Superintendent Congressional Reference Library.—J. Q. Howard, 1530 I street NW. Register of Copyrighis.—Thorvald Solberg, Garfield Park and Second street SE. Superintendent of Law Library.— Thomas H. Clark, 1764 Madison street NW. Superintendent of Manuscript Department.—Herbert Friedenwald, 943 K street NW. Superintendent of Hall of Maps and Charts.—P. Lee Phillips, 1707 H street NW. Superintendent of Music Department.—W. R. Whittlesey, 620 Duke street, Alex- "andria, Va. Chief of Order Depariment.—A. R. Kimball, 8 B street NE. Superintendent of Periodical Department.—Allan B. Slauson, 324 B street SE. Librarian of Smithsonian Deposit.—Cyrus Adler, 943 K street NW. Supevintendent of Prints.— Custodian of Washington Library.—Lawrence Washington, Alexandria, Va. LIBRARY BUILDING AND GROUNDS. Superintendent. —BERNARD R. GREEN, 1738 N street NW. Chief Clerk.—Ed. Sutherland, 1418 S street NW. Chief Engineer.—Charles B. Titlow, 639 Columbia avenue, Baltimore, Md. Electrician.—D. W. Harding, 1004 C street NE. Captain of the Watch.—J. V. Wurdemann, 12 Fourth street SE. : | ! Executive Mansion. 207 THE EXECUTIVE MANSION. (Pennsylvania avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets NW.) WILLIAM McKINLEY, President, was born at Niles, Trumbull County, Ohio, January 29, 1843; was educated in the public schools, Poland Academy, and Alle- gheny College; before attaining his majority he taught in the public schools; enlisted as a private in the Twenty-third Ohio Volunteer Infantry June 11, 1861; promoted to commissary-sergeant April 15, 1862, to second lieutenant September 23, 1862, to first lieutenant February 7, 1863, to captain July 25, 1864; served successively on the staffs of Gens. R. B. Hayes, George Crook, and Winfield S. Hancock, and was bre- vetted major in the United States Volunteers by President Lincoln for gallantry in battle March 13, 1865; detailed as acting assistant adjutant-general of the First Division, First Army Corps, on the staff of Gen. S. S. Carroll; mustered out of the service July 26, 1865; returning to civil life, he studied law in Mahoning County; took a course at the Albany (N. VY.) Law School, and in 1867 was admitted to the bar and settled at Canton, Ohio, which has since been his home; in 1869 he was elected prosecuting attorney of Stark County, and served a term in that office; in 1876 was elected a member of the National House of Representatives, and for four- teen years represented the Congressional district of which his county was a part; as chairman of the Ways and Means Committee he reported the tariff law of 189o, but in November following was defeated for Congress in a gerrymandered district, although reducing the usual adverse majority from 3,000 to 300; in 1891 was elected governor of Ohio by a plurality of 21,511, and in 1893 was reelected by a plurality of 80,995; in 1884 was a delegate at large to the Republican national convention and supported James G. Blaine for President; was a member of the committee on resolu- tions and read the platform to the convention; in 1888 was also a delegate at large from Ohio, supporting John Sherman, and as chairman of the committee on resolu- tions again reported the platform; in 1892 was again a delegate at large from Ohio, and supported the renomination of Benjamin Harrison, and served as chairman of the convention. At that convention 182 votes were cast for him for President, although he had persistently refused to have his name considered. On June 18, 1896, he was nominated for President at St. Louis, receiving 661 out of a total of gos votes. He was elected President at the ensuing November election by a popular plurality of 600,000 votes, and received 271 electoral votes as against 176 for William J. Bryan, of Nebraska. JOHN ADDISON PORTER, of Hartford, Conn., Secretary to the President (1623 K street NW.), was born in New Haven, Conn., April 17, 1856; is a graduate of Yale University of the class of 1878; was secretary to Representative William Walter Phelps and clerk with Senator Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut, in 1884 and 1885; was elected to the Connecticut house of representatives in 1892; was presented as a candidate for governor in the Republican State conventions of Connecticut in 1894, 1896, and 1898; was appointed Secretary to President McKinley February 5, 1897. Assistant Secrvetarvies to the President.—O. 1, Pruden, 604 Massachusetts avenue NW.; George B. Cortelyou, 238 Maryland avenue NE. Executive Clerks.—William H. Crook, 7 H street NW.; Benjamin F. Barnes, 48 R street NE. Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds.—Col. T. A. Bingham, 1717 I street NW. EXECUTIVE MANSION RULES. The Cabinet will meet on Tuesdays and Fridays from 11 a. m. until 1 p. m. Senators and Representatives will be received from 10 a. m. to 12 m., excepting on Cabinet days. Visitors having business with the President will be admitted from 12 to 1 o’clock daily, excepting Cabinet days, so far as public business will permit. The East Room will be open daily, Sundays excepted, for the inspection of visitors, between the hours of 10 a. m. and 2 p. m. By direction of the President: JoEN ADDISON PORTER, Secretary to the President, 208 Congressional Directory. THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. (Seventeenth street, south of Pennsylvania avenue.) JOHN HAY, of the District of Columbia, Secretary of State (8oo Sixteenth street NW.), was born in Salem, Ind., October 8, 1838; graduated at Brown University in 1858, and studied law in Springfield, Ill.; was admitted to practice before the supreme court of Illinois in 1861, but immediately came to Washington as Assistant Secretary to President Lincoln, remaining with him until his death; acted also as his adjutant and aid-de-camp, and served under Generals Hunter and Gillmore, and was brevetted colonel; was appointed secretary of legation to France March 22, 1865; retired March 18, 1867; appointed secretary of legation to Austria-Hungary May 20, 1867, where he acted as chargé d’affaires until August 12, 1868; appointed secretary of legation to Spain June 28, 1869; retired October 1, 1870; then became an editorial J writer on the New York Tribune, remaining five years, during seven months of which he was editor in chief; removed to Cleveland in 1875 and took an active part in the Presidential canvasses of 1876, 1880, and 1884; was appointed Assistant Secre- tary of State November 1, 1879; retired May 3, 1881; in that year he represented the United States at the International Sanitary Congress in Washington, of which he was president; wasappointed ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary to Great Britain March 19, 1897; retired September 19, 1898; appointed Secretary of State September 20,1898. Assistant Secretary.—David J. Hill, 1313 K street NW, Second Assistant Secvetary.—Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth street NW. Third Assistant Secretary.—Thomas Wilbur Cridler, 1708 Rhode Island avenue NW. Chief Clerk.—William H. Michael, 215 North Capitol street. Diplomatic Bureau.—Chief, Sydney Y. Smith, 1346 Riggs street NW. Consular Bureau.—Chief, Robert S. Chilton, jr., 822 Eighteenth street NW. Bureau of Indexes and Archives.—Chief, Pendleton King, 1213 K street NW. Bureaw of Accounts.—Chief, Frank A. Branagan, 1325 Wallach place. Bureau of Foreign Commerce.—Chief, Frederic Emory, The Grafton. Bureau of Rolls and Library.—Chief, Andrew Hussey Allen, 1500 Vermont avenue. Bureau of Appointments.—Chief, Robert Brent Mosher, The Cairo. Translator.—Henry 1,. Thomas, 823 Thirteenth street NW. Private Secretary.—E,. J. Babcock, 1334 Thirteenth street NW. SPECIAT, COMMISSION PLENIPOTENTIARY UNDER TARIFF ACT. Commaissioner.—John A. Kasson, 1726 I street NW. Secretary.—Chapman Coleman. Assistant Secretary.—John B. Osborne, 2116 Connecticut avenue NW. Special Assistant Secretary.—Frank H. Peabody, 1120 New York avenue NW. COMMISSION TO THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. (815 Vermont avenue NW.) Commissioners.—Jacob Gould Schurman, president, The Arlington; George Dewey, Admiral U. S. N., 1747 Rhode Island avenue NW.; Elwell S. Otis, Major-General, U. S. V., Manila, P. 1.; Charles Denby, The Arlington; Dean C. Worcester, The Bancroft. Sceretary and Counsel.—John R. MacArthur, The Arlington. Assistant Secretary.—Rutherford Corbin, The Arlington. : \ THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT. (Fifteenth street and Pennsylvania avenue.) LYMAN J. GAGE, of Chicago, Ill., Secretary of the Treasury (1715 Massachusetts avenue), was born in Deruyter, Madison County, N. Y., June 28, 1836; received a common-school education in his native county, but, his parents removing to Rome, N. Y., in 1848, he there received the advantages of the Rome Academy; entered the banking business in the lowest position at the age of 18; going West in 1855 to seek a betterment in fortune, after some trials he obtained in 1858 a bookkeeper’s position in the Merchants’ Loan and Trust Company, of Chicago; his promotion was rapid; in 1868 he was cashier of the bank; believing that the national banking system was superior to the State law, under which the Merchants’ Loan and Trust Company | was organized, he accepted the appointment as cashier of the First National Bank \ of Chicago in the year 1868; its charter expiring, the bank was reorganized in 1882, with a capital of $3,000,000, and Mr. Gage was made vice-president and general | Executive Departments. 209 . manager, and in 1891 he was elected president; has never held political office, though often pressed to allow his name to be used, notably for the office of mayor of Chicago; on February 15, 1897, he resigned the presidency of the bank in order to accept the portfolio of the United States Treasury; was appointed March 4 and con- firmed by the Senate March 5, 1897, and immediately entered upon the discharge of his duties as Secretary of the Treasury. Assistant Secretaries.—O. 1,. Spaulding, 1637 R street NW.; Frank A. Vanderlip, The Cairo; HH. A. Tayler, 2117 S street NW. Chief Clerk.—Theo. F. Swayze, 1739 S street NW. Private Secretary to Secretary of the Treasury.—Milton E. Ailes, 951 Twenty-fifth street NW. Division of Appointments.—Charles Lyman, 1243 New Jersey avenue NW. Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants.—Chief, W. F. MacLennan, 1916 F street NW. Division of Public Moneys.—Chief, E. B. Daskam, 1423 R street NW. Division of Customs.—Chief, Andrew Johnson, 917 Nineteenth street NW. Division of Revenue-Culter Service.—Chief, Capt. C. F. Shoemaker, 1303 Yale street NW. Division of Stationery, Printing, and Blanks. Roanoke street NW. Division of Loans and Currency.—Chief, A. T. Huntington, Vienna, Va. Division of Mail and Files.—Chief, S. M. Gaines, Brookland, D. C. Miscellaneous Division.—Chief, Iewis Jordan, 1429 Twenty-first street NW. Division of Special Agents.—Chief, W. S. Chance, 2230 Q street NW. Disbursing Clerks.—George A. Bartlett, 1575 Park street, Mount Pleasant; Thomas J. Hobbs, 1622 H street NW. Capiain of the Watch.—H. A. Cobaugh, 2134 I street NW. Chief, George Simmons, I100 SUPERVISING ARCHITECI’S OFFICE. (I'reasury Department Building.) Supervising Architect.—]James K. Taylor, The Portland. Chief Executive Officer.—Charles FE. Kemper, 1310 Riggs street NW. Technical Division.—Chief, James P. Low, 1328 Corcoran street. Engineering and Drafting Division.—Chief, HE. A. Crane, 1415 Hopkins street NW. Inspection and Material Division.—]. A. Sutherland, 300 Sixth street SE. Law and Record Division.—Chief, J. A. Wetmore, Takoma Park, D. C. Computers’ Division.—]. C. Plant, 1550 Howard avenue NW. Accounts Division.—Chief, P. S. Garretson, 1341 T street NW. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. (Fourteenth and B streets SW.) Director of Burean.—Claude M. Johnson, The Olympia. Assistant Dirvector.— Thomas J. Sullivan, 1530 Ninth street NW. Accountant.—Edwin Lamasure, The Victoria. Engraving Division.—Chief, John R. Hill, 1327 Princeton street NW. Custodian of Dies, Rolls, and Plales.—Joseph E. Ralph, 312 S street NE. Chief Clerk and Disbursing Agent.—Van H. Bukey, 201 Fast Capitol street. SECRET SERVICE DIVISION. (Treasury Department Building.) Chief.—John E. Wilkie, The Victoria. Chief Clerk.—W. H. Moran, 1316 Tenth street NW. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. (Adams Building, 1333 F street NW.) Chief of Bureaw.—Oscar P. Austin, 1620 Massachusetts avenue NW. Chief Clerk.—]. N. Whitney, 1403 H street NW. LIFE-SAVING SERVICE. (Treasury Department Building.) General Superintendent.—S. 1. Kimball, 1316 Rhode Island avenue. Assistant General Superintendent.—Horace 1. Piper, 1505 I, street NW. 210 Congressional Directory. COMPTROLLER OF THE TREASURY. (Treasury Department Building.) Comptroller.—Robert J. Tracewell, 1428 Fuclid place NW. Assistant Comptroller.—1,. P. Mitchell, Leamington Flats, corner Fourteenth and Clifton streets NW. Chief Clerk.—C. M. Foree, 1209 K street NW. Chief Law Clerk.—]. D. Terrill, 1334 Vermont avenue. REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. > (Treasury Department Building.) Register. —Judson W. Lyons, 1459 Corcoran street NW. Assistant Register.—N. 1,. Chew, 159 Massachusetts avenue NE. Division of Loans.—Chief, C. N. McGroarty, 123 Fifth street NE. Division of Notes, Coupons, and Currency.—Chief, Newton Ferree, 1720 Thirteenth street NW. AUDITOR FOR THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT. (Treasury Department Building.) Auditor. —W. E. Andrews, 1223 Vale street NW. Deputy.—Edward McKitterick, 1901 I street NW. Law Clerk.—]. C. L,. Gudger, 1905 I street NW. Customs Division.—Chief, H. K. Leaver, 1528 Sixteenth street NW. Public Debt Division.—Chief, T. O. W. Roberts, 918 Twenty-third street NW. Miscellaneous Division.—Chief; A. F. McMillan, 1311 Wallach place NW. Internal Revenue Division.—Chief, Cadwell C. Tyler, 1712 Oregon avenue NW. AUDITOR FOR THE WAR DEPARTMENT. (Winder Building, Seventeenth and F streets NW.) Auwditor.—F. H. Morris, The Westminster (corner Seventeenth and Q streets NW. ). Deputy.—Dan A. Grosvenor, 1210 G street NW. Disbursing Clerk.—S. McDonald, Winder Building. Archives Division.—Chief, S. E. Faunce, 929% New York avenue NW. Claims Division.—Chief, W. A. Rogers, 1428 Welling place NW. Paymasters’ Division.—Chief, M. J. Hull, 1024 Seventeenth street NW. Pay and Bounty Division.—Chief, Elias Mann, 1242 Kenesaw avenue NW. Military Division.—Chief, N. C. Martin, 222 Eighth street NW. Law Department.—W. C. Eldridge, 322 C street NW.; L. K. Ginn, 1219 M street NW. ; J. Q. Kern, 507 Sixth street NW. AUDITOR FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. (Treasury Department Building.) Auditor. — William Youngblood, 1341 I, street NW. Deputy.—Robert S. Person, 1515 R street NW. Indian Division.—Chief, I,ee W. Funk, 1545 T street NW. Army and Navy Pension Division.—Chief, R. R. West, Brookland, D. C. Land Files and Miscellaneous Division.—J. E. R. Ray, 1213 H street NW. Law Clerk.—W. S. Stetson, 1309 S street NW. AUDITOR FOR THE NAVY DEPARTMENT. (Treasury Department Building.) Auditor.— William Wallace Brown, The Stratford. Deputy.—]John M. Ewing, 1318 I, street NW. Navy Pay and Allotment Division.—Chief, George P. Davis, 1457 Staughton street NW - Paymasters’ Division.—Chief, Louis K. Brown, 134 C street SE. Claims and Prize Money Division.—Chief, Paul T. Bowen, 1218 T street NW. AUDITOR FOR THE STATE AND OTHER DEPARTMENTS. (Treasury Department Building.) Auditor.—FErnst G. Timme, Providence street, between Twelfth and Thirteenth streets, Brookland, D. C. Deputy.—George W. Esterly, 1115 Fast Capitol street. Miscellaneous Division.—Chief, E. T'. Bushnell, 1757 Madison street NW. Diplomatic and Consular Division.—Chief, W. P. Armstrong, Brookland, D. C. Division of Judicial Accounts.—Chief, W. O. Bradley, 1007 Massachusetts avenue NE, Law Clerk,—W, W. Scott, Brookland, D. C. Executive Departments. 211 AUDITOR FOR THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMEN. (Post-Office Department Building.) Auditor.—Henry A. Castle, 1532 Twenty-second street NW. Deputy.—Abraham I. Lawshe, 1209 Rhode Island avenue NW. Chief Clerk.—John M. Bishop, The Olympia. Law Clerk.—David H. Fenton, 131 T street NW. Disbursing Clerk.—B. W. Holman, 1014 Fourteenth street NW, Collecting Division.—Chief, Arthur Clements, 115 Fifth street SE. Bookkeeping Division.—Chief, David W. Duncan, 115 Fifth street NE. Fay Division.—Chief, John B. Sleman, 3008 Fifteenth street NW. Inspecting Division.—Chief, M. M. Holland, Fifth and Colfax streets. Checking and Assorting Division.—Chief, R. M. Johnson, 1209 Rhode Island ave- nue NW. Foreign Division.—Chief, Emanuel Speich, 137 T' street NW. Recording Division.—Chief, B. A. Allen, 1901 Fourth street NW. TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. (Treasury Department Building.) Tveasurer.—Ellis H. Roberts, 1313 Massachusetts avenue NW. Assistant Treasurer.—James F. Meline, 2111 O street NW. Chief Clerk.—Willard F. Warner, The Concord. Cashier.—E. R. True, 2507 Pennsylvania avenue NW. Assistant Cashier.—G. C. Bantz, 2112 Callow avenue, Baltimore, Md. Accounts Division.—Chief, D. W. Harrington, near Alexandria, Va. Loans Division.—Chief, Ferd. Weiler, 1316 V street NW. National Banks Division.—Chief, George Fort, 3108 Q street NW. Redemption Division.—Chief, Albert Relyea, 2106 O street NW. Issue Division.—Chief, James A. Sample, 2104 O street NW. Paying Teller. —William H. Gibson, 2136 1, street NW. Recetving Teller.—C. S. Pearce, 1621 Nineteenth street NW. Assistant Teller.—R. H. Forsyth, 1522 T street NW. Assistant Teller.—D. W. Herriott, 1842 Fifteenth street NW. Vault Clerk.—A. R. Quaiffe, The Concord. Principal Bookkeeper.—Sherman Platt, The Portner. Assistant Bookkeeper.—J. O. Manson, 923 S street NW. National Bank Redemption Agency. Supervintendent.—Thomas H. Rogers, The Columbia. Zeller.—F,. W. Wilson, 1714 Oregon avenue NW. Bookkeeper. —F. W. Lantz, 1319 Nineteenth street NW. Assistant Teller.—R. S. Lytle, 1329 Wallace place. COMPIROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. (Treasury Department Building.) Comptroller.—Charles G. Dawes, 1337 K street NW. Deputy Comptroller.— Thomas P. Kane, 207 S street NE. Chief Clerk.—]. Y. Paige, 1624 Riggs place NW. Organization Division.—Chief, W. J. Fowler, 114 R street NE. Division of Reports.—Chief, George S. Anthony, 917 S street NW. Division of Issues.—Chief, W. W. Eldridge, Kensington, Md. Redemption Division.—Superintendent, E. E. Schreiner, 1314 R street NW. Bond Clerk.—W. D. Swan, 222 First street SE. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE. (T'reasury Department Building.) Commissioner.—George W. Wilson, The Gordon. Deputy.—Robert Williams, jr., The Bancroft. Chief Clevk and Appointment Division.—John'T. Bivins, 1420 New York avenue NW, Law Division.—]. B. T. Tupper, 1316 Nineteenth street NW. Tobacco Division.—Henry C. Jones, 1314 Florida avenue NW. Stamp Division.—E,. C. Johnson, 810 Twelfth street NW. Assessment Division.—Chief, Charles A. Bates, 1434 V street NW. Division of Distilled Spirits.—Chief, Thomas A. Cushing, 1333 N street NW. Division of Revenue Agents.—Chief, W. H. H. Bowen, The National. Division of Accounts.—Chief, William Hinds, 1315 Kenesaw avenue NW. Division of Chemistry.—C. A. Crampton, Montgomery County, Maryland, 56-1ST—2D ED——1I5 212 Congressional Directory. Division of Documentary and Proprietary Stamps.—Charles W. Eldridge, 218 Mary- | land avenue NE. Miscellaneous Division.—Scott B. Mercier, 1935 Thirteenth street NW. DIRECTOR OF THE MINT. (I'reasury Department Building.) Director of the Mint.—George E. Roberts, The Kensington, Fourteenth street. Computer of Bullion.—B. ¥. Butler, 418 T street NW., Le Droit Park. Adjuster. —Frank W. Braddock, 601 North Carolina avenue SE. Assayer.—Cabell Whitehead, 1102 New Hampshire avenue. Examiner.—Robert E. Preston, 53 K street NE. COMMISSIONER OF NAVIGATION. (I'reasury Department Building.) Commissioner of Navigation.—Eugene Tyler Chamberlain, Metropolitan Club. Deputy Commassioner.— Thomas B. Sanders, 2309 M street NW. OFFICE OF STEAMBOAT INSPECTION. (Treasury Department Building.) Supervising Inspector-General.—James A. Dumont, 1807 Nineteenth street NW. Chief Clerk.—William F. Gatchell, 604 E street NE. LIGHT-HOUSE BOARD. y (T'reasury Department Building.) Hon. Iiyman J. Gage, Secretary of the Treasury and ex officio President of the Board, Treasury Department, Washington, D. C. Rear-Admiral Francis J. Higginson, U. S. N., Chairman, The Cairo, Washington, D. C. Col. Walter S. Franklin, office 2552 Madison avenue, Baltimore, Md. Lieut. Col. Alexander Mackenzie, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., War Department, Wash- ington, D. C. Col. George L. Gillespie, Corps of Engineers, U.S. A., Army Building, New York, N. VY. Dr. Henry S. Pritchett, Superintendent U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, Washington, D.C. Capt. Yates Stirling, U. S. N., 209 West Lanvale street, Baltimore, Md. Capt. Thomas Perry, U. S. N., Naval Secretary, 2002 R street NW., Washington, D. C. Maj. R. L. Hoxie, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., Engineer Secretary, 1632 K street NW., Washington, D. C. Inspectors: : First district.—Commander James K. Cogswell, U. S. N., Custom-House, Port- land, Me. Second district.—Commander Washburn Maynard, U. S. N., Post-Office Building, Boston, Mass. Third district.—Capt. E. M. Shepard, U. S. N., Tompkinsville, N. VY. Fourth district.—Commander Adolph Marix, U. S. N., Post-Office Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Fifth district.—Capt. Yates Stirling, U. S. N., Custom-House Building, Balti- more, Md. Sixth district. —Commander John A. Rodgers, U. S. N., Charleston, S. C. Seventh district. —Commander Frederic Singer, U. S. N., Custom-House, Key West, Fla. Eighth district.—Commander J. R. Selfridge, U. S. N., Custom-House, New Orleans, La. Ninth district.—Commander F. M. Symonds, U. S. N., Room 1431 Marquette Building, corner Adams and Dearborn streets, Chicago, Ill. Tenth district. —Commander Franklin Hanford, U. S. N., Ellicott Square, Buf- falo, N. V. Eleventh district.—Commander Duncan Kennedy, U. S. N., U. S. Public Build- ing, Detroit, Mich. Twelfth district. —Commander Uriel Sebree, U. S. N., Safe Deposit Building, San Francisco, Cal. Thirteenth district.—Commander Edward D. Taussig, U. S. N., 623-625 Marquam Building, Portland, Oreg. Fourteenth district,—Commander Charles T. Forse, U. S. N., Post-Office Build- ing, Cincinnati, Ohio. Fifteenth district.—1ieut. Commander James M. Helm, U. S. N., New Custom- House, St. Louis, Mo. Sixteenth district.—Iieut. Commander James M. Helm, U. S. N., Custom- House, Memphis, Tenn. Executive Departments. 213 Engineers: First district.—Maj. William S. Stanton, U. S. A., 373 Washington street, Boston, Mass. : Second district.—Maj. William S. Stanton, U. S. A., 373 Washington street, Boston, Mass. Third district.—Lieut. Col. D. P. Heap, U. S. A., Tompkinsville, N. V. Fourth district. —Lieut. Col. William A. Jones, U. S. A., Post-Office Building, Philadelphia, Pa. : Fifth district. —Lieut. Col. William A. Jones, U. S. A., Post-Office Building, Balti- more, Md. Sixth district. —Maj. E. H. Ruffner, U. 8. A., 33 Custom-House, Charleston, S. C. Seventh district.—1ieut. Col. A. N. Damrell, U. S. A., Mobile, Ala. Eighth district.—ILieut. Col. A. N. Damrell, U. S. A., Mobile, Ala. Ninth district.—Capt. James G. Warren, U. S. A., Room 406, Custom-House, Mil- waukee, Wis. Tenth district.—Maj. T. W. Symons, U.S. A., 1100 D. S. Morgan Building, Buf- . falo, N. VY. Eleventh district.—Maj. Thomas H. Handbury, U. S. A., 18 Bagley avenue, Detroit, Mich. Twelfth district.—Maj. Charles XE. I. B. Davis, U. S. A., Flood Building, San Francisco, Cal. : Thirteenth district.—Capt. William C. Langfitt, U. S. A., Oregonian Building, Portland, Oreg. Fourteenth district.—Maj. William H. Bixby, U. S. A., Custom-House, Cincinnati, Ohio. Fifteenth distvict.—Lieut. Col. Amos Stickney, U.S. A., 1515 Locust street, St. Louis, Mo. Sixteenth district.—Capt. H. C. Newcomer, U. S. A., Memphis, Tenn. COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY. (New Jersey avenue, near B street SE.) Superintendent.—Henry S. Pritchett, 1524 P street NW. Assistant Superintendent.—Otto H. Tittmann, 1617 Riggs place NW. Assistant in charge of Office.—Andrew Braid, The Columbia, Fourteenth and Binney streets NW. Inspector of Hydrography and Topography.—Herbert G. Ogden, 1610 Riggs place NW Inspector of Standards ( Weights and Measures).—Samuel W. Stratton, The Buck- ingham, 920 Fifteenth street NW. Inspector of Charts.—Gershom Bradford, 312 A street SE. Inspector of Geodesy.—John F. Hayford, 1514 Howard avenue. Disbursing Agent.—Scott Nesbit, 1919 Seventeenth street NW. Naval Accounts.—M. M. Ramsay, 1502 Seventeenth street NW. Lditor.—E. D. Preston, 44 M street NW. Computing Division.—C. A. Schott, 212 First street SE. Drawing and Engraving Division.—Will Ward Duffield, 1631 Q street NW. Tidal Division.—Leland P. Shidy, 1617 Marion street NW. Terrestrial Magnetism Division.—Louis Bauer, 1925 I street NW. Instrument Division.—E. G. Fischer, 436 New York avenue NW. = Library and Archives.—Edward 1,. Burchard, 506 C street SE. MARINE-HOSPITAI, SERVICE. (Supervising Surgeon-General’s Office, 3 B street SK.) Supervising Surgeon-General.—Walter Wyman, The Shoreham. Assistants.—Surg. Preston H. Bailhache, 2115 S street NW.; Surg. J. H. White, 3207 Seventeenth street NW.; Surg. P. M. Carrington, 3019 Thirteenth street NW.; P. A. Surg. R. M. Woodward, The Columbia; P. A. Surg. G. T. Vaughan, 816 Seventeenth street NW.; Asst. Surg. W. C. Billings, 1731 Twentieth street NW, Chief Clerk.—William P. Worcester, Spring Street Road. HYGIENIC LABORATORY, (3 B street SE.) Director.—P. A. Surg. M. J. Rosenau, The Cairo. Assistant.—P. A. Surg. L. D. Fricks. 214 Congressional Divectory. | BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION. (Treasury Department Building.) Commissioner-General of Immigration. —T. V. Powderly, 502 Newark street NW. Chief Clerk.—Frank H. Larned, 2449 Eighteenth street NW. COMMISSIONERS OF IMMIGRATION. Thomas Fitchie, Barge Office, New York, N. Y.; George B. Billings, 70 Long Wharf, Boston, Mass.; John J. S. Rodgers, 1225 Sansom street, Philadelphia, Pa.; Percy C. Hennighausen, Custom-House, Baltimore, Md.; Hart H. North, San Francisco, Cal.; David Healy, Vancouver, British Columbia; Peter B. Laird, Quebec, Province of Quebec, and Halifax, Nova Scotia. THE WAR DEPARTMENT. (Seventeenth street, south of Pennsylvania avenue.) ELIHU ROOT, of New York, N. V., Secretary of War (1626 Rhode Island ave- nue), was born in Clinton, Oneida County, N. Y., February 15, 1845; was graduated in 1864 from Hamilton College, where his father, Oren Root, was for many years professor of mathematics; taught schoolat the Rome Academy in 1865; graduated in law from the University Law School of the City of New York in 1867, when he was admitted to the bar; since that time has been in active practice in the city of New York; was appointed by President Arthur in March, 1883, as United States attorney for the southern district of New York, and served until July, 1885; was delegate at large to the state constitutional convention of 1894, and chairman of the judiciary committee; was appointed Secretary of War August 1, 1899. Assistant Secretary of War.—George D. Meiklejohn, The Raleigh. Chief Clerk.—John C. Scofield, 1447 Corcoran street NW, Private Secretary to Secvetary of War.—W. S. Coursey, 1718 Corcoran street NW. Confidential Clerk to the Secretary of War.—F. C. Squires, The Portner. Clerk to Assistant Secretary.—Robert FE. Parker, 1540 T street NW. Disbursing Clerk.— William S. Yeatman, 1713 G street NW, Correspondence Division.—Chief, John T. Dillon, 1602 K street NW. Requisition and Accounts Division.—Chief, Charles B. Tanner, 3005 Fifteenth street NW. Supply Division.—Chief, Martin R. Thorp, 316 S street NE. Record Division.—Chief, John B. Randolph, 1229 Princeton street NW. Appointment Clerk.—Francis W. Ford, 1416 Rhode Island avenue NW. HEADQUARTERS OF THE ARMY. (In War Department Building.) Major-General.—Nelson A. Miles, Commanding the Army, 1736 N street NW. Aides-de-Camp.—Capt. Francis Michler, Fifth Cavalry, Metropolitan Club; Lieut. Henry H. Whitney, Fourth Artillery, 1359 Columbia road. Assistant Adjutant-General.—Iieut. Col. John C. Gilmore, The Portland. Chief Clerk.—Joseph B. Morton, 127 North Carolina avenue SE. \ OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT-GENERAL. (In War Department Building.) Adjutant-General.—Brig. Gen. Henry C. Corbin, 1019 Connecticut avenue. Assistants. —Col. Thomas Ward, 1901 N street NW.; Lieut. Col. W. H. Carter, 1420 Hopkins street; Maj. J. A. Johnston, 1752 Q street NW.; Maj. W. A. Simpson, 1723 De Sales street. Chief Clerk.—Raphael P. Thian, 3319 N street, Georgetown. OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR-GENERAIL. (In War Department Building.) Inspector-General.—Brig. Gen. Joseph C. Breckinridge, 1314 Connecticut avenue. Assistant.—Maj. Thos. T. Knox, 1329 Twenty-first street NW. Chief Clerk.—Warren H. Orcutt, 509 East Capitol street. I Executive Departments. 215 OFFICE OF THE JUDGE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL. (In War Department Building.) Judge-Advocate-General.—Brig. Gen. G. N. Lieber, 1322 Eighteenth street NW. Assistants.—Maj. Chas. McClure, 1722 Q street NW.; Maj. Harvey C. Carbaugh, Army and Navy Club. Chief Clerk.—Lewis W. Call, 1249 Kenesaw avenue NW. OFFICE, OF THE QUARTERMASTER-GENERAL. (In War Department Building.) Quartermaster-General.—Brig. Gen. M. I. Ludington, The Cochran, Assistants.—Maj. Charles Bird, 2019 N street NW.; Maj. William S. Patten, 718 Nineteenth street NW.; Maj. M. C. Martin, 2019 Hillyer place; Maj. F. G. Hodg- son, 1409 Twenty-first street NW.; Maj. J. B. Bellinger, 2162 Florida avenue; Maj. F. M. Schreiner, U. S. Volunteers, 1440 Q street NW.; Capt. J. Z. Dare, U. S. Volunteers, 1340 Corcoran street NW. Chief Clerk.—Henry D. Saxton, 615 Nineteenth street NW. Depot Quartermaster.—Maj. T. E. True, 1401 Massachusetts avenue NW. OFFICE OF THE COMMISSARV-GENERAI, OF SUBSISTENCE. (In War Department Building.) Acting Commissary-General of Subsistence.—Col. John F. Weston, War Department. Assistants.—1ieut. Col. Henry G. Sharpe, A. C. G.S., The Portland; Maj. Abiel L. Smith, 1416 Twenty-first street NW. Chief Clerk.—Wm. A. De Caindry, 1816 H street NW. OFFICE OF THE SURGEON-GENERATL,. (In War Department Building.) Surgeon-General.—Brig. Gen. George M. Sternberg, 1019 Sixteenth street NW. Assistants.—Col. Charles H. Alden, 2020 R street NW.; Col. Dallas Bache, The Cairo; Lieut. Col. Charles Smart, 2017 Hillyer place; Maj. Walter Reed, 5 Cook place, West Washington; Maj. James C. Merrill, The Portland; Maj. George E. Bushnell, The Bancroft. Chief Clerk.—George A. Jones, 1307 Rhode Island avenue NW. Attending Surgeon.—Maj. E. C.+Carter, The Bancroft. Assistant.—Contract Surgeon F. S. Nash, 1225 Fifteenth street NW. OFFICE OF THE PAVMASTER-GENERAL. (In War Department Building.) Paymaster-General.—Brig. Gen. A. E. Bates, 1775 N street NW. Assistant to Paymaster-General.—1Lieut. Col. C. C. Sniffen, 1606 K street NW. Chief Clevk.—Grafton D. Hanson, 1228 Massachusetts avenue NW. Chief Disbursing Officer and Post Paymaster.—Lieut. Col. G. W. Baird, The Cairo. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS. (In War Department Building.) Chief of Engineers.—Brig. Gen. John M. Wilson, 1773 Massachusetts avenue. Assistants.—Lieut. Col. A. Mackenzie, 1836 Jefferson place; Maj. James L. Lusk, 1709 Twenty-first street NW.; Capt. Joseph E. Kuhn, 1622 Twenty-first street NW.; Lieut. Spencer Cosby, 1808 Massachusetts avenue NW. Chief Clerk.—William J. Warren, The Cairo. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ORDNANCE. (In War Department Building.) Chief of Ordnance.—Brig. Gen. A. R. Buffington, Ebbitt House. Assistantis.—Maj. V. McNally, The Hamilton; Maj. C. E. Dutton, Army and Navy Club; Maj. Charles S. Smith, 19 Towa circle; Capt. A. H. Russell, 1715 H street NW.; Capt. C. B. Wheeler, 2106 R street NW.; Lieut. E. P. O’Hern, 1528 I street NW. Chief Clerk.—John J. Cook, 925 M street NW. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAL OFFICER. (In War Department Building.) Chief Signal Officer.—Brig. Gen. A. W. Greely, 1914 G street NW. Ana) Richard E. Thompson; Capt. Geo. O. Squier, Army and Navy Club. Disbursing Officer.—Capt. Eugene O. Fechét, U. S. V., 3010 Cambridge place NW. Chief Cler.—Otto A. Nesmith, 1610 New Hampshire avenue. 216 Congressional Directory. RECORD AND PENSION OFFICE. (In War Department Building.) Chief.—Brig. Gen. F. C. Ainsworth, U. S. A., The Concord. Assistant Chief.—Maj. John Tweedale, 1725 P street NW. Acting Chief Clerk.—Jacob Frech, 514 I, street NE. OFFICE OF PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS AND WASHINGI'ON MONUMENT. (In War Department Building.) In charge.—Col. Theodore A. Bingham, 1717 I street NW. Chief Clerk.—E. F. Concklin, 229 New Jersey avenue SE. Public Gardener. —George H. Brown, 1357 Roanoke street NW. Custodian of Monument.—John Hawkins, 302 Sixth street SE. OFFICE OF WASHINGTON AQUEDUCT. (2728 Pennsylvania avenue.) In charge.—Lieut. Col. Alexander M. Miller, 2123 R street NW. Chief Clerk.—Pickering Dodge, 2025 G street NW. THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. (XK street, between Vermont avenue and Fifteenth street.) JOHN WILLIAM GRIGGS, of Paterson, N. J., Attorney-General (1707 Massachu- setts avenue NW. ), was born at Newton, N. J., July 10, 1849; was prepared for college in his native town and was graduated from Lafayette College in 1868; was admitted to the bar in 1871, and began the practice of the law at Paterson in that year; was member of the general assembly of the State of New Jersey in 1876 and 1877; was elected State senator for Passaic in 1882 for a term of three years, and was reelected in 1885 for a sec- ond term; was president of the senate of New Jersey in 1886; was elected governor of New Jersey on the Republican ticket November, 1895, and inaugurated as governor January, 1896; was appointed by President McKinley Attorney-General to succeed Hon. Joseph McKenna, who resigned to accept a seat on the Bench of the United States Supreme Court; was confirmed by the Senate January 25, 1898; resigned the office of governor January 31, and took his oath of office as Attorney-General on that day. : Solicitor-General.—John K. Richards, 1335 Connecticut avenue NW. Assistant Attorney-General.—James Edmund Boyd, 1704 P street NW. Assistant Attorney-General.—John G. Thompson, The Cairo. Assistant Attorney-General.—Louis A. Pradt, 1908 F street NW. Assistant Attorney-General.—Henry M. Hoyt, 1516 K street NW. Assistant Attorney-General (Depariment of the Interior).—Willis Van Devanter, 2108 Wyoming avenue, Washington Heights, NW. Assistant Attorney-General (FPost-Office Department).—James N. Tyner, 1471 Kene- saw avenue NW. ; Solicitor of Internal Revenue (Treasury Department).—George M. Thomas, 1325 Vermont avenue NW. Solicitor for Department of State.—William I,. Penfield, 1012 Thirteenth street NW. Special Assistant Attorney.—M. C. Burch, 1709 P street NW. : Assistant Attorneys.—William H. Button; Felix Brannigan, 1481 Columbia road; George H. Walker, Cleveland Park; Charles F. Kincheloe, 1332 Massachusetts avenue NW.; John G. Capers, 1522 Sixteenth street NW.; James A. Tanner, 601 M street NW.; Elijah C. Foster, The Portner; Harry Peyton, 1207 Q street NW.; Lincoln B. Smith, 2445 Fighteenth street NW.; Patrick J. Finn, 2027 Columbia road NW. Law Clerk and Examiner of Titles.—A. J. Bentley, 1116 Ninth street NW, Chief Clerk.—Cecil Clay, 1513 S street NW. General Agent.—Frank Strong, 1338 Q street NW. Chief of Division of Accounts.—Howard Perry, 1425 W street NW, Disbursing Clerk.—Henry Rechtin, 1616 Fourteenth street NW. Assistant Attorney in charge of Dockets.—Sinclair B. Sheibley, 1360 Harvard street. Attorney in charge of Pardons.—]James S. Easby-Smith. Appointment Clerk.—Joseph P. Rudy, 312 Seventh street NE. Private Secretary to the Attorney-General.—Charles O. IL. Cooper, The Dewey. Executive Departments. 217 OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR OF THE TREASURY, (In the Treasury Department Building.) Solicitor.—Maurice D. O’Connell, 1918 N street NW. Assistant Solicitor.—Felix A. Reeve, 1606 Nineteenth street NW. Chief Clerk.—Charles E. Vrooman, Hyattsville, Md. THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT (Pennsylvania avenue, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets NW.) OFFICE OF THE POSTMASTER-GENERAL. CHARLES EMORY SMITH, of Pennsylvania, Postmaster-General (1774 Massa- chusetts avenue NW.), was born in Mansfield, Conn., in 1842; removed with his parents to Albany, N. Y., when he was a child; was educated at the Albany Academy and at Union College, Schenectady, N. VY.; was actively engaged during the civil war as aide to General Rathbone, under the war governor, Morgan, in raising and organizing Union volunteer regiments; became editor of the Albany Expressin 1865, joint editor of the Albany Evening Journal in 1870, and in 1877 sole editor; was del- egate to the Republican National Convention in 1876, and was secretary of the plat- form committee; in 1878 was elected regent of the university by the legislature of New York; was delegate to Republican State conventions in New York for several successive years, and was invariably chairman of the committee on resolutions and author of the platform; in 1880 removed to Philadelphia and became editor of the Press; was appointed minister to Russia by President Harrison in 1890, which office he resigned after having served two years; was active in the relief work of the great Russian famine in 1891 and 1892 while in Russia, and had charge of American con- tributions of over $100,000 in money and five shiploads of food; has delivered numerous public, political, and literary addresses; was nominated and confirmed as Postmaster-General April 21, 1898. Chief Clerk.-—Blain W. Taylor, 246 Ninth street NE. Private Secretary.—Clarence E. Dawson, Lenox street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Attorney.—Harrison J. Barrett, 2441 Eighteenth street NW. Appointment Clerk.—]. H. Robinson, 1733 Seventeenth street NW. Superintendent and Disbursing Clerk.—Rufus B. Merchant, 514 Third street NW. Topographer.—A. Von Haake, 1831 Corcoran street. OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. (Post-Office Department Building.) First Assistant Postmaster-General.—Perry S. Heath, 1800 Connecticut avenue. Chief Clerk.—George M. Allen, Riggs House. Division of Post-Office Supplies.—Superintendent, M. W. Louis, The Concord. Division of Free Delivery.—Superintendent, A. W. Machen, 1823 Corcoran street; Assistant Superintendent, Edwin C. Fowler, Riverdale, Md. Division of Salaries and Allowances.—Chief, George W. Beavers, 9g Grant place. Division of Corvespondence.—Chief, James R. Ash, 1825 Thirteenth street NW. Money-Order System.—Superintendent, James T. Metcalf, 335 Florida avenue NW.; Chief Clerk, Edward M. Gadsden, 1737 Corcoran street NW. Dead-Lelter Office.—Superintendent, David P. Leibhardt, 1526 T street NW.; Chief Clerk, Ward Burlingame, 1104 Thirteenth street NW. OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. (Post-Office Department Building.) Second Assistant Postmaster-General.—W. S. Shallenberger, go6 East Capitol street. Chief Clerk.—George F. Stone, 1536 Fifteenth street NW. Superintendent Ratlway Adjustment.—James H. Crew, 1532 Ninth street NW. Contract Division.—Chief, E. P. Rhoderick, 911 French street NW. Division of Inspection.—Chief, James B. Cook, Kensington, Md. Mail Equipment Division.— Chief, Thomas P. Graham, 1123 Eleventh street NW. Railway Mail Service. —General Superintendent, James E. White, Hotel Stratford; - Assistant General Superintendent, Alexander Grant, 1347 L,street NW. ; Chief Clerk, John W. Hollyday, 1924 Thirteenth street NW. Foreign Mails.—Superintendent, N. M. Brooks, 224 A street SE.; Chief Clerk, Robert I,, Maddox, 1521 Vermont avenue NW. 218 Congressional Directory. OFFICE, OF THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAIL,. (Post-Office Department Building.) Third Assistant Postmaster-General.—Edwin C. Madden, 1358 Harvard street NW. Chief Clerk.—Edward B. Kellogg, 604 A street NE. Finance Division.—Chief, A. W. Bingham, 1927 Fourteenth street NW. Postage Stamp Division.—Chief, James H. Reeve, 1336 R street NW. Registered Letter Division.—Principal Clerk, John B. Quay, 627 Second street NE. Division of Files, Mails, elc.—Principal Clerk, E. S. Hall, 1701 Thirteenth street NW. Division of Classification.—Principal Clerk, D. C. Fountain, Kast Washington Heights. Redemption Division.—Principal Clerk, George D. Scott, 711 T'welfth street NW, Postage Stamp Agent.—John P. Green, 1944 Ninth street NW. Postal Card Agent.—FE,. H. Shook, Piedmont, W. Va, Stamped Envelope Agent.—Charles H. Field, Hartford, Conn. OFFICE OF THE FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General.—Joseph 1. Bristow, 1213 Yale street NW. Chief Clerk.—Merritt O. Chance, 20 R street NE. Division of Appointments.—Chief, Carter B. Keene, The Kenmore, North Capitol street. Division of Bonds and Commissions.—Chief, Christian B. Dickey, 3212 Seventeenth street NW. Division of Post-Office Inspectors and Mail Depredations.—Chief Post-Office In- spector, W. E. Cochran, 129 Massachusetts avenue NE.; Chief Clerk, John P. Clum, 812 Kast Capitol street. NAVY DEPARTMENT. (Fast wing, State, War, and Navy building.) JOHN DAVIS LONG, of Massachusetts, Secretary of the Navy (The Portland), was born in Buckfield, Oxford County, Me., October 27, 1838; received his preparatory education in the common school of his native town and the Hebron Academy, Maine; was graduated from Harvard in 1857; taught school two years in Westford Academy, Massachusetts; studied law at Harvard Law School and in private offices; was admitted to the bar, and has since practiced; was a member of the Massachusetts legislature in 1875, 1876, 1877, and 1878; was speaker of the house during the last three years; was lieutenant-governor of his State in 1879 and governor in 1880, 1881, and 1882; was elected to the Forty-eighth and reelected to the Forty-ninth and Fif- tieth Congresses; was for several years on the Statehouse construction commission of his State; is senior member of the law firm of Long & Hemenway; was appointed and confirmed Secretary of the Navy March 5, 1897. Assistant Secretary.—Charles H. Allen, The Portland. Chief Clevk.—B. F. Peters, 140 C street SE. Private Secretary.—1. H. Finney, jr., Chevy Chase, Md. Special duty.—Second Lieut. Harold C. Snyder, U. S. M. C., 1337 L street NW. Disbursing Clerk.—F. H. Stickney, 607 M street NW. OFFICE OF THE ADMIRAL. (1747 Rhode Island avenue NW.) Admiral. —George Dewey, 1747 Rhode Island avenue NW. Secretary.—1ieut. John W. Crawford, 1902 G street NW. Aid.—1ieut. Harry H. Caldwell, 1020 Seventeenth street NW. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. (‘Third floor, east wing.) Chief of Bureau.—Rear-Admiral Charles O’Neil, The Grafton. Assistant to Chief. —1ieut. T. C. Fenton, 1631 Nineteenth street NW. Chief Clerk.—E. S. Brandt, 1518 Corcoran street NW. Lieut. Commander W. McLean, 2109 O street NW. Lieut. Jos. Strauss, Army and Navy Club. Lieut. I. H. Chandler, 1363 Roanoke street. Lieut. F. B. Bassett, 1911 N street NW. Taal Executive Departments. 219 BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT. (‘I'hird floor, east wing.) | | | | Chief of Buvean.—Rear-Admiral R. B. Bradford, 1522 P street NW. Chief Clerk.—A. C. Wrenn, 240 Tenth street NE. Special duty, Lieut. Commander T. E. D. W. Veeder, 1726 Eighteenth street NW. Naval Inspector of Electrical Appliances.—Lieut. G. W. Denfeld, Army and Navy Club. Special duty, Lieut. H. E. Parmenter, 1834 I street NW.; Lieut. F. I. Chad- wick, Army and Navy Club. Superintendent of Compasses.—1ieut. Commander S. W. B. Diehl, 1525 P street NW. Special duty, Lieut. F. I. Chapin, 1341 New Hampshire avenue NW,; Lieut. Com- mander W. H. Allen, 1640 Nineteenth street NW. Special Duty. —1ieut. Jno. B. Blish, Army and Navy Club. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE. (Basement, Navy Department.) Hydrographer.—Capt. J. E. Craig, 1733 De Sales street NW. Assistants to Hydrographer.—Commander J. D. Adams, 1722 Connecticut avenue NW.; Lieut. Commander R. G. Davenport, 1729 G street NW.; Lieut. F. W. Kellogg, 1823 G street NW.; George W. Littlehales, 2132 Le Roy place NW. Clerk.—]John S. Stodder, 716 Nineteenth street NW. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. (Second floor, east wing.) Chief of Bureau.—Rear-Admiral A. S. Crowninshield, 820 Eighteenth street NW. Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Commander William S. Cowles, 1733 N street NW. Assistants.—Iieut. Commander Chas. E. Colahan, 1914 N street NW.; Lieut. Com- mander Jacob John Hunker, 1527 K street NW.; Lieut. W. W. Phelps, 2204 Q street NW.; Lieut. H. H. Ward, 1905 Kalorama avenue NW.; Lieut, Chas. Webster, 3040 Cambridge place NW. Chief Clerk.—D. A. Denison, 929 P street NW. OFFICE OF NAVAL INTELLIGENCE. (Navy Department, fourth floor.) Chief Intelligence Officer.—Commander Richardson Clover, 1535 New Hampshire avenue NW. Lieut. Commander George H. Peters, 1354 Columbia road NW. Lieut. Commander Richard T. Mulligan, 1432 M street NW. Lieut. Horace W. Harrison, 2127 Florida avenue NW. Lieut. Charles C. Marsh, 324 Indiana avenue NW. Lieut. William I. Howard, 2026 Hillyer place NW. Lieut. Sumner E. W. Kittelle, 1744 Oregon avenue NW. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. (First floor, east wing.) Chief of Buveaun.—Civil Engineer Mordecai T. Endicott, U.S. N., 1330 R street NW. Chief Clevk.—Wm. M. Smith, 92 M street NW. Prof. H. M. Paul, U. S. N., 2015 Kalorama avenue NW. Civil Engineer H. H. Rousseau, U. S. N., The Bancroft. Civil Engineer A. C. Cunningham, U. S. N., 1918 I street NW. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS. (First floor, east wing.) Chief of Bureau.—Paymaster-General A. S. Kenny, 1402 Chapin street NW. Assistant Chief.—Paymaster George W. Simpson, 1804 G street NW. Paymaster. —T. H. Hicks, 1804 G street NW. Paymaster.—]J. J. Cheatham, Army and Navy Club. Assistant Paymaster.—Eugene F. Hall, The Bancroft. Chief Clerk.—Nat. S. Faucett, 922 I street NW. BUREAU OF STEAM ENGINEERING. (Third floor, east wing.) Chief. —Engineer in Chief and Rear-Admiral George W. Melville, 1720 H street NW. Chief Clerk.—Wm. H. H. Smith, 2122 H street NW. Commander Harrie Webster, 1523 Thirty-first street, Georgetown, D. C. 220 Congressional Directory. Lieut. Commanders J. H. Perry, 2012 Hillyer place; ¥. H. Bailey, 1815 Riggs | place NW.; A.B. Willits, 2106 Eighteenth street NW.; W. F. Worthington, 1755 P street NW. Lieuts. R. S. Griffin, 1710 Q street NW.; B. C. Bryan, 1507 U street NW.: W. W. White, 1717 Corcoran street NW.; C. HE. Rommel, The Albany, Seventeenth and H streets NW. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. (First floor, south wing.) Chief of Bureau.—Surg. Gen. W. K. Van Reypen, 1021 Fifteenth street NW. Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Medical Inspector J. C. Boyd, 1313 P street NW. Chief Clerk.—Charles T. Earle, 1240 Nineteenth street NW. Special Duty.—Asst. Surg. F. L. Pleadwell, 2126 R street NW. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. (First floor, east wing.) - Chief of Burean.—Chief Constructor Philip Hichborn, 1707 N street NW. Chief Clerk.—Darius A. Green, 1123 Seventeenth street NW. Naval Constructor D. W. Taylor, 1640 Twenty-first street NW. Naval Constructor W. I. Capps, Metropolitan Club. Naval Constructor F. B. Zahm, 1406 Twenty-first street NW. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL. (Second floor, east wing, room 288.) Judge-Advocate-General.—Capt. Samuel C. Lemly, The Richmond. Lieut. Thos. Washington, U. S. N., Army and Navy Club. Capt. W. C. Dawson, U. S. M. C,, 2020 G street NW. Chief Clerk.—E. P. Hanna, 700 Twentieth street NW. NAVAL WAR RECORDS OFFICE AND LIBRARY. (Fourth floor, east wing.) Superintendent. —Prof. E. K. Rawson, 2137 Le Roy place. Lieut. Commander G. P. Colvocoresses, U. S. N., 2129 N street NW. Clerk.—Charles W. Stewart, 1522 Kingman place NW. BOARD OF INSPECTION AND SURVEY. (1707 G street NW.) President. —Rear-Admiral Frederick Rodgers, 1411 Twenty-first street NW. Recorder.—Lieut. Commander Richard Henderson, Metropolitan Hotel. Capt. Robley D. Evans, 324 Indiana avenue NW. Commander W. H. Emory, The Albany. Commander C. R. Roelker, 1434 QO street NW. Naval Constructor W. L. Capps, 1814 K street NW. Maj. C. H. Laucheimer, U.S. M. C., 1804 G street NW. NAVAI OBSERVATORY. (Georgetown Heights.) Superintendent.—Capt. Charles H. Davis, at the Observatory. Lieut. B. W. Hodges, The Buckingham, McPherson Square. Astronomical Divector.—Prof. S. J. Brown, at the Observatory. Prof. A. N. Skinner, at the Observatory. Prof. T.]. J. See, 2715 N street NW. Prof. Milton Updegraff, 3032 Cambridge place. Assistant Astronomers.—George A. Hill, 3222 Wisconsin avenue; Theo I. King, Hyattsville, Md. ; F. B. Littell, 1825 13th street NW. Clerk.—Thomas Harrison, 2723 N street NW. NAUTICAL ALMANAC. (United States Naval Observatory, Georgetown Heights.) Director.—Prof. H. D. Todd, 1519 Twentieth street NW. Assistants. —E. J. Loomis, Cleveland Park ; W. S. Harshman, 1817 Thirteenth street NW.; H. B. Hedrick, Glencarlyn, Va. | NAVY-YARD AND STATION, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Foot of Eighth street SE.) Commandant.—Rear-Admiral A. H. McCormick, U. S. N., navy-yard. Head of Steam Engineering Department.—Commander C. R. Roelker, U. S. N., 1432 Q street NW. : General Storekeeper.—Pay Inspector I. A. Frailey, U. S. N., navy-yard. Medical Officer of Naval Hospital.—Medical Inspector D. Dickinson, U.S. N., Asst. Surg. G. F. Freeman, U. S. N., naval hospital. Superintendent Naval Gun Factory.—Commander E. C. Pendleton, U. S. N., navy- | yard. Purchasing Pay Officer.—Pay Inspector S. Rand, U. S. N., Ebbitt House. Recorder Board Labor Employment, Head of Departments of Equipment and Nav- tgation.—Lieut. Commander L. L. Reamey, U. S. N., 1746 N street. Ordnance Duty.—Iieut. Commander H. McCrea, U. S. N., navy-yard; Lieut. A. Gleaves, U. S. N., navy-yard; Lieut. W, I. Rodgers, U. S. N.; Lieut. F. J. Haeseler, U. S. N., navy-yard ; Lieut. R. D. Tisdale, U. S. N., navy-yard ; Lieut. J. L. Sticht, U. S. N., The Bancroft. Medical Officer of Yard.—Surg. S. H. Dickson, U. S. N., navy-yard. Head of Department Yards and Docks.—Lieut. J. J. Knapp, U. S. N., navy-yard. Pay Officer of Yard.—Paymaster IL. Hunt, U. S. N., 1709 Rhode Island avenue NW. U. S. S. Sylph.—Lieut. W. J. Maxwell, U. S. N., Ensign J. M. Reeves, U. S. N. Seamen’s Quarters.—In charge, Lieut. W. K. Gise, U. S. N., navy-yard; Gunner W. G. Moore, U. S. N., 939 Westminster street NW.; Gunner G. D. Johnston, U. S. N., 22 Seventh street SE.; Acting Gunner I. J. Wallace, U. S. N., The Varnum. Assistant Officer in charge of Naval Hospital.—Asst. Surg. George F. Freeman, U. S. N., naval hospital. Member Inspection Board.—Chief Gunner George Fouse, U. S. N., 712 Seventh street SE. Repairing and Shipping Ordnance Material.—Chief Gunner J. J. Walsh, U. S. N., Bellevue Magazine. Instructor to Seamen Gunners.—Chief Gunner W. Walsh, U. S. N., 402 South Cap- itol street. In charge Tug Triton.—Chief Boatswain J. McLaughlin, U. S. N., navy-yard. In charge Tug Tecumseh.—Boatswain J. Dowling, U. S. N., navy-yard. Apothecary of Yard.—Pharmacist F. Wood, U. S. N., navy-yard. Ordnance Instructions.—Capt. E. T. Strong, U. S. N., 1911 G street NW.; Lieut. H. M. Taylor, U. S. N., The Ebbitt. Commanding Marines.—Maj. R. Dickins, U. S. M. C., navy-yard. Garrison Officers.—First Lieut. J. S. Bates, U. S. M. C., marine barracks, navy-yard ; Second Lieut. R. G. McConnell, U. S. M. C., marine barracks, navy-yard. Executive Departments. 227 | | NAVY PAV OFFICE. (1429 New York avenue NW.) Purchasing Qfficer.—Pay Inspector S. Rand, The Ebbitt. Chief Clerk.—F. V. Walker, 1526 Corcoran street NW. NAVAL HOSPITAL. (Pennsylvania avenue, between Ninth and Tenth streets SE.) Medical Insnector A. F. Price. Asst. Surg. George F. Freeman. MUSEUM OF HYGIENE. (Twenty-third and E streets NW.) Medical Director Charles H. White. Surg. C. G. Herndon. NAVAL DISPENSARY. (2037 F street NW.) Surg. P. M. Rixey, 909 Sixteenth street NW. P. A. Surg. E. P. Stone, 1411 Twentieth street NW. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD. (Navy-Yard.) Rear-Admiral John A. Howell, Ebbitt House. Capt. Silas W. Terry, Annapolis, Md. Capt. Francis A. Cook, Annapolis, Md. Recorder.—Francis M. Hosier, 1204 S street NW. 222 Congressional Directory. NAVAL RETIRING BOARD. (Navy-Yard.) Rear-Admiral Bartlett J. Cromwell, 1525 New Hampshire avenue. Rear-Admiral Benjamin F. Day, 404 A street SE. Medical Director Grove S. Beardsley, 1704 Connecticut avenue. Capt. Francis A. Cook, Annapolis, Md. Medical Inspector William S. Dixon, 1336 Nineteenth street NW. Recorder. —Francis M. Hosier, 1204 S street NW. BOARD OF MEDICAI, EXAMINERS. (Navy-Yard.) Medical Director Joseph B. Parker, 1724 S street NW. Medical Inspector John C. Wise, 1120 Vermont avenue. Surg. Daniel N. Bertolette, The Albany. STATE, WAR, AND NAVY DEPARTMENT BUILDING. (Superintendent’s room, No. 148, first floor, north wing.) Superintendent.—Chief Engineer George W. Baird, U. S. N., 1310 Vermont avenue NW. Clerk.—Alfred B. Horner, Army and Navy Club, 1632 I street NW. HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS. (Eighth street SE.) Brigadier-Generval, Commandant.—Charles Heywood, headquarters. Paymaster.—Col. Green Clay Goodloe, headquarters, 1103 Sixteenth street NW, Adjutant and Inspector.—Col. George C. Reid, headquarters, The Milton. Assistant Adjutant and Inspector.—Maj. Charles H. Lauchheimer, 1804 G street NW, Quartermaster.—Col. Frank I,. Denny, headquarters, 1634 Connecticut avenue. Assistant Quartermaster.—Maj. Charles. I. McCawley, headquarters, Metropolitan Club. Assistant Quartermaster.—Capt. Cyrus S. Radford, The Lenox. MARINE BARRACKS. (Eighth street SH.) Lieut. Col. F. H. Harrington, Commanding Post, marine barracks. Capt. Lincoln Karmany, 228 New Jersey avenue SE. Second Lieut. IL. B. Purcell, marine barracks. Second Lieut. J. McE. Huey, marine barracks. Surg. Edward H. Green, 1916 Sunderland place. THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. (Corner of Seventh and F streets NW.) ETHAN ALLEN HITCHCOCK, of Missouri, Secretary of the Interior (1601 K street NW. ), a great-grandson of Ethan Allen of Vermont, was born in Mobile, Ala., September 19, 1835; lived a year at New Orleans, and then removed to Nashville, Tenn., where he attended private schools, completing his course of study in 1855 at the military academy in New Haven, Conn. Rejoining his family, who were then living at St. Louis, Mo., he engaged in mercantile business until 1860, when he went to China to enter the commission house of Olyphant & Co., of which firm he was made a partner in 1866. Retired from business in 1872, and spent a couple of years in Europe. Returning to the United States in 1874, was engaged as president of several manufacturing, mining, and railway companies, until he was appointed, August 16, 1897, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Russia. Reached his post in December of that year, and on February 11, 1898, was made Ambassador Fxtraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at St.Petersburg, where he discharged the duties of his office as the first American Ambassador accredited to the Russian Court until he left for home to assume, on February 20, 1899, the duties of Secretary of the Interior, for which office he was nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate on the same day, December 21, 1898. First Assistant Secretary.—Thomas Ryan, 1336 Yale street, Columbia Heights, NW. Assistant Secretary.— Webster Davis, 721 Third street NW. Chief Clerk of the Department.—Edward M. Dawson, 1752 S street NW. a al - Executive Departments. 223 First Assistant Attorney.—Frank I,. Campbell, 1439 Howard avenue, Mount Pleas- ant, NW. Private Secretary to the Secretary.—W. Scott Smith, 525 T street NW. Appointment Division.—Chief, John W. Holcombe, 1829 Corcoran street NW. Disbursing Division.—Chief, George W. Evans, 918 Nineteenth street NW. Lands and Railroads Division.—Chief, James I. Parker, 1810 Fourth street NW. Indian Division.—Chief, Eugene E. White, 1009 Thirteenth street NW. Patents and Miscellaneous Division.—Chief, W, Bertrand Acker, 111 Fourth street SE. Board of Pension Appeals.—Chairman, Harrison I,. Bruce, 2317 Pennsylvania ave- nue NW. Stationery and Printing Division.—Chief, Amos Hadley, 1554 Howard avenue, Mount Pleasant, NW. Indian Tervitory Division.—Chief, Luther R. Smith, 1706 S street NW. Custodian.—Hiram Buckingham, 1522 Sixth street NW. Document Division.—Clerk in charge of documents, John G. Ames, 1600 Thirteenth street NW. Private Secretary to First Assistant Secvetary.—James F. Tufts, 132 D street NE. Private Secretary to Assistant Secrelary.—John M. Carr, 721 Third street NW. Captain of the Watch.—Walter F. Halleck, 422 Eighth street NE. GENERAL, LAND OFFICE. (Interior Department Building.) Commissioner.—Binger Hermann, 1742 S street NW. Assistant Commissioner.— William A. Richards, 2455 Eighteenth street NW. Chief Clevk.—Granville N. Whittington, The Concord. Recorder.—Chester H. Brush, goq Fourteenth street NW. Public Lands Division.—Chief, Alexander C. Shaw, 1456 Euclid place NW. Surveying Division.—Chief, Charles I,. Du Bois, 1421 Chapin street NW. Railroad Division.—Chief, Samuel S. Marr, 1318 Corcoran street NW. Preemption Division.—Chief, Isaac R. Conwell, 1302 Columbia road. Contest Division.—Chief, Henry W. Sanford, 933 I street NW. Swamp Land Division.—Chief, Edmond Mallet, 934 I street NW. Accounts Division.—Chief, George Redway, 1328 Columbia road. Mineral Division.—Chief, Henry G. Potter, 1106 G street NW. Special Service Division.—Chief, Woodford D. Harlan, Takoma Park, D. C. Drafting Division.—Chief, Harry King, 1335 Q street NW. Confidential Clerk to the Commissioner and Receiving Clerk.—Orvil Dodge, 210 A street SE. Law Clerks.—James W. Witten, 461 Florida avenue NW.; T. Warren Akin, 935 Massachusetts avenue NW. Law Examiners.—William O. Conway, 301 Fourth street SE.; John V. Wright, 1725 Twenty-first street NW. PATENT OFFICE. (Interior Department Building.) Commissioner.—Charles H. Duell, 2025 Columbia road. Assistant Commissioner.— Arthur P. Greeley, 9o6 T street NW, Chief Clerk.—Edw. V. Shepard, 1437 Rhode Island avenue. Financial Clerk.—Frank D. Sloat, The Everett. Law Clerks.—William A. Megrath, 1239 O street NW.; J. M. Coit, 1104 P street NW. Examiners-in-Chief.—Solon W. Stocking, 1013 H street NW. ; Thomas G. Steward, 1316 Columbia road; John H. Brickenstein, 1603 Nineteenth street NW. Principal Examiners: Advertising, Baggage, elc.—F. B. Moore, 1365 Kenesaw avenue NW. Artesian and Oil Wells, Mills and Thrashing, Stone Working. —1,. B. Wynne, 1424 Chapin street NW. Builders’ Hardware, Locks, Lalches, etc.—A. G. Wilkinson, 1526 K street NW. Calorifics.—Millard J. Moore, Glencarlyn, Va. Chemistry.—J. B. Littlewood, 415 B street NE. - Civil Engineering. —B. W. Pond, Eckington, D. C. (607 T street NE.). Electricity, A.—F. W. Winter, 423 Tenth street NE. Electricity, B.