viii Ann Ehenrias \0 as, TH] TER {i 1 58TH CONGRESS, SENATE. : Doc. No. 4, 3d Session. FIFTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. [THIRD SESSION—BEGINNING DECEMBER 5, 1904.] OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY For the use of the United States Congress. COMPILED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING BY A.J. HALFORD. SECOND EDITION. CORRECTIONS MADE TO JANUARY 6, 1905. i WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. I9O05. >a NOTE. Hon. W. F. Mahoney, Representative from the Eighth district of Illinois, died | | December 27, 1904. i | All Washington addresses given in the Directory, except as otherwise noted, are | | northwest. | 111 2 | | | { | { 1 A tn All AA A TTD SE I ES —— oe ———————— MEETING DAYS OF CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES. [Committees not given below have no regular meeting days, but meet upon the call of the chairmen. ] : SENATE. Acricultwre and Forestry. o.oo tr es ies sen Tuesday. Camadian Belaliong.. ci viii rs ren sss sens Tuesday. a a Re Se es i Wednesday. : Comtlerce. 1.0. ri ree SEL Thursday. Pistrictof Columnbla.. i... ivi vanes isin Friday. Bdueationand Labor... co 0h viii. iis hath Tuesday. IC es a a ee Tuesday. Bashieries i i rT irises sea Friday. ¥orelgnRelations: 5. . a reais reais nian .. Wednesday. Indian Afalrs. oy a en eee Thursday. Interoceamie Canale... a... oh de ee Thursday. Interstate Commerce... oo 0 div Tn a Friday Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands ............... Saturday. Judiciary, cho. vl oa LA Ra Em aaE aL Monday. Military Affairs... 00. EE MS Bia p eat Te Thursday. National Banke: 0. oo a Second Thursday. -- Organization, etc., Executive Departments.............. Thursday. Pensions 0 EE i ai aes Monday. Post-Offices and Post-Roads.... oo oi oe Wednesday. Privileges and Elections............... SS Saturday. Public Buildingsand Grounds... .. i. ii. oii on Friday. Public lands... i ota iia ii et ss ede Wednesday. LertilOtiBs us tres itunes tar nis sath sn Ss tira £eithe Friday. HOUSE ACCOMM. oi as a a anes sd rte Tuesday. Agricnlture......, SE PI ARC IRR Ea Sa es Tee Wednesday. Banking and Currency... ic vii soc overin Wednesday. CII, nl ve a a a Thursday. ‘Coinage, Weights, and Measures........................ Thursday. Districtof Columbia’. ov Sr JG on ae Thursday. Bdncalion or. fies dass ci arene a Et eh Monday. Elections NO. 3s: vai can fora innvirinnn i ohas Sodas Tuesday. Brrelled- Bills cv. vv. 0 vs ee a a ee aes Daily. Yoreigw Affairs |... aa is Thursday. Immigration and Naturalization ............ cca. ins Tuesday. sdindin Affairs, 0 ooo hn can Sdn cS a, Thursday. Imanlar ATale, ud ii rr a a a a ae Tuesday. Interstate and Foreign Commerce... vr sah pais vals Tuesday and Friday. Irricotion of Arid Lands. voor icnniinriovnsitnis sis Monday. Judiciary oo. ae ra ees Wednesday and Friday. er ET Lr TE Thursday. AbEArY ae Ee et eres a sea ns . Tuesday. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. ..'... o.oo. ona 00 Thursday. Miltry Aas Ee Tuesday and Thursday. Naval ATalrs ri ar aa ede a ata sido Tuesday and Friday. Pacific Railroads. .... aes SE a Wednesday. Pater oie hires er a eed Tuesday. TTT Re EVs I ee heen Bu SR NGS Wednesday. Public Buildingsand Grounds... ..... =... ...o. ne oo. Friday. PublicYands..... 0 ooo cea aa Wednesday. Riveisand Harbors. 0... 00 oii co Ss inns sro Dally, War Claims. ouvert ri ah rns ak ke Tuesday. CALENDAR FOR 190s. JANUARY. JULY. SUNG M. ‘TU. |W. |TH. [| F |SAT.LSUNJ MM. [| TU. [| W. [ TH. { FP. ISAT, lo abl 5] of 5 : 8 9 | 10: | a8 {12 | 135 | 74 2 3 4:1 3 6 7 2 15 16. 17 13:19 | 200 | 21 12 u 12 3p ua 1s i) 23 24: | 25 26: | 27. | 25 17 1 19. 20 4 22 20 25 | 25°20 | 75 | 2 27 | 2 29 : 30 | 37 FEBRUARY AUGUST. I 2 3 4 I 2 3d 5 5 6 7 8 9 {10 [71 6 7 8 gs 30: | 171 iz 12 13 14 | I3 16. | 17 18 13 14 [ 15 16: | 17 18 19 10 | 20: | 21 [22° 23 | 24 | 25 20 | 21 | 22 (23 | oa | 25 26 26 | 27 { 28 a7. 28 | 20. 30 | 31 MARCH SEPTEMBER. : 1 | 2 3 4 1 2 5 6:( 71. 8] o| 1071 3.1 4 5/06 7.0819 2 [13 [tify a6 ry | a8 Io | v1. 12 | 13 [aq 15 16 10 [20 21 | 20 [ 23 [24 | 05 17 P18 10: |. 90 | 21 | 92 | 23 26 |i 27. 28 | 29 | 30 | 3r 2d [P25 | 26 | 27 | 28 Ing | 20 APRIL OCTOBER. : rl al alis tel 2 3 ‘; 5 6 7 2 8 O20 | v1 | 12 | 73° 14 9110 11 Iz 13 44 13 I 16 | 1 18 I 20 | 27 16 | 17 18 30 | 20 | 27 22 5 7 x9 3 23 24°| 93 26 | 27 28 29 22 23 244 23 27 2 30 29 |. 30 | 31 MAY. NOVEMBER. | | | 1 2 3 | 4 S 6 I 2 3 4 7 8 gif 10 1] 12 171) 5 6 7 8 9-| 10 | (IT 14 | 15 0 16: 1:37.28 | 10 | 20 2 13 i415 316 137] 18 21-22: | 23. | 24 | 25. | 26: | 27 19 | 20. {21 | 22 | 23-124 1.25 28. | 20 [30 | 31 | 26 ( 27 28 | 29: 30 a JUNE. DECEMBER. jl : 1 | 2 4 5 6 7 | 3 211° " 2 5 " 2 y fea) 15 | 1d | 15 | 16 | 17 17 1:15:19 = ary 22 {| 23 I I 20 | ar 23. 2 2 i > >a | > | 2 4 | 2 25 | 26: 27 | 25] 20.1 30 Vi CALENDAR FOR 1906. JANUARY. JULY. SUN.[-M. (TU. W. [TH. | FP. [SAT [SUN M. (TU. [| W, ITH. | F, ISAT, I 2 3 4 5 6 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 8 9] 10 bar | 12 13 8 gl 10 [13 12. 13 | 14 Ml 1516 | 17-18 1 39 | 20 I5 16 | 17-1 a8 vo 26 i oF as 21 22 (2g [4 05 (a6 | ay 22 an [24 a5 i260 ay. a8 23 L 20 | 30 | 3% 20 | 20 | 21 FEBRUARY. AUGUST. | : I 2 3 I 2 3 4 4 5 6 | i 8 g | 10 5 6 7 8 9 TO | IT xy 12 [13 | 4 4 15. 16 | 17 I2 13 ad vse v6 I v7 78 3 [10 | 20. 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 Y9 | 20 | 21] 22. 23 | 24.| 25 25 | 26-1 27 | 28 | 26. 27 | 28 | 2g ‘30 | a7 seth SE el aR LI sO : MARCH. SEPTEMBER. | I 2 3 : 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 4 5 5 7 S | 9 alo ol 10 | v7 | 72 [13 | 74 | 15 1 v1 14.13 161.17 16° | 1 ISH 1 20) | 21 [22 IS | 19 |-20 [27 23 = 23 [a4 Y 2 35 25.1. 26 [ 274 2% [80 [30 | 31 41.25 2 27.1 2 9 APRIL. OCTOBER. r vf slog gy lglis lu it a gloul slg 8 9. 10 tn 12 (13 14 z 8 gill 700] 11 (“12 | I3 15 36 | 17 | 1S | 10 | 20 | 21 I4 | 35 16 | 171 13 | 10 | 20 22 | 23 [24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 27 22 | 23 [24 '| 25 26 | 27 20 | 30 28 ("20 (| 30 | 3% MAY. NOVEMBER. = I 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 es 6 7 8 9 | 700 [i 11 12 4 5 6 & 8 9 | IO L415 | 96 yy 18 19 II 2 ve aa rss nb oe Ty 20 | 21 |-22 23 | 94 [a5 | 26 I3 | 19 | 20 | oT | 22 | 23 | 24 27 | 28 | 29 | 30. 3% | 25. | 26. | 27 | 28 | 20 | 30 | | | JUNE. DECEMBER. 1 I 2 6 = 8 slats al gia olf 220 ES 30 | 3 ¥I2. 0 13. 14 | 15 1176 2 Io 12975 1. 95 ¥7 L318 | 90 | 20° 27 | 22 | 23 ! 171 5 20 ou 2 - 24 | 25: (26 | 27 | 23 | 20 | 30 > i: 25.2 272 29 : CONTENTS. J Page. a. Acidemy of Sciences, National oh civics sinner errnin sree sn atied: Silesia Saisie s SC wesiiees ein 255 Admiral of the Navy, Office Of. cc cvoc va viv vie teniin sed ohnn a se sii tos oti is ee salsa vin sata v ates 239 TL RT 1 Th I Ei rT Ea rr AE i Se bm oA SE rs aU a Se a 420 American TUSIOrIcal ASSOCIAION Sli i ch mee eh tisn sinvs sins uithies outer saineiuisinuinie vainin s salen ss snie 256 Apartment houses, ele, QIredlory Of sah ee rr Le ee 373 Appointment clerk, Department of Agriculture, dutiesof ............... ......... EE aa tes 280 Tustlce,:dutiesof &,.. =... ....0.. Aa EAR a aw 272 Apportionment of Representatives under the several censuses.... ........... EH RRNA 156 Assignment of rooms on basement floor of the Capitol .....c.cciieiiiviiiiiiiiniiiarennae.. 219 gallery floor.of the Capitol.................ov ills, RRL pS es Sa 223 principal floor of the Capitol. i... ec co veloc iis alsin csi viens ons 221 Assistant Attorney-General for the Interior Department, duties of...........oooociiiiiiiil, 271 Post-Office Department, duties of. ..........cueeediaec even 275 Attorneys-General, qutlesiofcc. coo re itive cr vices ices hiviavinins sw als eas mis tain sine 270 Secretaries of State, dutiesof .......cociiiiinniiiiiiiii ieee EN he 257 the Treasury, duties ol o.oo. ee ce ctaiiv clin naisisnivninn in saina stasis tay Secretary of Agriculture, duties of .. 0. corte da a Ess ss sees vs 280 the INierior QUES Of. . ci. Li isin uss seria enn neve sins Selansaie vigeisnts 279 Navy, dutlesof oni aes REN sr ES Se 275 WAT ANCE Of oc cies ci ih isons wists cain tie sien aR lenis Shek in inin oldin sina’ 267 tothe Attorney-General, qutles of ... .oviu. veins sits vnnnssnn ons sesn nasa vrines 270 ASLTOPNYSICal ODSEEVAIOTY oc rer es csrmess suis vavainu weissiainiasisnishisinivsioninie siereininisisis ion vislsain sin isis 255 Attorney-General; blograply ol... . cc ics uss tei cvevmnstonicsmadasissivinionninsovelsssise ssivains seve ees 237 AUECS Of a i ti vo sii A ee ea A A SE eR te re 270 Auditor forthe Interior Department... Nc suis ars sass seiosiosssssienoniveenisn bene ee sion vies 232 1 dutiesofc.....corivs istosivaisranniuinnes joeviioe vss annisaivenas 280 Navy Department... oc oiuviees AR SM Re CES Ab Le, 232 \ duties Of... cv: evs orvsvveinnseeseeessonsnssorsrssssesssasnanne 261 : ! Post-Office Department... vi ci cision sn veri svasinvnanis sssenssonsiinisn vasa sisss 232 | duties of . oc . cutie ricer vosisnisasrsnovnnine sive va snarinais 261 | State and other Departments... ... co. cv. coeeis sens vesnecsssnsnssesesssns seas rss 232 : A I EE RT Tt es 261 | Treasury: Department................ nh Re Se ER ER FT 231 AUHIES Of s.l sts vies sss vr anrrs vonsien lve nviesusnsiss veithishin 280 | War Department «ue iiis seis ivsiveivnsisnsise vaivesisiasissninisvesaa'vn wa sis asiamine voices 231 { EE eh SS ARSE RT a 260 Basement floor of the Capitol, assignment of TOOMS ....ceviieiiereiiirieiteeiraneeresnsenenens 219 | diagram of. ..oies vue rT ER A Ch Tr Chan a ay 218 { oo Beginning and expiration of terms of Senators by classes .......coiciiiiiiiiieiiieiiieicnnnn. 135 s Biography of the Attorney-General. .............c.ss vise sevsnasssntnnsssnsssisnesssssnssnmenssss 237 ! Postmaster-Generali i. ure is der risasnien csee atin veves ess sne wv ein iciotelet 238 President of the United States... iil. ic ivinticisvnisctnninssnvnncanmevsions 228 Resident Commissioner from Porto RiCO..oceu'iiiiiiirecneaeess ls sinenetnee 134 Secretary of Agriculture... . seis roi ss vsneien srnmoavs sive ves sen tees wale 247 Commerce and Labor ce ssrses ss cose ssscensnins sence ees sear 251 I rE LC Ce EE EA EES sivsssissinee ccosesrs anne 229 hE TNL CTIOr sess Finan asvnss sennas siaaine ns oasis as Tess assnses 244 NAVY ceo ess cmcimnans srs nvsrinisisinsisoninvaesivissenssassoains verses 239 SefIAlE vce ve vse oe sens snerenseiravsinmseivsissitesnsnsess seiveenise 210 RTEASHEY cies csiinivess cones sneisesuniveivinieniassnniisnnesisiosisivesie 230 WAT. occa cisic ss sinicic nin siviisiesisioninie ss sia Juisinisvieia’e a eieie stele iol siniuiets u nis ele eT n 234 tothe President... corer ioc isan: ER PT sesh 228 Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate... ...ccercec renee scon sss esescanssnsrsaneas 212 so Biographies of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States.......ccciiveieiiiniinnn.n. 291 Senators, Representatives, and Delegates, by States ......... RAT LT 1-134 i tee A i i a Bl. Congressional Directory. Page Board of medical examiners, Department of: the NAVY... 5. 0 ini ciovsi eine vrnnsnnss roses . 243 inspection and survey, Department of the Navy............. ie ie aria eine, Seen 24S ON Geographic NANTES. 1... svi cess. v3 benim nin ies da naa esas sinh sn Sa ans son oats an 253 A eS OF i i ee a a a Br a Th a 290 Botanic Carden, National oc. cs cr snare ss saan nails. won dine ite rman sin oo nen ies Eran» 216 Burean of Accounts, Department of State, AUtIes of... .. coco ss ties ie es scocvnbtrtsnnicnnsins 257 AMETICan MNOIOZY ci is i ves veces sonies snes isn ns sainviensvionios vs ssnisiosnisais 255 American Republics. ro i th cies dens ares ssnaals iad a ser aeaniae ss feos Sear ah 253 Guliesiof ul ee eS SE 290 ATI I UG yr a oa so Ss hens a de Sains a wit sana ata 2477 dutlesof ... Cui itn ET UE a Ae DR Se ee 281 Appointments, Department of State, duties Of ..L.... cine iii. sv dacs oboe seas 258 Bureau of Entomology. Department of Agriculture... .........cooeseeer oe sudan sain 250 dutles of. i. vs isin crit 282 CREE a Si re i i a ee A En aa 249 Ante Ol ree Ets 281 Construction and Repairs... oo. ve hums any sie iiss sie sais a 5s wie ale wns heii Sa ae 241 EE Se ae ie Deo 276 Corporations. ruil ls a Sar as hsiete isle Sa Tes ere SE She HEE Se SRE 2571 AU eG Or RC ee ta ae a A a eh 284 Engraving and Printing. ..... Ne CS yD Sn HS a, 230 Aes OF i Sih vin rises rh Ra ve a sda eat wie Pe ae 261 Bauipment .... as di ia ed eas se ee es a 240 AUIS Of oda sera tts nas ater a s Ae SR ae See 276 175 US Teese a es La US si es Se COI SE SE Sh Re 252 Ales Of i a i ded ie ae i sD Ga eae A Asa naan 286 Foreign Commerce, Department of State, duties of............... de dire wes wie Cre 258 LEE Sa Ca i EE Ogee, 249 Autles of Ls dni indies fe lneriiasieines Thats a sr See wa seas wae ee 282 TETIEiT aL haley] ERO Ce RR RC LR 252 Ee A ns Nat 286 Indexes and Archives, Department of State, dutiesof ............ cco esasscasneens 257 Insular Affairs ......vc.. nese ER DP ry Tr Per Rn 236 Fabor...i.i-. a I Tr Tor a an erro 251 Eo I a a A a al rr Nn a a CRs 285 MANUEACtHEES. Liles fhe ili weinniss sna spbis swe aie stein oa ATA iE Sasirereii ev dla 251 Medicine and SUIZerny... coors a Si wens desta swat ets vais Se ete see 241 : QUBIESIOf Se ca eRe ee se Re ea 277 Navigation, Department of Commerce and Labor ............... re DT rr 252 duties of. 5. i, i ive dear ael 286 He NAVY LS cdots sh slanien ws wil ss nid a wuinintica'e 240 ; dutlesiof vc i ie Re Ph Sa 275 Ordnance, Department of tHe NAVY... iv. oii rainrnsssisnin son brn snismnessine ss ans 240 : duties of... .. ov elas ous ian os sink iin srsly tis lee outs 276 Ordnance and Fortifications, War Department.....cceveueo. oo. RE ere eH en 237 PENSIONS n.d ses sr etn a ee nk see les tleie rs hie ee Smee eS pe Ge fr Pree 245 Plant Industry .... oct cs tdarsrnssr se reones CS viins es ee i ah ST 248 AUHIES Of ae rrr i vs ssi saivia wr ntsial sy ess wee a er Se a cn ser ie 282 Rolls and Library, Department of State, duties of ..... ass Waianae ne we SA ee ae aT 257 Et A a ol aR he RE Te ah BS 249 QUELLE Ofic ss vis sania srs sivswiinsinins sven vin srnss RP a LR tr i NR IR 283 1 ET rte a a Ere a Br LS lor Sb Sr Sri Fe LLP Spr Seal A 253 AUIS OF ess asenei sie ols elise lon iieinie din oi rms ale win u's rete dln nl re aia a Shain 4 286 Statistics ‘Department of Agriculture, ... io ee dd a alain 249 LR a a a DR ER Rs Oe ia Ta 281 Commerce and 1, abot... ... ere iocs vin snes cons sesis 252 dutlesof 2, a otis 286 Steam Engineering ...... aes Ey A EE RL Rt i Fe rE 241 AU ES Of sss ss as sate cure thins nainic nr ve sities minlentswivis 277 Supplies and Accounts, Department of the Navy.............. corse venn cm ren a sreaine 241 duties of. oa iii irre 275 the Census... seeicos iodo diets BS Ta hh er aie et se hee ea Rea 251 EH ly BR Sa 285 Trade Relations, Department of State, dutieSof .............c.. vouievniia nse taonnss 258 Yards and DOCS. weve ssssss0ssrssnsissts snes sctisassnssns reicsvens tae vur sss seltainvivs seh 241 Contents XI Page Calendars Tor 1905 ANA X06 i. avai sition nina ss mena sr rs Ss ers a a Swett VI, VII Capitol; disgramel basement oor... cor es nr ce Ei Saas ies aw ee ae ae aes 218 gallery floor of or vi tr a ee a I ‘222 pENEIpal oor rr i ee re ie se ea ae 229 history and description of veo coher es CR a Se rae ee se 217 DOMCE sn. ess he sia ete Srna es eb Sr Cea a a RS ae a a 216 Superintendent of, OcE OF. oh rr a Ch es hates eee ae ie 216 Ghaplaliof the TouSe i ha rei Rant sient rade s emia a ee rvin ns 213 EAE Th sn a ie eae a aaa eT nate a tak ies ras aaah 210 Chief clerk Department of Agriculture, utiles of . i f .. isis casas sues sananienneiss se sian 280 Commerce and aboy, duties of. iin ciao a5 Bi nsnsisssn asin 284 Justice, duiles of fon. cir ih vo a i a rie ST dis 271 State Aulles ol ras a een 257 the Taterior, duties of .............- I SS el 279 Treasury, duties of...... a ee a Ee a ee hs SA ee a 259 War, duties of iio rh, si ol rn er ea ses re es ee 267 Post-Office Department, Quiles of -» 284 Steamboat-Inspection Service v.uueeeeeenneeniveeneeneas. 249 dutiesof.. roses 285 Department of JUSHICE: ccorinic svar ie siicn es irvnnsssonieiasivisios we sussensimeios srw reinssis susie sss 237 : appointment clerk, duties of... «. voce iv cori tsvaininn suits semivms vessels 272 Assistant Attorney-General for the Interior Department, duties of .... 271 atiorneys-ceneral, Qutles OF. cc vc ivssines sss rv ve ehsmvannie 270 to the Attorney-General, duties of ........cceveeeeniedernnns 270 Attorney-General, biography Of .....v. cv. einrerios crn vevsiavinsives saisiasie 237 | QUES OF sect vics vs sar nsinnn sss intios roms biins vi siv nies 270 | chic clerk, QUES ol. .cci iiss iis vr ensiisaniam ve isans tens vas salewuins 271 Commission fo Revise the Taws. ih... ss ravsiss csv csnnisnnsvnsivsisvvaes sos 238 disbursing clerk, duties of. vv us vine iv dui insiis ans vive nn aaiy sans 272 Department of Justice, division of accounts, duties of examiner of titles duties of. 0 vo va eae avs generalagent, dufles of. oi Gl ian sn aan pardon attorney; dutiesiof.. oS ans Lunn Department of State Contents, Solicitor for the Department of Commerce and Labor, duties of....... State, duties of ...... ie Solicitor of the Treasury, duties of. ......c..ccevvivrnnes Office of. i ei es aes Appoiniments, dutlesof....... .c...... ice Porelgn Commerce, duties of =... ....v oe renee Indexes and Archives, duties of................ Rolls and Eibrary,; duties of... .... coi eeveren Trade Relations, duties of... ic cinnne rss A a a rp PE AN Be Sl ConsnlarBurean), QUES of ie soins ris sess iemints ae Sra ar sa ale ETT Re a Cray en el a a le A Ld i ey Diplomatic Bureau, dutiesof............occcverareresseens Tawiclerk, dutlesiof oc vai iin vs tie areas tess ssn Louisiana Purchase Exposition Conmiasion TEE mE Mexican Water Boundary Commission ............. Aare - Passport Bureau, dullesiof i... isi esvariin casein ne Secretary of State, 'blography of . .......... coer iduar es duties of ou il ai ansirei sade ara aril CommMIISSION hos ite cine wins sive vuvn noes Department of the Interior Assistant Secretary of the Interior, dities of... ... Bea Oo Pen ONS ar cast risa sees arena chHlel clerk AUtIeS Of iv vii ote atarsaisss sssaibsinsvhiesis inne sate soeie Commissioner of ‘Hducation,sdutles of... ........iveistacerscennes Indian Affairs, duties of oo... comes siien snisinions Patents duties of... ce cvs seis as ey Pensions, Autlesiof (io. ave iit irre ss ath deinen the General Land Office, duties of .............. Director of the Geological Survey, dutiesof ..............ccu..n.. First Assistant Secretary of the Interior, duties of General TL anQiOCe tr i a ee ee ene ea a ae hee Office of Commissioner of Raflroads.... ..... cco cesrersenvnnscsovsios BAucatlon ii iacisiieme save ts msioniosie Indinn Allalrs. ue es irae sarineins the Geological Survey . or over elo vue. ote Pe ON CE, a ee a a ry a a nbd Ae ee Re Rn Pension AZENCY | vos tui devnisn soins sissisies shins sainiv scorns ok te tete ‘Secretary of the Interior, biography of ............ccceveeone..Lee Autles ofl. irri sesansannsitsravnnse Department ol the NAVY, cc voit vert veer es sis ivoie ss dunainn sets nsec vos on sunsniotnssinenwoseeess Assistant Secretary of the Navy, dutiesof................ Saisie ans board of MSpection and SURVEY... cite ciivs cevesisinnes sivsinivn drives medical examiners, i. cie iia i hea ie Cranes eae Burean of Construction and Repair. coi. Lo cai vero vena duties of EE SR en Baulpment ori i el See ss dil erm ee Quiles of. rr a eR aR es res Medicine and SUIGeTY.Cc. cv iis cae vis dnrnnivsios sersiinies dqutlesol ce aan Navigation. vi rc vre rs aesninevs nt Ts A Raa ea RA AES Of Cah aa rr i Ca sete OTANATICE ccna snl ira a aire les seat purteie tint on wlgeioieain’s Auties of eT Ee sae dhe Steam Engineering... . sets sovaidsivans vosnion on nssos dutiesof...... ....%... Sse wae eR as Supplies and ACCOUNTS ves cs vivrviesvie seinen vviveiosive Svvissmeis | XIV Congressional Directory. q Page. Department of the Navy, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, duties of............. FEF 277 Vards and Docks... hint hav Taner ia sre ea ea es 241 | Aue Of ais as 275 ll general board..... Brinn visas sin ive Saipan tay niin eer hr ee ene a a 242 | \ Hydrographic. Officer. . ... i. 50 hess thins RA CNL 240 Marine Barracls. on a ae ie a 243 | Corps, ALES Of i oa ash car msnh vais Srna rae 278 REAdqUATECES ais cot i Resse ocarins smsiens svn sosiian sn’ 243 Museum of Hygiene and Medical School............c.uuu... a ar 242 Naval examining board =... cco ss asiornts cansves esse steesiaies 243 QISDENSALY vic veiv vr rrmsliciossnsianshiniinsssstonssessin Baeiesreimateiniere 242 [l hospitals. ivi oa a its devas swe Yee, ren Tha 242 Hh ll Th LLB AI rr pe DE RA Te ee iog3 retiring board. ....... ry ES Rr Tl FRE, ia 243 Navy Pay OfICe coo seis sin ve sats s adjoin nave se ton sae Banani oo areleiee 242 yard and station .......... SRE Tel ere er wlivieieniceianior: 2A Office of Naval Intelllgence. . ....cceasve sion sesnsessvene sein siveie sie 240 Wak Recordsand TAbrary:. oii. ove ceecaiiveneins 241 EE Tr Er le a oe 239 Judge- Advocate- General Ry RT I eet 2AT duties of ..ooe creo vias, 277 Secretary of the Navy, DIOGraphy of ...... 0s ceeeisssies vesessesnseriens 239 dutlesiof.. no ii iit. vs ees oven in OUS Department of the reasury ii i ii i esti ve sc la oo aS pase aaa aes TM Assistant Secretaries of the I'reasury, duties of....... vouvsiesiaenti 258 Auditor for the Interior Department..........ocoveenennns Vernon 232 duties of i. orn on ha, 260 Navy Department... oi sevens 232 | dutiesof ..... nln, 261 Post-Office Departirenil oc. ih. oevres eens sn ves snainen 232 dutles.of ....0. ........ 261 State and other Departments. ............... os». 232 dutlesof ......... 261 Treasury Department]. i... secre 231 dutiesof.... ....c. varesvs 260 War Department. . oo... a aes sashes ales 231 : - dutiesof uo... ovo. rari 260 ! Bureau of Engraving and Printing ............. re TR sole 27 duties of... .0.... 0... 266 | chick clerk, duties of... viv. ds a sae sane en 279 Commissioner of Internal REVENUE. ....v ec. vi vissnesongenes ever 23d duties of... a veneers 265 | Comptroller of the CUrreney i, i. ee i.e aensiosnivess 233 AUER Ol rt te esas Seeniies 265 | FP ICABHEY vod sre sh tens sr Tents ar an ev 231 [| dutiesof . 0... oll a san, 279 Divector of the MAN: oo vc iticu se tyr nis dunt vrs aalot san ss cs woiis velsals 233 ; dultesiof voles an aT, 263 [| General Superintendent Iife-Saving Service, duties of .......... 266 || : Life-Saving Service. ......aveecceeernre cress aes seers 231 - i Marine-FHospital Service .. us. canis i sachin Sei vbeaiinis 233 ' Hl dutlesiof. cu ots. i ir re anaes 206 National Bank Redemption Agency............. .ceocuevereseens 233 Register of the Treasury... .. coils. oo. ees coins stains eve D2 duties Of. rr area 264 secret service division... coon dd 231 Secretary of the Treasury, biography of.................. cave re- 230 dutlesiof 0 i ih a rn ds 258 Supervising Architect;dutles of =. ei evince eien 279 | Architects Office... -....... I er A BARS 230 | Treasurerof the United States. os... cs. oo vines 232 i dutiesof ..... 0.5, Rr 283 Bepartment of Wat oi ats ert rta ia av sna a eh oe a Assistant Secretary of War. LET esa sa Le 267 Board of Ordnance and Fortifications, ........ vous. oul oi as 237 <+ Bureawof Tnsalas Mialrs..... ooo oe ree aes 236 chief clere, AUIES OF ov. ro Tiassa site tas seis it hres dei es 237 Contents. XV Page Department of War, Commission to the Philippine Islands................ $a vine dalrn ee tins raiehin 237 dulies oles. od ro 266 General Stall oo 2 alas eae Se LS 234 AUHESOf ve A Ea ea ho 268 Ysthmian Canal Commission ... on iatan ts de a 236 Military bareaus dntlediofl 5 i in ee a Ee a OT 268 Office of Public Buildings and Grounds and Washington Monument ..... 236 the Chicl of BnoiNeets in. aliases ah rei 236 BEGET RE Or ee eR ee 236 Signal OMicer... int i hin is ae 236 Commissary-Cenerali...i ... coun siies as tate, oo 235 Inspector=Generall. co . nh Ra aitinnl see a El 235 Judge: Advocate-General. i iii sa bnre basilar sie selena 235 PaynmaglerGeneralie. oo iis frien a 235 Quariermaster-Ceneral rer ul. oor 0 Thal ae ne ie 235 SUTHCONEEEAEIII TN SS sa oa ans cease conidia iia nh oY 235 Washington Aqueduct. coi or fl a ee A ERR 236 Phiippive Comission imal is oh a = aa] Se 236 Secretary'of Wan Biography oli ll. 0. 234 AL LR eR i a a a 2677 Departmental telegraph, nanagessiof. 0 0 0 0 tno OE a Rees a 216 Deparinre of passengertrains btimeol 1. 0 Lo anni Sree a Ei at Ba 352 Dispaichi agents, Depatiment of State. fo an so Loca na STS nl nai ald 229 Diagram hasement Joos ol Caplol vires ser ee ins 218 gallevetloorolCapliol i orm iti sn Lh a Le A ET 222 privicipaliflooroff Caplio ai nie re Ry ee 220 of seats on the floor of THE HOUSE: 10.2. cvs ceie ns rs ere ai 208 LEE AR ee Le SO LR Sa a 206 Diplomatic Bureau, dutiesiof x oon rhe i Sea sieves Sil iaan 257 Director of the Geological Survey, duties of .......iive renin lewis erdee wis inieian Co Cale TiE 279 Mn ee ae a SG ele eicy a ET re ra 233 Fines Lal Se le a Sins wielnive isis alenisiate 265 Directory of apartment houses, clubs, and hotels ...........oovevuennn. Winnie ® Sele tivarsieis eseniaie nile nell K78 rooms, United States Senators... ti tm ceeenrrie ir soe tts edb 224 the House of Representatives... .. ....0.cevrerr ens vaerss vie snes mainimealainien ne si wieie’e 209 theSenate. i. selssivasaisaine sane sitive 2% sien snivioe ,207 Disbursing clerk, Department of Justice, duties of....... bois raisin ie vienin cin ut ls sins ininaininte os ecto nieilie 272 District of Columbia, Comnissionets Office. .....cceeceners ver ovaries 343 fire department. .............. sieisaiamis c sieien su sis inin dan enn tn siti sme ne aie 345 health department vn. ci ie sive iv a a “346 Metropolitansholice vile Tl Sr rir at er a 346 aH ITT Aes Se ES ees De 343 originand form of COVEINMENE .. ..oeihsevseinrs: reer ite ie 346 POC CONE oo oe nee 346 Division of accounts, Department of Tastice, QUES or it ah 2y1 and disbursements, Department of Agriculture..............vvvueeennnn. 250 duties of... ............. 28 biological survey, Department of Agrienlture .-. .. 0. iiss 250 dutiesiof iC on ea 282 publications, Deparimentof Agticnlture....v.. cco. esac ee 250 dubiesal.... oi re a 283 Document roomei the onse..; «ca... 0 oo ln, ea 213 Boorkeeper of the House, Officenf...... voir i rt ae 354s sana aieive tied vee wrens 214 Examinations forcivilservice.. i ...... coe li i AE ae ae 289 Examiner of titles, Department of Justice, dutiesof...... o.oo... eee 272 Fifty-ninth Congress, unofficial list of Representatives and Delegates-elect..:......... cena 422 Filling of vacancies in civil service...... AE A EU ft ar a a ar Sy SNE ee i CE 289 Biredepartment. oo i sn aL 344 First Assistant Secretary of the Interior, Quiiesof......c0c ie eis 278 Postmastenn@eneral Su no a a ee 238 dutfegiofl. cn a a a 272 Poldingwomofthe House... ov oi Lh te sn A a 214 EE Te Re LR ae aa ee ee 212 Horelzn consular officers in the United SIBLes. ui. o.oo: i te cei a 324 embassies and legations to the United States...v.ccevte seo sessr veer 298 Fourth Avsleinnt Postmaslers0eneral........ le i osais rerrii a 239 XVI Congressional Directory. Page. Gallery: floor of the Capitol, assighment Of TOOMBS OMG vv eiee os sora cite ie ies ssnrse sewn sn ns 223 RTE Eh 4 1 Brera asa me GE SIC a CL i Oe Se Sy 222 General agent, Department of Justice, dutiesof .............. NR a Sn ee 271 board, Department of the NaVY ... or ve. co voae vohaiinasirnss series siinsssinsionssstissnan. 242 En er re a A EB A I Er rE a A I rT A iT 244 Staff, Department of War... ii ets iit sin sana vn sais sion sewers Ve vue 3 234 Autles Oh a ES i pia ne dre le wy we ea 268 Geological Survey ..... PE A Nm DS Ra] 246 Government Board, I ouisiana Purchase BXposition ....c.. ..ciineierecrens snes srsivesm rss 256 Hospital forthe TNSae . 000i. es sans snes caine selene sawn on Saisie sin n ves 348 Printing Office .......... Es a a a re 253 EL ET Em a I a i ES i Eh ia 290 Governors of the'several States and ‘Terrliories .... ..coo se caiiteiv re vases insaiveinnvensiioinins ves 297 Headquarters of the Marine Corps... c vers. sve esrnsrrsvsrennovevsvssisisssvetorvessinainon dove 243 Health Qeparimment. coc ven ss assis ras bvrsissionis sie sits selon siting vieionicitionioniuss Cele sv ositisvivseivis 345 Heating and ventilation of the House ............ ee RS RL SI Ls RE ST el 215 SEA Ese sre te sy we eins iiss sae tin rials is eres Srinsle vols suv irises 212 History and descripiionof the Capifol.. i. cui... ors overt esis srs ss weiss sinnnvsnsvriness 217 Library of Congress wu... co. . ni ev ste sivierr nan ivesn se wa 216 Home and local address of membersiof Congress... ... ve .. o eue sieve vesanrivisainnn- 362 Hotels: cle, Aireclony Of... i ei Gove ia crises vsssineins Sw iws Sbiswis minis bb ve sislestuis ais wate sats 371 House ofl Representatives, Chaplain of. . uiiteais iii cers: sossnssvvr tintrrinsins oe rrintivenns 213 clerks:to committees of hu. en ava ne cies ARE ER 214 Clerk’sidocument room... i... ove nese ren ite 212 commitlees Of iar rr hee eh ye end see a ie wes wn allen a 178 diagramoel geal in. 0 i i a se ees vies ees 208 document Too OF tu. csi eco snie cos wn riscins sriveanvbe sun sins ion meatier 211 Dootkeeper; Office of oie. va cere cv vicer Saas Sve nnies pe 214 FolAING TOOL OL ae. ait vias es rie sy eiein sim iaTe wan se iui e ie wn ni racnie 214 heating and ventilation of... 7... vi cave c.f eive dolrive town as revs 215 3H Bry mn ae A SL Se Ee Ne SS 213 Officeol the Clerkof, oar ior i Tera mn sami sdens 210 official stenographers to committeesiof ............ 2... iv. ovens, 213 post-office OF i ii asa sane s a ee ons 215 Sergeantat-Arms, Office of reece i ore css essen nmen rar siveivsy 213 rr EA a EE TL DER PR Ll a 5 EAL 213 Howard University ...... rr Try Re OE a PR ER A a 348 Hydrographic Office 1... ce i ei eos vsinivs vs svsome sivas verve voy vas solv ais mn siusismiveinnis sare 240 Ensane Hospital or i iii ies eiineiiias a Er A A ee 348 Inspector-General, Office Of ccc vane ion dress ios srs ana mss dairies sds nin nin ss ahisin sess unismsie nw vete 235 International BMChANGES.. «cic uit aris corsa it deen s Fas Eo amie alate w smie monn SE Em ve 255 Interstate-Commerce Commision &.... co... ec Ls eee se svi nin us salsivnwmsiaaias wateie sins 253 ET LE ee a 287 IntrodnGlory MOLE. oi. ei esis ssi essen vr ins snns ss tna vases RS PTR SE SL Ee I11 Isthmian Canal Commission........... pera a LS SE Se Rr 236 civil-service regulations for employees.............. rr ee 289 Judge-Advocate-General of the Army, Office of... .coviiiiiiiinn ieee eee 235 NAVY i die ev on ins sists ER EE eT Tr Rr 241 dutlesiof Jr Sn re a se tee sR eu aes 277 Justices of the PEACE... vc ciivh ve vns inelse cuituinto a sls anise wismismsivemsissosine sui: Ee Re OR 296 Taw.clerk, Department of State, Quties of I........coir ier viens i seen ee 258 Library, Department of Agriculture .......ieeveeeeiiiiaea sii sar resraseesesionsensesvssesenies 250 TAH (a re ER EL a a i RE Ae A it 284 of Congress, historyand description of... .....c. coo. ie votre sess ease cnn ve 226 I FoR Er re EA Re SE a i le Re BIRO 227 THE TOUR ae a de ee eS a Rey er ev A A ewe on 213 TAfe-Saving Servite... .. . J iver vrs re sn srt vriviennt shonin Ras aies sans aie akin tiie ddr eee svae 231 la a) Dn a ry de i Re LS es Sen hl ILight-House Board.......... ee A Tl tet hls a rs Fee on sal ee en 251 eth HT Loe BE re i er SS Gi SN DS LE TR Se ie a 285 Iouisiana Purchase Exposition COMMISSION ........eeeuieeauiiiniserieniarerseetaenasees sree 230 Maps of Congressional districts .........ciivevienniiie ere eareetansnsecnenetaeenn. ra 373 MAT INe BarIaCKS cc i on sadii nis vitae elie eet sisloity Siviaie tia wins Re de Arete 243 Corps, dutiesiofl i. ive. 5. ooo lm vad se BA AE an le aed 278 TIoSDHAL ServiCe ; Population (1900), 185,986. WILLIAM CHARLES ADAMSON, Democrat, of Carrollton, was born at Bowdon, Ga., August 13, 1854; spent his youth alternately in working on the farmand 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 1835 to 1839, and was attorney for the city of Carrollton for a number of years; was Presidential elector in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition, receiving 2,883 votes. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Campbell, Clayton, Dekalb, Douglas, Fulton, Newton, Rockdale, and Walton (8 counties). Population (1909), 211,527. I,EONIDAS FELIX LIVINGSTON, Democrat, of Covington, 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 prominent in all political struggles in his State for many years; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without oppo- sition, receiving 2,485 votes. | { { . : 1 ] i i { | 1 GEORGIA.] Senators and Representatives. > ry SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Baldwin, Bibb, Butts, Fayette, Henry, Jones, Monroe, Pike, Spalding, and Upson (10 counties). Population (1900), 193,852. 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 1885, and to the State senate in 1888 and 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 nomi- nated by the Democrats as a candidate for Congress, and was elected to the Fifty- fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition, receiving 4,522 votes. On April 29, 1904, was unanimously renominated at the Democratic primary for the Fifty-ninth Con- gress, receiving 15,422 votes, the entire vote cast for Congressman, and was reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield (13 counties). Population (1900), 197,612. 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 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 5,305 votes, to 86o for S. J. McKnight, Populist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Clarke, Elbert, Franklin, Greene, Hart, Jasper, Madison, Morgan, Oconee, Oglethorpe, Putnam, and Wilkes (12 counties). : Population (1900), 191,026. 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, 1830; 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, Fifty- ‘sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition, receiving 3,139 votes. NINTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Banks, Cherokee, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Gilmer, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Jack- son, Lumpkin, Milton, Pickens; Rabun, Towns, Union, and White (17 counties). Population (1900), 196,435. 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 schools and in the 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 58-3D—2D ED——2 13 Congressional Directory. [GEORGIA of the special committee to redistrict the State; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 4,749 votes, to 20 for J. D. Dobb. TENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Columbia, Glascock, Jefferson, Hancock, Lincoln, McDuffie, Richmond, Taliaferro, Warren, Washington, and Wilkinson (11 counties). Population (1900), 181,395. THOMAS WILLIAM HARDWICK, Democrat, of Sandersville, was born Decem- ber 9, 1872, at Thomasville, Ga.; attended college first at Gordon Institute, Barnes- ville, Ga., and later at Mercer University, Macon, Ga.; graduated from the latter institution in June, 1892, with the degree of A. B.; graduated from Lumpkin Law School, University of Georgia, in June, 1893, with the degree of B. L..; admitted to the bar in June, 1893, and began the practice of law in September, 1893, at Sandersville. In March, 1895, was appointed by Governor Atkinson prosecuting attorney for Washington County, which position he held until January, 1897, when he resigned; in 1898 was elected to the Georgia house of representatives from Washington County for the years 1898 and 1899; in 1900 was reelected for 1gor and 1902. In 1900-1901 was captain of Company D, Sixth Regiment Infantry, Georgia State troops (Wash- ington Rifles). Married on April 25, 1894, to Maude Elizabeth Perkins, of Washing- ton County, Ga. In June, 1902, was nominated by the Democratic party, after a hot contest, over Hon. William H. Fleming, of Richmond County, to represent the Tenth Georgia district in the Fifty-eighth Congress, and was elected without oppo- sition, receiving 2,675 votes. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTres.—Appling, Brooks, Camden, Charlton, Clinch, Coffee, Dodge, Echols, Glynn, Irwin, Johnson, Laurens, Lowndes, Montgomery, Pierce, Telfair, Ware, and Wayne (18 counties). Population (1900), 227,355. 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition, receiving 3,606 votes. IDAHO. SENATORS. FRED T. DUBOIS, Democrat, of Blackfoot, was born in Crawford County, Ill., May 29, 1851; received a public-school and collegiate education, graduating from Yale Col- lege in the class of 1872; was secretary of the board of railway and warehouse commis- sioners of Illinois in 1875-76; went to Idaho Territory in 1880 and engaged in business; was United States marshal of Idaho from August 25, 1882, till September 1, 1886; was elected to the Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses as a Republican Delegate, being the last Delegate from the Territory, having secured the admission of the Territory to the Union on July 3, 1890; was chairman of the first delegation from the new State to the Republican national convention held at Minneapolis, Minn., in June, 1892; was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican December 18, 1890, for the term ending March 3, 1897, and took his seat March 4, 1891; was chairman of the Repub- lican delegation from his State to the national Republican convention at St. Louis, in 1896, and left the convention and the party when they declared for the single gold standard; in 1896 was the candidate of the Silver Republicans of Idaho for reelection to the Senate and was beaten after four weeks balloting by the combined votes of the Democrats, Populists, and Republicans, receiving 30 votes to 40 for Henry Heitfeld; was nominated in State convention in 19oo by the Democrats, Populists, and Silver Republicans, being classed as a Silver Republican; was elected to the United States Senate on the first ballot, receiving 41 votes, against 27 for George IL. Shoup and 2 for Jos. C. Rich, and took his seat March 4, 1901; after his election Mr. Dubois declared himself a Democrat and is a full member of that party. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. IDAHO] Senators and Representatives. 19 WELDON BRINTON HEYBURN, Republican, of Wallace, was born in Dela- ware County, Pa., May 23, 1852; his parents were Quakers, of English descent; received an academic education; previously, at Maplewood Institute, Concordville, Delaware County, Pa., under Prof. Joseph Shortledge (Yale, M. A.); and afterwards studied largely under private tutors; was admitted to the bar in 1876, and has prac- ticed law continuously since that time. "In the winter of 1883-84 he came to Sho- shone County, Idaho, and has resided there ever since. On August 12, 1903, he was married to Miss Gheretein Yeatman, of Kennett square, Chester County, Pa. Mr. Heyburn has always voted and supported the Republican ticket; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1888, 1892, and 1900; was not affected by the silver craze of 1896, and was largely instrumental in maintaining the Republican organization in Idaho during that campaign and since, which resulted in the sweeping Republican victory in 1902; was the nominee of the Republican party of Idaho for Congress in 1898, but was defeated by a fusion of the Democrats, Populists, and Silver Republicans; was elected to the United States Senate on January 13, 1903, receiving the entire Republican vote of the legislature, to succeed Henry Heitfeld, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. Population (1900), 161,772. BURTON LEE FRENCH, Republican, of Moscow, was born near Delphi, Ind., August 1, 1875, of Charles A. and Mina P. French; moved with his parents to Kearney, Nebr., in 1880, and moved to Idaho in 1882; was graduated from the University of Idaho in 19o1 with the degree.of A. B., and was fellow in the Univer- sity of Chicago in 1901 and 1902, graduating in 1903 with the degree of Ph. M.; married Winifred Hartley June 28, 1904; is an attorney at law, and member of the law firm of Orland, Smith & French; was elected upon the Republican ticket to the house of representatives in the fifth session of the Idaho legislature in 1898, and reelected in 1900, in which latter year he was the Republican caucus nominee for speaker; was nominated for the Fifty-eighth Congress by the Republicans in State convention, August 21, 1902, and elected by a majority of 7,506, receiving 32,384 votes, to 24,878 for Joseph H. Hutchinson, Democrat, 1,737 for John A. Davis, Socialist, and 636 for Herbert A. Lee, Prohibitionist, Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. ILLINOIS. SENATORS. SHELBY MOORE 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 Spring- field 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 chair- man 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, 1894, and again in 1900; 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, 1907. 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 Logan ticket, 1884; was elected to the 20 Congressional Directory, HLLINOIS, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Rifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses; was nominated for the United States Senate in State convention and elected to succeed William E. Mason, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909, REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. City oF CHIcAGO.—First and Second wards; part of the Third Ward east of Halstead street; part of the Sixth Ward north of Forty-third street. Population (1900), 237,701. MARTIN EMERICH, Democrat, of Chicago, was born in Baltimore, Md., April 27, 1847; received a public school education, after which he engaged in the import- ing business. In 1870 he was appointed ward commissioner of the poor of Baltimore, and in 1879 was elected a member of the Maryland legislature. He was a member of the Fifth Regiment Maryland National Guard, and of the staff of Governors Hamilton and Jackson, with the rank of colonel; married Miss Lena Strauss Sep- tember 27, 1871. In 1887 Mr. Emerich removed to Chicago, where he resides at 2421 Michigan boulevard; is interested in manufacturing, and is prominently iden- tified with societies, clubs, and charities of the city; has been grand president of District Grand Lodge No. 5, Independent Order of B’nai B'rith, grand president of District Grand Lodge No. 3, Order Kesher, Shel Barsil, grand master of Improved Order Free Sons of Israel of the United States and chairman of the court of appeals of the order, past master of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, past worshipful master in his Masonic lodge, past high priest of Royal Arch Chapter Masons, mem- ber of council of High Priests of Masons, and a life member of the most worshipful Grand Lodge and Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons and order of High Priests of Maryland; was one of the founders of the orphan asylum of District Grand Iodge No. 5, at Atlanta, Ga., and a member of the orphan asylum board at Baltimore, also at Cleveland, and a director of the Chicago Home for Jewish Orphans, and director of the Chicago Orthodox Home for the Aged. In 1892 Mr. Emerich entered Chicago politics, being proposed as a candidate for county commissioner by a special com- mittee of 25 at a business men’s mass meeting, and was nominated and elected by a large majority; served as chairman of the committee on finance, chairman of the committee on. judiciary, and was a member of the various other important com- mittees; in 1goI was elected South Town assessor; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,591 votes, to 15,339 for Martin B. Madden, Republican. and 415 for Howard T. Wilcoxson, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT. City oF CHicaco.—Seventh, Eighth, and Thirty-third wards; part of the Sixth Ward south of Forty-third street. Population (1900), 181,936. JAMES R. MANN, Republican, of Chicago, was born in 1856; was educated in the public schools; is 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; was for four years a member of the city council of Chicago; was chairman of the Illinois State Republican convention in 1894, and was chairman of the Republican county convention in Chi- cago in 1895, and again in 1902; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,697 votes, to 9,532 for Frank Brust, Democrat, 557 for Charles R. Wakeley, Prohibitionist, and 2,332 for Bernard Berlyn, Socialist Democrat. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. THIRD DISTRICT. Cook CouNTy.—Towns of Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, I,emont, Orland, Palos, Rich, Thornton, and Worth. City oF CHICAGO.—Thirty-first and Thirty-second wards; parts of the Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth wards south of Fifty-first street. Population (1900), 186,140. WILLIAM WARFIELD WILSON, Republican, of Chicago, was born March 2, 1869, at Ohio, Bureau County, Ill.; had a literary, commercial, and legal education, 5 ILLINOIS] 4 Senators and Representatives. 21 receiving the degrees of LL. B. and L. B.; is a lawyer by profession, admitted to the bar in 1893; married Sarah M. Moore October 11, 1891; has never held any political office or position; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 13,977 votes, to 10,517 for D. M. Smith, jr., Democrat, 543 for F. D. Brooke, Prohibitionist, and 1,073 for Joshua Wanhope, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT. City OF CHICAGO.—Fifth Ward; part of the Third Ward west of Stuart avenue; part of the Fourth Ward west of Halstead street; part of the Eleventh and Twelfth wards south of Twenty- second street; part of the Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth wards north of Fifty-first street. Population (1900), 201,870. GEORGE P. FOSTER, Democrat, of Chicago, was born in Dover, N. J.; is a lawyer by profession; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,698 votes, to 850 for F. Finsterbach, Socialist, and 317 for D. J. Stewart, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. City or CHICAGO.—Ninth and Tenth wards; part of the Eleventh and Twelfth wards north of Twenty-second street. Population (1900), 212,978. JAMES McANDREWS, Democrat, of Chicago, was born in Woonsocket, R. I., October 22, 1862; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 12,346 votes, to 1,263 for Jacob Winnen, Socialist, and 304 for C. O. Bassett, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT. Cook CountTy.—Towns of Cicero, I,yons, Proviso, Riverside, and Stickney. City OF CHICAGO.—Thirteenth, Twentieth, and Thirty-fourth wards; part of the Thirty-fifth Ward south of the Chicago and North-Western Railway right of way. Population (1900), 196,610. WILLIAM LORIMER, Republican, of Chicago, was born in Manchester, Eng- land; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, and Fifty-sixth Congresses, and . reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,540 votes, to 15,555 for Allan C. Durborow, Democrat, 536 for H. P. Kuesch, Socialist, and 667 for Eugene W. Chafin, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Cook County.— Towns of Barrington, Elkgrove, Hanover, Leyden, Maine, Norwood Park, Pala- tine, Schaumberg, and Wheeling. City oF CHIcaGco.—Twenty-seventh and Twenty-eighth wards; part of the Fourteenth and Fif- teenth wards west of Robey street; part of the Thirty-fifth Ward north of the Chicago & North-Western Railway right of way. Population (1900), 268,163. PHILIP KNOPF, Republican, of Chicago, was born November 18, 1847, on a farm in Lake County, Ill.; enlisted in Company I, One hundred and forty-seventh Regiment Illinois Volunteer Infantry, and served until the regiment was mustered out at Savannah, Ga.; came to Chicago in 1866, and attended Bryant & Stratton’s College for one year; was in the teaming business until 1884, when he was appointed chief deputy coroner and served eight years; in 1886 he was elected State senator, and was reelected in 1890, serving eight years; in 1894 was elected county clerk of Cook County, and was reelected in 1898, serving eight years; in 1896 was a delegate to the national Republican convention at St. Louis; isat present a member of the State central committee, was married to Miss Carrie Fehlman, of Lake County, I1l., December 23, 1880; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,167 votes, to 13,443 for John M. Hess, Democrat, 3,471 for James H. Bard, Socialist, and 496 for Frederick C. Ebinger, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. City oF CHICAGO.—Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, and Nineteenth wards; part of the Fifteenth Ward east of Robey street. Population (1900), 286,643. 22 Congressional Directory. [ILLINOIS. NINTH DISTRICT. City OF CHIcAGO.—Twenty-first and Twenty-second wards; part of the Twenty-third Ward east of Halstead street; part of the Twenty-fifth Ward south of Graceland avenue. Population (1900), 220,766. HENRY SHERMAN BOUTELIL, Republican, of Chicago, was born in Boston, Mass., March 14, 1856; removed to Chicago in 1863; graduated from Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill., in 1874, and from Harvard University in 1876; received the degree of A. M. from Harvard (constitutional history and international law) in 1877; 1s a trustee of the Northwestern University; 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 to the United States Senate; received the degree of LL. D. from the Northwestern University, June, 1904; is a director of the American Insti- tute of Germanics; has been president of the Phi Beta. Kappa Society, Northwestern University; twice president of the Illinois Society Sons of the American Revolution; twice president of the Harvard Club of Chicago; twice president of the University Club of Chicago; was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress to fill the unexpired term of Edward Dean Cooke, deceased, and to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,857 votes to 13,774 for Lockwood Honoré, Democrat, 1,305 votes for George T. Millar, Socialist, and 288 votes for Andrew T. Lofgren, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. Cook County.—Towns of Evanston, Niles, New Prior, and Northfield. City oF CHicAGo.—Twenty-fourth and Twenty-sixth wards; part of the Twenty-third Ward west of Halstead street; part of the Twenty-fifth Ward north of Graceland avenue. LAKE COUNTY. Population (1900), 189,552. 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, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, receiving 15,318 votes, to 9,733 for J. J. Philpin, Democrat, 986 for Gus Lohse, Socialist, and 590 for M. M. Parkhurst, Prohibitionist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Dupage, Kane, McHenry, and Will (4 counties). Population (1900), 211,511. HOWARD MALCOLM SNAPP, Republican, of Joliet, was born at Joliet, Ill., September 27, 1855; was educated in the public schools, with three years at the Chicago University; was admitted to the bar in 1879, and has since practiced his profession; was a delegate to the national Republican convention of 1896; was master in chancery from 1884 to 1903; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,549 votes, to 9,968 for J. O. Munroe, Democrat, 927 for S. C. Reber, Prohibitionist, and 623 for C. S. Getting, Socialist. TWELFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Boone, Dekalb, Grundy, Kendall, Lasalle, and Winnebago (6 counties). Population (1900), 218,771. CHARLES E. FULLER, Republican, of Belvidere, was born near Belvidere, I11., March 31, 1849; was admitted to the bar of Illinois in 1870; was city attorney of Belvidere two terms; State’s attorney for Boone County one term; representative in the general assembly of Illinois three terms; State senator two terms, making four- teen years’ service in the legislature; circuit judge for six years; raised a regiment for the Spanish-American war in 1898, and was commissioned colonel by Governor Tanner, but the regiment was never called into the service; married to Sarah A. Mackey in 1873; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,812 votes, to 9,356 for Julius Steward, Democrat, and 2,558 for Frank G. Regan, Prohibitionist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, and Whiteside (6 counties). Population (1900), 172,162. 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 TLLINOIS.] Senators and Representatives. 23 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 death of Hon. R. M. A. Hawk; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,229 votes, to 9,401 for Lewis Dickes, Democrat, and 729 for S. T. Shirley, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, Rock Island, and Warren (6 counties). Population (1900), 170,820. 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, Fifty-fifth, and Fifty-sixth Congresses from the Fifteenth district, and elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress from the new Fourteenth district, receiving 19,404 votes, to 13,195 for J. W. Lush, Democrat; 1,118 for R. F. Kindler, Socialist, and 988 for P. M. Carrishon, Prohibitionist. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Adams, Fulton, Henry, Knox, and Schuyler (5 counties). Population (1900), 213,049. GEORGE W. PRINCE, Republican, of Galesburg, was born March 4, 1854, in Taze- well County, Ill.; attended the public schools and graduated from Knox College, Galesburg, Ill, 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 a vacancy caused by the death of Hon. P. S. Post; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,899 votes, to 16,045 for Jonas W. Olson, Democrat; 899 for J. Hoffman Batten, Prohibitionist, and 6o1 for Homer Whalen, Socialist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bureau, Marshall, Peoria, Putnam, Stark, and Tazewell (6 counties). Population (1900), 194,243. JOSEPH VERDI 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 24 Congressional Directory. [ILLINOIS. 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,360 votes, to 15,623 for J. M. Neihaus, Democrat, and 573 for H. H. Peters, Prohibitionist. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Ford, Livingston, Logan, McLean, and Woodford (5 counties). Population (1900), 178,739. JOHN A. STERLING, Republican, of Bloomington, was born on a farm near Leroy, I11., February 1, 1857; attended the public schools, and took the classical course at the Illinois Wesleyan University, graduating in June, 1881, with the degree of A. B., and three years later received the degree of M. A.; after graduation was superin- tendent of the public schools of Lexington for two years; was admitted to the bar in December, 1884, since which time he has been a member of the law firm of Welty & Sterling, in the active practice of the law at Bloomington. He was State’s attorney of McLean County from 1892 to 1896; and a member at large of the Republican State central committee of Illinois from 1896 to 1898; was married May 20, 1886, to Clara M. Irons, of Bloomington; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,331 votes, to 14,040 for Z. F. Yost, Democrat, and 1,344 for William P. Allen, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress by a plurality of 10,552. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Clark, Cumberland, Edgar, Iroquois, Kankakee, and Vermilion (6 counties). Population (1900), 209,233. JOSEPH G. CANNON, Republican, of Danville, was born at Guilford, N. C., 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 22,941 votes, to 15,254 for H. C. Bell, Democrat, and 1,166 for N. J. Wright, Prohibitionist. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Champaign, Coles, Dewitt, Douglas, Macon, Moultrie, Piatt, and Shelby (8 counties). Population (1900), 228,896. VESPASIAN WARNER, Republican, of Clinton, was born at Mount Pleasant (now Farmer City), Dewitt County, Ill., April 23, 1842; in 1843 removed to Clinton, I11.; attended common and select schools there, and Lombard University, Gales- burg, Il1l.; was studying law at Clinton when, on June 13, 1861, he enlisted as a pri- vate soldier in Company E, 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 1863, 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 1868; 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; ILLINOIS.) Senators and Representatives. 25 was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 24,155 votes, to 19,895 for Wilber B. Hinds, Democrat, and 1,241 for H. S. Mavity, Prohibitionist. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Brown, Calhoun, Cass, Greene, Jersey, Mason, Menard, Morgan, Pike, and Scott (10 counties), Population (1900), 184,593. HENRY T. RAINEY, Democrat, of Carrollton, was born at Carrollton, Ill., August 20, 1860, and has resided in the piace of his birth all his life; was educated in the public schools of his native town, at Knox Academy and Knox College, Galesburg, Ill., and at Amherst College, Massachusetts, from which latter institution he graduated with honors in 1883, with the degree of A. B.; three years later this institution also conferred upon him the degree of A. M. for post-graduate work. He studied law in the Union College of Law, Chicago, Ill., for two years after his graduation from Am- herst College. He graduated from the law school in 1885, being the valedictorian in a class of over fifty students. This institution also conferred upon him the degree of B. I,. Soon afterwards he was admitted to the bar. Since that time he has prac- ticed law at Carrollton, Ill. During the earlier part of his career as a lawyer he was master in chancery of Greene County, Ill., for six years, resigning that position in order to attend to his increasing law practice. He was married on the 27th day of June, 1888, to Miss Ella McBride, of Harvard, Nebr. He was nominated for Con- gress by the Democratic Congressional convention for the Twentieth district of Illinois at Jacksonville on the 20th day of August, 1902, it being the forty-second anniversary of his birth. At the election which followed he received 20,165 votes; James H. Danskin, the Republican candidate, received 14,889 votes; J. H. Mor- phis, nominated by the Prohibition party, received 642 votes. He belongs to the Knights of Pythias, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Modern Woodmen, the Mutual Protective League, and the Elks. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT, CouNTIES.—Christian, Macoupin, Montgomery, and Sangamon (4 counties), Population (1900), 177,475. BEN FRANKIIN CALDWELL, 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 during the years 1877 and 1878; was a member of the Illinois house of representa- tives, 1882-1886; was a member of the Illinois State senate, 1890-1894; resides on a farm 9 miles from Springfield and 2 miles from the village of Chatham, where he has resided continuously since April, 1853; upon his election to the Fifty-sixth Congress, in 1898, he resigned the presidency of the Farmers’ National Bank of Springfield, which he had held since 1885; is president of the Caldwell State Bank of Chatham and has been since its organization; was elected from the Seventeenth Illinois dis- trict to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected in 1902 from the Twenty-first Illinois district to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,774 votes, to 16,998 for Leroy Anderson, Republican, and 726 for J. Jay Dugan, Prohibitionist, showing a plurality of 3,776, which is 2,060 in excess of the Democratic plurality in the counties comprising that district at the election in 1900, TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT, CoUNTIES,—Bond, Madison, Monroe, St. Clair, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1900), 200,830. WILLIAM A. RODENBERG, Republican, of East St. Louis, was born near Chester, 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 con- vention of 1896 at St. Louis; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress; was appointed a member of the United States Civil Service Commission by President McKinley, 26 Congressional Directory. [ILLINOIS. March 25, 1901; resigned April 1, 1902, in order to again make the race for Congress, - was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,101 votes, to 18,747 for Frederick J. Kern, Democrat, 235 for William W. Cox, Socialist I,abor, and 39 for Frank Rommerskirchen, Populist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT, CounTIiES.—Clinton, Crawford, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Jefferson, Lawrence, Marion, Rich- land, and Wabash (10 counties). Population (1900), 211,830. JOSEPH BURNS 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, Ill., 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 schoal 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 and Fifty- seventh Congresses and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,735 votes, to 17,557 for G, J. Van Sant, Republican, 1,145 for W, H. Bowles, Prohibi- tionist, and 130 for D, T. Harbison, People’s Party. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT, CouNTIES.—Clay, Edwards, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Johnson, Massac, Pope, Saline, Wayne, and White (11 counties). : Population (1900), 190,438. JAMES ROBERT 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 elected to the Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,971 votes, to 17,719 votes for Pleasant I, Chapman, Republican, and 651 votes for W, I. Morris, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Alexander, Franklim, Jackson, Perry, Pulaski, Randolph, Union, and Williamson (8 counties). Population (1900), 185,721. 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 schools; graduated from the literary department of McKendree College, at Lebanon, Ill, in 1868; read law in Fairfield, Ill., after which he entered the law department of the university at Bloomington, Ind., from which he graduated in 1870; was admitted to the practice of law by the supreme court of Illinois the same year, since which time he has resided in 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,743 votes, to 16,444 for James Lingle, Democrat, and 958 for Clark Braden, Prohibitionist. INDIANA.] Senators and Representatives. 27 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 a delegate at large to the Republican national convention at Philadelphia in 1900, and as chairman of the committee on resolutions reported the platform; was a delegate at large to the Republican national convention at Chicago in 1904, and was chairman of the Indiana delegation; was unanimously nominated by that convention for Vice Presi- dent of the United States, and elected; 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, to succeed Daniel W. Voorhees, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1897; was reelected in 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. ALBERT J. BEVERIDGE, Republican, of Indianapolis, was born on a farm in Highland County, Ohio, October 6, 1862; his father and brothers were soldiers in the Union Army; was married to Miss Katherine Maude Langsdale on Novem- ber 24, 1887, who died June 19, 1900; was admitted to the bar in 1886, and has since then devoted himself to his profession; was elected to the Senate of the United States by the sixty-first general assembly of Indiana January 17, 1899, and took his seat March 4 following. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Gibson, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburg, and Warrick (6 counties). Population (1900), 189,423. 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,524 votes, to 17,833 for John W. Spencer, Democrat, 540 for George W. Norman, Prohibitionist, 1,459 for Moses Smith, Socialist, and 41 for Samuel P. Aydelotte, Populist. : SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Daviess, Greene, Knox, Lawrence, Martin, Monroe, Owen, and Sullivan (8 counties). Population (1900), 193,657. ROBERT WALTER MIERS, Democrat, of Bloomington, was born in Decatur County, Ind., January 27, 1848; is a graduate of both the literary and the law depart- ments 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 28 Congressional Directory. [INDIANA. an unexpired term; was elected judge of the same circuit in 18go and served as judge until September, 1896, when he resigned and accepted the nomination of the Demo- cratic Congressional convention for the Second district of Indiana; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 21,162 votes, to 20,423 for John C. Chaney, Republican, 672 for Jonathan T. Hobson, Prohibitionist, 199 for William B. Wolfe, People’s, and 332 for James C. Heenan, Socialist. : THIRD DISTRICT, Counrties.—Clark, Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Orange, Perry, Scott, and Washington (9 counties). Population (1900), 180,836. WILLIAM T. ZENOR, Democrat, of Corydon, was born in Harrison County, Ind.; 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 I,eaven- worth, 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 succeeding elections till 1882; in 1884 was elected judge of the judicial circuit without opposition; was reelected in 1890; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 20,740 votes, to 16,784 for Edmund A. Maginness, Repub- lican, and 483 votes for E. C. Richardson, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty- ninth Congress, receiving 3,579 majority over Hon. J. ¥. Dillon, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Bartholomew, Brown, Dearborn, Jackson, Jefferson, Jennings, Johnson, Ohio, Ripley, and Switzerland (10 counties). Population (1900), 178,486. 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 during two sessions, and during two sessions was president pro tempore thereof; in 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 8. Holman, to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,751 votes, to 18,894 votes cast for Joshua M. Spencer, Republican, 828 for Isaac Overman, Prohibitionist, and 320 for Thomas McDonough, Socialist. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counrties.—Clay, Hendricks, Morgan, Parke, Putnam, Vermilion, and Vigo (7 counties). Population (1900), 197,799. ELIAS S. HOLLIDAY, Republican, of Brazil, was born in Aurora, Ind., March 5, 1842; was taken west by his parents, and spent his early life on a farm; secured a common school education, and later in life a partial academic education; served through the war of the rebellion in a Kansas regiment; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1873; was married to Lina Gregg on March 5, 1873; located in Brazil in that year, and has been living there, engaged in the practice of his profession, ever since; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 23,795 votes, to 21,562 votes for J. A. Wiltermood, Demo- crat, 1,231 for D. G. Carter, Prohibitionist, and 745 for James Bishop, Socialist. INDIANA.] Senators and Representatives. 29 SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Decatur, Fayette, Franklin, Hancock, Henry, Rush, Shelby, Union,'and Wayne (9 coun- Het Population (1900), 186,035. 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 & Kngle; 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, to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 23,641 votes, to 19,535 for James T. Arbuckle, Democrat, and 1,529 for Mercer Brown, | Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Population (1900), 197,227. 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; served as secretary of the national Republican Congres- sional committee through the campaigns of 1898, 1900, and 1902; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 25,191 votes, to 20,933 for Jacob P. Dunn, Democrat, 1,126 for John R. Henry, Prohibitionist, 793 for David C. McClure, Socialist, and 413 for Ernest Viewegh, Socialist Labor. : CouNTY.—Marion. EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTtieEs.—Adams, Delaware, Jay, Madison, Randolph, and Wells (6 counties). Population (1900), 221,246. 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 and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 25,842 votes, to 21,474 for James E. Truesdale, Democrat, 1,848 for Rev. David F. Lg Kain, Prohibitionist, and 529 for Sebastian Feiser, Socialist. > ; NINTH DISTRICT. { | { CouNTIES.—Boone, Carroll, Clinton, Fountain, Hamilton, Howard, Montgomery, and Tipton (8 f { counties). Population (1900), 202,915. CHARLES BEARY 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 i reelected in 1895; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Con- —- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 25,824 votes, to 23,317 I¥ for Lex J, Kirkpatrick, Democrat, and 1,548 for George B. Jones, Prohibitionist. | 30 Congressional Directory. [INDIANA, TENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Benton, Jasper, Lake, Laporte, Newton, Porter, Tippecanoe, Warren, and White (9 counties). Population (1900), 202,484. EDGAR DEAN CRUMPACKER, Republican, of Valparaiso, was born May 27, 1851, in Laporte County, Ind.; was educated in the common schools and at the Valpa- raiso 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 26,016 votes, to 19,428 for William C. Guthrie, Democrat, and 714 for R. M. Delzell, Prohibitionist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Blackford, Cass, Grant,’ Huntington, Miami, and Wabash (6 counties). Population (1900), 191,931. FREDERICK LANDIS, Republican, of Logansport, son of Abraham H. and Mary Kumler Landis, was born at Sevenmile, Butler County, Ohio, in 1872, his people removing to Logansport, in 1875, where he was admitted to the bar in 1893; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 24,390 votes, to 19,596 for John C. Nelson, Democrat, and 2,244 for Bennett S. Shugart, Prohibitionist. TWELFTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Allen, Dekalb, I,agrange, Noble, Steuben, and Whitley (6 counties). Population (1900), 174,345. JAMES M. ROBINSON, Democrat, of Fort Wayne, was born in 1861, on a nearby farm; till 15 attended common school, being a newsboy during his school days; then while at work in a shop studied law till 1881; in 1882 was admitted to the bar, and elected prosecuting attorney in 1886 and 1888, having been unanimously nominated as he was for Congress in 1896, 1898, 1900, and 1902, and elected, receiving 19,320 votes, to 19,035 for Clarence C. Gilhams, Republican, 731 for W. W. Wyrick, Pro- hibitionist, and 1,065 for M. H. Wefel, Socialist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—FKlkhart, Fulton, Kosciusko, Marshall, Pulaski, St. Joseph, and Starke (7 counties). Population (1900), 200,078. ABRAHAM LINCOLN BRICK, Republican, of South Bend, St. Joseph County, was born in that county May 27, 1860; was educated in the common schools; was graduated from the South Bend High School, and later attended Cornell, Yale, and Michigan universities; after being graduated from the law department of the Michi- gan University in 1883, immediately took up the practice of the law in South Bend, at which he has continued since; in 1886 was elected prosecutor for the counties of St. Joseph and Laporte; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 24,206 votes, to 22,289 for Frank B. Hering, Democrat; 1,286 for W. R. Lowe, Prohibitionist, and 327 for E. T. Anderson, Socialist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress with 6,907 plurality. IO W A. SENATORS. 