—G. D. Seely, Cleveland Park, D. C. Farm, Stock, and Products.—FE,. D. Sewell (acting), 14 Quincy street. Fine Arts, Harvesters.—Charles H. Lane, 1524 Kingman place. Firearms, Ordnance, Marine Propulsion, and Shipbuilding.—Malcolm Seaton, 1140 Connecticut avenue. 224 Congressional Directory. Principal Examiners—Continued. Gas, Painting, Hides, Skins and Leather, Alcohol, and Oils.—George S. Ely, 300 First street SE. Household Furniture.—C. Alexander Mason, The Savoy. Hydraulics. —F. M. Tryon, 913 Eighth street NW. Instruments of Precision.—]James T. Newton, 8oz Twelfth street NW. Interferences.— Walter Johnson, 208 Delaware avenue NE. Lamps and Gas Fittings.—Arthur F. Kinnan, Brookland, D. C. Land Conveyances.—H. P. Sanders, 1504 Twenty-first street NW. Leather-working Machinery and Products.—]ay F. Bancroft, 500 R street NE. Measuring Instruments, Numbering Machines.—G. 1. Morton, 1310 Q street NW. . Mechanical Engineering. —William I. Aughinbaugh, 1420 Sixth street NW. Metal Bending and Wire Working. —Louis W. Maxson, Kensington, Md. Metallurgy.—Eugene A. Byrnes, 2539 Thirteenth street NW, Metal Working.—G. C. Dean, 2437 Eighteenth street NW. Packing and Storing, efc.—Thomas A. Witherspoon, 27 Towa circle. Lois, Lind Stones, Lime, and Cement.—Levin H. Campbell, Hyatts- ville, Md. Preumatics.—W.W. Townsend, 1447 Kenesaw avenue, Mount Pleasant. Printing and Poper Manufactures, 1ypewriting and Linotype Machines.—Oscar Woodward, The Westminster. Railway Cars, elc.—George R. Simpson, 1203 Whitney avenue. Sewing Machines.—P. B. Pierce, 1421 Twenty-ninth street NW. Steam Engineering.—Francis Fowler, 1449 Q street NW. Zextiles.—I1. U. Townsend, 1219 Kenesaw avenue. 7illage.—Oscar C. Fox, Linden, Md. Trade-Marks and Designs.—FE. 1,, Chapman, 1744 S street NW. Velocipedes, Games, and Toys.—Charles C. Stauffer (acting), 3238 N street NW. Washing, Brushing, Abrading.—C. G. Gould, 1617 Thirteenth street NW. Wood Working .—Ballard N. Morris, Woodside, Md. Chiefs of Divisions: Classification.—Frank C. Skinner, 1316 Harewood avenue NW. Issue and Gazelte.—John W. Babson, 108 Eleventh street SE. Draftsman.—Wallace W. Hite, The Lennox. Assignment.—Frederick V. Booth, 335 C street NW. Librarian.—Howard 1,. Prince, 419 Spruce street NW. BUREAU OF PENSIONS. (Pension Building, Judiciary Square.) Commussioner.—H. Clay Evans, 1406 M street NW. First Deputy Commissioner.—James 1. Davenport, 1714 Fifteenth street NW. Second Deputy Commissioner.—Leverett M. Kelley, 1414 K street NW. Chief Clerk.—William H. Bayly, 2125 N street NW. Assistant Chief Clerk.—Walter J. Brooks, Garrett Park, Md. Medical Referee.—Jacob FE. Raub, 225 First street NE. Assistant Medical Referee.—Charles F. Whitney, 128 A street NE. Law Division.—Law Clerk, Stephen A. Cuddy, 632 Ninth street NE. Board of Review.—Chief, Thomas W. Dalton, 427 Massachusetts avenue NW, Medical Division.—Medical referee in charge. Special Examination Division.—Acting Chief, Alvin I,. Craig, 726 Seventh street E NE. Old War and Navy Division.—Acting Chief, Charles M. Bryant, 934 T street NW. Eastern Division.—Chief, Warner Wilhite, 1218 S street NW. Middle Division.—Chief, Frank A. Warfield, 1535 T street NW. Western Division.—Chief, John S. Garrison, East End, Falls Church, Va. Southern Division.—Chief, John W. Watson, Langdon, D. C. Record Division.—Acting Chief, Gilbert C. Kniffin, Takoma Park, D. C. Certificate Division.—Chief, Adolphus B. Bennett, 3306 Seventeenth street NW. Finance Division.—Chief, William I. Soleau, Garrett Park, Md. Stationery Division.—Chief, John Hancock, 1822 New Hampshire avenue. Army and Navy Survivors Division.—Chief, Charles W. Filer,.1233 B street SE. Mail Division.—Chief, T. Mannell Hermann, 1742 S street NW. Admitted Files.—In charge: Tory Oleson, 644 KE street NE. Attorneys’ Room.—In charge: Walter B. Pettus, 1614 T street NW. Superintendent of Building. —George W. Barnes, 103 Fourth street SE. Executive Departments. 225 PENSION AGENCY. (No. 308 F street NW.) Pension Agent.—Sidney 1,. Willson, 423 Fourth street NW. Chief Clerk.—Allen Bussius, 1341 Emerson street NE. OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS. (01d Post-Office Department Building.) Commaissioner.— William A. Jones, The Portland. Assistant Commissioner.—A. C. Tonner, 1916 Sixteenth street NW. Superintendent of Indian Schools.—Miss Estelle Reel, Arlington Hotel. Finance Division.—Financial Clerk, Samuel E. Slater, 1415 S street NW. Land Division.—Chief, Charles F. Larrabee, 1514 Twenty-first street NW. Accounts Division.—Chief, W. B. Shaw, jr., 1418 Kenesaw avenue. Education Division.—Chief, Josiah H. Dortch, 2931 Fifteenth street NW. Records and Files Division.—Chief, Lewis Y. Ellis, 101 Eleventh street SE. OFFICE, OF EDUCATION. (Northeast corner of Bighth and G streets NW.) Commissioner.— William T. Harris, 1303 P street NW. Chief Clerk.—Lovick Pierce, 1427 Rhode Island avenue NW. Compiler.—1. Edwards Clarke, 1752 Oregon avenue NW. Statistician.—Alexapder Summers, 1111 M street NW. OFFICE OF COMMISSIONER OF RAILROADS. (01d Post-Office Department Building.) Commissioner.—James Longstreet. Bookkeeper. —Herman Schreiner, 1775 Madison street NW. OFFICE OF THE GEOLOGICAI, SURVEY. (Hooe Building, 1330 F street NW.) Director.—Charles D. Walcott, 2113 S street NW. Chief Clerk.—Henry C. Rizer, 1738 Q street NW. Chief Disbursing Clerk.—John D. McChesney, 2903 Thirteenth street NW. Assistant to Director in Geology.—Bailey Willis, 2117 Bancroft place NW. Editorial Division.—Chief, Philip C. Warman, 1221 O street NW. - Division of Illustrations.—Chief, John I. Ridgway, 1441 Florida avenue. Division of Engraving and Printing.—Chief, S. J. Kubel, 628 East Capitol street. Division of Hydrography.—Chief, F. H. Newell, 1829 Phelps place NW. Division of Mineral Resources.—Chief, David T. Day, 1425 Euclid place NW. Division of Chemistry.—Chief, Frank W. Clarke, 1612 Riggs place NW. Division of Topography—Forest Reserves.—Henry Gannett, 1881 Third street NW. Atlantic Section.—H. M. Wilson, 1706 Twenty-first street NW. Central Section.—]. H. Renshawe, The Bancroft. Rocky Mountain Section.—E. M. Douglas, Takoma Park, D. C. Pacific Section.—R. U. Goode, Summit avenue, Ianier Heights, NW. CENSUS OFFICE. (B street, between First and Second streets NW.) Director.— William R. Merriam, 1414 Sixteenth street NW. Assistant Dirvector.—Fred H. Wines, 1446 Staughton street NW. Chief Clerk.—Albert F. Childs, 24 Grant place NW. Disbursing Clerk.—Fdward McCauley, 1719 Rhode Island avenue NW. Chaef Statistician, Population.— William C. Hunt, 652 East Capitol street. 20 Statistician, Manufactures.—S. N. D. North, Commonwealth Building, Boston, ass. Chief Statistician, Agriculture.—Ie Grand Powers, 3007 Fifteenth street NW. Chief Statistician, Vital Statistics.—William A. King, 17 Fourth street SE. Chief Statistician, Methods and Results.—Walter F. Willcox, 1421 K street NW. Expert Chief of Division, Population.—John S. Lord, The Woodmont, Towa circle. Expert Chief of Division, Manufactures.—William M. Steuart, Commonwealth Building, Boston, Mass. 226 Congressional Directory. Expert Chief of Division, Agriculture.—Harry ‘IT. Newcomb, 132 F street SE. Expert Chief of Division, Vital Statistics. — Whitman Osgood, The Kenmore, North Capitol street, near C street NW. Expert Chief of Division, Methods and Results. — ; Printing Division, Chief.—George E. Boos, 1238 Kenesaw avenue NW. Correspondence Division, Chief.—John R. Bane, 926 Massachusetts avenue NW. Purchasing Clerk.—A. V, Rice, The Olympia. THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth streets.) \ OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE, JAMES WILSON, of Traer, Tama County, Iowa, Secretary of Agriculture (1022 Vermont avenue NW. ), was born in Ayrshire, Scotland, August 16, 1835; in 1852 he came to the United States, settling in Connecticut with his parents; in 1855 he went to Iowa, locating in Tama County, where, as early as 1861, he engaged in farming; was elected to the State legislature, and served in the Twelfth, Thirteenth, and Fourteenth general assemblies, being speaker of the house in the last-mentioned assembly; was elected to Congress in 1872, and served in the Forty-third, Forty- fourth, and Forty-eighth Congresses; in the interim between the Forty-fourth and Forty-eighth Congresses served as a member of the Railway Commission; from 1870 to 1874 was a regent of the State University, and for the past®six years has been director of the agricultural experiment station and professor of agriculture at the Towa Agricultural College at Ames; was confirmed Secretary of Agriculture March 5, 1897. Assistant Secretary.—Joseph H. Brigham, 1947 Fourth street NE. Chief Clerk.—Andrew Geddes, 508 C street SE. Appointment Clerk.—]. B. Bennett, 137 Eleventh street NE. Private Secretary to the Secretary of Agviculture.—]. W. Wilson, 1022 Vermont avenue NW. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secvetary of Agviculture.—M. Marjorie Brigham, 1947 Fourth street NE. : Confidential Clerk to the Secretary of Agriculture.—James Morison, 1225 Roanoke street NW. Chief of Supply Division.—Cyrus B. Lower, North Chevy Chase, Md. Caretaker of Museum.—Nathaniel Shatswell, 722 Thirteenth street NW. Engineer and Captain of the Watch.—John A. Harvey, 1228 C street SW. WEATHER BUREAU. (Corner Twenty-fourth and M streets NW.) Chief.—Willis 1,. Moore, 1616 S street NW. Chief Clerk.—Henry E. Williams, 206 S street NE. Private Secretary to the Chief of Burean.—FEdgar B. Calvert, 1104 Twelfth street NW. Professors of Meteorology.—Cleveland Abbe, 2017 I street NW.; Frank H. Bigelow, 1625 Massachusetts avenue NW.; Henry A. Hazen, 1234 Tenth street NW.; Charles F. Marvin, 1404 Binney street NW.; Edward B. Garriott, 1248 Princeton street NW. Forecast Official.—Harry C. Frankenfield, 1416 K street NW. h, Chiefs of Divisions.—James Berry, 14 Third street SE.; Alfred J. Henry, 940 P street NW.; Daniel J. Carroll, 1914 Fifth street NW. Editor and Chief of Publications Division.—John P. Church, 201 Third street NE. Superintendent of Telegraph.— Jesse H. Robinson, 1607 S street NW. Medico Climatologist and Librarian.—William F. R. Phillips, 1418 I, street NW. In Charge of Division of Supplies.—Frank M. Cleaver, 2311 M street NW. BURFAU OF ANIMAI, NDUSTRY. Chief.—D. E. Salmon, 1923 Thirteenth street NW. Assistant Chief.—Alonzo D. Melvin, 1221 Kenesaw avenue NW. Chief Clerk.—S. R. Burch, 646 Hast Capitol street. Chief of Bio-Chemic Division.—E,. A. de Schweinitz, 1023 Vermont avenue NW. Chief of Dairy Division.—Henry E. Alvord, 2501 Pennsylvania avenue NW. (The Luzon). Chief of rien Division.—A. M. Farrington, 1436 Chapin street NW. Executive Departments. 227 Chief of Miscellaneous Division.—Tovie A. Geddes, 508 C street SE. Chief of Pathological Division.—Victor A. Norgaard, 69 N street NW. Zoologist.—Ch, Wardell Stiles, American Embassy, Berlin, Germany. Superintendent of Experiment Station.—E. C. Schroeder, Bethesda, Md. DIVISION OF STATISTICS. Statistician.—John Hyde, 1458 Euclid place NW. Assistant Statistician.—George K. Holmes, 1323 Kenesaw avenue NW. SECTION OF FOREIGN MARKETS. Chief.—Frank H. Hitchcock, 1114 Fourteenth street NW. DIVISION OF CHEMISTRY. Chemist.—Harvey W. Wiley, 1314 Tenth street NW. First Assistant Chemist.—Ervin E. Ewell, 1804 S street NW, OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS. Director.—A. C. True, 1604 Seventeenth street NW. Assistant Divector.—E. W. Allen, 1725 Riggs place NW. DIVISION OF ENTOMOLOGY. Entomologist.—1,. O. Howard, 1336 Thirtieth street NW. First Assistant Entomologist.—C. 1,. Marlatt, 1440 Massachusetts avenue NW. BIOLOGICAI, SURVEY. Chief.—C. Hart Merriam, 1919 Sixteenth street NW. First Assistant Biologist.—T. S. Palmer, 1604 Thirteenth street NW. DIVISION OF FORESTRY. Forester.—Gifford Pinchot, 1705 Rhode Island avenue NW. Superintendent of Working Plans.—Henry S. Graves, 1705 Rhode Island avenue NW. DIVISION OF BOTANY. Botanist.—Frederick V. Coville, 1836 California avenue NW. First Assistant Botanist.—Lyster H. Dewey, 1337 Wallach place NW. DIVISION OF AGROSTOLOGY. Chief.—F. Lamson-Scribner, 1443 Q street NW. Assistant Chief.—Thomas A. Williams, Box 35, Takoma Park, D. C. DIVISION OF POMOILOGY. Pomologist.—Gustavus B. Brackett, 724 Twelfth street NW. Assistant Pomologist.—William A. Taylor, 55 QO street NE. DIVISION OF VEGETABLE PHYSIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY. Chief.—B. IT. Galloway, Garrett Park, Md. Assistant Pathologist.—Albert F. Woods, 1021 Eleventh street NW. DIVISION OF SOILS. Chief.—Milton Whitney, Takoma Park, D. C. Assistant Chief.—Lyman J. Briggs, 56 S street NE. DIVISION OF SEEDS. Chief.—Robert J. Whittleton, 717 Thirteenth street NW. OFFICE OF PUBLIC-ROAD INQUIRIES. Director.— Vacant. Assistant Divector.—Maurice O. Eldridge, 38 S street NW. 56—I1ST—2D ED——I6 228 Congressional Directory. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS. Chief.—Frank 1,. Evans, 1604 Fifteenth street NW. Assistant Chief of Division (in charge of Weather Bureau Accounts).—A. Zap- pone, 1306 Corcoran street NW. Cashier.—Everett D. Yerby, 1417 OQ street NW. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. Chief.—George William Hill, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Chief.—Joseph A. Arnold, 229 Second street NE. Assistant in charge of Document Section.—Robert B. Handy, 1017 Fast Capitol street. GARDENS AND GROUNDS. Horticulturist and Superintendent of Gardens and Grounds.—William Saunders, 1603 Third street NW. LIBRARY. Librarian.—W. P. Cutter, 1618 Seventeenth street NW. Assistant Librarian.— Josephine A. Clark, 1322 Twelfth street NW. THE INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. (Sun Building, 1317 F street NW.) [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the 3 designates those whose daughters accompany them. ] Commissioners.—* Martin A. Knapp, of New York, Chairman, The Portland; * Jud- son C. Clements, of Georgia, 2113 Bancroft place, Connecticut Avenue Heights; * James D. Yeomans, of Iowa, The Kensington; * Charles A. Prouty, of Vermont, The Portner; Joseph W. Fifer, of Illinois. Secretary.—Edward A. Moseley, 1113 Sixteenth street NW, THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. (National Safe Deposit Building, corner Fifteenth street and New York avenue NW.) Commissioner.—CARROLL D. WRIGHT, 1345 Vermont avenue. Chief Clerk.—Oren W. Weaver, 1429 New York avenue. Disbursing Clerk.—Charles E. Morse, 1429 New York avenue. THE CIVIL, SERVICE COMMISSION. (Offices, corner Eighth and E streets NW.) Commissitoners.—President, JoHN R. PROCTER, Cosmos Club; John B. Harlow, 2028 P street NW.; Mark S. Brewer, 1363 Yale street NW. Chief Examiner.—A. R. Serven, 117 R street NE. Secretary.—John T. Doyle, 2104 Wyoming avenue NW. THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. (Corner North Capitol and H streets.) Public Printer. —F. W. PALMER, 1333 T street NW. Chief Clerk.—W. H. Collins, 125 Tenth street NE. Foreman of Printing.—Henry T. Brian, 34 I street NW. Foreman of Binding.—H. C. Espey, 9o4 Third street NW. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. Foreman in charge.—W. H. Hickman, 34 I street NE. Clerk in charge at Capitol.——W. A. Smith, 2004 Fourteenth street NW. OFFICE OF SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS. (Union Building, G street between Sixth and Seventh streets NW.) Superintendent of Documents.—1L,. C. Ferrell, The Savoy. Bhs. Pd | S | Be, Executive Departments. 229 THE COMMISSION OF FISH AND FISHERIES. (Office, corner Sixth and B streets SW.) ; Commissioner.—GEORGE M. BowERS, The Ebbitt. Chief Clerk.—1. H. Dunlap, 1605 Twenty-second street NW. Assistant in charge of Division of Inquiry respecting Food Fishes.—Hugh M. Smith, 1248 New Jersey avenue NW. Assistant in charge of Division of Fish Culture.—W. de C. Ravenel, 1611 Riggs place NW. Assistant in charge of Division of Statistics and Methods.—C. H. Townsend, Cosmos Club. Disbursing Agent.—W. P. Titcomb, 2237 OQ street NW. INDUSTRIAL, COMMISSION. (Bliss Building, No. 35 B street NW.) [The members with ladies accompanying them are marked with a * for wife and § for daughter. ] Commissioners.—Senator James H. Kyle, chairman, Aberdeen, S. Dak.; Senator Boies Penrose, Philadelphia, Pa.; Senator S. R. Mallory, Pensacola, Fla.; Senator John W. Daniel, Lynchburg, Va.; Representative John J. Gardner, second vice- chairman, Atlantic City, N. J.; Representative William Lorimer, Chicago, Ill; Representative I. F. Livingston, Kings, Ga.; Representative John C. Bell, Mont- rose, Colo.; Representative Theobold Otjen, Milwaukee, Wis.; Mr. Lee Mantle, Butte, Mont.; * Mr. A. I. Harris, Faton, Ohio; Mr. Ellison A. Smyth, Pelzer, S. C.; * Mr. John M. Farquhar, Buffalo, N. Y.; Mr. E. D. Conger, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Mr. Thomas W. Phillips, first vice-chairman, Newcastle, Pa.; Mr. Charles J. Harris, Dillsboro, N. C.; Mr. M. D. Ratchford, Indianapolis, Ind.; *% Mr. John L. Kennedy, No. 526 Eighth street NE., Washington, D. C.; Mr. Albert Clarke, 77 Bedford street, Boston, Mass. Secretary.— William E. Sackett. Sergeant-at-Arms and Disbursing Agent.—Mahlon Purcell. Chief Messenger.—A. P. Cunningham. SUBCOMMISSIONS. Agriculture.—Messrs. A. 1. Harris, Kyle, Gardner, Livingston, Conger. Manufacturing. —Messrs. Smyth, Penrose, Livingston, Farquhar, Clarke. Mining .—Messrs. Daniel, Otjen, Bell, Mantle, Ratchford, C. J. Harris. Transportation.—Messrs. Phillips, Mallory, Lorimer, C. J. Harris, Kennedy, Bell. Statistics. —Messrs. Farquhar, Conger, Otjen, C. J. Harris, Clarke, THE BOARD ON GEOGRAPHIC NAMES. Chairman.—HENRY GANNETT, Geological Survey. Secretary.—Marcus Baker, Geological Survey. Andrew H. Allen, Department of State. Otis IT. Mason, Smithsonian Institution. H. G. Ogden, Coast and Geodetic Survey. A. B. Johnson, Light-House Board. Harry King, General Land Office. Maj. James L. Lusk, United States Engineers, War Department. Commander Joseph E. Craig, Hydrographic Office, Navy Department. A. Von Haake, Post-Office Department. H. T. Brian, Government Printing Office. John Hyde, Department of Agriculture, NATIONAL HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. Branches.—Central, Dayton, Ohio; Northwestern, Milwaukee, Wis. ; Southern, Hamp- ton, Va.; Fastern, Togus,Me.; Western, I,eavenworth, Kans. ; Marion, Marion, Ind.; Pacific, Santa Monica, Cal.; Danville, Danville, I11. 230 Congressional Directory. Managers.—The President of the United States, the Chief Justice, the Secretary of War, ex officiis, Washington, D. C.; Gen. William J. Sewell, president, Camden, N. J.—term expires 1904; Gen. Martin IT. McMahon, first vice-president, Times Building, New York City—term expires 1904; Col. John I. Mitchell, second vice- president, Milwaukee, Wis.—term expires 1904; Gen. Thomas J. Henderson, secre- tary, Princeton, Ill.—term expires 1902; Gen. Alfred I. Pearson, Pittsburg, Pa.— term expires 1900; Col. George W. Steele, Marion, Ind.—term expires 1902; Gen, Charles M. Anderson, Greenville, Ohio—term expires 1900; Col. Sidney G. Cooke, Herington, Kans. —term expires 19oo; Gen. J. Marshall Brown, Portland, Me.—term expires 1902; Maj. William H. Bonsall, Los Angeles, Cal.—term expires 1904. THE SOLDIERS’ HOME. BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS. (Office, Room 48, War Department, north wing.) President of the Board. —NELSON A. MILES, Major-General Commanding the Army. H. C. Corbin, Adjutant-General, U. S. A. M. I. Ludington, Quartermaster-General, U. S. A. John F. Weston, Acting Commissary-General of Subsistence, U. S. A. George M. Sternberg, Surgeon-General, U. S. A. G. Norman Lieber, Judge-Advocate-General, U. S. A. George D. Ruggles, Brigadier-General, U. S. A. (retired), Governor of the Soldiers’ Home. Secretary of the Board.—N. Hershler. OFFICERS OF THE HOME. (Residing at the Home.) Governor.—Brig. Gen. George D. Ruggles, U. S. A. (retired). Deputy Governor.—Bvt. Brig. Gen. Reuben F. Bernard, U. S. A. (retired). Secretary and Treasurer.—Capt. Charles W. Taylor, Ninth Cavalry. Attending Surgeon.—Maj. L. A. LaGarde, surgeon, U. S. A. THE BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS. (No. 2 Jackson place.) Director. —Wir11AM WOODVILLE ROCKHILL, 1828 I street NW. Secretary.—Dr. Horacio Guzman, 1714 1 street NW. Chief Clevk.— Williams C. Fox, 2558 University place. Chief Translator.—Arthur W. Fergusson, 5 Cooke place. THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. (The Mall, opposite Tenth street.) Presiding Officer ex officio.—WiLriaMm McKINLEY, President of the United States. Chancellor.—Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the United States. Secretary of the Institution.—S. P. Langley, Metropolitan Club. Assistant Secretary.—Richard Rathbun, 1622 Massachusetts avenue. Members of the Institution. —Wir11aM MCKINLEY, President of the United States; Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the United States, Chancellor; John Hay, Secretary of State; Lyman J. Gage, Secretary of the Treasury; Elihu Root, Sec- retary of War; J. W. Griggs, Attorney-General; Charles Emory Smith, Postinaster- General; John D. Long, Secretary of the Navy; KE. A. Hitchcock, Secretary of the Interior; James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture. Regents of the Institution.—Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the United States, Chancellor; S. M. Cullom, member of the Senate; Orville H. Platt, member of the v 5 | Executive Departments. 23% Senate; William Lindsay, member of the Senate; R. R. Hitt, member of the House of Representatives; Robert Adams, jr., member of the House of Representatives; Hugh A. Dinsmore, member of the House of Representatives; William I,. Wilson, citizen of Virginia (Lexington); J. B. Angell, citizen of Michigan (Ann Arbor); Andrew D. White, citizen of New York (Ithaca); J. B. Henderson, citizen of Washington, D. C.; Alexander Graham Bell, citizen of Washington, D. C. Executive Committee.—]. B. Henderson, of Washington, D. C.; W, L. Wilson, of Virginia; Alexander Graham Bell, of Washington, D. C. THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. Keeper ex officio.—S. P. LANGLEY, Metropolitan Club. Assistant Secretary in Charge.—Richard Rathbun, 1622 Massachusetts avenue. Executive Curator.—F. W. True, 1320 Yale street, Columbia Heights. Head Curators.—W. H. Holmes, F. W. True, G. P. Merrill. Curators.—Robert Ridgway, O. T. Mason, I. Stejneger, Thomas Wilson, F. A. Lucas, J. Elfreth Watkins. Honorary Curators.—Tarleton H. Bean, F. W. Clarke, F. V. Coville, W. H. Dall, B. E. Fernow, J. M. Flint, Paul Haupt, S. R. Koehler, I. O. Howard, Richard Rath- bun, Chas. D. Walcott, I,. F. Ward. Chief Clerk.—William V. Cox, Emery place, Brightwood. Chief of Corvespondence and Documents.—Randolph I. Geare, 1751 Eighteenth street NW. Chief of Buildings and Superintendence.—J. Elfreth Watkins, 1626 S street NW. Disbursing Clevk.—W. W. Karr, 1452 Euclid place NW. Librarian.—Cyrus Adler, 943 K street NW. Registrar.—S. C. Brown, 305 New Jersey avenue SE. THE, BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY. (Office in Adams Building, 1333 F street NW.) Director.—JoEN W. POWELL, 910 M street NW. LEthnologist in Charge.—W. J. McGee, 1620 P street NW. Chief Clevk.—F. F. Hilder, 419 New Jersey avenue SE. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGES. Assistant Secretary in Charge.—RICHARD RATHBUN, 1622 Massachusetts avenue. Chief Clerk.—W. 1. Adams, 2750 Fourteenth street NW. THE NATIONAI ZOOLOGICAI, PARK. (Adams Mill road.) Superintendent.—EFRANK BAKER, 1728 Columbia road. Property Clerk.—A. B. Baker, 1845 Lanier avenue NW, THE ASTROPHVYSICAI, OBSERVATORY. Director.—S. P. LANGLEY, Metropolitan Club. Aid.—C. G. Abbot, 223 Tenth street NE. THE WASHINGTON NATIONAI, MONUMENT SOCIETY. (1833. Incorporated 1859. Acts of August 2, 1876; October 1, 1888.) President ex officio.—WILLIAM McKINLEY, President of the United States. Lrst Vice-President.—]James G. Berret, 1535 I street NW. Second Vice-President.—A. R. Spofford, Library of Congress. Treasurer.—Daniel B. Clarke, 1422 Massachusetts avenue NW. Secretary.—F. M. Gunnell, 600 Twentieth street NW. Clerk.—F. 1. Harvey, jr., 2146 Florida avenue NW. Members.—John Sherman, James G. Berret, D. A. Watterson, Edward Clark, Daniel B. Clarke, A. R. Spofford, Asaph Hall, F. M. Gunnell, M. F. Morris, Samuel R. Franklin, George S. Boutwell, E. M. Gallaudet, Samuel H. Kauffmann, John M. Sons, John F. Hurst, Henry B. Brown, William A. Maury, and Henry A. Willard. 232 Congressional Directory. THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. (Incorporated by act of Congress March 3, 1863.) Section 3 of the act of incorporation provides: ‘That the National Academy of Sciences shall hold an annual meeting at such place in the United States as may be designated, and the academy shall, whenever called upon by any department of the Government, investigate, examine, experiment, and report upon any subject of science or art, the actual expense of such investigations, examinations, experiments, and reports to be paid from appropriations which may be made for the purpose; but the academy shall receive no compensation whatever for any services to the Government of the United States.” In accordance with this provision, the academy—which includes about one hun- dred members—has made many investigations and reports, at the request of the leg- islative and executive branches of the Government. The annual reports are published by Congress as House and Senate documents. President.—Wolcott Gibbs, Newport, R. I. Vice-President.—Asaph Hall, Washington, D. C. Foreign Secretary. —Alexander Agassiz, Boston, Mass. Home Secretary.—Ira Remsen, Baltimore, Md. ZTreasurer.—Charles D. Walcott, Washington, D. C. THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. (Incorporated by act of Congress January 4, 1889.) The act of incorporation provides that: ‘Said association shall report annually to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution concerning its proceedings and the con- dition of historical study in America. Said secretary shall communicate to Congress the whole of such reports, or such portions thereof as he shall see fit. The regents of the Smithsonian Institution are authorized to permit said association to deposit its collections, manuscripts, books, pamphlets, and other material for history in the Smithsonian Institution or in the National Museum, at their discretion, upon such conditions and under such rules as they shall prescribe.” In compliance with this act the annual reports of the association, with accompa- nying memoirs, are presented to the President of the Senate, through the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, and published as Senate documents. President. —FEdward Eggleston, 7 West Forty-third street, New York, N.Y. Vice-President.—Moses Coit Tyler, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. Secretary.—Herbert B. Adams, Baltimore, Md. Assistant Secretary and Curalor.—A. Howard Clark, Smithsonian Institution, Wash- ington, D. C. Zrveasuver.—Clarence W. Bowen, New York, N, VY, Department Duties. 233 DEPARTMENT DUTIES. THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. SECRETARY OF STATE. The Secretary of State is charged, under the direction of the President, with the duties appertaining to correspondence with the public ministers and the 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 medium of correspondence between the President and the chief executives 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 the extradition of fugitives from justice. He is regarded as the first in rank among the members of the Cabinet. He is also the custodian of the treaties made with foreign States, and of the laws of the United States. He grants and issues pass- ports, and exequaturs to foreign consuls in the United States are issued through his office. He publishes the laws and resolutions of Congress, amendments to the Con- stitution, 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. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE. The Assistant Secretary of State becomes the Acting Secretary of State in the absence of the Secretary. Under the organization of the Department the Assistant Secretary, Second Assistant Secretary, and Third Assistant Secretary are charged with the immediate supervision of all correspondence with the diplomatic and con- sular officers, and 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. CHIEF CLERK. The Chief Clerk has the general supervision of the clerks and employees and of the business of the Department. DIPLOMATIC BUREAU. Diplomatic correspondence and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto. CONSULAR BUREAU. Consular correspondence and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto. BUREAU OF INDEXES AND ARCHIVES. Opening, preparing, indexing, and registering all correspondence to and from the Department; the preservation of the archives. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS. Custody and disbursement of appropriations under direction of the Department; charged with custody of indemnity funds and bonds; care of the property of the Department. BUREAU OF ROLLS AND LIBRARY. Custody of the rolls, treaties, etc.; promulgation of the laws, etc.; care and super- intendence of the library and public documents; care of the Revolutionary archives, and of papers relating to international commissions. 3 BUREAU OF FOREIGN COMMERCE. Edits and publishes the monthly consular reports, special consular reports, and the annual report laid before Congress entitled ‘Commercial Relations of the United States.” 234 Congressional Directory. BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS. Matters relating to appointments; the preparation of commissions, exequaturs, and warrants of extradition; custody of the Great Seal, of applications and recommenda- tions for office, etc. THE DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY. SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY. 5 > 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 public credit; superintends the collection of the revenue, and pre- scribes the forms of keeping and rendering public accounts and of making returns; grants warrants for all moneys drawn from the Treasury in pursuance of appropria- tions 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-Inspec- tion, 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 Super- vising Architect, Director of the Mint, Director of Engraving and Printing, Supervis- ing Surgeon-General of the Marine-Hospital Service, General Superintendent of the Life-Saving Service, Supervising Inspector-General of Steamboats, Bureau of Statis- tics, Light-House Board, and in the following divisions: Bookkeeping and Warrants; Appointments; Customs; Public Moneys; Loans and Currency; Revenue-Cutter; Stationery, Printing, and Blanks; Mails and Files; Special Agents, and Miscellaneous. ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF THE TREASURY. To Assistant Secretary Spaulding is assigned the general direction and supervision of all matters pertaining to the Customs Service, and all matters relating to the public business assigned to the following bureaus, offices, and divisions: The Bureau of Navigation; the Office of the Supervising Inspector-General, Steamboat-Inspection Service; the Office of the Supervising Surgeon-Gemneral, Marine-Hospital Service; the Office of the Life-Saving Service; the Division of Customs; the Division of Special Agents, and the Division of Revenue-Cutter Service, To Assistant Secretary Vanderlip is assigned the general direction and supervision of all matters relating to the public business assigned to the following bureau, office, and divisions: the Office of the Director of the Mint; the Bureau of Engraving and Printing; the Secret Service Division; the Division of Public Moneys; the Division of Loans and Currency; the Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants, and the Division of Stationery, Printing, and Blanks; all official communications relat- ing to or making appointments, removals, or changes in compensation of the person- nel of the Department and services under its control in the District of Columbia. . To Assistant Secretary Taylor is assigned the general direction and supervision . of all matters relating to the public business assigned to the following bureaus, f offices, and divisions: The Bureau of Immigration; the Bureau of Statistics; the Office of the Coast and Geodetic Survey; the Office of the Light-House Board; the | Office of the Supervising Architect; the Office of the Chief Clerk and Superintend- ent; the Miscellaneous Division, and the Division of Mails and Files. CHIEF CLERK. The Chief Clerk supervises, under the immediate direction of the Secretary and Assistant Secretaries, the duties of the clerks and employees connected with the i Department; the superintendence of all buildings occupied by the Department in Washington, D. C.; 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 expenses 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 control of the Department Duties. . 235 Department; 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 regulations of the Department, and the charge of all business of the Secretary’s office not assigned. COMPTROLLER OF THE TREASURY. The act of July 31, 1894, reorganizing the accounting offices of the Treasury, abolished the offices of Second Comptroller of the Treasury and the Commissioner of Customs, and provided that hereafter the First Comptroller shall be known as the Comptroller of the Treasury. The Comptroller is not charged with the duty of revising accounts, except upon appeal from the settlements made by the Auditors, an appeal to be taken within one year by either the claimant, the head of the Depart- ment interested, or by the Comptroller himself. Upon the request of a disbursing officer or the head of a Department, the Comptroller is required to give his decision upon the validity of a payment to be made, which decision, when rendered, shall govern the Auditors and the Comptroller in the settlement of the account involving the payment. He is required to approve, disapprove, or modify all decisions of the Auditors making an original construction or modifying an existing construction of statutes, and to certify his action to the Auditor. He transmits all decisions made by him forthwith to the Auditor or Auditors whose duties are affected thereby. By the regulations of the Department the Comptroller passes upon the sufficiency of author- ities to indorse drafts and receive and receipt for money from the Government, upon the evidence presented in applications for duplicates of lost or destroyed United States bonds, drafts, checks, etc. The forms of keeping and rendering all public accounts (except those relating to the postal service), the recovery of debts certified by the Auditors to be due to the United States, and the preservation, with their vouchers and certificates, of accounts finally adjusted, aré under the direction of the Comp- troller. Upon revision of accounts, appealed from the several Auditors to the Comptroller, his decision upon such revision is final and conclusive upon the execu- tive branch of the Government. AUDITOR FOR THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT. The Auditor for the Treasury Department receives and examines all accounts of salaries and incidental expenses of the office of the Secretary of the Treasury and all bureaus and offices under his direction. All accounts relating to the Customs Service, the public debt, internal revenue, Treasurer and Assistant Treasurers, mints and assay offices, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Coast and Geodetic Survey, Revenue-Cutter Service, Life-Saving Service, Light-House Board, Marine Hospital, public buildings, Steamboat-Inspection Service, Immigration Service, Bureau of Nav- igation, Secret Service, Alaskan fur-seal fisheries, and all other business within the jurisdiction of the Department of the Treasury, and certifies the balances arising thereon to the Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants. The subordinate divisions of his office are— Customs Division.—Receipts and expenditures of the customs service, including fines, emoluments, forfeitures, debentures, drawbacks, and warehouse and bond accounts received from custom-houses. Internal Revenue Division.—Accounts of collectors of internal revenue, including salaries, contingent expenses, and compensation of storekeepers. Public Debt Division.—Redemption of the public debt, including principal, pre- mium, and interest, the payment of interest, redemption of certificates of deposit, notes destroyed. Miscellaneous Division.—Accounts of mint and assay offices, construction, repair, and preservation of public buildings; Treasurer of the United States, for general receipts and expenditures; Bureau of Engraving and Printing; Coast and Geodetic Survey; Revenue-Cutter Service; Life-Saving Service; Light-House Board; Marine- Hospital Service, and all other miscellaneous accounts coming to this office. AUDITOR FOR THE WAR DEPARTMENT. -~ The Auditor for the War Department receives and examines all accounts of sal- aries and incidental expenses of the offices of the Secretary of War and all bureaus and offices under his direction; all accounts relating to the military establishment, armories and arsenals, national cemeteries, fortifications, public buildings and grounds under the Chief of Engineers, rivers and harbors, the Military Academy, and to all other business within the jurisdiction of the Department of War, and cer- | | 236 : Congressional Directory. tifies the balances arising thereon to the Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants, and sends a copy of each certificate to the Secretary of War. The work is distributed among six divisions, as follows: Archives Division, Review Division, Mail and Miscellaneous Division, Paymaster and Claims Division, Pay and Bounty Division, and Military Division. AUDITOR FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARI'MENT. The Auditor for the Interior Department shall receive and examine all accounts of salaries and incidental expenses of the office of the Secretary of the Interior, and of all bureaus and offices under his direction, and all accounts relating to Army and Navy pensions, Geological Survey, public lands, Indians, Architect of the Capitol, patents, census, and to all other business within the jurisdiction of the Department of the Interior, and certify the balances arising thereon to the Division of Bookkeep- ing and Warrants, and send forthwith a copy of each certificate to the Secretary of the Interior. He also examines and approves or disapproves all requisitions for advances of money made by all persons authorized to do so in the above-named Department. AUDITOR FOR THE NAVY DEPARTMENT. The Auditor for the Navy Department examines and settles all accounts of the Navy Department, including the office of the Secretary of the Navy, and all offices and bureaus under his direction, certifying the balances arising thereon to the Secretary of the Treasury and sending a copy of each certificate to the Secretary of the Navy. Paymasters’ Accounts Division.—Adjusts accounts of pay officers of the Navy at navy-yards and stations and on vessels, accounts of the paymaster and quartermas- ter of the Marine Corps, and claims of subsidized railroads, and keeps individual accounts of seamen’s deposits of savings. Requisition and Prize Money Division.—Records requisitions and notes them for approval, keeps ledger accounts of navy appropriations, adjusts the account of Gen- eral Account of Advances, examines monthly returns of all pay officers of the Navy, reports delinquent pay officers, settles prize-money claims, furnishes the Pension Office and Navy Department with service records of officers, seamen, and marines, and has charge of the mail, records, and files of the office. ‘The Miscellaneous Claim Section adjusts claims for arrears of pay, bounty, etc., arising in the Navy and Marine Corps. Navy Pay and Allotment Division.—Adjusts accounts of purchasing pay officers of the Navy, of naval attachés at United States legations in Europe, of the Navy Department’s fiscal agent in London, of agents at coaling stations, and of the dis- bursing officer of the Navy Department, and keeps individyal accounts of allotments of officers and men of the Navy. AUDITOR FOR THE STATE AND OTHER DEPARTMENTS. The Auditor for the State and other Departments receives, examines, and certifies the balances arising thereon to the Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants all accounts of salaries and incidental expenses of the offices of the Secretary of State, the Attorney-General, and the Secretary of Agriculture, and of all bureaus and offices under their direction; all accounts relating to all other business within the jurisdiction of the Departments of State, Justice, and Agriculture; all accounts relating to the Diplomatic and Consular Service, the judiciary, United States courts, judgments of the United States courts, and Court of Claims, Executive Office, Civil Service Commission, Interstate Commerce Commission, Department of Labor, Dis- trict of Columbia, Fish Commission, Court of Claims and its judgments, Smithsonian Institution, Territorial governments, the Senate, the House of Representatives, the Public Printer, Library of Congress, Botanic Garden, and accounts of all boards, commissions, and establishments of the Government not within the jurisdiction of any of the Executive Departments. He also examines and approves or disapproves all requisitions for advances of money made by all persons authorized to do so-in any of the above-named Departments, commissions, or establishments, AUDITOR FOR THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. The Auditor for the Post-Office Department receives, examines, and adjusts all accounts relating to the postal service, or arising within the jurisdiction of the Post- Office Department. He is in a sense auditor, comptroller, and register. His deci- sions on all settlements are final, unless an appeal to the Comptroller be taken within one year. He certifies balances due direct to the Postmaster-General instead of to the Treasury Department, as in the case of the other Auditors. He countersigns and | i, WO. TTS Department Duties. 237 registers the warrants upon the Treasury issued in liquidation of settlements; super- intends the collecting of debts due the United States for the service of the Post- Office Department and all penalties imposed; directs suits and all legal proceedings in civil actions, and takes all legal measures to enforce the payment of money due the United States for the service of the Post-Office Department, and for this purpose has direct official relations with the Solicitor of the Treasury, Department of Justice. He receives and accepts, with the written consent of the Postmaster-General, offers of compromise under sections 295 and 405, Revised Statutes. He is the legal custo- dian of all contracts of the Post-Office Department and of all bonds’ of indemnity accompanying applications for duplicate warrants. ‘The work of the office is assigned as follows: The Deputy Auditor assumes charge of the Bureau as Acting Auditor during the absence of the Auditor; by direction of the Auditor he examines and signs in the name of the Auditor all certificates to the Postmaster-General for the payment of mail transportation; all certificates from the Collecting Division for the payment of balances due late and present postmasters; all statements and vouchers from the Bookkeeping Division for the consideration of the Postmaster-General; all post-office warrants issued in payment of expenses of the postal service; all collection drafts upon delinquent and late postmasters, and all miscellaneous reports and papers, except letters and requisitions. By direction of the Auditor he controls the appro- priation for furniture, carpets, and miscellaneous items, and makes all purchases thereunder; has supervision of the files of the Bureau, and personally superintends the sale and destruction of paid money orders and files seven years old, as authorized by law, in conjunction with the officer of the Post-Office Department designated by the Postmaster-General. He is requested to exercise a general supervision over the Pay, Recording, Inspecting, and Assorting and Checking Divisions. The Chief Clerk has charge of all division correspondence; the opening, reading, and assigning of all letters received to their proper divisions; the reading, preparing for signature, and press copying of all letters sent. He supervises the duties of the Executive Clerk, and has charge of the record of attendance of clerksand employees; prepares requisitions for supplies, except those affecting the appropriations for the Bureau; and in the same manner has supervision of furniture and carpets and all repairs thereof, and of the carpenter shop, and of the laborers and charwomen. He is requested to exercise a general supervision over the Bookkeeping, Collecting, and Foreign Divisions. The Law Clerk has charge of all civil suits instituted for the collection of amounts due the Post-Office Department; the submission to the Comptroller of all cases requiring his action; the consideration of offers of compromise of claims under sec- tions 295 and 409, Revised Statutes, and the giving of legal advice in all matters pertaining to the work of this Bureau. The Disbursing Clerk has charge of the preparation of pay rolls, disbursement of appropriations for the salaries of officers and employees of the Bureau, the disposi- tion of deposits on postal and money order accounts improperly transmitted to the Auditor, and the receipt and the dispatch of the registered mail addressed to and sent from the office, There are seven subordinate divisions in the Bureau, viz: The Bookkeeping Division.—Keeps the general ledger accounts of the postal service and an individual account with each postmaster and mail contractor; regis- ters Postmaster-General’s transfer drafts and all warrants drawn for transporting the mails, expenses of rural free delivery, purchase of supplies and miscellaneous expenses of the pcstal service; prepares the quarterly and annual reports of receipts and expendi- tures; receives and settles postal accounts of postmasters, postal depositories, and the disbursing clerk of the Post-Office Department. 1he Collecting Division.—Reviews the postal accounts in which differences are found by the Bookkeeping Division; collects balances due from and pays balances due postmasters on postal accounts; keeps a record of all changes of postmasters and the establishment and discontinuance of post-offices; has charge of postal files and conducts correspondence affectifig this part of the work. The Pay Division.—Adjusts and reports for payment all accounts for transporta- tion of mails; audits accounts of post-office inspectors, superintendents and assistant superintendents Railway-Mail Service, and sundry miscellaneous accounts, including post-office supplies. The Inspecting Division.—Examines postmasters’ statements of momney-order business with accompanying orders as vouchers, comparing every money order with the credit claimed for its payment by the postmaster, detecting and correcting errors and verifying fees charged for issuing international and domestic orders, and conducts correspondence incident thereto. 238 Congressional Directory. The Assorting and Checking Division.—Assorts by States and offices of issue and arranges numerically by quarters all money orders received by the Inspecting Division and compares all money orders issued, with the amounts postmasters debit themselves in their statements, detecting and correcting errors therein. The Recording Division.—Audits and adjusts the money-order accounts of post- masters, and conducts correspondence relating thereto; adjusts money-order accounts of late postmasters by payment, transfer, or collection, as indicated by the balance; prepares quarterly and annual statements of money-order transactions of the United States, both domestic and international, with revenue derived therefrom for the information of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Postmaster-General. The Foreign Division.—Adjustsand settles postal and money-order accounts with foreign countries; settles accounts of steamship companies for ocean transportation of mails; verifies all lists of money orders certified for payment in foreign countries and all lists received from foreign countries of orders certified for payment in the United States, and conducts the correspondence arising in connection with the above duties. : TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. The Treasurer of the United States is charged with the receipt and disbursement of all public moneys that may be deposited in the Treasury at Washington and the subtreasuries at Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. TLouis, New Orleans, and San Francisco, and in the mnational-bank United States depositaries; is trustee for bonds held to secure national-bank circulation and public deposits in national banks; is custodian of Indian trust-fund bonds and other public trusts; is fiscal agent for paying the interest on the public debt, and ex officio com- missioner of the sinking fund of the District of Columbia. Assistant Treasurer, United States.—Authorized by the Treasurer, with the con- sent of the Secretary of the Treasury, to act in the place and discharge any or all the duties of the Treasurer of the United States. The duties are performed under the direction of the Treasurer in the following divisions : : Chief Clerk’s Division.—Opens and distributes all mail received, and has charge of the outgoing mail ; answers all correspondence of a miscellaneous nature; keeps all records in relation to the employees of the office; has custody of the records and files; prepares estimates for appropriations and special reports; has charge of the messengers, laborers, and charwomen; makes all requisitions and distributes sup- plies; has charge of all reports and circulars and the mailing thereof; issues dupli- cates of lost or destroyed interest and transfer checks, and Treasury warrants, and disburses the salaries of employees. : Cash Division.—XKeeps the transfer accounts of subtreasuries and accounts of dis- bursing officers; makes shipments of moneys to subtreasuries and banks; receives and makes payment of moneys on various accounts; makes collection of drafts; and prepares estimates for paper for United States notes and certificates, and orders the printing of required denominations. Division of Accounts.—Receives daily from the subtreasuries, and weekly from the national banks designated as depositaries of the United States, reports on account of their receipts and expenditures for the Government; transfers funds to and from the subtreasuries, mints, and assay offices, and national-bank depositaries; directs the payment of all warrants issued against appropriations by Congress; directs the shipment of standard silver dollars and fractional silver coin from the subtreasuries and mints; and examines, verifies, and combines the accounts of the above-named offices into one account, entitled the ‘‘ General Account of Receipts and Expendi- tures of the Treasurer of the United States.” Division of National Banks.—Has custody of bonds held for national-bank circu- lation, for public deposits, and various public trusts, and makes collection of semi- annual duty. Division of Loans.—Receives for payment by check called or matured United States bonds, interest notes, and bonds of the District of Columbia; issues and mails checks for interest on registered United States and District of Columbia bonds; records on numerical registers payment of such checks when returned by Treasury offices; receives refunding certificates for conversion into 4 per cent consols of 1907; and prepares for the proper auditor accounts relating to the obligations above referred to. Division of Redemption.—Receives all currency, except national-bank notes, pre- sented for redemption, which is examined, counted, canceled, and delivered to the offices of the Secretary and Register for reexamination and recount; makes expert examinations of burned and badly mutilated currency presented; receives all regis- ¥ - - Ce Department Duties. 239 tered mail; receives and counts all remittances from postmasters in Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia made in settlement of their accounts. Division of Issues.—Prints the Treasury seal upon all issues of United States paper currency, separates sheets into single notes, and packs them in bundles of 4,000 each for delivery to the reserve vault. Counts and assorts silver and minor coins received for redemption and exchange. National Bank Redemption Agency.—Redeems national-bank notes and, after assorting them by banks of issue and charging them to the proper redemption accounts of the banks, delivers the assorted notes unfit for use to the Comptroller of the Currency for destruction and reissue, and sends those fit for use by express to the respective banks of issue. Sinking Fund Office, District of Columbia.—Pays interest on miscellaneous bonded debt of the District of Columbia, invests money provided for sinking funds and vari- ous trust funds, and keeps all accounts pertaining thereto. REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. The Register of the Treasury signs and issues all bonds of the United States, the District of Columbia, the Pacific railroads, the Cherokee Indian lands, the I ouisville and Portland Canal Company, and the Spanish indemnity, and transmits to the Treasurer of the United States schedules showing the name of every individual, corporation, etc., holding registered bonds and entitled to receive interest thereon. He signs all transfers conveying money from the United States Treasury to all the United States subtreasuries and depositories, and all the correspondence of the office. He receives, examines, and registers coupon bonds exchanged for registered bonds or redeemed and registered bonds transferred and finally redeemed. He receives, examines, arranges, and registers all redeemed United States notes, gold certificates, silver certificates, Treasury notes, detached interest coupons, interest checks on registered bonds, redeemed fractional currency, and all other United States securities redeemed and destroyed. Also, all customs, internal-revenue, and post- age stamps condemned for imperfections and destroyed. He is represented on the committee having in charge the destruction by maceration of certain of the United States securities, etc., mentioned herein. The work is performed in two divisions, as follows: Division of Loans.—The duties performed in this division include the issue, exchange, transfer, and redemption of the bonds before mentioned, and the prepara- tion of the schedules for payment of interest on the registered bonds, etc.; being in detail the receipt of new bonds after their preparation by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing and the care of same until required for issue; the issue of bonds upon warrant or certificate of the Secretary of the Treasury, showing the payment of accepted subscriptions for loans, and recording the same; the issue and recording of new registered bonds in place of those assigned by the parties or corporations in whose name they stood, and making a record of the cancellation of the original bonds; the recording of coupon and registered bonds redeemed; the examination of all assignments of registered bonds as to their sufficiency and regularity; the examina- tion of all papers submitted by the representatives of corporations, of the estates of decedents, and of persons under legal disability; also proof of succession where bonds are held in a fiduciary capacity (these papers may refer to parties or corporations in the United States or in foreign countries); the keeping of ledger accounts with every individual, corporation, or other holder of registered bonds; the keeping of general accounts showing all changes in the amounts, and summary statements of transac- tions in connection with each loan; the preparation of quarterly, semiannual, and annual schedules on various loans for the payment of interest by the Treasurer of the United States, including the footing of the schedules; the preparation of the copy of the same for the printer and the examination of proof; the filing, arrange- ment, and custody of the various books, records, and bonds, and summary statements of interest, discounts, premiums, and expenses of the public loans, together with all papers and reports connected with the business of the division. Division of Notes, Coupons, and Currvency.—The duties of this division comprise the receiving, counting, examining, arranging, and registering of all redeemed old demand notes, United States notes, gold certificates, silver certificates, Treasury notes, 4 per cent refunding certificates, one-year 5 per cent Treasury notes, two- year 5 per cent Treasury notes, two-year 5 per cent coupon Treasury notes, three-year compound-interest notes, act March 3, 1863, three-year 6 per cent com- pound-interest notes, act June 30, 1864, and redeemed fractional currency, detached interest coupons, exchanged and redeemed coupon bonds, and interest checks on registered bonds, Also all customs, internal-revenue, and postage stamps condemned 240 Congressional Directory. for imperfections and destroyed. This division represents the Register on the com- mittee having in charge the destruction by maceration of certain of the United States securities, etc., referred to, and the committee having in charge the destruc- tion of discount, burnt, and mutilated money. All redeemed interest-bearing securi- ties of the United States, including certificates payable to order, are filed in this division. : COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. The Comptroller of the Currency has, under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, the supervision 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.—The examination and consolidation of the reports of national banks. Redemption Division.—The redemption and destruction of notes issued by national banks. 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 transfers 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. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAI, 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, storekeepers, and other subordinate officers; the preparation and distribution of stamps, instructions, regulations, forms, blanks, hydrometers, stationery, etc.; and analyses of foods and drugs in the District of Columbia, and payment of bounty on sugar. The business of his office is divided into the several subject-matters and distributed among eleven divisions, as follows: Appointments.—Discipline of official force, general files, registering and copying letters, distributing mail, issuing commissions and leaves of absence, printing and distributing blanks, blank books, and stationery. Law.—Seizures, forfeitures, compromises, suits, abatement and refunding claims, direct taxes, 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 appropriations 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 storekeepers, 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. I ntinis Aeon, bonded accounts, warehouse reports of storekeepers and gaugers, exports, and drawbacks. Revenue Agents.—General supervision of the work of revenue agents; examina- tion and distribution of their reports; direction of their investigations and exami- PRR Fa oe RIAN [Rin pa FREE i Soper RR Department Duties. 241 nation of their accounts. Also charged with supervision of the work incident to the collection of the tax on oleomargarine. Chemistry.— Analyses of all samples submitted for test of products subject to the payment of tax under internal-revenue laws; supervision of chemical work in collectors’ offices, and other miscellaneous scientific work. Documentary and Proprietary Stamps.—All matters pertaining to the use of stamps on documents, instruments, papers, etc., taxable under Schedule A, and all matters pertaining to the use of proprietary stamps upon patent medicines, per- fumery, etc., taxable under Schedule B. Miscellaneous Division.—Matters pertaining to the collection of the tax on oleo- margarine, filled cheese, and mixed flour. : : COMMISSIONER OF NAVIGATION. The Commissioner of Navigation is charged with general superintendence of the commercial marine and merchant seamen of the United States, except so far as supervision is lodged with other officers of the Government. He is specially charged with the decision of all questions relating to the issue of registers, enrollments, and licenses of vessels and the filing of those documents, with the supervision of laws relating to the admeasurement, letters, and numbers of vessels, and with the final decision of questions concerning the collection and refund of tonnage taxes. He is empowered to change the names of vessels, prepares annually a list of vessels of the United States, and reports annually to the Secretary of the Treasury the operations of the laws relative to navigation. 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, tempera- ture and current observations 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 form of annual reports, which include professional papers of value; bulletins which give information deemed important for immediate publication; notices to mariners, issued monthly; tide tables, issued annu- ally; charts upon various scales, including harbor charts, general charts of the coast, and sailing charts; chart catalogues and Coast Pilots. SUPERVISING INSPECTOR-GENERAIL OF STEAM VESSELS. The Supervising Inspector-General superintends the administration of the steam- boat-inspection laws, presides at the meeting of the Board of Supervising Inspectors, receives all reports, and examines all accounts of inspectors. The Board of Supervising Inspectors meets in Washington annually, on the third Wednesday in January, to establish regulations for carrying out the provisions of the steamboat-inspection laws. SUPERVISING SURGEON-GENERAIL MARINE-HOSPITAI, 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 super- vision includes the purveying of medical and other supplies, the assignment of and orders to medical officers, the examination 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 physically to determine their fitness before shipment, and a like examination is made of the candidates 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 February 15, 1893, he is charged with the framing of regulations for the prevention of the introduction of contagious diseases and the prevention of their spread; and he is also charged with the conduct of the quarantine service of the 242 Congressional Directory. United States. He has the direction of laboratories established to investigate the cause of contagious diseases, and publishes each week, under the title of ‘Public Health Reports,” sanitary reports received from all parts of the United States and (through the State Department) from all foreign countries. Under the law of March 28, 18go, known as the interstate quarantine law, he is charged with preparing the rules and regulations, under direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, necessary to prevent the introduction of certain contagious diseases from one State to another, and he has also supervision of the medical inspection of alien immigrants, which, under the law of March 3, 1891, is conducted by the med- ical officers of the Marine-Hospital Service. BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION, It is the duty of the Commissioner-General of Immigration to prepare and revise all regulations pertaining to immigration and to supervise the expenditures of the appropriations for ‘‘ Expenses regulating immigration’ and the ‘“ Enforcement of the alien contract-labor laws,” and certify same to the accounting officers of the Treasury Department. All inspection and other officers in the service after appoint- ment will be assigned to duty by the Commissioner-General, and their official duties and conduct will be supervised by him; and all correspondence connected with immi- gration shall be conducted by him. All appeals from the decisions of the boards of special inquiry at the several ports, touching the right of an alien to land in the United States, shall be decided by him, subject to the approval or disapproval of the Secretary of the Treasury. He shall cause all alleged violations of the alien con- tract-labor laws to be investigated and submit such evidence as he may be able to obtain to the proper United States district attorney for prosecution, if deemed advisa- ble. He shall collect and compile all statistics relative to immigration and shall make annual reports in writing of the transactions of his office to the Secretary of the Treasury. GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT OF THE LIFE-SAVING SERVICE. It is the duty of the General Superintendent to supervise the organization and government of the employees of the service; to prepare and revise regulations therefor as may be necessary; to supervise the expenditure of all appropriations made for the support and maintenance of the Life-Saving Service; to examine the accounts of disbursements 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 belong- ing is properly accounted for; to acquaint himself, 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 stations which may appear to be meritorious and available; to exercise supervision over the selection 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 encroach- ment of the sea or by other causes; to prepare and submit to the Secretary of the Treasury estimates for the support of the service; to collect and compile the statis- tics 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 ILife-Saving Service, and of the operations of said service during the year. 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 coun- tries and by customs districts; 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; the inward and outward movement of tonnage in our foreign trade and the countries whence entered and for which cleared, distinguishing the nationalities of the foreign vessels. The publications of the Bureau are as follows: Annual Report on Commerce and Navigation; Annual Statistical Abstract of the United States; Monthly Reports on Commerce and Finance; Monthly Reports of Total Values of Foreign Commerce and Immigration; Monthly Report of Exports of Breadstuffs, Provisions, Petroleum, and Cotton. The divisions of the Bureau are as follows: Division of Examination and Revision; Division of Compilation* Miscellaneous Division; Library and Files. | 4 ie i nn rr i | Department Duties. 243 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, embracing United States notes, bonds, and certificates, national-bank notes, internal- revenue, postage, and customs stamps, Treasury drafts and checks, disbursing officers’ checks, licenses, commissions, patent and pension certificates, and portraits author- ized by law of deceased members of Congress and other public officers. THE, LIGHT-HOUSE, BOARD. The Light-House Board has charge, under the superintendence of the Secretary of the Treasury, of all administrative duties relating to the construction and mainte- nance of light-houses, light-vessels, beacons, fog signals, buoys, and their appendages, and has charge of all records and property appertaining to the light-house establish- ment. THE DEPARTMENT OF WAR. 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 Department, of all purchases of Army supplies, and of all expenditures for the sup- port and transportation 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 on Ordnance and Fortification. He has charge of all matters relating to river and harbor improvements; the pre- vention of obstruction to navigation; the establishment of harbor lines, and approves the plans and location of bridges authorized by Congress to be constructed over the navigable waters of the United States. : 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. 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 Secretary of War. MILITARY BUREAUS OF THE WAR DEPARTMENT. The chiefs of the military bureaus of the War Department are officers of the Regula- 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 Presi- dent, the Secretary of War, and the Commanding General of the Army, and con- ducts the correspondence between the latter and the Army; receives reports and returns pertaining to the Army; prepares commissions, appointments, and acceptances of resignations for issuance; and, under the immediate direction of the Secretary of War, has charge of the recruiting service. The Inspector-General, with his assistants, inspects all military commands and stations, 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. 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 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 repairs the same; furnishes water, heating and lighting apparatus; pays guides, spies, and interpreters, and is in charge of national cemeteries. The Commissary-General of Subsistence has administrative control of the Subsist- ence Department; the disbursement of its appropriations; the providing of rations 56-18T—2D ED——17 | 244 Congressional Directory. \) and their issue to the Army; the purchase and distribution of articles authorized to be kept for sale to officers and enlisted men; the administrative examination of | accounts of subsistence funds preliminary to their settlement by the proper accounting officers of the Treasury; and the examination and settlement of returns of subsistence supplies. Re 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 employees of the Department; with furnishing funds to + 4 his officers and seeing that they duly account for the same, and with a preliminary , i 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 construction and repair of fortifications, whether permanent or temporary; with torpedoes for coast defense; with all works of defense; with all military roads and 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 river and harbor improvements, with military and geographical 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 Secretary of War. 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 dutiesare 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 maintaining uni- | formity and economy in their fabrication, for insuring their good quality, and for their preservation and distribution. The Judge-Advocate-General is directed by law to ¢‘ receive, review, and cause to be recorded the proceedings of all courts-martial, courts of inquiry, and military commissions.”” He also furnishes the Secretary of War information and advice | relating to lands under control of the War Department, and 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 prisoners; 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 disbursing officers, colleges, and others; examines, revises, and drafts charges and specifications against officers and soldiers; and also | drafts and examines deeds, contracts, licenses, leases, and legal papers generally. 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 mili- ES | tary signaling. i The Chief of the Record and Pension Office is charged by law with the custody of the military and hospital records of the volunteer armies and the transaction of the | pension and other business of the War Department connected therewith, including | the publication of the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion. The work of the office embraces all subjects relating to the service of organizations, officers, and enlisted men of the volunteer armies, and includes the answer to calls from the ‘Commissioner of Pensions, the accounting officers of the Treasury, and others for | information required in the adjudication of claims against the National and State governments, the adjustment of the individual records of officers and enlisted men | under the general and special legislation of Congress relating thereto, and the gen- i eral correspondence of the Department relating to the volunteer forces. The records of the office include those of the late Provost-Marshal-General’s Bureau and the | Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands; also the Confederate archives, | embracing those relating to the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of the Confederate Government. ~gieiy Department Duties. 245 THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. 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, when they are required by the President or by the heads of the other Executive Departments, on questions of law arising in the administration of their respectivé Departments; he exercises a gen- eral 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 employees 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 investigation of legal questions and in the preparation of opinions. SOLICITOR-GENERAL,. The Solicitor-General assists the Attorney-General in the performance of his gen- eral 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 Attorney-General so directs, any such case in any court of the United States may be conducted and azgued 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. ASSISTANT ATTORNEVS-GENERAL,. Four Assistant Attorneys-General assist the Attorney-General and the Solicitor- General in the performance of their duties. They 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 seven assistant attorneys to assist him; another 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 Assistant Attorney-General for the Department of the Interior, the Assistant Attorney-General for the Post-Office Department, the Solicitor of the Treasury, the Solicitor of Internal Revenue, Treasury Department, and the Solicitor for the Depart- ment of State. SOLICI'EOR FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. The Solicitor is the law officer of the Department, and investigates questions referred to him by the Secretary and Assistant Secretaries covering matters of both municipal and international law. SOLICITOR OF THE TREASURY. 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 compro- mise 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 disburs- ing 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 cus- toms, navigation, banking, and registry laws, and in the administration of the Department. He is also charged by law with the supervision of suits and proceed- ings 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. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY-GENERAI, FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. The Assistant Attorney-General is the chief law officer of this Department. When requested he advises the Secretary and Assistant Secretaries upon questions of law arising in the administration of the Department. All appeals from the General Iand * 246 Congressional Directory. Office are sent to his office for consideration. Oral arguments are heard by him in the more important cases, or by brief; and decisions are prepared under his super- vision for the signature of the Secretary or First Assistant Secretary, as the case may be. The Assistant Attorney-General is aided in this and his other work by twenty assistant attorneys. ‘THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. : POSTMASTER-GENERAL, The Postmaster-General has the direction and management of the Post-Office Department. He appoints all officers and employees of the Department, except the four Assistant Postmasters-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 $1,000; 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. 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 post- masters 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 appointment of letter carriers, and the general supervision of the system. Division of Post-Office Supplies.—The duty of purchasing stationery, blanks and books, wrapping paper, twine, letter balances, and canceling stamps, and supplying the Department and post-offices with such quantities of these supplies as they are upon requisition entitled to receive. Money-Order Division.—Under the immediate direction of the Superintendent, who has supervision and control thereof, including the domestic money-order business and the superintendence of the international momney-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. ead-Letler 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 regulations; 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 unde- livered matter; the examination and forwarding or return of all letters which have failed of delivery; the inspection and return to the country of origin of undelivered 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. Correspondence Division.—To this division are referred inquiries received from postmasters and others relative to the construction of postal laws and regulations, disputes regarding the delivery of mail matter, and all correspondence of a miscel- laneous character. 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: The Contract Division prepares all advertisements inviting proposals for star, steam- boat, 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 correspond- ence relating thereto, and prepares statistics and reports of mail service required by law. "The 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 deductions 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, em | i A EE ee Department Duties. 247 and the correspondence relative to nonperformance of contract requirements for carrying the mails. The 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 tlle returns and computes basis of pay therefrom; prepares cases for the adjustment of allowances to railroads for carrying the mails and for postal cars, and attends to all correspondence relating to these matters. The Mail Equipment Division is charged with the preparation of advertisements inviting proposals 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. The 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 appointment, 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 and distribution of mail matter in railway post-office cars and post-offices, and conducts the weighing of mails when ordered. The Office of Foreign Mails has charge of all foreign postal arrangements (except those relating to the money-order system), including the preparation of postal con- ventions and the regulations for their execution, as well as the consideration of ques- tions arising under them; and conducts the correspondence relative thereto both with foreign Governments and private citizens. It also has the supervision of the ocean mail steamship service in all its details, including the settlement of the accounts with steamship companies for the conveyance of mails from the United States to foreign countries. THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Third Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the Finance Office, etc., embracing the following five divisions: Division of Finance.—The duty of issuing warrants and drafts in payment of balances reported by the Auditor to be due to mail contractors or other persons and the superintendence of accounts between the Department and the Treasurer and Assistant Treasurers and special designated depositaries of the United States. Division of Postage Stamps and Stamped Envelopes.—The issuing of postage stamps, stamped envelopes, newspaper wrappers, and postal cards; also the sup- plying of postmasters. with envelopes for their official use, including registered- package envelopes. Division of Registered Letlers.—The duty of preparing instructions for the guid- ance of postmasters relative to registered letters, and all correspondence connected therewith; also the compilation of statistics as to the transaction of the business. Division of Mail Classification.—The duty of passing upon the applications of publishers for the entry of newspapers and periodicals into the mails as second-class matter, and generally the control of all business relating to the rates of postage and the classification of mail matter. Division of Files, Mails, efc.—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. Division of Redemption.—The duty of receiving, disposing of and authorizing credits for redeemed, damaged, and unsalable supplies returned by postmasters. The office of the Third Assistant Postmaster-General has also charge of the Special Delivery System. FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the Bureau including the Divisions of Appointments, of Bonds and Commissions, and of Post-Office Inspectors and Mail Depredations. : Division of Appoiniments.—Thé duty of preparing all cases for establishment, dis- continuance, 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 approval of same) 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, and the consideration and adjustment 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. 248 Congressional Directory. THE DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY. 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 superin- ines of construction, manning, armament, equipment, and employment of vessels of war. The Chief Clerk has general charge of the records and correspondence of the Sec- retary’s Office. 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. NAVAI, 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. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. The duties of the Bureau of ‘Navigation comprise all that relates to the promulga- tion, record, and enforcement of the Secretary’s orders to the fleets and to the officers of the Navy, except such orders as pertain to the office of the Secretary; the education of officers and men, including the Naval Academy and technical schools for officers (except the War College and Torpedo School), the apprentice establishment, and schools for the technical education of enlisted men, and to the supervision and control of the Naval Home, Philadelphia; the enlistment and discharge of all enlisted per- sons, including appointed petty officers for general and special service. It controls all rendezvous and receiving ships, and provides transportation for all enlisted persons and appointed petty officers; establishes 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 publication; has under its direction the preparation, revision, and enforcement of all tactics, drill books, signal codes, cipher codes, and the uniform regulations. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. The duties of the Bureau of Yards and Docks comprise all that relates to the plan- ning, construction, and maintenance of all docks (including dry docks), wharves, slips, piers, quay walls, and buildings of all kinds, for whatever purpose needed, within the limits of the navy-yards, but not of hospitals and magazines outside of those limits, nor of buildings for which it does not estimate. It repairs and fur- nishes 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 administration of the navy-yards; provides and has sole control of all landings, derricks, shears, cranes, sewers, dredg- ing, railway tracks, cars, and wheels, trucks, grading, paving, walks, shade trees, inclosure walls and fences, ditching, reservoirs, cisterns, fire engines and apparatus, all watchmen, and all things necessary, including labor, for the cleaning of the yards and the protection of the public property. BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT. The duties of the Bureau of Equipment comprise all that relates to the equipment 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 department of steamers, and fuel for steamers, the ropewalks, and the shops for making anchors and cables, rigging, sails, galleys, and cooking utensils, the Naval Observatory, Nautical Almanac, compass offices, and pilotage. It has under its control the Hydro- graphic Office, the collection of foreign surveys, publication and supply charts, sailing directions, and nautical works, and the dissemination of nautical and hydro- graphic information to the Navy and mercantile marine. Department Duties. 249 BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. The duties of the Bureau of Ordnance comprise all that relates to the manufacture or purchase 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 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 conjunc- tion 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 pre- scribes 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, furni- ture for ships’ 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 distribution of thickness have been deter- mined by the Bureau of Ordnance; has control of all vessels 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 propulsion of naval vessels, and will also include steam pumps, steam heaters and connections, and the steam machinery necessary for actuating the appa- ratus by which turrets are turned. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. The duties of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery comprise all that relates to laboratories, naval hospitals, and dispensaries, the furnishing of all supplies, medi- cines, 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, instru- ments, 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 completion has exclusive control of the same, and makes all contracts for and superintends all the work done under it. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS. The duties of the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts comprise all that relates to supplying the Navy with provisions, clothing, small stores, fresh water, and contin- gent stores in the Paymaster’s Department; the reception, care, and custody of all stores not exempt by order from the general storekeeper’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-GENERAIL. It is 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 250 Congressional Directory. and promotion in the naval service; to prepare the charges and specifications and the necessary orders convening 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 pre- pare the necessary orders convening courts of inquiry, boards for the -examina- tion 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 correspondence relating to the business connected with the increase of the Navy, including the preparation of advertisements inviting proposals for the construc- tion of new vessels, or for furnishing 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 entered into and bonds to be fur- nished 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 discipline 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 statutory 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 affecting 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 recruiting service of the corps, and of the necessary expenses thereof, including the establishment of recruit- ing offices. THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. The Secretary of the Interior is charged with the supervision of public business relating to patents for inventions; pensions and bounty lands; the public lands and surveys; the Indians; education; railroads; the Geological Survey; the census; the Hot Springs Reservation, Arkansas; Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, and the Yosemite, Sequoia, and General Grant parks, California; distribution of appropria- tions for agricultural and mechanical colleges in the States and Territories; the custody and distribution of certain public documents; and supervision of certain hospitals and eleemosynary institutions in the District of Columbia. He also exer- cises certain powers and duties in relation to the Territories of the United States. FIRST ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF T'HE INTERIOR. To the First Assistant Secretary of the Interior is assigned the direction and super- vision of matters relating to official bonds and bonds for the fulfillment of contracts; signing requisitions for Treasury warrants; business relating to the Territories; con- tracts and open-market purchases of Indian supplies; surveys, allotments, deeds, and leases of Indian lands; Indian annuities and trust funds; depredation claims; business from the office of the Commissioner of Railroads; repayments of money for PA afi EE rs waar ame i or Department Duties. 251 public lands erroneously sold and cash indemnity for swamp lands; Hot Springs of Arkansas; Yellowstone, Yosemite, and other national parks; and acts as Secretary in the absence of that officer. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. To the Assistant Secretary of the Interior is assigned the consideration and decision of appeals from the Commissioner of Pensions and questions relating to violations of the pension law; appeals from the administrative action of the Commissioner of Pat- ents; countersigning of letters patent; business from the office of the Commissioner of Education, Government Hospital for the Insane, Freedman’s Hospital, Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, education of the blind of the District of Colum- bia; admission to practice and disbarment of attorneys before the Department and bureaus; approval of requests and vouchers for advertising, and vouchers for trans- portation and other expenses of inspectors and special agents, and acts as Secretary in the absence of that officer and of the First Assistant Secretary. CHIEF CLERK. The Chief Clerk of the Department of the Interior has the general supervision of the clerks and employees; of the order of business, records, and correspondence of the Secretary’s Office; of all expenditures from appropriations 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, 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 interferences, and thirty-six 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 sub- sequent 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 super- vision over business arising in divisions of the Bureau assigned, under order of the Commissioner, to his immediate charge. COMMISSIONER OF THE GENERAI, LAND OFFICE. The Commissioner of the General Iand Office is charged with the survey, manage- ment, and sale of the public domain, and the issuing of titles therefor, whether derived from confirmations of grants made by former governments, by sales, dona- tions, or grants for schools, railroads, military 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, trans- portation, and distribution of presents and annuities; and reports annually the relations of the Government with each tribe. He is aided by an Assistant Com- missioner, 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 man- agement of schools and school systems and methods of ‘teaching as shall aid the people of the United States in the establishment and maintenance of efficient school systems, and otherwise promote the cause of education 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 or credit or subsidy in bonds or lands; to examine the books 252 Congressional Directory. and accounts of each of said railroad 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 Government directors of any of said railway 2 companies in all matters which come under their cognizance, 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 railroad companies, their road, accounts, and affairs, for the fiscal year ending June 30 immediately preceding. DIRECTOR OF THE GEOLOGICAI, 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, and of survey of forest reserves. DIRECTOR OF THE CENSUS. taking of the census of the United States, Alaska, and the Hawaiian Islands, and the subsequent arrangement, compilation, and publication of the statistics collected. The census of 1900 will be the Twelfth Census and will be taken under the act of | The Director (heretofore entitled Superintendent) of the Census supervises the i Congress approved March 3, 1899. THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE. The Secretary of Agriculture exercises personal supervision of public business relating to the agricultural industry. He appoints all the officers and employees of the Department, with the exception of the Assistant Secretary and the Chief of the Weather Bureau, who are appointed by the President, and directs the management of all the divisions, offices, and bureaus embraced in the Department. He exercises advisory supervision over the agricultural 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, includ- ing the inspection and transportation of cattle and the inspection of cattle-carrying vessels. He is charged especially with carrying out the chief purpose of the Department, which is “to acquire and diffuse among the people of the United States useful infor- mation on subjects connected with agriculture in the most comprehensive sense of that word and to procure, propagate, and distribute among the people new and valuable seeds of plants.” The Assistant Secretary of Agriculture performs such duties as may be required ! by law or prescribed by the Secretary. He also becomes the Acting Secretary of | Agriculture in the absence of the Secretary. CHIEF CLERK. The Chief Clerk has the general supervision of the clerks and employees; of the order of business, records, and correspondence of the Secretary’s office; of all expend- itures from appropriations for contingent expenses, stationery, etc.; of the enforce- ment of the general regulations of the Department; and of the buildings occupied by | the Department of Agriculture. | THE, WEATHER BUREAU. | The Chief of the Weather Bureau, under the direction of the Secretary of Agri- culture, has charge of the forecasting of weather; the issue of storm warnings; the - display of weather and flood signals for the benefit of agriculture, commerce, and 4 ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE. Re § L} i { i { Department Duties. 253 navigation; the gaging and reporting 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 reporting of temperature and rain- fall 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. The Bureau of Animal Industry makes investigations as to the existence of dan- gerous communicable diseases of live stock; superintends the measures for their extirpation, and makes original investigations as to the nature and prevention of such diseases. It inspects live stock and their products slaughtered for food con- sumption; has charge of the inspection of import and export animals, of the inspec- tion of vessels for the transportation of export cattle, and of the quarantine stations for imported neat cattle; generally supervises the interstate movement of cattle and reports on the condition and means of improving the animal industries of the country. DIVISION OF STATISTICS. The Statistician collects information as to crop production and the numbers and status of farm animals, through a corps of county and township correspondents and State agents, and obtains similar information from foreign countries through special agents, assisted by consular, agricultural, and commercial authorities. He records, tabulates, and coordinates statistics .of agricultural production, distribution, and consumption, the authorized data of Governments, institutes, societies, boards of trade, and individual experts; and issues a monthly crop report for the information of producers and consumers. SECTION OF FOREIGN MARKETS. The Section of Foreign Markets has for its object the extension of the agricul- tural export trade of the United States. It investigates the requirements of foreign markets, studies the conditions of demand and supply as disclosed by the records of production, importation, and exportation, inquires into the obstacles confronting trade extension, and disseminates through printed reports and otherwise the infor- mation collected. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS AND DISBURSEMENTS. The Division of Accounts and Disbursements audits and pays all accounts and adjusts claims against the Department; decides questions involving the expend- iture of public funds; prepares advertisements, schedules, and contracts for annual supplies, leases, and agreements; issues requisitions for the purchase of supplies, requests for passenger and freight transportation; prepares the annual estimates of appropriations, and attends to all other business relating to the financial interests of the Department. DIVISION OF CHEMISTRY. The Division of Chemistry makes investigations of soils, fertilizers, and agricul- tural products, and such analyses as pertain in general to the interests of agriculture. It investigates the composition and adulteration of foods and the composition of field products in relation to their nutritive value and to the constituents which they derive from the soil, fertilizers, and the air. It cooperates with the chemists of the agricul- tural experiment stations in all matters pertaining to the relations of chemistry to agricultural interests. It also cooperates with all the other scientific divisions of the Department in all matters pertaining to chemistry in their work, and, through the Secretary of Agriculture, conducts investigations of a chemical nature for other Departments of the Government at the request of their respective Secretaries. OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS. The Office of Experiment Stations represents the Department in its relations to the agricultural colleges and experiment stations, which are now in operation in all the States and Territories, and directly manages the experiment stations in Alaska. It seeks to promote the interests of agricultural education and investigation throughout the United States. It collects and disseminates general information regarding the colleges and stations, and publishes accounts of agricultural investigations at home and abroad. It also indicates lines of inquiry, aids in the conduct of cooperative experiments, reports upon the expenditures and work of the stations, and in general furnishes them with such advice and assistance as will best promote the purposes for 254 Congressional Directory. which they were established. It is also charged with investigations on the nutritive value and economy of human foods and on irrigation, which are largely conducted in cooperation with the colleges and stations. DIVISION OF ENTOMOLOGY. The Entomologist obtains and disseminates information regarding insects injurious to vegetation; investigates insects sent him in order to give appropriate remedies; conducts investigations of this character in different parts of the country, and mounts and arranges specimens for illustrative and museum purposes. BIOLOGICAL SURVEY. The Division of Biological Survey studies the geographic distribution of animals and plants, and maps the natural life zones of the country; it also investigates the economic relations of birds and mammals, and recommends measures for the preser- vation of beneficial and the destruction of injurious species. DIVISION OF FORESTRY. The Division of Forestry investigates methods and trees for planting in the treeless West, gives practical assistance to tree planters, and also to farmers, lumbermen, and others in handling forest lands; it studies commercial trees to determine their special values in forestry, and also studies forest fires and other forest problems. DIVISION OF BOTANY. The Division of Botany investigates botanical agricultural problems, including the introduction of valuable seeds and plants from foreign countries; the extension of American agriculture through the home production of plants and plant products now imported from abroad; the encouragement of higher standards of purity and value in commercial agricultural seeds; methods of controlling the spread of weeds or preventing their introduction into this country; the dangers, effects, and antidotes for poisonous plants; the native plant resources of the country, and other subjects of economic botany. DIVISION OF AGROSTOLOGY. The Division of Agrostology is charged with the investigation of the natural his- tory, geographic distribution, and uses of grasses and forage plants, their adaptation to special soils and climates, the introduction of promising native and foreign kinds into cultivation, and the preparation of publications and correspondence relative to these plants. DIVISION OF POMOLOGY. 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 intro- duces new and untried fruits from foreign countries. DIVISION OF VEGETABLE PHYSIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY. The Division of Vegetable Physiology and Pathology has for its object a study of the normal and abnormal life processes of plants. It seeks, by investigations in the laboratory and experiments in the field, to determine the causes of disease and the best means of preventing the same. It studies plant physiology in its bearing on pathology and the growth of plants in general. DIVISION OF SOILS. The Division of Soils has for its object the investigation of soils in their relation to crops, the mapping of soils, the investigation and mapping of alkali lands, and investigations of the growth, curing, and fermentation of tobacco. OFFICE OF PUBLIC-ROAD INQUIRIES. The Office of Public-Road Inquiries collects information concerning the systems of road management throughout the United States, conducts investigations and experiments regarding the best methods of road making, and prepares publications on this subject. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. The Division of Publications edits all bulletins, reports, and circulars, and exer- cises supervision of the printing, publishing, and illustration work of the Depart- ment and the distribution of all publications with the exception of those turned over | Department Duties. 255 by law to the Superintendent of Documents for sale at the price affixed by him; it issues, in the form of press notices, official information of interest to agriculturists, and distributes to agricultural publications and writers synopses of Department pub- lications. DIVISION OF GARDENS AND GROUNDS. 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 conservatories and gardens for testing and propagating exotic and economic plants. DIVISION OF SEEDS. This division is occupied mainly with the, supervision of the Congressional and miscellaneous distribution of seeds, as provided for by act of Congress. Under the law two-thirds of the whole quantity purchased are sent out upon requests of Sen- ators, Representatives, and Delegates, and under their franks, and the necessary books and accounts with members of Congress are kept in this division. THE INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. This Commission, appointed under ‘‘An act to regulate commerce,’’ approved Feb- ruary 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 transportation 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 Columbia 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 to inquire into and report upon the reasonableness of rates on interstate traffic, to decide questions of unjust discrimination and of undue preference, to prescribe the publicity to be given to joint tariffs, and to insti- tute 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 produc- tion of books and papers, to hear complaints of a violation of the act made against any such carrier, and to determine what reparation shall be made to a party wronged; to institute inquiries 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. Under the act of August 7, 1888, all railroad and telegraph companies to which the United States have granted any subsidy in lands or bonds or loan of credit for the construction of either railroad or telegraph lines are required to file annual reports with the Commission, and such other reports as the Commission may call for. The act also directs every such company to file with the Commission copies of all contracts and agreements of every description existing between it and every other person or corporation whatsoever in reference to the ownership, possession, or oper- ation of any telegraph lines over or upon the right.of way, and to decide questions relating to the interchange of business between such Government-aided telegraph company and any connecting telegraph company. The act provides penalties for failure to perform and carry out within a reasonable time the order or orders of the Commission. The act of March 2, 1893, known as the ‘Safety Appliance Act,’’ provides that within specified periods railroad cars used in interstate commerce must be equipped with automatic couplers and standard height of drawbars for freight cars, and have grab irons or hand holds in the ends and sides of each car. A further provision is that locomotive engines used in moving interstate traffic shall be fitted with a power 256 Congressional Directory. driving-wheel brake and appliances for operating the train-brake system, and a suf- ficient number of cars in the train shall be equipped with power or train brakes. The act directs the Commission to lodge with the proper district attorneys informa- tion of such violations as may come to its knowledge. The Commission is author- ized to, from time to time, upon full hearing and for good cause, extend the period within which any common carrier shall comply with the provisions of the statute. The act of June 1, 1898, concerning carriers engaged in interstate commerce and their employees, known as the ‘‘Arbitration Act,” directs the Chairman of the Inter- state Commerce Commission and the Commissioner of Labor to use their best efforts, by mediation and conciliation, to settle controversies between railway companies and their employees. Every agreement of arbitration made under the act must be forwarded to the Chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commission, who shall file the same in the office of that Commission. When the agreement of arbitration is signed by employees individually instead of a labor organization, the act provides, if various specified conditions have been complied with, that the Chairman of the Commission shall, by notice in writing, fix a time and place for the meeting of the board of arbitrators. If the two arbitrators chosen by the parties fail to select a third within five days after the first meeting, the third arbitrator shall be named by the Chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commission and the Commissioner of Labor. ‘ THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. COMMISSIONER OF LABOR, The Department of Labor was established by act of Congress approved June 13, 1888. It is placed in charge 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 relations 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 ascertain 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 classification show- ing the different elements of cost of such articles of production, including wages paid in such industries, etc. It is also the duty of the Commissioner to ascertain and report as to the effect of the customs 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 combinations of capital, business operations, or of labor, and what effect such trusts or other combinations 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 employees 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 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. He is also authorized, by act of March 2, 1895, to publish a bulletin of the Depart- ment of Labor as to the condition of labor in this and other countries, condensations of State and foreign labor reports, facts as to conditions of employment, and such other facts as may be deemed of value to the industrial interests of the country; by act of July 1, 1898, he is authorized to compile and publish annually, as a part of the Bulletin of the Department of Labor, an abstract of the main features of the official statistics of the cities of the United States having over thirty thousand population, and there shall be printed one edition of not exceeding 15,000 copies (act of June 4, 1897,) of each issue of said bulletin for distribution by the Department of Labor. This bulletin is issued every other month and contains usually from 120 to 150 pages. | Department Duties. 257 THE 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 employees, 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, such rules to provide, among other things, for open competitive examinations for testing the fitness of applicants for the public service, the filling of classified positions by selections from among those pass- ing with highest grades, an apportionment of appointments in the Departments at Washington among the States and Territories, and the prohibition of the use of offi- cial authority to coerce the political action of any person or body. The act also pro- < vides for investigations touching the enforcement of the rules promulgated, and forbids, under penalty of fine or imprisonment, or both, the solicitation by any per- son in the service of the United States of contributions to be used for political purposes from persons in such service, or the collection of such contributions by any person in a Government building. a OE a EXTENT OF THE SERVICE. In the year 1898 the number of persons in the classified civil service was estimated to be 83,817, made up as follows: 78,728 classified (made subject to the provisions of the civil-service act and rules) by reason of designation, duties performed, or com- pensation, including 3,483 person (2,240 of whom are Indians) excepted wholly or | in part from the requirements of examination; 5,063 classified under regulations of the Navy Department, approved by the Commission; and 26 classified, who were ! appointed by the President solely. Tables based upon data furnished to the Com- mission by the several Departments were compiled to show the extent and distribu- tion of the service on June 30, 1896, and published as House Document No. 202, Fifty- fourth Congress. As the Departments have not reported the changes of status of positions due to changes in the rules under the President’s order of May 29, 1899, it is impracticable to present statistics of a later date. | DIVISIONS OF THE, SERVICE. The classified civil service is divided into five great branches, as follows: The Departmental Service, the Customs Service, the Postal Service, the Government | Printing Service, and the Internal-Revenue Service. The Departmental Service includes all officers and employees who, on the one hand, are not appointed subject to the consent of the Senate, and, on. the other hand, are above the grade of laborers, and who are serving in, or on detail from (1) the Departments, Commissions, and Offices in the District of Columbia; (2) the Railway- Mail Service; (3) the Indian Service; (4) the Pension Agencies; (5) the Steamboat- Inspection Service; (6) the Marine-Hospital Service; (7) the Light-House Service; (8) the Mints and Assay Offices; (9) the Revenue-Cutter Service; (10) the Subtreas- | uries; (11) the Engineer Department at Large; (12) the Ordnance Department at | Large; (13) the force employed under custodians of Federal buildings; and (14) those employées outside of the District of Columbia between the extremes before | mentioned whose duties are clerical or medical, or who serve as watchmen, messen- gers, draftsmen, computers, engineers, firemen, or as superintendents of construc- tion, superintendents of repairs, or foremen, under the Supervising Architect of the Tooaenys or who are employed in any branch of the Treasury Department not here included. \ The Customs, Government Printing, and Internal-Revenue Services include all fl similar officers and employees whose appointments are not confirmed by the Senate or who are not engaged in unskilled manual labor. The Postal Service includes like officers and employees in free-delivery post-offices. | | EXCEPTED POSITIONS. The list of classified employees or positions excepted from examination or registra- : tion is as follows: | | Executive Office. ! I. Not exceeding two private secretaries or confidential clerks to the President. | i All Executive Departments. | 2. Not exceeding two private secretaries or confidential clerks to the head of each - of the eight Executive Departments. 258 Congressional Directory. 3. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk to each of the assist- ant heads of the eight Executive Departments. 4. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk to each of the follow- ing heads of bureaus appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate in the eight Executive Departments: The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Treasurer of the United States, the Comptroller of,the Currency, the Comptroller of the Treas- ury, the Superintendent of the Coast and Geodetic Survey; in the War Department, the Major-General Commanding the Army, the Adjutant-General, the Inspector- General, the Judge-Advocate-General, the Quartermaster-General, the Commissary- General of Subsistence, the Surgeon-General, the Paymaster-General, the Chief of Engineers, the Chief of Ordnance, the Chief Signal Officer, the Chief of the Record and Pension Office, and the Superintendent of Public Buildings and Grounds; and in the Department of the Interior, the Commissioner of the General Land Office, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, the Commissioner of Patents, the Commissioner of Education, the Assistant Attorney-General for the Interior Department, the Director of the Geological Survey, and the Commissioner of Pensions. 5. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk to each of the heads of bureaus appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate in the eight Executive Departments not enumerated in paragraph 4 of this rule, if authorized by law. 6. All persons appointed by the President without confirmation by the Senate. - 7. Attorneys, assistant attorneys, and special assistant attorneys. Departments or Offices not in Executive Departments. 8. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk to the Commissioner of Labor. 9. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk to the Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries. 10. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. 11. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk to each of the Inter- state Commerce Commissioners. Treasury Department. 12. All shipping commissioners. 13. Not exceeding one cashier in each customs district, if authorized by the Secre- tary of the Treasury. 14. Not exceeding one chief or principal deputy or assistant collector at each cus- toms port; and not exceeding one principal deputy collector of customs at each sub- port or station. 15. Not exceeding one deputy naval officer at each customs port where a naval officer is authorized by law. 16. Not exceeding one deputy surveyor of customs at each customs port where a surveyor is authorized by law. 17. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk, if authorized by the Secretary of the Treasury, to the collector of each customs district where the receipts for the last preceding fiscal year amounted to as much as $500,000. 18. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk, if authorized by the Secretary of the Treasury, to each of the appraisers at the ports of Boston, New York, and Philadelphia, respectively. 19. Not exceeding one counsel before the Board of United States General Appraisers. 20. Not exceeding one paymaster in the New York customs district. 21. All positions in Alaska in the customs and internal-revenue services. 22. All deputy collectors of internal revenue who are borne on the rolls as such and the allowance for whose salaries is approved by the Secretary of the Treasury: Provided, That no position designated as a clerkship under a collector of internal revenue, appointment to which is made by the Secretary of the Treasury, shall be discontinued for the purpose of substituting a deputy collectorship therefor, or for any purpose other than a bona fide reduction of force, and that before such reduction shall be made the reasons therefor shall be given in writing by the collector of the district and shall be approved by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the Secretary of the Treasury. 23. Storekeepers and gaugers whose compensation does not exceed $3 per day when actually employed and whose aggregate compensation shall not exceed $500 per annum. 24. Officer in charge of the Bureau of Statistics. Department Duties. 259 25. Not exceeding one chief clerk in each mint or assay office, who is authorized by law to act for the superintendent or assayer in charge during his absence or disability. 26. One private secretary or confidential clerk to the superintendent, one cashier, one deposit weigh clerk, one assistant coiner, one assistant melter and refiner, and one assistant assayer in each mint or assay office. Provided, That appointments to the positions named in this rule in clauses 13, 14, 15, 16, 22, and 23 shall be subject to an examination, to be prescribed by the Secre- tary of the Treasury, equivalent to the examination held by the Commission for positions of like grade Such examinations shall be conducted by the Commission in accordance with its regulations: Provided, That examinations may be waived by the Secretary of the Treasury for appointments in the Alaska customs service and internal-revenue service in Alaska. War Department. 27. Not exceeding one clerk to each army paymaster in actual service. Department of Justice. 28. Wardens, chaplains, and physicians in the United States penitentiaries or prisons. 29. Not to exceed one private secretary or confidential clerk to each United States district attorney. 30. Examiners. . Fost-Office Department. 31. The Assistant Attorney-General for the Post-Office Department. 32. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk to the Assistant Attorney-General. 33. Not exceeding one private secretary or confidential clerk to the postmaster, if authorized by the Postmaster-General, at each post-office where the receipts of the last preceding fiscal year amounted to as much as $350,000. 34. One assistant postmaster or the chief assistant to the postmaster, of whatever designation, at each post-office. 