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, 1896, and 1902. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. i IOWA.] Senators and Representatives. 31 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 as a Representative from the Tenth Congressional district of Iowa; was a member of the House also in the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, and Fifth-sixth Congresses; August 23, 1900, was appointed Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. J. H. Gear, deceased, and took his seat in the United States Senate December 3, 1900; was elected January 21, 1902, to succeed himself, over John J. Seerley, Democrat, by a vote of 120 to 26. His term of office will expire March 3, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Des Moines, Henry, Jefferson, Lee, Louisa, Van Buren, and Washington (7 counties). Population (1900), 164,755. THOMAS HEDGE, Republican, of Burlington, was born in the town of Burling- ton, Territory of Towa, June 24, 1844; prepared for college at Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass. , graduating in 1861; was graduated from Yale College in 1867 and from Columbia College Law School, New York, in 1869; served as private in Com- pany E, and as second lieutenant in Company G 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 and Fifty-seventh Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,266 votes, to 13,343 for John E. Craig, Democrat, 604 for W, C. Shepard, Prohibitionist, and 301 for John Lecht, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Clinton, Iowa, Jackson, Johnson, Muscatine, and Scott (6 counties). Population (1900), 191,608. MARTIN J. WADE, Democrat, of Jowa City, was born in Burlington, Vt., Octo- ber 20, 1861; removed to Iowa at early age; educated in common schools, at St. Joseph's College, Dubuque, and at Iowa State University, where he graduated LI. B. 1886. Practiced law 1886 to 1893, when he was appointed to the position of judge of the eighth judicial district of Iowa, in which position he served until January 1, 1903. Lecturer in college of law, Iowa State University, 1891 to 1903. Lecturer in college of medicine 1895 to 1903. President Iowa State Bar Association 1897-98; was elected to Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,825 votes to 18,667 for William Huffman, Republican; 1,162 for A. K. Gifford, Prohibitionist, and 292 for Francis Bacon, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Blackhawk, Bremer, Buchanan, Butler, Delaware, Dubuque, Franklin, Hardin, and Wright (9 counties). Population (1900), 219,691. \ BENJAMIN P. BIRDSALL, Republican, of Clarion, was born at Weyauwega, Wis., October 26, 1858; was educated in the common schools of Iowa and at the Towa State University, Iowa City; by profession is a lawyer, admitted to practice in March, 1878; served as district judge of elqventh judicial district of Towa from Jan- uary, 1893, until October, 1900; has been twice married—his first wife, Bertha H. Schultz, deceased in 1886; remarried in 1888 to Belle Johnston, of Clarion; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 22,300 votes, to 16,761 for Horace Boies, Democrat, 1,078 for J. A. Earl, Prohibitionist, and 788 for F. A. Lymburner, Socialist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress by a plurality of 15,000. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Allamakee, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Clayton, Fayette, Floyd, Howard, Mitchell, Winneshiek, and Worth (10 counties). Population (1900), 195,815. GILBERT N. HAUGEN, Republican, of Northwood, Worth County, was born April 21, 1859, in Rock County, Wis. ; since the age of 14, and prior to his election to Congress, he was actively engaged in various enterprises, principally real estate and banking; was treasurer of Worth County, Iowa, for six years; was elected to the 32 Congressional Directory. [IOWA. Iowa legislature, serving in the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth general assemblies; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,303 votes, to 14,280 for A. I. Sorter, jr., Democrat, 668 for D. McGregor, Prohibitionist, and 168 for Frank KE. Macha, Socialist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress by 13,000 plurality. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Benton, Cedar, Grundy, Jones, Linn, Marshall, and Tama (7 counties). Population (1900), 190,227. . 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 r 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,516 votes, to £3,733 for A. C. Daly, Democrat, 993 for Malcom Smith, Prohibitionist, and 281 for A. C. Palmer, Socialist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT. CoUuNTIES.—Davis, Jasper, Keokuk, Mahaska, Monroe, Poweshiek, and Wapello (7 counties). Population (1900), 174,673. JOHN FLETCHER LACEY, 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 Towa 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,828 votes, to 17,015 for John P. Reese, Democrat, 542 for W. P. Sopher, Populist, and 414 for Frank Rice, Socialist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Dallas, Madison, Marion, Polk, Story, and Warren (6 counties). Population (1900), 191,086. 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,037 votes, to 9,914 for Parley Sheldon, Democrat, 1,270 for J. D. O. McFarland, Prohibitionist, and 665 for W. F. Strouder, Socialist. en FIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Adams, Appanoose, Clarke, Decatur, Fremont, Lucas, Page, Ringgold, Taylor, Union, and Wayne (11 counties). Population (1900), 200,470. 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; | : | IOWA.] Senators and Representatives. 33 was admitted to practice law in 1854; served in the Second Towa 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 to the Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,657 votes, to 14,796 for T. M. Stuart, Democrat. NINTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Adair, Audubon, Cass, Guthrie, Harrison, Mills, Montgomery, Pottawattamie, and Shelby (9 counties). lr Population (1900), 202,253. WALTER INGLEWOOD SMITH, Republican, of Council Bluffs, Pottawattamie County, was born at Council Bluffs, July 10, 1862; received a common school educa- tion, and studied law in the office of Col. D. B. Daily; was admitted to practice Decem- ber, 1882; was elected judge of the fifteenth judicial district of Iowa in November, 1890, and reelected in 1894 and in 1898; and was elected, in November, 1900, to the Fifty-sixth Congress, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. Smith McPherson, and at the same time elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress; reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,997 votes, to 13,639 for George W. Culli- son, Democrat, and 604 for A. D. Beckhart, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty- ninth Congress. TENTH DISTRICT. COoUNTIES.—Boone, Calhoun, Carroll, Crawford, Emmet, Greene, Hamilton, Hancock, Humboldt, Kossuth, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Webster, and Winnebago (14 counties). Population (1900), 259,357. JAMES PERRY CONNER, Republican, of Denison, was born in Delaware County, Ind., January 27, 1851; attended college at the Upper Iowa University at Fayette, Towa, and graduated from the law department of the State University at Iowa City in June, 1873; in 1880 was elected district attorney of the thirteenth judicial district of Towa, and held that office four years; in 1884 was elected circuit judge of the thir- teenth judicial district of Iowa; in 1886 was elected district judge of the sixteenth judicial district of Iowa, having the support of both Republican and Democratic parties; in 1892 was a delegate to the national Republican convention at Minne- apolis; on September 26, 1900, was nominated by the Republican convention of the Tenth Congressional district of Towa for the Fifty-sixth Congress, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. J. P. Dolliver, and elected, and at the same time elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress; reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress and to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 34,977 votes, to 14,531 for W. I. Branigan, Dem- ocrat, 1,352 for James W. Woodward, Prohibitionist, and 1,116 for S. W. Brown, Socialist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Ida, Iyon, Monona, O’Brien, Osceola, Plym- outh, Sac, Sioux, and Woodbury (13 counties). Population (1900), 241,918. LOT 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 of terms at New Virginia, Warren County. During this time he purchased some law books 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 Lake 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; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and again elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,854 votes, to 12,721 for James M. Parsons, Democrat, and 471 for John W, Bennett, Socialist, a, 58—-3D—2D ED——3 —— = y 34 Congressional Directory. [KANSAS. KANSAS. SENATORS. JOSEPH RALPH BURTON, Republican, of Abilene, was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Lucien Baker, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1901. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress. Before his term as Representative in the latter Congress began, he was elected to the United States Senate to succeed William A. Harris, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE. Population (1900), 1,470,495. CHARLES FREDERICK SCOTT, Republican, of Iola, was born on a farm in Allen County, Kans., September 7, 1860, and has resided continuously in that county; was educated in the common schools and at the State University of Kansas, being gradu- ated from the latter institution in 1881 with the degree of B. S., receiving his master’s degree some years later; being thrown upon his own resources immediately after leaving the university, went West and spent the next year and a half in Colo- rado, New Mexico, and Arizona, engaging chiefly in clerical work; in the latter part of 1882 returned to Iola, the county seat of his native county, and bought a small interest in the Iola Register, a weekly newspaper; in the course of the next five years he acquired entire control of the paper, which he has ever since owned, pub- lished, and edited; was married in 1893 to May Brevard Ewing; in 1891 was appointed regent of the university for a term of four years and has been twice reap- pointed; in 1892 was elected as a Republican to the State senate of Kansas and served for four years; in 1896 represented his Congressional district on the Repub- lican electoral ticket; at different times has been president of the State Editorial Association, president of the Kansas I.eague of Republican Clubs, and president of the Kansas Day Club, an organization of the young Republicans of the State; was elected to the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- ninth Congress by a plurality of 82,504, having received 187,983 votes, to 105,479 for Franeis M. Brady, Democrat, 6,210 for Duncan McFarlane, Prohibitionist,and 11,956 for Chistopher Bischir, Socialist FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Atchison, Brown, Doniphan, Jackson, Jefferson, Leavenworth, Nemaha, and Shaw- nee (8 counties). Population (1900), 215,747. 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 and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 23,594 votes, to 13,774 for John E. Wagner, Democrat, and 443 for C. B. Harmon, Socialist. KANSAS.] Senators and Representatives. 35 SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Douglas, Franklin, Johnson, Linn, Miami, and Wyandotte (9 counties). Population (1900), 234,268. 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; has six children, two boys and four girls. The sons are both lawyers, graduates of the University of Kansas and of Harvard; 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; was twice elected mayor of Law- rence; served in the Kansas house of representatives in 1887, State senate in 1895; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 26,308 votes, to 19,250 for Noah Bowman, Demo- crat, and 723 for F. A. Byrne, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Chautauqua, Cherokee, Cowley, Crawford, Elk, I.abette, Montgomery, Neosho, and Wilson (9 counties). Population (1900), 226,207. PHILIP PITT CAMPBELL, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in Nova Scotia; when 4 years old removed with his parents to Kansas and has resided there ever since; graduated A. B. from Baker University; read law on the farm, and was admitted to practice in the fall of 1889; in 1892 married Helen Goff; was elected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 22,753 votes, to 18,690 for A. M. Jackson, Democrat, and 941 for W. E. Morgan, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Butler, Chase, Coffey, Greenwood, I,yon, Marion, Morris, Osage, Pottawatomie, Wabaun- see, and Woodson (11 counties). Population (1900), 187,129. JAMES MONROE MILLER, Republican, of Council Grove, was born at Three Springs, Huntingdon County, Pa.; was graduated from 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 Kansas legislature in 1894; elected a Republican Presidential elector for Kan- sas in 1884, and was selected by his colleagues to carry the vote of Kansas to Wash- ington; wasa delegate to the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,808 votes, to 14,361 for T. H. Grisham, Fusionist, and 267 for Clarence C. Rolfe, Socialist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Con- gress, receiving 24,182 votes, to 14,326 for F. B. Lawrence, Fusion candidate. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTtIEs.—Clay, Cloud, Dickinson, Geary, Marshall, Ottawa, Republic, Riley, Saline, and Wash- ington (10 counties). Population (1900), 173,116. WILLIAM ALEXANDER 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. E. B. Calderhead, a minister of the United Presby- terian 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 schools 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 1888 and served two years; was for several years clerk of the board of education of the city; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,920 votes, to 13,930 votes for Andrew Shearer, Fusion-Democrat, and 623 votes for Gus Eckwall, Socialist. 36 Congressional Directory. [KANSAS. SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTiEs.—Cheyenne, Decatur, Ellis, Ellsworth, Gove, Graham, Jewell, Lincoln, I,ogan, Mitchell, Norton, Osborne, Phillips, Rawlins, Rooks, Russell, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Thomas, Trego, and Wallace (22 counties). Population (1900), 174,512. WILLIAM AUGUSTUS REEDER, Republican, ot 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, Ill., where, at the age of 14 years, he began teach- ing in the public schools, a vocation he followed until 30 years of age, the last ten years of his work being in Kansas, where he was principal of the Beloit® public schools; moved to Kansas and took a claim in Mitchell County in 1871, and has resided continuously since in this Congressional district; 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 business in the city of Logan, Kans., where he at present resides; in 1890, in partnership with A. H. Ellis and J. J. Wiltrout, purchased an extensive tract of it on the Solomon River and estab- lished the largest irrigation farm in the State of Kansas; was elected to the Fifty- sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,300 votes, to 15,832 for C. M. Cole, Democrat, and 306 for E. M. Weed, Socialist. This gave W. A. Reeder 2,162 majority over the combined opposition, being the first majority received by any Republican candidate for Congress since 1888. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounNTIiES.—Barber, Barton, Clark, Comanche, Hdwards, 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). Population (1900), 259,516. VICTOR MURDOCK, Republican, of Wichita, was born in Burlingame, Kans., March 18, 1871, the son of Marshall M. and Victoria Murdock. He moved to the then frontier town of Wichita early in 1872, and was educated in the common schools and in Lewis Academy, Wichita. He began the printer’s trade during vaca- tions at the age of 10 years; became a newspaper reporter at 15, and at 20 moved to Chicago and worked there as a newspaper reporter. He married Miss M. P. Allen in 1890. At 23 he became managing editor of the Wichita Daily Eagle. He was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress at a special election held May 26, 1903, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. Chester I. Long, receiving 19,681 votes, to 6,834 for Charles F. Clyne, Democrat, 2,863 for W. J. Babb, Populist, and 1,184 for Andrew Roesler, Socialist. Reelected to the fifty-ninth Congress. KENTUCKY. SENATORS. JOSEPH CLAY STILES BLACKBURN, Democrat, of Versailles, was born in Woodford County, Ky., October 1, 1838; was educated at Sayres Institute, Frankfort, Ky., and at Centre College, Danville, Ky., whence he graduated in 1857; studied law with George B. Kincaid, esq., at Lexington; was admitted to the bar in 1858 and practiced until 1861; entered the Confederate army in 1861 and served throughout the war; resumed practice in 1865; was elected to the State legislature of Kentucky in 1871 and 1873; was elected to the House in the Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty- sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed John S. Williams, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1885, and was reelected in 1890; was reelected in 1900, to succeed William Lindsay, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1901. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. JAMES B. McCREARY, Democrat, of Richmond, was born in Madison County, Ky., July 8, 1838; graduated when 18 years old at Centre College, Danville, Ky., in 1857; commenced the study of law the same year, and graduated at the law depart- ment of Cumberland University, Tenn., with the first honor in a class of forty-seven, in 1859, and in 1860 commenced the practice of law at Richmond; entered the Con- federate army in 1862, and was lieutenant-colonel of the Eleventh Kentucky Cav- alry at the close of the war; was selected a Presidential elector on the Democratic ticket in 1868, but declined; was then elected a delegate to the national Democratic KENTUCKY.] Senators and Representatives. 37 convention held in New York July 4, 1868; was elected a member of the house of representatives of Kentucky in 1869, 1871, and 1873, and was elected speaker of the house in 1871, and reelected speaker in 1873; was nominated as Democratic candi- date for governor in May, 1875, and elected, serving from August, 1875, to Septem- ber, 1879; received the degree of LL. D. from Centre College in 1879; was appointed, under an act of Congress, by the President of the United States and served as a dele- gate to the International Monetary Conference held at Brussels, Belgium, in 1892, where twenty nations were represented; was elected as a Democrat to represent the Eighth district of Kentucky in the Forty-ninth Congress in 1884, and reelected to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, and Fifty-fourth Congresses as a Democrat; was elected a delegate from the State at large to the national Demo- cratic convention held at Kansas City in 1900, and was chairman of the State Dem- ocratic committee in the campaign of 1900; was elected a delegate from the State at large to the national Democratic convention held in St. Louis in 1904; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat in 1902, to succeed William J. Deboe, Repub- lican, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Carlisle, Crittenden, Fulton, Graves, Hickman, Livingston, Lyon, McCracken, Marshall, and Trigg (13 counties). Population (1900), 201,956. OLLIE M. JAMES, Democrat, of Marion, was born in Crittenden County, Ky., July 27,1871; educated in the common and academic schools; page in the Kentucky legislature, session of 1887; studied law under his father, I. H. James; was admitted to the bar in 1891; was one of the attorneys for Governor Goebel in his celebrated contest for governor of the State of Kentucky; delegate to the Democratic national convention at Chicago, 1896, and to the Democratic national convention at St. Louis, 1904, and elected chairman of the Kentucky delegation at both; served as chairman of the State convention in Kentucky in 1900, which sent delegates to the Democratic national convention at Kansas City; was married December 2, 1903, to Miss Ruth Thomas, of Marion, Ky.; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 23,558 votes, to 13,755 for Speight, Republican, 862 for Richey, Prohibitionist, and 585 for Lackey, Populist. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Christian, Daviess, Hancock, Henderson, Hopkins, McLean, Union, and Webster (8 counties). Population (1900), 203,316. AUGUSTUS OWSLEY STANLEY, Democrat, of Henderson, was born May 21, 1867, in the city of Shelbyville, Shelby County, Ky.; was educated at the State Col- lege, Lexington, Ky., and at Center College, Danville, Ky., graduating from Center College in the class of 1889 with the degree of B. S.; entered the practice of law in 1894, having been engaged between 1889 and 1894 as professor of belles-lettres in Christian College and as principal of Marion Academy; was one of the Presidential electors in 1900; never previously held any other office than that of elector, or belonged to any military organization except as a cadet at the State College, which is a military school; married Miss Sue Soaper, April 29, 1903; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,522 votes, to 11,675 for R. W. Slack, Repub- lican, and 458 for I. W. Cooper, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Allen, Barren, Butler, Edmonson, I,ogan, Metcalfe, Muhlenberg, Simpson, Todd, and Warren (10 counties). Population (1900), 179,518. 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 Lee 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 nomination before the convention for President; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty- 38 Congressional Directory. [RENTUCKY. F I sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses; on March 25, 1902, he was unseated on a con- test instituted by Mackenzie Moss, Republican; was reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress the following November, receiving 16,820 votes to 16,056 for Mackenzie Moss, Republican, and 326 for G. W. Milligan, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Breckinridge, Bullitt, Grayson, Green, Hardin, Hart, Larue, Marion, Meade, Nelson, Ohio, Taylor, and Washington (13 counties). Population (1900), 210,314. 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 I 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, I 1889, election for four years; while in the State senate was chairman of general statutes committee and member of committees on rules and Julians; 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 unanimously 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 14,114 votes, to 881 for J. A. Bonsall, Prohibitionist, and | 165 votes scattered. It was the third consecutive nomination without opposition by the Democratic party, and there was no Republican nomination in that race. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. | FIFTH DISTRICT, ll CounTy.— Jefferson. Population (1900), 232,549. SWAGAR SHERLEY (bachelor), Democrat, of Louisville, was born in Louis- ville, Jefferson County, Ky., November 28, 1871; educated in the public schools, graduating from the Louisville Male High School June, 1889, B. A.; studied law at the University of Virginia, and graduated June, 1891, B. I,.; was admitted to the practice of law September, 1891, at the Louisville bar; has practiced continuously in | State and Federal courts since; admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of the f United States, 1898; never before held public office; was elected to the Fifty-eighth i Congress, receiving 17,896 votes, to 15,892 for Harvey S. Irwin, Republican, 1,187 for Joseph D. Bradburn, United Labor, 312 for J. M. Tydings, Prohibitionist, 278 for | James H. Arnold, Socialist Labor, and 213 for F. R. Markert, Socialist. Reelected | to the Fifty-ninth Congress. | a SIXTH DISTRICT. CoUuNTIES.—Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Pendleton, and Trimble (8 counties). | Population (1900), 179,430. D. LINN GOOCH, Democrat, of Covington, 47 years old, was born at Rumsey, I McLean County, Ky., son of Rev. Gideon Gooch, a prominent Methodist minister, | and a member of the old Gooch family of Virginia; was educated.at a private | school; was left an orphan at the age of 16 years; is president of the Cincinnati [i Drug and Chemical Company; also president of the Licking Valley Kentucky Oil and Gas Company; takes great interest in patriotic societies; is governor of the order of Descendants of Colonial Governors, and deputy governor-general of the Society of Sons of Colonial Wars. He has always been a warm friend of organized labor, a Democrat all his life; served three terms as president of the Jefferson Club, the largest Democratic organization in the South. He was twice elected to the office without opposition, an honor never conferred by the club upon any other man; never held a political office until elected a member of the Fifty-seventh Congress, his majority over his Republican opponent, Hon. W. McD. Shaw (an attorney, who, although living in a Democratic county, had never been defeated before the people, and is now circuit judge), was 5,715, receiving 22,573 votes, to 16,857 for Shaw, and 397 for E. S. Leeds, Independent; was reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, Sh) i= ht’ RENTUCEY.] Senators and Representatives. 39 : SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bourbon, Fayette, Franklin, Henry, Oldham, Owen, Scott, and Woodford (8 counties). Population (1900), 151,453. SOUTH TRIMBLE, Democrat, of Frankfort, was born in Wolfe County, Ky., April 13, 1864; was educated in the public schools of Frankfort and Excelsior Insti- tute, located near that city; is a farmer by occupation; was elected to the Kentucky house of representatives in 1898 and again in 1900, being elected speaker in the last- named year; served in that capacity during the memorable Goebel contest; was married November 24, 1885, to Miss Carrie Bell Allan, of Galveston, Tex.; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 12,093 votes, to 7,639 for W. I. Cannon, Republican, and 461 for J. W. Zachary, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Anderson, Boyle, Garrard, Jessamine, Lincoln, Madison, Mercer, Rockcastle, Shelby, and Spencer (10 counties). Population (1900), 143,089. GEORGE GILMORE GILBERT, Democrat, of Shelbyville, was born in Spencer County, Ky.; was educated in the common schools of the neighborhood until 18 years of age; went to Cecilian College in 1868 and 1869; afterwards studied the Latin, Greek, and French languages at Lyndland 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 permanent organization at that convention; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 13,531 votes, to 11,458 for W. Lawson Sumrell, Republican, and 435 for William Lowen, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bath, Boyd, Bracken, Carter, Fleming, Greenup, Harrison, Lawrence, Lewis, Mason, Nicholas, Robertson, and Rowan (13 counties). Population (1900), 200,064. JAMES N. KEHOE, Democrat, was born at Maysville, Ky., July 15, 1862; edu- cated in public and private schools of his native city; learned the printing trade and engaged in that business until 1884, when he commenced the study of law at Louisville, Ky.; admitted to practice November 1, 1888, and been engaged in the practice of his profession continuously since; served as precinct, county, and district chairman of the Democratic executive committee; city attorney of Maysville; master in chancery of the Mason County circuit court; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Con- gress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,823 votes, to 18,557 for William H. Castner, Republican, and 403 for D. W. Dillon, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Breathitt, Clark, Elliott, Estill, Floyd, Johnson, Knott, I,ee, Magoffin, Martin, Meni- fee, Montgomery, Morgan, Pike, Powell, and Wolfe (16 counties). Population (1900), 187,169. FRANK A. HOPKINS, Democrat, of Prestonsburg, was born at Jeffersonville, Tazewell County, Va., May 27, 1853; was educated in the Tazewell High School; studied law and procured a license to practice in November, 1873, before he was of age; in January, 1874, moved to Prestonsburg, Ky., where he was admitted to the bar in the same month, and has lived there ever since; in November, 1874, he was married to Miss Alice G. Davidson; in the spring of 1882 he was appointed by the county court of Floyd County to fill an unexpired term of commissioner of common schools, and that fall was elected for the following term of said office; in August, 1890, he was elected as a delegate to represent the counties of Floyd, Knott, and Letcher in the convention which made and published the present consti- tution of Kentucky; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,007 votes, to 12,484 for John G. White, Republican, and 245 for ¥. M, Long, Prohibitionist. 40 Congressional Directory. [KENTUCKY. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Adair, Bell, Casey, Clay, Clinton, Cumberland, Harlan, Jackson, Knox, Letcher, Leslie, Laurel, Monroe, Owsley, Perry, Pulaski, Russell, Wayne, and Whitley (19 counties). Population (1900), 258,316. WHITESIDE GODFREY HUNTER, Republican, of Burkesville, was born Decem- ber 25, 1841; was educated for and practiced medicine; was surgeon in the Union Army during the civil war, and participated in all the great battles fought by the Army of the Potomac from the Peninsula to Appomattox; was taken prisoner at Gettysburg and in the Wilderness; was three times elected a member of the Ken- tucky legislature; was a delegate to the Republican national convention in Chicago in 1880, and was one of the 306 who stood by Grant to the last; was also a delegate to several other Republican national conventions; was the Republican nominee for United States Senator in 1896; was United States minister to Guatemala and Hon- duras from November 8, 1897, to December 8, 1902; was elected to the Fiftieth and the Fifty-fourth Congresses, from the third district of Kentucky, and to the Fifty- eighth Congress from the eleventh district of Kentucky, November 10, 1903, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the Hon. Vincent Boreing, receiving 6,227 votes, to 6,112 for C. E. Edwards, Republican, and 4,457 for John D. White, Independent Republican. LOUISIANA. SENATORS. 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. VY.; 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 I,. 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 wasas 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. Reelected in 1902. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. MURPHY J. FOSTER, Democrat, of Franklin, was born at Franklin, La., January 12, 1849; after the civil war attended preparatory school at White’s Creek, near Nash- ville, Tenn., for two years; from there went to Washington and Lee College for the session of 1867 and 1868; from Washington and Lee went to Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn,, and graduated there in 1870; attended the law school of Tulane Uni- versity, New Orleans, graduating in 1871; in 1872 was elected member of the John McEnery legislature, but owing tothe fact that this government was never recognized and that the Kellogg government was, did not take his seat; in 1879 was elected a member of the senate of the State of Louisiana under the constitution of that year, and was returned for three consecutive terms of four years each; was elected president pro tempore of the senate in 1888-1890; led the antilottery fight in the legislature in 1890, and in 1892 was nominated by the antilottery convention as candidate for governor; was elected for four years, and in 1896 was nominated to be his own suc- cessor and again elected; at the end of eight years in the governor’s office was unanimously elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. Donelson Caffery,_ Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1gor. When the Democratic party of Louis- iana adopted the plan of selecting nominees for State offices by a general primary election, he requested, inasmuch as the members of the general assembly to be so elected would select his successor, that the United States Senatorship be included in the primary, and announced his candidacy to succeed himself. He received 42,990 w— | 2% ) LOUISIANA] Senators and Representatives. 41 votes, as against 26,122 cast for ex-United States Senator B. F. Jonas, insuring his return to the Senate as his own successor at the expiration of the present term of service, which will be March 3, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.. City oF NEw ORLEANS.—Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, and Fifteenth wards. PARISHES.—St. Bernard and Plaquemines. Population (1900), 178,670. or : 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 Louisiana 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 3,910 votes, to 866 for O. S. Livandais, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. City oF NEW ORLEANS.—First, Second, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth wards. ParisHES.—Jefferson, St. Charles, St. James, and St. John the Baptist. Population (1900), 183,424. ROBERT CHARLES DAVEY, Democrat, of New Orleans, was born in that city October 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; was elected 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 ses- sions 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 5,014 votes, to 868 for Robert E. Lee, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. PARISHES.—Assumption, Iberia, Lafayette, Lafourche, St. Martin, St. Mary, Terrebonne, and Vermilion (8 parishes). Population (1900), 200,596. ROBERT F. BROUSSARD, Democrat, of New Iberia, was born August 17, 1864, near New Iberia, La.; attended school at Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., and graduated at the law school of the Tulane University, of Louisiana, at New - Orleans, in 1889; practices law in New Iberid, La.; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty- 4 sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 2,725 votes, to 707 for William EK. Howell, Republican. 7. FOURTH DISTRICT. PARISHES.—Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, De Soto, Natchitoches, Red River, Sabine, Webster, and Winn (9 parishes). Population (1900), 196,261. PHANOR BREAZEALE, 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 in 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 42 Congressional Directory. ; [LOUISIANA., member of the constitutional convention of 1898, and took a leading part in fram- ing the judiciary and railroad commission ordinances; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 2,567 votes, to 156 for S. M. Thomas, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. ParIsHES.—Caldwell, Catahoula, Claiborne, Concordia, Fast Carroll, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, Union, and West Carroll (15 parishes). Population (1900), 207,430. JOSEPH EUGENE RANSDEIL]I,, Democrat, of Lake Providence, was born in Alex- andria, La., 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 Eighth 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 August 29, 1899; 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, and to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 2,645 votes, to 232 for H. B. Talliaferro, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT. PARISHES.—Ascension, Iberville, East Baton Rouge, Fast Feliciana, Iivingston, Pointe Coupee, St. Helena, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Washington, West Baton Rouge, and West Feliciana (12 parishes). Population (1900), 211,967. 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 Kast 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 a delegate to the national Democratic convention at Chicago in 1896, and a member of the committee on resolutions; was an original Bryan man; was elected to the Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, FRifty-fiftth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 2,124 votes, to 673 for C. S. Hebert, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. PARrRISHES.—Acadia, Avoyelles, Calcasieu, Cameron, Grant, Rapides, St. Landry, and Vernon (8 par- ime Population (1900), 203,277. ARSENE P. PUJO, Democrat, of Lake Charles, was born December 16, 1861, near I.ake Charles, Calcasieu Parish, of the marriage of Paul Pujo, of Tarbes, France, to Miss Eloise M. Le Bleu; educated at the public and private schools of Lake Charles, where he now resides; admitted to the bar October 23, 1886, by the supreme court of Louisiana, and has followed the law as a profession; was a member of the Loui- siana constitutional convention of 1898, serving on the judiciary committee of that body; elected tothe Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 3,233 votes, to 545 for Gilbert L. Dupre, Republican. MAINE. SENATORS. 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, MAINE.] Senators and Representatives. 43 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 LI. 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 Han- nibal 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. 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 IL. 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, in 1895, and again in 1901; was elected President pro tempore of the Senate February 7, 1896, and reelected March 7, 1901; 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, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Cumberland and York (2 counties). Population (1900), 165,574. AMOS LAWRENCE ALLEN, Republican, of Alfred, was born in Waterboro, York County, Me., March 17, 1837; attended the common school, and entered Whites- town Seminary, Whitestown, N. Y., in 1853, and the sophomore class of Bowdoin College in 1857, graduating in 1860; studied law at Alfred, and attended the Colum- bian Law Schoolin Washington, D. C.; was admitted to the bar of York County in 1866; served as clerk in I'reasury 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; elected to the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 18,301 votes to 13,312 for Luther R. Moore, Democrat, and 391 scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Androscoggin, Franklin, Knox, Lincoln, Oxford, and Sagadahoc (6 counties). Population (1900), 175,329. CHARLES EDGAR LITTLEFIELD, Republican, of Rockland, was born June 21, 1851, in Lebanon, 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 Cougress June 19, 1899, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Nelson Dingley, and to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,297 votes, to 11,739 for Horatio G. Foss, Democrat, and 707 for S. B. Martin, Prohibitionist. 44 t Congressional Directory. [MAINE. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Hancock, Kennebec, Somerset, and Waldo (4 counties). : Population (1900), 154,392. EDWIN C. BURLEIGH, Republican, of Augusta, was born at Linneus, Aroostook County, Me., November 27, 1843; is publisher of the Kennebec Journal, daily and weekly; was State land agent 1876-1878; State treasurer 1885-1888; governor four years—1889-1892; elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,613 votes, to 8,032 for Elliott N. Benson, Democrat, and 605 for Fred A. Martin, Socialist. Reelected te the Fifty-ninth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Aroostook, Penobscot, Piscataquis, and Washington (4 counties). Population (1900), 199,171. LEWELLYN POWERS, Republican, of Houlton, was born at Pittsfield, Somerset County, Me., in 1839; graduated from the Ricker Classical Institute, attended Colby University two years, and graduated from the law department of the university of Albany, N. Y.; Colby has since given him the honorary degrees of A. M. and LI. D.; was admitted to the bar in 1861 and began the practice of his profession at Houlton; was attorney for the State for the county of Aroostook 1864-1871; collector of cus- toms for the district of Aroostook 1868-1872; a member of the house of representatives, State legislature, for six terms, and speaker of the house one of them; elected gov- ernor of Maine in 1896 by a majority of 28,696, and reelected in 1898, receiving a majority of 48,696; was elected to the Forty-fifth Congress from the then Fourth district, and elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress in April, 1901, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. Charles A. Boutelle; reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 16,356 votes, to 7,765 for Thomas White, Democrat, 1,080 for I,. B. Merritt, Prohibitionist, and 123 for G. W. Saunders, Socialist; reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 20,501 votes, to 11,600 for William R. Pattangall, Democrat; 688 for Volney B. Cushing, Prohibitionist, and 12 scattering. MARYLAND. SENATORS. LOUIS EMORY McCOMAS, Republican, of Williamsport, was born in Washing- ton County, Md., October 28, 1846; 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; is professor of International Law in the law school of Georgetown Uni- versity; received the degree of Doctor of Laws from Dickinson College, Pennsylvania, and from Georgetown University, District of Columbia; was the Republican candidate for the Forty-fifth Congress; waselected tothe Forty-eighth; Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses, and was defeated for reelection to the Fifty-second Congress; was a delegate-at-large to the Republican national conventions in 1892, 1900, and 1904; and during the Presidential campaign of 1892 was the secretary of the Repub- lican national committee; was elected in 1900 and again in 19o4 Republican National Committeeman from Maryland; on November 17, 1892, he was appointed by President Harrison an associate justice of the supreme court of the District of Columbia, which office he held when he was elected to the Senate to succeed Arthur P. Gorman, Demo- crat, and took his seat March 4, 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. ARTHUR PUE GORMAN, Democrat, of Laurel, was born in Howard County, Md., March 11, 1839; attended the public schools in his native county for a brief period; in 1852 was appointed page in the Senate of the United States, and continued in the service of the Senate until 1866, at which time he was postmaster; on the 1st of September, 1866, he was removed from his position and immediately appointed col- lector of internal revenue for the Fifth district of Maryland, which office he held until the incoming of the Grant Administration in 1869; in November, 1869, was elected a member of the house of delegates of the Maryland legislature; was reelected in 1871; then elected speaker of the house of delegates at the ensuing session; in June, 1872, he was elected president of the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Company; in 1875 he was elected to represent Howard County in the Maryland State senate, and was reelected in November, 1879, for a term of four years; was elected in January, 1880, to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed William Pinkney Whyte; took his seat March 4, 1881, and was reelected in 1886 and in 1892; in 1902 was again elected, to succeed George I. Wellington, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1903. Histerm of service will expire March 3, 1909. Ce a —— ss MARYLAND] Senators and Representatives, 45 REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne, Somerset, Talbot, Wicomico, and Worcester (9 counties). Population (1900), 196,004. WILLIAM H. JACKSON, Republican, of Salisbury, was born in 1839, six miles from Salisbury, Md., on a farm belonging to his great-grandfather, Elihu Jackson; remained on the farm until 1864, receiving his education at the country schools; in 1864 he married a daughter of Josephus Humphreys, and moved to Salisbury; from that year until 1867 was dealing in horses and cattle; in 1867 went into the lumber business with the firm of E. E. Jackson & Co., consisting of Hugh Jackson, his father, and E. E. Jackson, ex-governor of Maryland; in 1889 this partnership was dissolved, and the firm was known as W. H. Jackson & Son, which continued until 1894, when the firm was consolidated into Jackson Bros. Co., which is still doing business; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,968 votes, to 16,179 for J. E. Ellegood, Democrat, and 1,391 for R. J. McAllen, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Baltimore, Carroll, and Harford; and Fifteenth and Sixteenth wards of Baltimore ea Population (1900), 196,878. JOSHUA FREDERICK C. TALBOTT, Democrat, of Towson, was born near Lutherville, Baltimore County, Md., July 29, 1843; received a public school educa- tion; began the study of law in 1862; joined the Confederate army in 1864, and served as a private in the Second Maryland Cavalry until the close of the war; was admitted to the bar September 6, 1866; married Laura B. Cockey, of Lutherville, Baltimore County, February 3, 1869; was nomindted and elected prosecuting attorney for Baltimore County in 1871, for the term of four years; was renominated in 1875 and defeated at the November election; was a delegate to the National Democratic Convention at St. Louis in 1876, and to the National Democratic Con- vention at St. Louis in 1904; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses; was appointed insurance commissioner of the State of Maryland in October, 1889, and resigned the position January, 1893, having been elected to the Fifty-third Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiv- ing 16,971 votes, to 15,422 for William Tyler Page, Republican, and 1,007 for H. N. Hanna, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. THIRD: DISTRICT. CITY OF BALTIMORE.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Kighth, and Twenty- second wards, and the Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, and Thirteenth precincts of the Eighteenth rad Population (1900), 194,606. FRANK CHARLES WACHTER, Republican, of Baltimore, was born in that city September 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, adjusting, 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; wasa 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. The Repub- licans of the Third Congressional district unanimously tendered him the nomination in 1898 as Representative to the Fifty-sixth Congress, to which he was elected; also elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,214 votes, to 15,031 for L. S. Meyer, Democrat, 443 for B. F. Lewis, Pro- hibitionist, and 499 for Frank Mareck, Socialist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Con- gress by a plurality of 2,032. FOURTH DISTRICT. CITY OF BALTIMORE.—Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Seventeenth Nineteenth. and Twentieth wards, and the First, Second, Third, and Twelfth precincts of the Fighteenth Ward. Population (1900), 201,882. JAMES W. DENNY, Democrat, of Baltimore, was born in Frederick County, Va.* educated at the university of that State; enlisted in the Thirty-ninth Virginia 46 ] Congressional Directory. [MARYLAND, Battalion of Cavalry, and surrendered with Lee’s army, at Appomattox Court-House, in 1865. He then studied law in Judge Richard Parker’s law school, in Winches- ter, Va., and after graduating located in the -city of Baltimore in 1868, where he has since continued in active practice of the law. In 1882 he was president of the first branch of the city council; served a number of years on the school board; was a member of the legislature of Maryland in 1888; a member of the Fifty-sixth Con- gress in 1900, and elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,105 votes, to 15,519 for Charles R. Schirm, Republican incumbent, and 620 for A, J, Church, Prohibitionist, FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTiEs.—Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince George, and St. Mary (6 counties), and the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth precincts of the Fighteenth Ward, and the Twenty-first, Twenty-third, and Twenty-fourth wards of Baltimore city. Population (1900), 199,775. 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 district delegate to the national Republican convention of 1896, and a delegate at large to the same body in 1900, and was chairman of the Maryland delegation in both of said conven- tions; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,621 votes to 12,781 for B. H. Camalier, Democrat, and 545 for Samuel R. Neave, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. : SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, Montgomery, and Washington (5 counties), Population (1900), 198,899. ° - GEORGE ALEXANDER PEARRE, Republican, of Cumberland, was born in that city July 16, 1860, a son of Hon. George A. Pearre and Mary Worthington; his early education was had at private schools, Allegany County Academy, St. James College, University of West Virginia, and Princeton University; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1882, having graduated at the law school of the Maryland University, of Baltimore; in active practice ever since; in 18go was elected to the State senate by a majority of over 400, and served in the sessions of 18go and 1892; in 1895 was nominated prosecuting attorney by the Republican party, and was elected by a majority of 1,400, which office he held until elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress in 1898 (in that contest he received 18,878 votes to 14,372 for his opponent, C. T. Poffen- berger, a plurality of 4,506, carrying all the counties in the district for the first time in its history); reelected to the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses, receiving 18,310 votes, to 14,479 for C. F. Konneweg, Democrat, and 1,063 for J. C. Hopkius, Prohibitionist, Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. MASSACHUSETTS. SENATORS. 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 LL. B.; was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1876; in the same year—1876—received the degree of Ph. D. from Harvard University for his thesis on “The Land Law of the Anglo-Saxons;’’ profession, that of literature; has published, 1877, ‘Life and Letters of George Cabot;’’ 1881, ‘ Short History of the English Colonies in America; ”’ 1882, ‘‘ Life of Alexander Hamilton;’’ 1883, ‘‘ Life of Daniel Webster; ’’ 1885, edited the works of Alexander Hamilton in g volumes; published, in 1886, ‘ Studies in History;’’ 1889, ‘‘ Life of Washington,” 2 volumes; 1891, eg TO eT LT ST —— MASSACHUSETTS.] Senators and Representatives. 47 ‘History of Boston’ (in the Historic Towns Series, published by the Longmans); 1892, ¢‘ Historical and Political Essays,’’ and a volume of selections from speeches; 1895, in conjunction with Theodore Roosevelt, ‘ Hero Tales from American His- tory;’ 1897, ‘ Certain Accepted Heroes,” and Other Essays; 1898, ‘‘ Story of the Revolution,” 2 volumes; 1899, ‘‘ Story of the Spanish War; ‘A Fighting Frigate, and other essays;’’ is a member of thé Massachusetts Historical Society, of the Vir- ginia Historical Society, of the American Academy of Arts and Science, of the New England Historic and Genealogical Society, and of the American Antiquar- ian Society, and has received the degree of doctor of laws from Williams College, Clark University, and Vale University; was permanent chairman of the Republican National Convention which met in Philadelphia Junc 19, 1900; chairman of the Com- mittee on Resolutions of the Republican National Convention of 1904 at Chicago; was a member of the Commission on Alaskan Boundary appointed by President Roosevelt; served two terms as member of the house of representatives of the Massa- chusetts 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. WINTHROP MURRAY CRANE, Republican, of Dalton, was born at Dalton, Mass., April 23, 1853; was educated at Williston Seminary, Easthampton, Mass. ; is a paper ‘manufacturer; was a delegate-at-large to the Republican National Conventions of 1892, 1896, and 1904; was selected as the Massachusetts member of the Republican National Committee in 1892, 1896, and 1904; was lieutenant-governor of Massachu- setts, 1897-1899, and governor, 19oo-1902; was appointed to the United States Senate October 12, 1904, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon, G. F, Hoar, and took his seat December 6, REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. BERKSHIRE COUNTY. FRANKLIN CouNTy.—Towns of Ashfield, Bernardston, Buckland, Charlemont, Colerain, Conway, Deerfield, Gill, Greenfield, Hawley, Heath, I,eyden, Monroe, Rowe, Shelburne, and Whately. HAMPSHIRE CountTy.—Towns of Chesterfield, Cummington, Goshen, Hatfield, Huntington, Mid- dlefield, Plainfield, Southampton, Westhampton, Williamsburg, and Worthington. HAMPDEN CouNnTy.—City of Holyoke and towns of Agawam, Blandford, Chester, Granville, Mont- gomery, Russell, Southwick, Tolland, Westfield, and West Springfield. Population (1900), 201,378. 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,093 votes, to 9,949 for Henry M. Fern, Democrat, 1,259 for Theo. Kohler, Socialist, and 8or for John Bascom, Prohibitionist; reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress by 6,028 majority over Charles Giddings, Democrat. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress by 6,100 majority over Charles Giddings, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. FRANKLIN CoUNTY.— Towns of Erving, Leverett, Montague, New Salem, Northfield, Orange, Shutesbury, Sunderland, Warwick, and Wendell. HampPsHIRE CouNTv.—City of Northampton; towns of Amherst, Belchertown, Easthampton, Enfield, Granby, Greenwich, Hadley, Pelham, Prescott, South Hadley, and Ware. HAMPDEN CoUNTY.—Cities of Chicopee and Springfield; towns of Brimfield, East Longmeadow, Hampden, Holland, Longmeadow, Ludlow, Monson, Palmer, Wales, and Wilbraham. WORCESTER CouNTvY.— Towns of Athol, Barre, Brookfield, Dana, Hardwick, New Braintree, North Brookfield, Oakham, Petersham, Phillipston, Royalston, Warren, and West Brookfield. Population (1900), 199,888. 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 48 Congressional Directory. [MASSACHUSETTS. attorney-general of Massachusetts from 1879 to 1882; was elected to the Massachusetts house of representatives in 18go and 1891; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 17,611 votes, to 7,992 for George W. Wheel- wright, jr., of Hardwick, Democrat, 1,744 for George H. Wrenn, of Springfield, Socialist, and 374 for Alfred E. Steele, of Northampton, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. WORCESTER CoUNTY.—City of Worcester; towns of Auburn, Charlton, Douglass, Dudley, Grafton, Holden, Leicester, Millbury, Northbridge, Oxford, Paxton, Rutland, Shrewsbury, Southbridge, Spencer, Sturbridge, Sutton, Uxbridge, Webster, Westboro, and West Boylston. Population (1900), 199,064. JOHN R. THAYER, Democrat, of Worcester, was born in Douglass, Mass., March 9, 1845; attended the common schools in Douglass; 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 Massa- chusetts for two terms, in 1880 and 1881, and was elected to the Massachusetts senate for two terms, in 1890 and 1891; has been one of the leading lawyers in Worcester 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, and reelected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, receiving 16,039 votes, to 15,509 for C. G. Washburn, Republican. The vote for the McKinley electors in the district was 19,565, for the Bryan electors, 11,031; the vote for governor was: Crane, Republican, 17,329; Paine, Democrat, 9,518. Reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,382 votes, to 13,602 for R. B. Dodge, Republican, 1,005 for H. A. Gibbs, Socialist, and 329 for G. H. Bemis, Prohibitionist. The vote for governor in the district was, Bates, Republican, 13,406; Gaston, Democrat, 11,596; Chase, Socialist, 1,420. FOURTH DISTRICT. WORCESTER CouNTy.—City of Fitchburg; towns of Ashburnham, Berlin, Bolton, Boylston, Clinton, Gardner, Harvard, Hubbardston, Lancaster, Lunenburg, Leominster, Northboro, Princeton, Southboro, Sterling, Templeton, Westminster, and Winchendon. MIDDLESEX CouNTy.—Cities of Marlboro and Waltham: towns of Acton, Ashby, Ashland, Ayer, Bedford, Boxboro, Concord, Framingham, Groton, Hudson, Lexington, Lincoln, Littleton, Maynard, Natick, Pepperell, Shirley, Stow, Sudbury, Townsend, Wayland, Westford, and Weston. Population (1900), 200,801. CHARLES QUINCY TIRRELL, Republican, of Natick, was born in Sharon, Mass., December 10, 1844; graduated at Dartmouth College in 1866; was admitted to the bar in 1870 at Boston, where he has since practiced; was elected to the general court of Massachusetts from Weymouth in 1872 and to the Massachusetts senate from the Fourth Middlesex district for two terms, in 1881 and 1882; was Presidential elector in 1888; in addition to a large civil practice he has been interested in exten- sive business enterprises; is a past grand master of the grand lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, of Massachusetts; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,660 votes, to 10,564 for Marcus A. Coolidge, Democrat, 2,739 for John F. Mullen, Socialist, and 370 for Herbert S. Morley, Prohibitionist; reelected tothe Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 18,995 votes, to 10,465 for M, A. Coolidge, Democrat, PIFTIH DISTRICT, MIDDLESEX CoUNTY.—City of I,owell; towns of Billerica, Burlington, Carlisle, Chelmsford, Dracut, Dunstable, North Reading, Reading, Tewksbury, Tyngsboro, and Wilmington. Essex CounTy.—City of Lawrence; towns of Andover, Lynnfield, Methuen, and North Andover. Population (1900), 200,552. BUTLER AMES, Republican, of Lowell, a grandson of Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Butler and son of Maj. Gen. Adelbert Ames, was born in Lowell in 1871; was educated at Lowell schools, Phillips Exeter Academy, class of 1890; graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1894; resigned from the | | it | | om gg NaASSACHUSETIN] Senators and Representatives. 49 United States Army after appointment to the Eleventh United States Infantry for the purpose of returning to Massachusetts to take a post-graduate course at the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, graduating in 1896 as a mechanical and electrical engineer; has since been agent of the Wamesit Power Company, of Lowell; joined Light Battery A, Massachusetts Volunteer Militia, a sergeant at its reorganization in 1895, acted as its instructor, and was promoted to first lieutenant in 1896; resigned from militia at outbreak of Spanish war, and was made lieutenant and adjutant of the Sixth Massachusetts Volunteers; at Camp Alger, near Washington, was appointed as acting engineer of the Second Army Corps, under General Graham, in addition to his duties as adjutant; went from Charlestown to Cuba and Porto Rico under General Miles; was at the landing at Guanica and the skirmish at Yauco Road in July; was promoted to lieutenant-colonel of his regiment in August; was civil administrator of Arecibo district of Porto Rico till November, 1898; served as member of common council of Lowell in 1896; a member of the Massachusetts State legislature for three years, 1897, 1898, 1899; chairman of committee on street railways; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 13,648 votes, to 12,765 for John T. Sparks, Dem- ocrat, 1,193 for James A. Wilkinson, Socialist, 338 for William S. Searles, Prohibi- tionist, and 253 for Joseph Youngjohns, Socialist Labor. Reelected to the Fifty- ninth Congress. SIXTH: DISTRICT. Essex County.—Cities of Beverly, Gloucester, Haverhill, Newburyport, and Salem, and towns of Amesbury, Boxford, Danvers, Essex, Georgetown, Groveland, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manches- ter,, Marblehead, Merrimac, Middleton, Newbury, Peabody, Rockport, Rowley, Salisbury, Swampscott, Topsfield, Wenham, and West Newbury. Population (1900), 200,266. AUGUSTUS PEABODY GARDNER, Republican, of Hamilton, was born in Boston, Mass., November 5, 1865; graduated from Harvard College with the degree of A. B. in the class of 1886; was a member of the Massachusetts State senate for two terms; served as captain and assistant adjutant-general on the staff of Gen. James H. - Wilson during the Spanish-American war; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of the Hon. W. H. Moody to become Secretary of the Navy in the Cabinet of President Roosevelt, and to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,164 votes, to 12,246 for Samuel Roads, jr., Democrat, 2,679 for George E. Littlefield, Socialist, and 350 for Willard O. Wylie, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Essex CounTy.—City of Lynn; towns of Nahant and Saugus. MIDDLESEX CouNTy.—Cities of Everett, Malden, and Melrose; towns of Stoneham and Wakefield. SUFFOLK CounTy.—City of Chelsea; town of Revere. Population (1900), 205,665. 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 and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,728 votes, to 9,034 for Arthur Iyman, Democrat, 2,811 for William B. Turner, Socialist, 814 for Frank B. Jordan, Socialist Labor, and 580 for George M. Buttrick, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. MIDDLESEX CoUNTy.—Cities of Cambridge, Medford, Somerville, and Woburn; towns of Arling- ton, Belmont, and Winchester. Population (1900), 205,807. SAMUEL WALKER McCALIL, Republican, of Winchester, was born in East Prov- idence, Pa., February 28, 1851; graduated at New Hampton (N. H.) Academy in 1870, at Dartmouth College in 1874; was admitted to the bar, practicing in Boston; served as editor in chief of the Boston Daily Advertiser; was a member of the Massa- chusetts house of representatives of 1888, 1889, and 1892; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1888 and 1900; is the author of biography of Thaddeus Stevens in American Statesmen Series; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty- fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,077 votes, to 8,872 for G. S. MacFarland, Demo- ocrat, 1,634 for C. W. White, Socialist, and 614 for C. A. Johnson, Socialist Labor. 58-3D—2D ED——4 50 Congressional Directory. [MASSACHUSETTS. NINTH DISTRICT. SUFFOLK COoUNTY.—Wards numbered One, Two, Three, Four, Five, Six, Seven, Eight, Nine, and precincts six and seven of ward numbered Twelve, in the city of Boston; the town of Win- throp. Population (1900), 199,718. JOHN A. KELIHER, Democrat, of Boston, is in the real estate business; was elected tothe Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 10,352 votes, to 10,099 for J. A. Conry, National Democrat, 5,108 for C. T. Witt, Republican, and 1,581 for J. J. McVey, Socialist. TENTH DISTRICT. SUFFOLK COoUNTY.—Wards numbered Thirteen, Fourteen, Fifteen, Sixteen, Seventeen, I'wenty, and Twenty-four, in the city of Boston. NORFOLK CoUNTY.—City of Quincy and the town of Milton. Population (1900), 199,202. WILLIAM S. McNARY, Democrat, of Boston, was born in Abington, Mass., March 29, 1863; was educated in the public schools of Abington and Boston, and graduated from the Boston English High School; engaged in newspaper work as reporter and editor on various trade and daily papers; served in the Boston city gov- ernment and the Massachusetts house of representatives and senate; was water com- missioner of Boston in 1893-94; was alternate delegate at large to the Democratic national convention in 1892, and delegate at large to the Democratic national con- vention in 1900; was secretary of the Democratic State committee in 1898, 1899, and 1900, and chairman in 1901, 1902, and 1903; married Albertine A. Martin June 30, 1892; was elected to the Fifth-eighth Congress, receiving 17,569 votes, to 11,374 for William W. Towle, Republican, and 3,506 for J. Weaver Sherman, Socialist. Re- elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. SUFFOLK COUNTY.—Wards numbered Ten, Eleven, and precincts one, two, three, four, and five of ward numbered Twelve, and wards numbered Eighteen, Nineteen, Twenty-one, Twenty- two, Twenty-three, and Twenty-five, in the city of Boston. Population (1900), 198,507. JOHN A. SULLIVAN, Democrat, of Boston, was born in Boston, May 10, 1868; educated at the public schools, the high school, and Boston University; graduated from Boston University Law School in 1896, with the degree of LI,. B., magna cum laude; was admitted to practice by the Suffolk bar, October, 1896; is a member of the bar of the United States district and circuit courts and of the Supreme Court of the United States; served two years in the Massachusetts senate; married January 25, 1899, to Mary E. Donovan; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,333 votes, to 14,467 for Eugene N. Foss, Republican, and 2,230 for George G. Cutting, Socialist; defeated Eugene N. Foss, Republican candidate for Congress in 1904, by a majority of 2,055, receiving 18,045 votes, Mr. Foss receiving 15,990. TWELFTH DISTRICT. NORFOLK CoUNTY.—Towns of Avon, Bellingham, Braintree, Brookline, Canton, Dedham, Dover, Foxboro, Franklin, Holbrook, Hyde Park, Medfield, Medway, Millis, Needham, Norfolk, Norwood, Randolph, Sharon, Stoughton, Walpole, Wellesley, Westwood, Weymouth, and Wrentham. MIDDLESEX CouNnTY.—City of Newton; towns of Holliston, Hopkinton, Sherborn, and Watertown. WORCESTER CouNTY.—Towns of Blackstone, Hopedale, Mendon, Milford, and Upton. BrisToL CouNntTv.— Town of North Attleboro. Population (1900), 197,585. SAMUEL LELAND POWERS, Republican, of Newton, was born in Cornish, N. H., October 26, 1848; was fitted for college at Kimball Union Academy and at Phillips Exeter Academy, New Hampshire, and graduated from Dartmouth College in 1874; subsequently studied law at the law school of the University of the City of New York and at Worcester, Mass., and was admitted to the bar in 1876, since which time he has practiced law in the city of Boston; is now a member of the law firm of Powers, Hall & Jones; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress from the new Twelfth Massachusetts district, receiving 14,807 votes, to 10,303 for Frederic J. Stimson, Democrat, 2,683 for J. Frank Hayward, Socialist, and 384 for Napoleon B. Johnson, Prohibitionist. Mr. Powers declined to be a candidate for reelection to the Fifty-ninth Congress, although strongly urged to allow the use of his name. He will return to the active practice of law after the close of the present Congress. | | | hd | | I | | Bo | | | i MASSACHUSETTS.) Senators and Representatives. : 51 THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. Bristor County.—Cities of Fall River and New Bedford; towns of Acushnet, Berkley, Dartmouth, Dighton, Fairhaven, Freetown, Rehoboth, Seekonk, Somerset, Swansea, and Westport. PLYMOUTH CouNTY.—Towns of Marion, Mattapoisett, and Rochester. } DUKES AND NANTUCKET COUNTIES. Population (1900), 200,712. WILLIAM STEDMAN GREENE, Republican,of Fall River,was born in T'remont, Tazewell County, Ill., 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 a in 1887 and 1888, but was defeated; in July, 1888, wasappointed 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, also elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 13,565 votes, to 5,241 for Charles T. Luce, Democrat, and 1,178 for Elijah Humphries, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. PrymouTH CouNTy.—City of Brockton; towns of Abington, Bridgewater, Carver, Duxbury, East Bridgewater, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Lakeville, Marshfield, Middleboro, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rockland, Scituate, Wareham, West Bridgewater, and Whitman. BrisToL CouNtTv.—City of Taunton; towns of Attleboro, Easton, Mansfield, Norton, and Raynham. NORFOLK CouNTv.—Town of Cohasset. BARNSTABLE COUNTY. Population (1900), 196,201. WILLIAM C. LOVERING, Republican, of Taunton, was born in 1835 in Rhode Island; waseducated in Cambridge, Mass., at the Cambridge High School and the Hop- kins Classical School; has been engaged in cotton manufacturing nearly all of his life; is interested in many other manufactories, in which he is president, 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,410 votes, to 5,447 for C. A. Gilday, Democrat, 4,300 for I. W. Skinner, Socialist, 512 for C. B. Gaffney, Prohibitionist, and 460 for Jeremiah Devine, Socialist Labor. MICHIGAN. SENATORS. 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 attor- ney 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- 52 Congressional Directory. : [MICHIGAN. 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 for the full term of six years, receiving every vote of the Republican members of the legislature. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. . RUSSELL ALEXANDER ALGER, Republican, of Detroit, was born in Lafay- ette Township, Medina County, Ohio, February 27, 1836. At the age of 11 years his parents died. For seven years he labored on a farm, attending the Richfield Academy, in Summit County, Ohio, in winters, and subsequently taught country school. He later studied law with Wolcott & Upson at Akron, Ohio; was admitted to the bar by the supreme court of that State in March, 1859, and in May, 1885, the degree of LI. D. was conferred upon him by Hillsdale College. In December of 1859 he removed to Grand Rapids, Mich. He has been extensively engaged in the lumber business and other industries since 1866. In August, 1861, he enlisted in the Army and was mustered into service September 2, 1861, as captain of Company C, Second Michigan Cavalry; major of the regiment April 2, 1862; lieutenant-colonel Sixth Michigan Cavalry, October 30, 1862; colonel Fifth Michigan Cavalry, June 11, 1863; brevet brigadier-general, U. S. Volunteers, for gallant and meritorious services to rank from the battle of Trevillion Station, June 11, 1864; brevet major-general, U. S. Volunteers, June 11, 1865, for gallant and meritorious services during the war, having participated in sixty- six battles and skirmishes. He was elected commander in chief of the Grand Army of the Republic in 1889. In politics General Alger has always been a Republican. He was a delegate to the Republican national convention in 1884 and was elected governor of Michigan in the same year, declining a renomina- tion in 1886. At the Republican national convention held in Chicago in 1888 he received 143 votes on the fifth ballot, the State of Michigan voting solidly for him on every ballot. In 1888 was first elector-at-large of his State. In March, 1897, he was appointed Secretary of War by President McKinley, resigning on August I, 1899. On September 27, 1902, he was appointed United States Senator by the gov- ernor of Michigan, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James McMillan, and took his seat December I, 1902, and was elected by the legislature of Michigan in January, 1903. His term will expire March 3, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. City oF DETROIT.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Thirteenth, Fifteenth, and Seventeenth wards. Population (1900), 235,491. ALFRED LUCKING, Democrat, of Detroit, was born of English and Scotch parentage, at Ingersoll, Ontario, December 18, 1856; his parents removed while he was an infant in arms to Ypsilanti, Mich. , where he was reared; educated at Ypsilanti High School, Michigan State Normal College, and law department of the University of Michigan, where he took the degree of bachelor of laws, 1878; has practiced law ever since at Detroit; married February 23, 1881, to Vie Loree Rose, and has two children; never before a candidate for any office; was named and confirmed a park and boulevard commissioner of Detroit in December, 1896, but declined the appoint- ment; was temporary chairman of the Democratic State convention in 1900, and was both temporary and permanent chairman of the State convention of 1902; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,009 votes, to 16,743 for John B. Corliss, Republican, 403 for John Sweet, and 169 for Herman Richter. Defeated for reelec- tion to the Fifty-ninth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.— Jackson, I,enawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw. WAYNE CouNnTY.—Townships of Ecorse, Huron, Montguagon, Nankin, Northville, Plymouth, Romulus, Sumpter, Taylor, and Van Buren, and Wyandotte City. Population (1900), 208,043. CHARLES E. TOWNSEND, Republican, of Jackson, was born on a farm in Con- cord, Jackson County, Mich. , August 15, 1856; attended common schools in Concord and Jackson, and in 1877 entered the literary department of the Michigan University, where he remained one year; was admitted to the Jackson bar to practice law in MICHIGAN] Senators and Representatives. 53 1895, and has practiced his profession in Jackson since; married Rena Paddock Sep- tember 1, 1880; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 22,198 votes, to 18,390 for Fred B. Wood, Democrat, and 1,034 for Ebenezer R. Bragg, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties). Population (1900), 182,969. WASHINGTON GARDNER, Republican, of Albion, was born 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 December, 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 and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,741 votes, to 13,900 for W. J. Sampson, Democrat, 951 for C. A. Wood, and 196 for D. B. Reed. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren (6 counties). Population (1900), 188,530. EDWARD LA RUE HAMILTON, Republican, of Niles, was born in Niles Town- ship, Berrien County, Mich., December g, 1857; was admitted to the bar in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,617 votes, to 15,368 votes for Thomas O’Hara, Democrat, and 138 votes for Edward F. Strickland, Socialist. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNnTIES.—Ionia, Kent, and Ottawa (3 counties). Population (1900), 203,710. 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 in 1872; was appointed a page in the Michigan house of representa- tives in 1879; studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1883; was a member of the Republican State central committee in 1888, 1890, and 1892; was general counsel of the Chicago and West Michigan, and Detroit, Grand Rapids and Western Railroad companies from 1886 to 1901; is president of the Grand Rapids Herald Company; is first vice-president of The People’s Savings Bank, of Grand Rapids; was honored with the degree of Master of Arts by Dartmouth College in June, 1901; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,040 votes, to 11,525 for M. H. Walker, Democrat, 767 for E. S. Townsend, and 289 for C. A. Bissonette. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress by a majority of 18,434, over Vernon H. Smith, Democrat. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Genesee, Ingham, Livingston, Oakland; townships of IL.avonia, Redford, Greenfield, Brownstown, Canton, Dearborn, Nankin, and Springwells, of the county of Wayne, and the Twelfth, Fourteenth, and Sixteenth wards of the city of Detroit. Population (1900), 221,136. SAMUEL WILLIAM SMITH, Republican, of Pontiac, was born in the township of Independence, Oakland County, Mich., August 23, 1852; waseducated 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-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 23,869 votes, to 18,300 for W. H. S. Wood, Democrat, and 224 for R. W. Le Baron. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. 54 Congressional Directory. [MICHIGAN. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, and St. Clair, and Grosse Pointe, Gratiot, and Ham- tranck townships of Wayne County. Population (1900), 192,674. HENRY McMORRAN, Republican, of Port Huron, was born in Port Huron, Mich., June 11, 1844; attended public schools until 13 years old, when he began his business life; has been engaged in the grocery business, milling, grain, and elevator trade, and is connected with numerous commercial, manufacturing, and transporta- tion companies; was general manager of the Port Huron and Northwestern Railway from 1878 to 1889, when it was sold to the Flint and Pere Marquette Company; has been alderman and city treasurer of Port Huron, a member of the canal commission, and always active and prominent in party affairs; married Miss Emma C. Williams, daughter of Myron Williams, of Marysville, and has one son, who is engaged in busi- ness with him, and two daughters; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,830 votes, to 12,481 for Martin Crocker, Democrat, 595 for John Scott, and 207 for J. M. Lamb. EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Clinton, Saginaw, Shiawassee, and Tuscola (4 counties). Population (1900), 176,114. JOSEPH WARREN FORDNEY, Republican, of Saginaw, W. S., was born in Blackford 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 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 and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,392 votes, to 11,389 for H. M. Youmans, Democrat, 1,004 for J. G. Fischer, Prohibitionist, and gor for Samuel Hackett, Socialist. ! NINTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Benzie, Lake, I,eelanaw, Manistee, Mason, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, and Wexford (g counties). . Population (1900), 160,137. 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,502 votes, to 6,166 for Daniel W. Goodenough, Democrat, 969 for Edwin S. Palmiter, Prohibitionist, and 330 for David M. Stevens, Socialist. : TENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Alcona, Alpena, Arenac, Bay, Cheboygan, Crawford, Emmet, Gladwin, Tosco, Midland, Montmorency, Ogemaw, Oscoda, Otsego, and Presque Isle (15 counties). Population (1900), 189,246. GEORGE ALVIN LOUD, Republican, of Au Sable, was born June 18, 1852, in Geauga County, Ohio; has been engaged in the lumber business for thirty years, in connection with his father and brothers; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,069 votes, to 11,846 for Michael O’Brien, Democrat, and 574 for Louis K. Russell, Prohibitionist. a HERA = i MICHIGAN.] Senators and Representatives. 55 ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Antrim, Charlevoix, Clare, Grand Traverse, Gratiot, Isabella, Kalkaska, Mecosta, Missaukee, Montcalm, Osceola, and Roscommon (12 counties). Population (1900), 201,570. ARCHIBALD BARD DARRAGH, Republican, of St. Louis, was born in Monroe County, Mich. ; received a common school and collegiate education, and was gradu- ated from the University of Michigan in the class of 1868; served in the Union Army during the civil war as a private and an officer until discharged in 1865; was elected to the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- ninth Congress, receiving 31,661 votes, to 10,639 for Wm. A. Bahlke, Democrat, and 1,054 for Henry A. Miller, Prohibitionist. TWELFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Alger, Baraga, Chippewa, Delta, Dickinson, Gogebic, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, I,uce, Mackinac, Marquette, Menominee, Ontonagon, and Schoolcraft (15 counties). Population (1900), 261,362. H. OLIN YOUNG, Republican, of Ishpeming, was born August 4, 1850, at New Albion, Cattaraugus County, N. Y.; had an academic education and is a lawyer; was a member of the Michigan State legislature in 1879; prosecuting attorney of Marquette County, 1886-1896; married March 20, 1876, to Mary J. Marsh; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,224 votes, to 8,467 for John Power, Democrat, Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. 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, Ill., 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 I, 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, and reelected in 19o0I. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. MOSES EDWIN CLAPP, Republican, of St. Paul, was born in Delphi, Ind., May 21, 1851; his parents removed to Hudson, Wis., in 1857; after obtaining a common school education, graduated from the Wisconsin Law School in 1873; was married in 1874 to Hattie Allen, and has three children living, one son and two daughters; in 1878 was elected county attorney of St. Croix County, Wis.; in 1881 moved to Fergus Falls, Minn., and resided there until 1891; was elected attorney-general of Minnesota in 1887, 1889, and 1891, and removed to St. Paul and made that his per- manent home in 1891; was elected to the United States Senate January 23, 1901, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Senator Davis, of Minnesota, and took his seat January 28, 19o1. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Dodge, Fillmore, Freeborn, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Steele, Wabasha, Waseca, and Winona (10 counties). Population (1900), 210,164. 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 he 56 Congressional Directory. [MINNESOTA. entered the blacksmith shop of his father as an apprentice; subsequently learned the trade of machinist; left Pennsylvania in July, 1877, arriving at Winona, August 1, where he was employed as a blacksmith and machinist until January 1, 1881, when he commenced the study of law in the office of Bentley & Vance, of Winona, having previously devoted mornings and evenings to the study of law for about two years; was admitted to the bar July 10, 1882; entered the law school of the University of Wisconsin in September following, that being the only school he attended after the age of 14. He was elected to the State senate of Minnesota in 1890; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,561 votes, to 12,545 for Peter McGovern, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Blue Earth, Brown, Cottonwood, Faribault, Jackson, Martin, Murray, Nobles, Pipe- stone, Rock, and Watonwan (11 counties). Population (1900), 175,174. 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 school for some years in Wisconsin; in 1881 resigned the superintendency of the Pierce County, Wis., schools to become State institute con- ductor 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,100 votes, to 9,234 for Charles N. Andrews, Democrat. THIRD: DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Carver, Dakota, Goodhue, Lesueur, McLeod, Nicollet, Rice, Scott, and Sibley (9 coun- Hes Population (1900), 183,106. CHARLES RUSSELL DAVIS, Republican, of St. Peter, was born at Pittsfield, I11., September 17, 1849; removed to Lesueur County, Minn., in 1853; was educated in the common schools of Lesueur County, graduating from the St. Peter High School in 1865; for two years thereafter received private instruction in the higher branches and took a business college course in St. Paul during the winter of 1867-68; studied law with Alfred Wallin, present chief justice of North Dakota; was admitted to the bar March 6, 1872, and has practiced his profession ever since in Minnesota; was married, 1874, to Miss Emma Haven, of Chicago; was county attorney of Nicollet County for ten years and city clerk and city attorney of St. Peter for eighteen years; elected to the house of representatives of the State legislature in 1888 and to the senate in 1890; was captain of Company I, Second Regiment, Minnesota National Guard, for four years; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 20,116 votes, to 10,384 for Joseph T. Craven, Democrat. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Chisago, Ramsey, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1900), 211,610. FREDERICK CLEMENT STEVENS, Republican, of St. Paul, was born in Boston, Mass., January 1, 1861; attended the common schools of Rockland, Me.; graduated from Bowdoin College in 1881; from law school of the State University 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 for sessions of 1888-89 and 1890-91, and to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh,and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and to the Fifty-ninth Congress without opposition. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTv.—Hennepin. Population (1900), 228,340. JOHN LIND, Democrat, of Minneapolis, was born in Sweden March 25, 1854; received a public school education; is a lawyer; was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty- first, and Fifty-second Congresses as a Republican from the then Second district of MINNESOTA] Senators and Representatives. : 57 Minnesota; was governor of Minnesota, 1899-1go1; married, September 1, 1879, to Alice A. Shepard; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,663 votes, to 17,809 for Loren Fletcher, Republican; 76 for A. H. Nelson, People’s Party; 350 for George D. Haggard, Prohibitionist; 421 for Martin Hanson, Socialist Labor, and 215 for Spencer M. Holman, Socialist. > SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Benton, Cass, Crow Wing, Douglas, Hubbard, Meeker, Morrison, Sherburne, Stearns, Todd, Wadena, and Wright (12 counties). Population (1900), 208,162. CLARENCE B. BUCKMAN, Republican, of Littlefalls, was born near Newtown, Pa., in 1851; had a common school education; removed to Minnesota in 1872, and in 1876 married Miss Emma C. Harvey; was elected to the lower house of the Minne- sota legislature in 1881, and has since served three terms in the State senate; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,879 votes, to 13,676 for Julian A. Du Bois, Democrat, SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIESs.—Bigstone, Chippewa, Grant, Kandiyohi, Lac qui Parle, Lincoln, I,yon, Pope, Redwood, Renville, Stevens, Swift, Traverse, and Yellow Medicine (14 counties). Population (1900), 184,357. ANDREW J. VOLSTEAD, Republican, of Granite Falls, was born in Goodhue County, Minn., in 1860; was educated at the public schools, St. Olaf’s College, and Decorah Institute, and is by profession a lawyer; has been president of the board of education, city attorney, and mayor of Granite Falls, and for fourteen years county attorney of Yellow Medicine County; is married, wife’s maiden name Nellie Gilruth; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,826 votes, to 5,397 for August O. Forsberg, Populist, FIGHTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES. —Aitkin, Anoka, Carlton, Cook, Isanti, Itasca, Kanabec, Lake, Millelacs, Pine, and St. Louis (11 counties). Population (1900), 156,943. J. ADAM BEDE, Republican, of Pine City, was born ona farm in Lorain County, Ohio, in 1856; educated in the public schools of that State; learned the printer’s trade; taught school; engaged in newspaper work as a profession, lived in most of the Western and Southern States; did reportorial work in Washington; married; supported Grover Cleveland in 1888 and 1892, and was appointed United States marshal for the district of Minnesota in 1894; served through the great railroad strikes of that year and resigned; returned to the Republican party on the financial issue in 1896, campaigning in several States that year, and in 1898 and 1900; decided to go to Congress as a Republican and was nominated under the primary ballot law September 16, 1902, by a vote of 8,641 to 5,514 for W. D. Edson, of Duluth, and 1,351 for Jesse I,. Jellison, of Itasca County, his Republican competitors; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,613 votes, to 8,882 for Marcus I. Fay, Democrat, and 538 for V, C, Konneczney, Socialist, Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. NINTH DISTRICT, CouNTIES.—Becker, Beltrami, Clay, Clearwater, Kittson, Marshall, Norman, Ottertail, Polk, Red Lake, Roseau, and Wilkin (12 counties). Population (1900), 190,052. HALVOR STEENERSON, Republican, of Crookston, was born June 30, 1852, in Dane County, Wis., but removed to Minnesota the following year, 1853, his parents having settled in Houston County, where he was educated in the common schools and at the high school in Rushford, Minn.; studied law in an office at Austin, Minn., and at Union College of Law, Chicago, and was admitted to the bar in the supreme court of Illinois in June, 1878, and in the courts of Minnesota the same year; began the practice of his profession at once, and removed to Crookston in April, 1880; was in the fall of that year elected county attorney and served two years, and in 1882 was elected State senator and served in the sessions of 1883 and 1885; was delegate to the national Republican conventions at Chicago in 1884 and 1888; married in 1878, and has one son, Benjamin G., 21 years of age; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress without opposition, receiving 27,061 votes, to 23,527 for the Republican electoral ticket. | | | 58 Congressional Directory. [MISSISSIPPI MISSISSIPPI. SENATORS. 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. Was renominated by the Democratic party in primary, August 6, 1903, to succeed himself for the term beginning March 4, 1905, and ending March 3, 1911. ANSELM JOSEPH McL AURIN, Democrat, of Brandon, was born March 26, 1848, at Brandon, Miss.; moved with his parents the latter part of that year to Smith County, where he was raised on a farm; attended the neighborhood schools occa- sionally until 16 years old, when he joined the Confederate army and served as a private; after the war, attended two years at Summerville Institute, completing the junior year; was licensed by Judge Watts to practice law July 3, 1868; married Miss Laura Rauch February 22, 1870, of which marriage ten children have been born, seven now living; was elected district attorney in 1871; representative in the legisla- ture in 1879; Presidential elector for the State at large in 1888; delegate to the con- stitutional convention in 1890; United States Senator in February, 1894; governor of Mississippi in 1895, and served four years; elected to the United States Senate in January, 1900, and took his seat March 4, 1901; reelected for the term beginning March 4, 1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Alcorn, Itawamba, I,ee, L,owndes, Monroe, Noxubee, Oktibbeha, Prentiss, and Tisho- mingo (9 counties). Population (1900), 187,739. EZEKIEL SAMUEL CANDLER, Jr., Democrat, of Corinth, was born in Bell- ville, Hamilton County, Fla., on January 18, 1862, but removed with his parents to Tishomingo County, Miss., when only 8 years old, and grew to manhood in that county; is the oldest son of Ezekiel Samuel Candler, sr., and Julia Bevill Candler, who are natives of Georgia; is a direct descendant of William Candler, who was a colonel in the army of the American Revolution and the ancestor of the Candler family of Georgia, who have been prominently identified with the history of that State from the days of the Revolution up to and including the present; received a common school education in the Iuka Male Academy, at Iuka, Miss.; attended the law department of the University of Mississippi, at Oxford, term of 1880-81, and on June 30, 1881, graduated in law, when a little over 19 years old, receiving the degree of B. L., and having previously had his disabilities of minority removed by the chancery court, so as to enable him to practice his profession, he at once commenced the practice of law with his father at Iuka under the firm name of Candler & Candler, which partnership still exists; was chairman of the Democratic executive committee of Tishomingo County in 1884, when 22 years old; removed from Iuka to Corinth January 1, 1887, where he has since resided, and actively engaged in the practice of law, the firm of Candler & Candler having an office at Iuka and also one at Corinth; was nominated by the Democratic State convention in 1888 by acclamation, when 26 years old, for Presidential elector for the First Congressional district, and was elected by the largest majority received by any district Presidential elector at that election in the State, and voted for Cleveland and Thurman; is now, and has been for the past ten years, a member of the Democratic executive committee of Alcorn County; is a member of the Baptist Church, and has been since 1896 the moderator of the Tisho- mingo Baptist Association, and has several times represented that association in the Southern Baptist Convention, which is the largest religious organization in that Wey 3. MISSISSIPPI] Senators and Representatives. 59 denomination; was married to Miss Nancy Priscilla Hazlewood, daughter of Thomas B. Hazlewood, of Towncreek, Lawrence County, Ala., April 26, 1883, and has three children, Julia Bevill Candler, Susan Hazlewood Candler, and Lucy Alice Candler; was nominated for Congress in a straight primary election before the people August 30, 1900, carrying seven out of eight counties in the district, and was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, successor to ‘‘ Private’ John M. Allen, who was not a can- didate for reelection. Reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition either for nomination or election, receiving 3,245 votes, SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Benton, De Soto, I.afayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchie, Tate, Tippah, and Union (9 counties). Population (r9co), 183,795. THOMAS SPIGHT, Democrat, 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 one 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 oificer of that rank in the famous ¢“Walthall’s Brigade,” commanded by the late distinguished Senator from Missis- sippi; participated in nearly all the battles fought by the Army of the 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 KE. 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; was married December 12, 1865, to Miss Mary Virginia Barnett, who died May 21, 1901; married again October 15, 1903, to Mrs. Thida D. Moore; 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 waselected district attorney of the Third judicial district, composed of seven counties, which position he held until 1892, when he voluntarily retired; he was a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Congress in 1894, but was defeated by Hon. J. C. Kyle, who was then serving his second term; was again a candidate in 1896, but was defeated in convention by a combination of the opposition on Hon. W. V. Sullivan, who was elected and afterwards appointed United States Senator to suc- ceed Senator Walthall, deceased; was elected for the unexpired term in the Fifty-fifth Congress, and to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition at the primary or the general election, receiving 2,523 votes. THIRD DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Bolivar, Coahoma, Holmes, Issaquena, Ieflore, Quitman, Sharkey, Sunflower, Tunica, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1900), 232,174. BENJAMIN GRUBB HUMPHREYS, Democrat, of Greenwood, was born in Claiborne County, Miss., August 17, 1865; his father was Brig. Gen. Benj. G. Humphreys, Confederate States army, and governor of Mississippi from 1865 to 1868, when he was forcibly ejected from the executive mansion by Federal soldiers under the command of Brig. Gen. Adelbert Ames, U. S. Army, who succeeded him as military governor; his mother was Mildred Hickman Maury, of Tennessee; he was educated at the University of Mississippi, in the class of 1885, but left before graduation, having completed the junior year; he engaged in mercantile pursuits, first as a clerk, afterwards as a commercial traveler, or ‘‘drummer,’’ and subsequently on his own account; he was married to Miss Louise Yerger, of Greenville, Miss., October 9, 1889; studied law, and was admitted to the bar November, 1891; was appointed superintendent of education for Leflore County in January, 1892, for a term of four years; he was selected messenger by the Presidential electors in 1892 to deliver the electoral vote of Mississippi; in 1895 he was elected district attorney for the fourth circuit court district of Mississippi for a term of four years, and was reelected without opposition in 1899; when war was declared against Spain, in April, 1898, he raised a company at Greenwood and was elected first lieutenant; he 60 Congressional Directory. [MISSISSIPPI offered to resign the office of district attorney in order to join the army, but United States Senator A. J. McLaurin, who was then governor of Mississippi, refused to permit it, and gave him a leave of absence instead; he served in the Second Mis- sissippi Volunteer Infantry under Maj. Gen. Fitzhugh Lee in Florida during the entire war, being mustered out with his regiment at Columbia, Tenn., December 22, 1898; he was a candidate for Congress in 1900, but was defeated by Hon. Pat- rick Henry; in 1902 he was nominated without opposition in the Democratic primaries, and elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition, receiving 1,146 votes. : FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Attala, Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Clay, Grenada, Montgomery, Pontotoc, ‘Webster, and Yalobusha (11 counties). Population (1900), 199,650. WILSON SHEDRIC HILIL, Democrat, of Winona, was born January 19, 1863, in Choctaw County, Miss.; educated in the common schools of that section and the Uni- versity of Mississippi; studied law at the Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., and began its practice at Winona in 1884; was elected to the legislature in 1887; served one term, and in 1891 was elected district attorney for the fifth judicial district of Mississippi; reelected without opposition in 1895 and in 1899; was nominated and elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition, receiving 2,834 votes. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Clarke, Jasper, Kemper, Tauderdale, I,eake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott, Smith, and Winston (10 counties). Population (1900), 183,066. ADAM MONROE BYRD, Democrat, of Philadelphia, was born July 6, 1859, in Sumter County, Ala.; moved to Mississippi when 8 years old, and settled in Neshoba County; was educated in the common schools and in the Cooper Institute at Dale- ville, Miss.; graduated from the law department of the Columbian University at Lebanon, Tenn., in 1884, and commenced the practice of his profession in his home county; served as superintendent of education in said county in 1887 and 1888; was elected to the Mississippi State senate in 1889, 1890, and 1892, and a member of the lower house of the Mississippi legislature in 1895. In 1896 was appointed prosecuting attorney for the tenth judicial district of Mississippi by Governor A. J. McLaurin, and in 1897 was by him appointed judge of the sixth chancery district of said State, and reappointed to the said position by Governor Iongino in 1goi. Resigned his position as chancellor, and was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without oppo- sition, SIXTH DISTRICT. ® CounTIiES.—Covington, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Jones, Lawrence, Marion, Lamar, Pearl River, Perry, Simpson, and Wayne (13 counties). . ? Population (1900), 162,440. EATON JACKSON BOWERS, Democrat, of Bay St. Louis, was born at Canton, Miss., June 17, 1865. He attended the village schools from 1870 to 1879, when he entered the Mississippi Military Institute, at Pass Christian, where he continued until February, 1881. Was admitted to the bar at Canton, Madison County, in April, 1883, at the age of 17 years; practiced at that place until August, 1884, when he _ removed to Bay St. Louis, where he has since resided. He was Presidential elector on the Democratic ticket from the Sixth district of Mississippi in the year 1888, and from the State at large in the year 1892; in 1896 was elected to the State senate, representing the first senatorial district, and served one term; in 1900 was elected to the house of representatives from Hancock County, which position he held at the time of his election to Congress. He was a member of the State Democratic execu- tive committee from 1886 to 1900; was a delegate to the Democratic national con- vention at Kansas City in 1900; was a major in the First Artillery Battalion Missis- sippi National Guard; was nominated for Congress by the Democratic party on August 20, 1902, and elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress. Reelected to the Fifty- ninth Congress. MISSISSIPPI] Senators and Representatives. 61 SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Jefferson, Lincoln, Pike, and Wilkinson (9 counties). . Population (1900), 211,521. FRANK ALEXANDER MCcLAIN, Democrat, of Gloster, was born 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; was married to Miss Fannie A. Tyler, of Magnolia, Miss., on March 6, 1879, who died March 13, 1900; 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 twelve consecutive years; 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 term in the Fifty-fifth Congress of William Franklin Love, who died October 17, 1898; elected to the Fifty- sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress with- out opposition, EIGHTH DISTRICT. CouNnTIiES.—Hinds, Madison, Rankin, Warren, and Yazoo (5 counties). Population (1900), 190,885. 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, Tenn., 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, Tenn.; 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 to the Chicago convention which nominated Cleveland and Steven- son; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition, receiving I,433 votes, MISSOURI. SENATORS. FRANCIS MARION COCKRELL, 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 has been reelected four times. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. WILLIAM JOEL STONE, Democrat, of Jefferson City, was born May 7, 1848, in Madison County, Ky.; graduated from Missouri University, which later conferred upon him the degree of LL. D.; is a lawyer, admitted to the bar in 1869; was pros- ecuting attorney of Vernon County, Mo., 1873-74; Representative in the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses; governor of Missouri 1893-1897; member from Missouri of the Democratic national committee 1896-1904; vice-chairman 1900-1904; married Sarah Louise Winston, April 2, 1874, and has three children; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed George Graham Vest, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. g 62 Congressional Directory. [MISSOURL REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Adair, Clark, Knox, Lewis, Macon, Marion, Putnam, Schuyler, Scotland, and Shelby (10 counties). Population (1900), 183,590. JAMES TIGHLMAN LILOYD, Democrat, of Shelbyville,was born at Canton, Lewis County, Mo., August 28, 1857; graduated from Christian University at Canton, Mo., in 1878; faught 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 ; had held no office, except that of prosecuting attorney of his county from 1889 to 1893, until his election to the Fifty-fifth Congress, to fill a vacancy; elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,972 votes, to 13,179 for Lee T. Robinson, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Carroll, Chariton, Grundy, Linn, Livingston, Monroe, Randolph, and Sullivan (8 counties). Population (1900), 183,358. WILLIAM WALLER 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 and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Con- gress, receiving 18,045 votes, to 13,293 for John L. Schmitz, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, Daviess, Dekalb, Gentry, Harrison, Mercer, Ray, and Worth (10 counties). Population (1900), 182,960. 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 elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,270 votes, to 14,618 for R. E. Ward, Republican. 3 FOURTH DISTRICT. CouUNTIES.—Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Holt, Nodaway, and Platte (6 counties). ; Population (1900), 221,885. CHARLES FREMONT COCHRAN, Democrat, of St. Joseph, was born in Kirks- ville, Adair County, Mo.; resided in Atchison, Kans., from 1860 till 1885; was edu- cated 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 the editor and publisher of the Atchison Patriot, a Democratic newspaper, in 1868-69; admitted to the bar in 1873, and practiced law until 1885, when he became editor of the St. Joseph Gazette, and filled that position until elected Representative, in 1896; was elected to the Fifty- fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,392 votes, to 14,510 for O. M, Gilmer, Republican, MISSOURL] Senators and Representatives. 63 FIFTH DISTRICT, CouNTY.— Jackson. Population (1900), 195,193. 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; was appointed assistant prosecuting attorney of Jackson 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,628 votes, to 14,393 for Col. R. T. Van Horn, Republican, indorsed by Public Ownership party, 345 for Ulysses G. Hughes, Prohibitionist, 81 for Thomas Wolfe, Allied Third party, and 49 for Chas. N. Wellman, Socialist. SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bates, Cass, Cedar, Dade, Henry, Johnson, and St. Clair (7 counties). Population (1900), 162,629. 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,639 votes, to 13,124 for Levin W, Shafer, Republican, SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Benton, Greene, Hickory, Howard, Lafayette, Pettis, Polk, and Saline (8 counties). Population (1900), 218,666. COURTNEY WALKER HAMLIN, Democrat, of Springfield, was born in Hen- derson County, N. C., October 27, 1858; lived in South Carolina until 1869, at which time he removed with his parents to Missouri; grew up on farm, and was educated in the common schools of the country, and at the Salem (Mo. ) Academy; is a lawyer, having been admitted to the bar on March 21, 1882, before the Hon. C. C. Bland, brother of the late Richard P. Bland; married, March 23, 1831, to Annie Laura Lamar, in Crawford County, Mo.; never before held office; was elected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 19,277 votes, to 17,250 for Granville P, Peale, Republican, EIGHTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Boone, Camden, Cole, Cooper, Miller, Moniteau, Morgan, and Osage (8 counties), Population’ (1900), 142,254. 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; elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,465 votes, to 13,133 for I. N. Enloe. NINTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Audrain, Callaway, Franklin, Gasconade, Lincoln, Montgomery, Pike, Ralls, St. Charles, and Warren (10 counties). Population (1900), 197,370. CHAMP CLARK, Democrat, of Bowling Green, was born March 7, 1850, in Ander- son County, Ky.; educated in the common schools, Kentucky University, Bethany 64 Congressional Directory. [MISSOURL 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; permanent chairman of the National Democratic Convention, St. Louis, July 6-9, 1904, and chairman of the com- mittee notifying Judge Parker of his nomination; married Miss Genevieve Bennett; has had four children born to him: Little Champ, Ann Hamilton, Bennett, and Gene- vieve, the two latter still living; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fifth, Fifty- sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,591 votes, to 14,770 for Dr. Alonzo Tubbs, Republican. Reelccted to the Fifty-ninth Congress, TENTH DISTRICT. ST. Louis COUNTY, and the First, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Nineteenth, Twenty-fourth, T'wenty-eighth wards, and eleventh precinct of the Twenty-seventh Ward, of the city of St. Louis. : Population (1900), 265,440. : RICHARD BARTHOLDT, Republican, of St. Louis,was born in Germany, Novemn- ber 2, 1855; 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty- sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to thé Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,516 votes, to 15,262 for R. T. Blow, Democrat, 1,256 for F. Brandt, Social- ist, 807 for C. H. Kunst, Allied Third party, and 236 for C. Gruppi, Social Labor. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CITY OF ST. Iouis.—Second, Third, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, and T'wenty-sixth wards, and precincts one to ten, inclusive, of the Twenty-seventh Ward. Population (1900), 207,414. ; JOHN THOMAS HUNT, Democrat, of St. Louis, was born in that city in 1860, and received a common school education; is a stone cutter by profession; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,913 votes, to 10,077 for Charles F. Joy, Republican, 426 for McInturff, Socialist, 113 for Poelling, Socialist Labor, and got for Doctor Chambers, Allied Trades and Labor. TWELFTH DISTRICT. CITY OF ST. Louls.—Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Twenty-second, Twenty-third, and Twenty-fifth wards. Population (1900), 152,424. JAMES JOSEPH BUTLER, Democrat, of St. Louis, was born in that city August 29, 1862; served an apprenticeship as blacksmith, and worked at that trade for sev- eral years; afterwards entered St. Louis University, and graduated from that institu- tion in June, 1881, with the degree of B. S.; worked as a blacksmith for a year and then entered the law school of Washington University; was admitted to the bar June 2, 1884; served for seven years as city attorney of St. Louis and for two years as a school director of that city; was married August 11, 1896, to Miss Rose Mary Lan- caster, of St. Louis; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, receiving 22,104 votes, to 18,551 for William M. Horton, Republican; was unseated June 28, 1902, on a contest filed by William M. Horton, Republican, the House declaring that no valid election had been held; at the special election, held on November 4, 1902, to fill the vacancy caused by his unseating, Mr. Butler received 16,844 votes, to 10,551 for George C. R. Wagoner, Republican; was unseated February 26, 1903, on a con- test filed by George C. R. Wagoner, Republican; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,316 votes, to 8,698 for George D. Reynolds, Republican. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bollinger, Carter, Iron, Jefferson, Madison, Perry, Reynolds, St. Francois, Ste. Gene- vieve, Washington, and Wayne (11 counties). Population (1900), 153,036. 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 MISSOURL] Senators and Representatives. 65 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,442 votes, to 13,793 for John H. Raney, Republican. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTieEs.—Butler, Cape Girardeau, Christian, Douglas, Dunklin, Howell, Mississippi, New Madrid, Oregon, Ozark, Pemiscot, Ripley, Scott, Stoddard, Stone, and Taney (16 counties). Population (1900), 250,614. WILLARD DUNCAN VANDIVER, Democrat, of Cape Girardeau, was born in Hardy County, Va. (now West Virginia), March 30, 1854; waseducated inthe 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 was a very large one, embracing at that time seventeen counties and containing a population of about 250,000, and was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 19,868 votes, to 16,788 for E. P. Kinsolving, and 74 votes’ scattering. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Barry, Barton, Jasper, Lawrence, McDonald, Newton, and Vernon (7 counties). Population (1900), 231,659. MAECENAS E. BENTON, Democrat, of Neosho, was born in Obion County, Tenn., January 29, 1849, but was reared in Dyer County, in that State; received his literary education in two West Tennessee academies and in St. Louis University; and his legal education in the law department of Cumberland University; on leaving the law school immediately 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 up to 1900, and was president of the conventions held in 1890, 1896, and 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;’”’ 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 1896, and a member of the committee on credentials in that body; has always been interested in the educa- tional interests of his State; served seven years as a curator for the State University of Missouri, and six years as a curator for Scarritt College; was elected to the Fifty- fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,038 votes to 18,411 for Theodore Lacaff, Republican, and 725 for Dow, Prohibitionist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTtiEs.—Crawford, Dallas, Dent, T,aclede, Maries, Phelps, Pulaski, Shannon, Texas, Webster, and Wright (11 counties). Population (1900), 158,173. ROBERT LAMAR, Democrat, of Houston, was born at Edgar Springs, Phelps County, Mo., March 28, 1866, the son of Charles T. I,amar, who died in 1878, and of Nancy J. Lamar, who died in 1884; was educated in the common schools of Mis- souri, by home study, and in Licking Academy, at Licking, Mo.; taught school in Phelps County and in Texas County, and was principal of Licking Academy in 1889; was admitted to the bar in Texas County in 1889, and in 1890 was elected prosecuting attorney of Texas County, and two years later was reelected; was chairman of the Democratic Congressional committee of the Thirteenth district of Missouri from 1894 to 1896; in 1896 was Presidential elector on the Democratic ticket for the Thirteenth district; since 1899 has been engaged in the practice of law at Houston; was married 58-3D—2D ED——35 66 Congressional Directory. [MISSOURL October 10, 1889, to Jennie Rice, at Licking, and has three children, two boys and a girl; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,102 votes, to 12,996 for Ben. F. Russell, Republican. MONTANA. SENATORS. WILLIAM ANDREWS CLARK, Democrat, of Butte, was born on a farm near Connellsville, Fayette County, Pa., January 8, 1839; received a comrion school edu- cation; moved to Iowa 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 Percés invasion of 1877; was presi- dent 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 18go, but was not seated, owing to the muddle growing out of the organization of two legislatures in the State, the Repub- lican Senators being seated; was the caucus nominee of his party for the Senate in 1893; assisted materially in retaining the State capital at Helena in a memorable contest between that city and Anaconda in 1894; 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; a memorial was filed in the Senate asking that the election of Senator Clark be investigated, which was referred to the Committee on Privileges and Elections; after an investigation a resolution was reported to the effect that the election was void; this resolution was not.acted upon by the Senate, as Senator Clark, in a speech on May 15, 1900, stated that he had sent his resignation to the governor of Montana and desired to submit the mat- ter to the people of his State, and would abide by their verdict; the acting governor of the State immediately appointed him to fill the vacancy created by his resigna- tion, but he did not present himself to be sworn in under the credentials; in the Democratic State convention held in Montana in September a resolution was unani- mously adopted demanding his reelection to the Senate, and a legislative ticket favorable to his reelection was overwhelmingly elected in November, and on Janu- ary 16, 1901, he was reelected for the term of six years to succeed the Hon. Thomas H. Carter, and took his seat March 4, 1gor. His term will expire March 3, 1907. PARIS GIBSON, Democrat, of Great Falls, was born at Brownfield, Oxford County, Me., July 1, 1830; was graduated from Bowdoin College in 1851, and was soon after elected a representative to the State legislature of Maine; in 1858 located in Minneapolis, Minn., and, in connection with W. W. Eastman, built the first flour mill of that city; later, built and operated the ‘North Star’ woolen mill in the same place; in 1879 located at Fort Benton, Mont., where he became interested in the first flocks of sheep driven into northern Montana; in 1882 first saw the falls of the Missouri, where he founded the city of Great Falls, of which he was the first mayor; in 1839 was chosen delegate to the convention at which was framed the constitution of the State of Montana; in 1890 was elected to represent his county in the State senate; inaugurated the municipal park system of Montana; was elected to the United States Senate March 7, 1901, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Hon. W. A. Clark in 1900, and took his seat December 2, 1901. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. Population (1900), 243,329. JOSEPH MOORE DIXON, Republican, of Missoula, was born at Snow Camp, N. C., July 31, 1867; attended Earlham College, Richmond, Ind., and graduated from Guilford College, North Carolina, May, 1889; was admitted to the bar Decem- ber, 1892; served as assistant prosecuting attorney, Missoula County, from 1893 to 1895; was elected prosecuting attorney in 1894 and served until 1897; was elected a MONTANA Senators and Representatives. 67 member of the Montana legislature in 1900; married Carrie M. Worden, March, 1896; was a delegate at large from Montana to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1894; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress and reelected to the Fifty- ninth Congress, receiving 32,957 votes, to 26,729 for A. C. Gormley, Democrat, Labor, and Populist, and 4,025 for Walsh, Socialist. : NEBRASKA. SENATORS. CHARLES HENRY DIETRICH, Republican, of Hastings, was born of German parentage at Aurora, Ill., November 26, 1853; removed to Deadwood, S. Dak., in the winter of 1875-76; located at Hastings, Nebr., in 1878, and engaged in mercantile busi- ness; organized the German National Bank in 1887, and is now president of the same; was elected governor of Nebraska in 1900, and elected United States Senator March 28, 1901, to fill out the unexpired term of the late Senator Hayward, succeeding W. V. Allen appointed by Governor Poynter; resigned the governorship May 1, 1901, and took his seat in the United States Senate December 2, 1gor; his term of service will expire March 3, 1905. JOSEPH HOPKINS MILLARD, Republican, of Omaha, was born in Hamilton, Canada, April, 1836, the son of natives of the United States temporarily residing abroad; in childhood removed with his parents to Iowa, near Sabula, Jackson County, and at 18 entered a store in Dubuque as clerk; two years later removed to Omaha, which has since been his home; engaged in the land business and later in banking, becoming a director of the Omaha National Bank in July, 1866, and on January 1, 1867, its president and cashier, still retaining his place at the head of the institution; served one term as mayor of Omaha, was for six years a Government director of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, and subsequently served the stockholders of the company as one of their representatives on the board for a period of seven years; is a widower with a grown son and daughter; was elected to the United States Senate March 28, 1901, succeeding John M. Thurston, Republican, who was not a candidate for reelection. Mr. Millard took his seat December 2, 1go1. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CounTtiEs.—Cass, Johnson, Lancaster, Nemaha, Otoe, Pawnee, and Richardson (7 counties). Population (1900), 165,986. ELMER JACOB BURKETT, Republican, of Lincoln, was born in Mills County, Towa, on a farm, December 1, 1867; attended public school and afterwards Tabor Col- lege, at Tabor, Towa, from which institution he graduated in June, 1890; 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 and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,534 votes, to 11,603 for H. H. Hanks, Fusion, 579 for T. B. Fraser, Prohibitionist, and 362 for Christ. Christensen, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIEs.—Deuglas, Sarpy, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1900), 162,756. GILBERT MONELI HITCHCOCK, Democrat, of Omaha, was born at Omaha, Nebr., September 18, 1859, and is the son of the late United States Senator P. W. Hitchcock; his education began in the public schools of Omaha, was continued for two years in Baden Baden, Germany, and concluded at the law department of Michi- gan University, from which he graduated in 1881; was then admitted to the bar, and practiced law till August, 1885, when he established and edited the Omaha Evening 63 : Congressional Directory. [NEBRASKA World, which, in 1889, purchased the Morning Herald and became the present Morning and Evening World-Herald; in 1894 he gave up editorial work to William J. Bryan and undertook the business management of the paper, which he continues to publish; in 1883 he married the eldest daughter of ex-Congressman Crounse; they have two daughters; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 13,509 votes, to 11,669 for David H. Mercer, Republican, and 1,379 for Bernard McCaffrey, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Antelope, Boone, Burt, Cedar, Colfax, Cuming, Dakota, Dixon, Dodge, Knox, Madison, Merrick, Nance, Pierce, Platte, Stanton, Thurston, and Wayne (18 counties). Population (1900), 211,780. JOHN JAY McCARTHY, Republican, of Ponca, was born at Stoughton, Wis., July 19, 1857, and received his education in the common schools of Wisconsin and in Albion Academy; came to Nebraska in 1879, and in the fall of 1882 removed to Dixon County, where he has since resided; was admitted to the bar in 1884, and has practiced law ever since; was elected county attorney of Dixon County in 1890, 1892, and 1894; was elected representative in the legislature of Nebraska in 1898 and 1900; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,201 votes, to 18,541 for John S. Robinson, Fusionist, and 632 for Charles C. Beveridge, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Butler, Fillmore, Gage, Hamilton, Jefferson, Polk, Saline, Saunders, Seward, Thayer, and York (11 counties). Population (1900), 188,466. EDMUND HOWARD HINSHAW, Republican, of Fairbury, was born at Greens- boro, Ind., December 8, 1860; lived on his father’s farm until he was 16, and began ‘teaching school and continued in that profession for ten years, attending college intermittently, and in 1885 graduated from Butler College, Indianapolis; the last year he taught he removed to Fairbury, Nebr., to accept the superintendency of the pub- lic schools; declined a reelection, and was admitted to the bar in 1887, immediately beginning the practice of law; has held various municipal and county offices, and in 1898 was nominated for Congress by the Republicans, but was unable to overcome the Fusion plurality; in 1901 was a candidate for United States Senator, but after a contest lasting three months all candidates withdrew and new men were chosen; in the spring of 1902 was again nominated for Congress after a spirited contest, and was elected togthe Fifty-eighth Congress. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiv- ing 23,407 votes, to 15,702 for Charles F. Gilbert, Democrat and People’s-Independent, and 1,321 for George I. Wright, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Adams, Chase, Clay, Dundy, Franklin, Frontier, Furnas, Gosper, Hall, Harlan, Hayes, Hitchcock, Kearney, Nuckolls, Perkins, Phelps, Redwillow, and Webster (18 counties). Population (1900), 165,148. GEORGE WILLIAM NORRIS, Republican, of McCook, was born on a farm in Sandusky County, Ohio, July 11, 1861, and his early life was spent on the farm where he was born. His father died when he was a small child; his only brother was killed in the war of the rebellion, and his mother was left in straitened cir- cumstances; was compelled to work out among the neighboring farmers by the day and month during the summer, and attended district school during the winter; after- wards taught school and earned the money to defray expenses for a higher educa- tion; attended Baldwin University, Berea, Olio, and the Northern Indiana Normal School, Valparaiso; studied law while teaching, and afterwards finished the law course in law school; was admitted to the bar in 1883; came to Nebraska in 1885; was three times prosecuting attorney, twice by appointment and once by election, refusing a second nomination for the position; was elected district judge of fourteenth district in 1895, and reelected to the same position in 1899, which position he held when nominated for Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,927 votes, to 14,746 for Ashton C. Shallenberger, Democrat and Populist, and 496 for John D. Stoddard, Prohibitionist. Reelected to Fifty-ninth Congress. NEBRASKA] Senators and Representatives. 69 SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNnTIES.—Banner, Blaine, Boxbutte, Boyd, Brown, Buffalo, Cherry, Cheyenne, Custer, Dawes, Dawson, Deuel, Garfield, Grant, Greeley, Holt, Hooker, Howard, Keith, Keya Paha, Kimball, Lincoln, Logan, Loup, McPherson, Rock, Scotts Bluffs, Sheridan, Sherman, Sioux, Thomas, Valley, and Wheeler (33 counties). Population (1900), 172,164. MOSES P. KINKAID, Republican, of O’Neill, a farmer’s son, was born in Monon- galia County, W. Va.; spent his boyhood in that State, Pennsylvania, and Illinois; taught school one year in Illinois; is a graduate of the law school of the University of Michigan, and was president of the class of 1876; first practiced law in Henry County, Il1l.; next at Pierre, S. Dak., one year; thence removing to Hoit County, Nebr., where he has resided for twenty-two years; was elected to the Nebraska State senate and made chairman of the judiciary committee, session of 1883; appointed judge for district in north Nebraska by Governor Thayer in 1887, and successively elected for three full four-year terms; ran for justice of supreme court, 1896, failing of election, together with the State and the McKinley electoral tickets; elected in his third successive candidacy for Congress in the Sixth Nebraska district over Gen. Patrick H. Barry, Fusionist, his principal competitor, by 2,800 majority, receiving 16,699 votes, to 13,997 for P. H. Barry, 660 for C. F. Swander, Prohibi- tionist, and 463 for J. C. L. Wisely, Socialist; is the first Republican to represent that district; has been constantly identified with-the Republican party since attain- ing his majority. NEVADA. SENATORS. WILLIAM MORRIS STEWART, Republican, 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 Lyons Union School and Farmington Academy; was teacher of mathematics in the former school while yet a pupil; with the little money thus earned and the assistance of James C. Smith, one of the judges of the supreme court of New York, he entered Yale College, remaining there till the winter of 1849-50, when, attracted by the gold discoveries in California, he found his way thither, arriving at San Francisco in May, 1850; he immediately engaged in mining with pick and shovel in Nevada County, and in this way 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 elected a member of the constitutional convention; was elected to the United States Senate in 1864, taking his seat February 1, 1865, 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, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1887; was reelected in 1893 and 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. FRANCIS GRIFFITH NEWLANDS, Democrat, 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; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed John P. Jones, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. 70 Congressional Directory. [NEVADA., REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. Population (1900), 42,335. CLARENCE DUNN VAN DUZER, Democrat, of Tonopah, was born near Moun- tain City, Nev., May 4, 1866; was educated in the public schools of Nevada; is a gradu- ate of the State University of Nevada, 1889, and of Georgetown Law College (B. L., 1893; M. L., 1894); was admitted to practice in the supreme court of the District of Columbia in 1893; was appointed by the governor of Nevada in 1892 State land agent, to reside in Washington City; for five years served as secretary to Hon. F. G. New- lands, of Nevada; married Miss Nelle Dane Webster at Cynthiana, Ky., November 18, 1896; is now engaged in mining; was elected district attorney of Humboldt County in 1898, as a Democrat; elected to the State legislature, as a Democrat, in 1900, and elected speaker of the house of representatives; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Con- gress, as a Democrat, receiving 5,876 votes, to 5,101 for E. S. Farrington, Republican. NEW HAMPSHIRE. SENATORS. 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, who afterwards moved to Canada; his mother (Catharine Cook ) was of American stock; was born on a farm in Cornwall, Ontario, March 28, 1837, being one of twelve children; received a common school and academic education; was a printer in early life; studied medicine and was graduated with honors in 1858, and followed the profession of medicine and surgery in the city of his present residence from April, 1862, until he entered Congress, 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 mem- ber 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 Dartmouth College in 1885; is a trustee of the George Washington University, of Washington, D. C.; was chairman of the Repub- lican State committee from 1882 to 1890, when he resigned the place, but was again elected to the position in 1898, reelected in 1900, 1902, and 1904; was chairman of the delegation from his State to the Republican national convention of 1888, and made a speech seconding the nomination of Bonin Harrison; was also chairman of the New Hampshire delegation to the Republican national convention at Philadelphia in June, 1900, which convention renominated President McKinley, and headed the delegation from his State to the national convention at Chicago in June, 1904; was for a time a member of the National Republican Committee; was elected to the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses, and declined renomination to the Fifty-first Congress; was elected United States Senator to succeed Henry W. Blair, and took his seat March 4, 1891; was reelected in 1897 by a unanimous vote of the Repub- " lican members of the legislature and the votes of five Democratic members; was reelected in 1903 (the first time in the history of the State that anyone had been elected United States Senator for three full terms) by the unanimous vote of the Republicans in the legislature and the votes of three Democrats. His term of serv- ice will expire March 3, 1909. HENRY EBEN BURNHAM, Republican, of Manchester, was born in Dunbarton, N. H., November 8, 1844; fitted for college at Kimball Union Academy, and graduated from Dartmouth College in 1865; studied law in the office of Minot & Mugridge, Concord, and in the offices of E. S. Cutter and Judge Lewis W. Clark, in Manches- ter; was admitted to the bar in April, 1868, and since that time has practiced in Manchester; was judge of probate for Hillsboro County in 1876-1879; representa- tive in the State legislature in 1873-74; has been treasurer of Hillsboro County; was a member of the constitutional convention of 1889, and has served as ballot law commissioner; in 1888 was chairman of the Republican State convention to nominate delegates to the national convention; has always been a Republican in politics; on October 22, 1874, married Elizabeth H. Patterson, of Manchester, and has NEW HAMPSHIRE.] Senators and Representatives. 71 three daughters, Gertrude B. Baker, Alice P. Carpenter, and Edith D. Burnham; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. W. E. Chandler, Republican, and took his seat March 4, 1go1. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Belknap, Carroll, Rockingham, and Strafford. HILLSBORO COUNTY.—City of Manchester; towns of Bedford, Goffstown, Merrimack, Hudson, Litchfield, and Pelham. MERRIMACK COUNTY.—Towns of Allenstown, Canterbury, Chichester, Epsom, Hooksett, I,oudon, Northfield, Pembroke, and Pittsfield. Population (1900), 204,002. 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 22,491 votes, to 15,218 for A. S. ILangley, Democrat, and 1,115 scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan. HILLSBORO COUNTY.—City of Nashua; towns of Amherst, Antrim, Bennington, Brookline, Deet- ing, Francestown, Greenfield, Greenville, Hancock, Hillsboro, Hollis, Lyndeboro, Mason, Milford, Mount Vernon, New Boston, New Ipswich, Peterboro, Sharon, Temple, Weare, Wil- ton, and Windsor. MERRIMACK CouNTy.—Cities of Concord and Franklin; towns of Andover, Boscawen, Bow, Brad- ford, Danbury, Dunbarton, Henniker, Hill, Hopkinton, Newbury, New London, Salisbury, Sutton, Warner, Webster, and Wilmot. Population (1900), 207,586. FRANK DUNKILEE CURRIER, Republican, of Canaan, was born at Canaan, N. H., October 30, 1853; received a common schooland academic education; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1874; was a member of the New Hampshire house of representatives in 1879; was secretary of the Republican State committee from 1882 to 1890; was clerk of the State senate from 1883 to 1887; was delegate to the Repub- lican national convention of 1884; was president of the State senate in 1887; was naval officer of customs at the port of Boston, Mass., from 18go to 1894; was speaker of the New Hampshire house of representatives in 1899; was elected to the Fifty- seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 22,138 votes, to 14,986 for George KE. Bales, Democrat, 610 for Charles H. Thorndike, Prohibi- tionist, 413 for James S. Murray, Socialist, 44 for David J. Driscoll, Allied People’s, and 2 scattering. NEW JERSEY. SENATORS. 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. JOHN FAIRFIELD DRYDEN, Republican, of Newark, was born near Farming- ton, Me., August 7, 1839; removed with his parents, when in his seventh year, to Massachusetts; fitted for college at Worcester, Mass., and entered Yale University, intending to adopt the legal profession, but before fully completing his course was obliged to leave on account of ill health; subsequently he graduated with the class of 1865; during a period of enforced rest he made a special study of life insurance, 72 : Congressional Directory. [NEW JERSEY. and in 1875, at Newark, N. J., originated and founded the Prudential Insurance Company of America, becoming its first secretary and, in 1881, its president, a position he still holds; was also one of the founders of the Fidelity Trust Company; is identified with the management of various street railways, banks, and other large financial enterprises of New Jersey and New York; has been a Republican all his life, but was more active in business than in politics; was one of the New Jersey Presidential electors at large in 1896 and 1900; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed the late William J. Sewell on January 29, 1902. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Camden, Gloucester, and Salem (3 counties). _ Population (1900), 165,078. HENRY CLAY ILOUDENSLAGER, Republican, of Paulsboro, was born in Mau- ricetown, Cumberland County, N. J., May 22, 1852; removed to Paulsboro, Gloucester County, in 1856, where he hasresided since; after leaving the home farm he engaged in 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 20,371 votes, to 15,279 for Richard T. Miller, Democrat, and 1,120 for Robert T. Seagrave, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 26,199 votes, to 14,135 for A. H. Swackhamer, Democrat. SECOND DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Atlantic, Burlington, Mercer, and Ccean (4 counties). Population (1900), 169,037. ~ JOHN J. GARDNER, Republican, of Atlantic City, was born in Atlantic County in 1845; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 26,296 votes, to 13,035 for Samuel E. Perry, Democrat, 1,406 for Tandon, Prohibi- tionist, 354 for "Barkley, Socialist Labor, and 209 for Owen, People’s Party. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Middlesex, Monmouth, and Ocean (3 counties). Population (1900), 181,566. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HOWELI,, 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; was elected surrogate of Middlesex County in 1882, and reelected for a second term in 1887; was elected to the Fifty- fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,014 votes, to 18,345 for Jacob A. Geissenhainer, Democrat, and 546 for Robert B. Crowell, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Hunterdon, Mercer, and, Somerset (3 counties). Population (19oo), 162,820. IRA W. WOOD, Republican, of Trenton, was born in Wilkesbarre, Pa.; is an alumnus of Princeton University; is a member of the New Jersey bar; has been a member of the board of education and the common council of the city of Trenton; was president of the board of trade of Trenton; was elected to the New Jersey legisla. ture as a member of assembly in 1899 and 1900; was appointed by Governor Murphy a commissioner for New Jersey to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the appointment of Hon. William M. Lanning as district judge for the district of New Jersey, vice Hon. Andrew Kirkpatrick, deceased, and also for the full term in the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiv- ing 22,580 votes, to 16,909 for Robert Livingston Stevens, Democrat, a plurality of 5,671. Mr. Lanning’s plurality in 1902 was 2,006. | § | } i: i J “Riser NEW JERSEY] Senators and Representatives. 73 FIFTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Morris, Union, and Warren (3 counties). . Population (1900), 202,290. CHARLES NEWELI, FOWLER, Republican, of Elizabeth, was born at Iena, Ill., November 2, 1852; graduated from Yale University in 1876 and from the Chi- cago Law School in 1878; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, .and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,030 votes, to 19,881 for DeWitt C. Flanagan, Democrat, 883 for J. G. Van Cise, Prohibitionist, 415 for J. M. Beaman, Socialist, and 231 for J. Grieb, Socialist Labor. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Bergen, Passaic, and Sussex (3 counties). Population (1900), 257,777. = WILLIAM HUGHES, Democrat, of Paterson, was born in 1872; educated in the common schools of Paterson and took a course of study in a business college; is an attorney at law; served in the Second New Jersey Volunteers in the Spanish-American war; married Margaret Hughes July 16, 1898; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Con- gress, receiving 24,084 votes, to 20,236 for William Barbour, Republican, 435 for R. H. Richards, Prohibitionist, 777 for W, H. Wyatt, Socialist, and 419 for Louis Magnet, Socialist Labor. SEVENTH DISTRICT. Essex CountTy.—First, Fourth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Eleventh, and Fifteenth wards of the city of Newark; city of Orange; towns of Bloomfield, West Orange, and Montclair; the boroughs of Caldwell, Glen Ridge, and North Caldwell, and the townships of Belleville, Caldwell, Franklin, Livingston, and Verona. Population (1900), 177,106. 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty- sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,878 votes, to 14,371 for G. A. Miller, Democrat, 243 for E. IL. Roff, Pro- hibitionist, 335 for F. C. Dey, Socialist, and 297 for William Walker, Socialist Labo reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress by 11,300 plurality. EIGHTH DISTRICT. EsSExX CouNTy.—Second, Third, Fifth, Ninth, Tenth, Twelfth, Thirteenth, and Fourteenth wards of the city of Newark; city of Hast Orange; town of Irvington; the borough of Vailsburgh; the village and township of South Orange, and the townships of Clinton and Millburn. Population (1900), 181,947. WILLIAM HALSTED WILEY, Republican, of Kast Orange, was born in New York City, July 10, 1842, and after preparation entered what is now the College of the City of New York in 1856, and received the degree of A. B. in 1861; entered the Union Army in ,the New York State Volunteers, and was mustered out in 1864 by the consolidation of his regiment; matriculated at the Rensselaer Poly- technic Institute, Troy, N. Y., in the fall of 1864, entering the advanced course, and graduated in 1866, receiving the degree of civil engineer; followed that profes- sion for several years, and then took a special course in mining at the Columbia College School of Mines, and became superintendent of a mine, remaining several years; at the request of his father, entered his business as a partner in 1876; was elected to the township committee of Hast Orange, where he served three years, and was president of that body for one year; in the International Exposition at Brus- sels, in 1897, was president of one of the juries and a member of the superior jury, for which he received the decoration of the Order of Leopold from the King; was appointed by the governor of New Jersey a member of the commission for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition; was married, in 1870, to Miss Joanna King Clark; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,814 votes, to 12,005 for Henry G. _ Atwater, Democrat, 192 for J. Berryman, Prohibitionist, and 742 for J. KE. Billings, Socialist, 74 Congressional Directory. [NEW JERSEY: NINTH DISTRICT. HupsoN CouNTy.—City of Bayonne; Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, and Twelfth wards and part of the Sixth Ward of Jersey City; the towns of Harrison and Kearney, and the borough of East Newark. Population (1900), 172,273. ALLAN BENNY, Democrat, of Bayonne, born in Brooklyn, N. Y., July 12, 1867; admitted to the bar in February, 1889; was member of the board of councilmen, Bayonne, 1892-1894; member of the State assembly, 1898, 1899, and 1900; city attor- ney of Bayonne, 1900-1903, resigned after election to Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,492 votes, to 13,700 for Robert Carey, Repub- lican, 813 for A. R. Hopkins, Socialist, 378 for I". P. Herrschaft, Socialist I abor, and 147 for James Parker, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. HUDSON CounTY.