35. Not exceeding one auditor at the post-office in New York City. 36. Not exceeding one finance clerk, if authorized by law and regularly and actu- ally assigned to act as auditor, at each post-office where the receipts for the last pre- ceding fiscal year amounted to as much as $350,000. 37. Not exceeding one cashier or finance clerk at each first-class post-office. 33. Not exceeding one cashier or one finance clerk at each post-office where the receipts for the last preceding fiscal year amounted to as much as $500,000. 39. Not exceeding one cashier and two finance clerks at each post-office where the receipts for the last preceding fiscal year amounted to as much as $1,000,000. 40. Not exceeding one cashier and three finance clerks at each post-office where the receipts for the last preceding fiscal year amounted to as much as $2,000,000. 41. Not exceeding one clerk, who shall be a regular physician, at each first-class post-office, when authorized by the Postmaster-General, to examine applications for sick leave, and also to act as a general utility clerk. Department of the Interior. 42. The superintendent of the Hot Springs Reservation. 43. One special land inspector. 44. Inspectors of coal mines in the Territories. 45. Special agents employed, as necessity for their employment may arise, for the purpose of protecting public lands. 46. The inspectors of surveyors-general and district land offices. 47. Superintendents of irrigation in the Indian service. 48. Superintendents of logging in the Indian service. 49. Five special Indian agents, as authorized by law. 50. Special agents for the allotment of land in severalty to the Indians, as the necessity for their employment may arise. wah 51. Special commissioners to negotiate with Indians, as the necessity for their employment may arise. 52. Engineers to make surveys of reservation boundary lines and surveys at Indian agencies, as the necessity for their employment may arise, 56-1ST—2D ED——18 260 Congressional Directory. 53. Examiners of Indian timber lands, as the necessity for their employment may arise. - 54. One financial clerk at each Indian agency to act as agent during the absence or disability of the agent. 55. All positions in the Alaska school service. 56. Not exceeding five special pension examiners to investigate fraudulent and other pension claims of a criminal nature. 57. One clerk at each pension agency to act for the agent during his absence or disability. Department of Agriculture. 58. Agents and experts who are temporarily appointed and employed in making investigations and furnishing information for the Department, as provided by law or under the direction of the head of the Department, which agents and experts shall be borne on the rolls as such and be actually engaged in the duties for which they are appointed, and whose payment has been authorized by law. : 59. One statistical agent in each State and Territory where authorized by law. Smithsonian Institution. 60. The Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, in charge of the | United States National Museum. CLASSIFIED POSII'TONS OR EMPLOVEES EXCLUDED IN PART. The following-mentioned positions or employees are not subject to any of the pro- visions of the rules, except sections 1, 2, and 3 of Rule II: (a) A number of positions with salaries not exceeding $300 per annum, the duties of which permit the employees to engage in other regular business or occupation. (6) Any person in the military or naval service of the United States who is detailed ] for the performance of civil duties. (¢) Any person employed in a foreign country under the State Department or who | is temporarily employed in a confidential capacity in a foreign country under any executive department or other office. (d) Any position the duties of which are of a quasi-military or quasi-naval char- acter, and for the performance of which duties a person is enlisted for a term of years, or positions in the Revenue-Cutter Service where the persons enlist for the season of navigation only. (¢) Any local physician employed temporarily as acting assistant surgeon in the Marine-Hospital Service. (f) Any person employed in the Marine-Hospital Service as quarantine attendant at the Gulf, South Atlantic, Tortugas, Reedy Island, and Angel Island quarantines; and any person temporarily employed as quarantine attendant on quarantine vessels or in camps or stations established for quarantine purposes during epidemics of con- tagious diseases in the United States or beyond the seas. (g) Any person in the Quartermaster’s Department at large of the United States Army employed as train master, chief packer, foreman packer, pack master, master baler, foreman of laborers, superintendent of stables, or forage master. Appoint- ments to these positions shail be made hereafter on registration tests of fitness pre- scribed in regulations to be issued by the Secretary of War and approved by the President. (2) Any person in the Medical Department at large of the United States Army = employed as chief packer, packer, or assistant packer. Appointments to these posi- | tions shall be made hereafter on registration tests of fitness prescribed in regulations to be issued by the Secretary of War and approved by the President. (¢) Any person in the Ordnance Department at large of the United States Army employed as foreman, assistant foreman, forage master, weigher, skilled laborer, guard, or on piecework. Appointments to these positions shall be made hereafter on registration tests of fitness prescribed in regulations to be issued by the Secretary of War and approved by the President. (7) Any person in the Engineer Department at large of the United States Army employed as subinspector, overseer, suboverseer, superintendent, master lock man- ager, deputy lock manager, assistant superintendent of canal, chief deputy inspector, ! deputy inspector, rodman, stadiaman, chainman, foreman, timekeeper, lock master, assistant lock master, custodian, storekeeper, fort keeper, torpedo keeper, assist- ant torpedo keeper, light keeper, board master, subforeman, master laborer, gauge reader, steward, dam tender, assistant dam tender, helper, carpenter’s helper, 2h HEAR AT 4 Department Duties. 261 machinist’s helper, quarry master, blacksmith’s helper, climber, barge master, recorder of vessels, track man, gardener, assistant gardener, or weigher. Appoint- ments to these positions shall be made hereafter on registration tests of fitness pre- scribed in regulations to be issued by the Secretary of War and approved by the President. : : (£) Any person in the national military parks at Gettysburg, Shiloh, Chicka- mauga, Chattanooga, Vicksburg, and Antietam employed as commissioner, assistant in historical work, agent for purchases of land, historian, secretary, rodman, chain- man, assistant superintendent, chief guardian, guardian, guard, inspector, carpenter, steam engineer, or painter. Appointments to these positions shall be made here- after on registration tests of fitness prescribed in regulations to be issued by the Sec- retary of War and approved by the President. (/) Any person employed as office or field deputy in the office of a United States marshal. _ P (me) All persons at navy-yards, naval stations, and at private shipbuilding and manufacturing establishments where work is done by contract for the Navy Depart- ment, employed as special mechanics and civilian assistant inspectors of work and materials (including ordnance, armor, armor plate, marine engines, hulls, buildings, dredging, etc.). Appointments to these positions shall be made hereafter on tests of fitness prescribed in paragraphs 74 to 83, inclusive, of Navy-yard Order No. 23, revised. Pending the result of such examinations the Secretary of the Navy may appoint to the above positions qualified persons for a period not to exceed thirty days. (22) All physicians employed as pension examining surgeons, whether organized in boards or working individually under the direction of the Commissioner of Pensions. This paragraph shall not include medical examiners in the Pension Office. (0) Indians employed in the Indian service at large, except those employed as superintendents, teachers, teachers of industries, kindergartners, and physicians. (p) Temporary clerks employed in United States local land offices to reduce testi- mony to writing in contest cases, not paid from Government funds. (¢) Temporary clerks employed in the offices of surveyors-general, and paid from the funds deposited by individuals for surveying public lands. PROVISIONS CONCERNING POWER OF REMOVAL. Among the most important provisions of the civil-service rules are those directed against removal for political or religious reasons. The order of the President, pro- mulgated July 27, 1897, as section 8 of Rule II, is one of these. It forbids removal from any position subject to competitive examination except for just cause and upon written charges filed with the appointing officer and of which the accused shall have a copy and an opportunity to make defense. THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. The Public Printer has charge of all business relating to the public printing and binding. He appoints the officers and employees of the Government Printing Office, and purchases all necessary machinery and material. 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 has charge of all matter which is to be printed. His department consists of the following divisions: The Document, Job, Specification, Press, Folding, Stereotype, and Congressional Record rooms, as well as the various branch offices. 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. The Superintendent of Documents has general supervision of the distribution of all public documents, excepting those printed for the use of the two Houses of Congress and the Executive Departments. He is required to prepare a comprehensive index of public documents and consolidated index of Congressional documents, and is author- 1zed to sell at cost any public document in his charge, the distribution of which is not specifically directed. 262 Congressional Directory. THE COMMISSION OF FISH AND FISHERIES. (Northwest corner of Sixth and B streets SW.) The United States Commission of Fish and Fisheries was established by joint reso- lution of Congress approved February 9, 1871. It is placed in charge of a Commis- sioner of Fish and Fisheries, who is required to be a person of scientific and practical acquaintance with the fish and fisheries of the sea, coast, and inland waters. Reports are made annually to Congress. The scope of the work of the Commission covers (1) the propagation of useful food fishes, including lobsters, oysters, and other shellfish, and their distribution to suit- able waters; (2) the inquiry into the causes of decrease of food fishes in the lakes, rivers, and coast waters of the United States, the study of the waters of the coast and interior in the interest of fish culture, and the investigation of the fishing grounds of the Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific coasts, with the view of determining their food resources and the development of the commercial fisheries; (3) the collection and compilation of the statistics of the fisheries and the study of their methods and relations. In the prosecution of its work the Commission has 34 stations, situated in different parts of the country, 5 fish-distributing cars, 2 steam vessels, and 1 sailing vessel. THE BOARD ON GEOGRAPHIC NAMES. (Organized September 4, 1890.) 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 Departments, and the decisions of the Board are to be accepted by the Departments as the standard authority in such matters. THE BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS. The Bureau of the American Republics was established under the recommendation of the International American Conference in 189o for the prompt collection and distri- bution of commercial information concerning the American Republics. It publishes translations of the tariffs of the countries of Latin America reduced to the United States equivalents; also handbooks of these countries, a monthly bulletin containing the latest information respecting their resources, commerce, and general features, and The Commercial Directory of the American Republics, an international publica- tion. 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, development of railways, agriculture, mines, manufactures, shipping, etc., are given to the press. The Bureau is sustained by contributions from the several American Republics in proportion to their population. INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION. (Bliss Building, 35 B street NW.) This Commission was established by act of Congress approved June 18, 1898. It is composed of nineteen members—five Senators appointed by the President of the Sen- ate, five Representatives appointed by the Speaker of the House, and nine civilians appointed by the President of the United States. The duties of the Commission are to investigate questions pertaining to immigration, labor, agriculture, manufactur- ing, and general business, and to report to Congress and suggest such legislation as deemed best upon these subjects. Tt shall also furnish such information and suggest such laws as may be made a basis for uniform legislation by the various States. The Judiciary. 263 THE JUDICIARY. SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. (In Capitol Building.) MELVILLE WESTON FULLER, Chief Justice of the United States, was born in Augusta, Me., February 11, 1833; was graduated from Bowdoin College in 1853; studied law, attended a course of lectures at Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the bar in 1855; formed a law partnership in Augusta, Me., and was an associate editor of a Democratic paper called The Age; in 1856 became president of the common council, and served as city solicitor; removed to Chicago, Ill., in 1856, where he practiced law until appointed Chief Justice; in 1862 was a member of the State con- stitutional convention; was a member of the State legislature from 1863 to 1865; was a delegate to the Democratic national conventions of 1864, 1872, 1876, and 1880; the degree of LI. D. was conferred upon him by the Northwestern University and by Bowdoin College in 1888, and by Harvard in 1890; was appointed Chief Justice April 30, 1888, confirmed July 20, 1888, and took the oath of office October 8, same year. JOHN MARSHALL HARLAN, Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, was born in Boyle County, Ky., June 1, 1833; was graduated from Center Col- lege, Kentucky, in 1850; studied law at Transylvania University; practiced his pro- fession at Frankfort; was elected county judge in 1858; was elector on the Bell and Everett ticket; removed to Louisville and formed a law partnership with Hon. W. F. Bullock; in 1861 raised the Tenth Kentucky Infantry Regiment and served in Gen. George H. Thomas’s division; owing to the death of his father in the spring of 1863, although his name was before the Senate for confirmation as a brigadier-general, he felt compelled to resign; was elected attorney-general by the Union party in 1863 and filled the office until 1867, when he returned to active practice in Louisville; was the Republican nominee for governor in 1871; his name was presented by the Republican convention of his State in 1875 for the Vice-Presidency; was chairman of the delegation from his State to the national Republican convention in 1876; declined a diplomatic position as a substitute for the Attorney-Generalship, to which, before he reached Washington, President Hayes intended to assign him; served as a member of the Louisiana commission; was commissioned an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court November 29, 1877, and took his seat December 10, same year. HORACE GRAY, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Boston, Mass., March 24, 1828; was graduated from Harvard College in the class of 1845 and from the Harvard Law School in 1849; was admitted to the bar in 1851; was appointed reporter of the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts in 1854 and held the position until 1861; was appointed associate justice of the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts August 23, 1864, and chief justice of that court September 5, 1873; was commissioned an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Arthur December 19, 1881. DAVID JOSIAH BREWER, Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, was born in Smyrna, Asia Minor, June 20, 1837; is the son of Rev. Josiah Brewer and Emilia A. Field, sister of David Dudley, Cyrus W., and Justice Stephen J. Field; his father was an early missionary to Turkey; was graduated from Yale College in 1856 and from the Albany Law School in 1858; established himself in his profession at TLeavenworth, Kans., in 1859, where he resided until he removed to Washington to enter upon his present duties; in 1861 was appointed United States commissioner; from 1862 to 1865 was judge of the probate and criminal courts of Leavenworth County; from 1865 to 1869 was judge of the district court; from 1869 to 1870 was county attorney of Leavenworth; in 1870 was elected a justice of the supreme court of his State, and reelected in 1876 and 1882; in 1884 was appointed judge of the cir- cuit court of the United States for the Kighth district; was appointed to his present position, to succeed Justice Stanley Matthews, deceased, in December, 1889, and was commissioned December 18, 1889. HENRY BILLINGS BROWN, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in South Iee, Mass., March 2, 1836; was graduated from Yale College in 1856; studied law for some time in a private office; attended lectures 264 Congressional Directory. both at Yale and Harvard law schools, and was admitted to the bar of Wayne County, Mich., in July, 1860; in the spring of 1861, upon the election of Mr. Lincoln, was appointed deputy marshal of the United States, and subsequently assistant United States attorney for the eastern district of Michigan, a position he held until 1868, when he was appointed judge of the State circuit court of Wayne County, to fill a vacancy; held this office but a few months, and then returned to active practice in partnership with John S. Newberry and Ashley Pond, of Detroit, which continued until 1875, when he was appointed by President Grant district judge for the eastern district of Michigan, to succeed Hon. John W. Longyear; on December 23, 1890, was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, to succeed Justice Samuel F. Miller ; was unanimously confirmed December 29, and took the oath of office January 5, 1891; received the degree of LI. D. from the University of Michigan in 1887 and from Yale University in 1891. GEORGE SHIRAS, Jr., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Pittsburg, Pa., January 26, 1832; was graduated from Yale Col- lege in 1853; attended the Yale Law School in 1854; was admitted to the bar of Pennsylvania in 1856; practiced law in Pennsylvania till his appointment to the Supreme Bench; received the degree of LL.D. from Yale University in 1883; was one of the Pennsylvania Presidential electors 1n 1888; in July, 1892, was appointed to succeed Justice Joseph P. Bradley; took the oath of office October 10, 1892. EDWARD DOUGLASS WHITE, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in the parish of Lafourche, La., in November, 1845; was educated at Mount St. Mary’s, near Emmitsburg, Md., at the Jesuit College in New Orleans, and at Georgetown (D. C.) College; served in the Confederate 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. Fustis, and took his seat March 4, 1891; while serving his term as Senator from Louisiana was appointed, February 19, 1894, an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, and took his seat March 12, 18094. RUFUS W. PECKHAM, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in the city of Albany and State of New York, November 8, 1838; his father was a native of Albany County, and had been district attorney of the county, justice of the supreme court of the State, and, at the time of his death in the shipwreck of the Ville de Havre, November 22, 1873, was one of the judges of the court of appeals of New York State. The son was educated at the Albany Academy and at one of the schools in Philadelphia; he studied law in the office of his father, who was then in partnership with Lyman Tremain, attorney-general of the State, practicing law under the firm name of Peckham & Tremain, in the city of Albany; he was admitted to the bar of the State in December, 1859; his father was in that year elected to the bench of the supreme court, and the son formed a partnership with the former partner of his father, under the firm name of Tremain & Peckham, which continued until the death of Mr. Tremain in December, 1878. In 1866 Mr. Peckham was married to a daughter of D. H. Arnold, an old New York merchant and at that time president of the Mercantile Bank in New York City. In 1868 he was elected district attorney of Albany County; was subsequently cor- poration counsel of Albany City, and in 1883 was elected a justice of the supreme court of the State. While serving as such he was elected, in 1886, an associate judge of the court of appeals of New York State, and while occupying a seat on that bench he was, in December, 1895, appointed by President Cleveland an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. JOSEPH MCKENNA, of San Francisco, Cal., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., August 10, 1843; attended St. Joseph’s College of his native city until 1855, when he removed with his parents to Benicia, Cal., where he continued his education at the public schools and the Col- legiate Institute, at which he studied law; wasadmitted tothe bar in 1865; was twice elected district attorney for Solano County, beginning in March, 1866; served in the lower house of the legislature in the sessions of 1875 and 1876; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, and Fifty-second Congresses; resigned from the last-named Congress to accept the position of United States circuit judge, to which he was appointed by President Harrison in 1893; resigned that office to accept the place of Attorney-General of the United States in the Cabinet of President McKinley; was appointed, December 16, 1897, an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States to succeed Justice Field, retired, and took his seat January 26, 1898. - | | | a pe PE CERT * | | a The Judiciary. 265 RESIDENCES OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE AND ASSOCIATE JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the 7 designates those whose daughters accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them. ] * 29 Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, 1801 F street NW. * 2% Mr. Justice Harlan, Fourteenth street and Euclid place NW. . * Mr. Justice Gray, 1601 I street NW. 4 Mr. Justice Brewer, 1412 Massachusetts avenue NW. * Mr. Justice Brown, 1720 Sixteenth street NW. * Mr. Justice Shiras, 1515 Massachusetts avenue NW. * Mr. Justice White, 1717 Rhode Island avenue NW. * Mr. Justice Peckham, 1217 Connecticut avenue NW, * 39 Mr. Justice McKenna, 2127 California avenue NW. OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT. Clerk.—James H. McKenney, 1523 Rhode Island avenue NW. Deputy Clerk.—Charles B. Beall, 1469 Kenesaw avenue NW. Marshal.—]. M. Wright, Metropolitan Club. Reporter.—]J. C. Bancroft Davis, 1621 H street NW, CIRCUIT COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES. First Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Gray. Districts of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island. Circuit Judges.—ILe Baron B. Colt, Providence, R. I., and William L. Putnam, Portland, Me. Second Judicial Civcuit.—Mr. Justice Peckham. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut, Northern New York, Southern New York, and Eastern New York. Circuit Judges.—William J. Wallace, Albany, N. YV.; E. Henry Lacombe, New York City, and Nathaniel Shipman, Hartford, Conn. Third Judicial Circuil.—Mr. Justice Shiras. Districts of New Jersey, Eastern Penn- sylvania, Western Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Circuit Judges.— Marcus W. Acheson, Pittsburg, Pa.; George M. Dallas, Philadel- phia, Pa., and George Gray, Wilmington, Del. Fourth Judicial Cirvcuit.—Mr. Chief Justice Fuller. Districts of Maryland, West Virginia, Eastern Virginia, Western Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. : Circuit Judges.— Nathan Goff, Clarksburg, W. Va., and C. H. Simonton, Charles- ton, S. C. Fifth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice White. Districts of Northern Georgia, South- ern Georgia, Northern Florida, Southern Florida, Northern Alabama, Middle Alabama, Southern Alabama, Northern Mississippi, Southern Mississippi, Eastern Louisiana, Western Louisiana, Northern Texas, Eastern Texas, and Western Texas. Circuit Judges.—Don A. Pardee, New Orleans, La.; A. P. McCormick, Dallas, Tex., and David D. Shelby, Huntsville, Ala. Sixth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Harlan. Districts of Northern Ohio, Souther Ohio, Eastern Michigan, Western Michigan, Kentucky, Eastern Tennessee, Middle Tennessee, and Western Tennessee. Circuit Judges.—William H. Taft, Cincinnati, Ohio; Horace H. Lurton, Nash- ville, Tenn. and William R. Day, Canton, Ohio. Seventh Judicial Civcurt.—Mr. Justice Brown. Districts of Indiana, Northern Illi- nois, Southern Illinois, Eastern Wisconsin, and Western Wisconsin. Circuit Judges.—W. A. Woods, Indianapolis, Ind.; James G. Jenkins, Milwau- kee, Wis., and Peter S. Grosscup, Chicago, Ill. Eighth Judicial Circuit. —Mr. Justice Brewer. Districts of Minnesota, Northern Towa, Southern Iowa, Eastern Missouri, Western Missouri, Eastern Arkansas, Western Arkansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, and Utah; Indian Territory, Northern; Indian Territory, Central; Indian Territory, Southern; and Territories of New Mexico and Oklahoma. Circuit Judges.—Henry C. Caldwell, Little Rock, Ark.; Walter H. Sanborn, St. Paul, Minn., and Amos M. Thaver, St. Louis, Mo. 266 Congressional Directory. Ninth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice McKenna. Districts of Northern California, Southern California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, Washington, Idaho, and Territories of Alaska and Arizona. Circuit Judges.—William B. Gilbert, Portland, Oreg.; Erskine M. Ross, 10s Angeles, Cal., and William W. Morrow, San Francisco, Cal. COURT OF CLAIMS. (Corner Pennsylvania avenue and Seventeenth street NW.) Chief Justice Charles C. Nott, 826 Connecticut avenue. Judge Lawrence Weldon, Hamilton House. Judge John Davis, 1211 Connecticut avenue. Judge Stanton J. Peelle, The Concord. Judge Charles B. Howry, 1533 I street NW. Chief Clerk.—Archibald Hopkins, 1826 Massachusetts avenue NW. Assistant Clerk.—John Randolph, 28 I street NW. Bailiff —Stark B. Taylor, 485 H street SW. 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 Executive Department, or upon any contract, expressed or implied, with the Govern- ment 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 growing 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 Depart- ment 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 claimant, 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 Supreme Court. By the act of March 3, 1883, chapter 116 (22 Stat. L., 485, and 1 Supplement to R. S., 2d ed., p. 403), called the ‘‘ Bowman Act,” the head of an Executive Depart- ment 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 investiga- tion 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. ‘This act is extended by act of March 2, 1887, chapter 359 (24 Stat. I., 505, and 1 Supplement to R. S., 2d ed., p. 559). CE, is 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 Depart- ments 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, and 1 Supplement to R. S., 2d ed., p. 471), Congress gave to the court jurisdiction over ‘‘ claims to indemnity upon the French Government arising out of illegal captures, detentions, seizures, condemna- tions, and confiscations prior to the ratification of the convention between the United States and the French Republic concluded on the zoth day of September, 1800." The time of filing claims is limited to two years from the passage of the act, and all mazar = io » The Judiciary. 267 and the law, and reports the same in each case to Congress. By act of March 3, 1891, chapter 538 (26 Stat. L., 851, and Supplement to R. S., 2d ed., p. 913), the court is vested with jurisdiction of certain Indian depredation | claims. The Secretary of the Navy has referred to the court, under the act of March 2, 1887 | (24 Stat. L., 505), all cases growing out of claims for bounty for war vessels captured or destroyed by the United States Navy during the late war with Spain, involving a | | claims not presented within that time are forever barred. The court finds the facts | consideration of every naval conflict that took place and the rights of all the officers and men engaged. | 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. The court sits at Washington, D. C., in the old Corcoran Art Building, Seventeenth | 7 and Pennsylvania avenue NW., on the first Monday in December each year, and con- i tinues into the following summer and until all cases ready for trial are disposed of. ih Cases may be commenced and entered at any time, whether the court be in session i or not. i | COURT OF APPEALS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. i (In United States Court-House.) i Chief Justice.—Richard H. Alvey, 6 B street NE. | Associate Justices.—Martin F. Morris, 1314 Massachusetts avenue NW.; Seth Shep- “ard, 1429 Kuclid place. | Clerk.—Robert Willett, 3014 P street NW. 1 | Assistant Clerk.—H. W. Hodges, 2208 Q street NW. | SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. i (In United States Court-House.) Chief Justice. —Edward F. Bingham, 1907 H street NW. Associate Justices.—Alexander-B. Hagner, 1818 H street NW.; Andrew C. Bradley, 2013 Q street NW.; Charles C. Cole, 1705 N street NW; Harry M. Clabaugh, 1527 Rhode Island avenue NW.; Job Barnard, 1306 Rhode Island avenue NW. Clerk.—John R. Young, 1522 R street NW. Retired Justices.—Andrew Wylie, 1205 Fourteenth street NW.; Walter S. Cox, 1636 I street NW. Tr UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE. (In United States Court-House.) United States Attorney.—Thomas H. Anderson, The Portland. Assistant United States Attorneys.—H. T. Taggart, 3240 N street NW.; Thomas C. Taylor, 921 G street NW.; Ashley M. Gould, Takoma Park; A. R. Mullowny, 1411 V street NW. UNITED STATES MARSHAIL’S OFFICE. (In United States Court-House.) - United States Marshal.—Aulick Palmer, 1401 Staughton street NW. Chief Office Deputy United States Marshal.— William B. Robison, 1520 U street NW. REGISTER OF WILLS OFFICE. (In United States Court-House.) Register of Wills.—Iouis Addison Dent, 1516 Ninth street NW. Assistant.—M. J. Griffith, 433 M street NW. RECORDER’S OFFICE. (In United States Court-House.) Recorder of Deeds.—Henry P. Cheatham, 1412 Seventeenth street NW. Deputy Recorder of Deeds.—George F. Schayer, 3435 Holmead avenue, Mt. Pleasant. \ 268 Congressional Directory. GOVERNORS OF THE SEVERAL STATES AND TERRI- TORIES. | States and Terri- : i Term | oN & tion Capitals. Governors. oF pore Expiration of term. |Salary. STATES. | | Years. Alabama .......... Montgomery ..... Joseph FE. Jonasion . Si 2 Dee. T,0000: 0s vs wvs viel $3, 000 Arkansas..... . x Little Rock" .::.. Daniel W. Jones . Zi Tan: Toot. tae 3, 000 | California......... Sacramento...... Henry I. Gage...... 4 JRO T0030 en 6, 000 | Colorado... ...-... Denver i aus Charles S. Thomas. . 2 Tan TOO atin eats 5, 000 Copnontions Ean Hartford ......... George E. Lounsbury 20 Ja. IO a 4, 000 | Delaware. . sine DOVER SLL Hbe W. Jumell ...... dV Jan. moors sus ae 2, 500 Rlorida... an. as. Tallahassee ...... ‘Wm. D. Bloxham... . A TA TORT va EL 3, 500 Georgia... o.oo. Atlanta... ........ Allen D. Candler.... 2: NOV. 1, 1000 =. Jai» 2, 000 Idaho... BOISE vil ean viies F. Steunenberg ..... 2: dan, Teeras ons 3, 000 | Hlnoigei.. iw. Springfield. .....| John R. Tanner..... EE hE REC 6, 000 | Indianar.. 200 000 Indianapolis .....| James A. Mount..... 41 JaNy TOOT « airy hls 5, 000 Towa unico Des Moines ...... 1.M. Shaw. ......... 2 [5Tan. Toez.. ou 3, 000 Kansas... iui Topeka. aul raln W. B. Stanley... ..... 2 | Jan., 1901 nn 3, 000 Kentucky... Frankfort. ....... W.:S, Taylor. ....% 4: Dec. 16, 10035 Lise. 5, 000 Louisiana... ..... Baton Rouge..... Murphy J. Foster... 4 ADT TO00 A 4, 000 Maine... rain Augusta... Llewellyn Powers .. 2 | Jan., Te rae rh, 2, 000 | Maryland... ...... Annapolis........ John Walter Smith . 4: lan. Tooq oa 4, 500 Massachusetts ....| Boston ........... W. Murray Crane... 1 | Jan., 1901 {se W Wed. 3.7 8, 000 | Michigan .........[ Lansing..........| Hazen S. Pingree.... 2 | Jan., 1901 . |" 4,000 Minnesota .......-| St. Paul... ........ John Tind........... 2 i Jan moore 5, C00 Mississippl..... | Jackson... .... ... ACH. Longino. ...... Lan. 1004. dh son a 3, 500 Missouri... .....s Jefferson City....| Lon. V. Stephens... 4 (an. 19k. san a 5, 000 Montana -.........' Helena... 2... Robert B. Smith... .. 4 | Jan. 1001. .cu. aa 5, 000 Nebraska ......... Flacola 2.008 W. J: Poynter -.- 5 zal Jan Toor oi Ni 2, 500 Nevada... .......5: Carson City ......- Reinhold Sadler .... 40 Jan. 6,7003. 5... vais, 4, 000 | New Hampshire..| Concord.......... Frank W. Rollins... 2 [Jan Teer. a 2, 000 | New Jersey. ......: Trento... ....- Foster M. Voorhees . 3: Jan. go; 1902. lL, 10, 000 New York .....%. Albany... Theodore Roosevelt. Z| Jan. 1,001... an, 10, 000 North Carolina ...| Raleigh ..........| Daniel I. Russell ... 4 | Jan. 1, Bor aE a el 3, 000 North Dakota... .| Bismarck ........ FE. B. Fancher ....0 =. 2 lo lan, 1,001.5 cia ok 3, 000 Ohl: viens ois Columbus........| George K. Nash..... 2 | Jan., 1902 (2d Mon.)..| 8 ooo @regon vi... ce: Salem: alin Theo. Geer ....... 4c Tan Joes Austin. rool Joseph D. Sayers ... Fl ERR SR Re 4, 000 Wah aes: Salt Lake City ...| Heber M. Wells..... 4 ]an. I00T wng. 2, 000 Vermont...........[ Montpelier.......| Edwin C. Smith .... 2°} Oct. 7,3000. dda 1, 500 Virginda... 2 Richmond. ...i... | T. Hoge Tyler-....... 4 Dec. 21, 7001: iT. 5, 000 Washington. ..... Olympia... 5... John R. Rogers...... Le Yan 1001 Lalani 4, 000 West Virginia. .... Charleston'....... | G.W. Atkinson ,.... A MATL I00T tes 2, 000 Wisconsin... .... Je Madison. x A Edward Scofield .... 2 Jam. Jo0%. «0. 0 5, 000 vl Wyoming ......... Cheyenne... .. .. De Forest Richards. Alan; 7, 1003. hn ie. 2, 500 we TERRITORIES. | | Adasloai Co 0 Bltka oahu John G.Brady........ 4 [June 23, 1001... Garr) ©3000 I Avizona®....... Sele Pheenin cia... Myron H. McCord .. 4: uly 79,9001. 2, 600 | New Mexico *..... Santa Fe..on Miguel A. Otero..... 4 June 7.700%... 2, 600 J Okiahoma®.......| Cuthrie.......... Cassius M. Barnes... 4: May 12 Tool . sie 2, 600 * Governors nominated by the President and envied Thy the Senate. The Diplomatic Corps. 269 FOREIGN EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS TO THE UNITED STATES. [Those having ladies with them are marked with * for wife and 2 for daughter ARGENTINA. Sefior Antonio del Viso, Chargé d’Affaires ad interim, 1728 Twenty-first street NW. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. (Office of the Xegation, 1307 Connecticut avenue.) * Mr. Ladislaus Hengelmiiller von Hengervar, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Baron Louis Ambrézy de Séden, Secretary of Legation, 1724 P street NW. BELGIUM. (Office of the Legation, 1714 Connecticut avenue.) * Count G. de Lichtervelde, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1714 Connecticut avenue NW. Mr. Georges Allart, Counselor of Legation, 1035 Connecticut avenue NW. -- Count Baudouin de Lichtervelde, Attaché. (Absent.) . BOLIVIA. (Office of Legation, care of Consulate of Bolivia, 15 Whitehall street, New York City.) Sefior Luis Paz, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent. ) BRAZIL. (Office of the Legation, 2014 Columbia Road NW.) * Mr. J. F. de Assis-Brasil, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1834 S street NW. * Mr. Paul de Amaral, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) CHILE. (Office of the Iegation, 1719 De Sales street NW.) * Sefior Don Carlos Morla Vicufia, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten- tiary. (Absent. ) * Sefior Don Eliodoro Infante, First Secretary and Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim, 1719 De Sales street NW. Sefior Don Manuel Balmaceda S., Second Secretary of Legation. (Absent. ) Sefior Don Enrique Cuevas, Attaché. (Absent.) CHINA. (Office of the Legation, 1764 Q street NW.) * Mr. Wu Ting-fang, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1764 Q street NW. Mr. Shen Tung, First Secretary. Mr. Chow Tsz-chi, Second Secretary. Mr. Chwang Hai-kwan, Second Secretary. Mr. Chung Mun-yew, Secretary Interpreter, 1741 Q street NW, * Mr. Yung Kwai, Interpreter, Cleveland Park, D. C. Mr. Hwang Chung-huei, Attaché, 1624 P street NW. Mr. Hsu Chao, Attaché. Mr. Wu Hstuieh-lien, Attaché. Mr. Fung Shao-chee, Attaché. 270 Congressional Directory. COLOMBIA. (Address Colombian Consul, 17 State street, New York.) * Sefior Don Climoca Calderén, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent. ) *Sefior Doctor Luis Cuervo Marquez, Secretary of Legation and Chargé d’Affaires ad interim. COSTA RICA. (Office of the Legation, 2111 S street NW.) * Sefior Don Joaquin Bernardo Calvo, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary, 2111 S street NW. DENMARK. (Office of the Iegation, 1521 T'wentieth street NW.) Mr. Constantin Brun, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. ECUADOR. (Office of the Legation, 160 West Ninety-eighth street, New York.) *§ Sefior Don Luis Felipe Carbo, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, (Absent. ) Sefior Don Luis Alberto Carbo. (Absent. ) FRANCE. (Office of the Embassy, 1710 H street NW.) Mr. Jules Cambon, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. (Absent. ) Mr. Eugene Thiébaut, First Secretary and Chargé d’Affaires ad interim. * Capt. P. Vignal, Engineer Corps, Military Attaché, 2034 O street NW. Lieut. Commander de Faramond de Lafajole, Naval Attaché, 1034 Connecticut ave- nue NW. Mr. Olivier Taigny, Second Secretary, 1034 Connecticut avenue NW. (Absent.) Mr. Jules Beeufvé, Chancellor and Attaché. (Absent.) GERMANY. (Office of the Embassy, 1435 Massachusetts avenue NW.) Herr Von Holleben, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Freiherr Speck von Sternburg, Counselor of Legation and First Secretary of Embassy. Count von Hacke, Second Secretary. Dr. jur. von Bohlen und Halbach, Second Secretary, 1427 Twentieth street NW. Lieut. Commander von Rebeur-Paschwitz, Naval Attaché, 1308 Nineteenth street NW. Freiherr Beno von Herman, Expert of the Embassy for Agriculture and Forestry, 1308 Nineteenth street NW. GREAT BRITAIN. (Office of the Embassy, 1300 Connecticut avenue.) *%244 The Right Honorable Lord Pauncefote, of Preston, G. C. B., G. C. M. G., Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Mr. Gerard A. Lowther, First Secretary, 6 Dupont circle. * Capt. Charles L. Ottley, R. N., Naval Attaché, 1330 Nineteenth street NW. *TLieut. Col. Arthur Lee, R. A., Military Attaché, 2224 N street NW. Mr. Reginald Tower, Second Secretary. (Absent.) Mr. C. N. E. Eliot, C. B., Second Secretary, 1015 Connecticut avenue NW. Mr. W. G. Max Miiller, Second Secretary, 1122 Connecticut avenue NW. Mr. Robert Bromley, Honorary Attaché, The Embassy. Mr. Arthur E. O. Humphreys-Owen, Honorary Attaché, 1019 Connecticut avenue NW. | The Diplomatic Corps. 271 GUATEMALA. (Office of the Legation, The Cairo.) Sefior Don Antonio Lazo Arriaga, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, \ The Cairo. | Dr. Joaquin Yela, jr., Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) | HAITI. * Mr. J. N. Léger, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1426 K street NW. Mr. Alfred Léger, Secretary. (Absent.) ITALY. (Office of the Embassy, 1503 Pennsylvania avenue NW.) | * Baron de Fava, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, 1708 H street NW. | Count Vinci, First Secretary of Embassy, 1537 I street NW. | Marquis Camillo Romano, Second Secretary. | Duke Gaetano Castagneta Caracciolo, Honorary Attaché. ) Lieut. Ferruccio Vitale, Military Attaché, Manila. JAPAN. (Office of the Iegation, 1310 N street NW.) Mr. Jutaro Komura, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. Tsune Jiro Nakagawa, First Secretary of Legation, 1310 N street NW. Mr. Durham White Stevens, Counselor of Iegation, The Stratford. Commander Katsuro Narita, I. J. N., Naval Attaché, 1310 N street. Mr. Mitsunojo Funakoshi, Third Secretary of Legation, 1310 N street NW. Mr. Matsujiro Kameyama, Attaché. KOREA. (Office of the Iegation, 1500 Thirteenth street NW.) *Mr. Chin Pom Ye, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1500 Thir- teenth street NW. Mr. Tam E. Ye, Secretary of Legation. Mr. Chong Ki Ye, Attaché. MEXICO. (Office of the Embassy, 1413 I street NW., entrance by side street.) * 2 Sefior Don Manuel de Azpiroz, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. ¥ Sefior Don José EF. Godoy, First Secretary, 1446 Rhode Island avenue. Sefior Don Enrique Santibafiez, Second Secretary, The Hamilton. Sefior Don Rodrigo de Azpiroz, Third Secretary, 1413 I street NW. Capt. Don Alfredo Barron, Third Secretary. (Absent. ) Sefior Don José Romero, Third Secretary, 1109 Fourteenth street NW. * Sefior Don Manuel Torres y Sagaseta, Attaché, The Woodmont. NICARAGUA. (Office of Iegation, 1704 Q street NW.) Sefior Don Luis FE. Corea, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1704 Q street NW. : PORTUGAL. * Viscount de Santo-Thyrso, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent. ) M. Ignacio de Costa Duarte, Chargé d’Affaires ad interim, 26 Fast Thirty-third street, New York. RUSSIA. (Office of the Embassy, 1829 I street NW.) 4 Comte Cassini, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. * Mr. de Wollant, First Secretary, 1729 Twenty-first street NW. Mr. Alexander Zelenoy, Second Secretary. * Baron Fersen, Naval Agent. Mr. Pierre Rogestvensky, Attaché, 1023 Connecticut avenue NW. Mr. M. Routkowsky, Financial Attaché. 272 Congressional Directory. SIAM. (Office of the Legation, 23 Ashburn place, South Kensington, London.) Phya Prashiddhi, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, London. * Mr. Frederick W. Vernay, Counselor of Legation. * Luang Prakich, Attaché. * Mr. Edward H. Loftus, Attaché. SPAIN. (Office of the Legation, 1785 Massachusetts avenue.) * Duke de Arcos, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1785 Massa- chusetts avenue NW. Sefior Don Juan Riafio, First Secretary of Legation, 1708 H street NW. Sefior Don Luis Pastor, Second Secretary of Legation, 1723 H street NW. Lieut. Col. Federico de Monteverde, Military Attaché. SWEDEN AND NORWAY. (Office of the Legation, 2011 Q street NW.) Mr. A. Grip, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2011 Q street NW, Mr. G. V. T. de Strale, Secretary of Legation, 1724 P street NW. Count Eugene von Rosen, Attaché. SWITZERLAND. (Office of the Legation, 2013 Hillyer Place NW.) * Mr. J. B. Pioda, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2013 Hillyer place NW. Mr. Walter Deucher, Secretary, 1617 Twenty-first street NW, TURKEY, (Office of the Iegation, 1818 Q street NW.) Ali Ferrouh Bey, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent. ) A. Rustem Bey, First Secretary of Legation and Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim. Sidky Bey, Second Secretary, 1818 Q street NW. Aziz Bey, Captain and Aid de Camp of His Majesty, Military Attaché. VENEZUELA. (Office of the Legation, The Cochran.) Sefior Don Augusto F. Pulido, Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim, The Cochran. United Stales Embassies and Legations. 273 UNITED STATES EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS. ARGENTINA. William P. Lord, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Buenos Ayres. Francois S. Jones, Secretary of Legation, Buenos Ayres. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. ® Addison C. Harris, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Vienna. Charles V. Herdliska, Secretary of Legation, Vienna. Commander W. H. Beehler, Naval Attaché, Vienna. BELGIUM. Lawrence Townsend, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Brussels. BOLIVIA. George H. Bridgman, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, La Paz. BRAZIL. : Charles Page Bryan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Rio de Janeiro. Thomas C. Dawson, Secretary of Legation, Rio de Janeiro. CHILE. Henry I,. Wilson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Santiago. Henry J. Lenderink, Secretary of Legation, Santiago. : CHINA. Edwin H. Conger, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Peking. H. G. Squiers, Secretary of Legation, Peking. William E. Bainbridge, Second Secretary, Peking. Lieut. Albert I,. Key, Naval Attaché, Peking. Fleming D. Cheshire, Interpreter, Peking. COLOMBIA. Charles Burdett Hart, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Bogota. Arthur M. Beaupre, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Bogota. COSTA RICA. William I,. Merry, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, San José. Rufus A. Lane, Secretary of Legation, San José. DENMARK. Laurits S. Swenson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Copenhagen. Lieut. Col. W. R. Livermore, Military Attaché, Copenhagen. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. William F. Powell, Chargé d’Affaires, Port au Prince. ECUADOR. Archibald J. Sampson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Quito. 274 Congressional Directory. FRANCE. Horace Porter, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Paris. Henry Vignaud, Secretary of Embassy, Paris. Spencer ¥. Eddy, Second Secretary of Embassy, Paris. Samuel Morrill, Third Secretary of Embassy, Paris. Lieut. W. S. Sims, Naval Attaché. GERMAN EMPIRE. Andrew D. White, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Berlin. John B. Jackson, Secretary of Embassy, Berlin. George M. Fisk, Second Secretary of Embassy, Berlin. H. Percival Dodge, Third Secretary of Embassy, Berlin. Commander Wm. H. Bechler, Naval Attaché, Berlin. GREAT BRITAIN. Joseph H. Choate, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, London. Henry White, Secretary of Embassy, London. John R. Carter, Second Secretary of Embassy, London. Joseph H. Choate, jr., Third Secretary of Embassy, London. TLieut. Commander John C. Colwell, Naval Attaché, I,ondon. Col. Samuel S. Sumner, Military Attaché, Tondon. GREECE, ROUMANIA, AND SERVIA. Arthur S. Hardy, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Athens. GUATEMALA AND HONDURAS. W. Godfrey Hunter, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Guatemala City. James C. McNally, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Guatemala City. HATTI. William F. Powell, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Port au Prince. ITALY. William F. Draper, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Rome. Lewis Morris Iddings, Secretary of Embassy, Rome. Richard C. Parsons, jr., Second Secretary of Embassy, Rome. Commander Wm. H. Beehler, Naval Attaché, Rome. JAPAN. Alfred E. Buck, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Tokyo. Joseph R. Herod, Secretary of Legation, Tokyo. Huntington Wilson, Second Secretary of Legation, Tokyo. Lieut. Albert Key, Naval Attaché, Tokyo. Ransford Stevens Miller, jr., Interpreter, Tokyo. KOREA. Horace N. Allen, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Seoul. , Secretary of Legation, Seoul. Pang Kyeng Hui, Interpreter, Seoul. Kwon Yu Sup, Interpreter, Seoul. LIBERIA. Owen I,. W. Smith, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Monrovia. James Robert Spurgeon, Secretary of Legation, Monrovia. MEXICO. Powell Clayton, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Mexico. Fenton R. McCreery, Secretary of Legation, Mexico. William Heimke, Second Secretary of Legation, Mexico. a United States Embassies and [eoations. 29 / wn THE NETHERLANDS. Stanford Newel, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, The Hague. Lieut. Col. James N. Wheelan, Military Attaché, The Hague. NICARAGUA AND SALVADOR. William IL. Merry, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, San Jose. (See Costa Rica.) Rufus A. Lane, Secretary of Legation, San jose. | PARAGUAY AND URUGUAY. William R. Finch, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Montevideo, Uruguay. | PERSIA. | Herbert W. Bowen, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Teheran. John Tyler, Interpreter, Teheran. PERU. Irving B. Dudley, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Iima. Richard R. Neill, Secretary of Legation, Lima. : PORTUGAL. John N. Irwin, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Lisbon. Capt. S. IH. Slocum, Military Attaché, Lisbon. RUSSIA. Charlemagne Tower, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, St. Petersburg. Herbert H. D. Pierce, Secretary of Embassy, St. Petersburg. Herbert J. Hagerman, Second Secretary of Embassy, St. Petersburg. Lieut. W. S. Sims, Naval Attaché, St. Petersburg. SIAM. Hamilton King, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Bangkok. James A. Chivers, Interpreter, Bangkok. SPAIN. _ Bellamy Storer, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Madrid. Stanton Sickles, Secretary of Iegation, Madrid. SWEDEN AND NORWAY. William W. Thomas, jr., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Stockholm. Lieut. Col. W. R. Livermore, Military Attaché, Stockholm. SWITZERLAND. John G. A. Leishman, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Berne. Capt. George R. Cecil, Military Attaché, Berne. TURKEY. Oscar S. Straus, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Constanti- nople. Lloyd C. Griscom, Secretary of Legation, Constantinople. A. A. Gargiulo, Interpreter, Constantinople. VENEZUELA. Francis B. Loomis, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Caracas. William W. Russell, Secretary of Legation, Caracas. EGVYPYE, John G. Long, Agent and Consul-General, Cairo. 56-1ST—2D ED——1I9 276 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS. UNITED STATES CONSULATES-GENERAIL, CONSULATES, COMMERCIAL, AGENCIES, CONSULAR AGENCIES, AND CONSULAR CLERKS. [Alphabetically arranged by consular offices. ] Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Aaraw, Switzerland... ... 0... Henry H. Morgan. ... Consul. Booioo on Remigius Sauerlander | Vice and deputy consul. Aberdeen, Scotland... ........... Andrew Murray...... Agent. Abo, Finland. 0 a LL Victor Forselius. . . ... Do. Acajutla, Salvador... ovina Tee Marston... s.....: Do. Acapulco, Mexico... iii... George W. Dickinson.| Consul. | Dee CR Se Fdgar Battle... ........ Vice-consul., Adelaide, Australia. ............. Charles A. Murphy...| Agent. Aden, Avie, LE Edwin S. Cunningham Consul. oe W. H. Lockerman ...| Vice-consul. Aguas Calientes, Mexico. ........ Alfred M. Raphall ...| Agent. Aix la Chapelle, Germany........ Frank M. Brundage ..| Consul. POs. iE a |: Gordon Scott. ....... Vice and deputy consul. AbyabaBengal a0 Ga | Charles Findlay...... Agent. Albany, Australia... 0... 0 | Frank R. Dymes...... Do. Alberton, Prince Edward Island. .| Albert Glidden....... Do. Albert Town, West Indies. ..... .. | José CG. Maura... Do. Aleppo, Syria... vias i Frederick Poche..... Do. Alexandretta, Syria. .... . ......; W.R. Davis’. ........ Consul. Bo sr hones al ana Walter F. Walker ....| Vice-consul. Alexandria, Egypt............... James Hewat......... Agent. Algeciras, Spain een er aa Do. Algiers, Algeria, Aafnien. San Daniel S. Ridder as Consul. Almeria, Malaga, Spain Amapala, Honduras Amherstburg, Ontario DO. cerns Ancona, Italy Angers, France Annaberg, Germany SS ee faietie Raia lute ule uive ule nt Annapolis, Nova Scotia Antigua, West Indies Antofagasta, Chile Antwerp, Belgium Do Henry W. Carey Alger KE. Carlton | William Heyden | Chester W. Martin. ... | F. A. Hough | Anson B. Johnson.... j-Carl Johmson.....;... . | Li Ung Bing | Frank D. Hill | Albertus Vinke | A. P. Tomassini | Jules H. Luneau John F. Winter | Franz M. Jaeger | Jacob M. Owen | Henry M. Hunt | Samuel Galbraith . | Charles C. Greene . | George F. Lincoln ... : Stanislas H. Haine... | Prancis E. Vouillon .. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul and marshal. Interpreter. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. | Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul-general. Vice and deputy consul- general. Deputy consul-general. TA SAAT 77 Consuls and Consulales. 277 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Apia, Samoa, and Nukualofa, Tonga. Areal Bragll co. .oo 000 Ce Arendal, Norway. ............... Aslea, Chilled. on i cin uis Arichat Nova Scotia... ........... Arnprior, Ontario... v.00. Arthabaska, Quebec.............. Assioot, Beypt ooh. oon Asuncion, Paraguay. .............. Augsburg, Germany ............. Aux Cayes, Haiti... ... ... 0 Azua, Santo Domingo...... ..... Bagdad, Miley on ols nn Bahia il: SArgenting. on Bahia, Beal a Gelud Bamberg, Germany ............ .. Bari, Waly coon Barmen Germany... ......c 0.0. Barnsley, England... oo... 00. Barranquilla, Colombia. .......... Barrie, Ontario... 00. ho dn Barrington, Nova Scotia... .......: Basle, Switzerland: 0.0 a Bassein, RBassoraly, Turkey... .. Bastia, Corsica... ou Batavia, Java: 0.00 nna Do A sR ER I SR RI Luther W. Osborn. . .. William Blacklock. . . Twiz Schondt..... ... Christian Eyde....... John W. Tutz... David Simpson...... Stanage Binet. ....... Charles H. Sawyer... Arthur Poifras.... Bestauros W. Khayat. John N. Ruffin... ....: William Harrison. ... Daniel E. McGinley. . Louis Nicolaides. .... John Burgess. ....... Frank Dillingham... Teonard A. Bachelder. XG. Oberndorf. i. Henry E. Roberts. ... John Hardy... ..... 0. Rudolph Hiirner. .... Walter I. Jones...... Henry W. Furniss. . .. Louis G. Mackay..... John G. Ballentine. .. Towis Stern. 0... AlbertKiessling.. .... Hamilton King... . Lawrence FE. Bennett. S. A. Magcallister..... Arthur B. St. Thill.... Julims Gi Lay .......: HE Rider... ... Ignacio H. Bass... ... Nicholas Schuck... .. Max Bouchsein...... John A. Ritterhaus. .. Robert D. Maddison. . W. Irving Shaw. A. FE. H. Creswicke. James Hamilton. .... Simon Damiani... ... Sidney B. Everett ... B.S. Rairden. ....... Henry Goddard... ... Benedict C. Mullins. . James C. Chambers. .. ATewis Kidd ....... G. Bie Ravndal...... Wm. C. Magelssen.. . | W. W. Touvelle...... Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Agent. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. ..| Consul. Elias P. Pellet. ....... | Vice and deputy consul. .| Agent. Thos. W. Robertson. .| George Gifford. ...... Samuel Hollinger. ...| Do. \ Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Do. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. | Vice and deputy consul. 278 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Belgrade, Servia... 0. .... 0. Belize, British Honduras. ........ 10 Ir el a Se Belleville, Ontario. ............. .. | oe I Se Se Beni-Saf, Africa, /.0. 0. ve. ied Bergen, NOIrWaAY ... ih vss vies os I Ed SC Re Berlin, Germany... .........5h | BI EE Se Se Sn Bilbao, Spain... cola eg Birmingham, England... ........ Ine sn De LR ae ee Sr a Black River, Jamaica... ..:.....v Bloemfontein,Orange Free State. . Bluefields, Nicaragua. ........... Bocas del Toro, Colombia. ........ Broke ES Se Ss Bogota, Colombia... ..........v.. | PLA A NR DE PY Bologna, aly... =o .h.. 0.0 Bombay, India. ...........i vain Be Sr SI Bongecea, Honduras ....... ....... Bone, Afvien,. .. via 0G Bordeaws, France... ............. ID a en i eR i Ce Do oh er aa aE Boulogne-sur-mer, France. ....... Bradford, England. .......-:..:-. AD a TEE Ea i BR ST ee RE Brake and Nordenhamm, Germany Brantford, Ontario... . 0... Brava, Cape Verde Islands. ....... Bremen, Germany... - ........... Po: ae Bremerhaven-Geesteminde, Ger- many. Breslan, Germany... ....... =. Brest Bronce: io. seis nies on Bridgewater, Nova Scotia. ........ Brisbane, New South Wales... ... Bristol, Bugland....... 5... 00 PO. ne re ae a, Brockville, Ontario... .... . i... .. Brung; Anstyla 0 0a Brunswick, Germany... ........... 1B I a Se eh Brussels, Belgium. ............ 0. Peas Cin crn ns an Bucaramanga, Colombia. ......... William I. Avery.... Christopher Hem p- stead. Michael J. Hendrick. . William N. Ponton. . . E.T,.G 'Milsom...... Victor E. Nelson .. ... Johan C. Isdahl, jr... Frank H.Mason ..... Dean B. Mason ...... Frederick von Versen. A. T,. Frankenthal.... Emil David. > ..... Carles Yensen . =... Marshal Halstead. . .. Frederick M. Burton. . Ernest Flarker....... C. M. Farquharson... Alfred Elliott... ..... Philip B. Coyle. ...... Davia R. Hand... .-. Arthur M. Beaupre... Benito Zalamea...... Carlo Gardin... ...... William I’. Fee ...... Charles F. Meyer..... William Bayly....... Antoine Felix Garbe. . Albion W. Tourgee. .. James I,. Chassereau . Willian: Hale... ..... Brastus 8. Day. ... ... Thomas I,. Renton... Richard B. Nicholls. . . Wilhelm Clemens... . Arthur C. Hardy..... J-J-Nanes........... Henry W. Diederich . George H. Murphy... John H. Schnabel. ... Charles W. Erdman. . Neander Alexander . . William H. Owen. . .. William J.Weatherill. Lorin A. Lathrop... ... Gerard Mosely... ...: Charles W. Merriman. William W. Wood. . .. Gustavus Schoeller. . . Talbot J. Albert...... Julius Seckel. ........ George W. Roosevelt. Gregory Phelan. ..... Gustave Volkman. ... Bucharest, Roumania.......:.... Budapest, Hungary....... Sm Bo a AE William (5. Boxshall. . Frank Dyer Chester. . Louis Gerster... =. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Consul. Vice and ‘deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Do. Deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul, Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consuls and Consulates. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Buen Ayre, West Indies Buenos Ayres, Argentina Ci Se seers Bet LN PRs Cagliari, Italy Cairo, Iigypt Caldera, Chile Cali, Colombia CollaoPern s,s von savin Campeche, Mexico Campobello Id., New Brunswick. . Cannes, France. Canton, Chima. ov lh, es Do Pa Canso, Nova Scotia. ........ Cape Haitien, Hatt, 5. Caracas, Venezuela Cardiff, Wales Carini, Italy Corligle, Bnglamd .. oo... 2 Caveava, Thay. i. iss ata Carril, Spain Satins, Colombia... ow ol alist ie iiai tel oie: ek aieii w te RN e ni Nenezuela. "oo. 0 5h Casa-Blanca, Morocco Cassel, German Rasim di Stabia, Italy... Condy France. ...............:. Cayenne, British Guiana Ceara, Brazil Cotta ane... or orainns Ceylon, India (Colombo) Do Champerico, Guatemala Charleroi, Bel oe A A el ROH Ho TE Consular officer. | Rank. En CxBoydl o.oo Agent. Daniel Mayer... iv. Consul. IL a Ra Vice-consul. John H. Carvoll..... .. Consul. Alphonse Dol: ....... Agent. John G. Lon Ethelbert Watts W. D. Hunter James B. Milner R. F. Patterson C. C. Campbell John €. Morong...... Wm. A. Barney William B. Dickey... W. S. McBride James S. Benedict. . . . Charles Murray... ... Rafael Preciat ....... John I. Alexander. ... Philip T. Riddett Edward Bedloe Hubbard T. Smith ... Frank R. Mowrer .... Tsin Ching Chung. ... Alfred W. Hart L. W. Livingston Theo. Behrmann James G. Stowe Clifford H. Knight . .. BE. DeSola..... 