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, and Fifth wards and part of the Sixth Ward of Jersey City; city of Hoboken; towns of West Hoboken, Union, West New York, and Gutten- berg; the townships of North Bergen and Weehawken, and the borough of Secaucus.. . Population (1900), 213,775. ALLAN LANGDON McDERMOTT, Democrat, of Jersey City, was born in South Boston, Mass., March 30, 1854; is a lawyer by profession, and has occupied these public positions: Corporation attorney of Jersey City, 1879-1883; district court judge, 1883-1886; president Jersey City Board of Finance and Taxation, 1883-1886; member of State board of taxation, 1884-1886; member of the State assembly, 1880-81; cor- poration counsel of Jersey City, 1897 to date; member of the State senate, 1899-1900; chairman of the New Jersey State Democratic Committee, 1885-1895; member of the commission to revise constitution of New Jersey, 1894; was the candidate of the Democratic legislative caucus for United States Senator in 1895 and in 1902; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. William D. Daly, and to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,311 votes, to 10,595 for J. D. Manning, Republican, 879 for Fred. Kraft, Socialist, 41 for R. B. Artz, Prohibitionist, and 523 for C. Marquelin, Socialist Labor, NEW YORK. SENATORS. THOMAS COLLIER PLATT, Republican, of Owego, was born in Owego, N.Y., July 15,1833; was prepared for college at the Owego Academy; was a member 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 1880 till 1888; was delegate to the national Republican conventions of 1876, 1880, 1884, 1888, 1892, 1896, and 1900; has been a member of the national Republican committee; was elected United States Senator in 1896, and took his seat March 4, 1897; was reelected in 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. 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 LL. 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 NEW YORE.| Senators and Representatives. 75 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 and Harlem Railroad Company, and has since continuously been identified with that and the New York Central and 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 and “Hudson River Railroad in 1885; resigned in 1899 to become chairman of the boards of directors of the New York Central, the Lake Shore, the Michigan Central, and the New York, Chicago and 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 Liberal 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 succeed 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 gg 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, who died in March, 1893; has one son, born in 1879; married in December, 1901, to Miss May Palmer; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Edward Murphy, jr., Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DIST RICE. CouNTIES.—Nassau and Suffolk. BOROUGH OF QUEENS (COUNTY OF QUEENS).—Third, Fourth, and Fifth wards. Population (1900), 196,854. TOWNSEND SCUDDER, Democrat, of Glen Head, 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, and was admitted to the bar of New York in 1889; has made a specialty of municipal law, serving four terms as counsel for Queens County, N.Y.; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress; declined a renomi- nation to the Fifty-seventh Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiv- ing 17,788 votes, to 17,681 for Congressman Frederic Storm, Republican, 226 for Frank Bessen, and 443 blank and scattering, 76" Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. SECOND DISTRICT. BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF KINGS).—The Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seven- teenth, and Eighteenth wards, and also that portion of the T'wenty-seventh Ward bounded on the north by the line dividing Kings and Queens counties from Flushing avenue to Jefferson street, Jefferson street south to Evergreen avenue, west to Noll street, south to Bushwick avenue, east to Arion place, south to Broadway, west to Flushing avenue, and north to point of beginning. Population (1900), 215,305. GEORGE HENRY LINDSAY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in New York City and removed to Brooklyn with his parents in 1843; educated in the public schools, and for many years engaged in the hotel business; was elected to the State assembly from the Seventh district, comprised of the Sixteenth Ward of Brooklyn, in 1882, 1883, 1884, 1885, and 1886; in 1886 was elected coroner for the second district of Kings County and served six years, being reelected in 1889; in 1898 was appointed assistant tax commissioner in the department of taxes and assessments of the city of New York; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,728 votes, to 9,593 for James R. Howe, Republican, ro7 for William Irvine, 821 for Isaac Bookman, and 1,033 for George Stamer. THIRD DISTRICT. BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF KINGS).—The Thirteenth, Nineteenth, and Twenty-first wards, and also that portion of the Twenty-seventh Ward bounded on the north by the line dividing Kings and Queens counties, from Jefferson street to Stockholm street, south to Bush- wick avenue, east to Kosciusko street, south to Broadway, west to Arion place, north to Bush- wick avenue, west to Noll street, north to Evergreen avenue, east to Jefferson street, and north to point of beginning; and also that part of the Twenty-third Ward bounded on the north by Lafayette avenue, from Bedford avenue to Stuyvesant avenue, south to Bainbridge street, west to Sumner avenue, north to McDonough street, west to Tompkins avenue, south to Fulton street, west to New York avenue, south to Atlantic avenue, west to Franklin avenue, north to Brevoort place, east to Bedford avenue, and north to point of beginning. : Population (1900), 187,871. : CHARLES TAPPAN DUNWELIL, Republican, of Brooklyn, was born at the vil- lage of Newark, Wayne County, N. Y., February 13, 1852; removed with his parents to Lyons, Wayne County, N. Y., in 1854; was educated at Lyons Union School; entered Cornell University in the class of 1873; at the close of his junior year entered Columbia College Law School in the city of New York, where he was graduated in 1874 with the degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the bar of New York State in May, 1874; practiced law for many years in New York City; became general agent for the New York Life Insurance Company in 1889; was unanimously nominated for comp- troller of the city of Brooklyn by the Republican city convention in 1890, and was defeated; was a member of the New York Republican State committee, 1891-92; was married April 22, 1880, to Miss Emma B. Williams, at Pittsburg, Pa.; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,457 votes, to 17,043 for Hugh E. Rogers, Democrat, 133 for G. M. Mather, 528 for Henry Kober, and 973 for Henry Jander. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT. BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF KINGS).—The Twenty-sixth, Twenty-eighth, Thirty-first, and Thirty-second wards, and also that portion of the T'wenty-fifth Ward bounded on the north by Broadway, from Howard avenue to boundary line of the Twenty-sixth Ward, south to Atlantic avenue, west to Howard avenue, north to Fulton street, west to Howard avenue, and north to point of beginning. Population (1900), 187,872. FRANK E. WILSON, M. D., Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in 185%, at Rox- bury, Delaware County, N. Y.; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,415 votes, to 13,695 votes for William T. Schnitzpan, Republican, 126 for H. T. Hinsch, 647 for Emil Mueller, and 1,369 for W. A. Heide. FIFTH DISTRICT. BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF KINGS).—The Eighth, Twenty-fourth, T'wenty-ninth, and Thirtieth wards, and also that portion of the Twenty-third Ward bounded on the north by Iafayette avenue, from Stuyvesant avenue east to Reid avenue, south to Fulton street, west to Utica avenue, south to Atlantic avenue, west to New York avenue, north to Fulton street, east to Tompkins avenue, north to McDonough street, east to Sumner avenue, south to Bainbridge street, east to Stuyvesant avenue, and north to the point of beginning; and also that portion of the T'wenty-fifth Ward bounded on the north by Lafayette avenue, from Reid avenue east to doll a aa RT | NEW YORE] Senators and Representatives. airy Broadway, southeast to Howard avenue, south to Fulton street, east to Howard avenue, south to Atlantic avenue, west to Utica avenue, north to Fulton street, east to Reid avenue, and north to the point of beginning. Population (1900), 187,348. EDWARD M. BASSETT, Democrat, of Brooklyn (address, 135 Broadway, New York), was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., February 7, 1863; went to public schools in Brooklyn and Watertown, N. Y.; attended Hamilton College, Clinton, N.Y., in 1881 and 1882; Amherst College, Amherst, Mass., 1883 and 1884; Columbia Law School, New York, 1885 and 1886; admitted to New York State bar, 1886; lived in ‘Buffalo from 1886 to 1892, and since then in New York City; was appointed on the Brook - lyn school board by Mayor Van Wyck in 1898, and served two years; chairman of local school board No. 38, borough of Brooklyn, during 1902; married Annie R. Preston May 14, 1892; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,149 votes, to 15,216 for H. A. Hanbury, Republican, 143 for R. T. Stokes, 338 for Justus Ebert, 378 for P. E. Burrows, and 854 for E. S. White; was not renominated for the Fifty-ninth Congress. : SIXTH DISTRICT. BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF KINGS).—The Seventh, Ninth, Twentieth, and Twenty. second wards, and also that portion of the Eleventh Ward bounded on the north by Johnson street, from Bridge street east to Hudson avenue, south to Myrtle avenue, east to Navy street, south to Bolivar street, west to Hudson avenue, south to Willoughby street, east to Navy street, south to De Kalb avenue, east to South Portland avenue, south to Atlantic avenue, west to Flatbush avenue, northwest to Fulton street, west to Bridge street, and north to point of beginning. Population (1900), 189,131. ROBERT BAKER, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in England in 1862. He ardently supported Grover Cleveland in 1884; two years later he was one of those who viewed with dismay the candidacy of Henry George for mayor of New York, but in 1887 he determined to thoroughly investigate the whole subject of taxation, purchasing Henry George’s works. He was soon after chosen secre- tary of the Albany Single Tax Club. Tater he became president of the Brooklyn Single Tax Club and was the secretary of the Brooklyn Ballot Reform League. For six years he was secretary of the Single Tax League of the United States, of which Hon. Tom L. Johnson was chairman. For four years he was secretary of the New York Tax Reform Association and also of the Brooklyn Revenue Reform Club, hav- ing charge of their home-rule-in-taxation bill before the New York legislature. In 1892 he secured the nomination by the Democrats of a single taxer, Alfred J. Wolf, for the assembly and conducted a cart-tail campaign canvass in his behalf. In 1893 he organized the single-tax men as the Citizens’ Union, in the hope of electing William J. Gaynor mayor of Brooklyn. The Republicans frustrated this by nom- inating Schieren for mayor and Gaynor (a Democrat) for supreme court judge. As a Shepard candidate he was defeated for the assembly the next year. In 1896 he fought the attempt of Edward M. Shepard to secure a unanimous indorsement by his organization of Palmer and Buckner. For Bryan and Sewall he spoke through- out Long Island. In 1897 he had charge of Henry George’s nominating petitions. For Bryan and Stevenson he spoke in Syracuse, Cohoes, etc. Immediately thereafter he organized the Citizens’ Union of Brooklyn, particularly enlisting the radical Demo- crats, with the result that in the borough convention the tories were routed by 4 to 1. He was nominated for sheriff, but the Republicans refused to indorse him as “unfit.” Farly in 1902 he was instrumental in forming the Radical Democracy of Brooklyn, whose platform declared for immediate withdrawal of protection to the trusts, free raw material, ultimate abolition of all tariffs, graduated tax on incomes and inheritances, municipal and national ownership of public utilities, the initiative, and the referendum. As one of a committee he appeared before the Democratic State convention and spoke for the election of Senators by popular vote and for the national acquirement and operation of the anthracite coal mines. Subsequently he was elected in a district where McKinley’s plurality in 1900 was 4,577 by 466, despite the rancorous opposition of the Brooklyn FKagle, which honored no other Demo- cratic candidate with its opposition. His success was due to the untiring efforts of the Single Taxers and other Radical Democrats, who conducted open-air truck meet- ings all over the district, boldly attacking every form of ‘special privilege,’”’ expos- ing the causes through which momnopolists obtain their power to rob and oppress the people, and advocating the coal plank in the State platform as the solution of that form of monopoly. Questions were invited and freely answered at meetings, but chal- lenges to the Republican speakers to debate were unanswered. Asa result the opposi- tion of the Eagle was not only overcome, but also that of other so-called Democrats who opposed his radical views. He received a larger proportion of the vote cast for the Democratic candidate for governor than any other Congressional candidate in 78 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. Brooklyn, except that in the Seventh district, where the sitting member had no real opposition. The vote was: Robert Baker, Democrat, 17,886; Henry Bristow, Repub- lican, 17,420; A. C. Carlson, 153; Frederick Leise, 328; Hugo Peters, 341. SEVENTH DISTRICT. BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF KINGS).—The First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Tenth, and Twelfth wards, and also that portion of the Eleventh Ward bounded on the north by Flushing avenue, from Navy street east to North Portland avenue, across Fort Greene Park to De Kalb avenue, opposite South Portland avenue, west to Navy street, north to Willoughby street, west to Hudson avenue, north to Bolivar street, east to Navy street, north to Myrtle avenue, west to Hudson avenue, north to Johnson street, east to Navy street, and north to point of beginning. : Population (1900), 199,055. JOHN JOSEPH FITZGERALD, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in that city March 10, 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 therefrom, receiving the degrees of bachelor and master of arts; studied law at the New York Law 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; was a delegate to the national Democratic convention at Kansas City in 1900; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 23,485 votes, to 13,276 for Robert H. Haskell, Republican. FIGHTH DISTRICT. RICHMOND COUNTY. NEw YOrRK CouNtTv.—That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at Battery place and North River, north to West street, north to Barrow street and Hudson River, east to Hudson street, north to Grove street, northeast to Bleecker street, southeast to Cornelia street, northeast to Sixth avenue, south to West Third street, east to Broadway, north to East Fourth street, east to the Bowery, north to Third avenue, to Saint Mark’s place, east to Second avenue, south to Second street, east to First avenue, south to East Houston street, west to Eldridge street, south to Stanton street, west to Chrystie street, south to Division street, west to northeast corner of Division street and Bowery, to the northeast corner of Chatham Square and Catherine street, southeasterly to Monroe street, east to Mechanic alley, and south to Cherry street, west to Market slip, south to the East River. Population (1900), 254,269. TIMOTHY D. SULLIVAN, Democrat, of New York City, was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 26,107 votes, to 10,386 for Montague Lessler, Repub- lican, 164 for B. F. Funk, 417 for Robert Downs, 496 for Gustave Theimer, and 74 for Frank Mayo. NINTH DISTRICT. NEw YORK CouNtTv.—Parts of the Second, Fourth, Eighth, Tenth, Twelfth, and Sixteenth assembly districts, as follows: Beginning at the Fast River and Market slip, north to Cherry street, east to Mechanic alley, north to Monroe street, west to Catherine street, north to Divi- sion street, east to Chrystie street, north to Stanton street, east to Cannon street, south to Broome street, west to Sheriff street, south to Grand street, west to Pitt street, south to Divi- sion street, to Montgomery street, south to southwest corner of Henry street and Montgomery street, diagonally through the middle of said block to the northeast corner of Madison street and Clinton street, south to South street at East River, thence along the Hast River to the point or place of beginning. Population (1900), 205,147. HENRY M. GOLDFOGLE, Democrat, of New York City, was born in New York City; educated in the public schools; admitted to the bar after having passed the examination at the head of his class; was elected justice of the fifth district court of New York in 1887, and reelected in 1893 without opposition; became one of the judges of the municipal court of New York; retired from the bench on January 1, 1900, to resume the practice of law; during twelve years of judicial service he enjoyed the creditable record of having been reversed in but two cases; drafted and secured the enactment of a law by the State legislature which allows an execution against the body to issue against a delinquent debtor on a judgment in favor of a working woman for services performed by her; is the author of the present law in that State providing for an expeditious remedy to collect judgments obtained by laborers, mechanics, and other wage-earners for wages earned or labor performed; served several terms as grand president of District No. 1 of the Independent Order B’nai B’rith, and is one of the judges of the court of appeals of that order; is prominently identified with many of the leading fraternal organizations, clubs, and societies in his city and with several financial institutions; was for years a governor of the Home for the Aged and Infirm at Yonkers; director of the infant asylum, geniss . S NEW YORK.] Senators and Representatives. 79 one of the advisory committee of the educational alliance; has been delegate to almost every State convention since he attained his majority; in 1892 was an alter- nate to the national Democratic convention, and in 1896 a delegate to the national Democratic convention; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 7,739 votes, to 4,235 for Charles S. Adler, Repub- Joan, 1,355 for Jonas, Socialist Democrat, and 499 for Rudolph Katz, Socialist Labor. TENTH DISTRICT, NEW YORK CouNTY.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at Hast Fourteenth street and the East River, west to Third avenue, south to Saint Mark’s place, east to Second avenue, south to Second street, east to First avenue, south to East Houston street, west to Eldridge street, south to Stanton street, east to Cannon street, south to Broome street, west to Sheriff street, south to Grand street, west on the south side of Grand street to Pitt street, south to Division street, west to Montgomery street, to northeast corner of Henry street and Montgomery street, diagonally through said block to the southwest corner of Madison street and Clinton street, south to the East River, thence along the East River to the point or place of beginning. Population (1900), 254,601. WILLIAM SULZER, Democrat, of New York City, was born in Elizabeth, N. J., March 18, 1863; educated in the public schools; 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 of the assembly; was a delegate to the Chicago convention, 1896, and to the Kansas City convention, 1900; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty- sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,451 votes, to 6,088 for William Blau, Republican, 45 for Ira Babcock, Prohibitionist, 1,873 for H. G. Wilshire, Socialist, and 1,391 for J. T. Hunter. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. ° NEw YORK CounTv.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at Hudson River and Barrow street, east to Hudson street, north to Grove street, easterly to Bleecker street, easterly on Bleecker street to Cornelia street, easterly on Cornelia street to Sixth avenue, south to West Third street, east to Broadway, north to East Fourth street, east to Third avenue, north to Fast Fourteenth street, west to University place, south to East Tenth street, west to Fifth avenue, south to West Ninth street, west to Christopher street, westerly to West Fourth street, northerly to Eighth avenue, to Hudson street, southerly along Hudson street to West Eleventh street, west to Greenwich street, north to Horatio street, east to Hudson street, north to West Fourteenth street, east to Eighth avenue, north to West Nineteenth street, east to Seventh avenue, north to West Twenty-first street, west to Eighth avenue, north to West Twenty-third street, east to Seventh avenue, north to West Fortieth street, west to Eighth avenue, north to West Forty-third street, west to Ninth avenue, north to West Sixtieth street, west to Hudson River to point of beginning at Hudson River and Barrow street. Population (1900), 228,447. WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST, Democrat, of New York, son of George Hearst, late United States Senator, and Phoebe A. Hearst, was born in San Fran- cisco in 1863; attended the public schools of San Francisco and subsequently went to Harvard College; became editor and proprietor of the San Francisco Examiner in 1886; in 1895 he purchased and became the editor of the New York Journal, and in 1896 he established the New York Evening Journal; founded the Chicago American in 1900, and the Chicago Examiner in 1902; is president of the National Association of Democratic Clubs; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 26,953 votes, to 10,841 for Henry Birrell, Republican, 119 for Edward A. Packer, Pro- hibitionist, 423 for Charles G. Teche, Socialist Labor, and 686 for Solomon Feldman, Socialist Democrat. TWELFTH DISTRICT. NEW YORK CounTy.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the East River and East Four- teenth street, west to Second avenue, north to East Eighteenth street, west to Third avenue, north to East Twenty-third street, west to Lexington avenue, north to East Twenty-ninth street, east to Second avenue, north to East Thirty-seventh street, west to Third avenue, north to East Thirty-ninth street, west to Lexington avenue, north to East Forty-second street, east to Third avenue, north to East Fifty-third street, west to Lexington avenue, north to Fast Fifty-ninth street, east to Third avenue, north to East Sixty-fourth street, west to Lexington avenue, north to East Seventy-second street, to the East River to paint of beginning at the East River and East Fourteenth street, including Blackwells Island. Population (1900), 192,819. WILLIAM BOURKE COCKRAN, Democrat, of New York City, was born in Ire- land February 28, 1854; was educated in France and in his native country; removed to America when 17 years of age; soon after his arrival received the appointment 80 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. of teacher in a private academy; was principal of a public school in Westchester County, N. Y.; while engaged in teaching read law, and was admitted to the bar in 1876; was a member of the Fiftieth Congress; was a member of the commission to revise the judiciary article of the constitution of the State of New York; was elected to the Fifty-second and reelected to the Fifty-third Congress; in 1896 he opposed the platform adopted by the Democratic Convention at Chicago and voted for McKinley, declining to participate in the Indianapolis Convention or to support Palmer and Buckner; in November, 1896, at Chickering Hall, New York City, he addressed the first public meeting in favor of intervention by this Govern- ment to terminate the perpetration of barbarities in Cuba, and in January, 1899, at the Academy of Music in New York, he addressed the first public meeting in oppo- sition to the forcible annexation or conquest of the Philippine Islands; in the election of 1900 he supported the Democratic candidate for President on the ground that the result could not in any way affect the coinage of the country, owing to the complexion of the Senate, while he believed the defeat of the Republican party would of itself have sufficed to expel imperialism from our political system; at a special election held February 23, 1904, he was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of George B. McClellan. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. NEW YORK CounTv.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the northwest corner of Hud- son street and West Eleventh street, north to Eighth avenue, to West Fourth street, south to Christopher street, east to West Ninth street, east to Fifth avenue, north to East Tenth street, east to University place, north to Fast Fourteenth street, east to Second avenue, north to East Fighteenth street, west to Third avenue, north to Fast Twenty-third street, west to Iexing- ton avenue, north to Fast Twenty-ninth street, east to Second avenue, north to Fast Thirty- seventh street, west to Third avenue, north to Fast Thirty-ninth street, west to Lexington avenue, north to Fast Forty-second street, east to Third avenue, north to Fast Fifty-third street, west to Lexington avenue, north to Fast Fifty-ninth street, east to Third avenue, north to Sixty-fourth street, west to Lexington avenue, north to Hast Eighty-ninth street, west to Park avenue, north to Fast Ninety-third street, west to Fifth avenue, south along Fifth ave- nue to Eighty-sixth street, west across Central Park to West Eighty-sixth street and Central Park west, south to West Fifty-ninth street, east to Sixth avenue, south to West Fifty-fifth street, west to Seventh avenue, south to West Fifty-third street, west to Eighth avenue, south to West Fortieth street, east to Seventh avenue, south to West Twenty-third street, west to Eighth avenue, south to West T'wenty-first street, east to Seventh avenue, south to West Nine- teenth street, west to Eighth avenue, south to West Fourteenth street, west to Hudson street, south to Horatio street, west to Greenwich street, south to West Eleventh street, east to point of beginning at the northwest corner of West Eleventh street and Hudson street. Population (1900), 180,398. FRANCIS BURTON HARRISON, Democrat, of New York City, was born Decem- ber 16, 1873; was educated at Cutler School, New York City, Yale University (A. B., 1895), and New York Law School (LL. B., 1897); was instructor in the New York night law school, 1897-1899; was admitted to the New York bar, February term, 1898; is vice-president of the McVickar Realty Trust Company; was private in Troop A, New York Volunteer Cavalry, from May 19 to June 20, 1898, and captain and assistant adjutant-general U. S. Volunteers, from June 20, 1898, to January 31, 1899; married June 7, 1900, to Miss Mary Crocker, daughter of the late Charles F. Crocker, of San Francisco; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,524 votes, to 13,987 for James W. Perry, Republican, 189 for A. H. Knudson, Socialist Tabor, 81 for J. H. Yarnell, Prohibitionist, 223 for Peter Zoeller, Socialist Democrat, and 51 for F. M. Neall, Liberal Democrat. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. NEW YORK CounTy.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the Hast River and East Sev- enty-second street, west to Lexington avenue, north to East Eighty-ninth street, east to Third avenue, south to East Eighty-eighth street, east to the East River, to point of beginning at the =~ East River and East Seventy-second street. QUEENS CounTy.—That part known as the Firstand Second wards of Queens County, whose bound- aries are as follows: Beginning at Newtown Creek and the East River to Flushing Creek, south to Ward street, Richmond Hill, west to Forest Park, along the southern boundary of Forest Park through Cypress Hill Cemetery, to the Kings County line, northwest to Newtown Creek, to point of beginning at Newtown Creek and the East River. Population (1900), 194,433. JRA EDGAR RIDER, Democrat, of New York City, was born November 17, 1868, in Jersey City, N. J.; was educated at the public schools, city of New York, o Sof NEW YORK] Senators and Representatives. 81 the College of the City of New York, and is a graduate of St. Lawrence University; is associated with the firm of Lexow, MacKellar, Guy & Wells, attorneys; was sec- retary of the borough of Manhattan from 1898 to 1902; was married June 30, 1898, to Sophia R. Funke; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,402 votes, to 8,942 for A. J. Anderson, Republican, 2,348 for Ehret, Socialist Democrat, 647 for Chambers, Socialist Labor, 79 for Issing, Liberty Bell Democrat, and 79 for Wallace, Prohibitionist. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. NEW York CouNntTy.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the Hudson River and West Sixtieth street, east to Columbus avenue, south along Columbus avenue and Ninth avenue to West Forty-third street, east to Eighth avenue, north to West Fifty-third street, east to Seventh avenue, north to West Fifty-fifth street, east to Sixth avenue, north to West Fifty-ninth street, west to Central Park west, north to West Kighty-sixth street, east across Central Park to Kighty-sixth street and Fifth avenue, north along Fifth avenue to Ninety-third street, east to Park avenue, south to Hast Eighty-ninth street, east to ILexington avenue, north to East Ninety-sixth street, west to Fifth avenue, north to East Ninety-seventh street, west across Central Park transverse road to West Ninety-seventh street and Central Park west, north to West One hundred and second street, west to Columbus avenue, south to West One hundred and first street, west to Hudson River to the point of beginning at Hudson River and West Sixtieth street. Population (1900), 141,117. WILLIAM HARRIS DOUGLAS, Republican, of New York City, was born on the present site of the Holland House, southwest corner of Thirtieth street and Fifth avenue, December 5, 1853; his family i is one of the oldest in the country, his grand- father four times removed having emigrated from Scotland in 1640, settling at Gloucester, Mass., moving the next year to Boston, and finally in 1660 proceeding with others to New London, Conn., and establishing that city; his father, Alfred Douglas, was born in New London, Conn., January 15, 1807, where his ancestors had lived for a period of nearly one hundred and fifty years; his grandfather, Capt. Richard Douglas, of the Fifth Connecticut Regiment, born in 1750, fought at Bunker Hill and throughout the Revolutionary war; he was educated mostly at private schools and went through the freshman class in the College of the City of New York; entered into business early in life, and has been connected with the exporting and importing trade for the last twenty-seven years; has been senior member of the firm of Arkell & Douglas, New York, for the past fifteen years, this firm having branches at London; Sydney and Melbourne, Australia, and Cape Town and Port Elizabeth, South Africa; has traveled extensively in Europe and other foreign countries, mak- ing two complete trips around the world and visiting Egypt, Ceylon, Australia, New Zealand, Samoan Islands, and Hawaiian Islands; while an active worker in politics for many years, has never heretofore held an official position; was married April 11, 1889, to Juliette H. Thorne, of New York City; is a member of the Chamber of Commerce, Sons of the Revolution, Society of Colonial Wars, New York Produce Exchange, Maritime Exchange, Merchants’ Exchange, and various other institu- tions; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 12,575 votes, to 12,161 for Henry B. Martin, Democrat, and 891 scattering, blank, and defective. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. NEW YORK CouNTy.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the Kast River and East Kighty- eighth street, west to Third avenue, north to Kast Eighty-ninth street, west to Lexington avenue, north to Hast Ninety-sixth street, west to Fifth avenue, north to East One hundred and twentieth street, east to Park avenue, south to East One hundred and nineteenth street, east to the East River to point of beginning at the Kast River and Fast Eighty-eighth street, including Randalls and Wards islands. Population (1900), 184,024. JACOB RUPPERT, Jr., Democrat, of New York City, was born August 5, 1867, in the city of New York; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 13,657 votes, to 7,485 for William R. Spooner, Republican, 679 for Claus Vonderleith, Socialist Labor, 1,146 for Hermann Wolter, Socialist Democrat, and 91 for Robert T. Niedig, Prohibitionist. 58-3D—2D ED——6 82 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. NEW YORK CouNTv.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the Hudson River and West One hundred and first street, east to Columbus avenue, north to West One hundred and second street, east to Central Park west, south to West Ninety-seventh street, east across the Central Park transverse road to Fifth avenue and East Ninety-seventh street, north to East One hundred and twentieth street, east to Park avenue, north to East One hundred and twenty-ninth street, west to Fifth avenue, north to the Harlem River, to the Hudson River, to the point of beginning at the Hudson River and West One hundred and first street. Population (1900), 183,138. FRANCIS EMANUEL SHOBER, Democrat, of New York City, was born in Salis- bury, N. C., October 24, 1860. His father, after whom he was named, was a member of the Forty-first and Forty-second Congresses from that State. He was graduated from St. Stephen’s College at Annandale, N. Y., in 1880, and received the degree of M. A. in 1883; engaged in ministerial and educational work in Dutchess County, N. Y., for some years, and afterwards became a newspaper man; was a reporter on the News- Press of Poughkeepsie; editor of the Rockaway Journal at Far Rockaway, N. Y., and for ten years has been a member of the editorial staff of the New York World; he is Master of Alma Lodge No. 728, Free and Accepted Masons; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,248 votes, to 17,731 for Harvey T. Andrews, Repub- lican, 138 for George Gethin, Prohibitionist, 367 for Niles Johnson, Socialist Labor, 560 for James G. Kanely, Socialist Democtat, and 714 blank and scattering. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. .NEw York CouNtTY.—The thirty-fourth and thirty-fifth assembly districts and the annexed dis- trict bounded as follows: Beginning at the East River and Hast One hundred and nineteenth street, west to Park avenue, north to East One hundred and twenty-ninth street, west to Fifth avenue, north to the Harlem River, to the Hudson River, to the Yonkers city line, to Long Island Sound, to the East River, to the point of beginning at the East River and Kast One hun- dred and nineteenth street, including islands in I,ong Island Sound and Harlem River attached to the said thirty-fourth and thirty-fifth assembly districts and the annexed district. Population. (1900), 238,733. JOSEPH A. GOULDEN, Democrat, of Fordham, Borough of the Bronx, New York City, born in Pennsylvania; served in the Navy during 1864 and 1865; manager of a life insurance company at 180 Broadway; was a member of the board of mana- gers, State reformatory at Morganza, Pa.; commissioner and trustee in the public schools of New York City for ten years; is a member of the board of trustees, Sol- diers’ Home, Bath, N.Y.; was secretary and a member of the commission that erected the soldiers and sailors’ monument, by the city of New York, in Riverside Park; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 28,411 votes to 14,844 for Frank C. Schaeffler, Republican, with 3,329 scattering and defective; plurality, 13,567. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. : NINETEENTH DISTRICT. Population (1900), 184,257. NORTON P. OTIS, Republican, of Yonkers, was born March 18, 1840, at Halifax, Vt.; was educated in the public schools at Albany and Yonkers, N. Y.; at the age of 18 he entered his father’s elevator works, and has since been connected with the business in various capacities, as treasurer, vice-president, president, and is now chairman of the board of directors of the Otis Elevator Company. In 1880-he was elected mayor of Yonkers, N. Y.; in 1883 was elected to the New York State assem- bly, and was a member of the committee on cities, of which President Roosevelt was then chairman; was president of the New York State Commission to the Paris Expo- sition of 1900, which received several grand prizes for New York State exhibits; is now president of St. John’s Riverside Hospital, of Yonkers. He was defeated for Congress in 1900 by Cornelius A. Pugsley by 711 votes, and was elected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 17,878 votes, to 17,338 for Cornelius A. Pugsley, Democrat, 291 for Menzo C. Beardsley, Prohibitionist, 553 for Owen Carraher, Socialist Labor, and 685 for William T. Wood, Socialist Democrat. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. CounTvy.— Westchester. CouNTIES.—Orange, Rockland, and Sullivan (3 counties). Population (1900), 174,463. THOMAS W. BRADLEY, Republican, of Walden, was born April 6, 1844; is a retired manufacturer; entered the Union Army as a private soldier, and, passing “ ~ SL NEW YORK] Senalors and Representatives. 83 through all intermediate grades, became a captain in the One hundred and twenty- fourth New York Volunteers; was aid-de-camp to Major-General Mott, Third Division, Second Army Corps; was awarded the Congressional medal of honor ‘for gallantry at Chancellorsville;’ was brevetted major of U. S. Volunteers ‘‘ for meri- torious service during the campaign terminating at Appomattox;’ was seriously wounded at Gettysburg, again wounded at the Wilderness, and again before Peters- burg; was a member of assembly in 1876—chairman of the committee on military affairs, and assistant inspector-general of the National Guard; was a delegate to the national Republican conventions of 1892, 1896, and 1900, voting at each convention for William McKinley; is a member of the New York Chattanooga and Gettysburg Battlefields Commission; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,747 votes, to 14,874 for Theodore H. Babcock, Democrat; 577 for John Anthony, Prohi- bitionist; 219 for Edward Gridley, Socialist Labor, and 197 for Beaumont Sykes, Socialist Democrat. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Columbia, Dutchess, Greene, and Putnam (4 counties). Population (1900), 170,146. JOHN HENRY 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Con- gress, receiving 22,363 votes, to 15,777 for Curtis F. Hoag, Democrat, 565 for Lester Howard, Prohibitionist, and 46 for Andrew C. Fancher, Socialist Labor. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIiEs.—Remnsselaer and Washington (2 counties). Population (1900), 167,321. WILLIAM H. DRAPER, Republican, of Troy, born in Worcester County, Mass., June 24, 1841; moved to Troy in 1847 and has resided there ever since; attended the public schools until 1856 and then entered upon a mercantile career; is now engaged in manufacturing cordage and twine under the firm name of William H. Draper & Son; has served as trustee of the village of Lansingburg, and from 1896 to 1900 as commissioner of jurors for Rensselaer County; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Con- gress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,689 votes, to 15,698 for J. H. Morrison, Democrat, 344 for C. H. Caspar, Socialist Democrat, and 547 blank. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Albany and Schenectady (2 counties). Population (1900), 212,423. GEORGE N. SOUTHWICK, Republican, of Albany, was born at 55 I'en Broeck street, Albany, N. Y., his present residence, March 7, 1863; his parents were Henry C. and Margaret J. Southwick; his early education was acquired at private school and later at Public School No. 6; entered the Albany High School in 1875, whence he was graduated in 1879; in the fall of 1880 entered Williams College, whence he was graduated in 1884; entered the Albany Law School, but financial reverses compelled him to seek active business life, and early in 1885 he entered the service of the Albany Morning Express, in both an editorial and a reportorial capacity; also repre- sented the Associated Press as reporter of proceedings in the senate or assembly dur- ing the legislative sessions of 1886, 1887, and 1888; in the last-mentioned year became managing editor of the Morning Express and early in 188g of the Albany Evening Journal; Mr. Southwick’s literary activity has extended beyond the field of the daily 84 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK. papers, with which he has been connected as editor, reporter, or correspondent; he has been an occasional contributor to the columns of the magazines, among others the North American Review; his political career began in the campaign of 1884, with voluntary contributions of editorial articles to the Albany Morning Express in the interest of James G. Blaine; in 1888 stumped Albany County for Benjamin Har- rison and Republican principles, and since that year his voice has been heard on the stump throughout the State of New York, at every recurring election, in the interest of the Republican party; in 1892 sought the Republican nomination for Congress in the Albany district, but was deterred by factious differences which existed within party lines; in 1894 secured the Congressional nomination, and won at the election, defeating Charles Tracey by a majority of 1,640; in 1896 was reelected to Congress, defeating Thomas F. Wilkinson by a majority of 4,705; in March, 1896, presided as permanent chairman over the stormy scenes of the Republican State convention in the city of New York, which selected delegates at large to the St. Louis conven- tion in favor of the nomination of Levi P. Morton; in 1898 was again a candidate for Congress, but was defeated by Martin H. Glynn by a majority of 551; in 1900 Mr. Southwick and Mr. Glynn were again the contestants, the former winning, being elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress by a majority of 2,456. Mr. Southwick was reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, in the new district consisting of Albany and Schenectady counties, by a majority of 6,399 over B. Cleveland Sloan, receiving 28,858 votes, to 22,459 for Mr. Sloan, 760 for J. E. Alexander, 254 for Henry Vitalius, and 943 blank and scattering. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Delaware, Otsego, Schoharie, and Ulster (4 counties). Population (1900), 210,628. GEORGE JOSEPH SMITH, Republican, of Kingston, was born in Kingston, Ulster County, N. Y., November 7, 1859; was educated in the public schools at Kingston; has been engaged in the banking and manufacturing business since 1879; has never before held public office; has been very active in promoting manufactures, good roads, and other things tending to the benefit and welfare of his native city and county; has also been active in politics for the past fifteen years, having been elected chairman of the Republican county committee of Ulster County, chairman of its executive committee, and was a delegate to the Republican national convention at Philadelphia in 1900; married Laura Nancy Lynch on August 2, 1882; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 26,842 votes to 20,045 for Clifford Champion, Democrat, 1,221 for Ira S. Jarvis, Prohibitionist, and 184 blank and scattering. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. CouNTIiES.—Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, Saratoga, and Warren (5 counties). Population (igoo), 186,309. 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; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 23,018 votes, to 18,132 for Frank Beebe, Democrat, and 611 for IL. R. Grinnell. i TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Clinton, Essex, Franklin, and St. Lawrence (4 counties). : Population (1900), 210,073. WILLIAM HENRY FLACK, Republican, of Malone, was born at Franklin Falls, Franklin County, N. Y., March 22, 1861; educated in the public schools; became interested in lumbering and tanning; was supervisor of the town of Waverly seven years, and chairman of the board for two years; was elected county clerk of Franklin County in 1897, and reelected in 1900; chairman of the Republican county committee from 1898 to 1902; served as trustee of the village of Malone, and was elected president of said village in 1902; married to Katherine M. Iynch, October 7, 1882, and has two sons, Daniel W. and William H., ages 19-and 15; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 27,816 votes, to 10,392 for Henry Holland, Dem- ocrat, ggo for Henry C. Shares, Prohibitionist, and 108 for Isaac Peyser, Socialist Democrat, and 520 blank and scattering. ~~ ~- NEW YORE] Senators and Representatives. 85 TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Herkimer and Oneida (2 counties). Population (1900), 183,849. 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; is a practicing lawyer; ‘also president of the Utica Trust and Deposit Company, and president of the New Hartford Canning Company; has served in these public posi- tions: Mayor of Utica, 1884; delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1892; chairman of New York State Republican convention in 1895 and again in 19oo; was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress by a majority of 3,246 over Edward Iiewis, Democrat, receiving 21,743 votes, to 18,497 for Mr. Lewis, 1,293 for S. H. Warner, and 970 blank and scattering. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT. Counrties.—Jefferson, Lewis, and Oswego (3 counties). Population (1900), 175,056. CHARLES ILLUMAN KNAPP, Republican, of Lowville, was born at Harrisburg, Lewis County, N. Y., July 4, 1847; was educated at Lowville Academy and Rutgers College, N. J., graduating from the latter in 1869; studied law and was admitted to the bar, and began the practice of his profession in Lowville in 1873; in 1885 was elected to the State senate from the district consisting of Lewis, St. Lawrence, and Franklin counties; served in the senate during 1886 and 1887 on the committees on judiciary, railroads, and miscellaneous corporations, and was chairman of the committee on literature and public education; in 1889 was appointed by President Harrison consul-general to Montreal, and served during Harrison’s term and until September, 1893, when he returned to Lowville and resumed the practice of his pro- fession; was married June 26, 1887, to Sarah Dorrance, daughter of Hon. Daniel G. Dorrance, of Oneida Castle, New York; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress November 5, 1901, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. A. D. Shaw, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 23,196 votes, to 14,883 for C. Frank Smith, Democrat, and 1,274 for Charles W. Richards, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Onondaga and Madison (2 counties). Population (1900), 209,280. MICHAEL EDWARD DRISCOLL, Republican, of Syracuse, was born in Syracuse, N.Y., February g, 1851; when about 1 year old his parents removed to the town of Camillus, Onondaga County; was educated in the district schools, Monro Collegiate Institute, at Elbridge, Onondaga County, and Williams College; is a lawyer; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 27,023 votes, to 16,330 for Martin F. Dillon, Democrat, 744 for Albert Coit, Prohibitionist, 474 for James Trainor, Socialist Labor, 417 for John Franz, Socialist Democrat, and 1,943 blank and scattering. THIRTIETH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Broome, Chenango, Cortland, Tioga, and Tompkins (5 counties). Population (1900), 195,074. JOHN WILBUR DWIGHT, Republican, of Dryden, was born May 24, 1859, in that place, where he has always resided; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of the Hon. G. W. Ray to become judge of the northern district of New York, and also to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 28,211 votes, to 17,176 for Charles D. Pratt, Democrat, and 224 blank and scattering. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Cayuga, Ontario, Wayne, and Yates (4 counties). Population (1900), 184,817. SERENO ELISHA 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, Fifty-fifth, 86 Congressional Directory, [NEW YORK. Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Con- gress, receiving 24,130 votes, to 14,833 for Harry B. Harpending, Democrat, 916 for Harrison L. Hoyt, Prohibitionist, 267 for Frank L. Brannick, Socialist Labor, and 157 blank and scattering. : : THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT. Population (1900), 217,854. JAMES BRECK PERKINS, Republican, of Rochester, was born at St. Croix Falls, Wis., November 4, 1847; was educated at the Rochester common schools and gradu- ated from the University of Rochester in 1867; was admitted to the practice of the law in December, 1868, and has since practiced his profession in Rochester; in 1874 he was elected city attorney of Rochester for a term of two years, and in 1878 was reelected for a second term. From 1890 to 1895 Mr. Perkins lived in Paris, engaged in work on French history; in 1887 his France Under Mazarin was published; in 1892, France Under the Regency; in 1897, France Under Louis XV, and in 1900 a Life of Richelieu as one of the Heroes of the Nation Series; in 1897 received the degree of LI. D. from the University of Rochester, and is a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters; in 1895 Mr. Perkins returned to Rochester and in 1898 served in the New York State assembly from the first district of Monroe County; was a delegate to the Republican national convention in 1904; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 22,119 votes, to 15,933 for William DeGroff, Democrat, 941 for Freeman H. Bettys, Prohibi- tionist, go4 for Henry Engel, Socialist Labor, 2,249 for Charles R. Bach, Socialist Democrat, and 872 blank and scattering; reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 30,091 votes, to 17,382 for Henry Selden Bacon, Democrat, 2,193 for Gad Martindale, Socialist Democrat, 1,052 for Edwin P. Clapp, Prohibitionist, and 337 for Robert C. Wetzel, Socialist Labor. CouNnTy.—Monroe. THIRTV- THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Chemung, Schuyler, Seneca, and Steuben (4 counties). “Population (1900), 180,810. CHARLES WILLIAM GILLET, Republican, of Addison, was born at Addison, N. Y., November 26, 1840; graduated at Union College, Schenectady, N. V., class of 1861; enlisted asa private in the Eighty-sixth Regiment New York Volunteers, August, 1861; was made adjutant of the regiment November, 1861, and served as adjutant until discharged the service for disabilities in 1863; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,587 votes, to 16,494 for Frank Frost, Demo- crat, 1,523 for William A. Allen, Prohibitionist, and 954 blank -and scattering, THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Genesee, Livingston, Niagara, Orleans, and Wyoming (5 counties). Population (1900), 207,158. 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 26,007 votes, to 18,787 for Dean F. Currie, Democrat, 1,501 for William E. Booth, Prohibitionist. THIRTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. City OF BUFFALO.—The First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Fighteenth wards. Population (1900), 224,864. WILLIAM HENRY RYAN, Democrat, of Buffalo, was born in Hopkinton, Mass., May 10, 1860; moved to Buffalo with his parents in 1866; was educated in the pub- lic schools and high school; married Miss Ellen T. Cosgrove September 19, 1887; 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 organi- zation of the board of supervisors in 1898 his associates elected him chairman; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,884 votes, to 14,715 for John M, Farquhar, NEW YORE] Senators and Representatives. 87 Republican; 282 for E. J. Cook, Prohibitionist; 752 for William S. Patterson, Socialist Labor; 349 for Theodore E. F. Schorr, Social Democrat; 630 blank and scattering. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. THIRTY-SIXTH DISTRICT. ERIE CouNTY.—Seventh and Eighth assembly districts. City oF BUFFALO.—The Seventeenth, Nineteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, Twenty-second, Twenty-third, Twenty-fourth, and Twenty-fifth wards. Population (1900), 208,822. 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 studied law and practiced in partnership with Hon. Stanton J. Peelle, now judge of the Court of Claims 1n 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 of 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Con- gresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,525 votes, to 16,016 for Ole L. Snyder, Democrat; 558 for Thomas Tomlinson, Prohibitionist; 263 for William R. Rohloff, Socialist Labor, 147 for Tom Fitton, Socialist Democrat, and 674 blank and scattering. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. THIRTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua (3 counties). Population (1900), 195,458. EDWARD BUTTERFIELD VREELAND, Republican, of Salamanca, was born at Cuba, Allegany County, N. Y.,in 1857; received an academic education and served as superintendent of the schools of Salamanca from 1877 to 1882; was admitted to the practice of law in 1881; since 18g1 has been president of the Salamanca Trust Company, and is engaged principally in the banking and oil business; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress Novemniber 7, 189g, and reelected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, receiving 32,357 votes, to 16,546 for Stillman E. Lewis, Democrat, and 1,880 for John Nicholson, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress by a plurality of 16,130. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress by a plurality of 20,253. NORTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. FURNIFOLD McLENDEIL SIMMONS, Democrat, of Raleigh, was born January 20, 1854, in the county of Jones, N. C.; graduated at Trinity College, that State, with the degree of A. B., in June, 1873; was admitted to the bar in 1875, and has prac- ticed the profession of law since then ; in 1886 was elected a member of the Fiftieth Congress from the Second Congressional district of North Carolina; in 1893 was appointed collector of internal revenue for the Fourth collection district of North Carolina, and served in that office during the term of Mr. Cleveland; in the cam- paigns of 1892, 1898, and 1900 was chairman of the Democratic executive committee of the State; received the degree of LL. D. from Trinity College, North Carolina, June, 1901; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Marion Butler, Popu- list, and took his seat March 4, 1901. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. LEE SLATER OVERMAN, Democrat, of Salisbury, was born January 3, 1854, in Salisbury, Rowan County; graduated at Trinity College, North Carolina, with the degreeof A. B., June, 1874; the degree of M. A. was conferred upon him two yearslater; taught school two years; was private secretary to Governor Z. B. Vance in 1877-78, and private secretary to Governor Thomas J. Jarvis in 1879; began the practice of law in his native town in 1880; has had a leading practice; was five times a member of the legislature, sessions of 1883, 1885, 1887, 1893, and 1901; was the unan- imous choice of the Democratic caucus for speaker in 1887, and was defeated by one vote through a combination of Independents and Republicans; was the unanimous 88 Congressional Directory. [NORTH CAROLINA, choice of his party and elected speaker of the house of representatives, session of 1893; was president of the North Carolina Railroad Company in 1894; was the choice of the Democratic caucus for United States Senator in 1895, and defeated in open session by Hon. Jeter C. Pritchard through a combination of Republicans and Popu- lists; was president of the Democratic State convention in 19oo; has been for ten years a member of the board of trustees of the State University; was chosen Presi- dential elector for the State at large in 1900; married Mary P., the eldest daughter of United States Senator, afterwards chief justice, A. S. Merrimon, October 31, 1878; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Jeter C. Pritchard, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT, CounTIES.—Beaufort, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Martin, Pasquo- tank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1900), 173,018. JOHN HUMPHREY SMALI, 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, 1887; was elected reading clerk of the State senate in 1881; 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 member 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 public school committee of Washington; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,096 votes, to 1,834 for Henry E. Hodges, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. CounNTiES.—Bertie, Edgecombe, Greene, Halifax, I,enoir, Northampton, Warren, and Wilson (8 counties). > Population (1900), 172,496. CLAUDE KITCHIN, Democrat, of Scotland Neck, was born in Halifax County, N. C., near Scotland Neck, March 24, 1869; graduated from Wake Forest College June, 1888, and was married to Miss Kate Mills November 13 of the same year; was admitted to the bar September, 1890, and has since been engaged in the practice of the law at Scotland Neck; never held public office until elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress; reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 12,705 votes, to 118 for Scotland Harris, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Carteret, Craven, Duplin, Jones, Onslow, Pamlico, Pender, Sampson, and Wayne (9 counties). Population (1900), 157,704. 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- - tute, Washington, D. C., and the University of North Carolina, graduating in 1887; 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 18go to 1896; was elected by the State legislature a trustee of the University of North Carolina in 1893; was elected in 1896 Democratic Presidential elector for the Third Congressional district of North Caro- lina; married Mary Ruffin, daughter of Judge Thomas Ruffin, of North Carolina; was -elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 11,198 votes, to 4,567 votes for George E. Butler, Populist-Independent, and 2 votes scattering. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. NORTH CAROLINA] Senators and Representatives. 89 FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Chatham, Franklin, Johnston, Nash, Vance, and Wake (6 counties). Population (1900), 178,066. EDWARD WILLIAM POU, Democrat, of Smithfield, was born at Tuskegee, Ala., September 9, 1863; was Presidential elector in 1888; was elected solicitor of the Fourth judicial district of North Carolina in 1890, 1894, and 1898; while serving his third term as solicitor was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress; reelected to the Plfty in Congress, receiving 13,851 votes, to 2,107 for John W, Atwater, Inde- pendent, : PIFIH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Alamance, Caswell, Durham, Forsyth, Granville, Guilford, Orange, Person, Rocking- ham, and Stokes (10 counties). Population (1900), 248,928. 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, the late Hon. W. H. Kitchin, and then under the late 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; married Miss Musette Satterfield in 1892; 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,900 votes, to 9,611 for J, Lindsay Patterson, Independent, indorsed by the Republicans, SIXTH DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus, Cumberland, Harnett, New Hanover, and Robeson, (7 counties). Population (1900), 163,001. GILBERT BROWN PATTERSON, Democrat, of Maxton, was born May 29, 1863, on a farm near Maxton, N. C.; was prepared for college at Laurinburg High School, Laurinburg, N. C., and graduated at the University of North Carolina in 1886; read law at the University of North Carolina, and was admitted to practice September, 1890; was elected to the legislature of North Carolina in 1898 and again in 1900; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 9,881 votes, to 4,440 for A. H, Slocomb, Republican nominee, SEVENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Amnson, Davidson, Davie, Montgomery, Moore, Randolph, Richmond, Scotland, Union, and Yadkin (10 counties), Population (1900), 193,086. ROBERT NEWTON PAGE, Democrat, of Biscoe, was born at Cary, Wake County, N. C., October 26, 1859; educated at Cary High School and Bingham Mili- tary School; moved to Moore County in 1880, and has been for more than twenty years actively engaged in the lumber business; has been treasurer of the Aberdeen and Asheboro Railroad Company since 1890; moved to Montgomery County in 1897; elected from this county to the legislature of 19or; married in 1888 to Miss Flora Shaw, of Moore County, and has four children; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Con- gress, receiving 13,269 votes to 2,482 for Edwin H. Morris, Republican, and 131 for William C. Wilcox, Populist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Cabarrus, Caldwell, Iredell, Rowan, Stanly, Surry, Watauga, and Wilkes (11 counties). Population (1900), 217,604. THEODORE FRANKLIN KI, UTTZ, Democrat, of Salisbury, was born in Salis- bury, Rowan County, N. C., October 4, 1848; received his education in schools of his native county; married, April 15, 1873, to Sallie C. Caldwell, of Statesville, N. C., daughter of Hon. Joseph Pearson Caldwell, who was a Representative from North Carolina in the Thirty-first and Thirty-second Congresses; is a lawyer in full practice; was presiding justice of the inferior court in 1884, and resigned; was Democratic 90 Congressional Directory. * [NORTH CAROLINA. elector in 1880, and again in 1896; was chairman of the North Carolina delegation to the Chicago convention in 1896; is president of the Davis & Wiley (State) Bank, vice-president of the. Salisbury Cotton Mills, and holds other responsible business positions; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress from the new Eighth Congressional district of North Carolina, receiving 15,632 votes, to 14,158 for FE. Spencer Blackburn, Republican, and 51 for Dr. J. W. Long, Prohibitionist; declined to accept a renomination to the Fifty-ninth Congress. NINTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Burke, Catawba, Cleveland, Gaston, Lincoln, Madison, Mecklenburg, Mitchell, and Yancey (9 counties). Population (1900), 210,908. EDWIN YATES WEBB, Democrat, of Shelby, Cleveland County, was born in Shelby, N. C., May 23, 1872; prepared for college at the Shelby Military Institute, and entered Wake Forest College September, 1889, graduating June, 1893; was second debater from his society in 1892; was orator from his society at the anniversary in February, 1893; one of the commencement orators in June, 1893; won orator’s medal at the Shelby Military Institute in 1889; entered the University of North Carolina Law School in July, 1893, receiving his license from the supreme court in February, 1894; practiced law until 1896, when he entered the University of Virginia Law School, taking a post-graduate course there; formed a copartnership with his brother, J. L. Webb, solicitor of the Twelfth judicial district, which firm is in existence at present; was elected to the State senate in 1900; in 1896 was appointed a trustee of Wake Forest College, which position he still holds; was appointed trustee of the Agricultural and Mechanical College at Raleigh by the legislature of 1899, and served in this capacity for two years; served as chairman of his ‘senatorial district in 1896, and was chairman of the Democratic county executive committee from 1898 to 1902; he married Miss Willie Simmons, daughter of Dr. W. G. Simmons, of Wake Forest, in November, 1894; was nominated for Congress at Morgantown on the 22d of July, 1902, on the seventh ballot, and was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,087 votes, to 8,778 for G. B, Hiss, Republican. TENTH DISTRICT. CounTies.—Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, McDowell, Macon, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, and Transylvania (13 counties). Population (1900), 178,999. JAMES MADISON GUDGER, Jr., Democrat, of Asheville, was born in Madison County, N. C., in 1855, was educated at Emory and Henry College, Virginia; studied law at Pearson’s I.aw School, and is a successful lawyer; is a Mason, Knight of Pythias, and a member of the Elks; married Miss Katie M. Hawkins; was State senator in 1900; during his term of service as State senator he was chair- man of the committee on engrossed bills and a member of the judiciary, election law, claims, and penal institution committees; was State solicitor of the Sixteenth district at the time of his election to Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 12,700 votes, to 12,517 for J. M. Moody, Republican. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, defeating Judge H. G., Ewart by 888 majority, leading national ticket by 560 votes. NORTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. HENRY CLAY HANSBROUGH, Republican, of Devils Lake, was born in Ran- dolph County, Ill., January 30, 1848; received a common school education; learned the art of printing, and engaged in journalism in California, Wisconsin, and Dakota Territory, becoming a resident of the latter in 1881; was twice elected mayor of his city; was a delegate to the Republican national convention in 1888; was national committeeman for eight years; nominated for Congress by the first Republican State convention in North Dakota, and was elected, receiving 14,071 majority; was elected to the United States Senate January 23, 1891, and he took his seat March 4, 1891; was reelected in 1897 and in 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909, ® f RR Re ~g- a et aes 1g dee NORTH DAKOTA] - Senators and Representatives. 91 PORTER JAMES McCUMBER, Republican, of Wahpeton, was born in Illinois February 3, 1858; 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 schoo! for a few years, and took the law course in the University of Michigan, 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. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE. Population (1900), 319,146. THOMAS FRANK MARSHALL, Republican, of Oakes, Dickey County, was born at Hannibal, Mo., March 7, 1854; was educated at State Normal School, Platteville, Grant County, Wis.; learned the profession of surveyor, which he has followed more or less for twenty-five years; became a resident of Dakota in 1873; is engaged in ~ banking; was elected mayor of Oakes, N. Dak., two terms; State senator from the Twenty-fifth district of North Dakota, one term—four years; was a delegate to the Republican national convention held at Minneapolis in 1892; was one of the leading candidates for United States Senator from North Dakota in 1899; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 32,986 votes, to 14,392 for V. R. Lovell, Democrat, 14,765 for L. A. Ueland, Democrat, and 1,195 for R. F. King, Socialist Democrat. . BURLEIGH FOLSOM SPALDING, Republican, of Fargo, was born in Crafts- bury, Vt., December 3, 1853; graduated from Norwich University, Northfield (the military college of Vermont), in 1877, receiving the degree of bachelor of phi- losophy, and subsequently received the honorary degree of master of arts; obtained education by working on a farm and teaching school in Vermont and New Hamp- shire; was admitted to the bar of Vermont in March, 1880; located in Fargo, March 31, 1880, and was then admitted to the bar of Dakota Territory; is a member of the bar of the United States district and circuit courts, of the supreme court of North Dakota, and of the Supreme Court of the United States; has been in the active prac- tice of his profession since admission; is president of the Cass County (N. Dak.) Bar Association; is a member of the American Bar Association and of the committee of that association on Iouisiana Purchase Exposition; married November 25, 1880, to Alida Baker, daughter of David and Emily (Cutler) Baker, of Glover, Vt., and has four sons and one daughter; was superintendent of public instruction, Cass County, Dakota Territory, 1882-1884; member of the commission to locate the capital of Territory of Dakota and build the capitol building, 1883; member of the constitu- tional convention of North Dakota, 1889; twice chairman of the Republican State central committee; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress, and again to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 32,854 votes, to 14,765 for Lars A. Ueland, Democrat, a majority of 18,089. : OHIO, 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 1885, 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, 1896, and 1900, 92 Congressional Directory. [OHIO. and a delegate at large from Ohio to the national Republican conventions of 1884, 1888, 1892, 1896, 1900, and 1904; was chairman of the Ohio delegation in the conven- tions 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 plat- form each time to the convention; presented the name of William McKinley to the conventions of 1896 and 1900 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; was reelected January 15, 1902, to succeed himself. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. CHARLES DICK (office, 701 Colorado building), Republican, of Akron, was born at Akron, Ohio, November 3, 1858; is a lawyer; served in the Eighth Ohio Volunteer Infantry in Cuba in the war with Spain; represented the Nineteenth Ohio District in the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses; was elected March 2, 1904, United States Senator for the short and long terms to succeed Marcus Alonzo Hanna, deceased, receiving the unanimous party vote, His term of service will expire March 3, 1911. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. HAMILTON CoUuNTY.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Kighteenth, Twenty-sixth, T'wenty-seventh, and Thirty-first wards of the city of Cincinnati; Anderson, Columbia, Sycamore, Symmes, and Spencer townships, and precincts of Mill Creek Township, as follows: Bond Hill, Carthage, Norwood, St. Bernard, and Evanston. Population (1900), 184,164. NICHOLAS LONGWORTH, Republican, of Cincinnati, was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, November 5, 1869; his preliminary education was at Franklin School, in Cin- cinnati; graduated A. B. from Harvard University, 1891; spent one year at Harvard Law School and graduated at the Cincinnati Law School, 1894; was admitted to the bar 1894; was a member of the school board of Cincinnati 1898; was elected to the Ohio house of representatives 1899 and to the Ohio senate 1901; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 24,082 votes, to 9,471 for Thomas Bentham, Democrat, 187 for William O. Johnson, Prohibitionist, and 1,745 for C. E. Irwin, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT. BaMILTON CouNTY.— Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Nine- teenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, T'wenty-second, T'wenty-third, T'wenty-fourth, Twenty-fifth, Twenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, and Thirtieth wards of the city of Cincinnati, the townships of Colerain, Crosby, Delhi, Green, Harrison, Miami, Springfield, and Whitewater, and Elm- wood, College Hill, Western, and Winton Place precincts of Mill Creek Township. Population (1900), 225,315. HERMAN PHILIP GOEBEL, Republican, of Cincinnati, was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, April 5, 1853; received his education in the public schools of that city; grad- uated from the Cincinnati Law College at the age of 19 years and was admitted to the bar on arriving at age; was elected a member of the house of representatives of Ohio in 1875; was elected judge of the probate court of Hamilton County, Ohio, in 1884, and reelected in 1887; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 24,274 votes, to 12,095 for Harry C. Busch, Democrat, 2,681 for William R. Fox, Socialist, and 208 for Albert R. Pugh, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Butler, Montgomery, and Preble (3 counties). Population (1900), 210,729. ROBERT MURPHY NEVIN, Republican, of Dayton, was born May 5, 1850, in Highland County, Ohio; went to the public schools in the town of Hillsboro, Ohio, until the age of 14, when he entered Ohio Wesleyan University at Delaware, graduating from that institution in June, 1868, and in 1871 was made master of arts by said college; came to Dayton, Ohio, in July, 1868, and has resided in that city ever since; was admitted to the bar May 10, 1871, since which date has been a prac- ticing attorney in that city; was a partner with Hon. Alvin W. Kumler from April, 1876, until the election of Judge Kumler to the bench in 1896, and for the last four years has been with the firm of Nevin, Nevin & Kalbfus; was married in November, 1871, to Miss Emma F. Reasoner, four children being born to them, all of whom are | | | | | | En OHIO.) Senators and Representatives. 93 living; has always been a Republican in politics, and in 1887 was elected prosecuting attorney of Montgomery County by a plurality of 8oo, the county that year giviug the Democratic State ticket a plurality of over 1,000; was nominated for the Fifty- fifth Congress in this same Third Ohio district in 1896 and defeated by Hon. John L. Brenner by a plurality of 101 votes; was elected this year by a plurality of 154 over his opponent, Hon. U. F. Bickley; has never been a candidate for any other office than the two named; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress by a plurality of 5,855, receiving 25,406 votes, to 19,551 for Thomas A. Selz, Democrat, 791 for James C. Upfold, Prohibitionist, and 2,375 for Jacob Helmer, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, and Shelby (5 counties). Population (1900), 174,346. HARVEY CABLE GARBER, Democrat, of Greenville, was born at Hill Grove, Darke County, Ohio, July 16, 1865; educated in the public schools of Greenville; entered the service of the Pennsylvania Railway as telegraph operator; later was manager of the Western Union Telegraph Company; then superintendent of the Central Union Telephone Company for Ohio, and for the past five years has been assistant general solicitor for the same company, with headquarters at Columbus and Chicago; was elected a representative to the Ohio general assembly in 1889, and reelected 1n 1891; was vice-chairman of the Democratic State central committee in 1900; chairman of the Ohio State Democratic committee on organization the follow- ing year, and was unanimously chosen chairman of the Democratic State executive committee for 1go2, which position he still holds; married Miss D. H. Curtis, May 21, 1900; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,242 votes, to 14,879 for I.. H. Rogers, Republican, and 431 for Lugibell, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Defiance, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, and Williams (6 counties). Population (1900), 169,069. JOHN S. SNOOK, Democrat, of Paulding, was born on a farm near Antwerp, Paulding County, Ohio, December 18, 1862, son of William N. and Martha Snook; lived on the farm until he was 21 years of age, attending the Antwerp graded schools, from which he graduated in 1880; entered the Ohio Wesleyan University at Delaware, Ohio, where he remained three years; took up the study of law under the instruction of Judge Wilson H. Snook, with whom he spent two years; in 1886 entered the law school of the Cincinnati College, where he graduated in May, 1887, and on the 26th day of that month was admitted by the supreme court to practice law in the State of Ohio; began the practice of law at Antwerp, Ohio, and in November, 1890; moved to Paulding, where he has since resided; on August 3, 1891, married Edith May Wells, of Crawford County, Pa.; was elected to the Fifty- seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,086 votes, to 16,548 for George Russell, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT, CoUNTIES.—Brown, Clermont, Clinton, Greene, Highland, and Warren (6 counties). Population (1900), 172,228. CHARLES QUINN HILDEBRANT, Republican, of Wilmington, was born in that city October 17, 1864; educated in the public schools and for a few months at Ohio State University, Columbus; was elected clerk of the courts of Clinton County in 1890, and reelected in 1893 and 1896; was married to Adda J. Hains, October 14, 1886, and has three children—two daughters and a son; was elected to the Fifty- seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,609 votes, to 15,188 for William G. Thompson, Democrat, 612 for E. T. Hays, Prohibitionist, and 214 for Frederick G. Strickland, Socialist. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTtiEs.—Clark, Fayette, Madison, Miami, and Pickaway (5 counties). Population (1900), 171,375. THOMAS BARTON KYLE, Republican, of Troy, was born in Troy, March 10, 1856, son of Lieut. Col. Barton S. Kyle, of the Seventy-first Ohio Volunteer Infantry, who was killed in the battle of Shiloh; was educated in the public schools of Troy 94 Congressional Directory. [OHIO. and Dartmouth College, which he attended two years, as a member of the class of 1881; was admitted to the bar in 1884, and in 1890 was elected prosecuting attorney of Miami County, serving two terms of three years each; has been for three years president of the board of education of Troy; was married December 26, 1883, to Let- tie E. Benedict, at Legrand, Towa; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,381 votes, to 13,994 for Chester Bryan, Democrat, 443 for William F. Cannon, Prohibitionist, and 602 for Ralph Howell, Socialist. : EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Champaign, Delaware, Hancock, Hardin, I,ogan, and Union (6 counties). Population (1900), 178,985. WILLIAM ROBERT WARNOCK, Republican, of Urbana, was born at Urbana, Ohio, August 29, 1838; attended public schools at Urbana and graduated from the high school there in 1855; taught school in 1856 and in 1858 at Urbana; graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University in July, 1861, receiving the degree of A. B., and in 1864 received the degree of A. M. from the same university; commenced the study of law in 1861, but suspended that to enter the Army, July 21, 1862, as captain of Company G, Ninety-fifth Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry; was promoted to be major of the same regiment July 28, 1863, for gallantry at Vicksburg, and was bre- vetted lieutenant-colonel March 15, 1865, for gallantry at the battle of Nashville; was chief of staff for the Eastern District of Mississippi from April to August, 1865; served for one year in the Fifteenth Army Corps and two years in the Sixteenth Army Corps; was mustered out of service August 14, 1865, and resumed the study of law; was admitted to practice in May, 1866; was elected prosecuting attorney in the fall of 1867 and served for two terms, from January 1868, to January, 1872; elected State senator to represent the Eleventh Ohio district and served for the years 1876 and 1877; was elected judge of the court of common pleas in the second judicial district of Ohio in 1879 and reelected in 1884, and served ten years, from November, 1879, to November, 1889; served as one of the board of school examiners for Champaign County from 1870 to 1876; has been trustee of the Ohio Wesleyan University, located at Delaware, since 1894; and in 19or received from it the degree of LI. D.; served two terms as junior vice-commander of the Ohio commandery of the military order of the Loyal Legion; served two terms as commander of the Ohio commandery of the military order of the Loyal Legion, being elected May 1, 1898, and reelected May 1, 1899; was a charter member of W. A. Brand Post, G. A. R., Urbana, and served two terms as its commander; was married August 20, 1868, to Kathryn Murray, of South Charleston, Ohio, and they have three daughters; is president of the National Bank of Urbana; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 22,177 votes, to 16,643 for William R. Niven, Democrat, and 835 for J. W. Yeisley, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT. CounTtiES.—Fulton, Lucas, Ottawa, and Wood (4 counties). Population (1900), 250,128. JAMES HARDING SOUTHARD, Republican, of Toledo, was born on a farm in Washington Township, Lucas County, Ohio, January 20, 1851; attended the public schools, and Cornell University, where he graduated in 1874; began to study law in 1875 and was admitted to practice in 1877; was assistant prosecuting attorney of Lucas County; afterwards was twice elected prosecuting attorney of said county; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and re- elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 23,815 votes, to 15,373 for C. I. York, Democrat; 1,817 for J. S. Pyle, Socialist, and 572 for H. F. Maclane, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 35,128 votes, to 16,488 for William Althoff, Democrat, 2,445 for W. C. Gunthrup, Socialist, and 1,058 for A. S. Watkins, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Adams, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, and Scioto (6 counties). Population (1900), 187,181. 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 Oak Hill Academy for fifteen years; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,593 votes, to 14,118 for C. E. Belcher, Democrat, and 518 for George P. Taubman, Prohibitionist. Be OHIO] Senators and Representatives. : 95 ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Athens, Fairfield, Hocking, Meigs, Perry, Ross, and Vinton (7 counties). Population (1900), 214,118. 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 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; wasa delegate at large fo the national Republican convention at St. Louis in 1896, and again to the national Republican convention at Philadelphia in 1900; was elected to the Forty- ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 23,124 votes, to 19,487 for Edward I. Lawrence, Democrat, and 456 for William Cornell, Prohibitionist. : TWELFTH DISTRICT. CounTy.—Franklin. Population (1900), 164,460. DEWITT C. BADGER, Democrat, of Columbus, was born August 7, 1858, in Madison County, Ohio; was brought up on a farm; taught school from 1875 to 1880; was admitted to practice law in 1880; elected prosecuting attorney in 1882, and in 1893 was elected common pleas judge, and reelected in 1897; married, in 1885, to Sidney B. Slaughter; the family now consists of self, wife, and three children; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,569 votes, to 17,793 for Cyrus Huling, Republican, 425 for Alfred B. Paul, Prohibitionist, and 70 for Otto C. Stein- hoff, Socialist I.abor. Mr. Badger’s plurality was 776, while the Republican State and county tickets carried the district by majorities averaging over 2,600. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Crawford, Erie, Marion, Sandusky, Seneca, and Wyandot (6 counties). Population (1900), 196,842. AMOS HENRY JACKSON, Republican, of Fremont, was born in Delaware County, New York, near the village of Franklin, May 10, 1847; in 1854 moved to Gibson, Steuben County, N. Y.; attended the village school at Gibson; moved to a farm near Corning, N. Y., in 1862; went West in 1866; soon after, started out in the street-vending business, which he followed until 1882; since then has been engaged in the manufacture of muslin and flannelette undergarments, with factories at Fremont, Sandusky, Tiffin, and Clyde, Ohio; is president of the Jackson Knife and Shear Company, of Fremont; was elected mayor of Fremont in 1897, and reelected in 1899, serving two terms; was married November 28, 1872, to Miss Mary Sharp, of Fremont, and they have three daughters; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 22,496 votes, to 22,169 for James A. Norton, Democrat, 441 for Hewson L. Peeke, Prohibitionist, and 402 for Charles R. Martin, Socialist Labor. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Ashland, Huron, Knox, Lorain, Morrow, and Richland (6 counties). Population (1900), 198,307. AMOS RICHARD WEBBER, Republican, of Elyria, was born at Hinkley, Medina County, Ohio, January 21, 1852; his father was a native of Massachusetts and his mother of New York; was educated in the public schools of Hinkley and Baldwin 96 Congressional Directory. [OHIO. University, Berea, Ohio, working his way through that institution; after graduating, studied law with Judge Lewis at Medina, being admitted to the bar in 1876; the same year he moved to Elyria; held the office of prosecuting attorney three terms, and in 1900 was chosen judge of the court of common pleas; was elected November 8, 1904, to fill the vacancy in the Fifty-eighth Congress caused by the death of Hon. W. W. Skiles, and to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Guernsey, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1900), 173,226. 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 a delegate to the Republican national convention at Chicago in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,462 votes, to 16,850 for Ernest B. Schneider, Democrat, and 1,120 for Joseph E. W. Greene, Prohibitionist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Belmont, Carroll, Harrison, Jefferson, and Monroe (5 counties). Population (1900), 169,560. CAPELL I, WEEMS, Republican, of St. Clairsville, county seat of Belmont County, was born July 7, 1860, at Whigville, Noble County, Ohio; was raised partly in that and partly in Belmont County; received a common school and academic edu- cation, and taught and superintended schools until commencing the practice of law at Caldwell, Ohio, in the spring of 1883. The same year he married Mary B. Nay, of Caldwell, Ohio, who died September 14, 1904. He was elected prosecuting attor- ney of Noble County in 1884, and at the end of his term was elected to the lower house of the general assembly of Ohio, where he served on the judiciary committee and on the joint committee of the two houses which prepared the constitutional amendments submitted to the people of Ohio in 1889. He removed to Belmont County in 1890; was elected prosecuting attorney of that county in 1893 and reelected in 1896; and on November 3, 1903, was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congressto fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. J. J. Gill, receiving 18,408 votes, to 12,468 for Lewis E. Matz, Democrat, and 375 for Lewis Hays, Prohibitionist. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Coshocton, Holmes, Licking, Tuscarawas, and Wayne (5 counties). Population (1900), 187,539. JOHN W. CASSINGHAM, Democrat, of Coshocton, was born there June 22, 1840, and received his education in the public schools of that place; was a dele- gate to the Democratic National Convention at Chicago in 1896; is president of the Commercial National Bank of Coshocton; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,753 votes, to 17,563 for William B. Stevens. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Columbiana, Mahoning, and Stark (3 counties). Population (1900), 233,471. JAMES KENNEDY, Republican, of Youngstown, was born September 3, 1853, in Poland Township, Mahoning County, Ohio, one of seven sons of T. W. Kennedy, the pioneer furnace builder of that section; the father constructed his first furnace at Haselton, the lines of which furnished the model for all subsequent like struc- tures; his six brothers are prominent in the iron world, the oldest, Julian, being the leading consulting and constructing engineer in the world. The subject of this sketch prepared for college at Poland Union Seminary, and graduated A. B.at West- minster College, Pennsylvania, 1876; studied law. with Gen. T. W. Sanderson, of Youngstown, and was admitted to the bar in March, 1879; married Phebe Erwin, and has one daughter; never held public position until elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 22,461 votes, to 10,502 for W. J. Foley, Democrat, 886 for E. H. Brosius, Prohibitionist, and 7,923 for Thomas J. Duffy, Labor. | en —=8 — OHIO.] Senators and Representatives. 97 NINETEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Ashtabula, Geauga, Portage, Summit, and Trumbull (5 counties). Population (1900), 213,744. WILLIAM AUBREY THOMAS, Republican, of Niles, was born June 7, 1866, in Wales; was educated in the public schools of Niles, two years at Mount Union Col- lege, Alliance, Ohio, and later at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N. V., making a specialty of chemistry and metallurgy; a son of John R. Thomas, deceased, a pioneer iron manufacturer of the Mahoning Valley, he was for some years manager of the Thomas furnace in Niles, and later became interested in other iron industries; was nominated in May, 1904, to fill the vacancy in the Fifty-eighth Congress caused by the resignation of Hon. Charles Dick, and for the Fifty-ninth Congress, and was elected November 8, 1904, unanimously to the Fifty-eighth Congress, and by a plu- rality of 23,747 to the Fifty-ninth Congress. TWENTIETH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—ILake, Medina, and the townships of Bedford, Brecksville, Brooklyn, Chagrin Falls, Collinwood, Dover, East Cleveland, Fuclid, Glenville, Independence, Mayfield, Middleburg, Newburg, Olmstead, Orange, Parma, Rockport, Royalton, Solon, Strongsville, Warrensville, and West Park, 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, Forty-first, and Forty-second wards of the city of Cleveland. Population (1900), 227,248. JACOB ATLEE BEIDLER, Republican, of Willoughby, was born near Valley Forge, Chester County, Pa., November 2, 1852; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,523 votes, to 16,885 for Charles A. Kohl, Democrat, 568 for Joseph N. Scholes, Prohibitionist, 815 for W. R. Krumroy, Socialist, and 377 for John Kircher, Socialist Labor. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. City oF CLEVELAND.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, T'wentieth, T'wenty-first, T'wenty-second, Twenty-third, Twenty-fourth, Twenty- fifth, and Twenty-seventh wards. Population (1900), 255,510. 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 Towa College, Grinnell, Towa, and at Oberlin College, from which last insti- tution he graduated in 1872; began the practice of law at Cleveland in 1875; is author of a work on Financial Crises and Periods of Commercial Depression, published in 1902; was a member of the Fifty-first Congress, but was defeated for reelection in 1890; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-séventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 33,930 votes, to 409 for John McDonough, Prohibitionist, 4,144 for Max S. Hayes, Socialist, 353 for James Rugg, Socialist Labor, and 355 scattering. OREGON. SENATORS. JOHN H. MITCHELL, Republican, of Portland, was born in Washington County, Pa., June 22, 1835; received a public school education and the instruction of a private tutor; studied and practiced law; removed to California and practiced law, first in San Luis Obispo and then in San Francisco; removed to Portland, Oreg., in 1860, and there continued his profession; was elected corporation attorney of Portland in 1861 and served one year; was elected as a Republican to the State senate in 1862 and served four years, the last two as president of that body; was commissioned by the governor of Oregon in 1865 lieutenant-colonel in the State militia; was a candidate for United States Senator in 1866 and was defeated in the party caucus by one vote; was chosen professor of medical jurisprudence in Willamette University, at Salem, Oreg., in 1867, and served in that position nearly four years; was elected to the United 58-3D—2D ED——7 ne 98 : Congressional Directory. [OREGON. States Senate September 28, 1872, and served from March 4, 1873, to March 3, 1879; received the caucus nomination of the Republican party for United States Senator in 1882, receiving the votes of two-thirds of all the Republicans in the legislature on first ballot, but was finally, after a contest lasting until the close of the session, defeated in joint session; was again elected to the United States Senate November 18, 1885, to succeed James H. Slater, Democrat, for the term commencing March 4, 1885, and took his seat December 17, 1885; was reelected January 20, 1891; January 10, 1897, in a caucus of the Republican members of the legislature, there being 48 | members present, 2 more than a majority of the whole legislature, the whole num- ber constituting the two houses being go, on an open roll call he received every one of the 48 votes and was declared the unanimous nominee of the Republican party | for United States Senator to succeed himself; 28 members of the House refused to take the oath of office during the entire session, thus destroying a quorum and pre- & venting a vote for Senator, and also preventing the passage of any appropriation or I other acts during the entire session, which resulted in his defeat; was again, on February 23, 1901, elected to succeed Hon. George W. McBride, and took his seat March 9, 1901. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. CHARLES WILLIAM FULTON, Republican, of Astoria, was born in the city of Lima, Ohio, August 24, 1853, and at the age of 2 years his parents removed to Magnolia, Iowa, where the family resided for sixteen years; at Magnolia Mr. Ful- ton received his early education, attending the common schools. In 1871 his parents I moved again, to Pawnee City, Nebr., at which place he took up the study of law. [| In 1873 and 1874 he taught school, and during part of the time attended an academy; in the spring of 1875 he determined to come West, and early in that year landed in Oregon; taught school one term at Waterloo, Linn County; came to Astoria in June, 1875, which has since been his home. In 1877 he formed a law partnership with J. - W. Robb, and through him became interested in politics, being elected to the State senate in 1878. In the early eighties was elected city attorney, and in 1888 was a Presidential elector, carrying to Washington the vote of Oregon and casting it for President Harrison. Was elected to the State senate in 1890, 1898, and 1902, and was president at the sessions of 1893 and 19o1. Mr. Fulton married Miss Ada Hob- ’ son, September 5, 1878, and has one son; was elected to the United States Senate, i February 28, 1903, to succeed Joseph Simon, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His i term of service will expire March 3, 1909. [ REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. : CouNTIES.—Benton, Clackamas, Coos, Curry, Douglas, Jackson, Josephine, Klamath, Lake, Lane, Lincoln, Iinn, Marion, Polk, Tillamook, Washington, and Yamhill (17 counties). Population (1900), 192,929. BINGER HERMANN, Republican, of Roseburg, was born at Loonaconing, Alle- gany County, Md., February 19, 1843; was educated in the rural schools of western I Maryland and at the Independent Academy (afterwards Irving College), near Balti- more; removed to Oregon, where he taught country schools; studied law, was admit- ted to practice before the supreme court of the State in 1866, and has practiced law continuously since; was elected to the Oregon legislature (lower house) in 1866 and - was State senator in 1868; was deputy collector of internal revenue for southern " Oregon, 1868-1871; was a receiver of public moneys at the United States land office at Roseburg, Oreg., under appointment by President Grant, 1871-1873; was judge- advocate, with the rank of colonel, in the Oregon State militia, 1882-1884; on the 27th of March, 1897, was appointed by President McKinley and confirmed Com- missioner of the General Land Office, and continued in that office until February 1, 1903, when he resigned, having served a longer continuous period as Commissioner than any of his predecessors, except two, who served in the earlier part of the last century. Mr. Hermann was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty- second, Fifty-third, and Fifty-fourth Congresses, and to the Fifty-eighth Congress on June I, 1903, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Thomas H. Tongue (who had himself succeeded Mr. Hermann in the Fifty-fifth Congress), receiving 15,313 votes, to 13,042 for A. E. Reames, Democrat, 1,900 for J. W. Ingle, Socialist, and 1,449 for W. P. Elmore, Prohibitionist; reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, ¥ receiving 23,970 votes, to 17,157 for R. M. Veatch, Democrat, 2,867 for H. Gould, pa Prohibitionist, and 2,800 for B. ¥. Ramp, Populist. Em OREGON.] = Senators and Representatives. 99 SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Baker, Clatsop, Columbia, Crook, Gilliam, Grant, Harney, Malheur, Morrow, Mult- nomah, Sherman, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, Wasco, and Wheeler (16 counties). Population (1900), 220,607. JOHN NEWTON WILLIAMSON, Republican, of Prineville, was born in I.ane County, Oreg., November 8, 1855; was educated in the Willamette University, a Methodist institution located at the capital of the State; pursued the classical course in that institution until within three months of graduation, when, being stricken down with rheumatism, he never returned to graduate; upon recovery, moved to the eastern part of the State, where he has lived and been engaged in the stock business ever since; January, 1886, was married to Miss Viletha Forest, also a native Oregonian, and has three daughters. His public service began in the year 1886, when he was elected sheriff of Crook County; at the end of his term as sheriff, 1888, was elected to the lower house of the State legislature; was elected again ten years thereafter; in 1900 was elected to the Oregon senate as joint senator for the four counties, Wasco, Crook, Lake, and Klamath; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Con- gress, receiving 24,397 votes, to 15,598 for W. F. Butcher, Democrat, 2,753 for D. T. Gerdes, Socialist, and 1,957 for F. R. Spaulding, Prohibitionist. PENNSYLVANIA. SENATORS. BOIES PENROSE, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born 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 MacVeagh and George Tucker Bispham, and was admitted to the bar in 1883; practiced his pro- fession in Philadelphia for several years; was elected to the Pennsylvania house of representatives from the Fighth Philadelphia district in 1884; 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 tempore of the senate in 1889, and reelected in 1891; was a delegate to the Republican national convention of 1900; was chairman of the Republican State committee in 1903-4; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed J. Donald Cameron, and took his seat March 4, 1897; was the unanimous choice of the Republican caucus of both houses and was reelected by the full party vote in the legislature in 1903. His term of office will expire March 3, 1909. : PHILANDER CHASE KNOX, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in Browns- ville, Pa., May 6, 1853, son of David S. and Rebekah Page Knox; his father was a banker in Brownsville; graduated at Mount Union College, Alliance, Ohio, in 1872; entered the law office of H. B. Swope, Pittsburg, Pa., and was admitted to the bar in 1875; was assistant United States district attorney for the western district of Pennsylvania in 1876; was elected president of the Pennsylvania Bar Association in 1897; was made Attorney-General in the Cabinet of President McKinley in 1901 as successor to John William Griggs, of New Jersey, resigned, and was sworn into office April 9, 1901; was the choice of President Roosevelt for Attorney-General in his Cabinet, and was confirmed by the Senate December 16, 1901; resigned that office June 30, 1904, to accept appointment as United States Senator tendered by Governor Pennypacker June 10, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. M. S. Quay, and took his seat December 6. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA. —First, Seventh, Twenty-sixth, Thirtieth, Thirty-sixth, and Thirty-ninth rds. hey Population (1900), 227,733. HENRY HARRISON BINGHAM, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., December 4, 1841; was graduated at Jefferson College in 1862, receiv- ing the degrees of A. B. and A. M., and also the degree of LL. D. from Washing- ton and Jefferson College; studied law; entered the Union Army as a lieutenant in the One hundred and fortieth Pennsylvania Volunteers; was wounded at Gettysburg, Pa., in 1863, at Spottsylvania, Va., in 1864, and at Farmville, Va., in 1865; mustered out of service July, 1866, having been brevetted for distinguished gallantry as major, 100 Congressional Divectory. [PENNSYLVANIA. lieutenant-colonel, colonel, and brigadier-general; received the medal of honor for special gallantry on the field of battle; 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, St. Louis in 1896, at Philadelphia June 19, 1900, and elected to the national convention at Chicago, 1904; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition, receiving 32,081 votes. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT. City OF PHILADELPHIA.—Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, I'wentieth, and Thirty-seventh wards. Population (1900), 195,609. ROBERT ADAMS, Jr., 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 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 41,724 votes, to 6,966 for John Cadwalader, jr., Democrat. In the Fifty-fifth Congress, as acting chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, Mr. Adams reported, conducted through the House, and had charge of, in conference with the Senate, the Cuban resolutions, and drafted, introduced, reported, and passed through the House of Representatives, in one hour, the declaration of war against Spain. THIRD. DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Sixteenth, Seven- teenth, Fighteenth, and Nineteenth wards. Population (1900), 251,649. GEORGE A. CASTOR, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., August 6, 1855; was educated in the public schools of his native city; has been engaged in active business life since his early manhood; was a member of the Republican city committee of Philadelphia for fifteen years; was a candidate for Congressman-at-large before the Republican State Convention in 1892, and failed of a nomination by only 12 votes, and was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress Feb- ruary 16, 1904, to fill a vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. Henry Burk, by a plurality of 24,347; reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 39,893 votes, to 7,846 for John H. Fow, Democrat and Independent. FOURTH DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA. —T'wenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, Thirty-second, and Thirty-eighth wards. Population (1900), 177,020. REUBEN O. MOON, Republican, of Philadelphia, descended from John Moon, one of the earliest judges of the State of Pennsylvania, who was appointed by King’s Commission about 168.4, was born in the State of New Jersey, son of Aaron I.. Moon, one of the most successful teachers of that State; was educated under his father’s instruction supplemented by a college course, graduating in 1874; taught school, and later was a professor in a prominent institution of learning in Philadelphia; engaged in the educational lecture field; studied law, being admitted to the bar in 1884, to the supreme court in 1886, and to the United States courts in 1890; was president of the Columbia Club, is also a member of the Penn Club, the Lawyers’ Club, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, and other prominent Pennsylvania associations; married Mary A. Predmore, of Barnegat, N. J., in 1876, and has two children. He was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress November 2, 1903, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Robert H. Foederer, receiving 17,875 votes, to 2,280 for Raff, Independent, and 252 for Ressler, Prohibitionist, -4 a | a PENNSYLVANIA.] Senators and Representatives. 101 PIFTH DISTRICT. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.— Twenty-third, Twenty-fifth, Thirty-first, Thirty-third, Thirty-fifth, and Forty-first wards. Population (1900), 196,315. EDWARD DE V. MORRELL, Republican, of Torresdale, Philadelphia, was born at Newport, R. I., August 7, 1862, while his parents were sojourning at that resort; his ancestors were old-time Philadelphians and were prominent in the history of that city; graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, department of arts, with high honors, in 1885; studied law at the same institution and received degrees | of M. A. and LIL. B. in 1887; was admitted to the bar in 1887; was elected to the select council of Philadelphia in 1891, serving three years; has been active in the National . a Guard of Pennsylvania, entering that organization as colonel of the Third Regiment, | and afterwards being commissioned as brigadier-general, commanding the First Brigade; in 1889 married Louise Bouvier Drexel, daughter of the late Francis A. Drexel; was elected to fill the vacancy in the Fifty-sixth Congress caused by the | death of the late Hon. A. C. Harmer, and to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and | reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 25,358 votes, to 292 for Raymond A. Smith, Prohibitionist; reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 28,146 votes, | to 6,524 for David Moffett, Democrat, 277 for C. E. McClellan, Prohibitionist, and 753 for John McDonough, Socialist. SIXTH DISTRICT. | | CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.— Twenty-first, Twenty-second, Twenty-fourth, Twenty-seventh, Thirty- fourth, Fortieth, and Forty-second wards. ¢ Population (1900), 245,371. fi { 1 | | | HN GEORGE DEARDORFF McCREARY, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in York Springs village, Adams County, Pa., September 28, 1846; his infancy and early youth were spent in the anthracite coal regions at Tremont, Tamaqua, and Mauch Chunk, where his father, the late John B. McCreary, one of the pioneer coal operators, was engaged in coal mining. In 1864, with his parents, he removed to Philadelphia; was educated in public and private schools, and in the same year, 1864, entered the University of Pennsylvania, remaining until his junior year, 1867, when he left to take a position in the Honey Brook Coal Company, of which his father was president. He began his independent business career in 1870, when he became a member of the newly organized coal firm of Whitney, McCreary & Kem- merer, retiring from the firm in 1879 to take charge of his father’s estate. In 1882 he became interested in municipal affairs of the city of Philadelphia, and was an original member of the committee of one hundred, serving on the important com- mittees; was elected treasurer of the city and county of Philadelphia in November, 1891, and during his term of office, from 1892 to 1895, reorganized the finances of the city, introducing and carrying out many needed measures, which have resulted in large financial gains to the city and safety in the transaction of its finances. He is an officer in and director of a number of successful financial, mining, and business companies, and is also associated in church and philanthropic institutions. He was married June 18, 1878, to Kate R. Howell; has traveled extensively in this and foreign countries; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress by a majority of 30,428, there having been only 501 votes cast against him for the Prohibition candidate. ® SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Chester and Delaware (2 counties). Population (1900), 190,457. THOMAS S. BUTLER, Republican, of Westchester, was born in Uwchland, Ches- ter County, Pa., November 4, 1855; received a common school and academic educa- tion; is an attorney at law; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty- seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,062 votes, to 9,751 for Frank B. Rhodes, Democrat, 666 for Joseph H. Paschall, Prohibitionist, and 213 for William H. Keevan, Socialist. FIGHTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bucks and Montgomery (2 counties). Population (1900), 210,185. 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 Aug? Ey wv ii 102 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA. elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-Eighth Congress, receiving 22,689 votes, to 20,080 for Charles E. Ingersoll, Democrat; 440 for William Jaques, Socialist, and 392 for Oliver. H. Holcomb, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 26,099 votes, to 15,847 for Joseph J. Broadhurst, Democrat, 471 for Atmore Loomis, Prohibitionist, and 430 for Hugh G. Ayres, Socialist. NINTH DISTRICT. Population (1900), 159,241. HENRY BURD CASSE], Republican, of Marietta, was bornin Marietta, Lancaster County, Pa., October 19, 1355, and after passing through the public schools of Marietta CouNTy.—ILancaster. “finished his education at the Columbia Classical Institute; has been a stanch Repub- lican, and became interested in politics at an early age. His first political office was as a member of the county committee, in 1881; became chairman of the county committee in 1893; was sent as a delegate to the national Republican convention held in St. Louis in 1896, and in 1898 was nominated and elected to the lower house of the State legislature, where his father had served fifty-nine years before, and was reelected in 1900; served as member of the important committees of the judiciary general, ways and means, and public buildings. Asa business man Mr. Cassel is the proprietor of the firm of A. N. Cassel & Son, wholesale and retail lumber dealers; 1s also associated as director or stockholder in a number of other companies; was . elected November 5, 1901, to the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Marriott Brosius, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,287 votes, to 7,036 for James F. McCoy, Democrat, 402 for D. S. Von Neida, Prohibitionist, and 508 for David Bixler, Socialist. TENTH DISTRICT. Population (1900), 193,831. WILLIAM CONNELL, Republican, of Scranton, was born at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, September 10, 1827, his parents being of Scotch and Irish descent; his educa- tion was self-won; when he was yet young, his parents moved to what is now Hazle- ton, Luzerne 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 identified with the management of most of the industries and large com- mercial 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, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, being seated in the latter on a contest against George Howell, who was given the certificate. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. Population (1900), 257,121. HENRY WILBER PALMER, Republican, of Wilkesbarre, was educated at Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pa.; Fort Edward Institute, Fort Edward, N. Y., and the National Law School of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., graduating from the latter institution in 1860; was admitted to the bar at Peekskill, N. Y., in 1860, and at Wilkesbarre in 1861; served in the Pay Department of the Union Army in the civil war at New Orleans in 1862-63; was a member of the constitutional convention of Pennsylvania in 1872-73, and attorney-general of the State from 1879 to 1883; mar- ried Ellen M. Webster at Plattsburg, N. Y., September 12, 1861; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,787 votes, to 14,091 for T. R. Martin, Democrat and Workingmen’s, and 3,911 for C. V. Quinn, Socialist. : CouNnTy.—ILackawanna, CouNTY.—ILuzerne. TWELFTH DISTRICT. CounTy.—Schuylkill. Population (1900), 172,927. GEORGE ROBERT PATTERSON, Republican, of Ashland, was born at Iewis- town, Mifflin County, Pa., November 9, 1863; attended the public schools and the academy at that place; has been engaged in mercantile pursuits since leaving school, in 1880, most of the time as a traveling salesman, first in the hardware business and for the last twelve years in flour and feed; at present is agent for a Minneapolis mill, } i PENNSYLVANIA] Senators and Representatives. 163 covering territory in central Pennsylvania; has been living at Ashland since March, 1886; has always been a Republican, and has taken an active part in the politics of the district for a number of years, having frequently been a delegate tolocaland State conventions, and delegate to the national Republican convention at Chicago, June, 1904; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,151 votes, to 12,402 for James W. Ryan, Democrat, 1,928 for I'. J. Lannon, Socialist, and 284 for W. H. Zweizig, Prohibitionist; reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress by a majority of 5,414, the largest ever given to any candidate for any office on any ticket in this district. : THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Berks and I,ekigh (2 counties). Population (1900), 253,508. MARCUS C. I. KLINE, Democrat, of Allentown, was born March 26, 1855, in Salisburg Township, Lehigh County, Pa.; attended common schoolsin the Borough of Emaus, Pa.,and graduated from Muhlenberg College, June 26, 1874; was admitted tc practice in the several courts of Lehigh County, June 5, 1876; has been admitted to practice in the supreme and superior courts of Pennsylvania, and Federal courts; was elected city solicitor in April, 1877, for the city of Allentown; served as district attorney for the county of Lehigh from January, 1887, to January, 1890; was chairman of the Democratic county committee of Lehigh during the years 1895, 1896, 1897, 1898, and 1899; served as director in the Second National Bank of Allentown for many years, and January 17, 1901, was elected president of the Lehigh Valley Trust and Safe Deposit Company, and is now associated with said institution in that capacity; was married October 4, 1881, to Clara M. Keller; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 24,771 votes, to 19,772 for William H. Sowden, Republican, and 1,233 for Alfred Brown, Socialist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTiEs.—Bradford, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming (4 counties). Population (1900), 146,769. CHARLES FRED WRIGHT, Republican, of Susquehanna, Susquehanna County, was born in Forest Lake Township, Susquehanna County, Pa.; is cashier of I'irst National Bank of Susquehanna Depot, Pa.; was delegate to St. Louis Republican convention in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,401 votes, to 10,727 for James West, Democrat, and 1,109 for Francis H. Dickerson, Prohibitionist. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Clinton, I,ycoming, Potter, and Tioga (4 counties). Population (1900), 184,567. : ELIAS DEEMER, Republican, of Williamsport, Lycoming County, was born in Bucks County, Pa., January 3, 1838; was educated in the common schools; engaged in the mercantile business in his native county and later in Philadelphia, until the war broke out; in July, 1861, enlisted as a private in Company E, One hundred and fourth Pennsylvania Volunteers, and served in the Peninsula campaign until the middle of May following, when he was discharged for disabilities resulting from injuries received while in the line of duty; is a member of Reno Post, No. 64, G. A. R.; in the spring of 1868 moved to Williamsport, where he has since continuously resided; was president of the common council, 1888-1890; is engaged in the manufacture of lumber, employing between 500 and 700 men in his different operations; became president of the Williamsport National Bank in 1894, and has been its president ever since; is not a politician and has never held public office, but has always taken an interest in party affairs; was elected tc the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 19,807 votes, to 11,959 for George B. M. Metzger, Democrat, 1,478 for A. H. Bingham, Prohibitionist, and 751 for Charles A. Reese, Socialist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, and Sullivan (4 counties). Population (1900), 158 467. CHARLES HEBER DICKERMAN, Democrat, of Milton, Northumberland County, was born in Harford, Susquehanna County, Pa., February 3, 1843; was educated in the public schools of his native village and at Harford University; taught school several years; read law in the office of Hon. Daniel S. Dickinson, Bingham- ton, N. Y., but before qualifying for admission to the bar became bookkeeper for a - large coal company; some years later he engaged in the coal commission business at Bethlehem, Pa.; soon after was made general manager of the Chapman Slate Com- Hil 1 1H 104 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYI,VANIA. pany, Chapman Quarries, Pa.; in 1880 he removed to Milton, and was elected sec- retary and treasurer of the car-building firm of Murray, Dougal & Co., Limited, of that place; served many years as director of the Second National Bank of Mauch Chunk, Lehigh Valley National Bank of Bethlehem, the Sunbury Trust and Safe Deposit Company of Sunbury, and of the First National Bank of Milton, Pa.; was elected president of the last-named bank January, 1897, and still occupies that posi- tion; married Joy I. Carter March 10, 1869, at Beaver Meadow, Pa.; was for three years Democratic chairman of Northumberland County, and a delegate to the national Democratic convention of 1892; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,019 votes, to 13,171 for F. A, Godcharles, Republican, and 705 for H. C. Harman, Prohibitionist. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Snyder, and Union (8 counties). Population (1900), 199,849. 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 September, 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; read law, and was admitted to practice in 1871; has been actively engaged in his profession in southern Pennsylvania ever since his admission to the bar; was a member of Pennsylvania legislature in 1870 and 1871; served as chairman of gen- eral judiciary committee; is president of Baltimore and Cumberland Valley Railroad, president of St. Thomas Bank, a member of the commission having charge of the soldiers’ orphan schools of Pennsylvania; was a candidate for Congress in the Eight- eenth 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 Repub- lican and has always taken an active part in State and national politics; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 21,197 votes, to 16,740 for Harry J. Huber, Democrat. ; EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Cumberland, Dauphin, and Lebanon (3 counties). Population (1900), 218,614. 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 (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 (late 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; married October 26, 1899, to Gertrude, daughter of late Maj. Conway R. Howard, of Richmond, Va.; received honorary degree of doctor of-laws from Lebanon Valley College in 1903; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses from the Four- teenth, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress from the new Eighteenth district of Pennsylvania, receiving 22,193 votes, to 13,715 for Benjamin I. Forster, Demo- crat, and 1,253 for John W. Ellenberger, Prohibitionist. NINETEENTH DISTRICT. CountieEs.—Bedford, Blair, and Cambria (3 counties). Population (1900), 229,404. ALVIN EVANS, Republican, of Ebensburg, was born at Ebensburg, Cambria County, Pa., October 4, 1845; was educated in the public schools of his native county; studied law in the office of the late George M. Reade, esq., and was admit- ted to the bar June 3, 1873, and has lived at Ebensburg, Pa., ever since, practicing law in the several courts of Cambria County, superior and supreme courts of the State, and Federal courts; was married November 17, 1875, to Miss Kate E. Shryock, since deceased, a daughter of Col. John K. Shryock, of Wilmore, Pa.; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,814 votes, to 15,690 for Robert E. Cresswell, Democrat, and 128 for Joseph E. Thropp, Union. PENNSYLVANIA] Senators and Representatives. 105 TWENTIETH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Adams and York (2 counties). Population (1900), 150,909. DANIEL FRANKLIN LAFEAN, Republican, of York, was born in York, York County, Pa., February 7, 1861; was educated in the public schools of his native city, entering the high school in 1876; has been actively engaged in the manufacturing business upward of twenty years, being connected with a number of local manufac- turing concerns, as well as president of the Security Title and Trust Company, a leading financial institution of his city; is a director of the Gettysburg College and trustee of the Gettysburg Seminary, Gettysburg, Pa.; was married in 1882 to Miss Emma B. Krone, and has three children. He was tendered a unanimous nomina- tion and elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Con- gress by a plurality of 4,306, receiving 19,088 votes, to 14,782 for William McSherry, Democrat, and 367 for Samuel S, W, Hammers, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Cameron, Center, Clearfield, and McKean (4 counties). Population (1900), 181,899. SOLOMON ROBERT DRESSER, Republican, of Bradford, was born in Litch- field, Hillsdale County, Mich., February 1, 1842; received a common school educa- tion and attended Hillsdale College; he conducted the Dresser farm with his father until 1865, when the oil development of West Virginia began to attract attention and companies were formed for oil operations. In one of these he took stock and soon became its manager and continued in this capacity until 1872, when he came to Pennsylvania to engage in the production of oil and gas. Here he gained the practical experience which, combined with his inventive genius, placed his name foremost among the men of brains whose business energy invented and developed the machinery and appliances used in the oil and gas industry; among his inven- tions are a packer for oil and gas wells which has taken the lead from the first day it was placed on the market; a rubber pipe coupling which by providing for contraction and expansion makes a perfectly tight joint; and an insulated pipe coupling which prevents the destruction of water and gas pipes by electrolysis; is a large employer of labor, and has never had a strike or any trouble with his employees; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,722 votes, to 13,243 for Delos Eugene Hibner, Democrat, and 1,295 for Benjamin N. McCoy, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Butler and Westmoreland (2 counties). Population (1900), 217,137. GEORGE FRANKLIN HUFF, Republican, of Greensburg, was born at Norris- town, Pa., July 16, 1842; received his education in the public schools at Middletown and later at Altoona, where, after learning a trade in the car shops of the Pennsyl- vania Railroad Company, at an early age he entered the banking house of William M. Lloyd & Co. In 1867 he removed to Westmoreland County to engage in the banking business. He was married in 1871 to Henrietta, daughter of the late Judge Jeremiah M. Burrell, of Pennsylvania, afterwards United States district judge and chief justice of Kansas by appointment of President Franklin Pierce; he was a member of the national Republican convention in 1880, where he was one of the “306” who followed the lead of Roscoe Conkling in the ever-memorable effort to nominate Gen. U. S. Grant for the Presidency. Mr. Huff is president of the Key- stone Coal and Coke Company, one of the largest producers of gas and steam coal in the United States; is largely engaged in many other business industries in various parts of Pennsylvania, together with the banking business in Greensburg, in which he has been constantly engaged since his youth; is president of the Westmoreland Hospital Association. He was elected to the Pennsylvania senate in 1884 and represented the Thirty-ninth senatorial district four years; was elected to the Fifty- second Congress from the Twenty-first district, then composed of the counties of Westmoreland, Indiana, Armstrong, and Jefferson; was elected Congressman-at- Large from Pennsylvania to the Fifty-fourth Congress; was elected to the Fifty-- eighth Congress, receiving 18,827 votes, to 13,014 for Charles M. Heinman, Democrat, and 778 for James S. Woodburn, Prohibitionist. 106 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Fayette, Greene, and Somerset (3 counties). Population (1900), 188,154. ALLEN FOSTER COOPER, Republican, of Uniontown, was born on a farm in Franklin Township, Fayette County, Pa., June 16, 1862; was educated in the public schools of his native township, in the State normal schools at California and Iock- haven, Pa., and at Mount Union College, Ohio; graduated from the State Normal School at California, Pa., inthe class of 1882, and taught school for six years; decid- ing upon the profession of law, he entered the law department of the University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor, and graduated from that institution in the class of 1888; was admitted to the circuit court of Washtenaw County, Mich., and to the supreme court of the State of Michigan before his graduation from the law school; after completing his law course in the University of Michigan, returned to Fayette County, Pa., and was admitted to the bar of that county December 4, 1888; on January 1, 1889, he formed a law partnership at Uniontown, Pa., with his classmate, J. Q. Van Swearingen, which still exists; is a member of the bar of the supreme court of Pennsylvania, of the dis- trict and circuit courts of the United States for the western district of Pennsylvania, and of the Supreme Court of the United States. He was elected to the Fifth-eighth Congress, receiving 15,546 votes, to 13,791 for Orran W. Kennedy, Democrat, and 1,096 for Harold L. Robinson, Prohibitionist. This was the first time Mr. Cooper ever sought or held any public office. Was reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 18,206 votes, to 10,597 for Charles F. Uhl, jr., Democrat, and 2,226 for George F. Hocking, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Beaver, Lawrence, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1900), 205,655. ERNEST FRANCIS ACHESON, Republican, of Washington, was born in Wash- ington, Pa., September 19, 1855; educated at Washington and Jefferson College; in 1879 became editor of the Washington, Pa., Observer and has since been con- nected with that newspaper; was a delegate to the Republican national conven- tions of 1884 and 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fiftth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,147 votes, to 9,974 for Charles R. Eckert, Democrat, 1,335 for John A. Bailey, Prohibitionist, 898 for George Frethy, Socialist Labor, and 142 for J. H. Cunning- ham, Citizens. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Crawford and Erie (2 counties). i Population (1900), 162,116. ARTHUR LABAN BATES, Republican, of Meadville, was born in Meadville, Pa., June 6, 1859; was graduated from Allegheny College in the class of 1880; admitted to the bar in 1882, and has practiced his profession continuously ever since; was chosen city solicitor of Meadville in 1889, and reelected in 1890, 1892, and 1894; has served on the Republican State central committee; was elected to the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 17,271 votes, to 8,082 for Hon. E. W. McArthur, Democrat, 1,644 for R. E. Loupe, Prohibitionist, and 925 for J. Wauchope, Socialist. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Carbon, Monroe, Northampton, and Pike (4 counties). Population (1900), 174,124. JOSEPH H. SHULL, Democrat, of Stroudsburg, was born in Lower Mount Bethel Township, Northampton County, Pa.; took a special course at Lafayette College, Easton, Pa., and graduated at the University of New York, New York City; taught in the public schools for four years; read law with General Charlton Burnett; was admitted to the bar in 1879 and has been engaged in the practice of law to the present time; was associate editor of the Monroe Democrat from 1881 to 1886; was elected senator of the Twenty-second senatorial district of Pennsylvania in 1886 and served in said office till 18971; is interested in the mercantile business, manufacturing, and railroads; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,763 votes, to 11,599 for Fred. Nesbit, Republican, 1,671 for James Hays, Socialist, and 565 for A. J. Dreiblebies, Prohibitionist. SO pe 2 ah PRNNEVLVANIAY Senators and Representatives. 10% TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Armstrong, Clarion, Indiana, and Jefferson (4 counties). : Population (1900), 188,503. WILLIAM ORLANDO SMITH, Republican, of Punxsutawney, was born in Reynoldsville, Jefferson County, Pa., June 13, 1859; educated in the public schools; learned the printing trade in the office of a local newspaper; was for a short time publisher of the Reynoldsville Herald; worked in the Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., six years; was one of a company of ten printers to establish the Washington Craftsman, a deceased organ of the International Typographical Union, and was its first associate editor; returned to his native county in 1884 and succes- sively edited the Punxsutawney Tribune and the Punxsutawney Spirit; elected a representative in the general assembly of Pennsylvania in 1889; reelected in'18go, 1892, 1894, and 1896; during the summer and fall of 1891 was editor of the Bradford, Pa., Daily Era; in January, 1892, purchased a half interest in the Punxsutawney Spirit, and is its present editor; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,018 votes, to 10,618 for Alfred W. Smiley, Democrat, and 1,007 for William H. Haupt, Prohibitionist. Married in February, 1880, to Miss Phebe H. Griggs, of Martinsville, Ind. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Elk, Forest, Mercer, Venango, and Warren (5 counties). Population (1900), 189,923. JOSEPH CROCKER SIBLEY, Republican, of Franklin, Venango County, was born at Friendship, N. Y., February 18, 1850; is a manufacturer and farmer; was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-third and Fifty-sixth Congresses, and as a Repub- lican to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,616 votes, to 12,889 for James B. Watson, Democrat, 3,042 for Richard A. Buzza, Prohibitionist, and 1 for Henry Roth, Socialist. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT. ALLEGHENY COoUNTY.—City of Allegheny and the townships and boroughs north of the Ohio River. Population (1900), 204,477. GEORGE SHIRAS, 3d, Republican, of Allegheny, was born in the city of Alle- gheny, Pa., January 1, 1859; prepared for college at Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass.; graduated from Cornell University in 1881 and from the Yale Law School in 1883; was admitted to the Connecticut and Pennsylvania bars in 1883; married Miss Frances P. White, of Marquette, Mich., in 1885; was associated at Pittsburg with his father, George Shiras, jr., in the practice of the law until 1892, when, upon the appointment of the latter by President Harrison to the United States Supreme Court, he became a member of the law firm of Shiras & Dickey; was elected a member of the Pennsylvania legislature in 1889-90; candidate for the Republican nomination for Congress in 189o, and defeated by a combination between Congressman Thomas M. Bayne and William A. Stone, whereby the latter was substituted in the conven- tion; in the year 1902 a party was formed in Allegheny County, composed of Repub- licans, whose purpose was to reform what they regarded as abuses in local affairs and to carry into effect their theories as to proper party management. Recognizing the fact that Allegheny County was overwhelmingly Republican, the Democratic party either indorsed the nominations for Congress made by the Citizens party or made no nominations against them. Mr. Shiras, as an avowed Republican, was unanimously nominated by the Citizens party in the Twenty-ninth district (formerly Twenty-third district) and later unanimously indorsed by the Democrats. W. H. Graham, elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress by 14,000 majority, was the ‘ organ- ization’ Republican candidate. The result was close, and required the official count to determine the result: George Shiras, 3d, Citizen, 14,553; W. H. Graham, Repub- lican, 14,535; E. L. Eaton, Prohibitionist, 227, and W. E. Hunt, Socialist Labor, 121 Was not a candidate for renomination or reelection to the Fifty-ninth Congress. THIRTIETH DISTRICT. ALLEGHENY CoUNTY.— Twentieth, Twenty-first, and Thirty-seventh wards of the city of Pittsburg; the city of McKeesport, boroughs of Braddock, East McKeesport, East Pittsburg, Edgewood, Elizabeth, North Braddock, Oakmont, Pitcairn, Port Vue, Rankin, Swissvale, Turtle Creek, Verona, Versailles, Wilkinsburg, and Wilmerding; townships of Braddock, Elizabeth, Forward, Lincoln, North Versailles, Patton, Penn, Plum, South Versailles, Sterrett, Versailles, and Wilkins. Population (1900), 173,416. JOHN DALZELL, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in New York City April 19, . 1845; removed to Pittsburg in 1847; received a common school and collegiate 108 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA, education, graduating from Yale 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,085 votes, to 518 for George B. Gerber, Prohibitionist, and 460 for Hamlet Jackson, Socialist Labor. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT. CITY OF PITTSBURG.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, and Twenty-third wards. Population (1900), 188,099. HENRY KIRKE PORTER, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in Concord, N. H., November 24, 1840; was educated in public and private schools, and fitted for col- lege at the New London Academy, New London, N. H.; entered Brown Univer- sity, Providence, R. I., in 1856, and graduated in 1860; pursued professional studies at Newton Theological Seminary, Newton Center, Mass., and at Rochester Theo- logical Seminary, Rochester, N. Y., between the years 1861 and 1866; enlisted in the Forty-fifth Massachusetts Volunteer Militia in 1862 and was mustered out of service in July, 1863. Began business in Pittsburg in May, 1866, and has continued continuously in the same business from that time, with some change of firm name; on January I, 1899, incorporated the business as ‘‘H. K. Porter Company,’’ and became its president. The exclusive specialty of this company is the manufacture of light locomotives and its product is known throughout the United States, and has been scattered very largely during the last twenty-five years throughout the world; president Y. M. C. A., Pittsburg, 1868-1887; member international com- mittee Y. M. C. A. since 1875; trustee Carnegie Institute, Pittsburg, since 1890; mem- ber board of trustees Crozer Theological Seminary since 1871; member board of fellows Brown University since 1899; vice-president Pittsburg Chamber of Commerce since 1892; member board of trustees Western Pennsylvania Institute for the Blind since 1887 and elected president in 1904; married November 23, 1875, to Mrs. Annie De Camp Hegeman, at Trinity Chapel, New York City; was never before a candi- date for public office; elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress as a Republican, on the Citizens’ ticket, which nomination was also indorsed by the Democratic party, receiv- ing 16,241 votes, to 14,532 for James Francis Burke, Republican, and g6 for John F. Conley, Socialist Labor. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT. ALLEGHENY CouNTy.—Twenty-second, Twenty-fourth, ‘Twenty-fifth, Twenty-sixth, Twenty seventh, T'wenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, Thirtieth, Thirty-first, Thirty-second, Thirty-third, Thirty-fourth, Thirty-fifth, Thirty-sixth, and Thirty-eighth wards of the city of Pittsburg; boroughs of Coraopolis, Crafton, Carnegie, Duquesne, Esplen, Elliott, Greentree, Homestead, Knoxville, Montooth, Mount Oliver, McKees Rocks, Oakdale, Sheraden, West Liberty, and West Elizabeth; townships of Baldwin, Bethel, Crescent, Chartiers, Collier, Findley, Jefferson, Lowes, Mifflin, Moon, North Fayette, Neville, Robinson, St. Clair, Scott, Snowden, South Fayette, Stowe, Union, and Upper St. Clair. Population (1900), 209,066. JAMES W. BROWN, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in that city July 14, 1844, and has resided in Pittsburg and Allegheny County all his life; was educated in the common and private schools of Allegheny County; has been connected with the iron and steel business ever since he came to manhood, and is still in that busi- ness; was married October 7, 1867, to Clara Palmer Howe, daughter of the Hon. Thomas M. Howe, deceased; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress on the Citi- zens and Fusion ticket, receiving 14,517 votes, to 13,471 for Dr. Albert J. Barchfield, Republican, 283 for R. H. Hood, Prohibitionist, and 329 for D. E. Gilchrist, Socialist Labor. : RHODE ISL AND. SENATORS. NELSON WILMARTH ALDRICH, Republican, of Providence, was born at Fos- ter, R. I., 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 latfer year as speaker of the house of representatives; was elected to the House of Representatives of the Forty-sixth Congress and reelected RHODE ISLAND.] Senators and Representatives. 109 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. GEORGE PEABODY WETMORE, Republican, of Newport, was born during a visit of his parents abroad, at London, England, August 2, 1846; was graduated from Yale 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 I1,.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 Yale 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 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, and reelected in 1900. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bristol and Newport, and the city of Providence. Population (1900), 221,340. DANIEL, LARNED DAVIS GRANGER, Democrat, of Providence, was born at Providence, R. I., May 30, 1852; was graduated from Brown University in 1874; was admitted to the Rhode Island bar in 1887 and entered upon the practice of law in Providence; was twice elected reading clerk of the house of representatives; in 1890 he was elected city treasurer of Providence on the Democratic ticket, and for eleven years served in that capacity. Mr. Granger was elected mayor as the candi- date of the Democratic and Good Government parties in November, 1900, by a plurality of 1,992. The next year he was reelected by a plurality of 6,306 over his Republican competitor. He was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,196 votes, to 14,535 for Melville Bull, Republican, 894 for James P. Reid, Social- ist Labor, and 388 for Ernest G. Wesley, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTieEs.—Kent and Washington, and all of Providence outside the city of Providence. Population (1900), 257,216. ADIN BALLOU CAPRON, Republican, of Stillwater, Providence County, son of Carlile W. and Abby (Bates) Capron, was born in Mendon, Mass., January 9, 1847; educated at Woonsocket High School and Westbrook Seminary, near Portland, Me.; is engaged in milling and dealing in grain; enlisted as sergeant in Second Rhode Island Infantry May, 1861; promoted to sergeant-major July 11, 1861; commissioned lieutenant September, 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 13,680 votes, to 12,657 for Franklin P. Owen, Democrat, and go3 for Henry B. Dexter, Prohibitionist. 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 110 Congressional Directory. [SOUTH CAROLINA, 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- 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 18qo; 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- ate 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; was reelected in 1go1. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. ASBURY CHURCHWELL LATIMER, Democrat, of Belton, was born July 31, 1851, 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 memor- able 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 Demo- cratic party of his county in 18go and reelected in 1892; was urged to make the race for lieutenant-governor of his State in 189o, but declined; was elected to the Fifty- third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate by 17,700 majority over J. G. Evans, to succeed John I.. McLaurin, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CounTiEs.—Berkeley, Charleston, Clarendon, Colleton, and Dorchester (5 counties). ; Population (1900), 196,390. GEORGE S. LEGARE, Democrat, of Charleston, was born at Rockville, in Charleston (formerly Berkeley) County, in 1870; in 1889 he was graduated with honors from the Porter Academy, of Charleston, after which he attended the Univer- sity of South Carolina for two years; from there he went to the Georgetown Uni- versity Law School, Washington, D. C., from which institution, in 1893, he graduated with the degree of LIL. B.; in the same year commenced the practice of law in the city of Charleston; in 1898 was elected to the position of corporation counsel, hold- ing the same for the period of five consecutive years, and resigning after his election to Congress; has always been a Democrat; is married and has four children; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 3,749 votes, to 175 for Aaron P. Prioleau, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Aiken, Bamberg, Barnwell, Beaufort, Edgefield, Hampton, and Saluda (7 counties). Population (1900), 195,509. THEODORE GAILLARD CROFT, Democrat, of Aiken, was born in Aiken, S. C., November 26, 1874; his early education was in the common schools of his native town; thereafter he entered Bethel Military Academy, Virginia, in 1890, graduating in 1894; subsequently he graduated in law at the South Carolina College, Columbia, S. C., and was admitted to the bar in 1897; he located at Aiken; where he has since practiced his profession; formed a copartnership with his father, Hon. George W. Croft, deceased; was elected without opposition in May, 1904, to the Fifty-eighth Congress, to fill out the unexpired term of his father, receiving 3,877 votes. THIRD DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Abbeville, Anderson, Greenwood, Newberry, Oconee, and Pickens (6 counties). Population (1900), 190,662. WYATT AIKEN, Democrat, of Abbeville, was born December 14, 1863, and was reared on a farm in Abbeville County (in that section now embraced in Greenwood County); received a common school education at Cokesbury, and at Washington, SOUTH CAROLINAL" Senators and Representatives. III D. C., while there with his father, Hon. D. Wyatt Aiken, Representative from this district for ten years; while at Washington acquired the art of writing shorthand; in January, 1884, was appointed an official court stenographer in South Carolina and held the position for nineteen years; has been a farmer all his life, and takes a keen interest in everything pertaining to agriculture; married Miss Mary Barnwell April 27, 1892; during the war with Spain was a soldier in Company A (Abbeville Volun- teers), First South Carolina Regiment of Infantry; has never held a political office before, but has been a delegate to several State conventions; was nominated for Congress in a Democratic primary over six of the most experienced and prominent public men in the district, and was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 5,082 votes, to 58 for John Scott, Republican. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT. . CouNTIES.—Greenville, Laurens, Spartanburg, and Union (4 counties). Population (1900), 181,933. JOSEPH TRAVIS JOHNSON, Democrat, of Spartanburg, was born at Brewerton, Laurens County, S. C., February 28, 1858; was graduated from Erskine College July 2, 1879; admitted to the practice of the law in all the courts of South Carolina May 30, 1883; never held office until elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress; reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 4,642 votes, to 61 for IL. W. C. Blaloch, Republican, - FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIieEs.—Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, and York (7 counties). Population (1900), 190,492. DAVID EDWARD FINLEY, Democrat, of Yorkville, was born February 28, 1861; is a lawyer; was a member of the house of representatives of South Carolina in 1890-91, and of the State senate 1892-96; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 7,928 votes, to 171 for P. T. White. SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIiESs.—Darlington, Florence, Georgetown, Horry, Marion, Marlboro, and Williamsburg (7 counties). : : Population (1900), 201,577. ROBERT BETHEA SCARBOROUGH, Democrat, of Conway, was born at Ches- terfield, S. C., October 29, 1861; the son of Rev. Lewis Scarborough, of South Caro- lina Methodist Conference; his mother was a Miss Bethea, daughter of William Bethea, of Marion County, S. C.; was educated in the common schools and at Mullins Academy; is married and has two boys living; was admitted to the bar May 27, 1884, and located at Conway; is president of the Bank of Horry, located at his home; has served in the State senate and as lieutenant-governor of South Carolina; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress without opposition, receiving 3,981 votes. Mr. Scarborough de- clined a renomination, and at the close of his term will devote his time to the prac- tice of law and banking. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTiEs.—Lee, Lexington, Orangeburg, Richland, and Sumter (5 counties). Population (1900), 183,753. ASBURY FRANCIS LEVER, Democrat, of Lexington, was born January 5, 1875, near Springhill, Lexington County, S. C.; was brought up on his father’s farm, attending the common schools of his community until his entrance into Newberry College, from which institution he graduated with the honors of his class in 189s; after graduation he taught school until he was selected as the private secretary to the late Hon. J. William Stokes, whom he succeeds; he graduated in law at the Georgetown University in 1899, and the same year was admitted to practice in his State by the supreme court; was a member of the State conventions in 1896 and 1900, and in 1900 was elected to the State legislature from Lexington County, hold- ing that position until his resignation to enter the race to fill the unexpired term of the Hon. J. William Stokes in the Fifty-seventh Congress, and to this position he was selected without opposition. Reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 4,220 . votes to 167 for A. D. Dantzler, Republican. ee co 112 Congressional Directory. . [SOUTH DAKOTA. SOUTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. ROBERT JACKSON GAMBLE, Republican, of Yankton, was born in Genesee County, N. Y., February 7, 1851; removed to Fox Lake, Wis., in 1862; graduated from Lawrence University, Appleton, Wis., in 1874; located at Yankton in 1875, where he has since been engaged in the practice of law; is a member of the law firm of Gamble, Tripp & Holman; was district 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 elected to the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-sixth Congresses, and elected to the United States Senate January 23, 190I. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. ALFRED BEARD KITTREDGE, Republican, of Sioux Falls, was bornin Cheshire County, N. H., March 28, 1861; was graduated from Yale College in 1882, and from the law school of that institution in 1885; immediately began the practice of law at Sioux Falls; was appointed to the United States Senate, July 11, 1901, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the Hon. James H. Kyle, and took his seat Decem- ber 2, 1901; was elected by the legislature in 1903 to succeed himself. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE. Population (1900), 401,570. CHARLES HENRY BURKE, Republican, of Pierre, Hughes County, was born on a farm in Genesee County, N. Y., April 1, 1861; 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 and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 48,310 votes, to 21,113 for J. R. Wilson, Democrat; 2,317 for J. W. Kelly, Prohibition- ist, and 2,738 for F. Knowles, Socialist. | EBEN WEVER MARTIN, Republican, of Deadwood, was born at Maquoketa, Jackson County, Iowa, April 12, 1855, and came of English, Irish, and Scotch ancestry; was graduated from Cornell College in 1879, with the degree of B. A., and three years later received the degree of A.M. from his alma mater; attended the law school of the University of Michigan, and was there president of his class; was admitted to the bar in the spring of 1880, after which, in the summer of the same year, he moved to Deadwood, and has since practiced law continuously in the various State and Federal courts of that region; married Jessie A. Miner, daughter of George N. Miner, of Cedar Falls, Towa, June 13, 1883; they have five children, three boys and two girls, all living; was a member of the Territorial legislature of Dakota in 1884 and 1885; was for several years president of the board of education of the city of Deadwood; is a member of the Sons of the American Revolution, South Dakota Chapter, and of the Iowa Commandery of the Loyal Legion, the latter by inherit- ance from his father, Capt. James W. Martin, of Company I, Twenty-fourth Iowa Volunteers, now deceased; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 48,454 votes, to 21,113 for J. R. Wilson, Democrat, 2,317 for J. W. Kelly, Prohibitionist, and 2,738 for F. Knowles, Socialist. TENNESSEE. SENATORS. WILLIAM BRIMAGE BATE, Democrat, of Nashville, was born October 7, 1826, near Castalian Springs, Tenn., and received an academic education; when quite a youth served as second clerk on a steamboat between Nashvilleand 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; gradu- ated from the Lebanon Law School in 1852 and entered upon the practice of his profes. TENNESSEE.] Senators and Representatives. 113 i sion 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-Lane ticket; was private, captain, colonel, brigadier-general, and major-general in the Confederate serv- ice, 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 Democratic 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 Janu- ary, 1887, was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed Washington C. Whit- 5 thorne, and took his seat March 4, 1887; was reelected in 1893 and again in 1899. g His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. 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 married in April, 1890, to Miss Elizabeth Cobey Dunnington, of Columbia, Tenn.; was delegate for the State at large to the Democratic national convention in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fifth and Fifty-sixth Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Thomas B. Turley, Democrat, who declined to stand for reelection, and took his seat March 4, 1901. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hancock, Hawkins, Johnson, Sevier, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington (12 counties). Population (1900), 224,059. 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, 1896, and 1900 he was elected by the delegations from his State to the national conventions as Tennessee’s member of the Republican national committee, and was unanimously elected chair- J man of the Republican State executive committee by the members of that body for 1898-99; was elected by Congress as a member of the Board of Managers for the National Soldiers’ Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; in 19o2 was chosen at a primary election as the nominee for Congress without opposition; was elected to the | Fifty-fiftth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth 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 15,373 votes, to 9,752 for Cyrus H. Lyle, Democrat. i i SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Hamblen, Jefferson, Knox, I,oudon, Roane, Scott, and Union (10 counties). Population (1900), 217,324. HENRY RICHARD GIBSON, Republican, of Knoxville, was born on Kent Island, he Queen Anne County, Md., in 1837; was educated at Bladensburg, Md., and at Hobart College, Geneva, N.Y., 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- 58-3D—2D ED——38 i f | | | 114 Congressional Divectory. [TENNESSEE. 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, Tenmn.; 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 IL. 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 the Rocky Mountains; in 1882 became editor of the Knoxville Daily Chronicle, 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 wrote and published Suits in Chancery, a book that has become an authority in the courts of Tennessee and other States; since 1889 has been professor of medical jurisprudence in the Tennessee Medical College; in 1892 the degree of LL.D. was conferred upon him by Hobart College, his alma mater; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 12,054 votes, to 9,644 for Harvey H. Hannah, Democrat. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Bledsoe, Bradley, Franklin, Grundy, Hamilton, James, Marion, McMinn, Meigs, Mon- roe, Polk, Sequatchie, Van Buren, Warren, and White (15 counties). Population (1900), 228,577. JOHN AUSTIN MOON, Democrat, of Chattanooga, is a member of the bar; was three times appointed and twice elected judge of the fourth judicial circuit of Ten- nessee; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,152 votes, to 343 for Frank Jane- way, Independent Republican, and 8 for Campbell, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Clay, Cumberland, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Morgan, Overton, Pickett, Putnam, Rhea, Smith, Sumner, Trousdale, and Wilson (14 counties). Population (1900), 188,452. MORGAN C. FITZPATRICK, Democrat, of Hartsville, is 34 years of age; was educated in the common schools of Tennessee, the University of Ohio, and graduated from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.; has practiced law, edited a newspaper, and served two terms in the State legislature; was elected speaker of the Tennessee house of representatives; served two terms as State super- intendent of public instruction; was twice chairman of the State Democratic executive committee; was nominated in a primary election over Congressman Snodgrass by a large majority, and elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 11,509 votes, to 6,228 for G. H. West, Republican. Mr. Fitzpatrick declined a renomination and election on account of ill health. FIFTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, Dekalb, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore,and Rutherford (8 counties). Population (1900), 152,316. JAMES DANIET, 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; Grand Commander of the Supreme Council, thirty-third degree Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Free Masonry ge —~ge TENNESSEE] Senators and Representatives. I15 (Mother Council of the World); was a delegate to the St. Louis Democratic con- vention in 1876, to the Chicago Democratic convention in 1896, and also to the Kansas City Democratic convention in 19oo, over which he presided as permanent chairman; in February, 1900, was made chairman of the Democratic Congressional Committee; editor and compiler of Messages and Papers of the Presidents; was the nominee in caucus of the Democratic members of the House of Representatives in the Fifth-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses for Speaker and received each time the full vote of his party for this office in the House; was elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 10,312 votes, to 3,113 for J. W. Parker, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT. : ” Counties.—Cheatham, Davidson, Georgetown, Montgomery, Robertson, and Stewart (6 counties). Population (1900), 209,197. JOHN WESLEY GAINES, Democrat, cf Nashville, was elected to the Fifty- fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses; is a lawyer by pro- fession, and a native of his district. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Dickson, Giles, Hickman, Houston, Humphreys, Lawrence, Lewis, Maury, Wayne, and Williamson (10 counties). Population (1900), 189,836. LEMUEL PHILLIPS PADGETT, Democrat, of Columbia, was born November 28, 1855, in Columbia, Tenn.; attended the ordinary private schools of the country till October, 1873, when he entered the sophomore class of Erskine College, Due West, S. C., graduating in 1876 with the degree of A. B.; began the study of law in September, 1876, in a law office, and was licensed to practice in March, 1877, but did’ not begin active practice until January, 1879, and since continued therein at Columbia; on November 11, 1880, was married to Miss Ida B. Latta, of Columbia; was one of the Democratic Presidential electors in 1884; in 1898 was elected to the State senate and served during the term; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 9,470 votes, to 3,106 for E. L. Gregory, Republican. FIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Benton, Carroll, Chester, Decatur, Hardin, Henderson, Henry, McNairy, Madison, and Perry (10 counties). Population (1900), 180,937. 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, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Con- gress, receiving 9,293 votes, to 8,319 for F. M. Davis, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT. ® CountiEs.—Crockett, Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion, and Weakley (8 counties). Population (1900), 194,411. 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, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 7,371 votes, to 1,557 for Coller, Republican, 116 Congressional Directory. [TENNESSEE. TENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Fayette, Hardeman, Shelby, and Tipton (4 counties). Population (1900), 235,507. MALCOLM RICE PATTERSON, Democrat, of Memphis, is a lawyer by profes- sion; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 7,869 votes, to 1,500 for Phelan, Republican. TEXAS. SENATORS. CHARLES A. CULBERSON, Democrat, of Dallas, was born in Dadeville, Talla- poosa County, Ala., June I0, 1855; is the eldest son of the late David B. Culberson, for twenty-two years consecutively a member of the House of Representatives from Texas, and Eugenia Kimbal Culberson, daughter of the late Dr. Allen Kimbal, of Alabama; removed with his parents from Alabama to Texas in 1856; resided at Gilmer and Jefferson until 1887, when he removed to Dallas; graduated from the Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, in the class of 1874; studied law under his father and at the University of Virginia in 1876-77 under Professors Minor and Southall; was the final orator of the Jefferson Literary Society and judge of the student law court, University of Virginia, in 1877; was elected attorney-general of Texas in 1890 and 1892; was elected governor of Texas in 1894 and 1896; was a delegate at large to the Democratic national conventions at Chicago in 1896 and at St. Louis in 1904, and was chairman of the Texas delegation at both; was chosen United States Senator January 25, 1899, with only three opposing votes, to succeed Senator Roger Q. Mills. ~ His term of office will expire March 3, 1905. z JOSEPH WELDON BAILEY, Democrat, of Gainesville, was born in Copiah County, Miss., October 6, 1863; was admitted to the bar in 1883; served as a district elector on the Cleveland and Hendricks ticket in 1884; removed to Texas in 1885 and located at his present home; served as elector for the State at large on the Demo- cratic ticket in 1888; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty- fifth, and Fifty-sixth Congresses; on the organization of the Fifty-fifth Congress, March 15, 1897, he was the Democratic nominee for Speaker of the House of Repre- sentatives; was chosen United States Senator January 23, 1901, to succeed Senator Horace Chilton, and took his seat March 4. His term of office will expire March 3, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Bowie, Camp, Cass, Delta, Franklin, Hopkins, Lamar, Marion, Morris, Red River, and Titus (11 counties). Population (1900), 220,322. MORRIS SHEPPARD, Democrat, of Texarkana, was born May 28, 1875, at Wheatville, Morris County, Tex.; was a student in the common schools of Dainger- field, Pittsburg, Cumby, Austin, and Linden; entered the University of Texas in 1891, taking the degrees of A. B., 1895, LL. B., 1897; was Columbus Day orator, Uni- versity of Texas, 1892; president, 1893, and final orator, 1894, Rusk Literary Society, University of Texas; commencement orator, academic department, University of Texas, 1895; entered Yale University in 1897, taking the degree of LL. M., 1898, winning Wayland prize debate, Yale law school, 1898, delivering the master’s oration, commencement Yale law school, 1898; was elected sovereign banker, or national treasurer, Woodmen of the World, at Memphis, March, 1899, and reelected at Mil- waukee in May, 1903; elected the first president of the Texas fraternal congress at Dallas, 1901; was representative of Texas fraternal congress in National fraternal congress at Milwaukee in August, 1903; began the practice of law at Pittsburg, Tex., in 1898, and removed to Texarkana in 1899, where he has continued to fol- low his profession; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill out the unex- pired term of his father, the Hon. John L. Sheppard, deceased; also elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,214 votes, to 3,875 for Hon. J. A. Hurley, Repub- lican. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. : TEXAS.) Senators and Representatives, 117 SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Angelina, Cherokee, Hardin, Harrison, Jasper, Jefferson, Nacogdoches, Newton, Orange, Panola, Sabine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler (14 counties). Population (1900), 203,372. SAM BRONSON COOPER, Democrat, of Beaumont, was born in Caldwell County, Ky., May 30, 1850; removed with his parents to Texas the same year and located in Woodville, Tyler County, where he resided until 1898; his father died in 1853; his education was received at the common school of the town; at 16 years of age began clerking in a general store; in 1871 read law in the office of Nicks & Hobby; in Janu- ary, 1872, obtained license to practice law and became a partner in the firm of Nicks, Hobby & Cooper; was married in 1873; in 1876 was elected county attorney of Tyler County; was reelected in 1878; in 1880 was elected to the State senate from the First senatorial district; was reelected in 1882, and at the close of the session of the Fight- eenth legislature was elected president pro tempore of the senate; in 1885 was appointed collector of internal revenue of the First district of Texas by President Cleveland; was chairman of Texas delegation to the Democratic national convention at Kansas City in 1900; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,175 votes, to 2,632 for Warren McDaniel, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIiEs.—Gregg, Henderson, Kaufman, Rusk, Smith, Upshur, Van Zandt, and Wood (8 counties). i Population (1900), 191,953. GORDON RUSSELL, Democrat, of Tyler, was born of Georgia parents, in Huntsville, Ala., at the home of his maternal grandfather, Judge James H. Gordon; is the eldest son of Henry A. Russell and Mary Gordon Russell; was educated at the Sam Bailey Institute, Griffin, Ga., and the Crawford High School, Dalton, Ga., and, after a two years’ course at the University of Georgia, received from that insti- tution the degree of A. B.; was a member of the Phi Delta Theta Greek letter fra- ternity and of the Phi Kappa Debating Society; was chosen anniversary orator of the Phi Kappa Society, and was also elected to represent that society in the annual debating contest with its college rival, the Demosthenian; taught school at Dalton, Ga., and during that time read law and was admitted to the bar by the superior court for Whitfield County; removed to Texas in the latter part of the year 1879 and located in Van Zandt County; removed to Tyler, Smith County, in 1895; was elected county judge of Van Zandt County in 1884, and at the end of one term vol- untarily relinquished that office to resume the practice of his profession; in 1892 was elected district attorney of the Seventh judicial district of Texas, composed of the counties of Gregg, Smith, Upshur, Van Zandt, and Wood; was reelected to that office in 1894; in 1896 was elected district judge of the Seventh judicial district of Texas, and in 1900 was reelected to that office without any opposition; was nomi- nated as the Democratic candidate in the new Third Congressional district for the Fifty-eighth Congress in August, 1902, and upon the death of Hon. R. C. De Graf- fenreid was elected to fill out the remainder of his term in the Fifty-seventh Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,628 votes, to 561 for L. L. Rhodes, Republican. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Collin, Fannin, Grayson, Hunt, and Rains (5 counties). Population (1900), 218,963. CHCICE BOSWELL RANDELIL, Democrat, of Sherman, was born in Georgia January 1, 1857; admitted to the bar in 1878; removed to Texas in January, 1879; was married October 29, 1879, to Miss Anna Marschalk, of Natchez, Miss.; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress from the new Fourth district, receiving 17,464 votes, to 3,063 for C. A, Graves, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Bosque, Dallas, Ellis, Hill, and Rockwall (5 counties). Population (1900), 200,061. JACK BEALL, Democrat, of Waxahachie, was born in Ellis County, Tex., October 25, 1866; his father was Richard Beall and his mother’s maiden name was Adelaide Pierce; both were Kentuckians and were among the early settlers of Texas. He was reared upon a farm and attended the old-fashioned country schools; taught school in 118 Congressional Directory. [TEXAS. 1884 and 1885; in 1886 entered the literary department of the University of Texas and in 1889 the law department, graduating therefrom in 18go; has since been engaged in the practice of law. Served as a member of the Texas house of representatives for three years and in the Texas senate for four years. He was married in 1898 to Miss Patricia Martin. Was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,373 votes, to 1,633 for S. H. Lumpkin, Republican, 358 for O. F. Dornblaser, Populist, and 151 for M. C. Scott, Socialist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Brazos, Freestone, I,imestone, Milam, Navarro, and Robertson (6 counties). Population (1900), 184,862. SCOTT FIELD, Democrat, of Calvert, is a native of Mississippi, 55 years of age; his early educational advantages were good, but his studies were interrupted by the war; he served in the Confederate Army as a private soldier under Gen. N. B. Forrest, and was in active service in the Army of the Tennessee through its Georgia and Tennessee campaigns; after the war he resumed his studies and finished his literary course at the University of Virginia in 1868; taught school; read law, and upon being admitted to the bar in 1872, moved to Texas and located at Calvert, where he has since resided and continuously practiced his profession; was elected county attorney in 1875; to the State senate in 1888; was a delegate to the Demo- cratic national convention in 1892. He married Miss Lucy Garrett, of Calvert, and they have three boys. Was nominated after a contest with several prominent Democrats, and elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition, receiving 17,262 votes. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress without opposition. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIiES.—Anderson, Chambers, Galveston, Houston, Liberty, Polk, San Jacinto, and Trinity (8 counties). Population (1900), 144,431. ALEXANDER WHITE GREGG, Democrat, of Palestine, is a native of the State of Texas, and is a lawyer by profession; he graduated from King College at Bristol, Tenn., and afterwards attended the law department of the University of Virginia; elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress without opposition, receiving 13,162 votes. BICHTH DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Austin, Fort Bend, Grimes, Harris, Leon, Madison, Montgomery, Walker, and Waller (9 counties). ! Population (1900), 202,736. JOHN McPHERSON PINCKNEY, Democrat, of Hempstead, was born in Grimes County, Tex., May 4, 1845, and was reared near the place of his birth; the only education he received was in the public schools near the place of his birth and what he has secured by his own study; was a Confederate soldier, serving four years in the Fourth Texas regiment, Hood’s Texas brigade; entered upon the prac- tice of law in 1875; served ten years as district attorney for the twenty-third judicial district of Texas, and three years as county judge of Waller County; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress November 17, 1903, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. T. H. Ball, receiving 4,986 votes. NINTH DISTRICT. COoUNTIES.—Aransas, Bee, Brazoria, Calhoun, Colorado, DeWitt, Fayette, Goliad, Gonzales, Jackson, Karnes, Lavaca, Matagorda, Refugio, Victoria, and Wharton (16 counties). Population (1900), 225,194. GEORGE FARMER BURGESS, Democrat, of Gonzales, was born in Wharton County, Tex., September 21, 1861; was educated in the common schools, and studied law, being admitted to the bar at La Grange, Tex., December, 1882; was county attorney of Gonzales County from 1886 to 1889, and Presidential elector for the Tenth district in 1892; was married in 1888 to Marie Iouise Sims; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress from the new Ninth district by 6,842 votes over B. R. Burow, Republican, receiving 18,316 votes, to 11,574 for Burow. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. TENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Bastrop, Burleson, Caldwell, Hays, Lee, Travis, Washington, and Williamson (8 counties). Population (1900), 214,103. ALBERT SIDNEY BURLESON, Democrat, of Austin, was born June 7, 1863, at San Marcos, Tex.; was educated at Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, —fl ~~ TEXAS] Senators and Representatives. 119 Baylor University, of Waco, and University of Texas; was admitted to the bar in 1884; was assistant city attorney of Austin 1885, 1886, 1887, 1888, 1889, and 1890; was appointed by the governor of Texas attorney of the Twenty-sixth judicial district in 1891; was elected to said office 1892, 1894, and 1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,539 votes, to 2,990 for Charles Schenk, Independent Republican, and 30 scattering. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Bell, Coryell, Falls, Hamilton, and McLennan (5 counties). Population (1900), 173,477. ROBERT LEE HENRY, Democrat, of Waco, was born May 12, 1864, in Linden, Cass County, Tex.; when 14 years old went to Bowie County, and there lived till Jan- uary, 1895, when he located in McLennan County; graduated with the degree of M. A. from the Southwestern University of Texas in June, 1885; was valedictorian of his class; read law, and in January, 1886, was admitted to the bar; practiced for a short time, and then took a course at the University of Texas, and graduated with the degree of B. IL. in 1887; was elected mayor of Texarkana in 189o; resigned this position to accept that of first office assistant attorney-general; removed temporarily to Austin; served in this capacity for nearly eighteen months; was appointed assistant attorney-general Octo- ber 3, 1893; held the latter position for nearly three years; filled out an unexpired term and one full term, and then located in Waco for the practice of law; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,548 votes, to 149 for G. T. Harris, 69o for A. Warts, and 50 scattering. TWELFTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Comanche, Erath, Hood, Johnson, Parker, Somervell, and Tarrant (7 counties). Population (1900), 177,637. OSCAR WILLIAM GILLESPIE, Democrat, of Fort Worth, was born June 20, 1858, in Clarke County, Miss. ; graduated from Mansfield College, of Tarrant County, Tex.; was admitted to the bar November, 1886; served as prosecuting attorney of Tarrant County from 18go to 1894; was assistant county attorney from 1886 to 1888; was married December 23, 1884, to Miss Ada Kate Hodges, of Mansfield, Tex.; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,220 votes, to 3,424 for S. A. Greenwell, Republican. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Archer, Armstrong, Bailey, Baylor, Briscoe, Carson, Castro, Childress, Clay, Collings- worth, Cooke, Cottle, Dallam, Deaf Smith, Denton, Dickens, Donley, Floyd, Foard, Gray, Hale, Hall, Hansford, Hardeman, Hartley, Hemphill, Hutchinson, Jack, Knox, Lamb, Lipscomb, Montague, Moore, Motley, Ochiltree, Oldham, Parmer, Potter, Randall, Roberts, Sherman, Swisher, Throckmorton, Wheeler, Wichita, Wilbarger, Wise, and Young (48 counties). Population (1900), 188,541. JOHN HALL STEPHENS, Democrat, of Vernon, was bornin Shelby County, Tex.; was educated at Mansfield, Tarrant County, Tex.; graduated from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., in June, 1872, and has practiced law since at Montague, Montague County, and Vernon, Wilbarger County, Tex.; served as State senator in the twenty-first and twenty-second legislatures of Texas; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 24,027 votes, to 2,034 for R. O. Rector, Repub- lican, and 123 for Joseph Schmidt, Socialist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Bandera, Bexar, Blanco, Brown, Burnet, Coleman, Comal, Gillespie, Kendall, Kerr, Lampasas, Llano, McCulloch, Mason, Mills, and San Saba (16 counties). Population (1900), 181,280. JAMES I. SLAYDEN, Democrat, of San Antonio, was born June 1, 1853, in Graves County, Ky.; was educated at the country schools of his native State and at Washing- ton and Lee University, Virginia; was a cotton merchant; was a member of the twenty-third legislature of Texas in 1892 and declined reelection; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress by a majority greater than the combined vote of three opponents, receiving 19,898 votes, to 4,915 for D. H. Meak, 344 for A. B. Surber, 170 for Frank Litener, and 38 scattering. 120 Congressional Directory. [TEXAS FIFTEENTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Atascosa, Cameron, Dimmit, Duval, Frio, Guadalupe, Hidalgo, Kinney, Lasalle, Live Oak, Maverick, McMullen, Medina, Nueces, San Patricio, ‘Starr, Uvalde, Valverde, Webb, Wilson, Zapata, and Zavalla (22 counties), Population (1900), 160,694. JOHN NANCE GARNER, Democrat, of Uvalde, was born in Red River County, Tex., November 22, 1869; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,542 votes, to 10,707 for J. C. Scott, Republican, and 51 for D. C. Crider. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Andrews, Borden, Brewster, Callahan, Cochran, Coke, Concho, Crane, Crockett, Crosby, A | Dawson, Eastland, Ector, Edwards, ¥1 Paso, Fisher, Gaines, Garza, Glasscock, Haskell, k Hockley, Howard, Irion, Jeff Davis, Jones, Kent, Kimble, King, Loving, Lubbock, I,ynn, Mar- i | tin, Menard, Midland, Mitchell, Nolan, Palo Pinto, Pecos, Presidio, Reeves, Runnels, Schlei- cher, Scurry, Shackelford, Stephens, Sterling, Stonewall, Sutton, Taylor, Terry, Tom Green, { Upton, Ward, Winkler, and Yoakum (55 counties). i | Population (1900), 161,084. i | WILLIAM ROBERT SMITH, Democrat, of Colorado, was born August 18, 1863, ! in Smith County, Tex.; was educated in the country schools of that county and at the | Sam Houston Normal Institute at Huntsville, Tex., graduating from that institution ; in 1883; studied law in Tyler, Tex., and was admitted to the bar in 1885; practiced ) law in Tyler until February, 1888, when he moved to Colorado, Tex., his present place of residence, where he continued the practice of his profession until he was appointed by the governor in May, 1897, judge of the thirty-second judicial district of Texas, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the late Judge William Ken- nedy; was reelected to the same office in 1898 and 19oo without opposition, and resigned after being nominated for Representative to the Fifty-eighth Congress, to which office he was elected over his Republican opponent, D. G. Hunt, by a vote of 22,118 to 291; D. H. Meek, 87. He was married November 6, 1890, to Miss Frances Lipscomb Breedlove, of Brenham, Tex. UTAH. SENATORS. THOMAS KEARNS, Republican, of Salt Lake City, was born near Woodstock, Ontario, April, 11, 1862; attended public schools until the age of 10 years, when he removed with his parents to Holt County, Nebr.; worked on his father’s farm until the age of 14, when he took up the business of freighter, and for several years carried goods of miners from the end of the railroad in Nebraska to the mining and cattle camps in the Black Hills; upon attaining his majority moved to Utah, settling first in Salt Lake City and afterwards at Park City; at the latter place he was employed as a miner in the Ontario mine, and later became one of the owners of the Mayflower and Silver King mines; was married September 15, 1890, to Miss Jennie Judge, and has two boys and one girl living; was a member of the city council of Park City in 1893, and of the constitutional convention of the same year; in 1896 was sent as a delegate to the national Republican convention; was a delegate to the Philadelphia conven- tion in 1900, and was elected to the United States Senate in 1901, taking his seat i February 4, succeeding Hon. Frank J. Cannon, whose term of service expired March » 4, 1899. The Democratic legislature of that year failed to make a selection, and for two years there was but one Senator from Utah. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REED SMOOT, Republican, of Provo City, was born January 10, 1862, at Salt Lake City, Utah; was educated at the State University and Brigham Young Acad- | emy, being a graduate of the latter institution; is a banker and woolen manufacturer; | married September 17, 1884, to Alpha M. Eldredge; was elected to the United States | Senate to succeed Joseph IL. Rawlins, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. Population (1900), 276,749. — JOSEPH HOWELL, Republican, of Logan, Cache County, was born February 17, 1857, in Boxelder County, Utah; attended the common schools and later was a student a UTAIL) Senators and Representatives. 121 at Utah University; his occupation is that of a merchant; was formerly mayor of Wells- ville, and a member of the board of regents of Utah University; served three terms in the Territorial legislature and one in the State senate; was married October 24, 1878, to Mary Maughan; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 43,710 votes, to 38,196 for William H. King, Democrat, and 2,936 for Matthew Wilson, Socialist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress over Judge O."W. Powers, Demo- crat, by 15,230 plurality. VERMONT. SENATORS. REDFIELD PROCTOR, Republican, of Proctor,was born at Proctorsville, Vt., June 1, 1831; graduated at Dartmouth College and at the Albany Law School; served as lieu- tenant and quartermaster of the Third Regiment of Vermont Volunteers, on the staff of Maj. Gen. William F. (‘Baldy’) Smith, and was major of the Fifth and colonel of the Fifteenth Vermont Regiments; was a member of the Vermont house of represent- atives in 1867, 1868, and 1888; was a member of the State senate and president pro tempore of that body in 1874 and 1875; was lieutenant-governor from 1876 to 1878 and governor from 1878 to 1880; was a delegate to the Republican national convention of 1884, and chairman of the Vermont delegation in the same conventions of 1888 and 1896; was appointed Secretary of War by President Harrison in March, 1889; in November, 1891, he resigned from the Cabinet to accept the appointment as United States Senator, to succeed George F. Edmunds, and October 18, 1892, was elected by the Vermont legislature to fill both the unexpired and the full terms; was elected Octo- ber 18, 1898, to succeed himself for the term beginning March 4, 1899, and reelected October 18, 1904. His term of service will expire March 3, 1911. WILLIAM PAUL DILLINGHAM, Republican, of Montpelier, was born at Water- bury, Vt., December 12, 1843; received an academic education and was admitted to the bar in 1867; was State’s attorney for Washington County two terms; was com- missioner of State taxes for several years; was a member of the Vermont house of representatives in 1876 and again in 1884; was a State senator from Washington County in 1878 and again in 1880; was governor of Vermont from 1888 to 18go. Octo- ber 18, 1900, was elected United States Senator from Vermont to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Justin S. Morrill, and on October 15, 1902, elected to succeed himself. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Addison, Bennington, Chittenden, Franklin, Grand Isle, ILamoille, and Rutland (7 counties). Population (1900), 174,375. DAVID JOHNSON FOSTER, Republican, of Burlington, was born in Barnet, Caledonia County, Vt., June 27, 1857; was graduated from the St. Johnsbury Acad- emy, at St. Johnsbury, Vt., in 1876, and from Dartmouth College in 1880; was admitted to the bar in 1883; was prosecuting attorney of Chittenden County, 1886-1890; was State senator from Chittenden County, 1892-1894; was commissioner of State taxes, 1894-1898; was chairman of the board of railroad commissioners, 1898-1900; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 16,007 votes, to 4,394 for J. Walter Lyons, Democrat, 892 for Henry M. Seeley, Prohibitionist, and 7 scattering. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Caledonia, Essex, Orange, Orleans, Washington, Windham, and Windsor (7 counties). Population (1900), 169,266. KITTREDGE HASKINS, Republican, of Brattleboro, was born at Dover, Vt., April 8, 1836; was educated in the public schools and by a private tutor; read law and was admitted to the bar of the State courts in April, 1858, and of the Supreme Court of the United States in January, 1885; was State’s attorney for Windham County from 1870 to 1872; was United States attorney for the district of Vermont from October, 1880, to June, 1887; served as first lieutenant of Company I, Sixteenth Regi- ment, Vermont Volunteers, in the Union Army; in 1869 was appointed colonel and chief of staff to Governor Peter TI. Washburn; is a member of the Grand Army of the Republic and of the Loyal Legion; served on the Republican State committee from 1869 to 1872, and was chairman of the Republican committee for the Second —— __ —_ _ Tre EC a 122 Congressional Directory. [VERMONT. Congressional district from 1876 to 1884; represented Brattleboro in the legislature, 1872 to 1874, and again from 1896 to 1900; was speaker of the house at the special war session in May, 1898, and again of the regular session, 1898 to 1900; was State senator from Windham County from 1892 to 1894; is a member of the board of trus- tees of the Norwich University; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,532 votes, to 4,150 for Harris Miller, Democrat, 1,135 for Sherburne L. Swasey, Prohibitionist, and 8 scattering. | Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 23,781 votes, to 7,066 for Harland | B. Howe, Democrat, 540 for Lester W. Hanson, Prohibitionist, 414 for Timothy Ivers, Socialist, and 3 scattering. VIRGINIA. i. SENATORS. JOHN WARWICK DANIEL, Democrat, of Lynchburg, Campbell County; born there September 5, 1842; attended private schools, Lynchburg College, Dr. Gessner Harrison’s University School; entered Confederate army as second lieutenant, “Stonewall Brigade,”’ in May, 1861; was wounded in first battle of Manassas; became second lieutenant, Company A, Eleventh Virginia Infantry, and then first lieutenant and adjutant of the regiment, and was wounded near Boonsboro, Md.; was promoted to major and chief of staff of Gen. Jubal A. Early, on which he served until crippled in the Wilderness, May 6, 1864; studied law at University of Virginia, 1865-66, and practiced with his father, the late Judge William Daniel, jr., until his death, in 1873; is LL. D. of Washington and Lee University and of Michigan University ; is author of Daniel on Attachments and Daniel on Negotiable Instruments; member of Virginia house of delegates, 1869 to 1872; member of State senate from 1875 to 1881; Demo- cratic elector at large, 1876, and delegate at large to national Democratic conventions of 1880, 1888, 1892, 1896, 1900, and 1904; Democratic nominee for governor in 1881, and defeated by William E. Cameron, Readjuster; elected to House of Representa- tives of Forty-ninth Congress in 1884; elected to United States Senate, to succeed William Mahone, and took his seat March 4, 1887; unanimously reelected in December, 1891, and unanimously reelected for the third term December, 1897; was reelected to a fourth term in January, 1904. His present term of service will expire March 3, 1905, and that for which he has been elected March 3, 1911. THOMAS STAPLES MARTIN, Democrat, of Albemarle County ( post-office, Scotts- ville), was born im Scottsville, Albemarle County, July 29, 1847, and since 1853, at which time his parents removed to the country, has lived in the county, about 2 miles from the town; was educated at the Virginia Military Institute, where he was a cadet from March 1, 1864, to April 9, 1865, and at the University of Virginia, where he was a student in the academic schools for two sessions, from October 1, 1865, to June 29, 1866, and from October 1, 1866, to June 29, 1867; though not a regularly enlisted soldier, considerable part of the time while he was a cadet at the Virginia Military Institute was spent in the military service of the Confederate States with the battalion of cadets of the institute; soon after leaving the University of Virginia he commenced the study of law by a course of private reading at home, and was licensed to practice law in the fall of 1869, since which time he has devoted himself closely to that profession; for a number of years has been a member of the board of visitors of the Miller Manual Labor School, of Albemarle County, and a member of the board of visitors of the University of Virginia, but until elected to the Senate he had never held nor been a candidate for any political office, State or national; Decem- ber 19, 1893, he was elected a Senator from Virginia for the term commencing March 4, 1895, to succeed Hon. Eppa Hunton, who had been first appointed by the governor and then elected by the legislature to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. John S. Barbour, and reelected in 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES.—Accomac, Caroline, Essex, Gloucester, King and Queen, Lancaster, Mathews, Middle- sex, Northampton, Northumberland, Richmond, Spottsylvania, and Westmoreland, and the city of Fredericksburg. Population (1900), 160,739. WILLIAM ATKINSON JONES, Democrat, of Warsaw, was born in Warsaw, Va., March 21, 1849; in the winter of 1864-65 entered the Virginia Military Institute, where he remained until the evacuation of Richmond, serving, as occasion required, with GR SE TT 7 VIRGINIA} Senators and Representatives. 123 the cadets in the defense of that city; after the close of the war studied at Coleman's School, in Fredericksburg, until October, 1868, when he entered the academic depart- ment of the University of Virginia, from which institution he was graduated with the degree of B. I. in 1870; was admitted to the bar in July, 1870, and has continued to practice law since; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 7,381 votes, to 2,762 for M. A. Coles, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTiEs.—Charles City, Elizabeth City, Isle of Wight, James City, Nansemond, Norfolk, Princess Anne, Southampton, Surry, Warwick, and York, and the cities of Norfolk, Portsmouth, Wil- liamsburg, and Newport News. Population (1900), 255,757. HARRY LEE MAYNARD, Democrat, of Portsmouth, was born in Portsmouth, Va., June 8, 1861; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 9,746 votes, to 2,917 for Robert M. Hughes, Republican, and 171 scattering. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTiES.—Chesterfield, Goochland, Hanover, Henrico, King William, and New Kent, and the cities of Richmond and Manchester. . Population (1900), 184,013. JOHN ILLAMB, Democrat, of Henrico County (post-office address Richmond), was born in Sussex County, Va., June 12, 1840; was educated by his father, who taught a private school; served through the war between the States in Company D, Third Virginia Cavalry; commanded his company three years, and was wounded several times; after the war he engaged largely in business; served as sheriff, treasurer, and surveyor in his county; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 5,300 votes, to 969 for B. W. Edwards and 209 for William E. Talley, both Republicans, 32 for J. J. Quantz, Socialist Labor, 18 for T. A. Hollins, Socialist, and 9 for Philip Harris, Independent Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Amelia, Brunswick, Dinwiddie, Greenesville, Lunenburg, Mecklenburg, Nottoway, Powhatan, Prince Edward, Prince George, and Sussex, and the city of Petersburg. Population (1900), 166,521. ROBERT GOODE SOUTHALI, Democrat, of Amelia, was born in Amelia County, Va., December 26, 1852; was educated at the Washington Academy and high school of Amelia County; was deputy clerk of Nottoway County for fourteen years; then attended the law school of the University of Virginia, 1874-1875, gradu- ating in June, 1876, with the degree of bachelor of laws; began the practice of law in January, 1877; was elected delegate to the Democratic convention in 1888 at St. Louis and again to the national Democratic convention in 1896 at Chicago; was elected to the house of delegates in the Virginia legislature from Amelia and Notto- way counties in 1899 and reelected in 1901 and is still a member of the house of dele- gates and will have to resign to take his seat in Congress; became commonwealth’s attorney of Amelia County, which position he held till January, 1903, when he resigned; has always been a Democrat in politics and was never married; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 5,717 votes, to 507 for R. T. Vaughn, Repub- lican, and 117 for Jones, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Carroll, Floyd, Franklin, Grayson, Henry, Patrick, and Pittsylvania, and the city of Danville. Population (1900), 175,579. CLAUDE A. SWANSON, Democrat, of Chatham, was born at Swansonville, Pitt- sylvania County, Va., March 31, 1862; attended the public schools until he attained the age of 16, at which time he taught public school for one year, then attended for one session the Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College; not having means te complete his college course, he clerked for two years in a grocery store in Danville, Va.; made arrangements to enter college after that time, matriculated at Randolph- Macon College, Ashland, Va., and remained there three sessions, graduating with the degree of A. B. in 1885; studied law at the University of Virginia, graduating with the degree of B. I. in 1886; has practiced law since at Chatham, Va.; had never been a candidate nor held any public office before his nomination and election 124 Congressional Directory. [VIRGINIA. to Congress; was a delegate at large to the Democratic national convention in Chi- cago in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 10,363 votes, to 6,414 for B. A. Davis, Republican, and 267 for Dan Dickerson, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTtiEs.—Bedford, Campbell, Charlotte, Halifax, Montgomery, and Roanoke, and the cities of Iynchburg, Radford, and Roanoke. Population (1900), 181,571. CARTER GLASS, Democrat, of Lynchburg, was born in that city January 4, 1858; was educated in private and public schools and in the newspaper business; owns The Daily News, the morning paper of the city, and The Daily Advance, the after- noon paper; member of Virginia State senate 1899-1903, and Virginia constitutional convention in 19o1; seven years member of board of visitors University of Virginia; resigned from Virginia State senate to contest for the seat in the Fifty-seventh Con- gress vacated by death of P. J. Otey, and was elected November 4, 1902, for unexpired term in Fifty-seventh and full term in Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 6,345 votes, to 1,418 for A. Graham, Prohibitionist, 88 for McTier, Socialist Labor, and 139 for Cowden, Independent Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT. CounNTIES.—Albemarle, Clarke, Frederick, Greene, Madison, Page, Rappahannock, Rockingham, Shenandoah, and Warren, and the cities of Charlottesville and Winchester. Population (1900), 162,933. JAMES HAY, Democrat, of Madison, was born in Millwood, Clarke County, Va., January 9, 1856; was educated at private schools in Maryland and Virginia, at the University of Pennsylvania, and Washington and Lee University, Virginia, from which latter institution he graduated in law in June, 1877; moved to Harrisonburg, Va., in 1877, where he practiced law and taught school until June, 1879, when he removed to Madison, Va., and devoted himself exclusively to his profession; was elected attorney for the Commonwealth in 1883 and reelected to that office in 1887, 1891, and 1895; was elected to the house of delegates of Virginia in 1885 and reelected in 1887 and 1889; was elected to the Virginia State senate in 1893; was a member of the State Democratic committee for four years, and was a member of the Democratic national convention of 1888; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses as a Democrat, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Con- gress, receiving 8,461 votes, to 4,620 for S. J. Hoffman, Republican. Was elected chairman of the Democratic caucus of the House of Representatives in the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses. FIGHTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Alexandria, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, King George, I,oudoun, I,ouisa, Orange, Prince William, and Stafford, and the city of Alexandria. ; Population (1900), 154,198. JOHN FRANKLIN RIXEY, Democrat, of Brandy, Culpeper County, was born in Culpeper County, Va., August 1, 1854; was educated in the common schools, Bethel Academy, and the University of Virginia; is a lawyer and farmer; was Common- wealth’s attorney for Culpeper County twelve years; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 6,618 votes, to 2,011 for William K. Skinker, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT. CounTtIiES.—Bland, Buchanan, Craig, Dickenson, Giles, Lee, Pulaski, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Taze- well, Washington, Wise, and Wythe, and the city of Bristol. Population (1900), 227,381. CAMPBELL, SLEMP, Republican, of Big Stone Gap, was born in Lee County, Va., December 2, 1839; until 1880 was allied with the Democratic party; wasraised ona farm and has been a farmer most of his life, being also engaged in the live-stock business and in trading in coal and timber lands; was a student at Emory and Henry College, Virginia, but did not graduate, owing to the death of his father; served in the Con- federate Army as captain and lieutenant-colonel in the Twenty-first Virginia Battal- ion, and colonel of the Sixty-fourth Regiment, which was both infantry and cavalry; a AT ae —— a ic pil . — VIRGINIA.] Senators and Representatives. 125 was elected to the house of delegates in 1879 and 1881; was defeated by 4o votes in 1883 by fraud; ran for lieutenant-governor with William Mahone in 1889; was elector on the Harrison ticket in 1888 and on the McKinley ticket in 1896; was married in 1864 to Miss Nannie B. Cawood, of Owsley County, Ky.; was elected to the Fifty- eighth Congress, receiving 13,694 votes, to 13,476 for William F. Rhea, Democrat. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, receiving 15,627 votes, to 11,710 for J. C. Wysor, Democrat. TENTH DISTRICT. CounTies.—Alleghany, Amherst, Appomattox, Augusta, Bath, Botetourt, Buckingham, Cumber- land, Fluvanna, Highland, Nelson, and Rockbridge, and the cities of Buena Vista and Staunton. Population (1900), 185,492. HENRY D. FLLOOD, Democrat, of Appomattox (office, room 21, Kellogg Build- ing), was educated at Washington and Lee University and the University of Virginia; isa lawyer; served in both branches of the general assembly of Virginia; was attorney for the Commonwealth for Appomattox County, and was in the Virginia constitu- tional convention of 1901-2; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 8,819 votes, to 4,235 for James Lyon, Repub- lican. WASHINGTON. SENATORS. ADDISON GARDNER FOSTER, Republican, of Tacoma, was born at Belchertown, Mass. , January 28, 1837, being a descendant of Reginald Foster, who landed at Ipswich in 1638; his parents were among the pioneers of Wisconsin, residing at Sheboygan Falls; later they removed to Oswego, Kendall County, I1l., where he received a good common-school education, and started out in life by teaching school; later settled at Wabasha, Minn., and engaging in the grain and real estate business; there his friends prevailed upon him to accept his first and last public offices until elected United States Senator from Washington, serving as county auditor and county surveyor one term in each position; in 1873 removed to St. Paul, Minn., and engaged extensively in lumbering, contracting, and the fuel-supply trade with Col. C. W. Griggs, of that city, and now of Tacoma, who has ever since been his close business and per- sonal associate; in Minnesota participated actively in several Congressional and Sen- atorial contests; has always been a Republican and active in maintaining party organization ; in Washington has extensive lumber, coal, coke, packing-house, and shipping interests; he and his business associates send the chief products of Wash- ington throughout the United States by rail and by sail and steam vessels through- out the world; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed John IL. Wilson, Republican. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. LEVI ANKENY, Republican, of Walla Walla, was born near St. Joseph, Mo., August 1, 1844; in the year 1850 with his parents crossed the plains to Oregon, where he attended the public schools of Portland; afterwards with his father, Captain Ankeny, he engaged in the transportation business to and from the mines; was agent for Wells-Fargo Company, and later engaged in the mercantile business at Lewiston, Idaho. He was the first mayor of Iewiston, the Government having deeded to him, as trustee, the public land on which that town was located. Later he moved to Walla Walla, Wash., and engaged in the banking business, being presi- dent of seven banks in Washington and Oregon. On October 2, 1867, he was mar- ried to Miss Jennie Nesmith, daughter of the late United States Senator James W. Nesmith, of Oregon. He was once a member of the Walla Walla common council, but has held no other public office; was chairman of the State delegation to the Repub- lican national convention at Philadelphia in 19oo; was appointed member Pan- American Exposition Commission from Washington by the late Governor Rogers, and was made its chairman; became candidate for the United States Senate in 1893, but was defeated, and was again defeated in 1899; was selected member of Republican national committee from the State of Washington in 1904; elected United States Senator from the State of Washington January 29, 1903, to succeed George Turner, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. 7 Congressional Directory. [WASHINGTON., REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE. Population (1900), 518,103. WESLEY IL. JONES, Republican, of North Yakima, was born near Bethany, Ill., October 9, 1863; graduated from Southern Illinois College at Enfield; is a lawyer; has a wife and two children—a boy and a girl; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 59,095 votes, to 34,315 for George F. Cottrell, the leading Democratic candidate; 823 for William C. McCormick, the leading Socialist-Labor candidate; 4,464 for George W. Scott, the leading Socialist candidate, and 1,785 for O. L. Fowler, the leading Prohibitionist candidate. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FRANCIS W. CUSHMAN, Republican, of Tacoma, was born May 8, 1867, at Brighton, Washington County, Iowa; was educated chiefly at the high school in Brighton, and at the Pleasant Plain Academy, of Jefferson County, Iowa; he as- sisted himself in securing an education by working as a ‘‘ water boy’’ on the rail- road in the summer time and attending school in the winter time; after the com- pletion of his school course he worked for a time as a common laborer or ‘section hand” on the railroad; atthe age of 16 he moved to the then Territory of Wyoming, where he remained for five years working as a cowboy on aranch, in a lumber camp, teaching school, and studying law; then moved to Nebraska and began the practice of law, being admitted to both district and supreme court bars of that State; in 1891 he moved to the State of Washington, and has ever since that time resided in Tacoma and engaged in the practice of law; prior to his election he never held, or was a candidate for, any office, either elective or appointive; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and has been reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. The State of Washington is not divided into Congressional districts, but elects three Congressmen at large. This explanation is necessary to make the statement of the vote of that State clearly understood. The vote for Con- gressmen for the Fifty-ninth Congress was as follows: Republicans: Francis W. Cushman, 93,328; Wesley L. Jones, 92,473; William E. Humphrey, 92,436. Demo- crats: Howard Hathaway, 35,636; James J. Anderson, 35,698; W. T. Beck, 35,193. Socialist Labor: William Bonstein, 1,320; R. McDonald, 1,328; G. Norling, 1,326. Socialist Party: T. C. Wiswell, 9,005; H. D. Jory, 8,940; George Croston, 8,940. Prohibitionist: Ferdinand B. Hawes, 3,059; Henry Brown, 3,052. WILLIAM E. HUMPHREY, Republican, of Seattle, was born March 31, 1862, near Alamo, Montgomery County, Ind.; was reared on a farm; attended common schools and graduated from Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Ind., in 1887; was admitted to the bar in 1887, and practiced law at Crawfordsville to 1893; in 1893 removed to Seattle, Wash., where he has since practiced his profession; in 1898 was elected to the office of corporation counsel of the city of Seattle; was reelected to that office in 1900; was unanimously nominated for the Fifty-eighth Congress and elected, receiving 58,057 votes, to 34,015 for George F. Cottrell, 31,825 for O. H. - Holcomb, and 31,893 for Frank B. Cole, Democrats. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. WEST VIRGINIA. SENATORS. STEPHEN BENTON ELKINS, Republican, of Elkins, was born in Perry County, Ohio, September 26, 1841; received his early education in the public schools of Mis- souri, and graduated from the University of that State, at Columbia, in the class of 1860; was admitted to the bar in 1864, and in the same year went to New Mexico, where he acquired a knowledge of the Spanish language and began the practice of law; was a member of the Territorial legislative assembly of New Mexico in 1864 and 1865; held the offices of Territorial district attorney, attorney-general, and United States district attorney; was elected to the Forty-third Congress, and while abroad was renominated and elected to the Forty-fourth Congress; during his first term in Congress was made a member of the Republican national committee, on which he served for three Presidential campaigns; after leaving Congress he removed to West Virginia and devoted himself to business affairs; was appointed Secretary of War December 17, 1891, and served until the close of President Harrison’s Administra- tion; in February, 1894, was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. Johnson N. Camden, and reelected in 1901 by the unanimous vote of the Republican members of the legislature, giving him a majority of 40 on joint ballot. His term of service will expire March 3, 1907. ; A ee ” i A WEST VIRGINIA] Senators and Representatives. 127 NATHAN BAY SCOTT, Republican, of Wheeling, was born December 18, 1842, in Guernsey County, Ohio; received a common-school education; enlisted in the Army in 1862 and was mustered out in 1865; after the war engaged i in the manufac- ture of glass at Wheeling, W. Va., where he has resided ever since; is president of the Central Glass Works and president of the Dollar Savings Bank of that city; was elected to the city council in 1880, and served two years as president of the second branch; was elected in 1882 to serve four years in the State senate, and reelected in 1886; was selected as a member of the Republican national committee in 1888, and has served continuously since; has been a member of the executive committee a greater portion of the time; was appointed Commissioner of Internal Revenue by President McKinley, and entered that office the 1st of January, 1898; was elected to the United States Senate on January 25, 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Brooke, Hancock, Harrison, Lewis, 'Marion, Marshall, Ohio, and Wetzel (8 counties). Population (1900), 188,360. BLACKBURN BARRETT DOVENER, Republican, of Wheeling, was born in Cabell County, Va. (now West Virginia), April 20, 1842; raised a company of loyal Virginians and served in the United States volunteer infantry during the war; studied law in the office of Hon. George O. Davenport, of Wheeling; was admitted to the bar in 1873, and has practiced law in Wheeling ever since; was elected as a repre- sentative of Ohio County in the legislature of “1883; was the Republican candidate for the Fifty-third Congress; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty- _eighth Congress, receiving 19,962 votes, to 16,922 for O. S. McKinney, Democrat, and 1,467 for G. W. Kinney, Prohibitionist; reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Mineral, Monongalia, Mor- gan, Pendleton, Preston, Randolph, Taylor, and Tucker (14 counties). Population (1900), 194,333. ALSTON GORDON DAYTON, Republican, of Philippi, was born in Philippi, Va. (now West Virginia), October 18, 1857; graduated from the University of West Vir- ginia in June, 1878; studied law, and was admitted to the bar October 18, 1878, and has devoted himself to the practice of his profession since; in 1879 was appointed to fill out an unexpired term as prosecuting attorney of Upshur County, W. Va.; was elected and served as prosecuting attorney of Barbour County for a four-year term begin- ning January 1, 1884; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,969 votes, to 19,628 for J. T. McGraw, Democrat, and 637 for R. M. Strickler, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTtiEs.—Clay, Fayette, Greenbrier, Kanawha,’Monroe, Nicholas, Pocahontas, Summers,,Upshur, and Webster (10 counties). Population (1900), 188,542. JOSEPH HOLT GAINES, Republican, of Charleston, was born September 3, 1864, in the District of Columbia; was taken by his parents to Fayette County, W. Va., in 1867; was educated at the University of West Virginia and Princeton, grad- uating from the latter institution in 1886; was admitted to the bar in Fayetteville, W. Va., in 1887; was appointed United States district attorney for West Virginia by President McKinley in 1897, and resigned in 1901; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,970 votes, to 17,215 for J. H. Miller, Democrat, and 523 for Squire Halstead, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Braxton, Calhoun, Doddridge, Gilmer, Jackson, Pleasants, Ritchie, Roane, Tyler, Wirt, and Wood (11 counties). Population (1900), 188,604. HARRY CHAPMAN WOODYARD, Republican, of Spencer, was born at Spencer, W. Va., November 12, 1867; was educated in the common schools; married Emma Douglass Kelley; is engaged in the wholesale grocery and lumber business; was elected to the State senate from the fifth senatorial district in 1898, and served as chairman of the committee on railroads and on the judiciary committee; was a 128 Congressional Directory. [WEST VIRGINIA, candidate for nomination for Congress in 1900, but was defeated in convention by Hon. James A. Hughes; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,158 votes, to 16,968 for William N. Chancellor, Democrat, and 711 for George R. Brown, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Boone, Cabell, Lincoln, Logan, McDowell, Mason, Mercer, Mingo, Putnam, Raleigh, Wayne, and Wyoming (12 counties). Population (1900), 198,871. JAMES ANTHONY HUGHES, Republican, of Huntington, was born in Corunna, Ontario, February 27, 1861; in July, 1873, removed with his parents to Ashland, Ky., where he entered on a business career; was elected to represent the counties of Boyd and Lawrence in the legislature of Kentucky for the years 1887 and 1888S; the bulk of his business interest having drifted to the adjoining State of West Vir- ginia, necessitated the removal of his residence to that State also; here, as in Ken- tucky, he was called on to be a representative in the legislature, the Sixth senatorial district having by a large majority sent him, the first Republican senator, to represent it in the term of 1894-1898; has always been an active and an interested Republican, identifying himself with all the movements and aspirations of his party; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress by the largest Republican vote ever given in the Fourth district (the majority being 3,784), and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress by a plurality of 2,547, receiving 20,164 votes, to 17,617 for D. E. Johnston, Democrat, and 56 for J. I. McGilliard, Prohibitionist. WISCONSIN. SENATORS. JOHN C. SPOONER, Republican, of Madison, was born at Lawrenceburg, Dear- born County, Ind., January 6, 1843; removed with his father’s family to Wisconsin and settled at Madison June 1, 1859; graduated at the State University in 1864; was private in Company D, Fortieth Regiment, and captain of Company A, Fiftieth Regiment, Wisconsin Infantry Volunteers; was brevetted major at the close of serv- ice; was private and military secretary of Governor Lucius Fairchild, of Wisconsin; was admitted to the bar in 1867, and served as assistant attorney-general of the State until 1870, when he removed to Hudson, where he practiced law from 1870 until 1884; was member of the assembly from St. Croix County in 1872; member of the board of regents of the Wisconsin University; was elected United States Senator to succeed Angus Cameron, Republican, for the term beginning March 4, 1885; was chairman of the Wisconsin delegation to national Republican convention in 1888; was succeeded as United States Senator March 4, 1891, by William F. Vilas, Democrat, receiving, however, the full vote of the Republican members of the legislature for reelection; was chairman of the Wisconsin delegation to national Republican convention at Minneapolis in 1892; was unanimously nominated as Republican candidate for gov- ernor of Wisconsin in 1892, but was defeated; removed from Hudson to Madison in 1893; was actively engaged in the practice of his profession from 1892 to 1897; unani- mously nominated in Republican caucus January 13, 1897, and duly elected Jan- uary 27, 1897, United States Senator for the term beginning March 4, 1897, to succeed William F. Vilas, Democrat, receiving 117 votes, against 8 votes for W. C. Silverthorn and 2 votes for Edward S. Bragg; was tendered by President McKinley in December, 1898, position in his Cabinet, as Secretary of the Interior, vice Cornelius N. Bliss, resigned, and declined it; was also tendered in 1898 by President McKinley member- - ship of the United States and British Joint High Commission, and declined it; was tendered by President McKinley January 3, 1901, position of Attorney-General, to take office March 4, 1901, and declined it; July 6, 1900, in communication to Republi- cans of Wisconsin announced unalterable purpose not to be a candidate for reelection; January 27, 1903, was, notwithstanding, elected for another term, beginning March 4, 1903, receiving 105 votes, every Republican vote in both houses, against Hon. Neal S. Brown, Democrat, who received 27 votes, His term of office will expire March 3, 1909. WISCONSIN] Senators and Representatives. 