0... Daniel ‘I. Phillips... .. Frnest L. Phillips. ... F. Crocchiolo Thomas S. Strong . ... Ulisse Boceacci... ...- Rafael Madrigal... ... Augustus T. Hanabergh Joseph Bowron Juan A. Orsini... ..... John Cobb Gustav C. Kothe Joseph E. Hayden. ... R. O’N. Wickersham. Alex, Heingartner. ... JacobRifter.......... Hans Dietiker..... ... E.A. L. Lalanne A. E. da Frota Virgil C. Reynolds ... L. S. Nahmens William Morey... .... Elmer I,. Morey. Pedro A. Bruni J. FisherReese. ....... Delmar J. Vail | John I. Crockett. .... Charles E. Monteith. . William Gordon Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Marshal. Interpreter. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Cockburn Harbor, West Indies... 280 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Chaudiere Junction, Quebec... ... Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland. . . .. Sheloo, Ching. * oo 0 a, Chemainus, British Columbia .... Chemnitz, Germany ............. Cherbourg, France... 0. oa. 0. Cheverie, Nova Scotia. .......... Glilclaye, Perm. oo. a de 20 Chibnahua, Mexico... . .......: POs i ra aa ee Chittagong, India . oo... 0. lL Christchurch, New Zealand. ...... Christiania, Norway. :............ Christiansand, Norway........... Christiansted, West Indies. ....... Ciudad Bolivar, Venezuela. ....... Ciudad Jnarez, Mexico... ....... ... Civitas Vecchia, Ttaly.... . o... Clarenceville, Quebec. ........... Clinton, Ontario... ... 2... 0h Coaticool:, Quebec... 0. Cognac, France... i... crave Cologne, Germany... ...... ......2 IR Se ER ae Se Ee Colonia, Urnguay. 0... ... Dos. sari Slr a Constantinople, Turkey. ......... Bou. ne Cookshire, Quebec... ............. Copenhagen, Denmark. .......... BOER. ie sa San Coquimbo, Chile... ........... vs Corcublon, Spain... .............. Cordoba, Argentina... ....... .... Corinto, Nicaragua.....:........ Cork (Queenstown), Ireland... ... James M. Rosse... .. Henri Rieckel, jr... John Fowler. ..... Henry A. C. Emery... James S. Gibson... ... James C. Monaghan. . . Joseph F. Monaghan. H. J. E. Hainneville. . John G. Burgess. ..... Theodore Stechmann. WW. Mills. ......... Charles Lee Curtis... William Martin... . .. George E. Sevey.. . Wan Bing Chung.... R. A. Mactaggart. ..... Robert Pitcaithly .... Henry Bordewich. ... Yauritz EF. Bronn..:.. Berne Reinhardt. .... A. J. Blackwood. ..... George F. Smithers. . Spencer Lewis... ... William Tseng Laisun. Robert Henderson. . . . Charles W. Kindrick . Charles E. Wesche. . . Charles P. Snyder. . .. Albon G. Snyder... .. G. Marsanick........ Edmund Macomber. . AO. Pattison... Jesse H. Johnson. .... Henest: |. Astell’. Walter K. Linscott. . . Oliver J. D. Hughes. . Alvin Florschutz . . . .. C.H. Durham. .....o.. Blise Jouard......... John A. Barnes... -.. Charles FE. Barnes .... William Small. ...... Charles Macdonell. .. Wm. W. Cobbs. ....... T.S. Flournoy... ... B.D. Manton........ Garret T. Ryan .. ....: C. M. Dickinson...... William Albert. ...... Thomas O. Morton . .. Erank I, Duley... .. William F. Given.... John C. Ingersoll. .... JulesBlom.... ...«... Andrew Kerr........ John M. Thome... ... Henry Palazio....... Daniel Swiney....... DO, a Ee James W. Scott... . .. Commercial agent. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul and interpreter. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Marshal. Interpreter. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul., Consul. Vice-consul. Interpreter. Agent, Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Interpreter. Marshal. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. = a Consuls and Consulates. 281 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Cork (Queenstown), Ireland ..... Cecil Piatt... .... 5 Deputy consul. Cornwall Ontavie................ David A. Black... .. Agent. Coro, Venemneln, op. 00 0, Josiah 1, Senior... .. Do. Coronel. Chile, Lo av, J. Henry Downs... ... Do. Corunna, Spain... ....... 0.0. J. 0 Julio Harmony......: Consul. Coan Gen El Ra Rh ae Vice-consul. Coteam, Onebec,. 000 is :...| Thomas Stapleton. ...| Agent. Courtwright, Ontario ............. Fred W. Baby... ..,.. Do. Crefeld, Germany. .............0. Julian Phelps........ Consul. Be, onside Wm. P. Phelps... Vice and deputy consul. Cronstadt, Bussin. ............... PeterWigins. +... .. Agent. Cuenta, Colombia... ........... Philip Tillinghast, jr. Do. Cumana, Venezuela. ............ . José G. N. Romberg. . Do. Cumberland, British Columbia ...| George W. Clinton. . Do. Curacao, West Indies. ........... Hlias'H. Cheney... | Consul. D0 a ea, th Jacob Wuister. ....... | Vice-consul. Damnasens, Syria... o.oo. N. Meshaka ......... Agent. Dantzie, Germany... 0c... 0 Philipp Albrecht. .... Do. Dardanelles, Turkey... .... i. i. Frank Calvert... ..... Do. Dartmouth; England... ...... ... Jasper Bartlett... .... Do. Dawson City, Northwest Territory.| James C. McCook. ...| Consul. Derby, Bugland.. =... i. 0 Deseronto, Onfario’.............. Dieppe, France... ....c ao Digby, Nova Scotia... ........: Dijon, Bramce 000 ian Dover, England... ......... Dresden, Germany. ..............-. Drontheim, Norway .... 0... Dublin, Ireland... oo ani Dunedin, New Zealand... ........ Dunfermline, Scotland. .......... Do Durban, Cape of Good Hope, Africa Dusseldorf, Germany. ...... + Rotation , Cape of Good Hope, Africa. Ediahgh, Scolland ......... en New Brunswick ..... Eibenstock, Germany............ Emerson, Manitoba." ............ Ensenada, Mexico: onl hic an Ronald Morrison. . . .. John E. Doherty..... Albert M. Herron. . .. George H. Moulton. . Gustav H. Richter . .. Charles Kirk Fddowes Charles A. Milliner . . Raoulle Bourgeois. . . . William B. Stewart. .. Ernest Bourette. . . ... Francis W. Prescott. . Charles I,. Cole... -.. Alfred C. Johnson.... Hernando de Soto. . .. ClavsBerg.......w... Joshua Wilbour...... Arthur Donn Piatt ... Jom C. Higgins... ... Allan Baxter... ........ W.GC. Nelle... John N. McCunn..... Charles Drysdale .... Benjamin Morel... ... Norman FE. B. Munro. Walter H. Faulkner. . William W. McVea .. Alex. H. Rennie..... Peter Lieber oi... Bmil Hoette. >. William H. Fuller. . .. Rufus Fleming. ...... Frederick P. Piatt ... J- Adolphe Guy......;. Ernest I,. Harris... ... Duncan McArthur. ... ‘Harry K. Taylor. .... Leo Bergholz.:.... ... Vital-Ojalvo.. .... .. ¢ Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general Deputy consul-general, Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul, 282 Congressional Divectory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Esmeraldas, Beaader. .......... Basen, Germany... cou. re de Falmouth, England. ............. D Falmouth, Jamaica, West Indies. . Farnham, Ouebec...:.......... ... Fare, Portugal... vw. 0 00h Payal Azores. .. 0... an Sn Pinme, Womgasy .... 000 Wlorenice, Maly ao. 0 a0 0 D ores, NZOres. in. nn, Flushing, Netherlands. .......... Bort Brie, Onlorle.......-. vs ois Port William, Ontario. ............ Frankfort-on-the-Main, Germany. Bouin nition nnd Fredericksted, West Indies. ...... Fredericton, New Brunswick. . ... Prelichsburg, Quebee....:.... .L. Freemantle, Australia. ........... Freiburg, Baden, Germany....... Fronfera, Mexico... on Buchan, China... 2.00 a Funchal, Madeira... ............... Ane Sat Galashiels, Scotland..-:..... ARE Galt, Orie. bien. or an Gananoque, Quebec.” 0... Garracha, Spain... o.oo dn, Gaspé Basin, Quebec. ... ..... Sal Georgetown, Prince Edward Island Gem, Germany... . 0 Ghent, Belgium... ....... wn... Girgenti, aly... a0 0o of iis; Glasgow, Scotland... ............ Pols. Ee EG Gloucester, England. ............ Goderich, Ontario... ...... 0.0... Gonaives, Fail. . J. 0 oh rin Gorée-Dakar, Africa..........5.. Ferdinand Servat . ... EF. Asthorver, jr... ... Howard Fox......... G. Henry: Fox... ..... Charles A. Nunes. .... | William I,. Hibbard. . RB. J. Tovares ........ Moyses Benarus. .. ... Giovanni Gelletich. . . Edward C. Cramer... Spirito Bernardi... ... James Mackay... .... Peter BF. Avier:...... Ossian Bedell ........ CW. Jarvis. Richard Guenther. ... S., W. Hanauner ...... Chas, P. Vaughn ..... William F. Moore. ... James T. Sharkey. ... | William A. Reynolds. | Alfred D. Allen ...... E. Theophilus Liefeld. Benjamin F. Liefeld. . Michael Girard... .... Samuel I. Gracey. ... Wilbur T, Gracey. .... Thomas Ling........ Thomas C. Jones... .. William J. G. Reid. .. John Stalker... ... James Ryerson... .... B.B.Abbolt..... .... Almar F. Dickson. ... John Canter... ....... Benjamin H. Ridgely. LH. Musnien......... James Fletcher... ... B.V. Dobrilovich. ... Federico: Seernt. ..: .. A. J. MacDonald... .. Charles Newer... ..... Richard Le Bert... ... Julius Van Hee...... Horatio J. Sprague. Richard I,. Sprague. . . PrancisCiotta... ..... Samuel M. Taylor... .. William Gibson... ... John McFadzean. .... George Sawter....... Alfred Neubert ...... Arnold H. Palin... ... Robert S. Chilton... .. William Campbell. . .. J. William Woeél ..... Peter Strickland... .. Robert S. S. Bergh... Rank. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul general. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and dep. consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Interpreter. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Deputy consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consuls and Consulates. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Gothenberg, Sweden... ....... ... Governors Harbor, West Indies. . . Grand Canary, Canary Islands. ... Grand Manan, New Brunswick. . . Greenock, Scotland... .......... 5 Green Turtle Cay, West. Indies. .. Grenada, West Indies. ........... Grenoble, BPranice.................4 Grenville, Onebec..’................ Greta B. Neliah Jn annals Guadalajara, Mexico. . >... ..x. Guadeloupe, West Indies. ........ Guanajuato, Mexico .............. Guatemala, Central America... ... Bo. tnt ed te ao he Guayaquil; Fenador. ............. 1 SS Ee Guaymas, Mexico. .... 0. oi... Guelph Ontario. ................ Guernsey, Great Britain. ......... Maida, Ansteia. oo... ie Hail, Synlas oie ans Elalifax, Nova Scotia............. rte nn ER Harput, Armenia: 0... 0. Havre, Brance.. -......onl Hemmingford, Quebec........... Hereford, Quebec -.. Hobart, Tasmania... ooh Hodewda, Arabia... ............. Holyhead, England... ............ Honda, Colombia. ............. Honfleur, France... i. .... =... .., Paul Berghaus...... Abner W. Griffin. . .. William A. Fraser. ... James: A. Tove....... Edward W. Bethell. .. Bl. Beam. ooo tn George B. Anderson. . Thomas W. Murton. . .| Alex. Pridham.......| Enoch Winkler. ..... Fdward B. Light..... Lows Hl. Aymé...... Charles Bartlett... ... Dwight Purness. . .... James C. McNally. ... W. GC; Hunter, jv... .. Pedro A. Bruwi....... Perry -M. De Ieon.... Martin Reinberg..... Frank VM. Crocker ... Charles N. Daly... ... George A. Oxnard. ... William Carey ....... Prank Siller. ...... .. Gottlieb Schumacher. John G. Foster... .... George Mill... -...... Hugh Pitcairn... .... Otto W. Hellmrich. . . Ernest H. IL. Mum- menhoff. W. Maxwell Greene. . James B. Heyl... .-. James M. Shepard. . .. Richard Butler. ....... LeviS. Wilcox... .... George E. Reed... Jay White............ Kirke Iathrop..... .. Alex. M. Thackara. ..| John Preston Beecher. | Jars Virgin, .......... | John R. Nichols. ..... Alex. G. Webster. . . .. Ernest Webster ... . .. Vittorio Cremasche. . . Richard D. Roberts. . . Henry Hallam... ... Henry M. Hardy... .. R. Wildman... ...... Edwin Wildman ..... | Chin Poy Woo... .. | W.DBavd Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Deputy consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Interpreter. Marshal. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Do. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Interpreter. William Haywood. ... Consul-general. | Vice and dep. con. gen. i ti EH Re To a Pe ae | || i i 284 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Huntingdon, Quebec... ...... ... Innsbruck, Austria... 0... 0.0 Iquique, Chile. ‘o.oo, Dobe cons nvh inna. oan wl Jacmel, Haiti. 0 hon Lan Jeremieg Hatt... ive Jeres de la Frontera, Spain....... Jersey, Great Brita. ..... ..0. Jerusalem, Syria... ....... 0. 00 Johannesberg, South African Re- public, Africa. Rorachi, India. .... ..- 0.00 Reh] Germany... 0... ia. Keneh, Eoyot............ coos Kidderminster, England .. ....... Riel, Gepnmny ola con ois Kimberly, Cape of Good Hope, Africa. Kingsport, Nova Scotia .......... Kingston, Ontario,. ... .... oui Kirkcaldy, Seotland .. .......... Ko6nigsberg, Germany............ ia Colle, Quebec... 00. La Guayra, Venezuela... ......... Taguna de Terminos, Mexico... .. La Libertad, San Salvador. ....... Langen Schwalbach, Germany... . Ianzarotte, Canary Islands. ...... a Pag Bolivdai), 5 ras lds LaPoz, Mexico. .....o 0. ons Launceston, Tasmania ............ leeds, Bagland 7... 00.00 Bos i a ane eae Techorm aly. Soo uy on co Doe. ee Lelcester, England... ......... Yeipsic, Germany... ......... uw... IDEA A Ste Lethbridge, Manitoba. ........... Liban, Russia a. von Bleata, Tally oho. iia Benjamin F. Stone ... David J. Bailey. ...... William P. Smyth. ... Arthur W. Benton ... John Dineen......... August Bargehr...... Joseph W. Merriam. . . Maximo Rosenstock. . Jean B. Vital, ....... L. Trebaud Rouzier. . . Herbert EF. Clark. .... William D. Gordon .. A. TH. BR. Armstrong. .. Alexander Wood. . . .. Max Adler. A. XK. M. el Ammari. . James Morton. ....... PH. I. Sartor... .... Gardner Williams . . . . Arthur F. Borden. .... Marshall H. T'witchell. Matthew H. Folger... Ethelbert Watts. ..... James H. Springer. ... Andrew Innes. ....... Alexander Eckhardt . Henvy Hoyle :.. .. Louis Goldschmidt. .. German Hahn ....... Alfred Cooper... ... Ernest Grebert....... James Viosea, jr... ... George H. Jackson... Judd B. Hastings. . ... Lindsay Tulloch ..... Lewis Dexter... ...., William Ward ....... Edmund Ward....... James A Smith... .... EmilioMasi ......... S.S. Partridge... .... BH Warner jr... Frederick Nachod.... Rudolph Fricke... ... Frederick W. Downer. Hugo Smit .......... Arthur Verderame. . .. Alfred A. Winslow. .. John Gross... ..... C. Dubois Gregoire .. Rank. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent, Consuls and Consulailes. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Timerick, Treland ul. 05 Imoges, France . 7... ov. 0 Lindsay, Ontario. io. 06 00.0 Tinebore, Ouebec.......... coo. Lisbon, Poustugal-. 50 dl on Liverpool, Nova Scotia........... Iivingston, Guatemala... ....... Elanelly, Wales J. 0 oc. 0 Toanda, Afeleal weir i nnn TE I I de Ol Londonderry, Ireland... -.... Lourengo Marquez, Africa. ....... I Odlent, Franee sx. 0.05.0 0s Louisburg, Nova Scotia .......... Tabeck, Germany. ©. 0 2b on Lucerne, Switzerland ............ Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. ......... Yorgan, Tyeland . cl 0000 0 Tuxor, Boypt.. coor ia aa yong; Wrances. 0.1.0. ann Macassar, Celebes ..............~ Maceio, Brazil... 00 0. an Macoris, Santo Domingo. ........ Madras, British India............ Madrid, Spain. 0.0 nos Magdalena Bay, Mexico... ....... Magdeburg, Germany... ......... Malmo, Sweden ............. 4. Malta, Malta Tsland... ............ Manads, Bragilis oo 8 5 nna Managua, Nicaragua............. DE Se Re a Manchester, England. ........... Mansourah, Beypt.:.... oi... Manta, Ecuador... =. 00h Maracaibo, Venezuela... ... ...... Maranhfe, Brazil..... ........... Markneukirchen, Germany. ...... Fdmund Ludlow... .. Walter T. Griffin... .. Auguste Jouhannaud . James M. Knowlson. . Heel S. Beebe. ....... Jacob H. Thieriot . ... John B. Wilbor :..... James Boyle .o.i:..... William J. Sulis...... William Pierce ...... Jason M. Mack ...... Frank C. Dennis... ... William Bowen ...... William M. Osborne. . Richard Westacott . .. Francis W. Frigout. .. Henry S. Culver... .. Robert Reid, jr... ..-. PR. Rodger... ...... W. Stanley Hollis. . . . James McIntosh. ..... Teon Deprez.... =; Henry C. V. LeVatte. . Jacob Meyer, jr... ... | B®. W. Magahan ...-... Aly Mourad. ....... Johan C:'Covert.... i. Thomas N. Browne. . . Kal Aner 5... Charles Goble... ...... Hdward C. Reed ..... William H. Nichols .. Dwight T. Reed. ..... Henry W. Diederich. . Robert Weichsel, jr .. Walter Shuman. ..... Walter Hausing. . . ... R. M. Bartleman..... Thomas R. Gerry .... Peter M. Flensburg .. John BH. Grout, jr. . .- Joseph F.-Balbi-..... John C. Redman..... Chester Donaldson... Arthur O. Wallace. . .. William F. Grinnell. . Ernest J. Bridgford. . . Heaton W. Harris. . .. Peter J. Osterhaus. . .. Ibrahim Daoud ...... E. H. Plumacher .... Emil MacGregor. .... I. F. da S. Santos. ... Oscar Malmros. ...... Marseilles, Prance........ . ... Robert P. Skinner. .. Agent. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Comnsul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. - Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Tp @i rn i 286 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Marseilles, France... .........-. Martinique, West Indies... ...... Matagalpa, Nicaragua. ........... Matamoras, Mexico. ............. Mathewtown, West Indies. ....... Mazatlan Mexico... NO a A SE Medellin, Colombia... ...... ..... Megantic, Quebec... 0... Melbourne, Australia. ............ Mentone, BPrance.......:. i... Mersine, Syria... otha 0 Messina, Waly. oo. iw Maen MemiCo, io iin ai is Mila, nly 0 ras Milford Haven,Wales............ Miragoane, Haiti... 00 00000 Mogador, Morocco. .............. Mollendo, Pernt. ....0. oh un Monaco, BraneCe. . ... ius ive Moncton, New Brunswick. ....... Monganui, New Zealand......... Monrovia, Tiberian. .............. Monte Christi, Santo Domingo. . .. Montego Bay, Jamaica, West Indies Monterey, Mexico... .......... Montserrat, West Indies. ......... Moertrisburg,Ontazio.. 2... ... Moulmein, India.... ..0......... Munich, Germany... ............ Mytilene Turkey... 0... Nacaome, Honduras ............... DOL Sn il a es ae Nanaimo, British Columbia. ...... Nantes, Brance..............0 20. . Robert I. Fast . 0... Alonzo C. Yates... ... Amedee Testart ...... Archibald Mackirdy. . Mahomed Fazel...... Isaac A. Manning. . .. P. Merrill Griffith. . .. J. Biclenberg .:...... Daniel D. Sargent. ... Louis Kaiser... ...... Gustavus A. Kaiser. . . Thomas Herran...... Walter C. Mann ..... Henry W. Albro....... Joli PB. Bray 0... Thomas W. Stanford. Achille Tspard'... . Richard Viterbo ... .. Charles M. Caughy... Letterio Pirrone. .. . .. Andrew D. Barlow ... J-Bilardy.. oo. 2. Henry Vizcayo. ... ... William Jarvis. ...... Lorenzo Frette....... George S. Kelway. . .. Francis W. Mitchell. . George Broome... ... Farique Meier... ... Emile de Loth....... Gustave Beutelspacher Edward A. Reilly .... Robert Wyles........ Owen I, W. Smith ... Beverly V. Payne. ... Isaac L. Petit. .....%. G. 1. P. Corinaldi.... John K. Pollard... ..... Philip C.. Hamma... ... Albert W. Swalm. . .. Thomas W. Howard. . John I. Bittinger. .... Patrick Gorman.. .... Richard Hannam..... John E. Hamilton. . .. George F. Bradfield. . . Thomas Smith. ...... Samuel Smith ....... W. J. Davidson....... James H. Worman . .. Michael M. Fottion .. John E. Foster....... Charles B. Harris .... E.R. Fulkerson ...... Wm. H. S. Gleason ... George S. Schetky . .. Joseph 1. Brittain... .. Hiram D. Bennett. ... William Templeton. . . Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent, Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. : Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Comnsul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Agent. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Interpreter. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consuls and Consulates. 287 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFRFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. NatalyiBragll ol ciiie nn vob Neustadt, Germany... ........... Nevis, West Indies... ........... Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England. . . Newcastle, New Brunswick. ...... Newport, Wales... ..... 00 Niagara Falls, Ontario. ... ........ Nimnchwang, China... ........ Nogales, Mexico... 5.0... 5 Norfolk Island, New South Wales. North Bay, Ctaldn... North Portal, Assiniboia ......... Nottingham, England GEE Do Sonos Menja:..... « o.o.ly Nuremberg, Germany... .:.... :- Ocos, Guatemala, ....... .....r.... Odessa, Russia... iol. 0000 Dba we Bl en By Oporto, Portugal. .... 5... .. ; @ran; Algeria, Africa. ............ Orillia, Onlarlos, ars Sain eran 1 eR OR Gl Oaxaca, Mexico. =o. i Padang, Sumatia. oh Palta Pern, io. ia a Paramaribo, British Guiana ...... Parise Omtanio. 00. aa A. Homer Byington .. Richard F. St. Lon 3 Thomas J. McLain. . Alfred E. Moseley. ... Apollonio Barroca. ... Leopold Blum. -...... Charles C. Greaves... Horace W. Metcalf. . . Hetherington Nixon . Frederic W. Goding . . Stewart Keightly..... Robert R. Call... .... William E. Heard. .. Harlan W. Brush ..... Ernest S. Fraser. ..... Harold S. Van Buren. Attilio Piatti... ....-- J. J. Fred’k Bandinel. James ¥. Darnell .." .. A. R. Morawetz... ... Isaac Robinson... ... Daniel J. McKeown. . W.. H: Dorsey ....... Silas C. McFarland. .. Wm. T. Cartwright. .. Paul’. Wolff... ... Robert B. Mahone. . .. APB. Theriot... Luther W. Osborne. .. G.C.B.- Weber... ... S. Dunkelsbiihler.. . . . Oscar Beck... uo. Samuel Wolford .. ... Thomas KE. Heenan. . . William Stuve....... Benj. A. Courcelle. . .. Ernest A. Wakefield. . Robert H. Jupp... -.» Samuel 8. Tiyon...... W. BEbihavah. .. ...... W. P. Sterricke..... Charles E. Turner . .. Horace M. Sanford. . . W. T. Robertson. . ... Charles H. Arthur. ... H. J-P. Haacke...... Giovanni Paternitiz . . Toton S. Hunt... .... Richard A. Shea ..... Hezekiah A. Gudger. . Francis A. Gudger. . .. K. XK Renneday...... Julius F. Tideman. ... Avthus Daye... W.W. Hume... .. =: Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Interpreter. Agent. Comnsul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Comnsul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. 288 Congressional Directory. fh UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Pavral, Mexico... oh von oh Parrghoro, Nova Scotia... .... Parry Sound, Ontario... .......... Paspebiac, Quebec... o.. 0.0 5 Patras Greece: vo ian Las Penang dndia fon... 20 ou Pernambuco, Brazil 5.0. 0000 Peteshoro, Ontario... a. va Petit Gove, Hafli... .......... 5 Picton, Onfarle.. ....... oi... Picton, Nova Scotia... ............ Pirrens, Greece... oid. SEN Bina tern, i a Plavnen Germany... 0. oh Port Elizabeth, South Africa... ... Port Hawkesbury and Mulgrave, Nova Scotia. Port Hope, Ontagio............ %.. D Port 1imon, Costa Rica... ....%. Portions, Mangitius......... 00. Port Maria, West Indies........... Port Morant,West Indies. ........ Port Rowan, Onfarlo............. Port Said, Boypt..... .. ©. soa Port St. Marys, Spain... ......... Port Sarnia, Ontario... ... .... Portsmouth, England... .......... Postau Prince, Halll. ............. Portde Paix, Haiti... ..c. a 0 Port of Marbella, Spain.......... Port Stanley, Falkland Islands. . .. Potton, Onebee.... i. ibis i Prague; Austria... ooo 00 Dorn a Prescott, Ontario... ... 0... DO a ra Re a es Progreso, Mexico... ....0..... Puebla, Mexico... nana div, John K. Gowdy...... B.P. Maclean'....:.. J. Allison Bowen... ... James J. Tong... =... Laurence H. Hoke ... Walter BR. Foot... Daniel Bisson... ..; George I. Darte...... D. BB. Maximos........ J. CG. Hufnagle, "=... George A. Hufnagle. . OttoSchule. =o. =. John Krause... ..... Frank J. Bell... ... .. I. Kampmeyer....... Jacob F. Beringer... .. John R. Davies... ... Marino T. Sourmely. . Thomas W. Peters. . .. W. PF. 1, Fiedler... . Joseph G. Stephens. .. John J. Stephens... .. Emil Pretscher ...... Nicholas R. Snyder .. Daniel H. Jackson. ... John A. Chabaud..... Alexander Bain....... Harvey Dill. Jo. 0 John Harcourt... ... Richard H. Gadd .... John P. Campbell. ... A. Povah Ambrose... . Renben R. Baker... .: Lorenzo D. Baker; jr. . George B. Killmaster. William H. Meek... . Samuel G. Broadbent. Neal McMillan ...... Richard W. Chester. . William Joseph Main. John B. Terres... ... ... Alexander Battiste.. . . Carl Abegm. ... no. John E. Rowan...... James Smith... ....... Chandler Bailey...... Hugo Donzelmanmn. . . Emil Kubinzky...... Grenville James. ..... James Buckley... ..... Adelbert S. Hay ....: Fmile A.B.van Amer- ingen. E. H. Thompson. .... William Headen ..... Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Vice consul-general. Deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Agent. J) Consuls and Consulates. 289 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. L Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Puerto Cabello, Venezuela... ..... Luther T. Ellsworth. .| Consul. enn SR William H. Volkmar.| Vice-consul. Puerto Cortez, Honduras. ........ William E. Alger. .... Agent. | Puerto Plata, Santo Domingo. . ... Thomas Simpson. . ... Consul. Banta a Arthur W. Lithgow ..| Vice-consul. Pugwash and Wallace,Nova Scotia | Conrad W. Morris. ...| Agent. Punta Arenas, Chile... .....«....... Moritz Braun. ......- Do. Punta Arenas, Costa Rica......., Henry S. Morgan . ... Do. Ouebec; Canada, oui 20 0 William W. Henry ...| Consul. 1D yp Rear eR i Frank S. Stocking ...| Vice-consul. Quezaltenango, Guatemala. ... ... Grant A. Morrill. .... Agent. Onibdo, Colombia. .... oo ........ Henry G. Granger ... Do. Rangoon, Burmah............... Jolin Young.......... Do. Rat Poriage, Ontario... ..... .. G. Clayton Frisbie. .. Do. Redditeh, Bngland ...-......0 0 H.C. Browning...... Do. Reggio aly. ... oo. oh ovs Carle Celesti.. .... Do. Reichenberg, Auwstrian.... ......... Frank W. Mahin..... Consul. Dos ct ee Ei hn i Stefan Wagner. ...... Vice and deputy consul. Rennes, France. ........ nu... Ernest Folliard ...... Agent. Ravel, Beslan ovo bia. EB. von'Glehn........ Do. Ribyeims, Prange... 0 co. 0 William A. Prickett. .| Consul. a Jolin 1. Crossley... Vice-consul. Richibucto, New Brunswick. ..... George V. Mclnerney.| Agent. Riga: Russias duos. oie N. P. A. Bornholdt...| Consul. Melsat iol Cog a Se Vice-consul. imonskl, Quebec... .5... C.A. Boardman... ... Commercial agent. i Brrr aes BRT a Joseph A. Talbot... ... Vice and dep. com. agt. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil... ....... Fugene Seager... ..... Consul-general. De. eae Will Leonard Loowrie.| Vice and dep. con. gen. | Inte eran ee Se Wolff Havelburg. .... Deputy consul-general. Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil... ...... Jorge Vereker ....... Agent. Rio Hacha, Colonia... Te Do. Ritzebiittel and Cuxhaven, Ger- | J. G. B. Starke... ... Do. many. River Hebert, Nova Scotia ....... William Moffatt ..... Do. Rody, Maly... 0 cco 7. del Giudice .... ... Do. Rome, Maly. ...... coin bia0h Hector de Castro... .. Consul-general. Doser oe Charles M. Wood. .... Vice and dep. con. gen. Rosario, Argentina... oo... 0... James M. Ayers. ..... Consul. Boi oe i ah Charles H. Dougherty | Vice and deputy consul. Rosean, Dominica... .............. Henry A. Frampton. .| Agent, Rossland, British Columbia ...... John Jackson, jr... ... Do. Rostoff and Taganrog, Russia. . . .. William R. Martin... Acting agent. Rotterdam, Netherlands. ......... Soren Listoe ......... Consul. 10 ie RS SE EN Aire H. Voorwinden. .| Vice and deputy consul. Roubaix, France... 2.00.0 0s William P. Atwell. ...| Consul. Doz roma gr Gaston Thiery....... Vice-consul. AE Ee SR A Alfred Basrison...... Deputy consul. Ronen, Brance. iv. ois Thos. T. Prentis... .- - Consul. | HI aa el TE RE a E. M. J. Dellepiane. ..| Vice-consul. Roatan, Honduras, ............. ous William C. Wildt ....| Agent. Saigon, Cochin China... Edward Schnéegans. .| Commercial agent. Tia SRR SO sn Tauritz 1, Stang... .. Vice commercial agent. Salonica, Twkey. .. oc. P. HH. lazaro........ Agent. Salt Coy, West Indies. ........... Daniel F. Harriott. . .. Do. Saltillo, Mexico .............. .. Charles B. Towle..... Consul. Bon i et ea en eR Hahn ch Vice-consul. Samana, Santo Domingo. ........ Jean M. Villain...... Vice commercial agent. Samavang; Java: | ooo a B. Caulfield Stoker ...| Agent. Samsoun, Turkey... cool. G. C. Stephopoulo. . .. Do. Sanchez, PD. Rin. 0 ona Tosé A. Puente... 1. Do. 290 Congressional Divectory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular officer. Consular office. Rank. San Cristobal, Venezuela. ........ Alexander Boue...... Agent. San Feliu de Guixols, Spain. ..... Francis Esteva....... Do. San Jorge, Azores... Sono J. JCardezn.... ... Do. San José, Costa Rica................ John C. Caldwell. .... Consul. rr Par EE ee Ey Charles S. Caldwell. ..| Vice-consul. San José, Mexico. . +. i. o ia Abraham Kurnitzky..| Agent. San José de Guatemala........... Upton Lorentz....... Do. San Juancito, Honduras ......... EB. B. Dickason...... Do. San Juan del Norte, Nicaragua ...| William B. Sorsby. ...| Consul. Boise sun cl nla vio, B. PercyScott........ Vice-consul. San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua. .... Charles Holmann ....| Agent. San Luis Potosi, Mexico ......... Jom HH, Parwell ...... Do. San Pedro Sula, Honduras ....... J. M. Mitchell, jr... Do. San Reno, aly... ...0.. 0000 Albert Ameglio Fegan Do Santo Domingo, West Indies. ... Savannah la Mar, West Indies. ... Scarboro, West Indies ........... Schiedam, Netherlands .......... Scilly Islands, England.......... Seon Boren i. i ie ea Setubal, Portugal... ....... 0... Seville; Soin... 50... Shanghai, Clima. ol. G0 Shela. Nova Scotia... Sherbrooke, Quebec... Sierra Mojada, Mexico........... Sven, Straits Settlements. . . . Sonneberg, Germany ............ Serabaya, Java... oi 0 00 Soran, Germany... Lai Sorel, Quebec... 00 000 Sorrento, Italy Souris, Prince Edward Island. . ... Southampton, England.......... St. Anns Bay, West Indies....... St. Andrews, New Brunswick. . . .. Campbell I,. Maxwell. Juan A. Read ......... Max]. Baehy ........ Ulricho Christiansen . George W. Shotts. . ... Alex: R. Flockhart... Chas. S. Farquharson. Edward Keens....... Broest A. Man... .... John Banfield, jr... ... Horace N. Allen... ... Geo. A. Derby ........ Stephen P. Barchet.. James johnston ...... Prank M, Clark... ... Paul Lang... 0... Geo. FE. B. Borlase ... John I: Williams. .. ... James A. 1, Trice..:.. Henry B. Hackley.... R. A. Moseley, jr... .. A. B.S. Moseley. ..... Milo A, Jewett... .... Rufus W.Lane....... Frank D. Brooks... .. Max Brab........... Verne E-Joy......... B. NN. Powell..... ... William B. Murphy .. Isaie Sylvestre... .... John E. Hopley...... Richard Jones'....... Joseph W. Hopley . .. R..W. Horrls: .....2 George H. Stickney. . Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Do. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul general. Deputy consul-general. Marshal. Interpreter. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Comnsul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul : Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Do. oh ba © Consuls and Consulates. 291 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. St. Catharines, Ontario........... St. Christopher, “West Indies... .. St. Eustatius, West Indies... ..... St. Gall, Switzerland............. Leonard H. Collard. . . Joseph Haven........ Emile S. Delisle... . Hilary S. Brunot... .. Hastings Burroughs. . J. GC. C Byewy... James T. Dubois ..... Joseph Simon... .. St. George, New Brunswick... ... Edward Milliken... .. St. Geonges, Bermuda. 1000 0 La a ae a ein hn] William D. Fox. . St. Helena (island of).. St. Helens, England... ..: 0... St. Hyacinthe,/Ounebec:...... .... St. Lucia, West Indies........ St. Male, France... .... ....... St- Mare, Botts... on, St. Martin, West Indies. ......... Bovis oie ia he a A eC Sn ee te St. Thomas, West Indies ............ St. Vincent, Cape Verde Islands. . St. Vincent, West Indies......... Bianbrides Quebec. 5... 0005 Stavamger, Norway .............. Stettin, Germany......... Do Se Ontario... ©... a hg. Suez BEoypt oo. ou 0s Summerside, Prince Edward Id. Sunderland, England... 0... .. Sundsvall, Sweden............... Sutton, Quebec... 0.0... 56-1ST—2D ED——20 | Robert P. Pooley. . John Hammill ....... Joseph M. Authier. ... Francis Bartels... .... Ira B. Myers... 0... Martin J. Carter... .... Henry F. Bradshaw . . Charles Deal......... John Domnaghy....... William Peter. ....... Raymond Moulton. . . Charles Miot..... ::.. D. C. von Romondt. .. W.B. F.C.L. A. Neth- erwood. Geo. H. Pickerill ... ... W. W. Nicholls... ... Thomas Sankey... ... W. R. Holloway... ... W. A. Heydecker. .... Charles N. Freeman . . George H. Frecker. .. C.A. McCullough . ... Charlie N. Vroom... . Michael J. Burke .... Wm. H. King Mahlon Van Horne .. Julius C. Lorentzen. . . Joao B. Guimaraes. . .. Ernest A. Richards. .. Felix S. S. Johnson .. G. M. Hastings...... B. B. Butterfield... .... Chr. Fr. Falck ....... John BE. Kehl .-...... Henry Harder... ..... Fdward D. Winslow. . | Axel Georgi 5% Carl P. Gerell. .... .... A.C. Seyfert. 0.5 Touis H. Dingman. .. Edward H. Ozmun . .. William Halm....... William P. Martin . .. Alfred W. Haydn.... Richard Hunt ....... Thomas A. Horan. ... Victor Svensson ..... James E. Ireland..... Agent. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Comnsul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice and dep.com.agent. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Deputy consul-general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. 202 ; Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Suva, Pililslands. o.oo Swansea, Wales, o.oo haan Swinemiinde, Germany .......... Sydasy, New South Wales. . Talcahuane, Chile... .. 0 i. Tamatave, Madagascar........... Tarragona, Spain... 0. al Tegucigalpa, Honduras... ....... Fercelm Azores. a Ton, Three Rivers, Quebec..... .. ..... Toreon, Mexico... vii iain. Noulon, Brance: ... . . hl au: Townsville, New South Wales. . .. Trapani, Taly, ....... 0.000 000. Frebizond, Turkey... ... 5. Trenton, OnarioL. .. .».. civ Triseis, Amgen, ih co Xelpoll, Syria: 0c. Raia Tromso, Norway ...............L Troon, Scotland... =... 0. 0 Troyes, France... /... nls ny Truxillo, Honduras. ........... 3F Leanxillop Peru, nooo dio ohn Tambez, Peru... on i. iia Pure Africa. olin ob nan Consular officer. Rank. | James W. Ragsdale. .. Alex B.Joske .......: Griffith W. Prees..... William D. Rees....... Gustav Ludwig ...... . George W. Bell... .... R. FP. ORourke... ... William H. Dawson. . George N. West. ..... John E. Burchell..... Jacob I. Doty... ..: John Hart: ........ John O, Smith... .... Mifflin W. Gibbs. .... Samuel E. Magill . ... Neill BE. Pressly... ... James W. Davidson .. A. Norris Wilkinson. . Samuel R. Gunnere . . Albert Martinsen.. ... Younis J. Agostini... .:. Frederick H. Allison . George Bernhard. . ... Robert W. Bowen. ... JohmnTyler.. i... Sol Berliner... ......... Henrique de Castro. . . Urbain]. Ledoux .... W. W. Braman, jr.... Sylvester G. Hill... .: Bertrand Ragsdale . .. William L. Sewell. . .. Raymond L. Sewell . . Tonis B. Stern ....... Benjamin Jouve...... W. J. HH. Muché ....... J. HH. Bogers.......... Constantino Serraino. H. Z. Longworth..... Stephen J. Young. . Frederick W. Hossfeld Felician Slataper. .... AlvinSmith:........... Ira Ylarris.. . So a. Richard Killengren. . Peter H. Waddell... .. Gaston Baltet........ John TB. Glynn... 0. Edward Gottfried. ... William Baldini...... Alfred Chapelié.. .... William H. Bradley .. John H. Copestake. .. Percy McElrath. ..... Hugo Pizzotti. ..... Co ST aC I GB FN TE ST TPAC 70 TH Te Commercial agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. - Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Marshal. Interpreter. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Do. Consul. | Vice-consul. Consul. | Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Pe Consuls and Consulates. 293 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Turks Island, West Indies ....... W. Stanley Jones ....| Vice-consul. Tuxpan, Mexleo:.. ni. oh anil i ses ee lee Consul. 1 yids thes Genie ie Tt Edwin R.Wells...... Vice-consul. Utilla, Honduras... ..,...0. 0 Benjamin Johnston ..| Consul. NE eR Robert Woodville. ...| Vice-consul. Nalema, Venezuela. jc... 0. coi oooh so adhe Ln, Agent. Valparaiso, Chile.’ ........... John FB. Caples... ..... Consul. BG he es ae August Moller, jr.... Vice-consul. Valencia, Spain... 5. dan H. L. Washington. ...| Consul. He ALR EARS WHER RA A. H. S. Troughton ...| Vice and deputy consul. Valencia, Venezuela... ...... Otto H. Becker...... Agent. Vancouver, British Columbia... .. I. Edwin Dudley....| Consul. Verviers, Belgium... ..0.. oo oi Vevey, Switzerland... ........ 5; Victoria, Brazil. .:. ...... ow... Victoria, British Columbia ....... Victoria, Mexico: . oa. io aia, Vienna, AUSUria. cu oc iiniiiniisa dan Vige, Spain... io. oh oa Nivero, Spain. ooh an Vladivostok, Russia ..... ........ 0. Wallaceburg, Ontario. ........... Waterloo, Quebec. .... .0...... Waubaushene, Ontario........... Weimar, Germany... ...... 0.0. Wellington, New Zealand. ....... West Hartlepool, England. ....... Weymouth, England. ............ Wiarton, Ontario... 4.0.0 Wiberg, Binland 0. 0. vs Windsor, Nova Scotia............ Winterthur, Switzerland ......... Woodstock, New Brunswick. . . ... Wolverhampton, England. ....... Wala Syria... aaa an Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. ......... Zacatecas, Mexico... .... [ B. von Gehren....... B. J. Schofield... . Henry A. Johnson... .. Frederick Rechsteiner William W. Canada. . Jose G. Pages. ......... HenryDodt. ........: William Cuénod...... Jean Zinzen.......... Abram FE. Smith..... Benjamin A. Hunter. . William J. Storms. . .. Carl Bailey Hurst. ... Alvesto S. Hogue... .. Richard T. Greener. . Isaac G. Worden... .. Charles B. Jackson... Joseph Rawicz....... William H. Farrell. . . Arthur S. Newell... .. Ronald F. White... .. Thomas E. Moore. ... Paul Teichmann..... John Duncan........ Hans. C. Nielsen .. ... Alfred C. Fliggs..... J. FH. libeando: 2... C.. Blstrom,’. 0... Joseph I. Hoke... ... John Nalder ......... Hugh C. Morris...... Jolin M. Tittle. . ...... Harry QO. Bell... W. H. H. Graham.... William Hall ........ Heinrich Iangsdorf. . Frank C. Denison... .. John Graham. ....... Johm Neve... oo BE. Hardege... 5... .. Radcliffe H. Ford... .. Ernest H. Armstrong. John F. Gowey....... John Mclean........ George H. Scidmore. . Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Do. Commercial agent. Do. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice and deputy consul- general and interpreter. Deputy consul-general. Agent. 294 Congressional Directory. | y UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. William Dulany Hunter Cairo, | Consular office. "Consular officer. Rank. | Zanzibar, Africa... ....... Sah Robert E. Mansfield. .| Consul. Dols ees, Sea nl ria Seth A. Pratt... ....:. Vice-consul. Zittaw, Germany.» 2.000 ls veda William K. Herzog. ..| Consul. 8 RE Ed Da es Rudolph Konecke. ...| Vice-consul. Zurich, Switzerland... 0 0 1 A. Lieberknecht...... Consul. | Posts ra ar W. A. Steinmann. ..... Vice and deputy consul. | : | CONSULAR CLERKS, | [Authorized by the act of Congress approved June 20, 1864.] Edward P. MacLean... Paris. | Donnell Rockwell. ... Washington. Charles M. Wood. ..... Rome. Hubbard T. Smith ... Canton. George H. Scidmore... Yokohama. J. ‘Allison Bowen... .. Paris. St. Leger A. Touhay.... Constantinople. | Richard Westacott.... London. George H. Murphy.... Bremen. Dean B.Mason...... .. Berlin. VW. Porter Boyd... .... Honolulu. Maddin Summers .... Washington. ‘ Foreign Consuls in the United States. FOREIGN CONSULS IN Note.—Foreign consular officers in Cuba have received provisional military recognition only. ARGENTINA—BELGIUM. 295 THE UNITED STATES. | Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. ARGENTINA. Mobile, Ala, ............ Manuel S; Macias ........... ..... Consul. Tloyd D; Batre, «00.5 0 oss Vice-consul. San Francisco, Cal... ... Wenceslao VV. Loaiza ............. Consul. Habana, Cuba... ... Julian J. Silveyra iin ns Do. Sagua la Grande, Cuba ..| Joaquin S. Diaz y Angueira ....... Vice-consul. Santiago, Cuba. ......... Jose J. Hemmandez . .. .. ii iit Consul. Fernandina, Fla ..... ... Thomas C.. Borden... .. 0... Do. Pensacola, Fla... ........ Silverio.de Castro...» .. i... vin ns Do. J HamisPierpont.... ....... .... Vice-consul Apalachicola, Fla ....... JoB. Bmball oan Do. Brunswick, Ga.......... Rosendo Torras. .,....... oii a Consul. Savannah, Ga. ..-....... Andrés ¥, Moyuelo.. -.......-. ... Vice-consul Chicago, Hl... ..... PY. Hudson oc ol 000i Consul. New Orleans, La........ Juan O. Bigelow... 80 Do. Banger, Me... 0... LE Swett Rowe 0 anaes Do. Portland Me... ...... .. Stephen RoSmall. coc. io. Do. Baltimore Md.........." Federico. Muller... ... Do. Boston, Mass:5 cn. 0 0 Guillermo McKissock ............ Do. New York City, N. Y.... Wilmington, N. C....... Philadelphia, Pa... ....- St.Louis, Mo... Pascagoula, Miss... ..... Norfolk, Va... oh AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Mobile, Ala... ..........x San Francisco, Cal... ... Habana, Cuba... Santiago,Cuba.......... Pensacola, Fla. ......... Honolulu, Hawaiian Is- lands. Savannah, Ga........... Chicago; ll: 0-2. 0d New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md .......... Boston, Mass... oon St. Louis, Mo. 2... New York City, N. Y.... Hazleton, Pa.......... : Philadelphia, Pa........ Pittsburg, Pa... .. Charleston, S.C......... Richmond, Va......... Galveston, Tex... ....... Milwaukee, Wis. ....... Carlos BGhL. on i a For the United States. Peli ¥,. de Castro. 0 ios George Hopriss. tl io orn Guillermo P. Wilson.............. Gustavo: V. Brecht... .............. Jan ¥, Dantzlen: ooo ovis i ‘With jurisdiction at Ship Island. Guillermo Blyver o.oo as, Wo BL Stontz, anna OC Sei Prancis Korbel: ov i J. E:-Bevndes 0 Ch isn C.W.Schumann ........ . Er Pdward Karow.... oiein iv ii a0 Maximilanus a Proskowetz. ....... Eduard Claussenius... =. os Pranciscus Stockinger..... ...... 2 Otto I,. Eberhard... 0 uns: Johann Nemeth... ... oo... Alfred J. Ostheimer...., = =... ... Ammeld Baty orig pains Thomas Dessewiy ="... co)... Charles Witte 0 0. Ftv Christophorus IL. D. Borchers... ... Consul-general. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Do. Consul-general., Vice-consul. Do. Temporary consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Honorary consul, Consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul-general. Honorary vice- consul. Consular agent. Consul. Honorary vice- consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. vice- Congressional Directory. BEI,GIUM—BRAZIL,. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. BELGIUM. Mobile, Ala. ............ Robert BoduMont............ 5... Consul. For the Alabama and Florida Gulf Coast. Los Angeles, Cal. VY. Ponet., , 7..0 naval nia iiaa Consular agent. San Francisco, Cal. ..... Leon Guiglain. ... i in ons Consul. Denver, Colo.........: .. Havana, Cnba.........0.; Atlanta, Ga... .... Savannah, Ga........... Ghiicagos lille. oon Lomsville, Ry. ......... New Orleans, Ta........ Baltimore, Md... .......... Boston, Mass... 00 Detroit, Miche... ...... St. Tons, Mo... ...v hs New: York City, N. Y.... Omaha, Nebr........ ..... Philadelphia, Pa........ Pitsburg, Pa. 5 Charleston, S. Co... .... Galveston, Tex. ......... Richmond, Va... ........ Green Bay, Wis. .:....... Seattle, Wash... 5. BOLIVIA. San: Prancisco, Cal ....... Boston, Mass... ... Ji... Kansas City, Mo ......... New Vork City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa........ BRAZIL. Pensacola, Fla,.......... Brunswick, Ga.........; For Washington, Montana, Oregon, Idaho, California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Alaska, and Hawaiian Is- lands. , J-Mignolel. 5 one wins oan For Colorado, Wyoming, and New Mexico. Provisionally recognized for Cuba and Porto Rico. Lanrentide Give, ..'..... ou aie Leopold 'Charrier. uo. .o co oy Ch. Henrolin. o.oo il ass LEME ERY i EE SS For Kentucky, Tennessee, and Ohio. ALY Landaner. vino ch Blrendli. Sdn a Ammold Kummer... 0 0 0 For Maryland and Delaware. B.S. Manefeldi. iio a For Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. Théophile Francois... ov. voi For New York, New Jersey, Connecti- cut, and Rhode Island. P.. Ruysschaert 0. vit ois For Nebraska and Kansas. Paul Hagemians, onic oro For the United States. Co We. Berpwlery ihn coir maa For eastern Pennsylvania. BWells, oi ien doar For North and South Carolina. Francis Lammers. ....o... 00. a For Texas, Indian Territory, and Ok- lahoma. WO. Noltmg.. .. 0 mien For Virginia and West Virginia. J.B. Brice. sonia For Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Da- kota, and South Dakota. B.C: Neufelder. ui nls) Belisario Melo: onl ocd na W. BH Bowdlear.. bl. To BdwinR. Heath...) .... Sed Barique Wulff (acting)..... ...... Wilfred H.Schoff. ....... 00. Manuel BE. Gonzales, =... ion John B. Cooki.t ra ais. ait Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Temporary consul. Consul. Honorary consul. Honorary consul- general. Honorary consul. Vice-consul. Do. gn 0 Se ae SL NRTA ed aL A CL SR tee Foreign Consuls in the United States. BRAZI1L—COSTA RICA. 297 TT —c TT .- Tacoma, Wash. ......., Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. BRAZII—continued. Savannah, Ga. .......... New Orleans, La. ....... Calais, Me.....co..i Baltimore, Md... . ........ Pascagoula, Miss... ...... St. Toms, Mo........... New York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa... 0... Charleston, S.C. .......... Norfolk, Va... 0. i. CHILE. San Francisco, Cal... .... Savannah, Ga........... | Honolulu,Hawaiian Isl’ds| Chicago, Tl... 0. ni. 5 | New Orleans, Ia ........ Baltimore, Md i... .... -.. Boston, Mass. ............ New York City, N. Y.... Portland, Orem... ou, Philadelphia, Pa........ San Juan, Puerto Rico... Port Townsend, Wash. . . CHINA. San Francisco, Cal......... William BH. Adams. . ..... i. 2.0 Charles Dittman. . William A. Murchie.. .... 00... Antonio Cerqueira de Mogalhaes. . Vicente Bog fro onsi cia hk Affonsode Figueiredo... ........ :- Antonio Fontoura Xavier.......... Antonio Guimaraes... ... oo... oi. John Maso, Jr. ona Ciao i Charles: BF. Huchet... voi. vic. 0 Barton Myerst «= ov. avin ae For Norfolk and Newport News. Juan M. Astorga Pereira......... -.. Walter: DD. Catton. ol iw 2a Roberto P. Reppard.... oii... ii. 0. HH. Renjes.... ni ii ha, 050 MT. Steffeng. i Ses i JemesS: Zachazie............. =. RG. Teupold. wo he a ss Horacio. N. Fisher... 0... 000 FedericoA Beelen ........... 0 Fernando iG. Bwald. -........0..... William P. Wilson... o.oo 0. 0a Federico I. Macaundray .......... Oscar Klocker.. 0... 0 i adie, I Tenmant'Steeb. ... o... . SLL TO NOW: ln Er Habana, Cuba... ........ Honolulu, Hawaiian Isl’ds New York City, N. Y.... Manila, Philippine Isl’ds. COLOMBIA. Mobile, Ala... ........ San Francisco, Cal... .... Chicago, Tl... 5 ou New Orleans, Ia........ Boston, Mass... «ii... Detroit, Mich. 7.0... St. Lonis, Mo =. i... 0... New York City, N. Y.... San Juan, Puerto Rico... Norvfoll, Va... ooo od COSTA RICA. San Francisco, Cal....... Shou Ing 2:0 ad sd Cliamg Yim-tung >... i y Provisionally recognized. | Vang Welpitt, 0... ...0 cond Goo Im Bats er ae Wong Tien Cheung... .... Chang Pao-Heii o.oo. lands. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul-general. Consul. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Acting consul. LIA IgE yew LoL a lees Provisionally recognized. RobertoUricoechea... 0. So. BelisatioMelo.. 0... ol sina Jorge Vargas Hevedia............. Herman Freund. >. v0. 5... ToArbuekle ion ti ao naa Eduardo Espinosa Guzman. ....... Jose G. Polo. i... ER aE SA Wenceslao Borda. ................ Hugo Arnal... ......-.. SE Rafael Gallegos... 0. nisi. José Maria Tinoco, ....... chev Erskine M. Phelps... i... ici. Alfonso Delgado... hn. | Comnsul-general. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Consul-general. Consul. 298 Congressional Directory. COSTA RICA—DENMARK. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. COSTA RICA— continued. Denver Colo... CasitmiveBavela.. oi. s Consul. Habana, Cuba... ..... =. Samuel Giberga. i=... .0 ov. bi Do. Provisionally recognized. Chicago, T............... Berthold Singer... ote Do. New Orleans, Ia........ Lamar C.Omntero.. ........ oo ... Do. Baltimore, Md... .... i . William: A. Riordan... .......0. +. <:De. Bogton, Mass. .~.....:.. Joseph]. Corbett. = iit iv Do. Ste Tonis, Mo. 0... .. Bben Richards. oi ni. on Do. New York City, NoYV... .[[ Juan]. Olloa.... ........00 cues Consul-general. For the United States. Juan Llllloa rst es Consul. Cincinnati, Ohio... ...~. Pal. Walker. sone. lain Do. Portland, Oreg... 0. AP Grandville G. Ames. ca Do. Philadelphia, Pa........ Gustave Niederlein. 0 v0 a0 Do. Henry C, Poller 0.00 5 ins Jans Vice-consul. Galveston, Tex... ....... Henry Mogle io as ody Consul. DENMARK. Mobile, Ala... 0 WW. Leimbaud 0 0 0 nde da Vice-consul, Little Rock, Avk... ..... San Francisco, Cal....... Penver, Colo......as.... 7. Habana, Cuba... ...... Matanzas, Cuba... ...-... Apalachicola, Fla .... ... Pensacola, Fla. ......... Savannah, Ga. .......... Boise City, Idaho. ....... Chicago, [lv no Story City, Towa. ..... ... Kansas City, Kans ...... Lonigville, Bvii 0... New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md... .. .=... Boston, Mass... oi Detroit, Mich... +... Rush City, Minn... .. .. St. Paul, Minn... ........ Scranton, Miss... ..... .. St louis Mo... 0.0. Omaha, Nebz.... ..... Gold Hill, Nev... ... 0»... Lovelocks, Nev......... New York City, N.Y.... Wilmington, N.C... ...... Barco, N.Dak........... Cleveland, Ohio......... Portland, Oreg.......... Philadelphia, Pa......... Charleston, S.C... .... August Sundholm 00 LL. BH. Birkholin casa W, A. Grandjean... 0. o.cv. Thorwald C.Culmell ........ i... Fernando Heydrich .............. SolaBrasli rie a rea Carl McKenzie Oerting 00... I Bn Rn) Walter'S. Brice... ov. a a Christian H. Hansson... ... = For Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Wis- consin, Minnesota,Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Colorado, South Dakota, North Dakota, Wyoming, and Utah. . AE EL i SN EE Sy WD. Gandeap: itn NT Jep- Hansen Mailand ........... Charles: B. Currie... vn on. For Kentucky, Tennessee, and Ohio. Dr. OR. Tanne. oi so dri For Iouisiana, Florida,Alabama, Mis- sissippi, Arkansas, Texas, Indian Territory, and New Mexico. Thyge SO0eganrd . .. 0 ain 00, Morris Whitridge.. .......... 00. Gustaf Lnmdberg.......-....000 Glert Toole... oh Peter Shrensen, ......... 0 aoe cii vs F. Sneedorff Christensen.......... John Co Nelsow.. 28.0 tintin si BRA Mont bs no Louis O.G. Amundsen... :.. Alexander Severin Heide. ......... HemryBrogh...... 00 iS William Secher:. «on i a0. 0h Borge Krimgelpaeh':..- oi... To NaoWallen Saini 0d vain DD. BrHugerSmth, 0... 0000 Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. 2Deo. Do. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Pe ——err em ——— Foreign Consuls in the United States. DENMARK—FRANCE. 299 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. DENMARK—continued. Galveston, Tex. ......... Salt Lake City, Utah. ... Norfolle, Va... ...... Seattle, Wash........... Racine, Wis... on. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Jacksonville, Fla... ..... Boston; Mass... ........ 0. New York City, N.Y. .-.. Philadelphia. Pa... ..... Mayaguez, Puerto Rico .. Ponce, Puerto Rico... .... San Juan, Puerto Rico... ECUADOR. Tos: Angeles, Cal... ..... San Brancisco,Cal.. .... Habana, Cuba... 0 Chicago, Tl: ooo. Boston, Mass... 0... New York City, N.V..... Cincinnati, Ohjo....-. .... . Philadelphia Pa .... 0 .. Charleston;:S. C... i. ... Nowfolke Va =. oo. oo: FRANCE. Birmingham, Ala. ....... Mobile, Ala............« Tos Angeles, Cal... ..... San Francisco, Cal.. .... San Jose, Call... oes Apalachicola, Fla........ Pensacola, Fla ......... Tampa, Fla... ......0 0. Savannah; Ga. .......... Chicago, Il... 0 a0. Tonisville, Ry........... New Orleans, La........ Baton Rouge, Ia........ Portland, Me ........:.: Baltimore, Md... .-..... Boston, Mass iio in: Detroit, Mich... ........ St. Paul, Minn........ .: Kansas City, Mo. ....... Frederick William Blake... .... .." Pelterfiansen =o 0 no aan James Iredell Jenkins... ........ John P, Jacobsen... iin. Peter Bering Nelson... 000.50. Diego M. de Moya...............; Pdwin M, Fowles... in ota AlejandroWoz y Gil... ............ For the United States. Santiage:Poteella...... :......... Thomas B. Wanamaker. .......... Joaquin Tornabells ... ............. Emilio Cortada «5.2. 00.0 Washington Lithgow............. Provisionally recognized. Tomas ¥. Duque. =... 00000004 Tuis BE Tastee. ots Perfecto B Lopez a. = aio lnivu ToisMNallet. nl Gustave Preston. i. oo ion Pidel Garcia oi ol oa Rafael Zevallos oo 0 on David:S. Reinberg.. ... oii Cassis AL Green... so Guillermo Oliveras Haal. .. ...... Charles M. Barnett =... ......... Simenlotz. i ins. Sa a JeanMarques. o.oo oa Leopold Loeb... coo. vii ins Adolphe A. I. G. D. de Trobriand .. Pedro de Saisset............. .... Antoine Jean Murat... .. o. ....... Joseph Dario: Piaggio... .......... Vicente Guerra: . «bubba oils BaChastamet on ot oo Henri Antoine Joseph Mérou. ..... For Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Min- nesota, Missouri, Montana, Ne- braska, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Michel Hermann... .o. 0... 0.0 Adrien Clément Laurent Cochilet. . For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, New Mexico, Tennessee, Indian Territory, and Texas. I. G. R. de Montluzin du Sanzay. . .| Ernest de Beaufort I,e Prohon.. ... Teonce Babillon o.oo. Duncan Bailly Blanchard. ......... Joseph Belanger... ool nn ol Francois Célestin Boucher. ........ Salmon Tang. ern oain Li Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Honorary consul- general. Consul. Consul- general. Consul. Do. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul. Honorary consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. 300 Congressional Directory. FRANCE—GERMANY. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. FRANCE—continued. St. Toms, Mo........... New York City, N. Y.... Cincinnati, Ohio... ..... Portland, Oreg....... . .. Philadelphia, Pa........ Brownsville, Tex........ Biase; Bex. ir. Dai Paling Mex. vi i, 5 Galveston, Tex.......... San Antonio, Tex. ...... Seattle, Wash........... Tacoma, Wash. .......... GERMANY. Mobile, Ala. ox. oni San’ Francisco, Cal...... Cienfuegos, Cuba. ....... Habana, Cuba... ..i........ Santiago, Cuba. ......... Trinidad, Cuba... 5. ::. Washington; D. C-..:... Pensacola, Fla .....:.... Darien, Gat: 5 Savannah, Ga........... Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. Chicago, Ill... 5... i... New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md... ........ Boston, Mass... ... 0 St. Louis, Mo... .... New York City, N. Y.... Wilmington, N. C......... Cincinnati, Ohie . .»...... Portland, Oreg....c.7. ... Toms: Seguefiot: co) iil inn Frangois Edmond Bruwaért. ...... Ancuste L.A Bredim... 0.0. 000 Charles HenriLabbé.. ..... >. 5. Pdouard-Pesoli.. i. iin aie. Celestori: Jagan.» Joan ll 2%. Comrchiesme!. un inblin, Dolo Jean Baptiste Adowe.............. James Alexander Dupas........... Edmond P.'Clandon.. /..i........ Andrien Monod. i oun a EB. Holzborm.. . 0h Shinra For Alabama and Florida. Adolph Resenthal 0... oo... For Arizona, California, Idaho, Mon- tana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Wash- ington, and Alaska. Oswald Lohan... a... 0 5 Friedrich Wilhelm Hunicke....... Provisionally recognized. August von Brick... ny Provisionally. recognized. C:Wm, Schurmann,..... 5... Provisionally recognized. Peter Gustav Jansen... +... on Provisionally recognized. Gustay Dittmar. i... loos vn Henry Bayer. oe tononaehaiiiong August Schmidt 5. ..0 oo Jacob Rauners. iv id van oh J Bo tlackield ool on ano Bard BUWz, ih ivi nes samo For North Dakota, South Dakota, Illinois (except St. Clair, Madison, and Monroe counties), Towa, Michi- gan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Wiscon- sin, and Wyoming. Bang Bopp. to a ih eae BE. von Meysenbug................ For Louisiana and Mississippi. Georg A. vonlingen: ............. For Maryland and the District of Columbia. Arthur J. Donner. io... cio For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island. Karl Bromma... aah ak For Arkansas, Colorado, Indian Ter- ritory, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, New Mexico, Tennessee, and St. Clair, Madison, and Monroe coun- ties in Illinois. Karl BlRz hea ahaa Ferdinand Bitschl.............. x. Paul Falcke. coco. Sunn nia Bduard Peschaw:. .. .. ion n Earl Poller. viv inns i isi For Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and West Virginia. Carl von Winizingerode........... For Oregon and Idaho. Consular agent. Comnsul-general. Consular agent. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Vice-consul Do. Consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Temporary consul- general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. pe I Foreign Consuls in the United States. 301 i i GERMANY—GREAT BRITAIN. i i Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. ] GERMANY— continued. i Philadelphia, Pa........ Wm. Marheinecke................ Consul. i For Delaware and Pennsylvania. i Friedrich Delvigne....... . .... Vice-consul. | : San Juan, Puerto Rice. 3] BoB. Tundt, =. 0. oh Acting consul. i | Charleston, S.C... oi... Charles Otto Witte. =... iol Consul. | [ Galveston, Tex... ....... Inline Runge... ia, Do. iil Norfollz, Va.....:. eon William Lamb... coi isu ees Vice-consul. i! Richmond, Va........... Adolph Osterloh.’.............. =, Consul. i Tacoma, Wash..." Hans Glese: no. iia 0h ail, Do. i GREAT BRITAIN. i Mobile; Ala... ...00... Arthur Shirley Benn... in. Vice-consul. | Tos Angeles Cal... William Clayton Pickeysville. .. ... e DO. | For Los Angeles and Wilmington. Hi San Diego, Cal... ...... .., William I. Allen... 000 00 a Do. i San Francisco, Cal....... Wm. Clayton Pickersgill . .... ....| Consul-general. | For California, Nevada, Utah, and } Arizona. i Wellesley Moore. ................. Vice-consul. i Denver, Colo..%....... 0... Richard Pearce... .. 0... vos. Do. | Habana, Cuba... ... YB. Corden ...0...i.i0 Sr, Consul-general. i ; ; Provisionally recognized. : i Apalachicola, Fla....... TB. Poster noua nk Vice-consul. | Fernandina, Fla... ...... BV. Nicholl... on Do. i Jacksonville, Fla........ Haward Sudlow...... 0.0.00 Do. Key West, Fla.......... WI. H Taylor... is ....00 0 oe Do. (| Pensacola, Bla, ......... Osmond 'C. Howe... 5.5 Do. i Port Tampa, Fla... ..... John Bradley, .. on ia se Do. | Punta Gorda, Fla: ...... Albert Folger Dewey ............. Do | St. Augustine, Fla... . ... John Pi: Dismukes.... 5 J. oi iiou. Do. f ; Brunswick, Ga... .; Rosendo Toreas.:. it ies os bobs Do. | { Darlen, Gas 0. v0. 0 Robert Manson... ......... 00... Do. | | Savannah, Ga........... Alexander Harkness... 0... 5. Do. | i Chicago, TL... «ci. William Wyndham. ..........5.. Consul. ’ For Illinois, Towa, Wisconsin, Minne- sota, Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, ! North Dakota, South Dakota, Mon- ¢ tana, Wyoming, Missouri, Okla- | homa, and Indian Territory. I Arthur Radcliffe Getty... ......«.. | Vice-consul. i New Orleans, Ia........ Arthur-Vansitbael oo 0 on ans, | Consul. 3 For Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. nr William: Johnson. .:...:.o. 00.0 Proconsul. | James Ac Donmelly.. oni ie oo Vice-consul. 8] Portland, Mex... oe JB Keating oo ovi ha Do. = Baltimore, Md... ....... Gilbert Praser... © 0 a vio vias Consul. For Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, and Kentucky. : Abraham George Coates. .......... Vice-consul. Boston, Mass... ..c... 0. John Elijah Blunt. oo. Consul. For Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. Willoughby Herbert Stuart. ....... Vice-consul. ; St. Paul, Minn... ...... Edward BH. Morphy. ...........:.% Do. | Biloxl, Miss. Lo... oh Lu James]. Lemon. ..............a... Do. Pascagoula, Miss. ....... | William Ozro Clark... .............% Do. Kansas City, Mo: ....... RB Bamrengh clin Ls in Do. | St. Touis, Mo... 0.00 | ‘Western Bascome.... . coe ai. ls Do. i Omaha Nebr........... Mathew Alexander Hall. .......... Do. New York City, N. Y....| Percy Sanderson.................. Consul-general. i i’ For NewYork, Delaware, New Jersey, = Rhode Island, and Connecticut. i Charles Clive Bayley... .......... Consul. Charles Alexander S. Perceval... .. First vice-consul. i Joseph Poulter Smithers... .... 5 Second vice-consul. 302 Congressional Directory. GREAT BRITAIN—HAITI. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. GREAT BRITAIN—cont’d. Wilmington, N.C... .... Astoria, Oreg.. ........ .. Portland, Oreg.......... Philadelphia, Pa ........ Cebu, Philippine Islands. Manila, Philippine Isl’ds. San Juan, Puerto Rico... Galveston, Tex. ......... Sabine Pass, Tex. ....... Alexandria, Va... ....... Newport News, Va....... Norfolk, Va... ... iz... Richmond, Va.......... Port Townsend, Wagh. . . Seattle, Wash ............ Tacoma, Wash .+........ GREECE. San Francisco, Cal... .... Chicago, Ill... 00. Boston, Mass, 2... St. Tonis, Mo... .....i0... New York City, N. V..... Philadelphia, Pa. ...... Nashville, Tenn. ........ Notiolk, Va... .....0. .. GUATEMATA. Mobile, Ala. ............. San Francisco, Cal...... Chicago, Tl... . vv Kansas City, Kans... ... Louwsville, Ky .......... New Orleans, ILa........ Baltimore, Md .......... Boston, Mass... ...". St. Lonig, Mo... ...%. New York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa........ Seattle, Wash........... HATIL. Mobile, Ala... ~...... 0. Santiago, Cuba.......... James Sprung... .0. vs eis Peter, Cherry... ue viii. James: Inidlaw: ooo Gass, James Frnest Taidlaw .......... ... .. For Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. Robert Charles Clipperton. ........ For Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan. Charles B. C. Clipperton... - ..... JN. Sidebottom on vas Provisionally recognized. SEL Barford ost ol na Provisionally recognized. ‘Wm. Brown Churchward.......... George A. Stockwell... cl... John Ernest Kessler... 0.0.0 For Beaufort and Port Royal. Henry W. R. de Coétlogon......... For North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Tennessee. Horace Dickinson Nugent. ........ For Texas and New Mexico. Alevander Roland... 00 John J Jameson... 5.00. James Haughton... Barton Myers io. on ie ae Philip Arthur Sherard Brine. ...... Oscar Kl6cker ~via Betmard Pelly:...... 5... 00. 0h. 5 Rev. J: B: Alexander... ........... .. For Tacoma and Seattle. Auguste Goustlaux 5... 00 Charles Hutchinson =... .. ois Nikolaos Sallopoulos.............. Demosthenes Th. Timayenis. ..... Demetrius Jannopoulos ........... DD: N-Bomassl 7 ooo an an S.- Edwin Megargee....... ... 0k. Panteles Ch. Panagiotopoulos. . . . .. Petros A, Agelastos. 0. 0, Jean Mdaramez. 4.0.0 sk Felipe Calicla..'..........0 v0 George FE. Stone.l..........ooi 00, BdwinR. Heath... iii. Jomes BP: Buckner, jr... Julio Novella. oi toh or Si, C. Morton Stewart, qe. ....0 000, Benj: Preston Clark: >... 0. 0... IoD. Kingsland... =. ..0 00s, Joaquin Vela... 2 ov a Sowuel Welsh... .............5 : BdwinHughes...... Liha Jean Marquess. toh. oe ooh Frederick Rey. > iv 0 voli los Provisionally recognized. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Deo. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Consul-general. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul-general. Honorary consul. Do. Do. Consul-general. Honorary consul- general. Homnorary consul. Honorary consul- general. Comnsul-general. Honorary consul- general. Honorary consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Foreign Consuls in the United States. HAITI—-ITALY. 303 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. HAITI—continued. Chicago, TH... ....... 0. Cuthbert Singleton... .....% ....... Consul. Bangor, Me... ni. Pre. MeConville..........5.. oo ons Do. Boston, Mass. .....;......« Benjamin C. Clayls 0.0.0.0. Do. New York City, N. VY. ... Wilmington, N.C... Savannah, Ga. ...... ... .. HONDURAS. Mobile, Ala... .... .... T.08 Angeles, Cal... .. San Diego, Cal. ......... San Francisco, Cal ... ... Habana, Cuba... -..... Chicago, Tl... .... Kansas City, Kans ...... Towmsyville Ry .......... New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md . ........, Detroit, Mich........... St-Touis, Mo... 5 New York City, N.Y. ... Philadelphia, Pa ........ Galveston, Tex... ....... Seattle, Wash........... ITALY. Mobile, Ala. i... 0 San Francisco, Cal... ... Cienfuegos, Cuba... ..... Habana, Cuba........... Matanzas Cuba... .. .... Santiago, Cuba... ....... Washington, D. C. ... a... Key West Fla. .......... Pensacola, Fla........... Savannah, Ga... ........ Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. Chicago, TlL............. Louisville Ky........... New Orleans, Ia........ Bangor, Me... sil... Baltimore Md... ....... =. Boston, Mass. ........ .¢. Joseph: Nicolas... i. 0. hiv BoD Bassett oun on nh William MM, Comming ............ ZB Hamig oho a Tis Moraguer:. 0 oii uns Tomas, Dugué. o.oo Tomds Dowell 5... ius Fusiorgio Calderén....... ... 0... Towis A. Vionnet ... =... 0. = George B.Sfone. oo... .0 00 0 TawmB Heath... 00. Jomes Be. Bucknericn on stn Ménico CordovaiSerra............. Vicior [Lo Botte o.oo ais B-Herndndez .. 1... .. ., nr, C. Morton Stewart, jr... 0 Joseph M. Bresler.. 0.0.00 0k I Mattael R-Gatell 00 0 I. D. Kingsland... .. ..... ET Nicanor Bolet Peraza .... -........ Eshest Schernllktow'. ©. 2. Robert J. Winsmiore............. .. A Pervler: +0 ile, eine R.oChilcott. oro iim al AngeloFestorazzl ci iyo inne Cav. Francisco Bruni Grimaldi... .. For California, Nevada,Oregon, Wash- ington, Alaska, Arizona, Idaho, Mon- tana, Wyoming, and New Mexico. Carlo Filippo Serra. oval. oo Cesare Pome... bouts inion, Bstenzasy Mendez. -...oi.0. Biagw Torriel inn covit i0 ns For Cuba and Puerto Rico. SignerGarcin. 0... .L i an Signor Dette. =. 0.0.0 il aim, Carlo Filippo Eysmans............ For the District of Columbia. PedroSells.. o.oo nh Giovanni B. Cafiero............... Trapani Tadgl 0 aol ns Federico Augusto Schaefer. ....... Antonio Iadislao Rozwadowski. . . . For Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Wis- consin, Iowa, Minnesota, and Mis- . souri. GiuseppeCuneo-...... on. c. Carlo Magenta: 0. ooo For Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi, Ar- kansas, Alabama, Florida, Tennes- see,and Indian Territory. Rowland W. Stewart. .... ......... Prospero Schiaffino:.. ........-.%. Rocco Brindist &ii vo ont aan Consul-general. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Do. Comnsul-general. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Comnsul-general. Do. Vice-consul. Comnsul-general. Consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. 304 Congressional Directory. ITALY—LIBERIA. Residence. TAT, V—continued. Calumet, Mich.......... Vicksburg, Miss... Ransas City, Mo... St Touls, Mo... ....0 Albany, N. Vi. ooo Buallalo, N.Y. vas New York City, N. Y.... Cincinnati; Ohio. ....... Philadelphia, Pa... ... .. Pittsburg, Pa... 0. Scranton, Pai. oui lL Mayaguez, Puerto Rico. . San Juan, Puerto Rico... Charleston, S.C. .... ...: Memphis, Tenn... ..... Galveston, Tex.......... Richmond. Va... .. ... Norfolk, Va, oo. 00 Seatfle, Wash. .......... JAPAN. San Francisco, Cal... ... Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. Chicago, IIL... .-.... ... New Orleans, ILa........ New York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa. ....... Galveston, Tex. ......... Seattle, Wash... ....... ‘Facoma, Wash .......... KOREA. New York City, N. Y.... LIBERIA. Mobile, Ala, 0... .... 0.0 Washington, D.C. ...... Savonnaly, Ga. Lu... 00 New Orleans, Ia ........ Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass... .... =... St Louis, Mo. =. ....... New York City, N.Y... Philadelphia, Pd. ....;.. Charleston, S.C ......... Galveston, Tex ......... Name and jurisdiction. Rank. Giacomo RubesTdsa. 2... Cav, Natale Piazza... For New York, Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Con- necticut, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Ohio, Kentucky, Virginia, West Vir- ginia, North Carolina, South Caro-_ lina, Georgia, and Tennessee. g Alberto Mori Ubaldini Alberti. . ... Apollinare Burdese.....;........; AungustoRavogli.. ...... 0. on Angelo dall’ Aste Brandolini ...... For Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Delaware. Giuseppe Natali... oot. 0nn SE OR I Be OT SignorSaliva. ;i0..0 0 oon, Signor. Bregaro... Lo nL Lb Grovanmi Seftile =... onto Rolando Arata. on id. IL Davis Reed Joc toon nonin Oliver Ames Spencer... 5 Mutts Hivokiehi v5... ae h Saftow Miki co ah Bujita Toshiro hs. oii voll John We Phillips... ool. on. Lair iy Shimamura Hisashi... 0... 5... SadazuchiUchida. 7... .... 5... AT: Osthetmer, =o noo Robert Bornefeld. oi foi George W. lovejoy ........... 5 HM, Tamer. 0. noises I-H Reynolds >... in. 00 WB. Hoffman. i has Charles Hall Adams... ©... 5. Hutchins Inge J. 5. on vn vn. 0s Frederick W, Vates.. . =... 5 Charles’I', Geyer... i. yr Thomas. Si Fhunt ir. 5 Co oi George C. Rowe... =. 0.0... 0 Wierd F.Smith: 0... ir Consular agent. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Honorary consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Do. Honorary consul. Consul-general. Consul. Honorary consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Honorary consul- general. Consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul-general. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Foreign Consuls in the United Stales. 305 MEXICO—NETHERLANDS. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. MEXICO. Mobile, Ala... civ. William A. TeBarofi........o... ... Vice-consul. Nogales, Arig... 2... Manuel Mascarefias.. =... ... Consul. Pheenix, Avlz. oo... leon Vargas. Navarre...» .......-. Do. Bishee Ariz... ... 0. Maximino' Gavito. =... Commercial agent. San Diego, Cal... i... Miginio Canudas:. ©... iv. oni vs Consul ad interim. San Francisco, Cal... .. Alejandro XX. Coney... 0 00 LL Comnsul-general. Denver, Colo. 2, xiii... Cagimireo Barela.. « .. on... 0 Consul. Pensacola, Fla.......... Abrahamiliaz. io ada Do. Jaume N. Moreno... ve aes Vice-consul. Chicago, IN. . ....0.. 000 ¥elipe Berriozabal. ii 00... Consul. New Orleans, La. ....... José Jacinto Jiminez... ........... Do. Baltimore, Md... ....... Jose No. Dosal;, oid G0 Vice-consul., Boston; Mass............ Arturo P. Cushing... oo... Consul. : Frederick O. Houghton.. ..........| Vice-consul Pascagoula, Miss. ....... Vicente Res. oi tno Do. Kansas City, Mo... |... Rafael CG. Acosta... 0... Consul. Hiram S. Thompson... i... oii. Vice-consul. St. Tonls; Mo........... Rafael P. Serrano... Consul. Juan N., Zamorane. 0s... 0 Vice-consul. Deming, N. Mex. ....... Agusiin Pifla.. oir. mE Consul. New York City, N. V.....[ Juan N. Navarro... .-.. 0a. 00. Comnsul-gen. ad int. : Ramon Vicente Williams. ......... Vice-consul. Portland, Oreg... ...... Brank A. Spencer .0.. 0 von Consul. Philadelphia, Pa... .L. Ernesto Subtkurski.. i. 00 Do. Brownsville, Tex. ....... Miguel Barragdn .............0. oo. Do. Corpus Christi, Tex. .... Joaquin Diaz Prieto. =. von v, Do. Fagle Pass, Tex... ..:. Franciscode P. Villasama......-.. Do. Bl Page, Vex: =». = 50 Fraficisco Mallen................ Do. Jacobo Blanco... aah Vice-consul. Laredo, Tex ....0.. 0. Salvador BB. Majllefert ....... ..... Consul. Ric:Grande City, Tex... Alberfoleal.. 0... 0... Do. Roma; lex. ic. on. JoséiQuiflones: ... coo. oa Do. Sabine Pass, Tex... .... BoB Goddard isin ad aoe Vice-consul. San Antonio, Tex... .... Plutarco Ornelas .......... 0... Consul. Galveston, Tex... ...... Barique C.:Lloremte, o.oo... hu. Do. Norfolk, Va. ............... JE Crawiord. i Vice-consul. MONACO. New York City, No. Vo. Henri Mot... . toni oan Consul. NETHERLANDS. Mobile, Ala... wo... W. . Teinkanf.. ....... oo... Vice-consul. San Francisco, Cal. ..... Teon Guislain. 5h. no oR Consul. Habana, Cuba... ........; Co ArnoWlsen oa i Do. Provisionally recognized. Pensacola, Fla. ......... POSE AE Ia OE Be I Se Vice-consul. Savannah, Ga. .......... W. de Bruyn Kops... .......0..00 0 Consul. Chicago, TN... 0... CG. Blkholf, jv, = ls nas Do. For Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Da- kota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Mon- tana, and Idaho. New Orleans, Ia. ....... A.Schreiber. J. 0 a bn ol Consul. For Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. Baltimore, Md........... Claas Vocke ain sho. Do. Boston, Mass 0... ....... C.NV.Dagey. oon ole ne nna Consul. For Massachusetts, Maine, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Ver- mont. ee ree ee ee EE ATR 306 Congressional Directory. NETHERLANDS PERU. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. NETHERI,ANDS—cont’d. Grand Rapids, Mich. .... St Paul, Minn... ..... Shieldsboro, Miss ....... St: Long, Moin, oa. i. New York City, N. Y.... Cincinnati, Ohio ......... Charleston, S.C... Galveston, Tex.......... Norfolk, Va... 0.0.0. 0. Philadelphia, Pa........ NICARAGUA. Mobile, Ala... 0. 1.08 Angeles, Cal... .. San Diego, Cal... ........ San Francisco, Cal... . .. Chicago, JI... Kansas City, Kans. ...... Lowisville, Ky: .: i... New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md ............. Poston, Mass............5: Detroit, Mich. .......... St. Tonis, Mo... =. .. New York City, N. V. ... Philadelphia, Pa........ Galveston, Tex.......... Noriolle, Va... ...... Seattle, Wash. ©. ........ ORANGE, FREE STATE. New York City, N.Y... PARAGUAY. San Francisco,Cal .\... .. Washington, D.C... .... Chicago, Hl. ............ New York City, N.Y. ... PERSIA. New York City, N.Y.... PERU. Mobile; Ala... .. San Brancisco, Cal ...... John Steketes o.oo TB. Barlsinck carl naan LH. Von Gohren. bn oor For Bay St. Louis. B.B. Haagsma... o.oo oon 0 For Missouri, Iowa, Kansas,Colorado, Arkansas, Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona. JR Planfient oo vee So For New York, New Jersey. and Con- necticut. Willem M. B. Gravenhorst........ EB Matbo ri on Te eee For Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee. A Pidelemey: 0 a aie BS Bat. net Barton. Myers 7. = ov ih aaa AmnoldiBaty, on ea Luis Moragez . . .. iives. iy avai Tomas. Dugué...........:....... TomasDowell «=... 00 George FB, Stoner (00 0 000 Wdwin Ro Heath... 00. 5.00 James: Buckmer.. 2... ..; Joaquin Sanson... un aT Victor. Bolto." 0 de sisi EHemandez:......c. 00... C. Morton Stewart, jr...... 2... CharlesHall Adams... J... ........ Joseph M. Bresler....... ou: Manuel RB, Gatell.... 0.50... L.D.Rmasland. 0... 00 0a 0s Bduarde Rattengell:....... _. Ernest Schemnitow.. =. ..o iL. CoACreen an, nan A. Fegrfer tof hd ion ale ey Charles M. Barnett. ............... R.Chileott. ic nine vs Charles y:-Plevee i Fi vin, aw Petrus Justus van Loben Sels...... Tohm Stewarh.s ov on Telisdwepinne. . 0 William Fvarts Richards.......... HR Pratl. oo ara at al Carlos. Brown... i snrn Enrique Gran... 00 cass ey Vice-consul. Do. Do. Consul. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul., Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Do. Consul ad interim. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul-general. Consul. Consul-general. Consul. Comnsul-general. Consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. ~ mnt” & Foreign Consuls in the United States. 307 PERU—SALVADOR. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. PERU—continued. abana, Cuba... 0... Max Tillman, 0 bani ah Cousul. Washington, D.C........ Clifford Stevens Walton........... Do. Rey West, Bla... José D. Pozoy Bstenos. ........... Do. Chicage, Ml. .i:...;... Charles H.Sergel........il.= 1 Do. Baltimore, Md.......... 0.C. H.Rehthinhn ........0.00 0c. vv Do. Boston, Mass:........... Mateo Crosby: x cl. 0 Deo. New York City, N.Y... .| FedericoBergmann............... Consul-general, Francisco Perez de Velasco. ....... Consul. New Orleans, Ia........ Sebastian’ V. Fornaris............. Do. Philadelphia, Pa......... PORTUGAL. San Branciseco, Cal ........ Gibara, Cuba... .. Habana, Cuba:..... 5... Manzanillo, Cuba ....... Matanzas, Cuba»... .. Sagua la Grande, Cuba .. Santiago, Cuba... 0. Pemsacola, Fla... Brunswick, Ga.......... Savannah, Ga... ........ Chicago, Wl. .- New Orleans, Ta. ....... Baltimore, Md... ...... Boston, Mass........ ..... New Bedford, Mass... ... New: York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa........ Newport News, Va...... RUSSIA. Mobile, Ala... 00... Sani Francisco, Cal...... Pensacola, Fla........ ... Savannah, Ga........... Chicago, Tl... «c=. New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md .......... Boston, Mass. ........... New York City, N.Y.... Portland, Oreg...... 0... Philadelphia, Pa... ..... Charleston, SiC... .... .. Galveston, Tex... .... ... Sabine Pass, Tex... .. a SAT, VADOR. San Francisco, Cal....... New York City, N.V.... Wilfredo 3d. Schoff nc io, Ignacio R. da Costa Duarte. ....... Hensiquelaidley. oo... 00... Manuel da Silva Teal ........ 0 Manuel Gomez de Aranjo Barros. . For Cuba and Puerto Rico. Goodwall Maceo... ....... i... Peder Robare Corp... ih os Modesto Rois y Rodriguez. ....... Juan, Borrds. nol as Rosendo Porras o.oo Fld s Laigh Trapani... uses: S:Chapman Simms... > 7. vei Maurice Generelly.., .. 0... 00. Frank Prick, jv... 0.00 0 ona Viscount de Valle das Costa. ....... Jayme Mackay d’Almeida......... For Boston and its district. Antonio Zerbone . 0 ih Luis Augusto de M. P. de A. Taveira Adelino Antonio Ferreira... ....... Jobin Mason, Jr. ooivovv Moan, i James Haughton... .- 2.0. 0. Murray Wheeler... 00s Jun, Wladimir Artzimovitch ........... Homce. G, Plat a vn on a DD. CBee RR Joseph Wilder... i. coo io ne Albert Schlippenbachy............ RE Negtler. vais ay, Charles Nilze os is Charles BP. Wyman. .... 00. Wladimir Teplow .. ....... 0. .... Christian G. Petersen... 0. 02. Gustave Wilson...» 0 ia William RB. Tnecker . ... oi on Stephen R. Bell... .... 5c. 00 James MoYler.. .....c. i000 x N.P-Hansen... inicio Eoearnacion Mejia 0. o.oo Ernesto Scherntkow............. = 56-1S1—2D ED——2T Honorary consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Do. Vice-consul. ° Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Po.t Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul. 308 Congressional Directory. SIAM—SWEDEN AND NORWAY. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. SIAM. New York City, NY... SPAIN. Cienfuegos, Cuba Habana, Cuba Santiago, Cuba New Orleans, La New York City, N.Y .... Iloilo, Philippine Islands. Manila, Philippine Islands San Juan, Porto Rico. ... SWEDEN AND NORWAY, Mobile, Ala... ...... San Diego, Cal........., San Francisco, Cal San Pedro, Cal Denver, Colo Apalachicola, Fla Key West, Fla Pensacola, Fla Brunswick, Ga Darten, Ga. .......0.r. Savannah, Ga Chicago, 111 Sioux City, Iowa New Orleans, La Portland, Me St. Louis, Mo Omaha, Nebr........... New York City, N. Y.... Wilmington, N. C Grand Forks, N. Dak.. .. Cleveland, Ohio Portland, Oreg Philadelphia, Pa Beaufort, S. C Charleston, S. C Austin, Tex Galveston, Tex Salt Lake City, Utah .... Norfolk, Va Port Townsend, Wash. . . Seattle, Wash Madison, Wis Isaac. Smithy sor hse Eduardo Alvarez y Gonzalez ...... Provisionally recognized. José Felipe Segrario Provisionally aaron. Joaquin Pereyra y Ferrau Provisionally recognized. Pedro Solis y Arias Joaquin Marquez y Hernandez . . .. José de Navarro y Lopez y Ayala. . Mariano Fabregas y Sotels Guillermo Leyra y Roques Luis Marinas y Lavaggi........... Nicolas Maria Rivero y Custodio .. Celestino Marconel y Guivelalde .. Angel José Cabrejo y Barrios William H. Yeinkauf.. .......... Fdgar Gilkey Dulin oud BL. Tend. 0 sien For California, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska. George H. Peck, Jr. iin viii Hjalmar R. Sahlgaard Sg i Per Edward A. Peterson Antoine]. Murat... 0.00. William J. H. Taylor Olaf Rye Wulfsberg Rosendo Torras Robert Manson 8a ste a sie ee nin a ein John Rilamdgren ....... 000 Gustavus Nelson Swan Pearl Wieht 7. no 00 nr Tewksbury I. Sweat Herman Rauschenberg Gleb Loots. ooo oi inti Carll: Pagelson. oo 20 00. Engelbreth FH, Hobe. . ©... .c....0.. Alf Alfred Essendrup Emeric M. Stenberg Christopher Ravn For Atlantic and Gulf coast ports. Alexander S. Heide Halfdan Bendeke., ii 00: Laurentius I, Malm Arthur Wilson S. Palm Severin Sivertsen Johnson William Lamb Eugene Biondi Andrew Chilberg Halle Steensland Consul-general. Consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul, Do. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. me LJ cae Foreign Consuls in the United States. 309 SWITZERLAND—URUGUAY. Cincinnati, Ohio. ..... .. Portland, Greg... ...... Philadelphia, Pa... ... Manila, Philippine Is- lands. Galveston, Tex. ......... 'URKEY. San Francisco, Cal... Washington D.C... =; Chicago; Ill... oy, boston, Mass. ......5.... New York City, N. Y.... URUGUAY. Mobile, Ala. .......... = San Francisco, Cal... ... Sagua la Grande, Cuba . Pensacola Fla ...../. ... St. Aneustine, Ela... Apalachicola, Fla ....... Brunswick, Ga... ....... Darien, Go ris. oon Chicago, Tl. oo. New Orleans, I1a........ Bangor, Me... «0... Calais, Me... ..... 0.» Portland, Me... ......... Baltimore, Md .......... Boston, Mass... ........ .. For New York, Maine, New Hamp- | shire, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, | Vermont, and Connecticut. James B. Robert. oo... 0 aunt Prederick-Jean Diem............. For Ohio and Indiana. Charles Biveher. ni G0 An For Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. | PR Rorradiy So goin rn saci For Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Jean Preisio, hoi an nna Werner Iischner. J oii oo HArich- Muller. a ss George BB. Hall... ov... 0 5.x Doctor. Schoenfeld... ... 0.07... Charles Henrotin. . . .. ales Se Mundji Bey... 0 0 onli Assim Bey... rah non Louis M. Moragues............... ToseCosla. vi ina oA Jose Ma. Beguiristain. .. . 1... 0... Thomas'C. Watson... | i. . 50, Francisco B- Genovae. ........ .... Antoine Jean Murat... 0... Henry Dumn. 5. oon 0, Rafnel S$. Sollag' aot coon ssn Carlos GC. Turner.. oc vvo vd 00 For Missouri, Ohio, and Illinois. Gilbert HH. Greens... von For I ouisiana. RB. W. Stewart... cain li. a W. A. Mugchie... ..... 0... as James: B, Marvetb oa cio a. Prudentio de Murguiondo. ........ For the United States. Yeonce Rabillon. 7 ivr ali on Arthey Carroll. ecu acai te For Boston and Salem. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. SWITZERLAND. San Francisco, Cal. ...... Antoine Borel... co 20 eins Consul. For California and Nevada. Denver,Colo......... 0. Fmile-Jaques Reithmann.......... Do. For Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona. Chicago, IW... ........ +. Arnold Hollinger... con lui, Consul. For Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, and northern Illinois. Louisville, Ky .......... JC. Bamberger... oon cal Do. | For Kentucky and Tennessee. New Orleans, ILa........ I Bmlle On. 7... rr Do. flor Iouisiana, Alabama, Arkansas, and Mississippi. St. Pad, Minn. 5.00, 0 Gotifried Stamm’... ....... vn 0 Do. For Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. St. Lows, Mo... viii n Jacques BuodE. oa tsar Do. New York City, N.Y..... Jacques Bertschmann.'............ Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Consul-general. Do. Do. Honorary consul. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. VA IS A ORT APTOS] ar | | | | | 310 Congressional Directory. URUGUAY—VENEZUELA. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. URUGUAY— continued. Scranton, Miss. ......... New York City, N. V..... Wilmington, N.C... .. Philadelphia, Pa........ Charleston, S$: C......... Galveston, Tex... ....... Noriollk, "Va. oie ih Richmond, Va... ...... VENEZUELA. Los Angeles, Cal. ....... San Francisco, Cal... Pengacoln, Fla. ;..0.. 0 Chicago, TH 0. nb on Des Moines, Iowa. ...... New Orleans, La........ Detroil, Mich. .......... St. Paul, Minn... 00. St. Louis, Mo. .......... Jersey City, Noo och, New York City, N. V.... Notiolk, Va... oi in Cincinnati, Ohio ........ Philadelphia, Pa. ....... Nicente Ross: iw 0.0 oil asin For Mississippi, and islands adjacent thereto, including Ship Island. Thomas A, Bddy ~ 50 o0s o Wallace B. Blink... ... 0. 0. 5. For North Carolina. ¥dnardo Formas... 0 0. Carlos B.Hlachet =i. 0. i Arturo Homer. 0 coh sais CovlosM. Barfietl cia For Norfolk, Newport News, and Yorkton. / George H, Barksdale. .......:.... Giullermo Andrade... 0... 0 Adolfo Canalo ome inh LL. Borrds.. iia inn not oily R. Philip Gormmlly..........5.. 0 Philip Hama... 0a 00s AlejandroPring. aa Sesion PugiAlex. Bresler. . oh. ..0. 0 JM. Pottgeiser. J... oon Herman Metnbavd. 2... 500 Franz Muller 07.00 oven os dais A.B Delfine... oui diee iii vans César Zumneta =... 0 0 00 sins Hugo Amal... 0.00 coin. Paul’. Walker: voc Tg et Reculo lopez Baralt. o.oo... Winfield S: Bird... 0.5 oe Vice-consul, Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Honorary consul. Honorary consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. Honorary consul. Consul. Vice-consul. | il The District of Columbia. 311 - THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. DISTRICT GOVERNMENT. (Offices, 464 Louisiana avenue NW.) Commissioners.—John B. Wight, 1767 Q street NW.; John W. Ross, 1334 Yale street NW.; Capt. Lansing H. Beach, 1327 Twenty-first street NW. Assistant to Engineer Commissioner.—Capt. David Du B. Gaillard, 1408 Twenty- first street NW. Secretary.—William Tindall, 2103 California avenue, Washington Heights. Secretaries to Commissioners.—Erancis Nye, 936 O street NW.; W. C. Hibbs, 1829 S street NW.; Moncure Burke, 1802 Wyoming avenue. Superintendent of Charities.—Herbert W. Lewis, Kensington, Md. Clerks, Executive Office.—Clifford Howard, 218 A street SE.; Daniel Curry, 602 A street NE.; William F. Meyers, 728 Third street NE. DISTRICT OFFICERS. Attorney.—A. B. Duvall, 1831 M street NW. Assistant Attorney.—C. A. Brandenburg, 2139 N street NW. Collector of Taxes.—E,. G. Davis, 2211 R street NW. Assessor.—Hopewell H. Darneille, 1753 Q street NW. Assistant Assessors.—E. W. W. Griffin, 412 New York avenue NW.; Goff A. Hall, 60 C street NW. . Special Assessment Clerk.—John W. Daniel, 1622 Riggs place NW. Board of Assistant Assessors and Excise Board.—James A. Bates, corner Second and T' streets: NE., Eckington; Matthew Trimble, 1320 Rhode Island avenue NW.; Samuel T. G. Morsell, 921 M street NW.; clerk to Excise Board, Roger Williams, 18 Third street NE. Auditor.—J. I. Petty, 3331 O street NW. Disbursing Officer.—Charles C. Rogers, 1428 Welling place NW. Property Clevk.—F. O. Beckett, 913 M street NW. Coroner.— William P. Carr, corner Vermont avenue and I, street NW. Surveyor.—Henry B. Looker, 3112 Q street NW. Inspector of Buildings.—John B. Brady, 1012 B street SW. Superintendent of Public Schools.—William B. Powell, 1410 N street NW. Superintendent of Colored Schools.—George F. T. Cook, 1212 Sixteenth street NW. Chief Clerk Engineer Department.—Abner Y. Lakenan, 604 Tenth street SW. Computing Engineer.—C. B. Hunt, 2015 N street NW. Assistant ngineer.— Wm. P. Richards, 137 S street NW. Superintendent of Water Department.—W. A. McFarland, 128 Maryland avenue SW. Water Registrar.—George EF. Green, 3018 Dumbarton avenue NW. Superintendent of Sewers.—David E. McComb. Superintendent of Roads.—George N. Beale, 3147 P street NW. Superintendent of Plumbing.—Charles B. Ball, 942 T street NW. Engineer of Bridges.—George H. Bailey, Takoma Park. Superintendent of Pavking.— Trueman Lanham, Lanham, Md. Electrical Engineer.—W. C. Allen, The Victoria. Superintendent Telegraph and Telephone Service. —James C. Simpson, 457 N street SW. Superintendent of Lamps.—Thos. J. Fisher, 1711 Thirteenth street NW. Inspector of Gas and Meters.—S. Calvert Ford, 1309 Q street NW. Chemist.—A. W. Dow, 2016 Hillyer place NW. Superintendent of Streets.—H. N. Moss, T street, between Sixth and Seventh streets N : BE. Superintendent of Street and Alley Cleaning. —Warner Stutler, 1225 New Jersey avenue NW. Sealer of Weights and Measures.— William C. Haskell, The Varnum. Librarian, Washington Public Library.—Weston Flint, 1213 K street NW. Trustees of Public Schools.—Jesse H. Wilson, 2914 P street NW.; James W. Whelp- ley, 1405 G street NW.; Job Barnard, 500 Fifth street NW.; George H. Harries, 4o1 P street NW.; David H. Hazen, 407 Sixth street SW.; Thomas H. Wright, 1916 Twentieth street NW.; Ellis Spear, 1003 I street NW.; George H. Richardson, 309 Eleventh street NE.; Sterling N. Brown, 2464 Sixth street NW.; Miranda B. Tulloch, 121 B street SE.; Bettie G. Francis. 312 Congressional Directory. Harbor Master.—J. R. Sutton, 1519 Eighth street NW. Initendant of Washington Asylum. —W. H. tit, Nineteenth and C streets SE.; visiting physician, D. Percy Hickling, 221 Third street NW. Inspector of Fuel, —John C. Howard, 206 Sixth street NE. Veterinary Surgeon.—C. B. Robinson, 222 C street NW. POLICE COURT. (Sixth and D streets NW.) Judges.—Charles F. Scott, 335 C street NW.; I. G. Kimball, 620 North Carolina avenue SE. Clerk.—Joseph Y. Potts, 450 M street NW. Deputies.—Joseph Harper, 412 B street NE.; N. C. Harper, 1800 S street NW.; William H. Ruff, 1507 U street NW.; F. A. Sebring, 664 G street NE. Assistant United States A ttorney. _ Alex. R. Mullowney, 1411 V street NW. Special Assistant Attorney for the District of Columbia.—James I. Pugh, jr., 3300 Seventeenth street NW. Deputy United States Marshal.—Van H. McCormick. METROPOLITAN POLICE. Major and Supervintendent.—Richard Sylvester, 1223 Roanoke street. Caplain.—M. A. Austin, 107 Fifth street NE. Chief, also Property, Clerk. —J. Arthur Kemp, 1422 N street NW. Clerk.—Edwin B. Hesse, 38 A street SE. Police Surgeons.—Dr. J. R. Nevitt, Dr. F. P. Vale, Dr. W. T. Burch, Dr. Clifton P. Mayfield. Sanitary Officer.—J. A. Frank, 457 P street NW. Hack Inspector.—A. R. Lamb, 1723 New Jersey avenue NW. Officer of Humane Society.—Samuel Wilson, 1220 Pennsylvania avenue SE. Detective Headguarters.—Lieutenant R. H. Boardman, inspector, 1218 M street NE.; Inspectors Isaac Pearson, 1514 T street NW.; F. E. Cross, 319 Ninth street SE. Station Houses. First precinct, Twelfth street, between .C and D streets NW.; Lieut. T. B. Amiss. Second precinct, Fifth street, between M and N streets NW. ; Lieut. J. E. Heffner. Third precinct, K street, between Twentieth and Twenty- first streets NW..; ; Lieut. R. B. Boyle. Fourth et, E street, between Four-and-a-half and Sixth streets SW.; Lieut. I. H. Hollinberger. Fifth precinct, E street, between Fifth and Sixth streets SE.; Lieut. F. F. McCathran. Substation, Anacostia. Sixth precinct, New Jersey avenue, between D and FE streets NW.; Lieut. John F. Kelly. Seventh precinct, Q street, between Thirty-second and Thirty-third streets NW. ; Lieut. John A. Swindells. Fighth precinct, U street, between Ninth and Tenth streets NW.; Lieut. John Kenney. Ninth precinct, Ninth street, near Maryland avenue NE.; Lieut. John C. Daley. - FIRE DEPARTMENT. Chief Engineer. —Joseph Parris, 439 Massachusetts avenue NW. Assistant Chief Engineers. _ william T. Belt, 233 North Capitol street; John D. Kurtz, 1687 Valley street. Clerk.—Ferdinand Donnelly, 1845 Ninth street NW. Fire Marshal.—William O. Drew, 3238 Prospect avenue. Superintendent of Repairs.—]. J. Membert, 535 Tenth street SE. Engine Houses: No. 1, K street, between, Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets NW.; Foreman, ; Charles S. Boss. No. 2, D street, between Fourteenth and Fifteenth streets NW.; Foreman, John Carrington. No. 3, Delaware avenue and C street NE.; Foreman, J. A. Walsh. No. 4, Virginia avenue, between Four-and-a-half and Sixth streets SW.; Fore- man, William T. Sorrell. No. 5, M street, near Thirty-second street, West Washington; Foreman, C. A. Kreamer. No. 6, Massachusetts avenue, between Fourth and Fifth streets NW.; Foreman, J. W. Smith. No. 7, R street, between Ninth and Tenth streets NW.; Foreman, F. J. Wagner. The District of Columbia. 313 Engine Houses—Continued. No. 8, North Carolina avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets SE.; Foreman, J. LT. Young. No. 9, U street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets NW.; Foreman, C. E. Harper. No. > Maryland avenue, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets NE.; Foreman, William Luskey. No. 11, Fourteenth street between Kenyon street and Kenesaw avenue NW.; Foreman, A. I. Grimm. No. 12, North Capitol and Quincy streets; Foreman, H. W. Wright. No. 14, Eighth street, between D and FE streets NW.; Foreman, James Keliher. No. 15, Anacostia, D. C.; Foreman, C. W. Hopkins. Truck A, North Capitol, near C street NE.; Foreman, S. R. Henry. Truck B, New Hampshire avenue and M street NW.; Foreman, Timothy Donohue. Truck C, Ohio avenue and Fourteenth street NW.; Foreman, A. J. Sullivan. Truck D, M street, near New Jersey avenue NW.; Foreman, P. W. Nicholson. Chemical Company No. 1, D street, between Twelfth and Thirteenth streets NW. ; Foreman, C. B. Proctor. Chemical Company No. 2, Brightwood, D. C.; Foreman, John Sherman. Telegraph and telephone service. Superintendent.—Henry R. Miles, 1610 Q street NW. HEALTH DEPARTMENT. Health Officer.— William C. Woodward, 508 I street NW. Deputy and Chief Clerk.—Harry C. McLean, 1414 Park avenue, Mount Pleasant. In charge of Inspectors.— William C. Fowler, 1141 Fifth street NW. Sanitary Inspectors.—Frank 1, Wollard, 719 Third street NW.; XE. W. Whittaker, 819 Massachusetts avenue NE.; J. F. Butts, 826 Twentieth street NW.; C. H. Welch, Ballston, Va.; T. M. Shepherd, Virginia Flats; G. A. Howe, 3500 Madison street, West Washington ; Robert I,. Iyynch, 2826 Fourth street NW.; Charles R. Holman, 60oo Maryland avenue NE.; Howard W. Barker, 2108 O street NW.; I. Nelson Conrad, jr., 1907 I, street NW.; George W. Rae, 1328 Ninth street NW.; F. W. Contee, 216 D street SW.; J. P. Turner, gro O street NW. Medical Sanitary Inspector.—John FE. Walsh, 200 Fast Capitol street. Food Inspectors.—W. H. H. Hoover, 511 P street NW.; J. R. Mothershead, 1322 Sixth street NW.; Thomas Cavenaugh, 1603 S street NW. Inspector of Marine Products. —Gwynn Harris, P. O. Box 23, Hyattsville, Md. Poundmaster.—Samuel Einstein, 3113 M street NW. Physicians to the Poor.—W. M. Barton, 1309 H street NW.; IL. J. Battle, 419 Second street NW.; W. K. Beatty, 123 A street NE; P. C. Hunt, 825 Fourteenth street N.W; A.W. Boswell, 601 Ninth street NE.; C. W. Childs, 513 Third street SW.; G. C. Clark, 321 Fast Capitol street; S.C. Cox, 2018 I street NW.;. I. W. Dennison, 1326 I, street NW.; FE. R. Hagner, 1754 M street NW.; A. B. Hooe, 1116 New York avenue NW.; Jesse Rumsbergh, 1021 Vermont avenue NW.; V. B. Jackson, 8og Thirteenth street NW.; E. S. Lothrop, 807 East Capitol street; F. P. Morgan, 1230 Ninth street NW.; J. L. Norris, 625 T street NW.; F. F. Repetti, 149 B street SE.; F. O. Roman, 1501 Eighth street NW.; Jesse Shoup, 117 Maryland avenue NE.; F. A. Swartwout, 810 Eleventh street NW.; J. R. Tubman, 1222 Eleventh street NW.; J. A. Watson, 201 Monroe street, Anacostia, D. C. THE COLUMBIA INSTITUTION FOR THE DEAF AND DUMB. (Kendall Green.) OFFICERS OF T'HE CORPBORATION. Patron ex officio.—WILLIAM McKINLEY, President of the United States. President.—FEdward M. Gallaudet, Kendall Green. Secretary.—John B. Wight, 1767 Q street NW. Treasurer.—Lewis J. Davis, 1411 Massachusetts avenue NW. Directors.—Francis M. Cockrell, Senator from Missouri; Charles A. Russell, Rep- resentative from Connecticut; Samuel W. T. Lanham, Representative from Texas; Henry I,. Dawes, citizen of Massachusetts; Joseph R. Hawley, citizen of Connecticut; Byron Sunderland, citizen of Washington, D. C.; William I.. Wilson, citizen of Virginia; John W. Foster, citizen of Washington, D. C.; Lewis J. Davis, citizen of Washington, D. C. 314 Congressional Directory. In its educational work the institution is divided into two departments, as follows: I. GALLAUDET COLLEGE. Faculty. Edward M. Gallaudet, President and Professor of Moral and Political Science. Edward A. Fay, Vice-President and Professor of Languages. Samuel Porter, Emeritus Professor of Mental Science and English Philology. John B. Hotchkiss, Professor of History and English. Amos G. Draper, Professor of Mathematics and Latin. Charles R. Ely, Professor of Natural Science. Percival Hall, Assistant Professor of Mathematics. Herbert E. Day, Assistant Professor of Natural Science. May Martin, Instructor in English. Allan B. Fay, Instructor in History and Latin. Albert F. Adams, Instructor in Gymnastics. Emilie Silkman, Instructor in Gymnastics. Arthur D. Bryant, Instructor in Drawing. Department of Articutation. Professor in charge.—Tercival Hall. Instructors.—Mary T. G. Gordon, Kate H. Fish. Normal fellows.—Ashbel Webster Dobyns, B. A., Millsaps College; Laurance Edwards Milligan, B. A., Illinois College; Frank Rowland Wheeler, M. A., Brown University; Martha Christian Bell, M. S., Synodical College, Missouri; Adelaide Hamilton Pybas, B. S., Southwestern Baptist University, Tennessee. II. THE KENDALI, SCHOOL. Principal.—James Denison. Assistant Instructors.—Melville Ballard, Mary T. G. Gordon, Kate H. Fish (in articulation), Theodore A. Kiesel, Sarah H. Porter, Mary Martin, Arthur D. Bryant (in drawing). ; Officers of the Domestic Department.—Wallace G. Fowler, supervisor and disbursing agent; D. Kerfoot Shute, attending physician; Ellen Gordon, matron; Mrs. Amanda W. Temple, associate matron; Isaac Allison, master of shop; Edward Mangum, farmer and gardener. Visitors admitted on Thursdays from g a. m. to 12 m. and 2 to 3 p. m. THE CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART. (Corner New York avenue, Seventeenth and F streets NW.) BOARD OF TRUSTEES. President.—Samuel H. Kauffmann, 1421 Massachusetts avenue NW. Vice-President.—Walter S. Cox, 1636 I street NW. Secretary.—Frederick B. McGuire, 1333 Connecticut avenue. 7reasurer.—Charles C. Glover, 20 Lafayette square, Iexington place. Edward Clark, Architect of the United States Capitol, 417 Fourth street NW. Calderon Carlisle, 1722 I street NW. William Corcoran Eustis. Thomas Hyde, 1537 Twenty-eighth street NW. Bernard R. Green, 1738 N street NW. CURATOR. PF. S. Barbarin, 3046 N street, West Washington. GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL FOR THE INSANE. (St. Elizabeth, Nichols avenue, beyond Navy-Yard Bridge.) Board of Visilors.—President, Byron Sunderland, D. D.; William A. Maury, Mrs. A. M. Gangewer, Mrs. Mary E. Fuller; Medical Director F. N. Gunnell, U.S. N.; Walter Wyman, Surgeon-General Marine-Hospital Service; Brig. Gen. John Moore, U.S. A.; W. W, Johnston, M. D.; B. L, Whitman, D. D. in ws ge The District of Columbia. 315 Executive Officers.—Superintendent, A. B. Richardson, A. M., M. D.; First Assistant Physician, A. H. Witmer, M. D.; Second Assistant Physician, Maurice J. Stack, M. D.; Third Assistant Physician, John C. Simpson, M. D.; Fourth Assistant Physician, Charles H. Latimer, M. D.; Fifth Assistant Physician, George W. Fos- ter, M. D.; Sixth Assistant Physician, Charles H. Clarke, M. D.; Junior Assistant Physicians, George H. Schwinn, M. D.; Harry R. Hammer, M. D.; ; Pathologist, I. W. Blackburn, M. D.; Night Medical Officer, John E. Toner, M. D.; Medical Interne, Frank C. Baker, M. D.; Dentist, A. W. Weakley, D. D. S.; Chief Clerk, M.]J. Quinn; Steward, Evanda French; Matron, Mrs. H, E. Norton. HOWARD UNIVERSITY. (University Hill, between Four-and-a-half and Sixth streets, near Brightwood avenue.) OFFICERS OF THE CORPORATION. Patron ex officio.—E,. A. HITCHCOCK, Secretary of the Interior. President.—Jeremiah Fames Rankin, University Campus. Secretary and 1reasurer.—George H Safford, 2445 Brightwood avenue. Executive Committee.—]. E. Rankin, chairman; George H. Safford, secretary; G. W. Balloch, ¥. H.Smith, John F. Cook, Wm. Waring. Honorary Trustees.—Hon. John M. Harlan, Supreme Court; Hon. William B. Allison, Hon. George F. Hoar, United States Senate; Hon. W. W. Grout, House of Repre- sentatives. DEANS OF FACULTIES. J. E. Rankin, President and Professor of Natural Theology, Christian Evidences, and Moral Science. John I. Ewell, Department of Theology, Professor of History, Hebrew, and Elocu- tion. * DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE. Thomas B. Hood, Professor of Diseases of the Nervous System, and of Clinical Medi- cine at Freedman’s Hospital. F. J. Shadd, Secretary and Treasurer. DEPARTMENT OF LAW. B. F. Leighton, Professor of Real Property and Contracts, Constitutional and Statu- tory Law, and President of the Blackstone Club. John F. Bundy, Secretary and Treasurer. COLLEGE DEPARTMENT. F.W. Fairfield, Professor of Greek Language and Literature and of Political Economy. DEPARTMENT OF PEDAGOGY. I. B. Moore, Professor of Pedagogy and Latin. Miss A. R. Barker, Instructor in Practice School. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT. George J. Cummings, Professor of Ancient I,anguages and Literature. ENGLISH DEPARTMENT. | George W. Cook, Professor of Mental Science. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICUL/IURE. William H. H. Hart, Instructor. DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC. William J. Stephens, Instructor and Musical Director. INDUSTRIAL, DEPARTMENT. Teachers. Chas Hall, printing; John F. Akers, carpentry; O. F. N. Madden, tin work; Mrs. B. M. Howard, sewing, and Miss Marie von Beseler, cooking and housekeeper ; Julia R. Hall, Matron. The exercises of the Medical Department are in brick building Freedman’s Hos- pital; of the Law Department, at 320 Fifth street NW. All the other departments meet in the University building. Visitors at any hour of the day and in all depart- ments are warmly welcomed. ¥This department is undenominational and wholly supported by personal benefactions. 316 Congressional Directory. WASHINGTON CITY POST-OFFICE. Postmaster.—JoHN A. MERRILT, 2503 Fourteenth street NW. Assistant Postmaster.—Madison Davis, 316 A street SE. MAIN OFFICE. Money-order division open from ¢ a. m. to 5 p. m. Registry division open from 8.30 a. m. to 6 p. m. for delivery of registered matter. For the receipt of matter for registration the division is always open. 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 can be obtained from the Senate and House of Rep- resentatives post-offices, or any of the branch stations of the Washington City post- office. MONEY-ORDER DIVISION. [Office hours: g a. m. to 5 p. m., except Sundays and national holidays. Money should always be sent by money order to insure safe delivery.] Money orders issued and paid as follows, Sundays excepted: At main office, 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. (Domestic money orders issued at general delivery after 5 p.m.) Stations A, B,C, D, E, F, G, substations 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,6, 7, 8, 9, Io, 11, 12,13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 34, 35, 37 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, and 46. Stations A, B, C, D, G, and substations Nos. 10 and 17, international money- order offices. Money-order hours at stations, from 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. Domestic money orders are payable in the United States. A single money order may include any amount from 1 cent to $roo, inclusive, but must not contain the fractional part of a cent. Fees collected for domestic money orders: On orders not exceeding $2.50 ............. $0.03 | Over $30 and not exceeding $40............ $0.15 Over $2.50 and not exceeding $5........... .05 | Over $40 and not exceeding $50....... .... .I8 Over: $5 and not exceeding $10. ........... .08 | Over $50 and not exceeding $60............ .20 Over $10 and not exceeding $20 ........... .10 | Over $60 and not exceeding $75............ .25 Over $20 and not exceeding $30........... .12 | Over $75 and not exceeding $100. .......... .30 The war tax is not a part of the fee, but is collected (two cents for each order, whatever its amount) from the remitter, in the place of a revenue stamp, which stamp is not required on a postal order. INTERNATIONAL MONEY ORDERS. Special forms of application for foreign money orders will be furnished to persons who desire them. The value of the British pound sterling in United States money is fixed by con- vention at $4.87; the German mark at 24} cents; French and Swiss franc and Ital- ian lire at 193{ cents; Swedish and Norwegian kroner at 27 cents; Netherlands florin at 41 cents; Newfoundland dollar at $1.01; Portugal milreis at 88 cents. International money orders issued payable in Africa, Algeria, Arabia, Australia, Austria, Azores, Bahamas, Bermuda, British Bechuanaland, Borneo, British Guiana, British Honduras, Bulgaria, Canada, Cape Colony, Ceylon, Chile, China, Crete, Cuba, Cyprus, Danish West Indies, Denmark, Dutch East Indies, Egypt, Falkland Islands, Faroe Islands, Finland, France, Germany, Gibraltar, Great Britainand Ireland, Hawai- ian Islands, Honduras, Hongkong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Java, Leeward Islands, Luxemburg, Madeira, Malacca, Malta, Mexico, Morocco, Netherlands, New South Wales, Newfoundiand, New Zealand, North Borneo, Nor- way, Orange Free State, Panama, Persia, Porto Rico, Portugal, Queensland, Rhodes, Roumania, St. Helena, Salvador, Servia, Siam, South Australia, Spice Islands, Straits Settlements, Sumatra, Sweden, Switzerland, ‘Tasmania, Tobago, Transvaal, Trinidad, Tripoli, Tunis, Turkey, Victoria, Western Australia, West Indies, Windward Islands, and Zanzibar, Er ER [des iy Washington City Post-Office. 317 Fees collected on international money orders: Not exceeding $60 Not exceeding $70 Not exceeding $80 Not exceeding $90 .90 Not exceeding ‘2100. i cit a clay ae sania 1.00 Not exceeding $10 Not exceeding $20 Not exceeding $30 Not exceeding $40 Not exceeding $50 Rates of fees for Mexico only: Orders for sums of §1oorless ............. $0.05 | Over $50 and not exceeding $60............ $o. 30 Over $10 and not exceeding $20............ .10 | Over $60 and not exceeding $70............ .35 Over $20 and not exceeding $30............ .15 | Over $70 and not exceeding $80............ . 40 Over $30 and not exceeding $40............ .20 | Over $80 and not exceeding $90. ........... . 45 Over $40 and not exceeding $50. ccceuve.n. .25 4. Over $90 and not exceeding $100........... .50 The maximum amount for which a single international money order may be drawn is, for orders payable in— The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Windward Islands........... £20 108.8d.= 100 Ireland, Cape Colony, and Jamaica (as Leeward Islands............. £20 108.8d.= 100 heretofore) 1058, 4d = $50 Bahamas. .... .........00 420 108. 8d. = 100 New Zealand 420 108. 8d. = 100 | The Colony of Trinidad and Queensland... .......... 5. 470 108. 8d. = 100 BODAGO is ii nels ile Siete ieinie 420 108. 8d. = 100 France, Algeria, and Tunis.... Francs 515= 100 | Austria........................ Francs 515= 100 Beloiamtit ir. i Ln ony Francs 515="100 | Hungary .............. BACHE, Francs 515 = 100 Switzerland... ui ia Ti Francs 515= Ioo | British Guiana..... ar Sh £1058. 4d.= 50 Italy. ns Tire or francs 515= Ico Bermuda... ........ cc. cv roves £1058. 4d. = 50 Poutugal. ssn Milreis 113.640 reis= 100 | South Australia.............. 420 108. 8d. = 100 The Netherlands....... Florins 243.90 cts. = 100 | Luxemburg, Grand Duchy GErMANY vv. vale vos sie mess vine Marks 416.67 = 100 Of a i oi a a ea Francs 515= 100 Sweden tir ar sana, Kronor 270 ==100] SAlvador.Z... viii iv. vice «eosin ticsicn vein e suisni 100 NOBWAY isin ides inne sia as asia iio Kroner s7o== "1700 | HONGKONG . Ju. icc avictindune dees snnsinionss 100 Penmapk cs. 0c eles on. Rronerz7o="100| Finland... ...... hc... .. Kroner 370 = 100 Canada. Ree i X00 4: Servia... io Ana ea sas Francs 515 = 100 Hawatiandslands . oo 0 on ais cri ek 100 Beypt a. oe tL 100 DO os rE Sl 1000 CITE i ei vis eas vm a a ati ils arate 00 ite 100 Honduras, oid ant oases 1005 British Honduras. ..........% £20 108. 8d. = 100 Newfoundland ........... ie he SR 00 CUNT Gras aie ha wre es 100 New South Wales............ 2 20308:.8d. == Too POO RICO i%. ott rv shienisins wae rsis caine’ 100 VCO oo vats civ sits iasic a ais oo omasnBd. == 100 i MexIcCok. ue tilde oti sav sn vainhiowaisen assiein inte 100 Pasmanla or ons LLIN 420 108. 8d. = 100 There is no limit to the number of international money orders. Any amount may be sent. REGISTRY DIVISION. Registered matter. —First, third, and fourth class matter may be registered at an expense of 8 cents each package, in addition to the proper postage. Letters or parcels can be registered for a fee of 8 cents in addition to postage— At main office, at all hours of day and night, Sundays excepted. At all substations 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 sender must be written 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 (MAIN OFFICE). (Postage on local letters or other first-class matter, 2 cents for each ounce or fraction thereof.) Delivery by carriers on five-trip routes, 7.15, 9.15, and 10.30 a. m., 12.15 and 3.30 p.m. Delivery by carriers on three-trip routes, 7 a. m., 12.15 and 3.30 p. m, Delivery by carriers to the Departments, 8 a. m., 12 m., and 3 p. m. Delivery by carriers to hotels, 7.30 and 10.30 a. m., I2.30, 3.I5, 5.15, 7, and 10.45 p. 1m. Collections commence at 8.30 and 10.15 a. m.. 12.15, 1.30, 4, 7, 9, and 11.30 p. m. Sundays at 5 p. m. and 11.30 p. m. Holidays, 9.30 a. m., 5 and 11.30 p. m. The carriers’ window is open from 6 to 7 p. m. daily, except Sunday, when it is open from 9.30 to II a. m. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF MAILS. Senate post-office.—Arrive 8.30 and 10.30 a. m., 12.15 and 3.30 p.m. Depart 9.30 and 10.30 a. m., 1.55 and 4.30 p. m., and upon adjournment. House post-office.—Arrive 9, 9.30 and 10.30 a. m., 12.30and 2.30 p.m. Depart 3.30, .30 and 11.30 a. m., 1.30 and 3.30 p. m., and upon adjournment. ) J ) p 318 Congressional Directory. RATES OF POSTAGE. [United States Postal Regulations.] First-class matter.—Letters, matter wholly or partly in writing, drawings and plans containing written words, letters, or descriptive figures, and matter which is sealed against inspection, are first-class matter, and subject to the postage rate of 2 cents for each ounce or fraction thereof. This rate applies also to letters for Canada, Mexico, Porto Rico, Hawaiian Islands, Guam, and the Philippine Islands. On local or drop letters, 2 cents for each 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.—Embraces all newspapers and other periodical publications which are issued at stated intervals and as frequently as four times a year. On newspapers and periodical publications of the second class, when sent by others than the publisher or news agent, the postage shall be prepaid at the rate of 1 cent for each 4 ounces or fractional part thereof. Third-class matter.—Embraces books, circulars, photographs, printed labels, 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 1 cent for each 2 ounces or fractional part thereof. Fourth-class matter.—FEmbraces blank address tags or labels, patterns, playing cards, visiting cards, ornamented paper, envelopes plain or printed, paper bags plain or printed, and all other matter of the same general character. This class also includes merchandise and samples of merchandise, models, samples of ores, metals, minerals, cut flowers, and any other matter not included in the first, second, or third classes, and which is not liable to destroy or otherwise damage the contents of the mail bag. Postage rate thereon, 1 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. DEPARTURE OF THROUGH TRAINS. [Schedules subject to change.] Atlantic Coast Line. For Charleston, Savannah, Jacksonville, and Florida points—4.30 a. m.; 3.46 and 6.20 p. m. (Florida Special). Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. For Chicago and Northwest—10.35 a. m.; 8.05 p.m. For Cincinnati, St. Louis, and West—10.55 a. m.; 3.40 p. m.; 12.05 night. For Pittsburg and Cleveland—10.35 a. m.; 8.30 and 11.55 p. 1m. For Columbus, Toledo, and Detroit—12.05 night. For New York and the Rast—2.35, 7.05, 8.30, 9, and 10 a. m.; 12.05, 1.15, 3 (Royal Limited), 5.05, 8, and 11.30 p. m. For Atlantic City—r0 a. m.; 12.05, 1.15, and 3 p. m. (Royal I,imited). Chesapeake and Ohio Railway. For Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis, and Chicago—2.15 and 11.10 p. m. Pennsylvania Railroad Lines. For New York—y7, 7.20, 7.55, 8.15, 9, 10, and 1I a.m; 12.45, 3.15, 4 (Congressional Limited), 5, 6.50, 10, and 11.50 p. m. For Boston—7.55 a. m.; 5 p. m. For Pittsburg, Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati, and West—7.55 and 10.50 a. m.; 3.30, 7.20, and 10.40 p. m. For Rochester and Northern Central points—7.55a. m.; 7.20 and 10.40 p. m. For Atlantic City —10 and 11 a. m.; 12.45, 3.15, 4 (Congressional Limited), and I1.50 p.m. For Cape May—1II a. m.; II.50 p. mi. Seaboard Air Line. For Atlanta, Memphis, and New Orleans—4.30 a. m.; 5 p. m. Southern Railway. For Atlanta, New Orleans, and Memphis—1I1.15 a. m.; 9.50 and 10.45 p. m. (South- western Iimited). For Jacksonville—r1.152a.m.; 6.35 (New York & Florida Limited) and 10.45 p. m. | { 1] | 8 es ——— rE Newspapers Represented. 319 NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED IN THE PRESS GALLERIES. [Streets and avenues are Northwest unless otherwise stated.] Paper represented. Name. Office. Residence, Albany Journal ATE SR Albany Times-Union ............. Albuquerque Citizen.............. Alexandria Gazette. . Re Anaconda Standard...... ....... Arizona Republican. ...... «.:»->. Associated Press... .. .....ves... Atlanta Constitution....eeveen.... Atlanta Journal. 75. doi. denen. Ballinger Press Syndicate....... Baltimor ee AMETICan. ... hs sees Baltimore Morning Herald....... Baltimore NEWS so iid os fiviaiiainte Baltimore SUtl...\ is svailosieess ss Birmingham Age-Herald ........ Boston Globe =... osc, Boston Herald’ alas Sashes det Boston Journal... ... Lo nhc, Boston Transcript .-.... on... Boston Praveler Hs so. nds dara Bradford (Pa.) Record... ........- Brooklyn Daily Eagle............ Brooklyn Standard-Union........ Brooklyn Times Jn or in. Buffalo Evening Times........... BuffalolBxpress o.oo asl Buffalo Evening News............ Charleston News and Courier. . Chicago Chronicle... .......... Chicago Dally News '.............. Chicago Journal.................. Chicago Evening Post............. Chicago Intex-Oceam... oo. ou Chicago Record uv voe smu enins sins Chicago Times-Herald............ Chicago Tribune... ....o Cincinnati Commercial-T'ribune.. Cincinnati Baquirer..... \.. do... Cincinnati Times-Star............ Cleveland Treader... Si Loa Cleveland Plain Dealer........... Cleveland: Press... ...........; Sa Cleveland World. 2: ... huss Cologne Gazette 0... 0h. an. Columbus Dispatch......5........ Columbus Press-Post....... ....., Denver Evening Post............. Denver Republican... . 5... Denver Rocky Mountain News. .. Des Moines Teader... ..v.-s ve.» Detroit Even'g News and Tribune Detroit Bree Press... .x. o.oo... Detroit Journal iin... ven. Duluth News-Tribune ........... Hlorence (S:C.) Times... -.o Lo Galveston and Dallas News...... Guthrie Siate Capital..." ..... 0... Hoboken Observer, ............... \ Chas. W. Metzgar.... Chas. B. Lockwood... J.-M. Bond ......5... Harold Snowden.. Frank H. Hosford. . C. 2. Hunt . C.:A. Boynton, “supt . Arthur W. Dunn.. Howard N. Thompson Chas. T. Thompson. . Elmer B.Paine...... John W. Mitchell . Harry A. Colman .... Edwin M. Hood...... Jo. 0Ohl........ 0... James A. Hollomon . Webster Ballinger .. Touls'Garthe...... ... Wilbur F.Coyle...... FE. W. Brad: F. A. Richardson..... Henry G. Kemp. ..... William W. Smith . Archibald W. Butt. . A. Maurice Iow.. ... H.B.F. Macfarland. . Morton E. Crane. I. A. Coolidge. ...... F. W. Cauldwell...... Robert I. O’Brien.... Frank B. Tracy...... Frank P. Morgan .... J.Nelken y Waldberg Addison B. Atkins.. Harris M. Crist... Albert Halstead. ..... Chas. A. Hamilton... H.C. ‘Stevens... ....... Walter E. Clark. .... Edwin S. Hoskins... Ro M. Larner: 0.0 Florence KE. Sullivan. J. A. Mathews........ H. Gilson Gardner . W. G. Nicholas....... I. White Busbey. Re William FE, Curtis. he John T. Suter, jr..... H. Teller Archibald. . Walter Wellman..... Richard Fairchild . Raymond Patterson. Henry C. Biggs...... Hal D.I,andon ...... Wm. C. MacBride.... S. EB. Johnson........ WE Wiley .......... John 8. Shriver...... PrediStarek. alo, Franklin Hall-....... Jacob Waldeck....... Roy 8. Drake ......... George E. Miller..... Siegfried Genthe.. Corry M. Stadden. ... Lewis H. Gibson..... Henry J. Robinson... J.-A. Breckons:....... Frank H. Hosford. . H. C. Stevens . George E. Miller. . W. 1. Crounse........ Otto Carmichael ..... Francis J. Carmody. . Crittenden Marriott. . George M. Bailey .. J- M. Bond ........... C..W. Gessner... ..... 1%. B. Nesbitt..... ... 603 Fifteenth st.... 515 Fourteenth st... Cr EA a ESE RI Alexandria ........ 1415 G Bt. co oni. .| 501 Fourteenth st. . Post Building ...... Post Building. ..... Post Building Pan Post Building ...... Post Building ely Post Building ...... Post Building ...... Post Building ...... TAT Gost, .| Metropolitan Hotel. 610 Fourteenth st .. 1430 Pa. ave........ 1345 Pa. ave........ 5oI Fourteenth st. Sun Building....... Sun Building....... Sun Building Tne 1345: Pa.ave......... 1410/6 St... T4056 Gist. one evees 1406 G st. .0. ee Fourteenth & KF sts. 3403 T Slyieeiceicrveines Wyatt Building. ... Wyatt Building Sa QZ IE SEY. veh 1407 New York ave. 608 Fourteenth st... 608 Fourteenth st... Ig45 Pa. ave........ 501 Fourteenth st. Post Building T4172: Gist... 0.8. vay Post Building ..... Post Building ...... Post Building ar Post Building ...... Post Building ...... 1503 Pa. ave ,....... 1503 Pa. ave......... FET7 EL St. atv, 515 Fourteenth st... zz Est. lic see 1345 Pa. ave..... 4. 501 Fourteenthst... 501 Fourteenth st .. Post Building ...... 13 Jowa Circle... ... 515 Fourteenth st... Post Building ...... 501 Fourteenth st. . TAI5.G 8. ovina Post Building ..... Post Building ...... 1I5:Gst a, Post Building ...... 1345 Pa. ave... .o..» 501 Fourteenth st... .| Metropolitan Hotel. 4 1135 Eighth st...... Post Building ...... 941 N. H. ave. Alexandria. 141 Mass. ave. NK, 1444 Corcoran st. 1357 Princeton st. 1929 Fifteenth st. 1450 Kenesaw ave. 2506 Nineteenth st. 1732 Fifteenth st. 3234 N st. 921 R st. 209 Twelfth st. SW. 911 Eighteenth st. Metropolitan Hotel. 1210 Mass. ave. Riggs House. 232 Ninth st. SK. 1308 Vermont ave. 1605 O st. Riggs House. 1635 I, st. 2006 Fifteenth st. 1816 F st. 604 Ninth st. 1423 Welling place. 1437 R.1. ave. 2504 Nineteenth st. 1400 Stoughton st. 217 Fifth st. SE. 1407 New York ave. 1318 Fifteenth st. 1702 R st. 1526 N. H. ave. 1305 Kenyon st. 1224 Eighth st. 1722 Twenty-first st. 301 C st. SE. 529 Eighteenth st. The Concord. 602 F st. NE. 2907 Fourteenth st. The Columbia. 2516 Thirteenth st. 1801 Conn. ave. 227 H st. Belford Hotel. 1623 R st. The Oxford. 1309 Kenyon st. 1359 Yale st. 2304 Pa. ave. 1925 K st. 1206 Fast Capitol st. 1212 Twelfth st. The Cairo, Q st. Fredonia Hotel. 1200 New York ave. 1401 Mass. ave. 1230 Roanoke st. 13 Iowa Circle. 1807 G st. Metropolitan Hotel. 1021 Vermont ave. 1437 Rhode Isl. ave. 141 Mass. ave. NE. 1224 Eighth st. 1230 Roanoke st. Grant road. Dewey Hotel. 324 Mass. ave. NE. 1826 G st. 1532 I st. 1135 Highth st. Congressional Directory. NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED, ETC.—Continued. Paper represented. Name, Office. Residence. Indianapolis Journal............. W. G. Nicholas....... 1503 PR. AVE. vi esis The Columbia. Indianapolis Press................ Otto Carmichael .....| Post Building ...... Dewey Hotel. Indianapolis Sentinel ............ Charles C. Carlton ...| The Wellington....| The Wellington. Kansas City Journal.............. Fred. F. Schrader ...| Hotel Normandie ..| 3530 Morgan ave. Kansas City Star... .....c.oeioren Albert Miller..........| Post. Building ...... 1633 29th st. : H.B. Nesbitt ........| Post Building Be RansagCliy’ Times... .. 5... W. A. Edwards......| 501 Fourteenth st ..| The Concord. Lewiston Daily Journal.......... Ernest G. Walker....| Post Building...... 1706 P st. London Daily Chronicles’... .io A. Maurice Iow...... 10 Gish. 2006 Fifteenth st. Yondon Daily Telegraph......... § Fa Sa Ee i A 127°C 8b, denies oir Highteenth st. London Morning ILeader......... Edward 8. Little .....| Post Building...... 1244 Princeton st. Ios Angeles Times............... Edward S. Little..... Post Building...... 1244 Princeton st. Louisville Courier-Journal........ O. O. Stealey i Lr BO RE 1728 P st. H. ei Stealey TA2T CG Sh. ia 1728 P st. Louisville Dispatchi........ oc... Frank G. Drury...... Wellington Hotel ..| Wellington Hotel. Touisville Evening Post.......... Archibald W. Butt...| 1345 Pa.ave.........| 1635 I, st Louisville Times... 0... cerns Otto Carmichael..... Post Building ...... Dewey Hotel. Manchester Unio. sv. xe: on iiss Alfred A. Brly....... 501 Fourteenth st...| 100 Eleventh st.SK. Memphis Commercial Appeal....| R. M. Moorman ...... 5 Paave. .....0. Metropolitan Hotel. Milwaukee Germania ............ I, W. Habercom..... 501 Fourteenth st..| Hyattsville, Md. Milwaukee Herald. .....c......... JulesiJaquet. oil edie varanasi Hyattsville, Md. Milwaukee Sentinel.............. Arthur J. Dodge...... Ter Fist... vv 3401 Holmead ave. Milwaukee Wisconsin............. J.S. Van Antwerp....| 515 Fourteenth st... yo] Riggs st. Minneapolis Journal.............. WW. W. Jermane.. ..... Post Building ...... 702 'T st. H.C. Stevens... 0x Post Building ......| 1224 Eighth st. Minneapolis Times ...c. cc veeen Otto Carmichael..... Post Building Cees Dewey Hotel. BD.) Nivea. Post Building EAS 2141 Pa. ave. Minneapolis Tribune............. B.A Johnsen... ..... 1345 Pa. ave. so... 3526 Morgan ave. Montreal Herald... .... coinvineons Walter KE. Clark...... 1437:G St... oe ens ..| 1722 T'wenty-first st. Nashville American ....... Tena R. M. Moorman...... 1345 Pa. ave ........| Metropolitan Hotel. Nashville Banner.. ieee ooo FATChibald WW. Butt... .[: 1345 Pa. ave... ...... 1635 I, st. Nebraska State Journal. . A F. A. Harrison ....... 603 Fifteenth st ....| 718 Eighth st. Newark Evening News........... New Haven Register... 00 0u ve New Orleans Picayune............ New Orleans Times-Democrat. .. . New York Commercial Advertiser New York Daily News............ New York Evening Journal...... New York Evening Post.......... New York Evening Telegram.... New York Herald... .... ..q.. si New York Journal................ New York Journal of Commerce. New York Mail and Express...... New York Morning Telegraph... New York Press.............. 00. New York Staats-Zeitung......... NEW VOrk Sun: . verse srteoinisnts New York Times... . oo. oivne, New-York Tribune... .. . vo. nin New York World... ......c.v cans Norfolk Virginian Pilot........... Ohio State journal................. Ol. City Derrick... .. os vote. cane Omaha World-Herald............. Philadelphia Evening Bulletin... Philadelphia Evening Telegraph. Philadelphia Inquirer............ Philadelphia North American... C. W.Gesner......... Walter BE. Clark... ... R.Bowman Matthews Corry M. Stadden... F.Michinard........: I. A. Coolidge... .- JM. Barvie oo Max F.Ihmsen ...... Frank I. Whitehead. . Francis E. Leupp ... - GeorgeW. Rouzer . R.M.Larner . George W. Rouzer.. John Cassel Williams Cal. O’Laughlin...... Max F.Thmsen ...... M.B. Tighe.........:. Sumner E. Curtis.... Chas. A. Conant...... John 8. Shriver...... Phocion Howard..... Robert J. Wynne..... Reginald Schroeder. . David S. Barry....... Henry G.Hayes ..0.:. Richard V.OQulahan . William I’. Bingham. Herbert F.I,. Allen .. BE. CG. Dunnell........ C. Willis Thompson .. M. G. Seckendorff.... Wm. I,, McPherson. . Richard Lee Fearn .. Charles S. Albert .... Horace J. Metk 5 Ewan Justice ........ John Boyle .......... Francis B. Gessner... Fred. F. Schrader. James Hines... ...... J. S. Van Antwerp.... Frank B. Jess. ....... John P. Miller........ Hugh W. Barr........ Chas. W. Campbell... W. B. Shaw...........« 1125. Eighth st...... TEC Shvs a tiene ss 515 Fourteenth st... 515 Fourteenth st . a EER Sr Ea Fourteenth & F sts. TATOR St 0. cea 603 Fifteenth st .... 603 Fifteenth st .... | yas Building.... 7oI Fifteenth SE. 7o1 Fifteenth st.... 7o1 Fifteenthst. .. sor Rifteenthst..... 7o1 Fifteenth st.... 603 Fifteenthst.... 603 Fifteenth st.... 603 Fifteenth st. ... 29 Corcoran Bldg... 515 Fourteenth at. og Bst............ Post Building ...... 515 Fourteenth st... 515 Fourteenth st. 1322 Beto. Je 1347 Pa. ave.... .... 1347: Pa. ave........... 1347 Pa.ave........., 1247. Pa. ave... 0, The Shoreham..... 1345 Pa. aye........, Hotel Normandie. . 1345 Pa. ave... ..... 515 Fourteenth st... 515 Fourteenth st... 509 Fourteenth st. 509 Fourteenth st .. 1410-1412 G st....... 1410-1412 G st....... 1345 Pa. ave ........ 1345 Pa. ave........ 1135 Highth st. 1722 Twenty-first st. 1751 Corcoran st. 1807 G st. 1423 Welling Place. 2419 Pa. ave. ‘The Wellington. 1729 H st. 1813 Sixteenth st. 1403 Twelfth st. 529 Kighteenth st. 1403 Twelfth st. The Savoy. 510 I st. The Wellington. 1012 Seventeenth st. 1317 Vt. ave. 1281 Kenesaw ave. The Cairo, Q st. 1434 S st. 915 R. I. ave. 602 Pa. ave. SE. 1617 S st. 113 First st. NE. 1421 Twentieth st. 927 Seventeenth st. 154 D st. SE. 616 Twelfth st. 2018 Hillyer place. Metropolitan Club. 2202 Mass. ave. 7o1 ‘T'welfth st. NE. The Fredonia. 909 New York ave. The Savoy. 532 Twenty-first st. 3530 Morgan ave. 1028 Seventeenth st. 1314 Riggs st. The Victoria. 1510 Thirteenth st. Riggs House. § < Members of the Press. 321 NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED, ETC.— Continued. Paper represented. Name. Office. Residence. Philadelphia Press................ Edgar J. Gibson..... ros Rist... 1500 H st. James S. Henry...... ogi sti. va.ns sien 1483 Columbia road. Roland N. Gibson. Taos Bell, Colonial Hotel. Philadelphia Public Ledger..... .| John M. Carson...... Post Building ...... 1332 Vermont ave, J. A. Truesdell ......, Post Building ...... 412 N st. Philadelphia Record. vi ones H. B. F. Macfarland..| 1406 Gst............ 1816 F st. Philadelphia Times............... Clarence Moore...... 28 Corcoran Bldg. ..| 1634 Conn. ave. Pittsburg Commercial Gazette. Charles W. Metzgar. .| 603 Fifteenthst..... Pittsburg Daily News.. Henry Hall....... wu: 515 Fourteenth st ..| 1029 Conn. ave. Isaac Gregg... vv ani 515 Fourteenth st . | 2022 Hillyer place. Pittsburg Dispatch. ...............] Austin F, Heiss ...... TV Cah ea ene 142 R st. NE, Plftsburgleader-............. 2 Wo. R. Bell........... 1245. Pa. ave... ..%. Pitsburg Post. ..c.. .. ..ouivs anus, Maurice Splain....... Post Building ...... 1737 Pa. ave. Pittsburg Press.................... HH. B. Nesbitt......... Post Building A Pittsburg Timesi........... ove. h Henry Hall ........... 515 Fourteenth st. ..| 1029 Conn. ave. Portland Oregonian . Sea Providence Journal............... Raleigh Morning Post............ Raleigh News and Observer...... Richmond Dispatch... ...... ..... Richmond Leader... 00 ove. Richmond Iimes.......s..... Pi Rochester Post-EXpress........... Rochester Times... on... 0. dias St. Joseph (Mo) News. =... soe St. Louis Globe-Democrat......... St. Louis Post-Dispatch........... StiT.ouis Republic...........c.u 0% St LOUIS SEAT. oo vt rahe Se re St. Louis Westliche Post .......... St. Paul Dispateh..... i..o0 Lon St. Paul GlODE is sia bans St. Paul Pioneer Pr ess a Salt Take Herald... cin co can Salt'Take Tribune...........00., San Antonio Bxpress............. San Francisco Bulletin ........... San Francisco Call. i... 0.0 San Francisco Chronicle.......... San Francisco Examiner.......... Santa Fe New Mexican........... Savannah Morning News ........ Scranton’ Fruth... ov... wi. av. Scripps-McRae Press Association. Publishers’ Press. Seattle Times... ...... 000000 Sioux City Journal..............0. Springfield Republican........... Springfield Union. ....... io. Syracuse Herald: wooo PacOomMAINEWS. ov sui cas vrvienasis Toledo Blade si... li. iin on ‘Topeka Capital... ud ih sat Trenton True American.......... ‘Troy times. rl ites Utica, Observer. oo. ivi visi Vicksburg Dispatch. .............. Washington Evening Star........ Washington Evening Times ..... Washington Post .. J... .. ooo hil Wheeling Intelligencer........... Wheeling News..... re eR ae Wilkesbarre Record «.....a-vi- Zanesville:Courjer...... 000 0.550 Harry J. Brown...... Fred’k H. Howland. . John'Beyle... +". . Edward I Jenkins . BE. Cuthbert. .z 5... :. J. B.Crown.......c... James ‘Hines... C. A. Hamilton ....... Edwin S. Hoskins... J.J. Dickinson ....... ‘Walter B. Stevens.... Justin McGrath...... W. A. Edwards....... W.S. Daniels.......... Fred. F. Schrader... .. I,. W. Habercom ..... E.A. Johnson ........ Hobart Brooks....... Arthur J. Dodge...... John E. Monk........ Frank H. Hosford ... Chas. A. Hamilton ... J. J. Dickinson ....-. Edward S. Tittle . aa Charles C. Carlton... . IL. R.E.Panlin'....... J. S. Van Sniwer: i J. M. Bond.. ihan R. M. Larner. Satara BW. Brady........%. A. 8S. Ayres, mgr...... Alfred J. stofer. Reh Willis P. King, jr..... Henry E. Eland...... J.S. Van Antwerp.... Fred F. Schrader .... Chas. A. Conant...... Robert Small ........ C. A. Hamilton....... W.W. Jermane. Se 2 Francis B. Gessner... John P. Fritts... J. Nelken y Waldber: g Chas. A. Hamilton. . Chas. B. Lockwood. . Geo. S. Johnson ...... John P. Miller. ..... ... N. O. Messenger..... Charles E. Kern...... Clifford Rose... ¢... HAT, Westin i.e. as Ernest G. Walker.... J. Syme Hastings .... Roscoe I,. Peterson... J. Harry Shannon.... C. M. Shinn........ J. Isaac Gregg ..c..vv.. F. W. Cauldwell ats Francis B. Gessner... Post Building ...... 1437:G stv. des 315 C8. daa iiatg so1 Fourteenth st .. Hotel Normandie, . 1345 Pasave,. ....... 501 Fourteenth st... Hutchins Building. Fourteenth & F sts. Fourteenth & F sts. 501 Fourteenth st .. 501 Fourteenth st... Hotel Normandie. . sor Fourteenth st .. 1345 Pa. ave. cv. «vex sor Fourteenth st. . .| 501 Fourteenth st .. Post Building ...... ‘The Wellington... . 1345 Pa.ave....... 5% 603 Fifteenth st..... Tip Gist. ini sor Fourteenth st... 501 Fourteenth st . . 501 Fourteenth st .. sor Fourteenth st .. sor Fourteenth st .. 501 Fourteenth st. . sor Fourteenth st .. 515 Fourteenth st... Hotel Normandie. . 29 Corcoran Bldg. . 1101 Pa. ave . 501 Fourteenth st. . Post Building ...... ‘The Shoreham..... 814 Eleventh st..... 1407 New York ave. 501 Fourteenth st... 515 Fourteenth st... 1345: Pa. ave... v. ..» Ito Pa.ave.... ....» itor Pa-ave......... Ilol Pa. ave... ....... Hutchins Building. Hutchins Building. Post Building...... Post Building...... Hutchins Building. Hutchins Building. Hutchins Building. 125 Eleventh st. NE. 515 Fourteenth st. .. Fourteenth & F sts. The Shoreham. 305 N. J. ave. SE. Century Club. The Savoy. 1507 Vt. ave. 315 C ste Owen House. 3530 Morgan ave. 1305 Kenyon st. 301 C st. SE. 41 Sst. The Hamilton. 1206 N st. The Concord. Brookland, D. C. 3530 Morgan ave. Hyattsville, Md. 3526 Morgan ave. 310 A st. NE. 3401 Holmead ave. 608 Eleventh st. 141 Mass. ave. NE. 1305 Kenyon st. 1244 Princeton st. ‘The Wellington. 1314 Riggs st. 529 Eighteenth st. 219 F st. NE. 930 I st. 444 H st. 1532 U st. 1521 Caroline st. The Oxford. The Arlington. [3550 Morgan ave. 1381 Kenesaw ave, 1727 Third st. NE. 1305 Kenyon st. 702 T st. The Shoreham. 814 Eleventh st. 1305 Kenyon st. 941 N. H. ave. I'he Victoria. 1216 Conn. ave. 25 R st. The Frederick. 1364 Harvard st. 1706 P st. 718 Eleventh st. 1404 I, st. 1226 Twelfth st. 2022 Hillyer place. 1437 R.1. ave, 1028 Seventeenth st. 1407 New York ave. 125 Eleventh st. NE. C. H. Mann, doorkeeper House Press Gallery; residence, 627 A street NE. James D. Preston, doorkeeper Senate Press Gallery; residence, The Maury. 322 Congressional Directory. MEMBERS OF THE PRESS WHO ARE ENTITLED TO AD- MISSION TO THE PRESS GALLERIES. [Streets and avenues are Northwest unless otherwise stated. ] [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the 3 designates those whose daughters accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them. ] Name. Paper represented. Office. * Albert, CharlesS.......... Allen, Herbert FB. I,......... Archibald, H, Teller........ * Atkins, Addison B......... RAYTES; ACS wi, TE Li Balley, George M ........ ... Ballinger, Webster. ........ Barts, Hugh Weis olan Barry, DavidiS o.. .000 Bell WR ios 00 Ga % Bigosi Henry C..l.....i0.. Bingham, William T........ Bond, J.VE. ori tar aai Boyle, John. ii. cil oui 2 Boynton, CoA. oleh Brady, BW. oe in Sanh Breckons JoA iii sinus Brooks, Hobart. ...... 5.0 Brown, Harry yJ illu ota Tombs I. W E Campbell CW sor oon Carlton, "Charles:iC. .. 0.0 Carmichael, Otto... .c...... Carmody, Francis J..... ... X Carson, Jehan M .........,. Cauldwell, BE. W.............. Colman; Harry A... oi. Conant, Chas. "A .... 5... % Coolidge, I. Au. iv... 00, Coyle, Wilbur FB. .=.... 00 Crane, Morton E............ Crist, Harris M.i.....000 00 Crounse, "WL, oo. na did; Crown, J. E.. Pata ee Curtis, Sumner E.. NET * Curtis, W. E Daniels, W.'S oie. ws Dickinson, J. Joh. hii *Dodge, Arthur J... .......5 Drake, Roy Stannard Bia Drury, Frank G ; * Dunn, Arthur w.. IES * Dunnell, Bn wr oh nas *Rdwards, Wo A... 00 *Bland, Henry B........ 0.0. Brly, Alfred A. oo. viii Fairchild, Richard .......... * | Fearn, Richard Iee...... Fritts, John A RA Gardner, HiGllson wiih vs Garthe, Iouis RL Rea Genthe, Siegfried... 50 %2Gesnier, C:. Wa.... nu: Gessner, Francis B.......... Gibson, Bdgar J... ... 2.0.0. Gibson, Tewis H............ Gibson, Roland N..:........ Gregg, Isaac. i. .-. oui Cuthbert, Or A pe Ar | Brooklyn Bagle 0 fo om an Scripps-McRae Press Association ....... Galveston and Dallas News ............. Ballinger Press Syndicate............... Philadelphia KEvening Telegraph ....... New-York: Sun. i... i esas srs Philadelphia North American, Pitts- burg Ieader. Chicago Bribumel coro LAs NewYork Sun uot i hi saa Albuquerque Citizen, Santa Fe New Mexican, Guthrie State Capital, I,eav- enworth Evening Standard. Norfolk Vir sinian-Pilot, Raleigh Post. . Superintendent Associated Press. ....... Baltimore News, Scranton Truth........ Denver Republican NI a Sti Pant. Globe. a oil a i Fs ns Portland Oregonian ©... hic ini: Chicago Infer-Oceam. x, his wie. Nashville Banner, Louisville Evening Post, Birmingham Age-Herald. Philadelphia Inquir RAT Ee ee sae San Francisco Call. ul, oo ain iii Detroit Journal, Iouisville Times, Min- neapolis Times, Indianapolis Press. Duluth News-Tribune... 5 ol. eae. Philadelphia Public T,edger...........+. Wilkes Barre Record, Boston Journal. . New Haven Register, Montreal Herald, Buffalo Express. Associated Press 0 too nando New York Journal of Commerce, Springfield Republican, Boston Journal, New York Commercial Advertiser. Baltimore Morning Herald. ............ Boston Herald ool ei Na rn bh Detroit Free “Press a A a oe a ea ora a Tac Richmond Leader, Richmond Times... . New: York Journal..coo. oo lb. Chicago Record. 0 tie dvi amu Richmond Dispatch ............... 0. | St. Touis Republic Sl a | San Antonio Express, Washington Times | Milwaukee Sentinel, St. Paul Pioneer I Press. Cleveland Press’. iwi Tee ra Touisville Dispatch iv. Lh io iiss The Associated Press. =o in oosoaori: New York Times: vos Sasa ss Kansas City Times, St. Louis Post-Dis- patch. Scripps-McRae Press Association........ Manechegter Union... a disso vas. Chicago Times-Herald:.................. NewYork Tribune. fo. Se rai a Topeka Capital... ve Bids nto Chicago, Journal... voi vine Jedi anr en, Baltimore AMerican. .....oo.eeeerenne.. Colegre Gazette iv. i. wv sian, Newark News, Hoboken Observer ...... Toledo Blade, Zanesville Courier, Ohio State Journal. Philadelphia Press... ov... isin vsves Columbus: Press-Post.. «uv. oid si ve Philadelphia Press. :....... cic oo Pittsburg News, Wheeling News ........ 1347 Pennsylvania ave. 1417 GS Post Building. 608 Fourteenth st. 501 Fourteenth st. 1532 I st. 610 Fourteenth st. 509 Fourteenth st. 1417 G st. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Fourteenth and F sts. 1417 G st. 42 F st. 1347 Pennsylvania ave. Post Building. 501 Fourteenth st. sor Fourteenth st. Post Building. 1403 F st. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1410-1412 G st. Riggs House. Post Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Post Building. 1403 F st. 1417 G st. Post Building. 29 Corcoran Building. Fourteenth and F sts. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1406 G st. 608 Fourteenth st. 1415 G s 501 Fourteenth st. 603 Fifteenth st. Post Building. 315 C st. so1 Fourteenth st. 501 Fourteenth st. 1421 F st. 501 Fourteenth st. Wellington Hotel. Post Building. 515 Fourteenth st. 501 Fourteenth st. 501 Fourteenth st. 501 Fourteenth st. 1503 Pennsylvania ave. 1322 F st. 814 Eleventh st. Post Building. 1410 Pennsylvania ave. 13 Towa Circle. 1800 New Jersey ave. The Shoreham. 1403 FE st. 1403 F st. 515 Fourteenth st. | Members of the Press. MEMBERS OF THE PRESS, ETC.—Continued. 323 Name. Paper represented. Office. 2 Habercom, L,.W.. vioccaie. Milwaukee Germania, St. I,ouis West- | sor Fourteenth st. liche Post. Hall, Franklin <0 A es Cleveland Plain Dealer. iin i ve 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Hall, Benry......o00 va. Pittsburg Times, Pittsburg News....... 515 Fourteenth st. * Halstead, Albert.......... Brooklyn Standard-Union.... .......... 1345 Pennsylvania ave. * Hamilton, Chas. A......... Brooklyn ‘TI'imes, Rochester Post-Ex- | 501 Fourteenth st. press, Syracuse Herald, Troy Times, Salt I,ake Tribune. Harrison, BA... ci. 00.00 Nebraska State Journal ................. 603 Fifteenth st. # Hastings, J. Syme-.......... Washington Times... ino ais Hutchins Building. *2 Hayes, Henry G.......... New Nor iSunt «noire uh aisiisy, 1417 G st. | Hazard, Ro Boon lion Scripps-McRae Press Association .......| 501 Fourteenth st. Helge, Austin B.. ....0 oe Pittsburg Dispatehy. ic. soi cai as) 1417 G st. Henry, James S.J. oun, Philadelphia Press. oo. sional ol. 1403 F st. Hines; James... ..... 00000 Omaha World-Herald, Richmond Times .| 1345 Pennsylvania ave, Hollomon, James A......... Atlanta Journal. lo ri eee Metropolitan Hotel. Hood, BoM issn The Associated Press. . .| Post Building. #Hosford, Frank BH... ..... Chicago Democrat, Anaconda ‘Standard, 1415 G st. Rocky Mountain News, Grand Rap- ids Herald, Salt Lake Herald. *2 Hoskins, Edwin S........ Buffalo Evening News, Rochester Times Howard, Phocion ........... New York Morning Telegraph A te 1347 Pennsylvania ave. Howland, Frederick H...... Providence Journal... oi. oo ooliey ..| 1417 Gs Hunt, CoP or ridin Arizona Republican, ... 2.0. oui. aay sor Fourteenth st. FThmsen, Max H.... 0. ioe. New Yo Journal, Evening New York | 603 Fifteenth st. Journal. 2:2 Jaquet; Tules............ Milwankee Herold... coo. J ontinive ves Jenkins, Edward T.......... Raleigh News and Observer............. #Jermane, W. W..........c.: Minneapolis Journal, Tacoma News. ____ Post Building. Jess, BrankB... on coil, Philadelphia Evening Bulletin .......... 515 Fourteenth st. “Johmson, B.-A... ....0 0. Minneapolis Tribune, St. Paul Dispatch.| 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Johnson, Geo. S:.... . vr on Vicksburg Dispatch... oh vial is 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Johnson, S$. F...........000. Cincinnall Bnquirer. ii duos aio 1517 H st. Justice, Bwan... i... es New YorkiWorld .... 5. oan ynesss 1347 Pennsylvania ave. AR AREEr, G: Jans caidsvaissitiinse Scripps-McRae Press Association... ..... 501 Fourteenth st. Remp, Henry CG... 05 Baltimore Sun. iio aan aa i Sun Building. # Kern, Charles BH .......... Washington Evening Star............... 1101 Pennsylvania ave. Ring WP gris seta: Scripps-McRae Press Association... ..... 501 Fourteenth st. * Landon, Hal D.............| Cincinnati Commercial Tribune......... 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Barner RoW. nhs ana. Charleston News and Courier, Savan- | 1417 G s nah Morning News, New York Tele- gram. Leupp, Francis B......... New York Bvening Post .........0 0.05. Wyatt Building. #*1ittle, Edward S...........: San Francisco Bulletin, Los Angeles | Post Building. Times, I,ondon Mor ning Leader. * Lockwood, Chas. B. ..... Albany "I'fmes-Union, Utica Observer. .| 515 Fourteenth st. * Low, A. Maurice ....... ... Boston Globe, I,ondon Daily Chronicle. .| 1410 G st. ¥MacBride, WW. C..l oo0u0 Cincinnati Enquirer. sii ia ai 1517 H st. ¥Macfarland, HB. EB ...... Boston Herald, Philadelphia Record....| 1410 G st. McEwen, Arthur............ Philadelphia North American........... 1345 Pennsylvania ave. #4 MeGrath, Justin ......... St. Louis Globe-Democrat............... Fourteenth and F sts. McPherson;>W. X,... 0... New York“Pribune...... hii liad, 1322 F st. Marriott, Crittenden ........ Florence S.C.) Times... haf, sor Fourteenth st. Mathews, J. A * Mathews, R. Bowman..... * Messenger, N Metzgar, Chas. W...... rE FMiller; John Poo. # Mitchell, John W.......... # Mock, Horace J........0.0, Monk, John HB. ......o...... Moore, Clarence. ............ Moorman, R.M............. Morgan, Frank P.. oe Nelken y Waldberg, Jorge. ; Nesbitt BB. rainsg. Niven, DJ cael diversion | O Brien, Joseph. B....... 3g 2 Hien, Robert } LR TREE *0hl, J. ¥ FO Laughlin, Cal... i... Chicago Dally News... 0 adenosis New Orleans Picayune. ................ Washington Evening Star......... 3 Albany Jour nal, Pittsburg Commercial Gazette. New Orleans Times-Democrat .......... Kansas City Star). Lt, beard aii Detroit Tribune, Detroit News, Cleve- land World. Washington Evening Star, Philadelphia Telegraph. The Associated Press. ... cusses one New Vork World... nities. St: Paul Ploneer Press, i. ie donne. Philadelphia’limes...................... Memphis Commercial - Appeal, Nash- ville American. Boston Traveler, .. ou cnr ido aos Bradford Record, Trenton True Ameri- can. Pittsburg Press, Huntington Advertiser, Kansas City Star. Chicago Evening Post, Indianapolis ournal. Minneapolis Times... iio vine. GiLCIty Derrick ond Cuba at, eA Boston Branscripl cou. vei eriv dd doses suis Atlanta Constitution, London Daily Telegraph. New. York Herald... oc. oiicoiner scevivnnase 56—181—2D ED—22 Post Building. 515 Fourteenth st. 1101 Pennsylvania ave. 603 Fifteenth st. 1331 BE st, Post Building. Post Building. 1101 Pennsylvania ave, Post Building. 1347 Pennsylvania ave, 1421 F st. 28 Corcoran Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. goz F st. 1407 New York ave. Post Building. 1503 Pennsylvania ave. Post Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Wyatt Building. 1417 G st. 7o1 Fifteenth st. 324 Congressional Directory. MEMBERS OF THE PRESS, ETC.—Continued. Name. Paper represented. Office. 2Oulaghan, R.V ............. %* Paine, BlmerE. .......n... Panlin Lo R. Ba, sin, * Patterson, Raymond...... Peterson, Roscoe L,.......... Richardson, ¥. A ...,........ Robinson, Henry: J... ...... Rose, Clifford... 0.0 wo #Rouzer, George W......... Sarvie Jo WM evs ina sn *Schrader, Fred. B........ 5 * Schroeder, Reginald ...... % Seckendorff, M. G......... * Shannon, J. Harry......... Small, Robert... 0. * Smith, William W......... *Snowden, Harold.......... Splain, Maurice... ...... Stadden,; Corry M........... *¥Starek, Pred... in... Stealey, H. Watterson...... #Stealey, O00... ol Stevens, TL. /Ch us. ioe #Stevens, WalterB........ 5. Stofer, A. J #Sullivan, Florence E ...... #Suter, John Pir... ni. * Thompson, Charles T .... *2 Thompson, Charles Willis * || Thompson, Howard N * Tighe, M. F Tracy, Frank B ......... ett * Truesdell, J. A... .......... Van Antwerp, J. S ........ Waldeck, Jacob. ......:..2.. * Walker, Ernest G........ * Wellman, Walter.......... EWest, TL cicai anaes * Whitehead, Frank I....... Wiley, Wolo ion 00 * || Williams, John Cassel... *¢ Wynne, Robert J New. York Sun. vis i rs seniteaniins The Associated Press... i. hii San Francisco Chronicle....... Denver Evening and Sunday Post ...... Washington Times... i. 0 halo ize New York Herald, New York Evening Telegram. New York Dally News... 0 00 Kansas City Journal, Omaha World- Herald, Sioux City Journal, Richmond Times. New York Staats-Zeitung ............... New York Bribune ...v.- oi vie ini Washinglon Blmegis anni dais Philadelphia Inquirer ........... ..... Wheeling Intelligencer '....: ..... on New York Mail and Express, Cincin- nati Times-Star. Springfield Unlon. ...o foe ss visi Baltimore Sam ii Sas en rs Alexandria Gazette: ... chi, Pittsburg Postini. ates Columbus Dispatch, New Orleans Pica- yune. Clevelandileader. 5 itl wn vv oi Louisville Courier-Journal ............ Tounisville Courier-Journal ......u.....0 Buffalo Times, Des Moines Leader, Min- neapolis Journal. St. Louis Globe-Democrat.......... .... Scripps-McRae Press Association ... ... Chicage:Chroniele .... co. ww ni nies, Chicago Record =i ily cae, ‘Phe’ Associated Press... ii. onsen. New York Times: . ew ios io ied ‘The Associated Press’... io. ou New York Journal.......... Boston Evening Transcript ... ......... Philadelphia Public Ledger. ..... ... ... San Francisco Examiner, Milwaukee Wisconsin, Seattle Times, Philadel- phia Bulletin, St. Paul Globe. Cleveland Presg i. oi wi oati adeno ; Washington Post, [Lewiston Journal. .... Chicago ’Pimes-Herald.:....0 0a a, Washington Post... 0... c.hevivi ina. New York Evening Journal. ........ ... Cincinnati" Bnquirer...: fo aun. ail dah New York Herald =... il dosti New. VOrk Press... .. oc... veivv-iasisn vis 1417 G st. Post Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1403 F st. Hutchins Building. Sun Building. Post Building. Hutchins Building. 7o1 Fifteenth st. 1419 F st. . Hotel Normandie, Post Building. 1322 F st. Hutchins Building. 1410-1412 G st. 125 Eleventh st. NE. 515 Fourteenth st. r1or Pennsylvania ave, Sun Building. Alexandria, Va. Post Building. 515 Fourteenth st. 1427 F st. i421 G st. 1421 G st. Post Building. Fourteenth and F sts. sor Fourteenth st. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. 515 Fourteenth st. Post Building. 603 Fifteenth st. Wyatt Building. Post Building 515 Fourteenth st. sor Fourteenth st. Post Building. 1503 Pennsylvania ave. Post Building. 603 Fifteenth st. 1517 H st. 7o1 Fifteenth st. 1403 F st. RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES. 1. Persons desiring admission to the Press Galleries shall make application to the Speaker, as required by Rule XXXVI of the House of Representatives, and to the Com- mittee on Rules of the Senate, as required by Rule V for the Regulation of the Senate Wing of the Capitol; 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 galleries; and that they are not in any sense the agents or representatives of persons or corporations having legislation before Con- gress, and will not become either while retaining their places in the galleries, and that they are not employed in an Executive or Legislative department, and will not become so employed while accepting the privileges of the galleries. Visiting jour- nalists who may be allowed temporary admission to the galleries must conform to the restrictions of this rule. 2. 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 occupation of the galleries is confined to bona fide telegraphic correspondents of reputable standing in their business, who represent daily newspapers, and not exceed- ing one seat shall be assigned to each paper; and it shall be the duty of the Standing pn Rules Governing Press Galleries. 325 ‘Committee, at their discretion, to report violations of the privileges of the galleries to the Speaker, or to the Senate Committee on Rules, and pending action thereon the offending correspondent shall be suspended. 3. Persons employed in the Executive or Legislative Departments of the Govern- ment, and persons engaged in other occupations whose chief attention is not given to newspaper correspondence, shall not be entitled to admission to the Press Galleries; and the Press List in the Congressional Directory shall be a list only of telegraphic correspondents. 4. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to admission. 5. The galleries, subject to the approval of the Speaker of the House of Represent- atives, and the supervision and control of the Senate Committee on Rules, shall be under the control of the Standing Committee of Correspondents. Approved : ! D. B. HENDERSON, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Approved by the Committee on Rules of the Senate. . JouN C. SPOONER, E. G. DUNNELL, Chairman, Chairman Committee on Rules. ROBERT J. WYNNE, WALTER B. STEVENS, J. A. MATHEWS, ELMER E. PAINE, Secretary, Standing Committee of Correspondents. 326 Congressional Directory. SENATORS, REPRESENTATIVES, AND DELEGATES. NAMES, HOME POST-OFFICES, AND WASHINGTON ADDRESSES. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the | designates those whose daughters accompany them; the | designates those having other ladies with them.] * President of the Senate pro tempore, WILLIAM P. FRYE, The Hamilton. SENATORS. Name. Home post-office. Washington address. *++ Aldrich, Nelson W ... Allen, William'V . ..... Allison, William B ....... Bacon, Augustus O ...... Baker, Tucten niin * Bate, William B ........ *Berry, James FL... . * Beveridge, Albert J..... * Burrows, Julius C...... ll Butler, Marion. .... =. *+1 Caffery, Donelson . . .. * || Carter, Thomas H..... * Chandler, William E ... *¥|| Chilton, Horace. ..... *Clark, Clarence D...... t1)ll| Clark, William A. ... *Clay, AlezanderS.... 1 Cockrell, FrancisM ..... #|||| Culberson, Charles A . *|||| Cullom, Shelby M . ... Daniel, John W.......... * Davis, Cushman K ..... *Deboe, William J ....... ||| Depew, Chauncey M. .. * Elkins, Stephen B ...... * Rairbanks,Charles W . . . *+11 Foraker, Joseph B . .. *|i Foster, Addison G . .... ¥ Frye WilliamP.../ .... * Gallinger, Jacob H . ...... ®Gear, JohnH. ......... ¥*Hale, Fugene........... *|| Hanna, Marcus A ..... *|| Hansbrough, Henry C . *|| Harris, William A. .... *1 Hawley, Joseph R...... .. ®Heitfeld, Henry... . .. Roar, George ¥ .......... #5 Jones, James K ...... Jones, Johw PB. ...... i. ill Kean, John ......... * Kenney, Richard R..... *Ryle, James: HH. ......:. *|| Lindsay, William... ... Providence, R.I....... Madison, Nebr......... Dubuque, Iowa. ........ Macon; Gal. viii 5 is ILeavenworth, Kans. .... Nashville, Tenn. ....... Bentonville, Ark....... Indianapolis, Ind ...... Kalamazoo, Mich...... Bllioth, N. C........ = Pranklin, Ta. ...0..00 Helena, Mont.......... Concord, NH... 0. Tyler, Tex ii Evanston, Wyo ........ Butte: Mont... ........ Marietta, Ga... . ci. Warrensburg, Mo... ... Dallas; Tex... vn Springfield, TIL... ..... .. Lynchburg, Va.. .. 0... St.Paul, Minn... = Marion, Ky:...... i. New York City, N.Y... Elkins, W.Va.......... Indianapolis, Ind....... Cincinnati, Ohio ....... Tacoma, Wash... ....... Lewiston, Me.......... Concord; N. Hi... Burlington, Iowa....... Ellsworth, Me. ......... Cleveland, Ohio. ....... Devils Lake, N. Dak. ... Linwood, Kans... ....... Hartford, Conm. ... i... Lewiston, Idaho. ....... ‘Worcester, Mass. ...... Washington, Ark....... Gold Hill, Nev...» ... ..: Elizabeth, N.J .... 5. Dover, Deli... Aberdeen, S. Dak .. .... Frankfort, Ky......... The Arlington. 216 New Jersey ave. NW. 1124 Vermont avenue NW. 1757 Oregon avenue NW. The Normandie. The Ebbitt. The Metropolitan. The Portland. The Dewey. 1742 Q street NW. 2110 O street NW. 1432 Staughton street NW. 1421 I street NW. The Metropolitan. 1000 T'wenty-second st. NW. The Arlington. Willard’s. 1518 R street NW. The Richmond. 1413 Mass. avenue NW. The St. James. 1703 K street NW. 1330 Fifteenth street NW. 1609 H street NW, 1626 K street NW. 1800 Mass. avenue NW. 1500 Sixteenth st. NW. The Cairo. The Hamilton. The Dewey. The Portland. 1oo1 Sixteenth st. NW. The Arlington. 2033 Florida avenue NW. 1016 Thirteenth st. NW. 1716 N street NW. 112 Mass. avenue NE. The Richmond. 915 M street NW. 1805 Nineteenth st. NW . 1327 Sixteenth street NW. 1710 Sixteenth street NW. 1358 Yale street NW. 1771 Mass. avenue NW. \ Home and City Residences. SENATORS—Continued. 327 Name. Home post-office. Washington address. *Lodge, Henry Cabot . ... McBride, George W. ..... *+ McComas, ILouisE. .. .. *|| McCumber, Porter J ... McEnery, Samuel D. ..... *| McLaurin, John L... .. *+ McMillan, James ...... Mallory, Stephen R...... ¥* Martin, Thomas S$... ®t Mason, Wm. E....... WW Money, H. Di. .oo 11|| Morgan, John T ...... *1! Nelson, Knute... ... Penrose; Boles. ..... .-. -. f Perkins, George C....... * Pettigrew, Richard F. . .. * Pettus, Edmund WW... .. RPh, Orville Hl, .. 0 J Platt, Thomas C .\....... * Pritchard; Jeter C ...... *1 Proctor, Redfield... ... * Quarles, Joseph-V...... Rawlins, Joseph 1... ... ®t Ross, Jonathan. =... .. *Scott,, Nathan B........ Sewell, William J........ *i1 Shoup, George L,.. ... Simon, Joseph... * Spooner, John C....... *+1 Stewart, William M .. 1 Sullivan, William V. ... *+ Taliaferro, James P.... OOuRRRRARAORRIZ ACRE IOOROY ROO RZ RRA Nahant, Mass. ......... St. Helens, Oreg., Hagerstown, Md ....... Wahpeton, N. Dak ..... New Orleans, Ia.. ..... Bennettsville, S. C..... Detroit, Mich........... Pensacola, Ela: Scottsville, Va... ..... Chicago, Tl. i000 Carrollton, Miss. ....... 1 Selo, Ala. ............. Alexandria, Minn. .... . Philadelphia, Pa... ...- Oakland Cali... Sioux Falls, S. Dak..... Selma, Ala, o.oo. 00, Meriden, Conn......... Owego, N.Y... ........ Marshall, N.C......... Proctor, Vt. oo. oi. Milwaukee, Wis ....... Salt Take City, Utah... Wheeling, W.Va... .. .. Camden, NJ... 000 Salmon City, Idaho .... Portland, Oreg......... Madison, Wis .......... Carson City, Nev....... Oxiord, Miss .......... Jacksonville, Fla......... 1765 Mass. avenue NW. I B street NW. 1723 R. I. avenue NW. 1534 22d street NW. The Metropolitan. The Oxford. 1114 Vermont avenue NW. The Gordon. 1423 Chapin street NW. 224 N. J. avenue NW. 315 4% street NW. 649 Fast Capitol street. The Normandie. The Portland. 1750 Q street NW. 34 B street NE. The Arlington. The Arlington. 902 East Capitol street. 1535 L street NW. The Richmond. 13 First street NE. The Richmond. The Shoreham. The Normandie. The Normandie. The Normandie. The Arlington. 1800 F street NW. The National. The Richmond. Teller, Henry M .... ...... S R.| Central City, Colo. ..... The Colonial. *Thurston, John MM... ... RJ Omaha, Nebr ....:..... The Cairo. * Tillman, Benj. R..... ... Do | Trenton; 8.°€ ......u’ vi 1006 Fast Capitol street. *t1\ Turley, Thomas B...| D | Memphis, Tenn... ....: The Ebbitt. ® Turner, George ........ F | Spokane, Wash ........ The Portland. *¥l Vest ‘George GC ,.. D | Konsas City, Mo... .... 1204 P street NW. ¥Wharren, Prancis EB ... .. RR: [-Cheyenne, Wyo ......i. 1848 Wyoming ave. NW. Wellington, George L, ...| R | Cumberland, Md....... 1453 Mass. avenue NW, *11t Wetmore, George P, |: R. | Newport, R. 1... 20.0% 1609 K street NW. Wolcott, Edward O...... R | Denver, Cola... 5.5 1221 Connecticut ave. NW. REPRESENTATIVES. Name. Home post-office. 2 Washington address. #* Acheson, Ernest B...| BR | Washington, Pa...... 24 | 217 North Capitol street. Adams, Robert, jr..... RE | Philadelphia, Pa....: 2 | The Albany. *IIll Adamson, W.C..| D | Carrollton, Ga ....... 4 | Metropolitan Hotel. ¥Alexander, D. S:..... R [Buffalo N:V......... 33 | The Concord. *illAllen, Amos]. ..... R | Alfred, Me... ........ I | 418 Stanton place. Allen HD... 0. D | Morganfield, Ky ..... 2 | 1415 K street NW. Allen, John M ...~...... D | Tapelo, Wiss... ....... I Atwater, TW ........ Di Rualto, N.C... ..0 4 | 317 East Capitol street. || Babcock, Joseph W...| R | Necedah, Wis........ 3] 11 B street NW. *Bailey, Joseph W..... D | Gainesville, Tex...... 5 | Riggs House. Bajley, W. J. 000, R | Baileyville, Kans..... (a)| 1529 I street NW. a At large. 328 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. ~~ Name. Home post-office. 2 Washington address. Baker, William B...... BR | Aberdeen, Md... ..... 2 | 215 New Jersey ave. NW. %Ball, Thomas i... -. D | Huntsville, Tex... ..... 1 | The Cairo. Bankhead, J. H....... D:| Payette Ala... 6 | Riggs House. Barber, LB oo. D | Mauch Chunk, Pa....| 8 | The Normandie. 2 Barham, Jolin A»... 'R | Santa Rosa, Cal: ©... 1 | The Ebbitt. *{Barney, Samuel S....| R | West Bend, Wis. ..... 5 | The Wellington. *|| Bartholdt, Richard ..| R | St. Louis, Mo........ 10 | Congressional Hotel. . % Bartlett. Chas. ¥, ..... Dd Macon, Ga...;.o oui 6 | Riggs House. *Bell, JohuC .......... P | Montrose, Colo....... [20 11 35 Twelfth street NW. *7lBellamy, J.D..." ... D | Wilmington, N.C ....| 6 | The Normandie. *lBenton, M. BE... ... DD | Neosho, Mo............ 15 | 1723 QO street NW. *1{i Berry, Albert'S ....{ D | Newport, Ky. ........ 6 | 1744 P street NW. Bingham, Henry H....| R | Philadelphia, Pa... .. I | The Normandie. *Bishop, Roswell P. ...| R | Ludington, Mich..... 9 | 132 A street NE. TiBoreing, Vincent..." B | London, Ky .......... 11 | 209 Fast Capitol street. #1 Boutell, Henry S:. .. .[ RB | Chicago, TL... ...... 6 | 1319 K street NW. Boutelle, Chas. A...... R | Bangor, Me. ..:... =. 4 | The Grafton. | *11|| Bowersock, J. D...| R | Lawrence, Kans...... 2 | The Hamilton. Bradley, Thomas J.....| D | NewYork, N.Y. .... 9 | Riggs House. [ Brantley, Wm. G...... D | Brunswick, Ga....... 11 | Riggs House. * Braezeale, Phanor D..| D | Natchitoches, La... ... 4 | Willard’s. * Brenner, John I, ..... D Dayton, Ohio... us. 3 | The Ebbitt. Brewer, Willis... ..... ... D | Flayneville; Ala... 5 | 1330 Columbia road NW. Ehrich SAT R | South Bend, Ind..... 3 | The Hamilton. Bromwell, JacobH ....| R | Wyoming, Ohio...... 2 | 1347 Q street NW. *iiBrosius, Marriett....| R | Lancaster, Pa........ 10 | The Elsmere. * Broussard, Robert F¥..| D | New Iberia, Ia....... 3 | Riggs House. | : *t Brown, Seth W..... R| Lebawon,-Ohie....... 6 | The Varnum, * Brownlow, Walter P..| R | Jonesboro, Tenn... ... I | 201 A street SE. | *Brundidge, S., Jr.:... D [Seavey Ark... .. 000. 6 | The Wellington. Bull, Melville ......... R | Middletown, R. I....| 1 | The Cochran. Burke: CF... R.{ Perry, S. Dak... 5 (@)| 1333 R street NW. 2¢Burke, Robert’ B. ..:| D | Dallas, Tex... =... 6 | The Metropolitan. “Burkett, B. J... R | Iincoln, Nebr ...v +. | “1/| The Hamilton. *y Burleigh, Edwin C..| BR | Augusta, Me......... |. 3 | The Richmond. 2 Burleson, A. S...... Di Austin, Lex... 00. | -‘9.| The Cairo. | Barnett, J.T... D: | Gadsden, Ala. ....... | 7 | 34 B street NE. Burton, Theodore E....| R | Cleveland, Ohio... .. 21 | Metropolitan Club. *|| Butler, Thomas S ...| R | West Chester, Pa..... 6 | 1623 H street NW. |Calderhead, W. A ....| R | Marysville, Kans..... 5 | 2149 Florida avenue NW. *t Caldwell, B. FP. ...... Dt Chatham, IW .5...5 17 | The Ebbitt. ®Camypbell, AT... .. Dl Butte, Mont.............. (@)| 1601 Thirty-first st. NW. 7 Cannon, Joseply G.....[| R | Danville, Tl ......... 12 | The Cochran. *7 Capron, Adin B. . ..: B | Stillwater, R.1....... 2 | The Cochran. *Carmack, B.W... ... D [ Memphis, Tenn... ... 10 | I3T B street SE. *Catchings, 1. C...... D |: Vicksburg, Miss... ..... 3 # [Chanler, W. A. ...... D | New York, N. V...... 14 | 501 Fourteenth street NW. [1 * Chickering, Chas. A..| R | Copenhagen, N.Y....| 24 | The Hamilton. *Clark, Champ... .... D | Bowling Green, Mo. ..| 9 | 617 Maryland avenue NE. %Clarke, Frank G,.... R | Peterboro, N. EH..." .. 2 | The Normandie. Clayton, B.2 ...00.0 Di | Brooklyn, N.. ¥ .......... | 4] 1324 Mass. avenue NW. Clayton, Henry D...... D | Bufonla, Ala... 2 | 3 | Willard’s. ¥Cochran, Charles ¥...[-'D | St, Joseph, Mo... .. | 4 | The National. * Cochrane, AaronV.S:| B | Hudson, N.Y... ... |" Tg { The Cairo. * Connell, William. ..... BR |i Scranton, Pa... 5... | 11 | The Shoreham. *Cooney,James.-....%... Dl Marshall, Mo=... .... 7: | 221 A street SP, Cooper, Henry A... .. RB [ Racine,Wis.. 0... | 1 | The Raleigh. tif Cooper, Sam B....| D | Beaumont, Tex ...... 2 | The Metropolitan. Cogliss, JohinB ........ R | Detroit, Mich... >. .. | I | The Dewey. Cousins, Robert G. .... R [ Tipton, lowa......... | 5 | The Shoreham. | * Cowherd, William S ..| D | Kansas City, Mo... .. | 5 | The Ebbitt. » a At large. Be St fe SE Home and City Residences. 329 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. ~~ Name. Home post-office. 2 Washington address. *7Cox, Nicholas N.....| D: | Branklin, Tenn ...... 7 | The National. * Crawford, W. 1... ... D | Waynesville, N.C....| 9 | 1327 Tenth street NW. %| Cromer, G. W.... ... .. RB | Muncie, Ind... ........ 8 | The Dewey. *rCrowley, J.B... -. Dit Robinson, Tl ......... 19 | 929% New York ave. NW. *111 Crump,Rousseau O| R | West Bay City, Mich. .| 10 | 413 A street SE. *Crumpacker, B.D....| R | Valparaiso, Ind ...... 10 | Willard’s. Commings, Amos)... | D.| NewYork City....... 10 *|[Curlis, Charles .... .. Rj Topeka, Kans........ I | 2012 R street NW. Cusack, Thomas ...... | Chicago, Ill... -.....v. 4 | 1509 S street NW. *| Cushman, BE: W..... R. | Tacoma, Wash .. ..... (@)| 922 M street NW. lll Dahle, HH. B ...... R | Mount Horeb, Wis ...| 2 | 1319 Vermont ave. NW, XDA Wo Ds D:| Hoboken, N. J =... .... 7 | Willard’s. ®:Dalzell, John. i: R | Pittsburg, Pa... 75... 22 | 1605 New Hampshire ave. Davenport, S.A....... Ri Brie; Pa «0 (a) | Riggs House. *Davenport,S.W-..... Di Plymouth, Pa.....«.. 12 | Riggs House. *Davey, Robt. C....... D | New Orleans, Ia..... | 2 | Riggs House. * Davidson, James H...| R | Oshkosh, Wis........ 6 | The Wellington. *+ Davis, Robt. W..... BD | Palatka Fla... .... 2 | The Metropolitan. * Dayton, Alston G.. ..%| -R| Philippi, W.Va... ... 2 | The Varnum. * De Armond, B.A ....] D | Butler, Mo.........: «.. 6 | The Varnum. De Graffenreid, R.C...| D | Longview, Tex....... 3 | The Wellington. % [De Vries, Marion... D | Stockton, Cal......., 2 | 1623 H street NW. Penny, J. We. D |: Baltimore, Md ... .- ... 4 | Baltimore, Md. Dick, Charles... ..... R |"Akvon,Ohio.......... 19 | Fourteenth and G sts. NW. Dinsmore, Hugh A....| D | Fayetteville, Ark..... 5 | 1814 K street NW. ¥|| Dolliver, Jonathan P.| R | Fort Dodge, Iowa ....| 10 | Portner Flats. *tDougherty, Join... ..| D | Liberty, Mo. ......... 3 | Third and T streets NE. ®Dhovenen, B.B. oo 0.. R | Wheeling, W.Va... .. 1 | Willard’s. * Driggs, Edmund H...] D { Brooklyn, N.¥Y....... 3 | The Ebbitt. *Driscoll, M. 1... ... RI Syracuse, NV... 27 | The Arlington. * Eddy, Frank M..... .. R | Glenwood, Minn..... 7 | The Varnum. #+ Eliott, William .... | D | Beaufort, 8.C... .... 1 | The Normandie. Emerson, 1. W........ R | Warrensburg, N. Y...| 23 | The Normandie. 2Ppes, SP. ha D. | Blackstone, Va ...... | 4 | Willard’s. Bee J.J. ei R | 1a Crosse, Wis... .... 7 | 922 I street NW. Faris, George W ...... R | Terre Haute, Ind. . ... | 5 | 812 Twelfth street NW. Hl Pinley, DB... ... D | Yorkville, S.C....... 5 | 635 Maryland ave. NE. Fitzgerald, John F ....| D | Boston, Mass, ....... 9 | The Wellington. Pitzgerald, J.J... =... D | Brooklyn, N. Vii J. 2 | 1324 Mass. avenue NW. Fitzpatrick, Thos. Y :. .| D | Prestonburg, Ky ..... 10 | The Wellington. Fleming, William H...| D | Augusta, Ga ......... 10 | The Cairo. [|| Fletcher, Loren. .... R | Minneapolis, Minn. ..| 5 | The Richmond. = Fordney, J. W....... R | Saginaw, Mich....... 8 | 1323 Vermont ave. NW. ¥* Poss, Geo. Edmund." R | Chicago, TIL... . .. 7 | 2005 O street NW. RPoster, C.F... Dl Chicago, TWl..... 0... 3 | 924 Fourteenth street NW. *l Fowler, Charles N...| BR | Blizabeth, N. J... ..... 8 | 1406 Sixteenth street NW. Fox, Andrew F........ D | Westpoint, Miss. ..... 4 | 52 B street NE. Breer, RB. EL o.oo R | Harrisville, W. Va .. .| 4 | The Varnum. Gaines, John Wesley. ..| D | Nashville, Tenn...... 6 | 1111 H street NW. BGamble, R.J ..~.... R. | Yankton, S. Dak..... (a)| The Normandie. *$|| Gardner, John J ...| R | Atlantic City, N. J...! 2 | Willard’s. * Gardner, Washington| R | Albion, Mich ........ 3 | 1303 Clifton street NW, Gaston, Athelston.. ... D: | Meadville, Pa........ 26 | The Varnum. Gayle, June W.... ...... D | Owenton, Ky ..>. 5. .: 7 - * Gibson, Henry R. .... R | Rnoxville, Tenn. ... 2 | 31 C street NE. * Gilbert, 6. GC... D.| Shelbyville, Ky. ..... 8 | 1645 R street NW. Gill, Joseph J... 0. R | Steubenville, Ohio ...| 16 | The Normandie. * Gillet, Clinrles W....[: R [Addison Ni V........ 29 | The Hamilton. Gillett, Frederick H...| R | Springfield, Mass..... 2 | The Everett. Glyn, MoH 0 wn. Di Albany, N.Y... 0. 20 | Congressional Hotel. Gordon, R.B.... .%... D. | St. Mary, Ohio. ...... 4 | The Arlington. #l| Groff, Josepi V . ...(* BR. ‘Peoria, Tl 1... .. 14 | The Wellington, a At large. 330 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. N=) Name. Home post-office. 2 Washington address. tT Graham, Wm. H..... R {-Allecheny, Pa: .... 23 | 1338 N. Y. ave. NW. lif Green, Henry D ...[ D' | Reading, Pa... ... 5: 9 | 425 Fourth street NW. 7 Greene, Wm. S...... R | Fall River, Mass..... 13 | 1209 Mass. avenue SE. Grifith, FrancisM....| D.| Vevay, Ind .......... 4 | 459 Florida avenue NW. *Ill Griggs, James MM. ..| D | Dawson, Ga.......... 2 | 335 C street NW. *¥ Grosvenor, C.H..... R [Athens Ohio... 11 | The Dewey. Grout, William W. . ... RB. [-Barton, Vt... 0.0000. 2 | The Arlington. Grow, Galusha A...... R | Glenwood, Pa........ (a) | Willard’s. LAB FNP A EE Ca a D ‘Ridgeway, Pa. .... =. 28 | The Cochran. * Hamilton, Edward lL, .| R | Niles, Mich......m ... 4 | 1119 K street NW. *i Harmer, Alfred C. -..| R (Philadelphia, Pa... .. 5 | 1239 Vermontavenue NW. Haugen, G.N....... ...| R | Northwood, Iowa ....| 4 | The Normandie. *{li Hawley, BR: B. ..... R | Galveston, Tex... ... 10 | The Gordon. Hay, James: 00 DD: "Madison, Va ......... 7 | 1505 Q street NW. *+ Heatwole, Joel P....| R | Northfield, Minn..... 3 | The Gordon. * Hedge, Thomas... ... R | Burlington, Iowa..... I | The Portland. ® Hemenway, J. A ..... R | Boonville, Ind ....... I | 100 B street NE. *j Henderson, DB ....| R | Dubuque, Jowa....... 3 | The Normandie. *j Henry, E. Stevens... R | Rockville,Conn...... I | 1421 K street NW. Henry, Patrick... .- D:-| Brandon, Miss... ... 7 | 2021 Hillyer place. * Henry, Robert 1,..... J Waco, Tex a... inh 7 | Willard’s. | Hepburn, W.P... | BR | Clarinda, Jowa....... 8 | 1124 East Capitol street. *+ Hill, Ebenezer] ....I' R | Norwalk, Conn ...... 4 | The Cochran. *Hit, Robert BR... ..... R | Mount Morris, Ill....| 9 | 1507 K street NW. *Hofiecker,]. H ....... R ("Smywa,; Deli... (@) | The Cochran. “+ Hopkins, Albert]. ..| BR | Anrora Il .e...o00 000 8 | Riggs House. *Howard, William M..| D | Lexington, Ga ....... 8 | 723 Eighteenth street NW. *Howell, Benj.-¥F ... .: R | New Brunswick, N.J..| 3 | The Normandie. Hull. John A.T. .... R | Des Moines, Iowa....| 7 | 1720 Twenty-first st. NW. Fire, SM aL Ri Indiann, Pa... 21 | The Dewey. * Jenkins, John J... ... R | Chippewa Falls,Wis..| 10 | The Wellington. *Jetf, Thomas M ...... D-[ Hillsboro, Yl. ...... 18 | 505 First street NE. ft Johnston, DE... ... Di [ Bluefield, W.Va .:... 3 | 16 Third street NE. Jones, William A.....| D | Warsaw, Va.......... 1 | The Varnum. *|| Jones, Wesley I, ....| R | North Yakima, Wash.| (a) | 1015 Mass. avenue NE. *Joy, Charles B..... RSE Louis, Mo... 11 | Graynol, Cleveland Park. RRahp, Julins......... R | San Francisco, Cal ...| 4 | TheHamilton. Kerr, Winfield S ...... R | Mansfield, Ohio...... 14 | The Fredonia. Ketcham, John H ..... R | Dover Plains, N.Y ...| 18 | The Hamilton. Kitchin, William W....| D'| Roxboro, N. C....... 5 | The National. *¥ Kleber, Rudolph | D | Cuero, Tex ........... 11 | 214 North Capitol street. Rnd TR. D: (Salisbury, NC....u0 7 | 1904 I street NW. *i Knox, William S....| R | Lawrence, Mass. ..... 5 | The Cochran. *1|| || Lacey, John ¥ ....| R | Oskaloosa, Iowa...... 6 | 1700 Fifteenth st. NW. Tamb, John... ........ D | Richmond, Va........ 3 | The National. Landis, Charles B..... BR Delphi, Ind... 200. 9 | The National. lane, J.B. inn R | Davenport, Iowa ..... 2 | The Cairo. * Lanham, Saml.W.I'..| D | Weatherford, Tex ....| 8 | The National. #ilatimer, Asbury C..| D [| Belton, 8.C........ 1 1 3 | 220 Second street SE. *Lawrence, George P..| R | North Adams, Mass ..| 1 | The Cochran. Xlentz, John |... ...... D | Columbus, Ohio. ..... 12 | The Portland. * Lester, Rufus E...... D [ Savannah, Ga........ 1 | ‘The Cairo. Levy, ME. aan, DD New York, N.¥....... 13 | The Gordon. *Lewis, Elijah B-..... D | Montezuma, Ga ...... 3 | The Metropolitan. *f Linney, Romulus Z.| R | Taylorsville, N. C....| 8 | 10 B street NE. Littauer, Lucius N..... R | Gloversville, N..V ....| 22 | The Albany. *Tittle, John S...... .. D | Greenwood, Ark ..... 2 | 1013 Mass. avenue NE. 2 littlefield, C. BE... .... R | Rockland, Me ....... 2 | The Hamilton. Tiavingston, I. FB... .. D "Kings, Ga 0. v.00. 0 5 | 2005 Kalorama ave. NW. *1loyd; James XT... ... D | Shelbyville, Mo...... I | The Varnum. * Long, Chester I ..... R | Medicine Lodge, Kans| 7 | 1321 M street NW. a At large, Home and City Residences. 331 | REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. a At large. 3 Name. Home post-office. = Washington address. Lorimer, William ..... Bil Chicago, TW...\..... .. 2 | The Raleigh. *T.oud, Eugene F...... R | San Francisco, Cal...| 5 | The Everett. Loudeunslager, H.C ....| R { Paulsboro,N.J....... I | tT Lovering, Wm.C.. ... R | Taunton, Mass....... 12 | 1824 Mass. avenue NW. |. Lybrand, Archibald ...| R | Delaware, Ohio ...... 8 | Willard’s. *+ McAleer, William... D | Philadelphia, Pa ..... 3 | The Regent. : ¥ *|| McCall, Samuel W..| R | Winchester, Mass ....| 8 | 1217 N. H. avenue NW. * McCleary, James T...| R | Mankato, Minn ...... 2 | The Regent. ® McClellan, Geo. B....| D | New Vork,N. ¥.....: 12 | 1445RhodeIsland ave. NW Hi McCulloch, P. D....| D | Marianna, Ark....... I | The Wellington. * McDowell, John A ...| D | Millersburg, Ohio ....| 17 | The Colonial. HH Mclain, BA. ...... D | Gloucester, Miss ..... 6 | 52 B street NE. | * McPherson, Smith ...| R | Red Oak, Iowa....... 9 | The Portland. *hMeRae, T.C..0.... DD | Prescott, Ark... ..... 3 | 814 A street SE. *> Maddox, JohnW ....| Dil Rome, Ga ........... 7 | The Metropolitan. *|| Mahon, Thad. M....| R | Chambersburg, Pa....| 18 | The Dewey. * Mann, James R ...... Bi Chicago, JIL. 0... io 1 | The Dewey. *ill March, Benj. FE... .. RB Wagsaw, Tl. 0 Jeu 15 | 121 Maryland ave. NE. May, Mitchell... ...... D | Brooklyn, N.Y.....- 6 | The Normandie. * Meekison, David... ... D |: Napoleon, Ohio... ... 5 | 1921 Sixteenth street NW. *Mercer,David H.... .. BR | Omaha Nebr......... 2 | 1303 Roanoke street NW. *|| Mesick, William S...| R | Mancelona, Mich..... 11 | 1227 Fifteenth street NW. * Metcalf, Vietor H..:.{ RB | Oakland, Cal.......... 3 | The Arlington. : . % Meyer, Adolph. ..... D | New Orleans, 1a..... I | 1700 Q street NW. | | Miers, Robert W..... D | Bloomington, Ind ....| 2 | 1527 I street NW. *Miller, J. M........... R | Council Grove, Kans .| 4 | 1201 Q street NW. *t|| Minor, Edward S...| R | Sturgeon Bay, Wis....| 8 | 49 D street SE. : *Mondell, BW. ...... R | New Castle, Wyo... .. (a@)| 1837 M street NW. Moody, Malcolm A....| R | The Dalles, Oreg..... 2 | The Shoreham. Moody, William H..... R | Haverhill, Mass. ..... 6 | The Everett. Moon, iJon. vs. D | Chattanooga, Tenn ...| 3 | 519 Fourth street NW. Morgan, Stephen. ..... RB [Oak Hill, Ohio....... 10 | The Regent. *7|{ Morris, Page... .... R\ Duluth, Minn... ...... 6 | 1225 Connecticut ave. NW. Mudd, Sidney E....... R | Taplata, Md ........: 5 | Willard’s. Muller, Nicholas... ... D | New Brighton, N.Y ..| 7 | The Shoreham. *Nophen, H. E........ D | Boston, Mass. ........ 10 | The Shoreham. ®| Needham, J.C ....5. J. R | Modesto, Colo =... .. .. 7 | 100 B street NE. * Neville, William... ... P | North Platte, Nebr ...| 6 | The National. * ti Newlands, F. GCG. ..[ S| Reno, Nev... ......+. (a) | Chevy Chase, Md. : Noonan, B.'F..~...... Di Chicago, Tl..« wc. 5 | The Raleigh. *Norton, James... ... D Mullins, S.C... ==. 6 | The Metropolitan. #* Norton, James A. of DD: Tin, Ohio... ....... 13 | The Wellington. OCrady, J.-M. BE ...... BR: [Rochester, N-V....... 31 | The Arlington. i *Olmsted, Marlin E ...| R | Harrisburg, Pa....... 14 | The Shoreham. ) 2 Oley, Peter]... D | Lynchburg; Va....... 6 | The Oxford. r Otjen, Theobold....... R | Milwaukee, Wis. ..... 4 | 227 New Jersey ave. SE. * Overstreet, Tesse..... R | Indianapolis, Ind ....| 7 | The Ebbitt. | Packer, Florace B.....| R | Wellshoro,Pa........ 16 | The Normandie. Parker, R.W ..... .. R (Newark N. J..c....; 6 | The Richmond. * Payne, Sereno EF... Ri | Auburn, N.Y... 28 | 1767 Q street NW. Pearce, Charles E ..... R | St. Lous, Mo.,....... 12 | The Arlington. XiPearre, GA. on. LL R | Cumberland, Md ..... 6 | The Everett. Phillips F.O....... .- R. | Medina, Ohio... ....:- 20 | 318 Fast Capitol street. Pierce, Rice A......... D | Union City, Tenn ....| 9 | The National. XPolR.IE... Dl Panville, Pa o.oo... 17 | The Normandie. *1|| Powers, H. Henry .| R | Morrisville, Vt....... 2 | Riggs House. *{l| Prince, George W ..I R | Galesburg, Ill. ....... 10 | 1237 Kenesaw ave. NW. *1 Pugh, Samuel J... | R | Vanceburg, Xy ...... 9 | 1330 Nineteenth st. NW. *Ouarles; J. M ...:.... D | Staunton, Va... .... 10 | Riggs House. *Ranedell-]. BH. ..... D | Lake Providence, La .| 5 | The Cairo. = *| Ray, George W..... RI Norwich N.Y ....... 26 | 702 Tenth street NW. 332 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. + Name. Home post-office. = Washington address. *Reeder, WA... ... R | Logan, Kans.... ... 6 | 228 A street SE. * Reeves, Walter ...... BR | Streator, TH... os... 11 | The Cairo. Rhea 1.8 lui eiilos D: | Russellville, Ky... .. 3 | 521 Fourth street NW. * Rhea WB. 0... Dk Bristol, Va oh. oi. . 9 | The National. *f Richardson, J.D ....| D | Murfreesboro, Tenn...| 5 | 1103 Sixth street NW. ll Ridgely, E.R... ... P | Pittsburg, Kans... .. 3 | 600 Maryland avenue NE. ®Rijordan, BD. J... 0. DD | New-York, N. ¥...... 8 | The Normandie, 3 *IRixey, John PF... .. DD Brandy Va... ..... 8 | 1721 Q street NW. Robb, Edward . ....... D: | Perryville, Mo....... 13 | The Oxford. | Hi Robbins, G. A... ... D | Selma, Ala... : 4 | 1765 P street NW. | 1 Roberts, BH... 5. D J Centerville, Utah. .... (a) | The Metropolitan. ®= Roberts, BE. W... ... R | Chelsea, Mass... .... 7 | 58 B street NE. * Robertson, Samuel M.| D | Baton Rouge, La..... 6 | Willard’s. i Robinson, James M....| D | Fort Wayne, Ind..... 12 | Riggs House. *Robinson, ].S ..... .[D| Madison, Nebr........ 3 | 3 B street NW. Rodenbers, W.A......| R | Bast St. Louis, T1l....| 21 | Willard’s. Rucker, WW... ..... D | Rytesville, Mo....... 2 | 2148 Pa. ave. NW. [| Ruppert, Jacob, jr. ...| D | New York, N. V..... 15 | The Arlington. “Russell C.A........., BR [ Killingly, Conn... .. 3 | The Hamilton. Ryan, I. W .......... D!! Potisville, Pa ........ 13 | The Varnum. Ryan, W. TL. .......] D | Buffalo, N.Y... ...... 32 | 922 Fourteenth street NW. *Salmon, J.S........ D:| Boonton, N..J:....... 4 | Riggs House. *|| || Scudder, Townsend | D | Glen Head, N.Y... ... I | 1701 Q street NW, *Shackleford, D. W...| D | Jefferson City, Mo....| 8 | 217 East Capitol street. ®Shafroth, J.B... .... S: [“Denver, Colo... .. .. I | 1346 Yale street NW. =Shattue, W.B-....... R | Madisonville Ohio .. 1 | The Cochran. *iShelden, C.D. ..... R | Houghton, Mich ..... | 12 | The Dewey. *Sheppard; 7-1... D: | Texarkana, Tex...... 4 | The Metropolitan. Sherman]. 8S... .... Rea N,V ...on 25 | The Normandie. *Showalter, J. B...... Rl Butler, Pa... 0 oo 25 | 1016 Hast Capitol street. *ESihley, [LC .. . D | Franklin, Pa. ..... ... 27 | 1116 Vermont ave. NW. *+Sims, Thetus W..... Di Linden, Tenn........ 8 | The Varnum. 2 Slayden, J. 1. ..... D | San Antonio, Tex ....| 12 | 1631 R street NW. Momall, T- 6. D | Washington, N. C....| 1 | The Varnum. *Smith, David H........ D | Hodgensville, Ky....| 4 | Riggs House. *Smith, George W....| R | Murphysboro, Iil..... 22 | 1313 Columbia road NW. FSmith, BH. C.... ... R | Adrian, Mich... ....; 2 | The Olympia. ASmith, Samuel W....[ R | Pontiac, Mich........ 6 | 1303 Clifton street NW. *Smith,Wm. Alden ...| R | Grand Rapids,Mich..| 5 | The Gordon. *Snodgrass, C.F ..... D | Crossville, Tenn ..... 4 | The Varnum. ¥Southwrd, |. HH... ... R | Toledo, Ohio... ....... | 9 | The Hamilton. | #*Spalding, B. P....... Rj Pargo, N. Dak... 5... (a) | 821 N. Carolina ave. SE. | Sparkman, S.M....... DD Pampa, Bla... I | The Metropolitan. i Sperry, N. D..0oo R | New Haven, Conn....| 2 | The Buckingham. *} Spight, Thomas. .... D | Ripley, Miss ......... 2 | The Varnum. a Sprague, Chas. B=... R | Brookline, Mass... ... IT | 1500 Rhode Island avenue. Stallings, Jesse FE. ..... D | Greenville, Aln....... 2 | The National. *Stark, William 1,..... P| Aurora, Nebr ........ 4 | 52 B street NE. *Steele, George W ....[ R | Marion, Ind... ....... II | The Dewey. Ri Stephens, JohnH .. D | Vernon Tex’:... ..... 13 | 114 Maryland avenue NE. *Stevens, Frederick C..[ RB | St. Paul, Minn....... 4 | The Cairo. *ii Stewart, Alex... .. RB. Wausau, Wis......... 9 | 1705 Connecticut ave. NW. Stewart, James F...... RR [Patérson,)N, J... J 5 | The Gordon. RStewart, LK... R | Amsterdam, N. Y ....| 21 | The Normandie. *Stokes, |. William ...| D | Orangeburg, S.C. ... 7 | The Varnum. T|| Sulloway, Cyrus A ..| R | Manchester, N. H....| 1 | The Varnum. Sulzer, William. ...... 0 New York, N. V.. 1T | 131 B street SE, *Sutherland,R.D..... P [ Nelson, Nebr......... | 5 | 215 A street SE. *|||| Swanson, Claude A.| D | Chatham, Va ........ 5 | 2017 Mass. avenue NW. RT albert, W. Jasper....[ D | Parksville, S.C... ... | 2 | The National. - a At large, Home and City Residences. 333 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (Four vacancies.) ~~ Name, Home post-office. 2 Washington address. Tate, Parigh C........ DD. Jasper, «Ga... iw 9 | 420 Sixth street NW. * Tawney, James A... R | Winona, Minn....... I | The Dewey. XTayler, Robert W.. NR | Lishon, Ohio... ....: 18 | The Portland. Taylor, George W..... Di | Demopolis, Ala. .... -L 1013 P street NW. *Terry, William1,..... D | Little Rock, Ark... .. 4 | The Wellington. Ee Mhayer, LR... D | Worcester, Mass...... 3 | The Elsmere. Thomas, C. R........ D: | Newbern, NN. C........... 3 | The Livingston. *i Thomas, V.of........ R | Storm Lake, Iowa....| 11 | The Dewey. *| Tompkins, A. S..... RB Nyack N.Y ..0 17 | Portner Flats. 2 Threpp. J. B........ Rel Everett Ba 0.0.0 20 | 1915 Mass. avenue NW. Tl Tongue, Thos. H.....| ‘R | Hillsboro, Oreg . ....... 1 | 1329 Tenth street NW. [il] Turner, Oscar... .. D | Lowisyille, Ky... 5 | The Ebbitt. *t Underhill, J. OQ. ..... D | New Rochelle, N. Y..| 16 | The Cochran. *Underwood, O. W....| D | Birmingham, Ala..... 9 | Columbia Flats. *Vandiver, W.D...... D | Cape Girardeau, Mo. .| 14 | 215 Fast Capitol street. *1t Van Voorhis, H. C..| R | Zanesville, Ohio. . .... 15 | 1733 P street NW. *nVreeland , B. B...... R | Salamanca, N. V..... 34 | The Dewey. Wachter, B.C... ic, R | Baltimore, Md... ... 3 | Baltimore, Md. * Wadsworth, Jas. W...| R | Geneseo, N.Y........ 30 | 1733 K street NW. ®Wanger, Irving P....] R | Norristown, Pa....... 7 | 1301 N street NW. *Warner, Vespasian...| BR { Clinton, Tl1.......... 13 | The Cairo. EWaters, RT... R | Los Angeles, Cal.....| 6 | 29 B street NW. Xi Watson, J.B... Ro Rughville, Ind ....... | 6 | 200 B street NE. Weaver, Walter L..... R Springfield, Ohio... | 7 | The Dewey. *71 Weeks, Fdgar ..... R | MountClemens, Mich.! 7 | 330 A street SE. * Weymouth, Geo.W...| R | Fitchburg, Mass ae | 4 | The Cochran. *Wheeler, Charles K..| D | Paducah, Ky......... | 1 | Willard’s. Ti Wheeler, Joseph. .I D | Wheeler, Ala... ....... | 8 | The Arlington. 2 White, George H...| R | Tarboro, N.C... | 2 | 1814 Eighteenth st. NW. 2Wlliams, J. R....... Dp Cary, TL. aL 20 | 102 B street NE. * Williams, John S..... ID. [ Yazoo: City, Miss. ..... 5 | 125 E street NW. *+ Williams, W. E..... D | Pittsheld, Wl, 25. 16 | 1437 Rhode Island av. NW. *|| Wilson, Edgar. ..... SR | Boise City, Idaho ....| (a)! 1308 R street NW. Wilson, PF. E..... D | Brooklyn, N. ¥...... 5 | 1425 New York ave. NW. *Wilson, Stanyarne...| D | Spartanburg, S.C..... 4 | The Normandie. Wright, CF... .. R | Susquehanna, Pa... .. 15 | The Gordon. *11|| Young, James R..| R | Philadelphia, Pa..... 4 | 1331 Corcoran street NW. Noung, W. A. ........ Dri Norfolk, Va... oo. ox 2 | The Raleigh. *Zenor, William T....| D Corydon, Indl ies. 3 | 213 North Capitol street. Ziegler, B.D, . 5... 0. By: Yorke, Pa... ..0. ci 19 | The Varnum. DELEGATES. Ellyn, DBL Rif: Guthrie, Okla iii; ... ....| 1372 Harvard street NW. Perea, Pedro... ... R | Bernalillo, N. Mex...|....| The Metropolitan. “EE Wilson; J. EB... 0... D | Prescoll, Ariz... ©... ....| ‘The Varnum. a At large. CLASSIFICATION. Senate: | House of Representatives: Republicans. ....... 0.0 iv 50 | Republicans . nic aiid, 185 DemMGCrats 0. Sob ti 0 ie oy 26 | Demoesrats. -. i.e oan ano 163 All others. natn a a 10 | All others: .....% on conn) 8 Hofalin wv ves ond os 86 Totals. ar 356 (One vacancy.) 334 Congressional Directory. DIRECTORY OF HOTELS, CI, UBS, ETC. [NoTE.—Only such hotels and clubs as are given in other portions of the CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY as the city residence of Senators, Representatives, and Delegates in Congress, or of prominent Government officials, are included in the following list.] Albany, corner of Seventeenth and H streets NW. Arlington Hotel, corner of Vermont avenue and H street NW. Buckingham, 918 Fifteenth street NW. Cairo, Q street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets NW. Cochran, corner of Fourteenth and K streets NW. ; Colonial (formerly Wormley’s), corner of Fifteenth and H streets NW. Columbia Flats, corner of Fourteenth and Binney streets NW. Concord, New Hampshire avenue, between S and T streets NW. Congressional Hotel, corner of New Jersey avenue and B street SE. Dewey, 1, street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets NW. | Ebbitt, corner of Fourteenth and F streets NW. Elsmere, 1408 H street NW. Everett, 1730 H street NW. Fredonia, H street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets NW. E | Gordon, Sixteenth street, between I and K streets NW. Grafton, corner of Connecticut avenue and DeSales street NW. Hamilton, corner of Fourteenth and K streets NW. Livingston, Thirteenth street, between K and I, streets NW. Metropolitan Club, 1700 H street NW. Metropolitan Hotel, Pennsylvania avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets NW. National Hotel, corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Sixth street NW. Normandie, corner of Fifteenth and I streets NW. Olympia, corner of Fourteenth and Roanoke streets NW. Oxford, corner of Fourteenth street and New York avenue NW. Portland, corner of Fourteenth street and Vermont avenue NW. Portner Flats, corner of Fifteenth and U streets NW. Raleigh, corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Twelfth street NW. Regent, corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Fifteenth street NW. Richmond, corner of Seventeenth and H streets NW. Riggs House, corner of Fifteenth and G streets NW. St. James, corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Sixth street NW. Shoreham, corner of Fifteenth and H streets NW. Varnum, corner of New Jersey avenue and C street SE. Willard’s, corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Fourteenth street NW. Wellington, Fifteenth street, between New York avenue and H street NW. De Departmental List. DEPARTMENTAL LIST. 335 NAMES OF CONGRESSIONAL, DEPARTMENTAL, JUDICIAL, AND DIS- TRICT OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES, ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED. BAbbeiClevelande fo. lion nae ABbot CG ne a en Abbott, James A Acheson, Marens WW ..... lo ime Acker, W. Bertrand Adams, Albert F Adams, Herbert B Adams, J.D Adams, Robent ri il Joi ss nan Adame, Wall Rl RR Adee Ale oAe a s a ee sta Adler Cyrano anh ana Agassiz Alexander . ii. hs ibnFaieg Alles; Milton Wi. aaah a at Ainsworth, EB. .C..... 0 viii Soe : AlzersiTohn Bo. onl ihe Akin, T. Warren Alden; Charles BL... co ion narnia Allen, Andrew Hussey. ......... .....L.. Allen, B.A Allen, Charles H Aer TI ws alee) Le i Allen; George M.. i hol. coho, Allisonglsanc aon i LE Pa SEE, Allison William B....o. ....ouvaaaiiss. Alvey, Richard TEL. cil. J wid iii Alvord, Henry FE Alvord, ThomasiG. cases vs ta annie Alward, Dennis. .... 00 a 0 ee arian Ames, John G Amiss, T. B Anderson, Thomas H Andrews, W. E Andrews, WoR ois daaie ait ove Angell] Bair se Se es Anthony, George Si... 0 Jive vhnuvv. Armstrong, W. P Arnold, Joseph A... i. dees divin Ash; James Ro... ni saved. pines Aughinbaugh, William I... .......c..... AUSH, MEA or eee, Avery. Brainard... i oi ia ee eien Babcock, E. J Babson, John: W....o. l,l. dads Bache, Dallas... 00. ania abe oe sten Bailey, F. H Bailey George... . 0: 0 Saint ies Bailliache, Preston H.....0 0 o 0. ns. Baird, George W Bain, J. Karle Baker, A.B Baker iBranle. usr, Sa Ss Bakersiranlk Coal vais: onsen iene Baker, James M........0.. oie ns Baker, Lester C Baker Marcus... oo. Srna a Ball, Charles B Ballard, Melville... vo. Balloch GAW 0. asl i Sn Bancroft, JAY FL. . u--coci se suisse sn 2a dais wind Bane, JohmR....... to. en Bantz, G.C Barbarin, F. S Barbour, Edward A Barker, A.R Barker, Howard W.. oho. oni ia vin Barnard, Job Barnes, Benjamin B........ 0.000 PP SS SS SSE RI SI Barnes, /GeorgeW . [i i nai, Barney, Harry Wilder............. Loh. Barrett, Harrison J... c... iin cians Bartlett George An ib on no Bun Barton, W. M Bassetty HB oh i ea hn. Bates AB ry a a Sa teil Bates, Charles A in iL i salads Bateg James-Ae. on onion hud tas Bates TS. a a Battle lL oni va Sai aia ht Banner, LL OMIsl ol ne ns a Bayly, William EL. oo noida a nhasi Beach, Yansing iH . .... 0. al Sih cnin. Beale; George NN... ivi. icon tania Beall, Charles B Beardsley, Crove SS... ania nn Beatty, Walloon, foie did rie eines, Beavers, George-W..... Lannion, Beckett, iF. 0. ini ir eae sh Bell Alexander Graham... ........ 5... Bell John i coal an Bell, Martha Christian Bellinger J.B outdo Lr tn Belts William O46. a isa Bennett, Adolphus B:... icon. Bennet, Adrian A... oi oie, saat Bennett, J. Ban or iain, Seo a Bentley, AJ vioa deihnio sl sian in Bernard, Reuben F...... Eo Berret, James G Berry, James soho erc a, win a Bertolette, Daniel N. ir. Ji. ov. ih vat soos Biddle, John WN... ... c.f ni aerial Bigelow, Frank H.... cc otusinigL aie Billings, George B.~ oo... oni nen BUNNIES WaiC vai a i wesley Bingham, A. W.......... Set bE AE Bingham, Bdward Br. Loon on oy Bingham, Theodore A... .........0. odo. Bird, Charles Bishop, John M-... uh ir i heer Bivins, John PE... ives iin nb oan iin Bixby, William H Blackburn, I. W Bland, BwingiC i. Cl vrs til ii deen $ Blanvelt Arthur Bl. i so ss aning BlishyJohm Bio one vali faa Blumtenbetg, MLR. 0 oan Blumenberg, Milton W Boardman, R. H Boas George B. iv dahil aide Boutwell; George S$... 0. bens l Booth, Frederick V. = iar. oia natin ans, Boss, Charles: S$... Sr maaan Sir a A Boswell, A. W Bowen, Clarence W BOWEL, Paul B.A ara hea ae ee Bowen, W. H. H Bowers, George M........ Boyd, Allen R Boyd, George H Boyd, J.C Boyd, James Edmund... ...- shea Boyle RuB. cial Cia ile hts vain Brackett, Gustavas B.«.: oc oe. ons Braddock, Frank W... o.oo. cl Said, Bradford, Gershom Bradiord, RB. Be lat ond, rae Bradley, Andrew. C............... 0... Bradley, W. O ; Brady, John B........o... cee ssaiss cic sine 336 Brahany, BW... ui aa Braid, Andrew... i. laa. Brandl, .8 ol sis an inal Brapagan, Brank A. .....o...... Brandenburg, C.A......... ....... Brannigan Felix... on Breckinridge, Joseph C Brewer, David Josiah (biography) Brewer, Mark S Brewster, id | RPA Brian, Henry Rimi ME Se Sere Brickenstein, John H Bridgeman, CE A Briggs, Lyman J................. Brigham, Joseph H................ Brigham, M. Marjorie Bright, Richard i RSE Nes Bristow, Joseph I,. Brockway, C. Bufo Brooks, N. M . Br ooks, Walter 1 EE Brown, David Wolfe .............. Brown, George Ho. aos Brown, Henry Billings (biography) Brown, Tonle I. Li cool ain BOW, Sr Cr on eae Brown, S. J Burke, E. B Butts, J. Cabanghy Th AS Rs aos i Callery GQ or niin Caldwell Tiarey X05 oils oi ian, Caldwell; Henry €..0 0... cn. Call, Lewis Wo ov rs fi eins Calvert, Bdghr Bn. ..o nisin. Cameron, John J... .. ...ui. Zui. Campbell, Frank X,..... 7... Campbell; Henry W......0. Lo Campbell, Levin I... ....0 00... 50, Cantrell, Robert W............. 00.5 Capers, John G...... IEA TIE SR ih Capps WoL. a ai A Carbaugh, Harvey CC... -..........~. Carlisle Calderon...c........ 0. Carr, John ML. .-.0 ooo. oe Care, William Pre isin sn ia vos Car rington, John. ue in ene Carrington; P.M oo con Carrol, “Daniel RES Ra Carter, HE A A ET Carter, W. Hi. oo or res i Casson EIENEY: © -.v ne yieaisinisidsisision Castle, Henry A 5. nino dig Cavenaugh, Thomas ...=..............0... Chadwick, PB . Tio. sade Chamberlain, Eugene Tyler Chance, Merritt oO Brown, Sterling N................ Brown, William Wallace Browning, William J ............. Bruce, Harrison, ......;.. ova, Brush, Chester TE... i mls Bryan, SE LR RE Ss Bryan, Paul § oo noni Gi saan Bryant, Asthnr DD. i si Seid ie es Bryant; Charles M........... ...0 0 Buckingham, Hiram... .....<... Buffingfon, A, R.oc i... ik ain sn Bukey, Van lH. ..... colo as. Bundy, John Bo... Sao Bane. Busch, M, Clie onlin imi ning Burke, MORGUE... 5. 55 ian: Burlingame; Ward...........=..- Burrell, J. G or Join vi aa dann sida Burrows, J. A ae celina Bushnell Bd. i aides Bushnell, George BB... .........00. BussiusiAllen rns svn so li. Byrnes, Bugene A. ooo n0 Chance, WS nn ee ne 210 215 224 209 188 218 265 215 226 194. 223 191 224 189 216 220 215 314 223 311 312 213 226 215 214 191 211 313 219 212 218 209 Congressional Directory. Page. Chancey,-JoRN IE 0 deh ri iiavai ans vaio 191 Chandler, Hi, oo nih nine sie oe 218 Chapin, Bl Shs rn dra ei as 219 Chapman, Viv. ire. Ji th ica vio aas 224 Cheatham, Henry Pi... oa sanity, 267 Cheatham oT. cai ire asiid nd oats 219 Chew, WX oo or, ari Sn Le a na 210 Childs, Aa DE Ls 225 Childs Ci Win sn nnn Geer ip any 313 Chilton, Robert Sr al sauna mes 208 Christian, Charles H . 191 Church, A Sa TE 188 Church John: Pu. vn seni vis iui oii 226 Clabaugh, Hasry MM... 5 iia hi Sa nins 267 Clayle (A Weward, i. 3 0 ms sat han 232 Clark, Bdward oi Gin 194, 231, 314 Clark, GEC ud sn aaibiie aside, 313 Clark, Josephine Au... oon in 228 Clark, Thomas I. i nr an sii. 206 Clarke Albert: v Jn Sl ndel Fa nee 229 Clarke Charles HB. 5. Lemurs sain: 315 Clarke, Daniel B..... 0 salen 200 231 Clarke, BrankyWe a oii ian, 225 Clarke, I. Bdwards:. uni orn iilss 225 Clay, Geel]. vl bar a Ses 216 « Cleaver, Prank Mo. oh rr naar 226 Cleaves: Thomas PB :l onal nnn, 188 Clements, Arthur, ao mine Sina. 211 Clements, Judson C.. 2. iu. cali 228 Clover, Richavdson.... 0. Sali vii 219 Clam Joh Poe ass i Sra usin 218 Cochran, Wa. BB. co nisi Sluis desigg 218 Cockrell AN Lr 188 Cockrell Francis Mo. sail aaniis 313 Cogswell, Tames I. Luni flan 3 212 Colahan. Charles BW. 0.0.00 coal an l 219 Cole, Charles Coin hoi laraaiviaait 267 Coleman; Chapman... oii ie dias i 208 Colense, James Bo la lo iia ii 191 Collins, WH. ois nn nie 228 Colling, Walter Bu. tio Shaina.) 190 Coli Le Baron B.D ais 265 Colvocoresses, CG. Pi ii nn oun ce nies 220 Coren I a RS NS Ee 216 Conger. Pv, frm vii obs rian iin 229 Conrad, Ux Nelson rial rion dvs vn 313 Constantine J. Fro fi bne dons, 194 Conte BF. Wb ls es Ss aaian te, 313 Conway, William ©: oi vom cas, 223 Conwell Isane Riot cis adds Soho, 223 Cools, FranelS Ad oi St saris ma roi 221, 222 Cook; George Fibs in han i, 31I Cook, George Wa. ir re mats ats 315 Cooks, James B .. vi. colo lade ints 217 Cook John Iv ruin sric im lasts i, 315 Cook, John J bi ci dain ls rises 215 Cook; J eonardiB 0 nin Ee ets 192 Cooksey, Paul. .....c.. 0 i sie vdgas 5180 Coombs, CWC oi. oS in ee 191 Corbin, Henry LB 214, 230 Corbin, ROhErEord fein os 208 Correll, A Bt aT at oF ae ele 191 Corser, BS nh an A Ch SR 189 Costelyon,; George Bo ....h. 2 oii anos 207 Cosby Spehicans fu sod si a roan 215 Cotterill) Charles Ai... i. nian do 189 Conden, Henry Noo... obits 190 CONESEY. a WS ie cide rete an tea 214 Courts; James. Co. . Sonia 0. ane ie 192 Coville Brederiek Vii vie ion ala, 227 Cowles, WilllamyS.... oo. fo bonis Lod, 219 Cowperthwaite, Mee ae 189 Cox, S.C. ny 313 Cox, Walter s TE i i SO A 267, 314 Cox, William: Ro. das i mags 188 Craig, AIAN Ko i an ras 224 OH oS a i LS ar Se 219 Crag ilose phi. ia in sie ol 229 Crampton, CoA. i a a rede yi lsaiiens 211 Crane tl IN ll i i 209 Crawford, John We. ola tadaas. 218 Cremer, John Wi... boil veel davai, 192 Crew, James H.. . Ie LIA ha 217 Cridler, Thomas WIIDEr.. oversee 208 Cromwell, Bartlett J .. 222 Crook, WHAM EL hr 207 Cross, F. E. A Se 312 Crow ninshield, A. S: ps Sen 219 Crump; Mabel A... a. vil LL ah an 192 f Departmental List. Page Crystal James iris sais inn tions Toole Downs, IN. Carroll oun. i iia, a Cuddy, Stephen A 224. | Doyle, John'L....... A Is a Colom 8 ME i cd a os 230: | DYAPEr AMOS . viii ca vs ide i mes siaaies : Cummings, George ll. ai Tae ISA Draper, Cr Sil So rn SR LE a Cunningham A €.....50.. on. 219. > Drew, WIlIam ©... 0. i aed s Cunningham, A P........0 0. os. 220 “Du Bois; Charles I. ......0.. Sr Cunningham, H.-R. PS SE RR a 185 | Duell, Charles He.o. on oa coi vols Clirpler, Bolt i Sinai. oii 191 | Duffield, Will Ward... ...... SERA a Curry, Dantel so wre ¥en Dumont, James Aso vo Sn nr SE eA Curtis James VM onl di asad vata 193 Duncan, David Win... oo iets, Curtis, O. H. SAREE CE Ca 18%. | Duncan; Robert To... i ivaione ain Cushing, FROMAR A sr on, 217 Dunlap TM nr i ee ae Ss py Cushman, Charles R ~..... Rs ehh ee oz Durfee Benjamin... to solani ann Cushman, John Bs hh aah 198 Dutton, CoB Suki Po sn i es Cutlery WL. Rr ne a dre 22% |-Dryal) ABA hs D E. Dalley Tolhma@e i. a) Lm nah gral Barle Charles "Bini irnis Sad Soi ini os Dallas Geonge:M, io. on onda 205 ||| Basby-Smith, James'S....\.... lun in Dalton, Phomas W. vii can ores 2o4i-Bekles, B.S... il.. Ee AT ey re eer Bamrell ASN ns a 213 | ‘Hggoleston, Bdward ....... oi... BL. Daniel, Jona Wh st a a dn 220,351 [F Emstein; Samuels. sos nln ans GR Dare, 17 RE RC De 235: Hldeidge Charles W..o or iinins So Darneille, Hopewell lH. .0.02 fo 311 | Eldridge, Maurice O ...... reed Daskam, E. B.. Pe 200 1 -Bldrvidge, WIC Lo a ii ss vn haa Davenport, James i an AR 224: Bldridge, WaW i. on So i he Sine Davenport, RG. uu iv, ant dais ai as ato | -Blis Wdeny. Lda hn ae Davis, Charles B. 1. B. .maiviiin 215 Bllis YT ewis Vl outro YT Ie Davis,Charles Hi... beat ol ann. 220: | EI Laman BL. 0. 0.0% ni ie aes eit Davie BE. Gon rn a ree Sr Bly; Charles Rr ior ns sr tag Davis, BUgene. {0.0 sins od 188 | Ely, George S....... CR A ee a Davis, Bredenick Lo i a Toz. Emory; Frederic... niin ia sn Davis, EORmeHPE, he eh ha 210 | Emory, W. H en ae er ee ars Davis, JC Bancroft... oles LL a 265 | Endicott, Mordecai TL. os i en Davis, Joli oil oa sin rnin 266-1" Emglish, James TF... ... 5 asain ins? Davis Yewis To oii on Ei 213 | Spey HOC Se a ee Davis, Madison... Lo 316: |" Hsterly, George: W ...... io end bi dis Davis Webster... uh i iin aise i goa i stey Wal hell Ll ar a Davison, AH. RN SE 193 | Kustis, William COTCOTaN vie ard Dawes, Chatlen OG eri: | vans, Frankl, so nae Saas Dawes, Henny I: on st an eg gil Bans, Frederick i. iui id rs faite Dawson, AR nn a SR aT, 188 | Evans, George W ......... AR eRe Dawson, Clarence By... oh aii sion 217 Evans BH. Clay «isi. hs. en Dawson, Bdward: MJ. av odie de iin 222. Byans, Johntl lh Su Lr Ra pa Dawson,’ Lhomas B..... ioc dein. 1307) Bvans. Robley D5. torsion Dawe, WC ed, 220 | Hwell, Brvint BJ. io enh va shies sate diets Day, Benjomin-Ro. oh Sl ule 222 | Bwell, John Xm voor i dna Day, David WB. ..0 0 OEE 225 | Bwing John WL... ier fo veto didn vive Pav, Heber BE . ...c. vi vhs cies 314 Day, William Bevo. co cn ons voli i aicoes 265 ¥. Dean, Go Cia io nt rss aaa, 224 Deardoril, John We. oo la nmiinie. ror of: FaivReld By Wie ainsi dns, De Caindry, Willian Ac. coi. v vain or, | Farquhar, John Molson eis Decker, Samuel H . he A a eR aT Yor [CParmington, A. Moi Let Denby, CHAIR... iets 208 | Haucett. Nat, 8... Lo ah Sains Delfield; GW... .... oh iit cine 21g Faupee, 8.0. ri. anna ea aan DeMSoM IAL Loic. a Sei 210 |= Pay Allan Bu cn os nei aaen Denison, James..... a gd PayyBdward A. oo camino a Denneth, Fred... 0. on. oo. oon aL LL 180. Feaga, Willlam J .....oi iid iainioin a. Dennison, IL. W.......... A EB Ve 313 Fechét, Bugene OQ, ln Lisa Denny, Frank I,...... a 295. Penton David Hl... cair oe ds Dent, Touts: Addison... . 0 nha, 267: Benton: Tr Cii Sioa or sd RR Pe Schweinitz, Ta aA 226 J Fergusson, Arthur We... tii a. Devendorf, Harry EB... oon loan 107 eI e rie INCWEOIL vd civ ry hate nls initia tots DEWEY ECOL. vo linisivisieidinains eared s 1105 sian 203,213 [= Rield, Charles Tr iva eta lnis Dewey, Lyster-l . ul aad ilisiss gag b Wifen close W. oh hl BPeWell WS cui Po a a ans 133 i Riler, Charles Wb. 0 dis snis yn, Dickey, Christian B.............. 0... 215 Finn, Patrick J... 0 0.L. vod ae ai atinan ar eR ee Re ST Te gar Binney, LH i Ln ve a a CE EE Re a SE ie 221. [Fischer B. Gr. vos Sr eis es le Dickson SE. o. Sn ea a 227 LC FRISh, Rate TH oo Jor rl ai EE Li zig: Bishback: Pred I, Lou ou. anions, Pllons: Toh Boas fa sana, zd (Fisher Chomas Ji. UL... ord ailasn Dinger, CRs Ves baat roo: LRitehie;Phomas. Lik aii an nine, Dinsmore, Hugh A... .c... oon is on gat Rlehatty RoR. Joos hE Dixon, William AE A Se 222: [RINE WESTON. stv. he diols aes oid ae ae Dobyns, Ashbel Webster vu ii olan 314 | Foraker, Joseph Benson, jr... se; Dodge Marry TW. oil ood saa vn 50 To2" Ford, Branels WW. 5 rt Conn iy Boedge Orville. J ai ana san 2235 Ford, S.Calvert.. cio viv sins aoa a Dodge, Plekeritig.. 0, i Sinha 216: [2 Reree CM i so vid Sin ea Ee Dodson, Bh. B.... oo uo oe a i igo | Forse, Charles ...o 0 aL einai Donnelly, Ferdinand... oan az [Forsyth RUTH Los. cl Ba Ponohve, Vimalthy..... 0 Lil a 213 Rort George tii irri ve Taber ha, Bogtel Joshalr Br ol onic a 225 Roster, Blijah= J. aia ania Douglas, BM. nis ines saiss, 225: | Foster, George Wi. or. ls cia na, Dover Blmer. ol vml Samo hangs 139 Foster; John Wi. cuise nl nani ons, Dow, AW... dana i a AT Bountaing D.C. bn Le a DOWHNG, T-voaan dain sos damn iadals 3 221: | FBONSE, CeOTGR wih st irs ret ita 338 Page. Rowler, BAWINC.. 0 . a ih ii ahh vreaiies 217 Fowler Francis. oh iC ri ade. 224 Bowler; WoT fo i dou i neater, 211 Bowler, Wallace CG .. 0. cove unison 314 Bowler William Ci-l.h clas. conus) 313 Fox, Oscar C.. sr SN ET Fe 224 Fox, WHAMS Ce ton 230 Frailey, A A OI RRS 221 Francis, To I A A 31I Frank, J] A iad Sn, 312 Frankenfeld, Harry ee . SI Eats 226 Frankim Samuel Be. . on ri 231 Franklin WalterS............... coco. 212 rech, Jacob: iis vale aio s nian sy mainte ca iuint 216 Ereeman, George F ... ..c. vache ull 221 Brench, Bvanda........ . a doin dn 315 French, Walter TL ein. ln oven toe 190 EIST TE Bb a SO ka Gee 213 Friedenwald, Herbert... ........ wo... .s 205 Frye,George W.........c. veeenivnnnnn.. 192 Frye, William P.. o.oo. oe 188 Baller, Mary B......oniu Lon 20 314 Fuller, Melville Weston (biography).... 230,263 Funk, Tee W Seivaisivisaiaisioiets Visit vives 210 EG. Gadsden, Rdward M ....... .......... Go 217 Gage, Lyman J. (biography) ........ 208, 212, 230 Gaillard, David Du B.................... 311 Galnmes;S Mu. ovo cava sh 209 Callaadet BM Lore he 231, 313, 314 Gallinger, W, XL. oon oo nn 189 Galloway, Bil, unas aed ad far nila. 227 GCangewen AC M............. Ll aaa 314 Gannett, Henry... tate leno, 225, 22 Carden; AP... oa 194 Gardner, Johuj........c......na 229 Garland, William Howard............... 189 Garretson, Se He Cand 209 Garrett, TG ana a 188 Garriott, Bdward B.....t ako tous 226 Gargson, John 8... coal Lin ind 224 Gatchell, William F. ..... ov. a, 212 Geddes, Andrew... ls anna Ny 226 Geddes, Lovie A 0 iol ol SE ale 227 Gensler; Henny J... for ton ne 194 Gibbs, Wolcott... inn oo nash, 232 Gibson, Charles Ain. ir. on, nL a 192 Gibson, William HH... . «o.oo inn 211 GIN, Blta | ool ii ee it 206 Gilbert, William B'..oo on vans, 266 Gilley Henry Il... onli oo as 188 Gillespie, George I, ees consul ties 212 Gilmore, Jom Co. . as ia 214 Giltner, BEawardiC .... ..... 0b 0 Law. 188 Ginn, LE 210 Gise, Ee a 221 Glveng, TW. Le... hash oe Sr 188 Gleaves, RE NA EE Re 221 Glenn, W. J.. la a aa Ales 191 Glover, Charles C . 314 Goff, Ratan ees 265 Goode, EL HS ee Ge ER a 225 Goodloe, Green 'Clay.............0... i... 222 Goodrich, Earle §.. ov vn on Go, 189 Goodwin, B.C. ii se staid visas 189 Gordon, Bllen.... iii vii sys 314 Gordon; Mary F.C... eos a viii, 314 Gould, Ashley Mi... oui ens 267 GOA, CoB a oot ns siren Saal 224 Graham, Thomas Pi... cin es 217 Grant, Alexanders. .... i... res rsa 217 Craves, George G......c...0. omnia 188 Graves, Henry S...... . ives viva anasto 227 Cray AC ROTTE. i... nie erie mss serve 265 Gray, Horace (biography) ............... 263 GraysensJoel ... 0.h ho. ch ee 191 Greeley, Arthur P.w. ol. .anb aan 223 Greely, A.W .. ER SE 215 Green, Bernard Bt ti aa 206, 314 Green, DATIAS AL, St as dh es ea 220 Green, Bdward Bi... 0.0 enti 222 Green, George Bi... 0... 0 a a 311 Green, DT EE Sa I a lA 218 Greenfield Hallo... ii iii sited 192 Griffin, A. RE RE aE 206 CHEN BW. Ween sani Sees 311 Congressional Directory. Griffins, R. S Griffith, M. Griggs, John William (biography) ...... CEI A Ts st tee ls wate Grosscup, Peter S Grosvenor, Dan A... alanis Hadley, Amos. ... Haeseler, (Fo. cole a Sains Hagner, Alexander B........... fara, Hagner, F. R Hall, Asaph Hall Charles EB... o.... i a aka Hall, Pope EF Hall, Joseph E Hall Julia R. iadgaite anna Hall, Percival Halleck, Wallep Bo... abun ving Halm, James: VE. ons in ee Hallinberger, I. H Halstead, Griffin Hamburger Isaacs... oil iii Hamme, Harry RR... non Hammond, John Hancock, John. Handbury, ThOMaS H+ 1. vrs rv eanrsnees Handy, Robert BM Jo occas, Hanford, Frankland Hanna, E. P Hannum, Joseph Hanson, Gratton DD... a Hanson, J.C. Mi. co oniiininniw ohh Harding, 15 FRY AGL Sa Gs Ce a Harlan, john Marshall (biography). Harlan, Woodford D Harlow, John B Harper, C. E Harper, Bred» ie Daren nts Harper, Josephine arin Soa Harper, Cindi. writ irae dnyint Harrington, D. W.................... Harrington, BH. oo nails, Harris, A. L,.. IN A ee Harris, Charles 1 Harris, George H Harris, Gwynn a A SL ee Harris, William EF. . 2. io seaiiecanh Harrison, Horace Wi iu ie aha, Harrison, Thomas... ons nies Harshman: WS... oo akin sina, Hart, Robert S Hart, William H. H .. a Harvey, BF. L., ir Harvey, John A . Haskell, William C . Hatchkiss, John B Haukness, 8 5 Bo RS Oe A le Hause, J Hawking, John... 000 00 saiseg Hawley, Joseph Ri..vi.onon ion ienl, Hawry, Charles B. Hay, John (biography) ee a Hayes, Henry Hayford, John F Hazen, David H. Hazen, Henry A...................... Healy, "David Healy, Peter Jr... col va lamiian Heap, D. P Heath, Perry S Hedge; Bred i... oon viii iid as. Hedrick, BH. Bo co bio ahhansda, Heflivter, T. B..o..\ wn dliansuaior ion Hemenway, William I Henderson, David B Henderson, J.B Henderson, Richard Hendricks, B..ol non. iii wa. Hennighausen, Percy C............, oo. Henry, Alfred 267 216-230 313 265 210 315 210 231 230 220 193 226 Departmental List. 339 Page I Page Henry;S. R...0. eae. SHE 313 ackson, Vall ib Lies AE CRY 313 Herbert WB. to Ll aa 191 Jeers Willian. RIE Yo1 Herd, Charles H.. ps ern: 189 | Jenkins, James Gr 265 Herriot, B. Wo iu. ftlows sossn nists se 215 Jenison, GEOIZE ... vv. visive osonssionies 191 Hermann, BInger ut. cin den minis. 225 Jessup, WHITed veo ns 193 Hermann, T.Mannell.....c.............. 208 LTOMMBOIL A. Boies t ona aariene'e 229 Herndon G:C... .... 0. oni th hi 228 | Yohmson ANGTEW «ova oie tha sensid uh 200 Herndon, JW. conti nss. sons sn ninlyinae 191 | Johnson, Clarence... .........0o..0.L oon 189 Hershler, N ..............ccoc0oioinenes 230 {Johnson Claude M.......... ....... oo. 209 Hesse, BAWIn B.......c..oovhevnnsn ors 312 SYolimeon, BC. so. hh oe. Shi 211 Heywood, Charles.’.................0..... 225 1 I OINEON, J Dns oh oi canna wasnt has 190 Hibbs, WW. Co eT Re 31x Johnson, RM Efe LNG YA 211 BUCHDOr PHI, J. 5i isin situs 220 | Jonson, WAT oo vn. e bass awesses sus 224 Hickling, Daniel PLE a 100 Yohneon WW. W tao: ii sodas anh 314 Hickling, D. Percy ..... ......cxeevs-e--s. AT TOhuston; GD i ee abd es 22: Hickman, W.H...............5c......... 228 Johnston JT. & noi iat, 214 ! Hicks, S1oveiang Bloor ecrene nine cen Ln Mi Re 189 Hicks, SE A aT ra ST IO] JOMEBT Ado cookin rae as ier 190 HY Brancle, J. San sesso. 210 ONCE ATCOTEE A ver ie aie rt Voie 215 Hilder, BE. FB... vv ZB. Jones, HATE B oie dren is 192 EHLDevd J co 208 | Jones, Yenty ES Ee 211 Hill, George Al... ho. LL og Rm RECO lee 194 Hill, George William... elsif insure» 228 | Jones, James K., jr a Beaty 185 Hill, Isaac R............ooovnnnnnnnnnnens 10Vl Jones, William A ........... ..........5. 213, 225 Hill, John R........oooiiiiiiniiennnnes 209 | Jones, WInEHIOPC -o. ccecavis snes iausi ios 191 Hills BoA eo ea re 188 TOraan. Lowi, ois inerrant rir 209 Hinds AsheriC....... nd 189 Hinds, Williamhe oh Lala he 211 K Hitchcock, Ethan Allen (biography). 222, 315, 230 : Hitchcock, Frank H.. ..........oooevnen. 22 Bane THOMAS Bre ins testa Sa snisrte 211 Hite, Wallace W............ooovnienninenn 224 | Kappler, Charles J............ an 189 Hath ROR. LL vei a 231 | Karmany,Lincoln ....................... 222 Hoar, George F.........................- ASE Kary, W. Wen SU ha 231 Hobbs, Thomas J..........ccoeervveree--- 200 | ‘Kasson, John A... o.oo LL 208 Hodges, B. W .. .... oiierurnn vane asnssse 220 | Kauffmann, Samuel H....ouvvinnannnn. 231,314 Hodges, HOW na ia sees 267 Keely, John rE a hh 312 Hodgson, F.G. . Zbffe slo iite als Sig tee 215 | Reefie Catter Bi... ha hil 218 Holcombe, JOHN W ....uuuuueennnnnnnn EB eR ee 1 190 Holland, MM... ...........-. teria 21 Reliher, James. oun. ton 313 Holloway, J. Been 192 | Kelley, Leverett M........cuvu.. AN 224 Hollyday, John W........................ 217 Kellogg, Bdward B....... oie. oo, 218 Holman B. Wi... oan 20 oR BW. oh suns avian on wags 219 Holman, Charles R..........0..co co, 313 Kemp, J. Arthur SRR Te Ta 312 Holmes, George RK ........c.e.crnxenerees 227.1 Kemper, Charles BE... .........o0. oon ecte 209 i Holmes, W.H ...........cooooeiinninnnnns 250 Kennedy, BW... 0... ove. 191 | Hood, Thomas B ......................... 313: Rennedy, Duncan: .-...............o... 212 HOoog, A. B,:..... o.oo dene eae 313 "Kennedy. John'L, J.........0.ancL LL. out 229 Hooker, Lerap J... ...c... coooennnnnnnns 196 | ‘Kenney, James M.........0. ............ 191 Hooks, Charles E ..............cooeneens By = Wenney. Jom... ho hn, 312 Hoover, WH. HL.............ho0n. 0. nen 33 ennyi A 8 Lin A 219 Hopkins, Sontag stale sieeleloinaiviots sivizio mie oie 260.41 Wiesel, Theodore A... ......... 0... oo. 314 Hopking, C. W.................coneonenns 31% FRmballA.R. FL 206 Horner, Er RET AE I SR 200 ABRIL FL oa eons 194 Horton, Ralph B ...............coceneeeee I BITC ae 312 Hosier, Francis Maa 221,222 FP Rimiall 86% Ea 209 Householder, W. RS lve oania a 191 Kincheloe, Chases haem S10 Howard, BM ..................c....cn..t 315 | King, RAWAtA A a 192 Howard, Clifford ......................... 31 | Ring HAILY....cvcons eros sosasvnonsen 223, 229 Howard, Guy V................c...c.0ente 193 | King, Pendleton. . i ee 208 Howard, Jobin CL SIE ES Re Sa 2: Ring, Theo. I... .......... cohol 220 Howard, JQ... ... «vecoens ite nee OO Ring WALHAM A oo. ia 225 Howard, I. 0... Saisie le vinyl dle ise Ss a 227 Tirana, ATURE I ors fei a eave aa ins 224 Howard, WAHIRAMEE, ois ek en ies 219 | Kittelle, Sumner E. WwW. REL 219 Howe, Albert H..................0v.len 189 | Rnapp,J.J.. US a 5 Howe, CG. Aviron elaenhaiine tie 313 | Knapp, Martin NS 228 | Howell, John A . Leo re 221 Bnifiin, Gilbert C... oon hn 224 { Hoxie, R.L...veeriiireeiineniennen 2120 Knight, Felton B......0. a... 191 Hoyt, Charles S .......coeeee nine aienn ns 191°] Rriowlion, John Ws.......... 5... as 193 Hoyt, Henry M.........cceevenniiiinnan 216 how, THOMAS Tir iia 214 Huey, J. METS. ee eh ees 22) preamer CAL ALL SiN 312 Hull, M. J. . pir iahiekive salsa ey 210 Rubel, 8 7 os 225 Hunker, Jacob John, SE A A eh 219 in, JORPR BE oor ra ad hn iEs 215 Hun eh rR ne TR a Si KurtziJohn'D.. 5 a.nd 312 CE A GR age 2 : : ne = J Tm C aia a an ass nn AG Ryle. James Bl... eens vacation solos 9 Hunt, William Coo vrais ls 225 | 1 Huntington, A. T.........i...o eel 209 : s Hurst, john E. sive waives yiaisieiairinie iia aie a 231 Lacombe; BiHenry..... die dada 265 Hutcheson, David. . oh 206 aie im 100 Huxford, William P.. Vues ink a sleet 189 | La Garde Tin. hme an 230 Hyams, Ns haa ry ne Nd DolRh l,i Tain 214 Hyatt, W. H . Er TERR 183 | Takenan, Abner Y......... 0. RA 311 Hyde, John. ....cooimeninieinniicnnenennn 227, 220-1 TL amasare, BAwWin ta is soi ne ohn Lain 209 Hyde, Thomas :..uiyeveiriiersneiniini. SAL Tamb, ARN rsa 312 Fampson, BE. LL... .... 00 190 ] TI. Lamson-Scribiier, EB... oi. oii. onlin 227 \ Tanders, Bdward P............ 0 0 191 h Teland, Bred. on. San 194 | Lane. Charles Hl... .........0..... oo... 223 Irving, William . Te 191 | Langfitt, William C..............cocounn 213 56 157—2D ED——22 | 340 : Congressional Directory. Page. Page Langley: 8. P..o bier wii, oo hie dl 230: 23% oMeNally Ve. oh fo Seni sna 215 Langsdale, Geo. J. dl: raisin saosin 180: -MeNeely, Leroy. J. oc mio rind a a 190 Lanham. Samuel a IR Gn arg MeRaeiHeelor Cr tn doin 191 Lanham, CETueman. . iv. cv vives oie vila rr riMachen, A. Wil ov etn do roi 217 Tantz, BW... oa on 211 | ‘Mackenzie, Alexander... «.......o.vl 0 a12-015 Earged Brag dd. oun nan vs a 214 | Mackey, Ferris PD St PR ea 191 Larrabee, Charles F.. RECT 225 | Madden, BAWInIC. ova viae oo oii ois 218 Latimer. Chasles Hn. ro cosas sein sisal Madden: ©. BLD fa oh a aN ans 315 Lauchheimer, Charles |... 2 on 220, 222 Maddox, RT Ss ee 217 Lawshe, Abraham L,.. Si 217 | Magnum, Bdward. Loca aan 314 Layton, BW -... o.tao Sin so too Mallet Edmond... Lo. 0 nen 223 Teaver TBI IE 2 rr Sha fe SS 210: Mallory,iS. Ror oo Ee 229 Leibhardt, DavidiP. fo aod 27 Man, CLL Rs Sa 191 Leighton, B. FB... .. ..0 or SE 215 Mann, Bag i om ai as Ue aa TA, 210 Lemly, Samuel €. inn. nL ny 220 | Manson, J.O..... Ro Sa Ee i 211 TewissBlah co us. oon aint os si oY |: Mantle, Tee ..:..- SES AD 229 Tewls, erhert Wi... oo rial ios iy sr Marie Adelphia. ot Lda na 212 Tewispldngh oo ruin ania ln, Yor: Marlatt Cll rr 227 LAChEer CG NOTING oh hain se ahia te is we 215,230 | Marr, Samuel St. LL so al Le 223 Lindsay, Willtame.......n0 00 Goan, oar ManshaC. Carroll lo sn nn oases 190 ER MR SS eS Se zz20: Mansh Charles €.. hs di en ha 5 219 Littlehales GeorgeiW. . i. thin, 219 Marshall, Park: oun mtr Sr 188 Littlewood J.-B. Fo. i ea 223 | Martin, MC ont 215 Livingston, LB. c..n. oon TR a nd zea Martin Many... aa 314 Livingstone, Colon Hl Joong 130 Martin May. a 314 Lloyd, DanlelbW... coo coo oiids sv ianints 194 Martin, te Te oe SE I Cl a 210 EodgerGn Cr ili on a nas, 13g | Marvin, ChalesiB. o.oo. 00 nasi, 226 Toga, JORN San i. Sih iee des ia ni 192 | Mason, C Alexander... = Cal, 224 Long, John Davis (biography). . ......... 218,230: Mason Otis T ................... 0... 229, 231 Longstreet, James... 8... o.0 Giieie 225 | Maury, WHHamy A. oo nor sont 237,374 Looker, Henry B......................... uk Maxson LL omisW.,.. nas aae a, 224 loomisi EB. J...m....... RLS Te REIN go: Maxwell. Wo a heii tn als 221 Lord John Sic dr Ale Cr aa, zzsil Mavhclds Clifton P70... cons cnn 312 Lorimer, William. hs se 220-1 Maynard, Washburn .. =. .... oa 0h 212 Lothrop, B.S. ...... 5. RC aS Ee 313 | Megrath, William Ac i. 00. oo. a 223 Toma aM Wt Lids io Si ea 217 | Meiklejohn, George D.. 7 ..... 0h. 214 Lowslames Pr. ...c0... Chisels aniston. 20g: Meline, James Ho... ch lo ohn oa 211 Lowe Calvin ai. nro Sli Fades 130 | Melville,George Wo. cn .i. oe ain oo 219 Lower, Cyrus: B..xtui vio. Sn savin 220" Melvin, Alonzo c.. clad it 226 Tucas, BA oF vie in asd eal aS ei 23 | Membert, J.J ede ei hen vena 312 Ludington, M. Tr. 00 i es 213,230 It Méntzer, William CL. 00 ios 192 Landy WE hee “ivoire 102’ | Merchanf, Rufus B......... ....0. or. oon 217 Luation, Horace Hl oi. iv. sews sy dni. 265 |“ Wercter,; Scott B.S .L oisinran Shaan. 212 Luskilamesik,. ooo RE 215,229 |s Merriam; C./ Hast... 0 od. . Ha 227 uskey, William =. Co vn noni do, giz Merriam, Willlam R:................, SE 225 Lyman, Charles. i... asia a 200 Merrill, GC. Po. fiona. Ll ni } 231 Lyon Robert, - i naenad ara" Merrill James € o.oo. a LLG, 215 a rE Gn ne Ts Ge i sath Yor | Merritt. John A... .......... A br 316 ILyons, Judson ¥ We ool iota nr Faraone dua turate 210%) Metcalf James. ,........ chun 0d 217 Lytle, R.S. Sis et selsionidioiate stellate nislute iets 211 Meyers, William F . Pe LR SIX Michael, William H.. Re 208 M. Michler, Francis... 0. lo 2 nice ina. 214 Milburn, WAHT IE. 5 ovens anvaimes 188 MacArthur, John RR .............0. ve. 208 i} Miles; Henry R-.......... 0. 313 MeCarthan, FB. ohn de vides ar Miles Nelson A «it nn Shai at. nal. 214, 230 McCauley, Wdward. 0.000 00 225 | "Miller, Alexander M.......0 0c ohn 216 McCawley, Charles, ......... 0 del 222 Milligan, Lani ance Edwards............. 314 McChesney, Johm:D.. liso aise. 225 | Mitchell, J.S. rn ba SC 192 MecClare, Chas. 5. 5. rs al ara, ad euts 205 VEE ld, Pr ry i et tea 210 McComb. David Bo... ons ns. rani. 311 Mitchell, Walter: ol Lo sss 188 McConnell, Lmes Bs on a 194i Moore. Charles. . WLC, od Ln oni dion 188 McConnellliR J: oi sins andi il hos 227: Moore David =. J. oh Calis mln 191 McCormick, NH 221 fo Moore, EF. B......... .. LLL 223 McCormick, A. P . EE Re 265 [F Moore, John. =... .... Lo 313 McCormick, Van FT 31Z Moore, LL. By. i ae 315 McCrea, H. CR Se TS de 227 |: Moore, Millard J ........ Lon Ls, 223 McDonald, HB. oni ia 1887] MOTE, W.G -5 cieeric ii aiioisnie saint aiotblu tratataty 221 NICDOnRld 8 J oor iit wh sie venti 2104 Moore, Willig, lui, obnia ha is fuk 226 McDowell, Alexander ........ Jo. nn Igo Moran, iW; EL. aah drinitave ely olla saa incsts 209 McElroy, JosephaC. uv lil odie de 192 Morgan, Joan I IS 192 MeBwan, John'S oot. ho ne ahs 188 | Morgan, F.P a et ales 313 McFarland, Wo A. al sos: seo doe bias 311 | Morison, James . Sie ete hoe in Oo 226 MeGeesW. Jur cvs, CS EE 231 | Morris, BAAN. Sa 22 McGroarty, C. OD 200 MOPS, Fa ore se nL 210 McGuire, Frederick B.%. ..o. 0. Sao Sui Morrs, Martin Bo. ona an 267 Meliary, Ormshy cov. vn nieve. 180: Moris, MLE... Co vanninn Cn LR 231 MeXay, J. Mu. ni Les fiddle rdns Yor | Morrison, Flugh A. Jr... oo... no 206 McKee, Thomas H.C... nana, 190 [i Mornsen, JohmiG .. ......i. oi or 206 McKenna, Joseph (biography).......... 264 “Morrison, John X, ......... oi o, 190 McKenney, CR. oo iva von din as aiirdands 190 Morrow, C.C . AL eee SL oh Gl 188 McKenney, James H. .... ........ 08. 265 | Morrow, WHAM Wo ant abs © 266 McKinley, William (blography). 207, 230, 231,310 Morse, BH... LL ae Ron 192 McKitterick, Edward. ....... li. 00 0 210 Morse, Charles... 0 Cr dea aed; 228 Melanghlim, J >. cid oii din ose a zon yk Mersell i B. Gle oto ann an 311 Mel ean, Hasry:C....\. Lov. cil Jie oh gig Morton iG. 0L, Gl io da mn i iy 224 Mel ean SW ti, al, oi. od She, del ain 218. Moron, Joseph Bi .. co... ive ivoviavors 214 MacLennan, W. Fi......... oo hoon 209 (Moseley, Edward A... 00.0 0a 228 MeVillan, AUTRE Con rss J aE Fa RNS 210 "Mosher iRobert. . =. cca. LL hhmd mee 208 MeMillani Yee Cao b iL nisi ree Som 188 | Moss, H.\N............. i a NE TE 3II | Si Departmental List. 341 SREY 8 Page : Page Mothershead J. Bo oi vs oa Sie arg Phillips; Phomas Wii. was nonin, 229 Moxley iBugene Cr. von 2 800000, 194: | Phillips, William FR... Sno 226 1 Mulligan, Richard Xo. ail inin.. A SO SS ee Be Sa 191 J Mullowney, Alex. R ....... nh ht ee i 267.12 | Plerce BAdwinm Sul rina ns an aid 191 | Murphy, Bdward VV... .... 0000 a. rot EPlerce John RE. A i ian 191 : Myers, George A... vn: .., ari RT: 101 Plercelovick not ti. oi rin he 225 Ee I Ee CS a 224 : N Pike, Willlamy J. bin lls son ni AGT, 192 hd Pinchol: Gtflord.o o oinnsianb i mata 227 3 LE SIE SEE ae wo: Binney Bred A hn mn is and 18 Con SER | Nesbit, Seal... i eon abs ira 213 | Plant, J.C. 209 | Nesmith, Oo A... oo aa, 15 | PIAL B.S... oo 188 | Neth TR... iii giz | Platt, Orville H. ...............co 230 Newcomb, Harry Tv. 0 5s 226 | Platt Sherman.......................... 211 | b Newcomer, HC LL .ci ods ume sas a 213 | Pleadwell, F.L.....oooooniinnnn, 220 Newell BE dF. i 225 | Pond, B-W......ooiiii EERE 223 Newton, James Fo. iv. Se ine 20s 22g | POTter,D.S ...iiin 192 ¥ Nichols John Vo. 2 ii oimbs i 188 | Porter, John Addison (biography). ..... 207 Nicholson BW. 00 Le ods inel 13 | Porter, Samuel... . 314 Norcross CoA Or. nS SSeS, 188 Porter, Sarah ..............ocooieils Eels 314 Norgaasd, VietoriA toon loi fo drei oir 227 | Potter, Henry G..........oooniiiinn 223 Nowrisa ILE oo oo SE giz | Potter, J.B... ell 191 | Botte, Josep Wooo. ii 12 NopthiEant Bo. os rae iss, 214 phx 3 Noth SN Ty =o... li nae os 225 | Powderly, T. V..............oeien een, 214 Northrup, C. Govan, tn disdain. 188 Powell, John W .. See pues pv sh shale she 231 Novtom BEB 0. se ars | Powell, William B....................... Sry Noir Charles Ca, oo oni Sosa liasdy 266 | Powers, LeGrand ................ ....... 225 ra a GE RE 18g | Fradt louis A................... sieve Siege 216 Nye. Francis Ema 71, rrescott, William Hl. ee. th 190 | go JE 2 Preston, TD onl vs hn eet EE 213 | 0 Preston, Robert Bil... ov. cots iiss 212 . 3 Brie ON le se A SE BE a 221 % Prince, Howard I: .... uv... ao ili 22 O'Connell, Maurice Du.vovusueiiinenee... 217: | Pritchett, Henry Sv. ivi ns 212 Ho Odor, Cadmus... ..........o on. oo 193 | procter, John K ... on Ogden Hervert db... 100010 PE PB ri OHern, K. Po..ooooiiiiiiniin inne. 215: Prouty, Charles A=... 0. 5 ors ihn ong 228 Oleson Ory ih vd it i ate a Ta 224 | pruden, O. 1, 207 Neil Charles. ..... 0 oad 218 | puch James I,. ir ESR 312 Areal Warten Xd. os i Sea 214 | PUTaiter Pitino enn ee 189 Osborn, Lather. Lod. aiarrranian. cos. 1951 Pilsifer. Woodbiiv... oe a 188 Osborne, John B..........ooooiviinninnn. 208 f Plrcell, MARION... .i vs 229 Osgood, Whitman. ....................... 220 | Prtnam, Herbert «o.oo vi 206 Otis, Elwell 5 ......... Hele de ve dais Sash 208. Putnam, WillamT,. o.oo. oo Lovo 265 Otjen, Theobold .... soe. caviar, 229 | pybas, Adelaide Hamilton ; 314 Overstreet, HT, vv inves sain rasa vervevsi 191 2 Tres enereae es P 2 : IEEE Gn ee SE EE Sal 211 Page, Hernando wives aus vnidss ons rors Onayv. John Bai ro si rir Rs 218 Page, William Byler ....... oh et ais Too eOmmm NE TE Re 315 Raige od]. Vi rar fr ni nl. 211 Palmer, Aulick. oi rye 267 Bi Palmers BB. W... cos ariaah e itn 228 Palen, B.S Lan ven A eR a zz Radford, Cyrus Sv. aida intimin 222 Pardee; DORA =, ou bnsnto, sara: 265 Rae, George W... .. cil sn i dae 313 Parker Chanles’l oui Laub ain oo RAM GEA LL En ee a ae 104 Parker james. Cn. ta nd 223 Ralph; Joseph B..L. ln oii ng 209 Parken Joseph Bice 222: Ramsay, M aM ERS a in 213 Parker Robert B.. 3. oi iia 2rd SRAndS a She ee a 221 ! Parkinsom, A.C vo. ia cio ss aon ag 188 (Randall, George C... oc iranian 191 | Parmenter Hol. ok ant nano iain 219 | Randolph, Ered. ...... uo. oe Ts 192 ParranyTHomuas: oor i nil pe Saas rgotlaRandolphyTohn: ooo vtiina ain on, 266 Parris; JOSEDI: suc. vor Yat iil a es se arz-|: Randolph; John Bl. iva sine 214 | Patten, William S.-J us ior Srna anne, 215 | ‘Rankin, Jeremiah Eames. ....... 00. 315 L Pan HN eT aaa 219 4- Ratchford, M.D. icine a voi 229 \ Peabody Prank FU... ov naan bnnig 208 | Rathbun, Richard..... a ate al 230, 231 | Pearce iC 8.0 Lu a aan 2335) Raub, JacoblB. sists Fh an iis, 224 Pearson Isaae...........c... nnn a0, arzi Ravenel, W.de Col nonin Lis, 229 Peckham, Rufus W. (biography) ........ 264) Rawson, B. Ir. . isan Sen sii dain 220 Peelle Stantom J. .ueo. bu aii. 2667 | Ray, Danijel A. io hain sia ns 189 Pendleton, BC. 5 nb siil a Soo 221 [PRAY JOR R. So SS St aaa. 210 | Penfield; William T,0.0 coro. vai iris 2167 |" Ray, Jo Jonson oi a A on eas 192 Penrose Boles. si ines nai man av ane 229: Bea Kennedy Fi. cium a iniasalni ss 192 Berllrig WB rns ne er se a 1835 Reames, LT Sova dais amine i 221 Perry, Howard = 2. dda a arr ivr haiy 276, - Rechtin, Henry =o, fos Seas iabie 216 Berry Hit sche es a aD ri te 220 Redway, George i. SER 223 Berry. Thomas i. i... oe eau 212: Reece, William Mo ivs lin vain ie. 192 Person; Robert Ovi tinea iia ie gro FE Reedy Batelle i. iio iis nin 225 Peters, Bal oe Sh ad 213 Reed, Horace GC ioia ls inn vn vets toati 189 Peters, George Hu... oil donde 2107] Reed, Walter. i ci i Si ses nants 215 Pettus, Walter Bo. 0 0 ils aia al 224} Reeside; HHowa rq Su 8 ini ois 192 EB EN Sa Sal Cl SS I Te srl Reeve Felix Ais or ir nr a 217 | Peyton, Harrv......... +. PE CHR 216 1 Reeve. Herman Do. oo 0b lmao 192 | Phelps, Charles Galil cr aid noes 180: "Reeve, James BH uo. low sh ob renin, 218 L Phelps, W. Wi. on a ina 210 Reeves, J. MG dove hid So ma ana 221 p. Phillips, Herman Av: oil ha sus 190: [[ Reichard, Bdward. ....c..... 0m dooien 2, 191 Php, P. Yee oi oh iol ine 206: Reld; George C. nil i iti nian 222 342 Congressional Directory. Page. Page Reisinger, J. W. H............. cc. iL Tool Scott, Silasi, . Luu Lh a 191 Relyea, Albert... ................. oh... . PE Seoll Wa Poin has i eins oie do i tenio nls 191 Remine, [LOA vol. LL Ln nh ha I9Y (Scotty WoW Js. nan, RE 210 REMSEN, Ira sy oh vier vie dun iss wile saints 232 | Scully, James B...... Testa ry ge 191 Renshawe, [iH ono soii oh, Rey 225 Seaton, Malcolm rv ut Ss a 223 Repett1, F. F . ON a gigniriSebsee, Uriel. .Lo Lh. Ll Ls : 212 Reynolds, C. Leslie. . ie ES 194 Sebring, A ER a 312 Bhoderick, B. Piso 0h Lisi hy TE PT ES SE 220 Rice ASV oer SE sla sit, 2260 8eely GUL Ln ee Lar 223 Rich, William H . ay Yor Selfridge JoR i... i. Jaan slaunhinE 212 Richards, Charles Ne ea 13% | Serven, AR Cu ca dni ie ae Ce 228 Richards, JohnR oni. nae nn fh 2167: Sewell, BUI, vo ibs visite bait veh th ts 22 Richards, TulaniWe., lon chns san, 190pToz: [HShadd, Pri o.oo on oh vi es anes, 315 Richards Willlam A i oon oie. 223 Shallenberger, WV Sanaa ake 217 Richards, William P ..5.. 0 noc in. 311 | Sharpe, Henry G............. .... oho 215 Richardson, A.B ....0 oe aii in. 315 | Shatswell, Nothanlel o.oo 226 Richardson, George Hl... .............. .% 311 | Shaw, AlERANROT Cf rin uss Teo 223 Riddleberger RR: H..' si oie ina 189 ShAW, W. BIE oss isitans sss Senta sais 225 Ridenour, C. Hl. .0iis oen Jiin, roz iaShea fl. Wiki lhl.. oonatl dh 189 Rideway, John Lio... oo coon 225 | 'Sheibley Sinclair B. ........ obo ohn 216 Ridgway, Rebert =... ... 0. co. oa, 25% | Shelby David D......0.... ain. 0a 265 Rizey P.M... co... hl wall on Sl Ls 221 Shelton, Arthur B.... Gi i iw nn 1180 Rizer Hen Cl. oti i von anand 225 | Shepard, E.M.. a a a A 212 Roberts, Charles Hl... oon on, 191 | Shepard, Edw. RAE ST RARE 223 Roberts, BUIST .o. 0 000. uid a arr liShepard; Seth ic lv ii odds gs 267 Roberts, George B................ 0 grat SHepardiW PL. LL edi a as. 193 Roberts, T. 0. W SRR mt Lh a 210 | Shepherd, T.M.. a Re 313 Robison, William Bo. . anniv a 267-1 Sherman, John... cov. in. 231-313 Robinson, CD nr a ni 312 | Shidy, Leland P.. en Ske Ena Sa 213 Robinson, HEeREY 4. oon. has. 190 | Shipman, Nathaniel Se 265 Robinson; JAB. wl nl ahs 217 | Shiras, George, jr. (biography) .......... 264 Robinson, Jesse VE Ge lS 226 Shoemaker, I EER rE RE Bl 209 Rockhill, William Woodville. ............ 230i Shook BE. H.....ov.0.. ona 218 Rodgers, Rieder. 220! [rSHOUP, JESSE. alin Ln Ch La 313 Rodgers, J. G eR tn FE NES) You | Shonse James Ho. cof. civat.. con oie. s 191 Rodgers, John A. ....... SRE Os 212i Shreve, JoWe Go. 30. she css ens 192 Rodgers, John J.'S .. .. nL iain oy 214 | Shuey, Pheodore Bo. va 194 Rodgers, W. A... .... A AE Re he roi] Shute: D. Kerfonh iin vn fra vy as 314 Rodgers, W. Li-........c0. oo oie va 277 Silman, Emilie ....... cue alain 314 Roelker CR. vor dan Lr nis 220, 221 Simmons, GEOTge . .. i edd oder 209 Rogers, CharlesC . 0... 0. ath Lr 377 {Simonton C. Heo, ..u 0a a a, 265 Rogers, FhomasE.. oo. .i. 00 50. ain 211 |v Simpson;George RY... i. aos on 224 Reman, B- Ou. ......0 0000 pe Re. 313 | Simpson,GeorgeW ...................... 219 Rome, John a i a et vist hus 191 | Simpson, James C.............oouuiutin 311 Rommel, Callas er es Cores wade 220 | Simpson, John C ......................... 315 Root, Elihu (biography) ...... alain 214,230: 1 Simpson," W.A ..o.. oh ann sn 214 Rose, Hens... co. conn has 18g | Singer, Frederick oo. nou 00h 212 Rogemam, Mui o. conan lom doh shamn ie 213 SkinneryAN Ln 220 Rose; Erskine M = Lou se have, es, 266: [Skinner Frank Cr i ci Ln aids sl 22 Ross, John W .............. oS rh 311 | Slater, SAMUEL BE ... ii itnin nn east 225 Rossealtt, HLH... Loh cin 219 | Slauson, Allan B.............. oi... 206 Rudy; Joseph'P......L oi on ans 216° Sleman John Bio . 2.0 ainsi 211 Ruff, William HJ... ne ie 312 Sloat FIED 0 ioe orien ss sere ras pie 22 Ruiner iB HG ini a Sirens ewe te 213 | Small. Rewel ......... .......... oo... 194 RugglesyGeorge PD. ...ol.nL iat aeons 230 | Smart, Charles ...........coooienin lL. 215 Rumprille, IJ os at anda 133 SmI A IC rina hs ne en aL 190 Rumsbergh, Jesse. ovine Sie 313 | Smith, AbielI, ............o.e.iiaait. 215 Russell ALE Io tr en ea 215 | Smith, Addison F'..................L on 189 Russell Aaron .......... 00.00 TR Tor | Smithy Amzi Lula han 190 Russell, Charles A... ......... oo. 313 | Smith, Chas. Me 188 Ryan Bhomas'’........ oo... ii oe hl 222 | Smith, Charles Emory (biography). . 217, 230 Smith, Charles'S:. i. vind Llanes 215 S. Smitha BrRl vi io Cn asa aa 315 3 Smith, Hugh M.. RR EC HE 229 Sabine, George W.......i oo. on Cel 191 Smith, I ea 312 Sackett, Willlam BE... ve... ian va. 220. Smith, Tincoln B......... =. Ll 216 Safford, George H....0.c..n. inns 3154 Smith, LutherR...... co ion oni an, 223 Salean, WiHam Tone ws fn wl 22 Smith, SySney A Rea DR Rr 208 SAMO. PLB vo at sas na a wend 2726: 1 Sunith, We Ar eG at aos, 194-228 Sammons, Thomas........... So As 1554 Smith. Willlam HH... Galo 219 Sample, James A... 000 Ln, 217 Stith; William Raine iis 104 Sanborn: Walter H.... 0. oo iann asin. 265: | Smithy W. Scott. LJ ir nn nls sun 223 Sanders, Hl Poi. ony i heaven 222: Smith, Willlam S...n on. iil, 219 Sanders, ‘Thomas Bio... ....v 0 tan 212. Smyth Bllison/A ocd a nnois. 229 Sanford, Henry W...........c onl 0 223 | Smyth, S. Cora .............. 00.0 ood, 189 Saunders William |... oon cin 2281 Snyder, Edgar C............ can 189 Sawyer, Frank FH... o.oo oo. Guna 189 | Snyder, Harold C . ee AL a 218 Savion, Henry BD ....c..ovio an 215 Solberg. Phorvald as ire 206 Schayer, George F............ 0.0.00 267 | Sorrell William Pov oon do 312 Schofield, Jona} 5 Ens a ES, 231 Spaulding, OEE DIRE Rn a SAE Te 209 Schott. C. A IS Eb 213 | Spear, Bills oto none nn 311 Schreiner, EE a Ee he ric aSpeich. Emanuel... noted SEES 2¥1 Schreiner, F. Ma 218. [i'Spofford, ALR a sal Sas 206-231 Schroeder, B.C... i ele ed vents 2 isi0e doin vin 727.1 Squier;€eo. O. .... cone e hs 215 Schurman, Jacob Gould................ J, 208 | Squires; B.C Loh Sa sana A nr 214 Schwinn, George Hi. is, oo idles, ais: Stack Maurice J i. on oil wah aie 315 Scofield John Ch. i. ui. an ne vn 214 | Stanton; WHHam'S .. ..... a. th casas 213 Scott: Charles BE. 0. 0 oo GL ns. a2. {t Stanfler, Chanles'C... 5. ois p. 22 Scot, iGeorge Divi dna Sha LT 218 [Steele cfohnl,. .. oh ous on. hank, 189 Departmental List. Page Stejneger, Lo .. vb iii innvinin lass 231 Stephens, William To Ga he ST ns 315 Sternberg George Mo... ou, vv iuate Sint 215-230 StetSonEWL iS co na Cr aia 210 Stevnart, WilllamM.. ...... nn oar 225 Stevenson, Cio a. vv aie ar 192 Steward; Thomas G.. ... 0... lantisro, 223 StewantzAlonzo Hl ...» lesan aban 190 Stewart, Charles Wi... lion cnn ov, 220 Stich Jol rt oh ed a na, 221 Stickney Amos: oi ors, ah i. 213 Stickney BBL... Cn bs She ada 218 Stiles Che Wardell =. oo hee ain, ol 227 Stillman, Frank To oe alvnao iis: 190 Stirling Yates... . ow. o.cin oni flo, 212 Stocking, Solon Wi... oo. oa oasis 223 Stedder, John Si... 0. Jin hi ol eas 219 TTT A a Ee Re Carl SS 221 Stone, George. lo. la ese 217 Stoughtenburgh W. HB ... . iia ah 312 Stratton, Samuel We... ae 213 SER EE tee RR a Se RS 218 Strickler Harry: co i RG 192 Strong, BD. en hs ae 221 Strong Brande, oo Avie ona ie SE 216 | SHbhS, EC CE 190 Stutler, Warner +o 2 asi talon 311 Sullivan, A.J .. eA a Ll 313 Sullivan, THomas 1 A EY 209 Summers, Alexander. oo 225 Sumner, & et eR BT A Re 191 Sunderland, Byron... Son lho 313, 314 Sutherland, Bd... Na A 206 Sutherlamdit] A. i. vinci va aan an 209 Sutton, J. Re... viens ale, 312 Swan: WD. vi rit nr en 211 Swattwonlti nO. wi iss en, 313 Swayze Neo: Th. os ri Sh nds a ate 209 Swindells; Johm Asa sa simi) 312 Sylvester Richards or ohn sa nas 312 Symonds Fi Meco. nil cis ones 212 SYMONS, EW vv viens vo vin wie y via sre vats 213 T. Taft, Willan Boe hea 265 Pageant HI Boos a. coe Dal an 267 Banner dA. Co vn yc a a 225 Tanner, Chasles Br. Soi iio nn ind 214 Lanner; JameseA. Linon anus aan 216 Ap Pan, SB. io. SE he ei 188 Tapping, William: ........... 0. a 192 Tanssio Bdwasd D.C i oh aise 212 Saylor Blain W..o vo cn anni ons. 217 Taylor, Charles W o.oo Toco 230 AVION TD EW, Lo oe a a 220 PaylorsCeorge MM. ii es shan 189 Taylor, HA Se iain 209 Taylor, Hawkins, jr. dasa, 189 Mayon Mo sf an 221 Taylor, FEW i a 192 Taylor James IK i. odo aii igs saan 209 Taylory Miles. chi. oe i i isis 188 Taylor Stark By. ce na 266 Taylor, Thomas C.. o mS 0 Glu iii 267 Taylor, William: A «o.oo i 227 Tazwell, George i. ni coins as 189 Temple, Amanda W. .. oa. Ra 314 Ferrell; L.C..... RR be SS 228 Merrill, J.D... 0... 210 erry, Silas W. ......... a. l aa 221 Thayer AMOS IVE... oe isdn 265 ‘T'heophilus, Richard odie ce 190 Thian Raphael Po oo di 50s 214 ‘'homas, Charles N...... .. A Se Tb, 191 Thomas; George MM... 0. oi aii, 216 Thompson; John A. ....... nosh. Banand 188 Thompson; John Gi. i. wi ton oiaionl 216 Thompson, Joseph i uc cio al onl 191 Thompson. Richard: FB... .o0. 0. oi 0 215 Thompson ReyaliW. t...L iui. esi. 189 Thornburg, BH NN ooo renin on 193 Thorp MasbinR oo oo a on onl, 214 Bimme, Bonest Gr. a Sn 210 Tindall, William ooo. i oi a 3II | Tinsley, Alfred ..o0.c oor ii 188 ‘Pisdale RD... a SE PI BI 221 COD WP, ro i a bane 22 Titlow,; Charles B i. ov ren Dic 206 ge. ‘Pittman, Otto Hus. ei igs 213 Todd Bn 5 aa Se Sala 220 Woner, John, i. sii a Ah 315 Townsend, C. H....... rib eS GT 229 Vownsend X10 0 i rr aii dane 224 Townsend, WW tn 0 8 08 oh rare, 224 Bracewell, Robert J... ih ei on, 210 Travis, Joh A ott hein fracas. 191 Trimble; Matthew ho in coin, 311 Br] ELE Se Le SE SE Re a 227 Wnge, TM La a aT dE a ay 271 Wrmer OVE re nar ae iit 231 me I he 215 IE ey AE Sa La SY 224 Tubman oR. wa Se 313 alts, James Be at i i ar 223 Tulloch, Miranda: B.h 0, sua sas 311 upper Be Nae 2T1 Turner, JET. ER 313 Turner, William Bo 188 ‘Tsweedale; John. i. oda mia as 216 ‘Cyler, Cadwell Cr neta 210 Tyler, Moses: Coit: Jos a ln et ss 232 yner, James IN. von. oiler tai 216 7. Updegralf, Milton 5. is sia aida ie 220 VV. Vail, Benjamin... ....50... Sate a es 191 AYE CT EE le Ig Ra Eo 312 Nale Henry A. co voodioa) soa Sante 189 Vanderlip, Frank An. oo Sl voi, 209 Van Devanter, Willis .. ov lo os 216 Van Reypen, WK Loo. naa oe 220 Vaughn, GF... ern ios naa iag 213 Veeder, WWRID, Wo ooo nd ins. : 219 Vest George:Pugh no... asa 189 NVoeniBeseler;Marie.. 0 nso nis 315 YomHanke Ar oo onal ai ans 217, 229 Vrooman, Charles TB ie didviisiieris 217 W. Wagner, Bo Jlnasdsio deanna a a lens, 312 Wakefield, Brank H .. i. 0. iain, 190 Walcott, Charles 1: ioc vise. 225, 232 ASTEINE No Cyn RE VEE IL Ma eG SE 221 Walker, George FH . 0... 0 oo. 0 216 Walkers, JohnH os oh co an 189 Wallaee Lo os er ana 221 Wallace William’ J. 5 rt 265 Walshe Jol Tenens ir eos 312 Walshe Fo Ho anil. hea ahaa 313 Walshe. Jeo. rina. cada i 221 Walshe We i oi ois ania ves ibs we an ale 221 Ward, HUB co. rnd ea ee 219 Ward /Dhomas . oo cai ssabs fas 214 Warde Ctl: i nt ais 188 Warfield, Prank dr. oo. ei ers 224 Waring, William sil coeds. Sai nn 315 Warman; Philip Ci a ana 225 Warner, Willard'F ..o. oo... ia an. 211 Warren, James G. [so ov. coh a see 213 Warren, Wildame J... o.oo ma aii a 215 Washington, Lawrence ........0. ...0 206 Washington, Phomas:.... wou Shs oon 220 Wasson: HB. HH. von oo se ee 191 Watkins, J. ifreth A ee ee ee 231 Watson Jil LL sR a en 313 Watson, John Wooo 0 Sn ol, 224 Watterson, a A LR a 231 Weakley, AW i... oe ivan. Ren ia 315 Weaver Oren W., ......0. 0. dove oa. Frradh 228 Webster; Charles... isin ne ios 219 Webster, Daniel B...... on... nian 193 Webster, Harrie. ii ors twa na A eteeiels 219 Weiler, Berd’, oii dng aval 211 Welch, AJC. ran an, ry 194 Welch, CH ie ia sn So ai te seats 313 Weldon, Lawrence. ..... io. sinister 266 Wells, Bdmund J. Cr a i or 189 West; RRs, aa es ars ad A 210 Weston; John Wo wad Son Baa 2 215, 230 WeEtMOTE, J. A i, fee niefimls outs sivinte 209 Wheeler iC. B.. ..q. ...i 0 be any 215 Wheeler, Frank Rowland. co... vi nas 5 314 344 Congressional Directory. Page. Wheeler, William H.'vvvvve in von iol Toz Wilson, Peter Ma. lui hn ans i Whelpley, Jamies W.o..50 0 cin nai 1 Wilson, Samitel.. cao od ase Wihilaere, JoRe one ya nan amit Tor: eWilson, Thomms:.. 0, Sian sisi s White, Andrew DD’. 5. ial fn Gina grate Wilson, William I, .... 0. nl iin. White Chagles BE 00 on) els nonin, gail Winesi Bred BY. . 5 Li cue ot a White, Edward Ponalese {ography 3 204 Winter; WUWe cali enh matin e White, Bugene l...... 223 Winters, CeorgeW « ... bossa hl White, Tames I. 0 Lion in Un didn, 217 | Wise, John C.. FRR White, ls a Rt OL RE 213 Witherspoon, THOMAS A + orn White il. ir as sla A 191 | Witmer, A. H. eh White John Hi oa a oon nna Giant 194 | Witten, James We White, A © esha cA Pr AT BE 188 Wollard, Bank Tondo unin o soe White, a aa ee a a 220. WOO, 8. Tl eR RE ae Whiteford, Wi: Scott... ho coo. ay, 192. sWoods, Albert Bove in os la Sena Whitehead, Cabell i rr 2127] Woods, Blliott. oon wha cn nh anes, Whitman, BF. 0 oh Re eats idl Weods, Wi Ac. roms ais ar i Whitney. Charles Fol. oC vin os 224: I» Woodward, Oscar. cai in ei rn ihe a Whitney, Henry H:.......-.. A 214 Woodward, B. Mou oo onl nea Whitney, Milton. o.oo Ln 227 | "Woodward, William €... 0. 1. = oa inn Whittaker Bo Wo os aha 213 Worcester Dean:Cr. 00 GuGe ASS don Whittington, Granville N.......... ..... 223 | Worcester, William PD. Gi is vill, WhillleSey, WR. wl Sri con sedan 206 Worsley, A. S .... i a i Whittleton Robert: Ji. 50. a du davon, 227: |. Worthington, Wo BE... on. wo voi Wiley, Harvey W.........0......0 a. 227 | Wray BL Risa as Wiley TLS Bl ol oy Es 19 Wrenn, ALC fa ah ae an A Willtite, Warner: fu oo cas des 224 (Wright; Carroll Ds. in i Sie. hen Willdle John Boar onion ian, 200: Wright, TW tere aii sana WHEINSon, ASC ar Sh a gags Weight JW. is ras a hook Willard Henty A oi iss. 5 aan 23% Wright, John B. o.oo. alll shi an Willcox, Walter: FE... ........ AE HR 225 [Wright John Vo ood iia Willett: Roberts ot iss se i ss, 267. LoWright Thomas TE. J. oi or iit ii ss WILIHES, A Be es nT a SSS 220 [Wurdemann, J. VL see cris have Williams 8:9... iii. Re Tors Wylie, Amdrew on. nL dain Williams, George Bl... in vo vow sano. Todd Wyman, Walter. oi. cs vb vai te sats Williams, Henry B....i. cinco iii us, 2264 Wynne, I, B., .. 5. i. vst waiely Seis are Willlamg JR art on ea a aes, 191 Williams, Robert Jr... ihe iS ie. 211 XY. Williams, Roger. 50 noir nl aan yi SEY Williams; Thomas Acc han nibs, 227 I Yeatman, William S$... fo ei irae. WiHlHams Wa DB... or cad a alia 192 | 'Veomans, James PD. .L ivi ve dateeiin ns Willis, Bayley lori alo Se rt 3 225 (i Yenby, Beret. ob won su Willson, Sidnny IL. eS RS 225 = Noung, Bred. Sie lc Sn ah a ah Wilson, D. W A Re Ey irs 180 | Vomng J. Br a a na Wilson, BW oir ios vain aia 21% Young, John RB. .. . io i siiihahe wiles ns Wilson; George W.. .: voo tii iar ia 211 | Youngblood, William , San Wilson EBL Vion ahr in es soi 225 Wilson, JW» ln bedi slices dein sabi 226 Zz Wilson, James {blography) I SA 226, 230 Wilson, fesse Hil sida ins Eh lie apn Zahm BB fu snl Lee Wilson, John M:...« 0. ones 215 DIZ apPONCIA oe dy eh eae eter : f = El f= Le | ym nil I | Wr = Tir : ri ZL SC IHD Pee A031 10000A ! er SE = 0007 IN SE EE I=000 NO=CZ70E =A NACE === EE 0 A Te AOI00CI00C NRO ZS se ONC no7 OLIN DL 20S R0001000 mm nf TP IEEER SBS Frain CI SSS = BE Zia EmEE Ea Es = Co | | [| | = | x Re fete nets EEN DID =e WASHINGTON ° 7) X Zi AND ™ 7 oo ya ENVIRONS. Sor 1899. oo ny REFERENCES. 2, Ne 1 ‘The Capitol. 25 Washington Monument. x 2 President’s House. 26 Naval Monument. 3 State, War, Navy Depts. 27 Statue of’ ington. ht 4 Treasury Department. 28 Statue of Washi n. 5 Interior Department. 29 Statue of Jackson. 6 Post-Office Department. 29 Statue of Lafayette. 7 Department of Justice. 30 Statue of Greene. 8 Dep't of Agriculture. 31 Statue of Scott. 9 Congressional Library. 32 Statue of Thomas. 10 Smithsonian Institution. 33 Statue of Farragut. 11 National Museuni. 34 Statue of Du Pont. 12 Army Medical Museum. 35 Statue of McPherson. 13 Pension Office. 36 Statue of Rawlins. 14 Bu. Engraving Printing. 37 Statue of Hancock. 15 Gov't Printing Office. 38 Statue of Emancipation. . 16 Naval Observatory. 39 Deaf and Dumb Institution. 17 Corcoran Art Gallery. 40 Botanic Garden. 18 City Post-Office. 41 Congressional Cemetery. 19 New Post-Office Building. 42 Judiciary Park. 20 U. S. Court-House. 43 Mount Vernon Square. 21 Washington Barracks. 44 Baltimore and Potomac Depot. 22 Navy-Yard. 45 Baltimore and Ohio Depot. 23 Marine Bafracks. 46 United States Jail. 24 Naval Hospital. 47 City Asylum. THE NORRIS PETERS CO., PHOTO-LITHO., WASHINGTON, D. £. ONY 7 é 7iN 2 a 2 | [== CMD bs a= f/m) Nl | i I | 4 [ ) tem fi Co — WV BB et er ——— a —