129 JOSEPH VERY QUARLES, Republican, of Milwaukee, was born at Kenosha, Wis. (then Southport), December 16, 1843; his father, Joseph V. Quarles, was born in Ossipee, N. H., moved to Southport in 1837, and there married Caroline Bullen; in 1862, Joseph V. Quarles, jr., entered the University of Michigan, but interrupted his course of study in the spring of 1864 to enter the Army as a private in the Thirty- ninth Wisconsin Volunteers; was mustered out as first lieutenant Company C, and returned to his studies, graduating in 1866; then studied law, and in 1868 formed at Kenosha a partnership with O. S. Head, one of the oldest and ablest prac- titioners of the State; was district attorney for Kenosha County for six years, mayor of Kenosha in 1876, member of the assembly in 1879, and State senator from 1880 to 1882; in the United States Senatorial contest of 1881 received a very flattering vote, but insisted upon having his name withdrawn; at the expiration of his term of office he moved to Racine, where he entered into partnership with the present justice of the supreme court, John B. Winslow; six years later he made Milwaukee his home, and there organized the law firm of Quarles, Spence & Quarles, of which he is the senior member, and now one of the leading firms of the State; was the commencement orator at the University of Michigan in 1903, when he received the degree of LI,. D. from his alma mater; married Miss Carrie A. Saunders, of Chicago, in 1868, and has three sons, William C., Joseph V., and Edward L.; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed John I,. Mitchell, Democrat, and entered upon his duties March 4, 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Green, Kenosha, Lafayette, Racine, Rock, and Walworth (6 counties). Population (1900), 191,491. HENRY ALLEN COOPER, Republican, of Racine, was born at Spring Prairie, Walworth County, Wis., September 8, 1850; graduated from the Northwestern Uni- versity in 1873 and from Union College of Law, Chicago, in 1875; is by profession a ‘lawyer; in 1880 was elected district attorney of Racine County, and was reelected without opposition in 1882 and 1884; member of the board of education of the city of Racine, 1886 and 1887; was a member of State senate 1887-1889; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 20,437 votes, to 12,122 for Lewis C. Baker, Democrat, and 1,111 for T. W. North, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES.—Adams, Columbia, Dane, Green Lake, Jefferson, and Marquette (6 counties). Population (1900), 170,792. HENRY CULLEN ADAMS, Republican, of Madison, was born November 28, 1850, at Verona, Oneida County, N. Y.; removed to Wisconsin in 1851; attended Albion Academy one year and the University of Wisconsin three years; was a member of the Wisconsin assembly two terms, 1883-1887; State superintendent of public property 1884-1890; dairy and food commissioner of Wisconsin 1894-1902; married to Anna B. Norton, of Madison, Wis., October 15, 1878; engaged in dairy- ing and small-fruit growing until 1890; present business real estate; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 17,519 votes, to 14,485 for John J. Wood, jr., Democrat, and 1,182 for C, F. Kroncke, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Crawford, Grant, Iowa, Juneau, Richland, Sauk, and Vernon (7 counties). Population (1900), 180,750. JOSEPH WEEKS BABCOCK, Republican, of Necedah, was born in Swanton, Vt., March 6, 1850; moved with his parents to Iowa in 1855, where he resided until 1881, when he removed to Necedah, Wis., where he has since resided and for many years was engaged in the manufacture of lumber; was elected to the Wisconsin assem- bly in 1888 and reelected in 1890; was elected chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee for the years of 1894, 1896, 1898, 1900, and 1902; was appointed chairman of the Committee on the District of Columbia in the Fifty- fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and a member of the Committee on Ways and Means in the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses; was 58-3D—2D Ep——9 130 Congressional Directory. IWISCONSIN, elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,405 votes, to 11,155 for Jackson Silbaugh, Democrat, and 1,356 for Edward Ownes, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT. MILWAUKEE CouUNTY.—Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Eighth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Four- teenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Twenty-third wards of the city of Milwaukee; cities of South Milwaukee, and Wauwatosa; towns of Franklin, Greenfield, Lake, Oak Creek, and Wauwatosa; village of Cudahy. Population (1900), 185,144. THEOBOLD OTJEN, Republican, of Milwaukee, was born in West China, St. Clair County, Mich., October 27, 1851; was educated at the Marine City (Mich. ) Academy and at a private school in Detroit conducted by Prof. P. M. Patterson; was employed as foreman in the rolling mill of the Milwaukee Iron Company at Milwaukee from 1870 to the fall of 1872; entered the law department of the University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor, in October, 1873; graduated March 25, 1875, and was immediately admitted to the bar at Ann Arbor; practiced law in Detroit until the fall of 1883, when he removed to Milwaukee, where he has since resided; engaged in the practice of law and in the real-estate business; was elected a member of the common council of the city of Milwaukee in April, 1887, and was reelected for three successive terms, serv- ing seven years in all; was a trustee of the Milwaukee Public Library from 1887 to 1891, and a trustee of the Milwaukee Public Museum from 1891 to 1894; ran for comptroller of the city of Milwaukee in April, 1892, but went down to defeat with the rest of the Republican ticket under the Bennett law tidal wave; was nominated as the Republican candidate for Congress in 1892 and ran against Hon. John L. Mitchell, formerly Senator, but was defeated; was again the Republican candidate in 1893 for the seat in Congress made vacant by the election of Mr. Mitchell to the Senate, but was again defeated; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,101 votes, to 13,468 for John F. Donivan, Democrat, 5,167 for Herman W. Bos- torius, Socialist Democrat, and 375 for Lyle B. Walker, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT, » MILWAUKEE CouNtTy.—First, Sixth, Ninth, Tenth, Thirteenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, T'wen- tieth, Twenty-first, and Twenty-second wards of the city of Milwaukee; towns of Granville * and Milwaukee; villages of North Milwaukee and Whitefish Bay. WAUKESHA COUNTY. Population (1900), 180,102. WILLIAM H. STAFFORD, Republican, of Milwaukee; was in the active practice of the law when elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,971 votes, to 10,971 for Henry Smith, Democrat, and 6,000 for Henry C. Berger, Socialist Democrat. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT. CounTIiES.—Dodge, Fond du Iac, Ozaukee, Sheboygan, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1900), 184,517. - CHARLES H. WEISSE, Democrat, of Sheboygan Falls, was born October 24, 1866, on a farm in that town; is a manufacturer of leather; was elected to the Fifty- eighth Congress in a district that gave McKinley 1,546 majority in 1900, receiving 17,991 votes, to 14,575 for W. H. Froehlich, Republican, 532 for G. C. Hill, Prohibi- tionist, and 1,394 for J. P. Wilson, Socialist, SEVENTH DISTRICT. Counties.—Buffalo, Clark, Eau Claire, Jackson, La Crosse, Monroe, Pepin, and Trempealeau (8 counties). Population (1900), 193,890. JOHN JACOB ESCH, Republican, of La Crosse, was born near Norwalk, Monroe County, Wis., March 20, 1861, of German parents; in 1865 his parents moved to Mil- waukee, and five years later to Sparta, Wis., where both still reside; after graduating Sh = — — # = WISCONSIN] Senators and Representatives. 131 from the Sparta High School entered the modern classical course of the State University at Madison, and took his degree with the class of 1882; for three years following engaged in teaching and the study of law, and in 1886 entered the law department of the State University, and graduated in 1887; since being admitted to the bar has practiced law in La Crosse; the only elective office held by him was that of city treasurer of Sparta in 1885; in 1883 organized the Sparta Rifles, after- wards known as Company I, Third Regiment Wisconsin National Guard, and was commissioned captain, retaining the office until 1887; upon his removal to Ia Crosse helped organize Company M, of the same regiment, being first lieutenant, and after- wards captain; in January, 1894, was commissioned acting judge-advocate-general, with the rank of colonel, by Governor W. H. Upham, holding the office for two years; was elected to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 18,494 votes, to 9,543 for William Carnahan, Demo- crat, and 925 for Frank R. Sebenthall, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Calumet, Manitowoc, Portage, Waupaca, Waushara, and Winnebago (6 counties). Population (1900), 194,634. JAMES H. DAVIDSON, Republican, of Oshkosh, was born in Colchester, Dela- ware County, N. Y., June 18, 1858; was educated in the public schools and at Wal- ton (New York) Academy; taught school; studied law; graduated from Albany Law School as president of the class in 1884 and was in the same year admitted to the bar of New York; subsequently removed to Wisconsin and commenced the practice of law at Princeton in 1887; in 1888 was elected prosecuting attorney of Green Lake County; in 1892 removed to Oshkosh and continued the practice of law; in 1895 was appointed city attorney; was chairman of the Republican Congessional com- mittee from 1890 to 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth as a Republican, receiving 25,233 votes, to 12,889 for C. F. Crane, Democrat, I,092 for]. J. Pelz, Socialist, and 777 for Charles A. Smart, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT. CoUNTIES.—Brown, Door, Kewaunee, Marinette, Oconto, and Outagamie (6 counties). Population (1900), 179,097. EDWARD S. MINOR, Republican, of Sturgeon Bay, was born in Jefferson County, N. V., in 1840; went with his parents to Wisconsin in 1845; settled in Milwaukee County and subsequently lived in the city of Milwaukee, where he attended the pub- lic schools; went with his parents to Sheboygan County in 1852, where he lived on a farm for several years; received a public-school and academic education; in 1861 enlisted in Company G, Second Wisconsin Volunteer Cavalry, as a private; partici- pated in all the expeditions, raids, and battles in which the regiment was engaged until the close of the war; was mustered out as a first lieutenant in November, 1865; after his return home engaged in mercantile pursuits until 1884, at which time he was appointed superintendent of the Sturgeon Bay and Lake Michigan Ship Canal, which position he held for seven years; is also a licensed master of steam vessels, and an honorary member of the Engineers’ Benevolent Association of Sturgeon Bay; was elected to the Wisconsin assembly in 1877 and reelected in 1880 and 1881; was elected to the State senate and served in that body in 1883 and 1885; was presi- dent pro tempore of the senate during the latter term; was also a member of the Wis- consin fish commission for four years; Has held numerous local offices at various times; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,958 votes, to 11,479 for Edward Decker, Democrat, and 518 for Thomas Loomis, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT. CouNnTIES.—Ashland, Florence, Forest, Iron, I,anglade, Lincoln, Marathon, Oneida, Price, Sha- wano, Taylor, Vilas, and Wood (13 counties). Population (1900), 190,975. WEBSTER EVERETT BROWN, Republican, of Rhinelander, was born in Madi- son County, N. Y., July 16, 1851; came with his parents to Wisconsin in 1857, living for a time in Columbia County, then moving to Portage County, where he lived on a farm till 17 years of age; his elementary education was received in the common schools of Portage County, and afterwards he took preparatory studies at Lawrence { 132 Congressional Directory. [WISCONSIN. University, Appleton, Wis., and a business course at the Spencerian Business College, Milwaukee; in 1870 entered the University of Wisconsin at Madison, and graduated with the class of 1874; was married December 26, 1877, to Juliet D. Meyer, also a graduate of the University of Wisconsin with the class of 1875; has been chairman of the town and county boards; also member of the school board, and has served two terms as mayor of the city of Rhinelander; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,551 votes, to 14,937 for Burt Williams, Democrat, and 650 for William D. Badger, Prohi- I bitionist. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. ELEVENTH DISTRICT. CounTIES.—Barron, Bayfield, Burnett, Chippewa, Douglas, Dunn, Gates, Pierce, Polk, St. Croix, ; Sawyer, and Washburn (12 counties). Population (1900), 217,650. JOHN JAMES JENKINS, Republican, of Chippewa Falls, was born in Weymouth, England, August 20, 1843; settled in Baraboo, Wis., June, 1852; attended the common schools a few terms; served during the war as a member of Company A, Sixth Wis- consin Volunteers; member of the Wisconsin assembly from Chippewa County; county judge of Chippewa County; appointed United States attorney of the Territory of Wyoming by President Grant in March, 1876; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 19,329 votes, to 8,261 for Joseph A. Rene, Democrat, 1,077 for y Moses Y. Cliff, Prohibitionist, and 5 scattering. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth’ Congress. WYOMING. SENATORS. FRANCIS EMROY WARREN, Republican, of Cheyenne, was born in Hinsdale, Mass., June 20, 1844; received a common school and academic education; enlisted in 1862 in the Forty-ninth Massachusetts Regiment of Infantry, and served as private and noncommissioned officer in that regiment until it was mustered outof service; received the Congressional medal of honor for gallantry on battlefield at the siege of Port Hudson; was afterwards captain in the Massachusetts militia; was engaged infarming and stock raising in Massachusetts until early in 1868, when he removed to Wyoming (then a partof the Territory of Dakota); isat presentinterested in live stock, real estate, | and lighting business; was president of the senate of Wyoming legislature in 1873-74 | and member of the senate in 1884-85; was twice member of the council and also | mayor of the city of Cheyenne, and served three terms as treasurer of Wyoming; was member of the Wyoming delegation to the national Republican convention at I Chicago in 1888 and chairman of the Wyoming delegation to the national Repub- lican conventions at Philadelphia in 1900 and at Chicago in 1904; was chairman of the Republican Territorial central committee, and chairman of Republican State § I . central committee of Wyoming in 1896; was appointed governor of Wyoming by \ President Arthur in February, 1885, and removed by President Cleveland in Novem- 3 | ber, 1886; was again appointed governor of Wyoming by President Harrison in i | March, 1889, and served until the Territory was admitted as a State, when he was I elected the first governor of the State; was elected to the United States Senate | November 18, 1890, took his seat December 1, 1890,and served until the expiration | of his term, March 3, 1893; was reelected January 23, 1895, and again in 1901. His I term of service will expire March 3, 1907. CLARENCE DON CLARK, Republican, of Evanston, was born at Sandy Creek, Oswego County, N. Y., April 16, 1851; was educated in the common schools and at the Towa State University; admitted to the bar in 1874 and taught school and practiced | law in Delaware County, Iowa, until 1881; in that year removed to Evanston, Wyo., | where he has since resided; was prosecuting attorney for Uinta County four years; was a delegate to the national Republican conventions of 1888 and 1900; was appointed associate justice of the Territory of Wyoming in 1890, but declined the office; upon A the admission of Wyoming as a State was elected to the Fifty-first and Fifty-second Congresses; was defeated for reelection to the Fifty-third Congress by a fusion of ra Ja WYOMING] Senators and Representatives. 133 Democrats and Populists; was elected January 23, 1895, to the United States Senate for the term ending March 3, 1899, to fill the vacancy caused by the failure of the legislature to elect in 1892-93; and on January 24, 1899, was reelected for the term beginning March 4, 1899. His term of service will expire March 3, 1905. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE. Population (1900), 92,531. FRANK WHEELER MONDELL, Republican, of Newcastle, was born in St. Louis, Mo., November 6, 1860; both of his parents died before reaching his sixth year; went to live with friends in Iowa, residing on a farm until 18 years of age; attended the local district schools, and received instruction in the higher branches from a private tutor; engaged in mercantile pursuits, mining, and railway construction in various Western States and Territories; settled in Wyoming in 1887, and engaged in the development of coal mines and oil property at and in the vicinity of Newcastle and Cambria; took an active part in the establishment and building of the town of New- castle and the development of the Cambria mines; was elected mayor of Newcastle in 1888, and served until 1895; was elected a member of the first State senate in 1890, served as president of that body at the session of 1892; was a delegate to the Repub- lican national convention in Minneapolis in 1892; was appointed Assistant Com- missioner of the General Land Office, November 15, 1897, and served until March 3, 1899; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 15,808 votes, to 8,892 for Charles P. Clemmons, Democrat. Reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress. TERRITORIAL DELEGATES. ARIZONA. Population (1900), 122,931. JOHN F. WILSON, Democrat, of Prescott, was born in Giles County, Tenn., May 7, 1846; was educated at Rhuhama, Ala.; is a lawyer by profession; removed from Alabama to Arkansas in 1866; was a member of the legislature of that State during ‘the years 1877 and 1878; was elected prosecuting attorney for the Fourth judicial district of that State in 1884, and served in 1885 and 1886; removed in 1887 to the Territory of Arizona; was elected to the constitutional convention called by the legis- lature for the year 1891; was appointed attorney-general for the Territory by Gov- ernor Franklin in 1896, and served in 1896 and 1897; was elected Delegate to the Fifty-sixth Congress, and to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 9,716 votes, to 9,239 for R, E. Morrison, Republican, HAW AIL Population (1900), 154,001. JONAH KUHIO KALANIANAOLE, Republican, of Waikiki, district of Hono- lulu, island of Oahu; was born March 26, 1871, at Koloa, island of Kauai, Hawaii; was educated in Honolulu, the United States, and England; is a capitalist; was employed in the office of minister of the interior and in the custom-house under the monarchy; is cousin to the late King Kalakaua and Queen Liliuokalani, monarchs of the then Kingdom of Hawaii, and nephew of Queen Kapiolani, Consort of Kala- kaua; was created prince by royal proclamation in 1884; married Elizabeth Kahanu Kaauwai, daughter of a chief of the island of Maui, October 8, 1896; was elected Delegate to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 6,636 votes, to 4,696 for Robert W. Wilcox, Home Ruler, 134 Congressional Directory. [TERRITORIES NEW MEXICO. Population (1900), 195,310. BERNARD SHANDON RODEY, Republican, of Albuquerque, was born in 1856, in County Mayo, Ireland; taken by parents to Canada in 1862; early years occupied in mining, farming, and merchandising; later, most of the family moved into Ver- mont; clerked in railroad office and read law in Boston, Mass., in the latter seventies; moved to New Mexico in the spring of 1881; acted as private secretary for railroad manager; was court stenographer of second district of New Mexico in 1882; was ad- mitted to the bar of New Mexico in 1883 and has practiced law there ever since; was city attorney of Albuquerque in 1888-89; member of the Territorial legislative council (senate) in 1889, and author of the bill creating the university, School of Mines, Agricultural College, and other institutions; was a member of the Constitutional Convention of New Mexico in 189o; is entirely self-educated; speaks French and Spanish fluently; was elected Delegate to the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 24,222 votes, to 14,576 for H. B. Fergusson, Democrat. : OLA ONA, Population (1900),/398,331. BIRD SEGLE McGUIRE, Republican, of Pawnee, was born at Belleville, Ill., in 1864, and when but a child of 2 years his parents, Joel and Rachael McGuire, moved to Randolph County, north central Missouri, where they resided upon a farm until the spring of 1881, at which time they moved to Chautauqua County, Kans.; after remaining there a few months Mr. McGuire left home and lived for three years in different parts of the Indian Territory, a part of which is now Oklahoma, being engaged a greater portion of the time in the cattle business; having been able to save a small sum of money, returned home and entered the State normal school at Emporia, Kans., remaining for two years; then taught school several terms and entered the law department of the university at Lawrence, remaining one year and again returning home to Chautauqua, Kans.; in the fall of 1890 was elected county attorney of that county, and served four years, or two consecutive terms; at the expiration of the last term, in the spring of 1895, moved to Pawnee County, Okla., and practiced law; in 1897 was appointed assistant United States attorney for Okla- homa Territory, in which capacity he served until after his nomination for Con- gress; was elected Delegate to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 45,802 votes, to 45,409 for William Cross, Democrat; 1,963 for Smith, Socialist, and 1,035 for Van Cleve, Prohibitionist. RESIDENT COMMISSIONER FROM PORTO RICO. Population (1899), 953,243. FEDERICO DEGETAU, Porto Rican Republican, of Aibonito, was born in Ponce, P. R.; received his first education in the schools of the island; was graduated as bachelor of sciences and arts at Barcelona, Spain, and as a lawyer in the Central University of Madrid; the Academy of Anthropological Sciences of Madrid elected him president of the section of moral and political sciences; is one of the founders of the Société Francaise pour I’ Arbitrage entre Nations, and honorary member of the Colegio de Profesores de Catalafia, and was lately president of the section of moral and political sciences of the ‘“‘Ateneo,” of San Juan; was one of the four commis- sioners sent by Porto Rico to ask Spain for autonomy; the district of Ponce elected him a deputy to the Cortes of 1898, giving him 7,407 votes, to 7,152 for the monar- chical candidates of the Government of Madrid; General Henry appointed him sec- retary of the interior of the first American cabinet that he formed in Porto Rico; was appointed a member of the insular board of charities by General Davis; in 1899 was elected first vice-president of the municipal council of San Juan, and lately president of the board of education of that city; was elected resident commissioner from Porto Rico to the United States for the Fifty-seventh Congress, and reelected for the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 73,823 votes, to 34,605 for Felipe Cuevas, Federal. List of United States Senators, showing Term of Service. 135 BEGINNING AND EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF .SERVICE OF SENATORS. Crass I.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3,1905. °° (Thirty Senators in this class.) g : Beginning : Name. Residence. of present | service. Aldrich, Nelson W.... -........... = Providence, R.1............. Sept. 14, 1881 Ball, YL. Heisler... ...... is. {Baunlkland, Del ...........-; Mar. 2, 1903 Bard, Thomas R .... ..... ov. o. Hueneme, Cal ............. Feb. 7, 1900 Bate, William B.-.......... 7. Nashville, Tenn... ......... Mar. 4, 1887 Beveridge, Albert J - .......0.. Indianapolis, Ind........ -.. Mar. 4, 1899 Burrows JuliwsC...~ ...o Kalamazoo, Mich ........ .. Jan. 23, 1895 Clapp; Moses ¥5.... ....... i 00. St.Paul, Minn... ..... = Jan. 23, 1901 Clare Clarence D.= oo. 005. 0 Evanston, "Wyo .... ....... Feb. 6, 1895 Cockrell, Francis MM... .. ... Warrensburg, Mo... =... Mar. 4, 1875 Culberson, Charles A... os Dallas ex. os nire ie Mar. 4, 1899 Daniel, JohnW. 0. =... . Lynchburg, Va. ............ Mar. 4, 1887 Depew, Chauncey Me... 0 New York City............. Mar. 4, 1899 Dick, Charles. ove viii Akron, Ohio... ......... ow. Mar. 2, 1904 Dietrich, Charles Fe.... =... Sept. 27, 1002 Allee, J, Prank... x i oa ii. Delaware. ...... =i = Mar. 2, 1903 33 fale Lalleigler: 0. avin ihe 40 es Mar. 2,1903 Ankeny: Levi. woes iainiion, Washington .i......... Mar. 4, 1903 Clarke, James P 0 5 al aoe = Arkansas .......... Mar. 4, 1903 Fulton, Charles W: ..... ............... Oregon. ovis Mar. 4, 1903 Gorman, Arthur P o.oo, Marviand ...... -..... Mar. 4,1903 Heybnrn, Weldon B.:................ Idaho... a Mar. 4, 1903 Hopkins, Albert J... =..5 ee, Hhhols Mar. 4, 1903 54 (Latimer, Asbury C- ....o nes 0-5 Sonth Carolina... .... i. Mar. 4, 1903 j Tong, Chester I... -...........cou ven, Bansass. cos niin Mar. 4, 1903 McCreary,-Tantes B.......o. oe 20 Kentucky ..-........... Mar. 4, 1903 Newlands, Francis G....... casos Nevada, .....-o noes Mar. 4, 1903 Overpmn, Lee Saat North Carolina ........ Mar. 4,1903 Smoot; Reed... v0 heey Tal einai Mar. - 4, 1903 Stone, William J... .-. noc aol VOSSOULE Sess = Mar. 4, 1903 ost Dick Charles: =i io tov conve Ones, ci as nah Mar. 2, 1904 26 Bnox, Philander €....... ou. iano Pennsylvania .......... July 1, 1904 37 Crane, W. Murray. _............. Massachusetts ......... Oct.- 12,1004 List of Members of the House of Representatives. LIST OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, SHOWING THE CONGRESSES IN WHICH THEY HAVE SERVED AND THE BEGINNING OF THEIR PRESENT * Vacancy. a At large. SERVICE. : Beginning Name. State. RZ Congresses. of present A service. Acheson, E.F..... R | Pennsylvania....| 24 | 54th, 55th, 56th,57th, Stl arr mdr Mar. 4, 1895 Adams, H.C... ... R | Wikconsin....... aataSth ii a ir Mar. 4, 1903 Adams, Robert, jr .| R | Pennsylvania ....| 2 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th s7th, 58th... 0: Mar. 4, 1893 Adamson, W.C...'!D | Georgia ........; 4 | 55th, 56th, 57th,58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Aiken, Wyatt ..... D: South Carolina...| gi s8th. 7... Mar. 4, 1903 ° Alexander, D.S ...| BR || New York....... 36 | 55th, 56th, 57th,58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Allen, A.L,....... .. Rl Mame. ......... I | *56th, 57th, 58th ....| Sept.4, 1Sog Ames, Butler...... RB Massachusetts ..{ 51 s8th..... ...o....... Mar. 4, 1903 Babcock, J. W. ....[ B | Wisconsin... .... 3 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, suit, 58th... . Mar. 4, 1893 Badger: D.C... Dl Ohio... IZ 058th =o Mar. 4, 1903 Baker, Robert. .... D[ New York... :.. GL sSth.. oo Mar. 4, 1903 Bankhead, J.H ...| D | Alabama ........ 6 | soth, 51st, 52d, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 5thys3th,. =. Mar. 4, 1887 Bartholdt, Richard | R | Missouri......... 10 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, sol 58th... or Mar. 4, 1893 Bartlett, C.T,. Dif Georgia... 6 | 54th, 55th, 56th,57th, SSN a Mar. 4, 1895 Bassett, E.M...... D "New York ....... SdesBth saan Sa Mar. 4, 1903 Bates; AL, ....... BR Pennsylvania... .[ 25 | 57th, 58th. ..=........ Mar. 4, 1901 Beall Jack... Del Texas. or SlsSthe oa on on Lo Mar. 4, 1903 Bede JA. ....n. BR [Minnesota..:.... Sls8nh.. aa, Mar. 4, 1903 Beidler, J. A....... BR. [Ohio 2... 20057, 58th... .. Mar. 4, 1901 Bell/I Al 2 D: [California =... guasSth. oa ou Mar. 4, 1903 ° Benny, Allan. ..... D: | New Jersey... ... Oath oe Mar. 4, 1903 Benton, L. FE, ..... Df Missouri... ...... 15 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Bingham, H. H....| R | Pennsylvania I | 46th, 47th, 48th, 49th, 50th, 51st, 52d, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, s7th, Both Mar. 4, 1879 Birdsall, B. P. Se BR llowa........- Ess al a Mar. 4, 1903 Bishop, RiP... R (Michigan. ....... 9 = 55th, 56th, 57th, ORE Re Mar. 4, 1895 Bonynge,R. W.. .[ RR | Colorado... . -.: I Soin. Sener Feb.15,1904 Boutel,L H.S —.. .. BR. (Olinels,....«.... 9 | *55th, 56th, 57th, 58th| June 25,1897 Bowers, B.J. +... D | Mississippi ...... Of 58th = re Mar. 4, 1903 Bowersock, J.D... RB [Kansas .......... 2 is6th, south 58th... Mar. 4, 1899 Bowie, S.J........ DfAlabama ......... Ll srth 58th. oa Mar. 4, 1901 Bradley, I. W.. .. ... Ro New York... ....- 20 RES a a Mar. 4, 1903 Brandegee, F.B...| R | Connecticut ..... sR srsSth. os: Oct. 24, 1902 Brantley, W. CG... [| D [Georgia ......... 11 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Breazeale, Phanor .| D | Louisiana. ....... 4 56th, 57th; 53th... .... Mar. 4, 1899 Brick; A... Ri Indiana:........ 13-| 56th, 57th, 58th. ..... Mar. 4, 1899 Brooks; BE. ....-. RB "Colorado: =... (OO Ls8th. oa. a0 Mar. 4, 1903 Broussard, BR. E...'D { lLouisiana........ 3 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Brown, J. Wi... BR Pennsylvania ....[ig2 58th. =... .... Mar. 4, 1903 Brown, W. BE. ......R | Wisconsin... ... 0 sy 58th... ... Mar. 4, 1901 Brownlow, W.P...| R | Tennessee ....... I | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Brundidge,S., jv-.1 D {(Arkansas........ 2 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 146 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.--Continued. Beginning Name. State. hz Congresses. of present a service. Buckman, C.B:.../ R | Minnesota....... CANIN Ie SL Se Mar. 4, 1903 Burgess, G.E ....... D [Texas ........... ol 57th 58th.....o.. Mar. 4, 1901 Burke C. T1....... R | South Dakota. ... (@) | 56th, 57th, 58th... Mar. 4, 1899 Burkett BE. TJ.... .. BR. | Nebragka........ I | 56th, 57th, 53th... ... Mar. 4, 1899 4 Burleigh, BEC... BR | Mame... ........ 3 | *s55th,56th, 57th, 58th| Apr.19,1897 a od Burleson, A. S..... Dexa... 7... Io. (56th, 57th, 58th... Mar. 4, 1899 Burnett. 1,...... D Alabama’. .5..... 7-1 56th, 57th, 53th... Mar. 4, 1899 Burton, 0. E....... RJ Ohio, ...... 21 | 51st, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th... Mar. 4, 1895 Butler, J.J... D: | Missonrt......... 2 sh sSths June 29,1902 Butler, ©. 5... ..... R | Pennsylvania ....| 7 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Byrd, A. M.... ... D | Mississippi ...... Coiba Re ae a Mar. 4, 1903 Calderhead, W.A .| R | Ransas.......... 5 | 54th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1899 Caldwell, B.F..... Diililhnels. 21 (56th 57th, 58th... . Mar. 4, 1899 Campbell, PB. Px Rl Kansas... SESS Mar. 4, 1903 Candler, E. a jr D | Mississippi ...... vl sth, 580h. or Mar. 4, 1901 ) ' $1 Camnon,].G ....| B | Illinois... ....... 18 | 43d, 44th, 45th, 46th, | | 47th, 48th, 4oth, : soth, sist, 53d, 54th, “55th, 56th, 57th, 58th......... Mar. 4, 1893 Capron, A. B...... R | Rhode Island ....| 2 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Cassel, H.B......: R | Peringylvania ....[ o{*s57th, 58th... ....... Mar.17,1901 Cassingliam, J. W .l D. Ohio............ wlisyiths8th.. Mar. 4, 1901 Clark, Champ... ... D> | Missouri... ....... 9 53d 5th 56th, 57th, elem Tht Mar. 4, 1897 Clayton, H.D..... D {Alabama ..-..o.. 3 a nn 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Cochran, C.F ..... D | Missouri......... 4 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Cochran, W.B -...| DD | New York....... 12 | 50th, 52d, 53d,* 58th.| Dec.22,1903 | Connell, William. .| R | Pennsylvania ....| 11 | 55th, 56th, 57th,58th.| Feb.10,1904 Conner; 7. PP... .. R (Towa... -..... 10 | *56th, 57th, 58th... .. Dec. 3, 1900 Cooper, A. B...... BR | Pennsylvania... [23 58th... ............ Mar. 4, 1903 Cooper, HH. A... .. R | Wisconsin....... 1 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, : Ssoth, SSth....... ve, Mar. 4, 1893 | Cooper, S.B ...... DD Texas. ...v.. 5. 2 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 758th... .... Mar. 4, 1893 Cousins, R. CG ..... CR Towa he a 5 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, | 57th, 58th... ...... Mar. 4, 1893 i Cowherd, W.S....| D | Missouri......... 5 s5th, 56th, 57th, 5S8th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Colt, .G ...-... D [South Carolina...| 2 | %53th................ Mar. 10,1904 | | Cromer, CG. W... ..: Rif Indiana ...-..- = 8 |-56th; 57th, 55th. ..... Mar. 4, 1899 | Crowley, J.B... ... Dl Illinois... 0.4 23 | 56th, 57th, 58th... ... Mar. 4, 1899 Crumpacker, E.D.| R: | Indiana ......... 10 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 } Currier, ED... .. R | New Hampshire .| 2 { 57th, 58th.........-. Mar. 4, 1901 Curtis, Charles. ...| R | Kansas. ......... I | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, | i < grt ssth. 1h Mar. 4, 1893 i Cushman, F. W ...| R | Washington ..... (a) | 56th, 57th, 58th. ... .| Mar. 4, 1899 ! Dalzell, John...... R | Pennsylvania ....| 30 | 50th, 51st, 52d, 53d, ! 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th 58th Mar. 4, 1887 Daniels, M. J... .-. R | Califormia..-... .. EE RA Mar. 4, 1903 | Darragh, A.B..... RB | Michigan........ yr sth sSth Mar. 4, 1901 Davey, B.C....... D | Tonisiana... .-.. 2 | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, eR Py Mar. 4, 1895 | Davidson, J. H ....| BR | Wisconsin....... 8 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Davis, CR... ... R | Minnesota. ...:. Esther Mar. 4, 1903 | Davis, B.W........ D | Florida... .. ...| 2 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Dayton, A. G...... R | West Virginia ...| 2 | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, Bethe ur a Mar. 4, 1895 De Armond, D. A..| D | Missouri ........ 6 | 52d, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th... . = Mar. 4, 1301 a At large. * Vacancy. 1 Elected Speaker of the 58th Congress. A Sg AA S——— AE —— List of Members of the House of Representatives. 141 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. : Beginning Name. State. 2 Congresses. of present a service. Deemer, Elias. . ... R [Pennsylvania ....| 15 | 57th, 58th. ,......... Mar. 4, 1901 Denny, J. W... «+... Df. Maryland ........ 4 56ths8th. 0... > Mar. 4, 1903 Dickerman, €C. H..| D:| Pennsylvania....; 16 [ 58th................ Mar. 4, 1903 Dinsmore; HB. A... D | Arkansas... =; 3 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, Ssothis8th. .o...... Mar. 4, 1893 Dixon, J. M....... BR | Montany ........ (OES ase as at. Mar. 4, 1903 Dougherty, John ..| D | Missouri ..... soar 3-1 56th is7th, 88th. + Mar. 4, 1899 Douglas, W.H.. | R [New York....... 54 s7this8th. .. . c.... Mar. 4, 1901 Dovener,B.B..... R | West Virginia I | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, £ IN TL Ee Mar. 4, 1893 Draper, W.H ....... R | New Norkz....... ga lsothasSth.. Mar. 4, 1901 Dresser, S.B...... Ri Pennsylvania -...[ 21 58th. a... ..... Mar. 4, 1903 Driscoll, M. FB... Rl New Nork....... 29 | 56th, 57th, 58th... ... Mar. 4, 1899 Dunwell, CL... Rous: dori ds. gf asthe Mar. 4, 1903 Dwight [.W...... Robs dorsi. 30 | sri 58th... Sept.11,1902 Emerich, Martin ..[ D | Hlinois.....:.... asthe db. na Mar. 4, 1903 Bsehuo la R | Wisconsin. J..... =| 56th, 57th, 58th. ..... Mar. 4, 1899 Evans, Alvin...... BR | Pennsylvania... 1g 57th s8th =... Mar. 4, 1901 Field, Scott... =. Dil lexas: >... 6 ssh. oo. Mar. 4, 1903 Finley, D.F ........ D | South Carolina 5 56th 57th, 58th... Mar. 4, 1899 Pitegerald, J.J... D { New ¥York........ = |: 56th, 57th, 55th... ... Mar. 4, 1899 Pitepatrick, M.C..| D | Tennessee ........ dq =5Stha et Mar. 4, 1903 Flack, Wo H ...... BR NewYork. ..... ob 58th ua Mar. 4, 1903 Flood, IL.D....... Da Virginia... ..... 0 sth 58h... ..... Mar. 4, 1901 Fordney, J. W..... R: | Michigan........ 8 (56th; 57th, 58th... Mar. 4, 1899 Foss, iG B. ..... rR limes .......... 10 | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, Ssh i. Mar. 4, 1895 Foster, aL A LIE R (Vermont .......%. rlEs7th, 58th, ...... Mar. 4, 1901 Poster, G. 2... DJ Hlinolg. ua. 4 [ 56th, 57th, 58th ..... Mar. 4, 1899 Fowler, CaN R | New Jersey t. ..... 5 | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58 a Mar. 4, 1895 Trench, B.1,.......R [Idaho.....v..... (0) 1:53. oon Mar. 4, 1903 Buller, CR: . Bl -Tlineis.... 0h. IZ Essh a Mar. 4, 1903 Gaines, J. H ..... BR [West Virginia....| 3 s7th,58hi.... ...... Mar. 4, 1901 Gaines, J. W ...... Dl Tennessee: .. ..... 6 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Garber, H.:C....... DA-Ohio......5..... Gash. aa Mar. 4, 1903 Gardner, A. P..... R | Massachusetis ...[ 6 “57th 58th.......... May 2, 1902 Gardner, J.J -..... BR New Jersey ...... 2 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, sthesSth....... Mar. 4, 1893 Gardner, Wash....| R | Michigan........ 3 iy sth, 58th... ... Mar. 4, 1899 Garner, J. N.. ..... Di Texasic.......... 15-58 th es Mar. 4, 1903 Gibson, H.R... ... R | Tennessee....... 2 Sa ssth, 56th, 57th, SBthee. iv Mar. 4, 1895 Gilbert, G.G...... D | Kentucky ....... 8 | 56th, he 58th... .. Mar. 4, 1899 Gillespie, O. W..../| Df Texas .;......... yz Esther al Mar. 4, 1903 Gillet; C&W... BR | New¥York....... 33 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, Sth s8thi.... Mar. 4, 1893 Gillett EH. v0. R | Massachusetts ...| 2 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, sth, 58th. Lx Mar. 4, 1893 Gillett, I. NL... R. | California ....... EeaBthiey oo Tia cn Mar. 4, 1903 Glass, Carter. ..... Dl Virginia... ... 6 tert sBih ui 0 May 5, 1902 Goebel, H. P...... R [Oho coi... REE Re SE a Hela Mar. 4, 1903 Goldiogle, H. M.. .|'D | New York. ...... o:esuthisSth, 0... Mar. 4, 1901 Gooch, Dd, ...... Di Kentucky: o...-. 6 57th 58th... aa Mar. 4, 1901 Goulden, J. A ...... D {New Nock... IS I s8th. sl Mar. 4, 1903 Graff. V......... Rl Hlineig.s x... 16 | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, CIMETRE Ee Te Mar. 4, 1895 Grangery,D. 1.0. .|D |Bhodelsland....| * | 5%th................ Mar. 4, 1903 Greene, W.S ..... R | Massachusetts ,..| 13 | *55th, 56th, 57th, 58th| Mar.27,1898 * Vacancy. a At large, * Vacancy. a At large. 142 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. : Beginning Name. State. 5 Congresses. of present fru service. Gregg, A. W...... BDillexas i ee Mar. 4, 1903 Griftith, F. M ..... Dsl Indiana = 0. 4 | *55th, 56th, 57th, 58th| Apr.23, 1897 Griggs; |-M ...... Di Georgia. 2. 2 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Grosvenor, C. FH... R [| Ohio’... IT | 49th, 50th, 51st, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, STH 55ths Mar. 4, 1885 Gudger,T. M., jr. ..| D | North Carolina. ..[ 10. 58th. ............... Mar. 4, 1903 Hamilton, BE. L.... B | Michigan........ Ler Sai 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Hamlin, C.W..... Df Missourl ...n oo altho Mar. 4, 1903 Hardwick, T. W....| D {Georgia ... ...... 10: 55th ee oo ont Mar. 4, 1903 Harrison, B.B....[D | NewYork... ... IGapsSth Lo alan Mar. 4, 1903 Haskins, Kittredge| R | Vermont ........ ols7ilsSih 0 oo Mar. 4, 190i Haugen, G. NN... Ri Towas 5... 20 4-5 56th, 57th, 58th. Mar. 4, 1899 Hay, James... -.. DD Virginia. ..o.. 0. 7 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th.| Mar. 4, 1897 Hearst, W.R...... PD x REPRESENTATIVES. f [Republicans, 4; Democrats, 2.] | . William H. Jackson, R. | 3. Frank C. Wachter, R. | 5. Sydney E. Mudd, R. . J. Fred’k C. Talbott, D. | 4. James W. Denny, D. 6. George A. Pearre, R. MASSACHUSETTS. | SENATORS. | W. Murray Crane, R. Henry Cabot Lodge, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 4; Republicans, 10.] | . George P.Lawrence, R. 6. AugustusP.Gardner,R.| 11. John A. Sullivan, D. . Frederick H. Gillett, R. 7. Ernest W. Roberts, R. | 12. Samuel I,. Powers, R. . John R. Thayer, D. 8. Samuel W. McCall, R. | 13. William S.Greene, R. + Charles O. Tirrell; R., 9. John A. Keliher, D. 14. Wm. C. Lovering, R. . Butler Ames, R. 10. William S. McNary, D. At large—Joseph M. Dixon, R. State Delegations. 151 MICHIGAN. | SENATORS. Russell A. Alger, R. Julius C. Burrows, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 11; Democrats, 1.] > | 1. Alfred Lucking, D. 5. William Alden Smith,R.| 9. Roswell P. Bishop, R. | 2. Charles E. Townsend,R. | 6. Samuel W. Smith, R. 10. George A. Loud, R. | 3. Washington Gardner,R. | 7. Henry McMorran, R. 11. Arch. B. Darragh, R. ar 4. Edward L. Hamilton,R. | 8. Joseph W. Fordney, R. | 12. H. Olin Young, R. MINNESOTA. SENATORS. Knute Nelson, R. Moses E. Clapp, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 8; Democrats, I.] I. James A. Tawney, R. 4. Fred’k C. Stevens, R. 7. Andrew J. Volstead, R. 2. James T. McCleary, R. | 5. John Lind, D. 8. J. Adam Bede, R. 3. Charles R. Davis, R. 6. Clarence B. Buckman, R.| 9. Halvor Steenerson, R. MISSISSIPPI. SENATORS. Anselm J. McLaurin, D. Hernando D. Money, D. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 8.] 1. Ezekiel S. Candler, jr., D.| 4. Wilson S. Hill, D. 7. Frank A. McLain, D. 2. Thomas Spight, D. - 5. Adam M. Byrd, D. 8. John S. Williams, D. 3. Benj. G. Humphreys, D..| 6. Eaton J. Bowers, D. MISSOURI. SENATORS. k William J. Stone, D. Francis M. Cockrell, D. | REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 15; Republicans, 1.] 1. James T. Lloyd, D. 8. Dorsey W. Shackle- | 14. Willard D. Vandi- 2. William W. Rucker, D. ford, D. ver, D. | 3. John Dougherty, D. 9. Champ Clark, D. 15. Maecenas E. Ben- —- 4. Charles F. Cochran, D. 10. Richard Bartholdt, R. ton, D. 4 5. William S. Cowherd, D. | 11. John T. Hunt, D. 16. Robert Lamar, D. " . 6. David A. De Armond,D. | 12. James J. Butler, D. * 7. Courtney W. Hamlin,D. | 13. Edward Robb, D. f MONTANA. | SENATORS. | William A. Clark, D. Paris. Gibson, D. REPRESENTATIVE. : | | NEBRASKA. | SENATORS. : | Charles H. Dietrich, R. Joseph H. Millard, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 1; Republicans, 5.] 1. Elmer J. Burkett, R. 3. John J. McCarthy, R. 5. George W. Norris, R. 2. Gilbert M. Hitchcock,D. | 4. Edmund H. Hinshaw,R.| 6. Moses P. Kinkaid, R. 152 Congressional Directory. NEVADA. SENATORS. Francis G. Newlands, D. REPRESENTATIVE. William M. Stewart, R. At large—Clarcnce D. Van Duzer, D. NEW HAMPSHIRE. SENATORS. Henry FE. Burnham, R. Jacob H. Gallinger, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2.] I. Cyrus A. Sulloway, R. \ NEW JERSEY. + SENATORS. 2. Frank D. Currier, R. John F. Dryden, R. John Kean, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 7.] 4. William M. Lanning, R. 5. Charles N. Fowler, R. 9. Allan Benny, D. = 6. William Hughes, D. 10. Allan I,. McDermott, 7. R. Wayne Parker, R. D. 1. Henry. C. Loudenslager, 8. William H. Wiley, R. R 2. John J. Gardner, R. 3. Benjamin F. Howell, R. NEW YORK. SENATORS. Chauncey M. Depew, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 17; Republicans, 20.] Thomas C. Platt, R. PN NPG pH . Townsend Scudder, D. George H. Lindsay, D. Charles T. Dunwell, R. Frank E. Wilson, D. Edward M. Bassett, D. .. Robert Baker, D. . John J. Fitzgerald, D. . Timothy D. Sullivan, D 9. Henry M. Goldfogle, D 10. William Sulzer, D. 11. William. R. Hearst, D. 12. W. Bourke Cochran, D. PWN = 13. Francis B. Harrison, D. 14. Ira BE. Rider, D. 15. William H. Douglas, R. 16. Jacob Ruppert, jr., D. 17. Francis E. Schober, D. 18. Joseph A. Goulden, D. 19. Norton P. Otis, R. 20. Thomas W. Bradley, R. 21. John H. Ketcham, R. 22. William H. Draper, R. 23. George N. Southwick, R 24. George J. Smith, RB. 25. Tucius N. Littauer, R. 26. William H. Flack, R. NORTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. Furnifold M. Simmons, D. « John H. Small, D. . Claude Kitchin, D. . Charles R. Thomas, D. . Edward W. Pou, D. Henry C. Hansbrough, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2.] At large—Thomas F. Marshall, R.; Burleigh F. Spalding, R. oN onan REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, ro.] William W. Kitchin, D. G. B. Patterson, D. . Robert N. Page, D. . Theodore F. Kluttz, D. NORTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. 27. James S. Sherman, R. 28. Charles I. Knapp, R. 29. Michael E. Driscoll, R. 30. John W. Dwight, R. 31. Sereno E. Payne, R. 32. James B. Perkins, R. 33. Charles W. Gillet, R. 34. James W. Wadsworth, R. 35. William H. Ryan, D. 36. De Alva S. Alexander, RB. . 37. Edward B.Vreeland,R. Lee S. Overman, D. 9. Edwin Y. Webb, D. 10. James M. Gudger, jr., D. Porter J. McCumber, R. \ i \ | | Joseph B. Foraker, R. I. Daniell. D. Granger,D. | Benjamin R. Tillman, D. State Delegations. OHIO. SENATORS. 153 Charles Dick, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 4; Republicans, 17.] [Democrats, 1; Republicans, 1.] SOUTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 7.] 1. Nicholas Longworth,R.| 8. William R. Warnock,R.| 15. Henry C. Van Voorhis, 2. Herman P. Goebel, R. 9. James H. Southard, R. R. 3. Robert M. Nevin, R. 10. Stephen Morgan, R. 16. Capell IL. Weems. 4. Harvey C. Garber, D. 11. Charles H. Grosvenor, | 17. John W.Cassingham,D. RE 5. John S. Snook, D. R. 18. James Kennedy, R. : 6. Charles Q. Hildebrant, | 12. De Witt C. Badger, D. | 19. W. Aubrey Thomas, R. i R. 13. Amos H. Jackson, R. . | 20. Jacob A. Beidler, R. | 7. Thomas B. Kyle, R. 14. Amos R. Webber, R. 21. Theodore E. Burton, R. OREGON. SENATORS. John H. Mitchell, R. Charles W. Fulton, R. : REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2.] 1. Binger Hermann, R. | 2. John N. Williamson, R. PENNSYLVANIA. SENATORS. Boies Penrose, R. Philander C. Knox, R. REPRESENTATIVES. ; [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 29.] 1. Henry H. Bingham, R. | 12. GeorgeR. Patterson, R | 22. George PF. Huff, R. 2. Robert Adams, jr., R. | 13. Marcus C. L. Kline, D. | 23. Allen F. Cooper, R. 3. George A. Castor, R. 14. Charles F. Wright, R. | 24. Ernest F. Acheson, R. 4. Reuben O. Moon. 15. Elias Deemer, R. 25. Arthur L. Bates, R. 5. Edward Morrell, R. 16. CharlesH. Dickerman, | 26. Joseph H. Shull, D. 6. George D. McCreary,R. D. 27. William O. Smith, R. 7. Thomas S. Butler, R. 17. ThaddeusM.Mahon,R. | 28. Joseph C. Sibley, R. 8. Irving P. Wanger, R. 18. Marlin E. Olmsted, R. | 29. George Shiras, III, R. 9. H. Burd Cassel, R. 19. Alvin Evans, R. 30. John Dalzell, R. } 10. William Connell, R. 20. Daniel F. Lafean, R. 31. H. Kirk Porter, R. 4 11. Henry W. Palmer, R. 21. Solomon R.Dresser,R. | 32. James W. Brown, R. Ti, RHODE ISLAND. 5 SENATORS. } George P. Wetmore, R. Nelson W. Aldrich, R. REPRESENTATIVES. 2. Adin B. Capron, R. Asbury C. Latimer, D. 4. Joseph T. Johnson, D. 5. David E. Finley, D. 1. George S. Legare, D. 6. Robert B. Scarborough, 2. Theodore G. Croft, D. D. 3. Wyatt Aiken, D. 7. Asbury F. Lever, D. 154 Congressional Directory. BON H ONAN NH ~~ NN SOUTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. Robert J. Gamble, R. Alfred B. Kittredge, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2.] At large—FEben W. Martin, R.; Charles H. Burke, R TENNESSEE. SENATORS. Edward W. Carmack, D. William B. Bate, D. REPRESENTATIVES. {Democrats, 8 ; Republicans, 2.] . Walter P. Brownlow, R. | 5. James D. Richardson, D.| 9. Rice A. Pierce, D. . Henry R. Gibson, R. 6. John W. Gaines, D. 10. Malcolm R. Patterson, . John A. Moon, D. | z Lemuel P. Padgett, D. D. . Morgan C. Fitzpatrick,D.| 8. Thetus W. Sims, D. TEXAS. SENATORS. Joseph W. Bailey, D. Charles A. Culberson, D. REPRESENTATIVES. : [Democrats, 16.] Morris Sheppard, D. 7. A.W. Gregg, D. 13. John H. Stephens, D. . Sam Bronson Cooper, D. | 8. John M. Pinckney, D. | 14. James L. Slayden, D. Gordon Russell, D. 9. George F. Burgess, D. 15. John N. Garner, D. . Choice B. Randell, D. 10. Albert S. Burleson, D. 16. William R. Smith, D. . Jack Beall, D, 11. Robert I. Henry, D. . Scott Field, D. 12. Oscar W. Gillespie, D UTAH. SENATORS. Reed Smoot, R. Thomas Kearns, R. REPRESENTATIVE. At large—Joseph Howell, R. VERMONT. SENATORS. William P. Dillingham, R. Redfield Proctor, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans 2.] 1. David J. Foster, R. I. 2. Kittredge Haskins, R VIRGINIA. SENATORS. Thomas S. Martin, D. John W. Daniel, D. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 9; Republican, 1.] . William A. Jones, D. 5. Claude A. Swanson, D. 9. Campbell Slemp, R . Harry I. Maynard, D. 6. Carter Glass, D. 10. Henry D. Flood, D. . John Lamb, D. 7. James Hay, D. . Robert G. Southall, D. | 8. John F. Rixey, D wei State Delegations. 155 WASHINGTON. SENATORS. : Levi Ankeny, R. Addison G. Foster, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 3.] At large—Wesley L. Jones, R.; Francis W. Cushman, R.; William E. Humphrey, R. WEST VIRGINIA. SENATORS. Stephen B. Elkins, R. Nathan B. Scott, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 5.] I. Blackburn B. Dovener,R.| 3. Joseph Holt Gaines, R. | 5. James A. Hughes, R. 2. Alston G. Dayton, R. 4. Harry C. Woodyard, R. WISCONSIN. SENATORS. John C. Spooner, R. Joseph V. Quarles, R. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 10; Democrat, 1.] 1. Henry A. Cooper, R. 5. William H. Stafford, R. 9. Edward S. Minor, R. 2. Henry C. Adams, R. 6. Charles H. Weisse, D. 10. Webster F. Brown, R. 3. Joseph W. Babcock, R. | 7. John J. Esch, R. II. John J. Jenkins, R. 4. Theobold Otjen, R. 8. James H. Davidson, R. WYOMING. SENATORS. Francis E. Warren, R. Clarence D. Clark, R. REPRESENTATIVE. At large—Frank W. Mondell, R. DELEGATES FROM TERRITORIES. ARIZONA. John F. Wilson, D. HAWAII, Jonah K. Kalanianoale, R. NEW MEXICO. Bernard S. Rodey, R. OKLAHOMA. Bird S. McGuire, R. RESIDENT COMMISSIONER FROM PORTO RICO. Federico Degetau, R. Congressional Directory. 156 APPORTIONMENT OF REPRESENTATIVES. nsus. i .| Whole Census Apportionment her Under— of Rep- : : resenta- Year. | Population. | Year. | Ratio. tives rir BI NIRA rh po ee eC RT ms LE i I Le 1789 30, 000 65 Pins Census. sn ation ee elem ay 1790 3,929,214 | 1793 33, 000 105 Second Census... ain cin GS a i 1800 5,308,483 | 1803 33, 000 141 Third Census. coo... oie. os ER iP SE 1810 7,239,881 | 1813 35, 000 181 Fourth Census. .......... ie ER a es a ts 1820 9,633,822 | 1823 40, 000 213 Fifth Census..........-...................0cc. 1830 12, 866,020 | 1833 47, 700 240 Sith Conan. th sv ca mee aida se ahaa 1840 17,069,453 | 1843 70, 680 223 Seventh Census.................................... 1850 23, 191,876 | 1853 93, 423 233 Eighth Census......................0.......... “.| 1860 31,443,321 | 1863 127, 381 243 Ninth Census... .. cuir arsenate 1870 38,558,371 | 1873 131, 425 293 Lent Censusi co. ihn ve cove si divei isis she dentin 1880 50, 155, 783 | 1883 151,911 325 WleventhiCensus. =i. nL SS anny 1890 62,622,250 | 1893 173, 9OI 356 EF BwelfthCensnsi. un. 0 ie a al 1900 74, 565,906 | 190I 194, 182 386 REPRESENTATION OF THE ENTH AND TWELFTH CENSUSES, WITH UNDER THE LATTER. THE INC STATES UNDER ELEV- REASE Number by apportion- ment of — States. Twelfth | Eleventh Increase. \ Census (386|Census (356 Members). Members). Alabama............... Se leainle i Sn wae eh Sivie ln ia vied Ge mialuiieieis unio y 9 Gh aes AYONSAS. Ji oo aha ean Eh ET a AT EL 7 6 I California... ...z........ eA TE Ee ee aa he oe atk a a als ai Tedle eiA 8 7 1 Coloyado i. livia ees Ris Se an a Te ae 3 2 I CONNECHOHE oo or i nee el eras ws ah ova ee 5 4 I DRlWaTe a a ee hE RT ee I Yat ends Blotida: > oe nia de as eh a SR I 3 2 I I LR hr hr a SER ER fa 11 Ce Bhat To NAAN Gn a a Eh bra i ae aT ea a A 1 Jal Meer Sri LET Le en Ca Ee EG He SO SC i es 25 22 3 Ly hE I I I SR 13 Ee RR rr ee Oa a En a bbe eis ea en Hae a te II 5 EE LS SAS i Tr i we en rh re es a Ra A Ske 8 et Ph Ly Io Re a mr a 8 II 11 oe Tomalann oe, en a a a hn See eta es A 7 6 I MARC so. na eine ws i th Reds eet hs a Has re TE ee 4 Alena de, 1 CoA FS A DE ER as ee Se te Le 6 Se Hr ER Massachusetts woven viii vo td i ar ane Lie sess 14 13 1 Michigan... c.....0. coven fai an I a 12 AD fas oni inal MNNEEOLA i ie oii thn an sre a ie A a aT Ts Sema. 9 7 2 Mississippl...........o ool ea 8 7 1 Missount, ores eR LB IIE SS Ge RR 16 15 I Montana... ... cc. eh dv sa tes bere ve I Xo femoressmoens Nebraska oe ee ee se ne ie sh enh 6 Br ane Nevada... col i vere eh le CR wl eR re ee I Ee Se NeW Hampsliire. ci... ooh cise snes ve iisinninis ss is nn gate sida aie Faiea a 2 BEE rte Se ieiiointe New Jersey... isl is ct tle nisi icity vaiais nin wisiainiuily Svsiviaintars nie ninte 10 8 2 NEW YOrE oo conics rie toesasilits elie min's sists mois eesti lant salute momen tarety 37 34 3 NOE CATOMNA. ova drs floral sa si ie she mim wis Wein ce seietmvveietece 10 9 I North Dakota. 5 voici coh elon oh Miia aaaie site whites wins 2 I I 1 EE Ee NE Se See 21 21 ER le Re RR OFCTOM. vse ou in visa foinins vie vinta imaiivighein tint sais ales inte als ini dintazn a niatn via aiaiety 2 J ERR Penneplvama coo. in is ana Ee cae he era te 32 30 2 Rhode Island: oo Sle enn tie at cient pimdileios wile siren viouiods 2 Zi econ Sonth Cagollna. cs a. de neem a a ee le 7 a er South Dakota... li ait a os a othe Rei canada 2 > Eel La Ta TeRNEEBEE. oo. =. voi ovals nine seeds on aes ra hi a Ra ae 10 ; roel ERR Ee BT rie sl Sa SOE Ll a ne ol Re RS 16 13 3 BL ER a in Li ees TT Pe i XT eth. fed soe ut NETMONT a is akan at ws hn ein ine aie a z sr Vegi a a as a a el ei la satan 10 Yor Washington... .....c..oene on tes Rae Re i hth eas 3 2 I West Virginia. o.oo eh Si ded cede isles es 5 4 I Wisconsin. viii ainaaa anakno i. nn dea ar aed II 10 I TAT ITE 01 Le Por a SE regi I Yolo vee n. *The ‘‘ Constitutional” population of the United States in 1900 was reported by the Director of the Census to the House of Representatives to be 74,565,906. On this basis the House passed a bill fixing the ratio of population at 194,182. This provided but 384 Representatives, and the States of Nebraska and Virginia were each given an additional Representative, arbitrarily, making the whole number 386, EA Er m—————— ES Senate Committees. 157 ® "COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE. STANDING COMMITTEES. [December 14, 1904.] Agriculture and Forestry. Redfield Proctor, of Vermont. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Addison G. Foster, of Washington. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa. Joseph V. Quarles, of Wisconsin. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. William B. Bate, of Tennessee. Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi. F. McL. Simmons, of North Carolina. Asbury C. Latimer, of South Carolina. Appropriations. William B. Allison, of Iowa. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. George C. Perkins, of California. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. John Kean, of New Jersey. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Joseph H. Millard, of Nebraska. Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi. Thomas M. Patterson, of Colorado. Canadian Relations. Charles W. Fulton, of Oregon. John F. Dryden, of New Jersey. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Charles W. Fairbanks, of Indiana. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. William A. Clark, of Montana. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Census. Joseph V. Quarles, of Wisconsin. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Thomas C. Platt, of New York. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Louis E. McComas, of Maryland. Joseph R. Burton, of Kansas. Thomas Kearns, of Utah. Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana. James P. Taliaferro, of Florida. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. Joseph W, Bailey, of Texas. Civil Service and Retvenchment. George C. Perkins, of California. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia. Thomas C. Platt, of New York. Joseph H. Millard, of Nebraska, William B. Bate, of Tennessee. Fred T. Dubois, of Idaho. Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas, 158 Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. John Kean, of New Jersey. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire, Joseph R. Burton, of Kansas. J. Frank Allee, of Delaware. Charles W. Fulton, of Oregon. Reed Smoot, of Utah, Congressional Directory. Claims. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. James P. Taliaferro, of Florida. Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi. Murphy J. Foster, 6f Louisiana. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Coast and Insular Survey. Levi Ankeny, of Washington. Addison G. Foster, of Washington. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. Charles W. Fairbanks, of Indiana. J. Frank Allee, of Delaware. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Coast Defenses. Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. Russell A. Alger, of Michigan. I,. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. Levi Ankeny, of Washington. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. William P. Frye, of Maine. Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Chauncey M. Depew, of New York. George C. Perkins, of California. Addison G. Foster, of Washington. Joseph V. Quarles, of Wisconsin. Russell A. Alger, of Michigan. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Asbury C. Latimer, of South Carolina. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. District of Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Addison G. Foster, of Washington. Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio. : Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia. Robert J, Gamble, of South Dakota. | | Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. James P. Taliaferro, of Florida. Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia. F. McL. Simmons, of North Carolina, Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Commerce. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia, Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia. Stephen R. Mallory, of Florida. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. Chester I. Long, of Kansas. C whan Relations. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi. James P. Taliaferro, of Florida. F. McL. Simmons, of North Carolina. Columbia. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Stephen R. Mallory, of Florida. EF. Mcl,. Simmons, of North Carolina. Fred T'. Dubois, of Idaho. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland, i ——— Senate Committees. 159 Education and Labor. Louis E. McComas, of Maryland. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. | John W. Daniel, of Virginia. Paris Gibson, of Montana. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Engrossed Bills. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Charles Dick, of Ohio. Enrolled Bills. - John F. Dryden, of New Jersey. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. | Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. I,. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. Reed Smoot, of Utah. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. Finance. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. William B. Allison, of Towa. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan. Thomas C. Platt, of New York. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. John C. Spooner, of Wisconsin. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Fisheries. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. Redfield Proctor, of Vermont. William P. Frye, of Maine. George C. Perkins, of California. Charles W. Fulton, of Oregon. Foreign Relations. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. William P. Frye, of Maine. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio. John C. Spooner, of Wisconsin. Charles W. Fairbanks, of Indiana. John Kean, of New Jersey. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. F. Mcl,. Simmons, of North Carolina. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Stephen R. Mallory, of Florida. Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. John T. Morgan, of Alabama, Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi. William A. Clark, of Montana. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Joseph R. Burton, of Kansas. Chauncey M. Depew, of New York. George C. Perkins, of California. Thomas Kearns, of Utah. Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. Levi Ankeny, of Washington, John T. Morgan, of Alabama. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Paris Gibson, of Montana. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina, 160 Congressional Directory. Geological Survey. Addison G. Foster, of Washington. Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia. Charles W. Fairbanks, of Indiana. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Immigration. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Charles W. Fairbanks, of Indiana. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. John F. Dryden, of New Jersey. Louis E. McComas, of Maryland. Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi. Thomas M. Patterson, of Colorado. Asbury C. Latimer, of South Carolina. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. Indian Affairs. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Thomas R. Bard, of California. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Chester I. Long, of Kansas. Williata P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. Fred T. Dubois, of Idaho. William A. Clark, of Montana. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Indian Depredations. Charles Dick, of Ohio. Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Charles H. Dietrich, of Nebraska. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Chester I. Long, of Kansas. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Edmund W. Pettus, of Alabama. Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi. Intevoceanic Canals. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Thomas C. Platt, of New York. Joseph H. Millard, of Nebraska. Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota. John F. Dryden, of New Jersey. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. Edward W. Carmack, of Tennessee. James P. Taliaferro, of Florida. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Interstate Commerce. Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. John Kean, of New Jersey. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa. Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Joseph H. Millard, of Nebraska. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi. Edward W. Carmack, of Tennessee. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Thomas R. Bard, of California. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. Thomas Kearns, of Utah. Charles H. Dietrich, of Nebraska. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. Levi Ankeny, of Washington. Charles W, Fulton, of Oregon. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Thomas M. Patterson, of Colorado. Paris Gibson, of Montana. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Senate Committees. 161 | Judiciary. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. : Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Edmund W. Pettus, of Alabama. | Charles W. Fairbanks, of Indiana. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Joseph C. S. Blackburn,of Kentucky. | Louis E. McComas, of Maryland. Thomas M. Patterson, of Colorado. Chauncey M. Depew, of New York. | John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. John C, Spooner, of Wisconsin. b Library. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. William A. Clark, of Montana. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. | Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. John F. Dryden, of New Jersey. Manufactures. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Paris Gibson, of Montana. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. | Asbury C. Latimer, of South Carolina. J. Frank Allee, of Delaware. Military Affairs. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. William B. Bate, of Tennessee. Redfield Proctor, of Vermont. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Edmund W. Pettus, of Alabaina. Joseph V. Quarles, of Wisconsin. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. h | it | Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia. | | Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio. | Russell A. Alger, of Michigan. Mines and Mining. Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. William A. Clark, of Montana. Thomas Kearns, of Utah. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Charles Dick, of Ohio. | Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. William B. Bate, of Tennessee. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa. Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana. Joseph H. Millard, of Nebraska. Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. : ) Naval Affairs. | Eugene Hale, of Maine. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. George C. Perkins, of California. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Thomas C. Platt, of New York. Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan, Charles Dick, of Ohio. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. J. Frank Allee, of Delaware. Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana. Edward W. Carmack, of Tennessee, William B. Allison, of Towa. | William J. Stone, of Missouri, Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania. | 58-3D—2D ED——II i es ee A i um ta ie 162 Congressional Directory. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio. Chauncey M. Depew, of New York. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Addison G. Foster, of Washington. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Thomas Kearns, of Utah. Joseph R. Burton, of Kansas. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Stephen R. Mallory, of Florida. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. William A. Clark, of Montana. Pacific Railroads. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa. William P. Frye, of Maine. William M. Stewart, of Nevada. Joseph H. Millard, of Nebraska. Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. James P. Taliaferro, of Florida. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. Asbury C. Latimer,. of South Carolina. Patents. Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota. Louis E. McComas, of Maryland. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Stephen R. Mallory, of Florida. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Asbury C. Latimer, of South Carolina. Pensions. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia. Addison G. Foster, of Washington. Joseph R. Burton, of Kansas. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. Russell A. Alger, of Michigan. I,. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. Reed Smoot, of Utah. James P. Taliaferro, of Florida. Thomas M. Patterson, of Colorado. Edward W. Carmack, of Tennessee. Paris Gibson, of Montana. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Philippines. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Eugene Hale, of Maine. Redfield Proctor, of Vermont. Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana. Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan. Louis E. McComas, of Maryland. Charles H. Dietrich, of Nebraska. Chester I. Long, of Kansas. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Fred T. Dubois, of Idaho. Edward W. Carmack, of Tennessee. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Fost-Offices and Post-Roads. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa. Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. Redfield Proctor, of Vermont, Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan. Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia. Joseph R. Burton, of Kansas. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. James P. Taliaferro, of Florida. F. McL. Simmons, of North Carolina. Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Printing. Thomas C. Platt, of New York. Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia. | Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland. Private Land Claims. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana. Edmund W. Pettus, of Alabama. Eugene Hale, of Maine. John Kean, of New Jersey. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. Joseph R. Burton, of Kansas. —— Th, Lom - - —= wp ps { yr Senate Committees. Privileges and Elections. Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan. Louis E. McComas, of Maryland. Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio. Chauncey M. Depew, of New York. Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania. Edmund W. Pettus, of Alabama. Fred T. Dubois, of Idaho. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Public Buildings and Grounds. Charles W. Fairbanks, of Indiana. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia. Joseph V. Quarles, of Wisconsin. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. F. Mc. Simmons, of North Carolina. Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Asbury C. Latimer, of South Carolina. Public Health and National Quarantine. John T. Morgan, of Alabama. Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana. Stephen R. Mallory, of Florida. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. John C. Spooner, of Wisconsin. Chauncey M. Depew, of New York. I. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. Chester I. Long, of Kansas. Public Lands. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Thomas R. Bard, of California. Thomas Kearns, of Utah. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. Joseph R. Burton, of Kansas. Charles H. Dietrich, of Nebraska. Charles W, Fulton, of Oregon. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Samuel D. McEnery, of Iouisiana. Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi. Paris Gibson, of Montana. Fred T. Dubois, of Idaho. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Railroads. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. Thomas R. Bard, of California. J. Frank Allee, of Delaware. Levi Ankeny, of Washington. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Fdmund W. Pettus, of Alabama. Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi. Edward W. Carmack, of Tennessee. Revision of the Laws of the United States. Chauncey M. Depew, of New York. Redfield Proctor, of Vermont. Charles W. Fulton, of Oregon. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. Chester I. Long, of Kansas. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. Stephen R. Mallory, of Florida. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Thomas M. Patterson, of Colorado. Revolutionary Claims. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. William B. Bate, of Tennessee. Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut. Russell A. Alger, of Michigan. I. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. Rules. John C. Spooner, of Wisconsin. Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. | Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. | Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. | Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. 163 | 164 Congressional Directory. : f | Territories. Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana. William B. Bate, of Tennessee. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Thomas M. Patterson, of Colorado. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Thomas R. Bard, of California. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. John Kean, of New Jersey. Charles Dick, of Ohio, Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. . | Edmund W. Pettus, of Alabama. EX Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. George C. Perkins, of California. Fred T. Dubois, of Idaho. I. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. J. Frank Allee, of Delaware. University of the United States. Chester I. Long, of Kansas. Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia. | William P. Frye, of Maine. Edward W. Carmack, of Tennessee. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Joseph C. S. Blackburn, of Kentucky. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. | Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. John F. Dryden, of New Jersey. William B, Allison, of Iowa. SELECT COMMITTEES. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. William B. Allison, of Iowa. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Departments. Edmund W. Pettus, of Alabama. | Chester I. Long, of Kansas. : William B. Bate, of Tennessee. Examination and Disposition of Documents. | Russell A. Alger, of Michigan. John Kean, of New Jersey. Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. SSS — | William B. Bate, of Tennessee. Charles H. Dietrich, of Nebraska. Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota. ” Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan. Industrial Expositions. 2 W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. John W. Danigl, of Virginia. Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut. Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri. Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. | Edward W. Carmack, of Tennessee. | Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Paris Gibson, of Montana. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. Russell A. Alger, of Michigan. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Charles W, Fulton, of Oregon. Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at Washington. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. William A. Clark, of Montana. Joseph H. Millard, of Nebraska. William P. Frye, of Maine. Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana. J. Frank Allee, of Delaware. | | | | —4 — Senate Committees. 165 Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands. Charles H. Dietrich, of Nebraska. | John T. Morgan, of Alabama. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. National Banks. Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana. Paris Gibson, of Montana. Thomas Kearns, of Utah. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Levi Ankeny, of Washington. { Standards, Weights, and Measures. Reed Smoot, of Utah. | William A. Clark, of Montana. Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa. | James B. McCreary, of Kentucky. Chester I. Long, of Kansas. | Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. John W. Daniel, of Virginia. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Joseph V. Quarles, of Wisconsin. L. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. Ventilation and Acoustics. I,. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. ee , Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire, | —— ———. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. | Woman Suffrage. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. James H. Berry, of Arkansas. Thomas R. Bard, of California. John H. Mitchell, of Oregon. 166 Congressional Directory. LIST OF UNITED STATES SENATORS, SHOWING THE COM- MITTEES OF WHICH THEY ARE MEMBERS. AIDRIC WirriaMm P. 1S Cre AT TISONG: ver vah nos ANRENY is tievsnn vn BAILEY © 0s e500 0s cee sn FRYE, President of the Senate pro tempore. (December 15, 1904.) Finance, chairman, | Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Cuban Relations. Interstate Commerce. Rules. Examination and Disposition of Documents (Select), . chairman. Coast Defenses. Commerce. Industrial Expositions (Select). Military Affairs. Pensions. Revolutionary Claims. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Execu- | tive Departments, chairman. | Claims. Coast and Insular Survey. Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at Washington (Select). Manufactures. Railroads. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Appropriations, chairman. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select). Finance. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Execu- tive Departments. University of the United States. | Coast and Insular Survey, chairman. Coast Defenses. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Irrigation. National Banks (Select). Railroads. Q Woman Suffrage (Select), chairman. Foreign Relations. Indian Depredations. Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at Washington (Select). Judiciary. Railroads. Rules. Canadian Relations. Census. Finance. Fisheries. 4 Irrigation. Privileges and Elections. Revision of the Laws of the United States. Alphabetical List of Senators and Committees. 167 BATE Ventilation and Acoustics (Select), chairman. Coast Defenses. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Pensions. Public Health and National Quarantine. Revolutionary Claims. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select). Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. BARD: ode Irrigation, chairman, Indian Affairs. Public Lands. Railroads. Territories. Woman Suffrage (Select). BATE....c... cisions The Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select), chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart- ments. Military Affairs. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Revolutionary Claims. Territories. BERRY... oa Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select), chairman. Appropriations. Coast and Insular Survey. Commerce. Indian Depredations. Public Lands. Woman Suffrage (Select). = BEVERIDGE. ....... Territories, chairman. Indian Depredations. Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at Washington (Select). Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Philippines. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Privileges and Elections. BIACRBURN ...........; Census. Judiciary. Military Affairs. Naval Affairs. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. University of the United States. BURNIAM ........ Cuban Relations, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Claims. - Education and Labor. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Pensions. Territories. University of the United States. BURROWS............... Privileges and Elections, chairman, Finance. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select). Naval Affairs. Philippines. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. 168 Congressional Directory. BUREON. aeons Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game, chairman, Census. Claims. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Pensions. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Private Land Claims. Public Lands. CARMACK .........» Interoceanic Canals. Interstate Commerce. Industrial Expositions (Select). Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Pensions. Philippines. Railroads. University of the United States. CLAP. ah its Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service, chair- man. Claims. Cuban Relations. Education and Labor. Engrossed Bills. Indian Affairs. Industrial Expositions (Select). Interstate Commerce. Patents. CLARK, of Montana..... Canadian Relations. Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at Washington (Select). ; Library. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Standards, Weights, and Measures (Select). CLARK, of Wyoming .... Railroads, chairman. Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. Judiciary. Public Lands. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. CLARKE, of Arkansas. ... Canadian Relations. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Immigration. Mines and Mining. Privileges and Elections. Territories. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. CLAY oo i aia Coast and Insular Survey. Coast Defenses. Commerce. Manufactures. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. University of the United States. COCRRELY, ....ov veneis Engrossed Bills, chairman. Appropriations. Geological Survey. Industrial Expositions (Select). Military Affairs. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Rules. Alphabetical List of Senators and Committees. 169 CULBERSON... ........ CUI oOM... ie Reed DIETRICH... os DILLINGHAM... eaves DOLLIVER...,..-. Industrial Expositions (Select), chairman. Canadian Relations. To Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. Coast and Insular Survey. Coast Defenses. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Judiciary. Philippines. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Health and National Quarantine. Foreign Relations, chairman. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select). Appropriations. Interstate Commerce. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select), chairman. Appropriations. Fducation and Labor. Finance. Industrial Expositions (Select). Revision of the Laws of the United States. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Revision of the Laws of the United States, chairman, Commerce. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Judiciary. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Privileges and Elections. Public Health and National Quarantine. Indian Depredations, chairman. Engrossed Bills. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Territories. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands (Select), chairman. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select). Indian Depredations. Irrigation. Philippines. Public Lands. Immigration, chairman. District of Columbia. Indian Depredations. Privileges and Elections. Territories. University of the United States. Pacific Railroads, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Education and Labor. Interstate Commerce. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Standards, Weights, and Measures (Select). 170 DRYDEN . ea: DUBOIS, i. ova vii PAIRDANES..c. 0c. ico PORARER avis FOSTER, of Louisiana . .. FOSTER, of Washington. . BULAON ivan Congressional Directory. Enrolled Bills, chairman. Canadian Relations. Immigration. Interoceanic Canals. Library. University of the United States. Civil Service and Retrenchment. District of Columbia. Indian Affairs. Philippines. Privileges and Elections. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. ® Interstate Commerce, chairman, Appropriatious. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Commerce. Geological Survey Printing. Rules. Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. Canadian Relations. Coast and Insular Survey Foreign Relations. Geological Survey. Immigration. Judiciary. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico, chairman. District of Columbia. Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. Claims. Coast Defenses. Commerce. Enrolled Bills. Interstate Commerce. Patents. University of the United States. Geological Survey, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Coast and Insular Survey. Commerce. District of Columbia. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. ou Pensions. A Commerce, chairman. Fisheries. Foreign Relations. Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at Washington (Select). | Pacific Railroads. | University of the United States. | Canadian Relations, chairman. Claims. Fisheries. ; Industrial Exposition (Select). | Irrigation. - Public Lands. Revision of the Laws of the United States. Alphabetical List of Senators and Committees. 171 GALLINGER .... oss soia GAMBLE. . GIBSON... ees cs ec es ens eee HANSBROUGH. .... ..s vv. HAWLEY . HEVBURN District of Columbia, chairman. Appropriations. Commerce. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. Ventilation and Acoustics (Select). Transportation Routes to the Seaboard, chairman. District of Columbia. Indian Affairs. Private Land Claims. Public Lands. Ventilation and Acoustics (Select). Education and Labor. Forest Reservations and Protection of Game. Industrial Expositions (Select). Irrigation. Manufactures. National Banks (Select). Pensions. Public Lands. District of Columbia. Finance. Interoceanic Canals. Irrigation. Library. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Printing. Naval Affairs, chairman, Appropriations. Canadian Relations. Census. Philippines. Private Land Claims. Public Lands, chairman, Agriculture and Forestry. District of Columbia. Finance. Industrial Expositions (Select). Irrigation. Library. Military Affairs, chairman. Coast and Insular Survey. Coast Defenses. Industrial Expositions (Select). Railroads. Manufactures, chairman. Coast Defenses. Geological Survey. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands (Select). Mines and Mining. Public Health and National Quarantine. Revision of the Laws of the United States. 172 Congressional Directory. HOPRINS:. ..5 eens Fisheries, chairman. Commerce. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Cuban Relations. Enrolled Bills. Examination and Disposition of Documents (Select). Interoceanic Canals. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Privileges and Elections. KBAN:......-... ioe Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, chairman. : Claims. Examination and Disposition of Documents (Select). Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Private Land Claims. Territories. KEARNS... ..... on. National Banks (Select), chairman. Census. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Irrigation. Mines and Mining. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Public Lands. RIITBEDGE o.oo. ovs Patents, chairman. Cuban Relations. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select). Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Interoceanic Canals. Pacific Railroads. BNOX tn. vais Coast Defenses, chairman. Indian Affairs. Interoceanic Canals. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Privileges and Elections. v LATIMER... -. Agriculture and Forestry. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Immigration. Manufactures. Pacific Railroads. Patents. Public Buildings and Grounds. LODGE ..... cciversvins vs Philippines, chairman. Civil Service and Retrenchment. -Foreign Relations. Immigration. Industrial Expositions (Select). Rules, TONG. viens University of the United States, chairman. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart- ments. Indian Affairs. Indian Depredations. Philippines. Public Health and National Quarantine. Revision of the Laws of the United States. Standards, Weights, and Measures (Select). Alphabetical List of Senators and Committees. 173 McComas..... ......... Education and Tabor, chairman. Census. Immigration. Judiciary. Patents. i Philippines. Privileges and Elections. McCREARY............. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Foreign Relations. Immigration. Industrial Expositions (Select). Pacific Railroads. | : Philippines. | Standards, Weights, and Measures (Select). { McCUMBER ............. Pensions, chairman. Census. Indian Affairs. Manufactures. Public Buildings and Grounds. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select). | | McENERY............ Census. | Fisheries. | Mississippi River and its Tributaries. National Banks (Select). Naval Affairs. : Private Land Claims. Public Health and National Quarantine. Public Lands. Claims. Immigration. Indian Depredations. ! Interstate Commerce. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. ; Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Public Lands. | | | MCLAURIN. co.cc ns Civil Service and Retrenchment. | ‘ | | MATYORY .. over oases Commerce. District of Columbia. Fisheries. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Patents. : Public Health and National Quarantine. Revision of the Laws of the United States. : MARTIN. vein ivan: Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia, f chairman. Claims. Commerce. District of Columbia. Indian Depredations. Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at Washington (Select). | Naval Affairs. | MU TARD c.occneneidecn Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at | Washington (Select), chairman. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. | | Civil Service and Retrenchment. | \ Mississippi River and its Tributaries. ; . Interoceanic Canals. | Interstate Commerce. Pacific Railroads. 174 MITeHELL,. ....-.c MORGAN NELSON. DR NEWILANDS , cc---vcvei. = OVERMAN... oo ive. PATTERSON... i. PENROSE Congressional Directory. Interoceanic Canals, chairman. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select). Cuban Relations. Judiciary. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Woman Suffrage (Select). Agriculture and Forestry. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. . Cuban Relations. Finance. Foreign Relations. Geological Survey. Railroads. Public Health and National Quarantine, chairman. Coast and Insular Survey. Foreign Relations. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Indian Affairs. Interoceanic Canals. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands (Select). Pacific Railroads. Mississippi River and its Tributaries, chairman. Commerce. Judiciary. Public Lands. Railroads. Territories. Interstate Commerce. Education and Labor. Geological Survey. Industrial Expositions. Irrigation. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Territories. Claims. Fisheries. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Indian Affairs. Pensions. Privileges and Elections. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Immigration. Irrigation. Judiciary. Revision of the Laws of the United States. Post-Offices and Post-Roads, chairman. Commerce. Education and Tabor. Finance. Immigration. National Banks (Select). Naval Affairs. JTree aig PERKINS . PETIUS.. Alphabetical List of Senators and Committees. es es es sees ee an ee es se se ee ee ee Pram, of Connecticut .. Pratt, of New York .... Proc1Ior QUARLES SIMMONS ees sees ese eee se ces es ee see. I Civil Service and Retrenchment, chairman. Appropriations. Commerce. Fisheries. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game, Naval Affairs. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. 175 Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart- ments, chairman. Indian Depredations. Judiciary. Military Affairs. Private Land Claims. Privileges and Elections. Railroads. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Judiciary, chairman. Cuban Relations. Finance. Revolutionary Claims. Printing, chairman. Census. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Finance. Interoceanic Canals. Naval Affairs. Agriculture and Forestry, chairman, Fisheries. Military Affairs. Philippines. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Revision of the Laws of the United States. Census, chairman, Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Military Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select). Mines and Mining, chairman. District of Columbia. Military Affairs. Pensions. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. Agriculture and Forestry. Coast Defenses. Cuban Relations. District of Columbia. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. © ss ss ress cose eee sees sess ss es ee TAILIAFERRO ses 00s eee se sees Congressional Directory. Standards, Weights, and Measures (Select), chairman. Claims. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Indian Depredations. Patents. Pensions. Railroads. Rules, chairman. Finance. Foreign Relations. Judiciary. Public Health and National Quarantine. Indian Affairs, chairman, Claims. District of Columbia. Irrigation. Mines and Mining. Pacific Railroads. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select). Commerce. Education and Labor. Indian Affairs. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Philippines. Public Buildings and Grounds. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. Census. Coast Defenses. Cuban Relations. Interoceanic Canals. Pacific Railroads. Pensions. Post-Offices and Post-Roads. Private Land Claims, chairman. Appropriations. Cuban Relations. Finance. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select). Indian Affairs. Rules. Revolutionary Claims, chairman. Appropriations. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Interstate Commerce. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Relations with Canada. Claims, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Irrigation. Military Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Ce ei Alphabetical List of Senators and Committees. 177 WEIMORE. 50s Library, chairman. Appropriations. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Public Buildings and Grounds. University of the United States. Woman Suffrage (Select). 58-3D—2D ED——1I2 1783 Congressional Directory. COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE. STANDING COMMITTEES. (December 19, 1904.) Accounts. Charles Q. Hildebrant, of Ohio. - James A. Hughes, of West Virginia. Joseph V. Graff, of Illinois. Frank D. Currier, of New Hampshire. H. Burd Cassel, of Pennsylvania. William H. Draper, of New York. Charles I,. Bartlett, of Georgia. Hugh A. Dinsmore, of Arkansas. Martin Emerich, of Illinois. Agriculture. James W. Wadsworth, of New York. E. Stevens Henry, of Connecticut. Charles F. Wright, of Pennsylvania. Gilbert N. Haugen, of Iowa. Charles F. Scott, of Kansas. Kittredge Haskins, of Vermont. Joseph V. Graff, of Illinois. George W. Cromer, of Indiana. William Iorimer, of Illinois. Franklin E. Brooks, of Colorado. Henry C. Adams, of Wisconsin. Bernard S. Rodey, of New Mexico. John Lamb, of Virginia. Sydney J. Bowie, of Alabama. Albert S. Burleson, of Texas. Asbury F. Lever, of South Carolina. Phanor Breazeale, of Louisiana. John W. Cassingham, of Ohio. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Nehemiah D. Sperry, of Connecticut. Justin D. Bowersock, of Kansas. | Amos I,. Allen, of Maine. Stephen R. Morgan, of Ohio. William H. Draper, of New York. Henry Kirke Porter, of Pennsylvania. | John I,. Burnett, of Alabama. George H. Lindsay, of New York. | James M. Gudger, jr., of North Carolina. Harvey C. Garber, of Ohio. John M. Pinckney, of Texas. Appropriations. James A. Hemenway, of Indiana. Henry H. Bingham, of Pennsylvania. Henry C. Van Voorhis, of Ohio. James T. McCleary, of Minnesota. T,ucius N. Littauer, of New York. Walter P. Brownlow, of Tennessee. Washington Gardner, of Michigan. Elmer J. Burkett, of Nebraska. Frederick H. Gillett, of Massachusetts. Walter I. Smith, of Iowa. Benjamin F. Marsh, of Illinois. Leonidas F. Livingston, of Georgia. Rice A. Pierce, of Tennessee. Meecenas FE. Benton, of Missouri. George W. Taylor, of Alabama. Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama. Stephen Brundidge, jr., of Arkansas. 8 So a J p— oh House Committees. 179 Banking and Currency. Charles N. Fowler, of New Jersey. George W. Prince, of Illinois. William A. Calderhead, of Kansas. William C. Lovering, of Massachusetts. William H. Douglas, of New York. Llewellyn Powers, of Maine. Burleigh F. Spalding, of North Dakota. Henry McMorran, of Michigan. Capell I.. Weems, of Ohio. George D. McCreary, of Pennsylvania. Milton J. Daniels, of California. John R. Thayer, of Massachusetts. Elijah B. Lewis, of Georgia. Lemuel P. Padgett, of Tennessee. Charles IL. Bartlett, of Georgia. Arsené P. Pujo, of Louisiana. Carter Glass, of ‘Virginia. Census. Edgar D. Crumpacker, of Indiana. Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine. James A. Hughes, of West Virginia. George A. Pearre, of Maryland. H. Burd Cassel, of Pennsylvania. Charles T. Dunwell, of New York. James Kennedy, of Ohio. Butler Ames, of Massachusetts. Francis M. Griffith, of Indiana. James Hay, of Virginia. Albert S. Burleson, of Texas. Gilbert B. Patterson, of North Carolina. Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Claims. Joseph V. Graff, of Illinois. Lot Thomas, of Iowa. Thomas S. Butler, of Pennsylvania. Robert M. Nevin, of Ohio. David J. Foster, of Vermont. James M. Miller, of Kansas. Charles Q. Tirrell, of Massachusetts. Joseph Howell, of Utah. Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York. Claude Kitchin, of North Carolina. South Trimble, of Kentucky. D. Linn Gooch, of Kentucky. William S. McNary, of Massachusetts. Jack Beall, of Texas. Martin Emerich, of Illinois. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. James H. Southard, of Ohio. Justin D. Bowersock, of Kansas. Thomas Hedge, of Towa. Arthur I. Bates, of Pennsylvania. George W. Cromer, of Indiana. John W. Dwight, of New York. James W. Brown, of Pennsylvania. Solomon R. Dresser, of Pennsylvania. George J. Smith, of New York. Ira W. Wood, of New Jersey. Joseph R. Knowland, of California. Charles F. Cochran, of Missouri. John W. Gaines, of Tennessee. Fzekiel S. Candler, of Mississippi. John S. Rhea, of Kentucky. Timothy D. Sullivan, of New York. Thomas W. Hardwick, of Georgia. John F. Wilson, of Arizona. District of Columbia. Joseph W. Babcock, of Wisconsin. Samuel W. Smith, of Michigan. Amos I. Allen, of Maine. James W. Wadsworth, of New York. Edward De V. Morrell, of Pennsylvania. Samuel I,. Powers, of Massachusetts. Stephen R. Morgan, of Ohio. Campbell Slemp, of Virginia. Charles R. Davis, of Minnesota. Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas. William H. Wiley, of New Jersey. Adolph Meyer, of Louisiana. William S. Cowherd, of Missouri. Thetus W. Sims, of Tennessee. James McAndrews, of Illinois. Edward W. Pou, of North Carolina. D. Linn Gooch, of Kentucky. 180 Congressional Directory. Education. George N. Southwick, of New York. Charles Q. Tirrell, of Massachusetts. Thomas B. Kyle, of Ohio. Elmer J. Burkett, of Nebraska. Burton I,. French, of Idaho. Reuben O. Moon, of Pennsylvania. William E. Humphrey, of Washington. W. Aubrey Thomas, of Ohio. Willard D. Vandiver, of Missouri. Edwin Y. Webb, of North Carolina. Ira Fdgar Rider, of New York. Morgan C. Fitzpatrick, of Tennessee. Oscar W. Gillespie, of Texas. Election of President, Vice-President, and Representatives in Congress. Joseph H. Gaines, of West Virginia. Cyrus A. Sulloway, of New Hampshire. Henry S. Boutell, of Illinois. Binger Hermann, of Oregon. Daniel F. Lafean, of Pennsylvania. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Franklin E. Brooks, of Colorado. Charles T. Dunwell, of New York. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. Phanor Breazeale, of Louisiana. John S. Rhea, of Kentucky. Oscar W. Gillespie, of Texas. Thomas W. Hardwick, of Georgia. Elections No. 1. James R. Mann, of Illinois. Llewellyn Powers, of Maine. Charles I. Knapp, of New York. Joseph H. Gaines, of West Virginia. Arthur I,. Bates, of Pennsylvania. Olin H. Young, of Michigan. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. Eaton J. Bowers, of Mississippi. Scott Field, of Texas. Elections No. 2. Marlin KE. Olmsted, of Pennsylvania. James M. Miller, of Kansas. Frank D. Currier, of New Hampshire. John W. Dwight, of New York. Capell I. Weems, of Ohio. Frederick Landis, of Indiana. Joshua F. C. Talbott, of Maryland. Adam M. Byrd, of Mississippi. ; John A. Sullivan, of Massachusetts. Elections No. 3. Michael E. Driscoll, of New York. Kittredge Haskins, of Vermont. H. Burd Cassel, of Pennsylvania. James Kennedy, of Ohio. John A. Sterling, of Illinois. Benjamin P. Birdsall, of Iowa. Frank A. McLain, of Mississippi. . Choice B. Randell, of Texas. Joseph T. Johnson, of South Carolina. Enrolled Bills. Frank C. Wachter, of Maryland. William W. Wilson, of Illinois. Frederick Landis, of Indiana. George A. Castor, of Pennsylvania. James T. Lloyd, of Missouri. Joseph T. Johnson, of South Carolina. Edward J. Livernash, of California. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Charles F. Wright, of Pennsylvania. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. William E. Humphrey, of Washington. Charles R. Davis, of Minnesota. | Henry D. Flood, cf Virginia. | James N. Kehoe, of Kentucky. | Sydney J. Bowie, of Alabama. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. William A. Calderhead, of Kansas. Eben W. Martin, of South Dakota. Henry Kirke Porter, of Pennsylvania. John J. McCarthy, of Nebraska. | Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York. Charles F. Cochran, of Missouri. | John H. Stephens, of Texas. | Tr— — ey House Committees. 181 Expenditures in the Interior Deparviment. Edward S. Minor, of Wisconsin. | George P. Foster, of Illinois. Blackburn B. Dovener, of West Virginia. = Robert N. Page, of North Carolina. George R. Patterson, of Pennsylvania. | John M. Pinckney, of Texas. Henry C. Adams, of Wisconsin. Expenditures in the Navy Department. William S. Greene, of Massachusetts. Choice B. Randell, of Texas. Joseph W. Fordney, of Michigan. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. Ernest F. Acheson, of Pennsylvania. Theodore G. Croft, of South Carolina. Daniel F. Lafean, of Pennsylvania. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Irving P. Wanger, of Pennsylvania. Edward Robb, of Missouri. William H. Flack, of New York. George G. Gilbert, of Kentucky. George L. Lilley, of Connecticut. Carter Glass, of Virginia. George W. Cromer, of Indiana. Expenditures in the State Department. John H. Ketcham, of New York. Rufus E. Lester, of Georgia. David J. Foster, of Vermont. Claude Kitchin, of North Carolina. Robert Adams, jr., of Pennsylvania. John N. Garner, of Texas. W. Godfrey Hunter, of Kentucky. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Robert G. Cousins, of Iowa. John Lamb, of Virginia. Edward De V. Morrell, of Pennsylvania. | Harvey C. Garber, of Ohio. Philip Knopf, of Illinois. James M. Gudger, jr., of North Carolina. Ebenezer J. Hill, of Connecticut. Expenditures in the War Department. William R. Warnock, of Ohio. | George F. Burgess, of Texas. George P. Lawrence, of Massachusetts. | Dewitt C. Badger, of Ohio. J. Adam Bede, of Minnesota. Morgan C. Fitzpatrick, of Tennessee. Campbell Slemp, of Virginia. Expenditures on Public Buildings. James A. Hughes, of West Virginia. John H. Small, of North Carolina. James N. Gillett, of California. Harry I,. Maynard, of Virginia. Augustus P. Gardner, of Massachusetts. | South Trimble, of Kentucky. E. Stevens Henry, of Connecticut. Foreign Affairs. Robert R. Hitt, of Illinois. Hugh A. Dinsmore, of Arkansas. Robert Adams, jr., of Pennsylvania. William M. Howard, of Georgia. Robert G. Cousins, of Iowa. Albert S. Burleson, of Texas. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Townsend Scudder, of New York. Charles B. Landis, of Indiana. James N. Kehoe, of Kentucky. James Breck Perkins, of New York. Henry D. Flood, of Virginia. Jacob A. Beidler, of Ohio. David J. Foster, of Vermont. Theobold Otjen, of Wisconsin. Adin B. Capron, of Rhode Island. Nicholas Longworth, of Ohio. 182 Immigration and Naturalization. Benjamin F. Howell, of New Jersey. Robert Adams, jr., of Pennsylvania. William H. Douglas, of New York. Alvin Evans, of Pennsylvania. Augustus P. Gardner, of Massachusetts. Burton I,. French, of Idaho. Robert W. Bonynge, of Colorado. Congressional Directory. | Edward J. Livernash, of California. Jacob Ruppert, jr., of New York. Edward Robb, of Missouri. ! Allan Benny, of New Jersey. Indian Affairs. James S. Sherman, of New York. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. John FE. Lacey, of Iowa. Thomas I. Marshall, of North Dakota. Webster FE. Brown, of Wisconsin. Charles H. Burke, of South Dakota. Charles I,. Knapp, of New York. Binger Hermann, of Oregon. Charles B. Buckman, of Minnesota. Edmund H. Hinshaw, of Nebraska. Herschel M. Hogg, of Colorado. Bernard S. Rodey, of New Mexico. William T'. Zenor, of Indiana. John J. Fitzgerald, of New York. John Dougherty, of Missouri. James McAndrews, of Illinois. Charles C. Reid, of Arkansas. \ John H. Stephens, of Texas. Industrial Arts and Expositions. James A. Tawney, of Minnesota. James S. Sherman, of New York. Augustus P. Gardner, of Massachusetts. John J. Gardner, of New Jersey. Justin D. Bowersock, of Kansas. William A.Rodenberg, of Illinois. Joseph Howell, of Utah. Henry Kirke Porter, of Pennsylvania. Harry C. Woodyard, of West Virginia. Insular Affairs. Henry A. Cooper, of Wisconsin. James A. Tawney, of Minnesota. Edgar D. Crumpacker, of Indiana. Edward IL. Hamilton, of Michigan. Marlin E. Olmsted, of Pennsylvania. George W. Smith, of Illinois. William R. Warnock, of Ohio. James C. Needham, of California. Charles E. Fuller, of Illinois. Moses P. Kinkaid, of Nebraska. Amos R. Webber, of Ohio. Federico Degetau, of Porto Rico. | | Charles I. Bartlett, of Georgia. Harry I,. Maynard, of Virginia. Courtney W. Hamlin, of Missouri. | William J. Wynn, of Calitornia. | George S. Legare, of South Carolina. Francis B. Harrison, of New York. William A. Jones, of Virginia. John W. Maddox, of Georgia. James R. Williams, of Illinois. Malcolm R. Patterson, of Tennessee. James M. Robinson, of Indiana. Wilson S. Hill, of Mississippi. — Interstate and Foreign Commerce. William P. Hepburn, of Iowa. James S. Sherman, of New York. Irving P. Wanger, of Pennsylvania. James R. Mann, of Illinois. William C. Lovering, of Massachusetts. Fred. C. Stevens, of Minnesota. Charles H. Burke, of South Dakota. John J. Esch, of Wisconsin. Francis W. Cushman, of Washington. Thomas B. Kyle, of Ohio. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Robert C. Davey, of Louisiana. William C. Adamson, of Georgia. Dorsey W. Shackleford, of Missouri. William H. Ryan, of New York. William Richardson, of Alabama. William B. Lamar, of Florida. House Commylttees. ‘183 Invalid Pensions. Cyrus A. Sulloway, of New Hampshire. Henry R. Gibson, of Tennessee. Samuel W. Smith, of Michigan. William A. Calderhead, of Kansas. Elias Deemer, of Pennsylvania. Elias S. Holliday, of Indiana. W. Godfrey Hunter, of Kentucky. Thomas W. Bradley, of New York. Charles E. Fuller, of Illinois. | Robert W. Miers, of Indiana. Joseph B. Crowley, of Illinois. George H. Lindsay, of New York. John S. Snook, of Ohio. Alfred Lucking, of Michigan. Frank A. Hopkins, of Kentucky. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Frank W. Mondell, of Wyoming. William A. Reeder, of Kansas. Charles Q. Tirrell, of Massachusetts. John W. Dwight, of New York. Thomas F. Marshall, of North Dakota. Allen F. Cooper, of Pennsylvania. John N. Williamson, of Oregon. | Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama. | Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. | Clarence D. Van Duzer, of Nevada. | Theodore A. Bell, of California. Judiciary. John J. Jenkins, of Wisconsiu. Richard Wayne Parker, of New Jersey. De Alva S. Alexander, of New York. Vespasian Warner, of Illinois. Charles E. Littlefield, of Maine. Tot Thomas, of Iowa. Samuel I eland Powers, of Massachusetts. Robert M. Nevin, of Ohio. Henry W. Palmer, of Pennsylvania. George A. Pearre, of Maryland. James N. Gillett, of California. David A. De Armond, of Missouri. David H. Smith, of Kentucky. Henry D. Clayton, of Alabama. Robert I. Henry, of Texas. John S. Little, of Arkansas. William G. Brantley, of Georgia. Labor. John J. Gardner, of New Jersey. Richard Bartholdt, of Missouri. Samuel W. McCall, of Massachusetts. Edward B. Vreeland, of New York. David J. Foster, of Vermont. James P. Conner, of Iowa. Burleigh F. Spalding, of North Dakota. Herman P. Goebel, of Ohio. | Ben F. Caldwell, of Illinois. | George G. Gilbert, of Kentucky. | John W. Maddox, of Georgia. . William Randolph Hearst, of New York. | William Hughes, of New Jersey. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Richard Bartholdt, of Missouri. George W. Prince, of Illinois. Thomas Hedge, of Towa. William A. Rodenberg, of Illinois. George F. Huff, of Pennsylvania. Charles B. Buckman, of Minnesota. Allen F. Cooper, of Pennsylvania. William Connell, of Pennsylvania. Robert EF. Broussard, of I,ouisiana. Harry L. Maynard, of Virginia. Robert M. Wallace, of Arkansas. James J. Butler, of Missouri. Robert Bruce Macon, of Arkansas. The Library. James T. McCleary, of Minnesota. Samuel W. McCall, of Massachusetts, James P. Conner, of Iowa. James D. Richardson, of Tennessee. William M. Howard, of Georgia. 184 Congressional Directory. Manufactures. Joseph C. Sibley, of Pennsylvania. William S. Greene, of Massachusetts. Henry McMorran, of Michigan. Norton P. Otis, of New York. Amos H. Jackson, of Ohio. Willard D. Vandiver, of Missouri. Daniel F. Lafean, of Pennsylvania. | Martin Emerich, of Illinois. Charles H. Weisse, of Wisconsin, John T. Hunt, of Missouri. Marcus C. L. Kline, of Pennsylvania. Theodore G. Croft, of South Carolina. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Charles H. Grosvenor, of Ohio. Edward S. Minor, of Wisconsin. William S. Greene, of Massachusetts. Fred. C. Stevens, of Minnesota. Joseph W. Fordney, of Michigan. Frank C. Wachter, of Maryland. Charles E. Littlefield, of Maine. William E. Humphrey, of Washington. William H. Flack, of New York. Benjamin P. Birdsall, of Towa. William W. Wilson, of Illinois. Thomas Spight, of Mississippi. John H. Small, of North Carolina. Robert W. Davis, of Florida. Allan I.. McDermott, of New Jersey. Alfred Lucking, of Michigan. Joseph A. Goulden, of New York. Mileage. William A. Reeder, of Kansas. William H. Jackson, of Maryland. William H. Flack, of New York. Elijah B. Lewis, of Georgia. James J. Butler, of Missouri. Military Affairs. John A. T. Hull, of Iowa. John H. Ketcham, of New York. Richard Wayne Parker, of New Jersey. Adin B. Capron, of Rhode Island. Fred. C. Stevens, of Minnesota. Frank W. Mondell, of Wyoming. John J. Esch, of Wisconsin. George W. Prince, of Illinois. Elias S. Holliday, of Indiana. H. Olin Young, of Michigan. George R. Patterson, of Pennsylvania. Bird S. McGuire, of Oklahoma. William Sulzer, of New York. James Hay, of Virginia. James IL. Slayden, of Texas. Robert EF. Broussard, of Iouisiana. James W. Denny, of Maryland. Militia. Edward De V. Morrell, of PRansyleanis, John A. T. Hull, of Towa. Joseph H. Gaines, of West Virginia. George W. Smith, of Illinois. Halvor Steenerson, of Minnesota. Butler Ames, of Massachusetts. William O. Smith, of Pennsylvania. William Aubrey Thomas, of Ohio. Joseph B. Crowley, of Illinois. Jacob Ruppert, jr., of New York. Ariosto A. Wiley, of Alabama. Edward M. Bassett, of New York. John A. Keliher, of Massachusetts. Mines and Mining. Webster E. Brown, of Wisconsin. George R. Patterson, of Pennsylvania. Charles F. Scott, of Kansas. George F. Huff, of Pennsylvania. Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. John N. Williamson, of Oregon. Joseph Howell, of Utah. Robert W. Bonynge, of Colorado. Farish Carter Tate, of Georgia. John Dougherty, of Missouri. Augustus O. Stanley, of Kentucky. Frank E. Shober, of New York. J. Thomas Heflin, of Alabama. John F. Wilson, of Arizona. “ 8 “ House Committees. George Edmund Foss, of Illinois. Alston G. Dayton, of West Virginia. Henry C. Loudenslager, of New Jersey. Thomas S. Butler, of Pennsylvania. Sydney E. Mudd, of Maryland. Robert G. Cousins, of Iowa. Ernest W. Roberts, of Massachusetts. Fdward B. Vreeland, of New York. Abraham I,. Brick, of Indiana. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. George Alvin Loud, of Michigan. “w William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Michael E. Driscoll, of New York. William H. Jackson, of Maryland. Stephen R. Morgan, of Ohio. Theobold Otjen, of Wisconsin. Henry W. Palmer, of Pennsylvania. Moses P. Kinkaid, of Nebraska. | Sydney E. Mudd, of Maryland. v Milton J. Daniels, of California. Frank D. Currier, of New Hampshire. Norton P. Otis, of New York. : Solomon R. Dresser, of Pennsylvania. Amos H. Jackson, of Ohio. Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. | © Edmund H. Hinshaw, of Nebraska. ; William Connell, of Pennsylvania. Robert W. Bonynge, of Colorado. Henry C. Loudenslager, of New Jersey. i George R. Patterson, of Pennsylvania. William H. Draper, of New York. Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas. | Butler Ames, of Massachusetts. James W. Brown, of Pennsylvania. k Herschel M. Hogg, of Colorado. a ~ Nicholas Longworth, of Ohio. 185 Naval Affairs. Adolph Meyer, of Louisiana. Farish Carter Tate, of Georgia. John F. Rixey, of Virginia. William W. Kitchin, of North Carolina. Willard D. Vandiver, of Missouri. Martin J. Wade, of Iowa. Pacific Railroads. William J. Wynn, of California. James I. Slayden, of Texas. David E. Finley, of South Carolina. Robert Baker, of New York. Henry T. Rainey, of Illinois. John 1,ind, of Minnesota. Patents. William Sulzer, of New York. | George S. Legare, of South Carolina. Edwin Y. Webb, of North Carolina. ' Charles H. Dickerman, of Pennsylvania. \ Francis B. Harrison, of New York. | Pensions. William Richardson, of Alabama. Ariosto A. Wiley, of Alabama. Frank A. McLain, of Mississippi. Henry A. Houston, of Delaware. Wyatt Aiken, of South Carolina. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Jesse Overstreet, of Indiana. John J. Gardner, of New Jersey. Nehemiah D. Sperry, of Connecticut. Thomas Hedge, of Iowa. Joseph C. Sibley, of Pennsylvania. Howard M. Snapp, of Illinois. Herman P. Goebel, of Ohio. Halvor Steenerson, of Minnesota. William H. Stafford, of Wisconsin. Archibald B. Darragh, of Michigan. Victor Murdock, of Kansas. Jonah Kalanianaole, of Hawaii. John A. Moon, of Tennessee. James M. Griggs, of Georgia. William S. Cowherd, of Missouri. Frank E. Wilson, of New York. David E. Finley, of South Carolina. Theodore F. Kluttz, of North Carolina. 186 Congressional Directory. Printing. Charles B. Landis, of Indiana. James B. Perkins, of New York. Farish C. Tate, of Georgia. Private Land Claims. George W. Smith, of Illinois. Alvin Evans, of Pennsylvania. Charles Q. Hildebrant, of Ohio. Thomas F. Marshall, of North Dakota. Francis W. Cushman, of Washington. George J. Smith, of New York. George A. Castor, of Pennsylvania. Bird S. McGuire, of Oklahoma. William A. Jones, of Virginia. George G. Gilbert, of Kentucky. William R. Smith, of Texas. Robert M. Wallace, of Arkansas. Wyatt Aiken, of South Carolina. Charles H. Weisse, of Wisconsin. Public Buildings and Grounds. Charles W. Gillet, of New York. Richard Bartholdt, of Missouri. Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine. Benjamin F. Howell, of New Jersey. James P. Conner, of Iowa. Eben W. Martin, of South Dakota. Edward S. Minor, of Wisconsin. William A. Rodenberg, of Illinois. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. William G. Brantley, of Georgia. Charles R. Thomas, of North Carolina. Robert W. Miers, of Indiana. Morris Sheppard, of Texas.. Robert B. Scarborough, of South Carolina. Public Lands. John F. Lacey, of Towa. Frank W. Mondell, of Wyoming. James M. Miller, of Kansas. James C. Needham, of California. Eben W. Martin, of South Dakota. Joseph W. Fordney, of Michigan. Andrew J. Volstead, of Minnesota. Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. Philip Knopf, of Illinois. George Shiras III, of Pennsylvania. John J. McCarthy, of Nebraska. Bernard S. Rodey, of New Mexico. Francis M. Griffith, of Indiana. John I,. Burnett, of Alabama. | George P. Foster, of Illinois. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. Ezekiel S. Candler, jr., of Mississippi. John Lind, of Minnesota. Railways and Canals. James H. Davidson, of Wisconsin. Ernest W. Roberts, of Massachusetts. Elias Deemer, of Pennsylvania. Charles I. Knapp, of New York. George F. Huff, of Pennsylvania. Harry C. Woodyard, of West Virginia. Allen F. Cooper, of Pennsylvania. Andrew J. Volstead, of Minnesota. John L. Burnett, of Alabama. Dewitt C. Badger, of Ohio. Joseph H. Shull, of Pennsylvania. John N. Garner, of Texas. Reform in the Civil Service. Frederick H. Gillett, of Massachusetts. John F. Lacey, of Iowa. Charles N. Fowler, of New Jersey. Justin D. Bowersock, of Kansas. James R. Mann, of Illinois. William O. Smith, of Pennsylvania. Amos I. Allen, of Maine. Jacob A. Beidler of Ohio, Edward W. Pou, of North Carolina. William T. Zenor, of Indiana. Edward M. Bassett, of New York. Robert G. Southall, of Virginia. Robert N. Page, of North Carolina. wi House Committees. 187 Revision of the Laws. Vespasian Warner, of Illinois. Henry R. Gibson, of Tennessee. Alston G. Dayton, of West Virginia. Alvin Evans, of Pennsylvania. Charles Q. Tirrell, of Massachusetts. Charles E. Littlefield, of Maine. Reuben O. Moon, of Pennsylvania. Charles T. Dunwell, of New York. Daniel IL. D. Granger, of Rhode Island. Robert Bruce Macon, of Arkansas. Robert Lamar, of Missouri. Swagar Sherley, of Kentucky. Harvey C. Garber, of Ohio. Rivers and Harbors. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Blackburn B. Dovener, of West Virginia. Roswell P. Bishop, of Michigan. Ernest F. Acheson, of Pennsylvania. De Alva S. Alexander, of New York. George P. Lawrence, of Massachusetts. James H. Davidson, of Wisconsin. James Mclachlan, of California. William Iorimer, of Illinois. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. J. Adam Bede, of Minnesota. Rufus E. Lester, of Georgia. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Stephen M. Sparkman, of Florida. Joseph KE. Ransdell, of Louisiana. George F. Burgess, of Texas. Benjamin G. Humphreys, of Mississippi. Rules. The Speaker. John Dalzell, of Pennsylvania. Charles H. Grosvenor, of Ohio. John S. Williams, of Mississippi. David A. De Armond, of Missouri. Territories. Edward L. Hamilton, of Michigan. Abraham I,. Brick, of Indiana. Adin B. Capron, of Rhode Island. George N. Southwick, of New York. Llewellyn Powers, of Maine. William H. Jackson, of Maryland. Burleigh F. Spalding, of North Dakota. George L. Lilley, of Connecticut. John A. Sterling, of Illinois. Bird S. McGuire, of Oklahoma. Bernard S. Rodey, of New Mexico. Jonah Kalanianaole, of Hawaii. John A. Moon, of Tennessee. James T. Lloyd, of Missouri. James M. Robinson, of Indiana. John R. Thayer, of Massachusetts. Gordon Russell, of Texas. Charles C. Reid, of Arkansas. John F. Wilson, of Arizona. Ventilation and Acoustics. Roswell P. Bishop, of Michigan. Jacob A. Beidler, of Ohio. Thomas W. Bradley, of New York. William Connell, of Pennsylvania. David H. Smith, of Kentucky. George H. Lindsay, of New York. Marcus C. L. Kline of Pennsylvania. War Claims. Thaddeus M. Mahon, of Pennsylvania. Henry R. Gibson, of Tennessee. Theobold Otjen, of Wisconsin. Gilbert N. Haugen, of Iowa. Kittredge Haskins, of Vermont. Elias S. Holliday, of Indiana. Burton I. French, of Idaho. James H. Southard, of Ohio. Thetus W. Sims, of Tennessee. Ben F. Caldwell, of Illinois. Thomas Spight, of Mississippi. Joseph T. Johnson, of South Carolina. Alexander W. Gregg, of Texas. 188 Congressional Directory. Ways and Means. Sereno E. Payne, of New York. John S. Williams, of Mississippi. John Dalzell, of Pennsylvania. Samuel M. Robertson, of Louisiana. Charles H. Grosvenor, of Ohio. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. James A. Tawney, of Minnesota. Sam Bronson Cooper, of Texas. Samuel W. McCall, of Massachusetts. Champ Clark, of Missouri. Joseph W. Babcock, of Wisconsin. William Bourke Cockran, of New York. Ebenezer J. Hill, of Connecticut. Henry S. Boutell, of Illinois. James E. Watson, of Indiana. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. James C. Needham, of California. | SELECT COMMITTEES. Joint Select Committee on Disposition of Useless Executive Papers. Arthur L. Bates, of Pennsylvania. | Edward M. Bassett, of New York. Relations of Members with the Fost-Office Department. Samuel W. McCall, of Massachusetts. Allan I,. McDermott, of New Jersey. Robert R. Hitt, of Illinois. Charles I.. Bartlett, of Georgia. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. William Richardson, of Alabama. em Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. 189 LIST OF MEMBERS AND DELEGATES OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, SHOWING THE STANDING COM- MITTEES OF WHICH THEY ARE MEMBERS. JosEPH G. CANNON, Speaker; Rules, chairman. (December 19, 1904.) ar ACHESON... oo denoted Expenditures in the Navy Department. Rivers and Harbors. Apawms, of Pennsylvania. Expenditures in the State Department. Foreign Affairs. Immigration and Naturalization. ADAMS, of Wisconsin. ... Agriculture. Expenditures in the Interior Department. ADAMSON: = ...0 on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. ATRIN oh fei vin ean Pensions. Private Land Claims. ATEXANDER .-.......-... Judiciary. Rivers and Harbors. ATTN Ce se Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. District of Columbia. Reform in the Civil Service. AMES or nT Census. ) Militia. Pensions. BARCOCK +... District of Columbia, chairman. Ways and Means. BADGER... ooh on Expenditures in the War Department. Railways and Canals. BABE os Pacific Railroads. BANKHEAD, =... Public Buildings and Grounds. Rivers and Harbors. ° BARTHOIDY........ +. Labor. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River, chair- man. Public Buildings and Grounds. BARILETE. Sia or be, Accounts. Banking and Currency. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Relations of Members with Post-Office Department, BASSENT: =. a Disposition of Useless Executive Papers. Militia. Reform in the Civil Service. BATES... aa Coinage, Weights, and Measures. I : Disposition of Useless Executive Papers. Elections No. I. 190 Congressional Directory. BEALY, ..oo0a nis on Claims. BODE Expenditures in the War Department. River and Harbors. BEIDLER a. Foreign Affairs. - Reform in the Civil Service. Ventilation and Acoustics. BEY ra ae Irrigation of Arid Lands. BENNY Immigration and Naturalization. BENTON....... coun, Appropriations. BINGEHAM:... ............ Appropriations. BIRDSALL ove eits Elections No. 3. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BISHOP. . sinh Saas. Ventilation and Acoustics, chairman. Rivers and Harbors: BONYNGE ©. in Immigration and Naturalization. Mines and Mining. Patents. BOULELY,.. vei . Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. Ways and Means. - BOWERS....... hoe Elections No. 1. BOWERSOCK ....... 0. ve Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. : : Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Reform in the Civil Service. BOWIE... ina Agriculture. ; Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. BRADLEY... Paes Invalid Pensions. Ventilation and Acoustics. BEANDEGEE. ....... ... Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Naval Affairs. BRANTLEY ........... Judiciary. Public Buildings and Grounds. BREAZEALE. ...... 0. Agriculture. Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. BRICK rs Sian Naval Affairs. Territories. Brooks. ....-... 0. Agriculture. Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. BROUSSARD... 5: Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Military Affairs. BROWN, of Pennsylvania. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Pensions. BROWN, of Wisconsin. ... Mines and Mining, chairman. Indian Affairs. : |: r- i - i ¥ { { | ESSE IECLELE aly Le Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. 191 DRE Er SE SE EE RE TT BUTLER, of Missouri BUTLER, of Pennsylvania. CASSINGHAM Appropriations. Appropriations. Indian Affairs. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Expenditures in the War Department. Rivers and Harbors. Indian Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Appropriations. Hducation. Census. Public Buildings and Grounds. Agriculture. Census. Foreign Affairs. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Public Lands. Railways and Canals. Relations of Members with Post-Office Department. Rivers and Harbors, chairman. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Mileage. Claims. Naval Affairs. Elections No. 2. Expenditures in the Department of Justice, chairman. Banking and Currency. Invalid Pensions. Labor. War Claims. District of Columbia. Pensions. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Public Lands. Foreign Affairs. Military Affairs. Territories. Accounts. Census. " Elections No. 3. Agriculture. Enrolled Bills. Private Land Claims. Ways and Means. Impeachment of Judge Charles Swayne. Judiciary. 192 Congressional Directory. COCHRAN, of Missouri... Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. COCKRAN, of New York. Ways and Means, CONNEIY bec iain Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Patents. J Ventilation and Acoustics. CONNER. ~..... Labor. Library. Public Buildings and Grounds. COOPER, of Pennsylvania. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Levees and Improvements of the Misssissippi River. Railways and Canals. COOPER, of Wisconsin .. Insular Affairs, chairman. COOPER, of Texas. ...... Ways and Means. COUSINS =i... =, Expenditures in the Treasury Department, chairman. Foreign Affairs. Naval Affairs. COWHERD .-- ose District of Columbia. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Crop wis nn, Expenditures in Navy Department. Manufactures. CROMER: =. ov. ve. 0s Agriculture. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. CROWLEY visas Invalid Pensions. Militia. CRUMPACKER........... Census, chairman. Insular Affairs. CURRIER... io aan Accounts. Elections No. 2. Patents, chairman. CURTIS... veins indian Affairs. Ways and Means. CUSHMAN. ..........- Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Private Land Claims. DATZELT, ie = rhiain Rules. Ways and Means. DANIELS... oooh Banking and Currency. Pacific Railroads. DAREAGE ==. Post-Office and Post-Roads. DAVEY » 5. vee oor Interstate and Foreign Commerce. DAVIDSON... sia Railways and Canals, chairman. Rivers and Harbors. DAViS, of Florida... ... Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Davis, of Minnesota . ... District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. DAYTON aes, Naval Affairs. Revision of the Laws. DEARMOND... .vooii.s Impeachment of Judge Charles Swayne. Judiciary. Rules. O——— Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. 193 DOUGLAS. i inn ia aims © ss ta ees ns esa FITZPATRICK Invalid Pensions. Railways and Canals. Insular Affairs. Military Affairs. Patents. Accounts. Foreign Affairs. Mines and Mining. Patents. Public Lands. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining. Banking and Currency. Immigration and Naturalization. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Rivers and Harbors. Accounts. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Pensions. Coinage, Weights, and Measures, Patents. Elections No. 3, chairman. Pacific Railroads. Census. Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. Revision of the Laws. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 2. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Accounts. Claims. Manufactures. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Military Affairs. Immigration and Naturalization, Private Land Claims. Revision of the Laws. Elections No. I. Pacific Railroads. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Indian Affairs. Education. Expenditures in the War Department. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Mileage. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture, Foreign Affairs. 58-3D—2D ED—13 esis eas 8 8 sie aie a FOSTER, of Illinois...... GAINES, of Tennessee. . . . GAINES, of West Virginia. GARBER Cr isan GARDNER, of Mass GARDNER, of Michigan. . GARDNER, of New Jersey. Gi1L1ET, of New York... GrrrLerr, of Mass GILLEN, of California .. Congressional Directory. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Public Lands. Naval Affairs, chairman. Claims. Expenditures in the State Department. Foreign Affairs. Labor. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Public Lands. Banking and Currency, chairman. Reform in the Civil Service. Education. Immigration and Naturalization. War Claims. Insular Affairs. Invalid Pensions. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress, chairman. Elections No. I. Militia. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Revision of the Laws. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Immigration and Naturalization. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Appropriations. Labor, chairman. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Expenditures in the State Department. Railways and Canals. Invalid Pensions. Revision of the Laws. War Claims. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Labor. Private Land Claims. Education. Election of President, Vice-President, and Represent. tives in Congress. Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. Reform in the Civil Service, chairman. Appropriations. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Impeachment of Judge Charles Swayne. Judiciary. Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. a —— Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. 195 GOEBEL. iiss Labor. Post-Office and Post-Roads. COLDFOGLE. i. wii, Claims. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. GOOCIT iv. cinta Claims. District of Columbia. GOULDEN .. vi. os ei bis, Merchant Marine and Fisheries. GRAVE .i......... .... Claims, chairman. Accounts. Agriculture. GRANGER... iii vid Revision of the Taws. CREENE.... ii Expenditures in the Navy Department, chairman. Manufactures. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. CRBCG waa hai War Claims. GRIFEITH 2a. .. Census. Public Tands. CRIGES ir. ea oi, Post-Office and Post-Roads. CROSVENOR 200. Merchant Marine and Fisheries, chairman. GUDGER Rules. Ways and Means. Rel Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. HamizroN.. oo 0 Territories, chairman. Insular Affairs. BAMEING ooo cen Industrial Arts and Expositions. HARDWICK ... i aaa Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. HARRISON... oie Industrial Arts and Expositions. Patents. : HASHING. oe hy Agriculture. Elections No. 3. War Claims. HAUGEN... = Agriculture. War Claims. BAY on ai Census. Military Affairs. HEARST sa Labor. HEDGE feta Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Post-Office and Post-Roads. RRRIN Mines and Mining. HEMENWAY. .. ........ Appropriations, chairman. HENRY, of Connecticut. . Agriculture. Expenditures on Public Buildings. 196 Congressional Directory. HENRY; of Texas ....... Judiciary. HEPBURN hai Interstate and Foreign Commerce, chairman. HEBMANN:. ....c. con. Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. Indian Affairs. HIT, DEBRANT:. ones Accounts, chairman, | Private Land Claims. Hirx, of Connecticut. ... Expenditures in the Treasury Department. E Ways and Means. | HiLL, of Mississippi. .... Insular Affairs. HINSHAW: i he aaa Indian Affairs. Patents. HYTCHCOCK |. oa Irrigation of Arid Lands. Berroa Foreign Affairs, chairman. Relations of Members with Post-Office Department. Hoga viv ovarian Indian Affairs. | Pensions. HoLIIDAY: . liv. oa Invalid Pensions. Military Affairs. War Claims. BHoPRINS coi asa Invalid Pensions. HOUSTON. i hiusvatiiien Pensions. BOWARD .......... ivi... Foreign Affairs. Library. HowELL, of New Jersey. Immigration and Naturalization, chairman. Public Buildings and Grounds. Howril, of Utah... .... Claims. Industrial Arts and Expositions. | Mines and Mining. | HUBS. ssi, Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Mines and Mining. Railways and Canals. | , HUGHES, of W. Va ...... Expenditures on Public Buildings, chairman. Accounts. Census. HucGHES, of New Jersey . Iabor. if Hull, aia oh Military Affairs, chairman. Militia. | HUMPHREY ........ +, Education. | | Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. | Patents. HUMPHREYS..... LG Rivers and Harbors. HUNT. oh el Manufactures. | | HUNIER ».. aos Expenditures in the State Department. | Invalid Pensions. = ; JACKSON, of Ohio. ...... Manufactures. if | Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. 197 JACKSON, of Maryland .. Mileage. | Pacific Railroads. Territories. FAMERS LE na Elections No. I. Expenditures in the Navy Department. JENRING oo a, Judiciary, chairman. JorNSON i. Elections No. 3. | Enrolled Bills. ro War Claims. 1 JONES, of Washington ... Rivers and Harbors. JoNES, of Virginia. ...... Insular Affairs. Private Land Claims. KATANIANOALE ........ Post-Office and Post-Roads. Territories. XBROB. =o Expenditures in Department of Agriculture. : Foreign Affairs. ; : RBLTHER bos vais Militia. RENNEDY. 3c on ion Census. Elections No. 3. KEICHAM 5. oii, Expenditures in the State Department, chairman. Military Affairs. KINRAID hiya Insular Affairs. Pacific Railroads. KrrcHIN, CrAvDE. 0. Claims. Expenditures in the State Department. KrrcHIN, WILLIAM W .. Naval Affairs. KEINE a i uw, Manufactures. | Ventilation and Acoustics. | SG bd by A ER EEE a Post-Office and Post-Roads. NADP es aia Elections No. I. Indian Affairs. Railways and Canals. / BNQPR...co vi ns Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Public Lands. RNOWIAND .--......... Coinage, Weights, and Measures. ( LG ME SU Ea Education. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. VACEY i. ins Public Lands, chairman. | Indian Affairs. Reform in the Civil Service. VARBAN. ovis tas Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Manufactures. TAMAR, of Missouri... .. Revision of the Laws. \ LAMAR, of Florida ...... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. TAMB EL en aoe Agriculture. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. 198 Congressional Directory. | | LANDIS, CHARLES B..... Printing, chairman. | Foreign Affairs. | | LANDIS, FREDERICK .... Elections No. 2. : Enrolled Bills. | LAWRENCE... Expenditures in the War Department. Rivers and Harbors. LEGARE, i van nb Industrial Arts and Expositions. Patents. | LRSTRE wo. hos Je Expenditures in the State Department. = i Rivers and Harbors. | LEVER... oie. Agriculture. | TEs esi Banking and Currency. | Mileage. | TARRY hha Sor ss Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Territories. | EAND. ce i en Pacific Railroads. Public Tands. TINDSAY hing Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Invalid Pensions. Ventilation and Acoustics. LITTAURBR 0 av Appropriations. 4 855 to vr UL SEE SHS Ee Judiciary. | LYITLERIBID., ..... oo Impeachment of Judge Charles Swayne. Judiciary. ll | Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Revision of the T.aws. LIVERNASH .. ... 0... Enrolled Bills. Immigration and Naturalization. IAVINGSTON .... . vii. Appropriations. LEOYD oo oe vs Enrolled Bills. Territories. TONGWORTH . .......... Foreign Affairs. Pensions. LORIMER. J. rnc Agriculture. Rivers and Harbors. LOUD Naval Affairs, = LOUDENSLAGER ........ Naval Affairs. Pensions, chairman. TLOVERING.........0 0, Banking and Currency. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. LOCKING LL oo. id os Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. MCANDREWS . | ....... District of Columbia. : Indian Affairs. MecCATY,.... «oe Labor. Library. ' Relations of Members with Post-Office Department. Ways and Means. Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. 199 | McCARTHY: i Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Public Lands. MCCLEARY on os Library, chairman. Appropriations. MCCREARYV... =n. Banking and Currency. MCDERMOTY «......... Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Relations of Members with Post-Office Department. 2 MoGUIBE vs ona Military Affairs. : Private I,and Claims. i Territories. MCLACHLAN... Rivers and Harbors. MeL AWN Sof aaa Elections No. 3. Pensions. McMORRAN,.. 0...) Banking and Currency. Manufactures. MONARY oii oss an Claims. MACON: =. 0. oor a Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Revision of the Laws. MADDOX... ies, Insular Affairs. Labor. MAHON oo ative. War Claims, chairman. | MATING a Cn Elections No. 1, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Reform in the Civil Service. MARSH oii do a he Appropriations. MARSHALL... el Indian Affairs. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Private Land Claims. MARTIN... ue Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands. MAYNARD... ...... di Expenditures on Public Buildings. = Industrial Arts and Expositions. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. MEVER oh cada District of Columbia. Naval Affairs. MIBRS Joleen Sul, Invalid Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. MITEER. oo Claims. Elections No. 2. Public Lands. X MINOR-.: 0 ae cn Expenditures in the Interior Department, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Public Buildings and Grounds. MooN, of Pennsylvania. . MooN, of Tennessee .... PATTERSON, of N., C PATTERSON, of Pa PATERSON, of Tenn .... Congressional Directory. Irrigation of Arid Lands, chairman. Military Affairs. Public Lands. Education. Revision of the Laws. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Territories. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. District of Columbia. Pacific Railroads. District of Columbia. ie 4 Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Militia, chairman. Naval Affairs. Pacific Railroads. Post-Office and Post-Roads. Insular Affairs. Public Lands. Ways and Means. Claims. Judiciary. Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. Public Buildings and Grounds. Eleetions No. 2, chairman. Insular Affairs. Manufactures. Patents. Foreign Affairs. Pacific Railroads. War Claims. Post-Office and Post-Roads, chairman. Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Reform in the Civil Service. Impeachment of Judge Charles Swayne. Judiciary. Pacific Railroads. Impeachment of Judge Charles Swayne. Judiciary. Military Affairs. Census. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Pensions. Insular Affairs. Ways and Means, chairman. Census. . Judiciary. Foreign Affairs. Printing. Appropriations, Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. 201 PINCENEV ci. vin Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. i Industrial Arts and Expositions. POU a aa District of Columbia. J Reform in the Civil Service. POWERS, of Maine ...... Banking and Currency. Elections No. I. | 4 % | i PORIER oil iii Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. \ “ ; Territories. B Impeachment of Judge Charles Swayne. Judiciary. PRINCE =. noel es . Banking and Currency. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Military Affairs. : POWERS, of Mass........ District of Columbia. Pujol Banking and Currency. RAINEY. ho Pacific Railroads. RANDELL, .........- ... Elections No. 3. : Expenditures in the Navy Department. RANSDELY, ite. Rivers and Harbors. REBDER . ..¢ ivi os Mileage, chairman. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Rep. eas Indian Affairs. | Territories. RBA. for te amit Coinage, Weights, and Measures. : Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. RICHARDSON, of Ala .... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Pensions. Relations of Members with Post-Office Department. RICHARDSON, of Tenn... Library. RIDER. nia, Education. RIXBY.. dave Naval Affairs. ROBB... hi .. Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. Immigration and Naturalization. = ROBERTS: iii lw Naval Affairs. 1 Railways and Canals. ROBERTSON. ..'.. he vat Ways and Means. ROBINSON, of Indiana ... Insular Affairs. Territories. 1p ROBINSON, of Arkansas. . Census. RODENBERG:.. vous non Industrial Arts and Expositions. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Public Buildings and Grounds. 5 RODEY: Ii iw oni ii Agriculture. Indian Affairs. _ Public Lands. Territories. 202 RUCKER. vo. aia Fant; SCUDDER i. avid SHACKLEFORD... . ../. .... SHEPPARD: « or ae, SHERIBY oo. es SHERMAN ...«. cata 5 SMALT, os Si weld SmrrH, of Illinois ....... SMmrrHa, of Jowa ......... SmrrH, of Kentucky... .. SMITH, SAMUEL W...... SMITH, WILLIAM ALDEN. SmrTH, of New York. ... Congressional Directory. Flection of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. Public Lands. Immigration and Naturalization. Militia. Territories. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Public Buildings and Grounds. Agriculture. Mines and Mining. Foreign Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Public Buildings and Grounds. Revision of the Laws. Indian Affairs, chairman. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Public Lands. Mines and Mining. Railways and Canals. Manufactures, chairman. Post-Office and Post-Roads. District of Columbia. War Claims. Military Affairs. Pacific Railroads. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the War Department. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Private Land Claims, chairman. Insular Affairs. Militia. Appropriations. Judiciary. Ventilation and Acoustics. District of Columbia. Invalid Pensions. Pacific Railroads, chairman, Foreign Affairs. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Private Land Claims. Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. SMITH, of Pennsylvania.. Militia. Reform in the Civil Service. SMITH, of Texas... ..... Private Land Claims. SNAPP. ahaa Post-Office and Post-Roads. SNOOK: i vhs in. Invalid Pensions. SOWEHALY,.. 6 Reform in the Civil Service. SOURHARD: cv ais: Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman. War Claims. SOUTHWICK =... 5. he Education, chairman. Territories. SPAIDING .......0.0. 0, Banking and Currency. Labor. Territories. SPAREMAN . cas Rivers and Harbors. SPERRY.. ia Alcoholic Liquor Traffic, chairman. Post-Office and Post-Roads. SPICHT a Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. STARBORD iis hs Post-Office and Post-Roads. STANIEY.. J ec a, Mines and Mining. SIEENERSON 0. coi. Militia. Post-Office and Post-Roads. ; STRPHING. oo. 0 Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Indian Affairs. STERLING: oo ia viii Elections No. 3. Territories. SOEVENS “i... vv Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Military Affairs. SULLIVAN, of Mass ..... Elections No. 2. SULLIVAN, of New York. . Coinage, Weights, and Measures. SULIOWAY. 0 0 0. Invalid Pensions, chairman. Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa- tives in Congress. SUIZEBR wf is as Military Affairs. Patents. SWANSON .......h.h oon. Ways and Means. TALBOTT ili os Flections No. 2. BATE, lr an in Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Printing. WAWNEN Sova Industrial Arts and’ Expositions, chairman. Insular Affairs. Ways and Means. CAYIOR a enh Appropriations. THAYER... baci ann Banking and Currency. Territories. 203 204 Congressional Directory. THOMAS, of Towa ....... Claims. Judiciary. TroMmas;,of N.C ........ Public Buildings and Grounds. THOMAS, of Ohio ....... Education. | Militia. TIRRBIL,. 0 Claims. | : Education. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Revision of the Laws. : \ TOWNSEND... ..i. . Interstate and Foreign Commerce. J 3 ! TrxmBoy.... oo. ols Claims. | 2 Expenditures on Public Buildings. UNDERWOOD... Appropriations. Irrigation of Arid Lands. VANDIVER .40 a0. 0 Hducation. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. \ VAN DUZER .....-. 0... Irrigation of Arid Iands. VAN VOORHIS... ... .... Appropriations. VOLSTEAD .. . inl nibs Public Lands. Railways and Canals. VREELAND...... ...... Labor. : Naval Affairs. WACHTER hin Enrolled Bills, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. WADI. oe Naval Affairs. WADSWORTH... ... 5... Agriculture, chairman. District of Columbia. | WALTACE:. ........ Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River. Private Land Claims. WANGER 0 oa Expenditures in the Post-Office Department, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. WARNER... Lo Revision of the Laws, chairman. Judiciary. WARNOCK... i.e Expenditures in War Department, chairman. Insular Affairs. 8 3 WATSON. = = iiaatiay Ways and Means. f Wren... " Education. Patents. WEBBER 0 an Insular Affairs. WeRMS oo. aa Banking and Currency. ! Elections No. 2. WrISSE 7 noo Manufactures. Private Land Claims. WILEY, of Alabama ..... Militia. Pensions. } WILEY, of New Jersey... District of Columbia. [ WiLrLiAMms, of Illinois ... Insular Affairs. Alphabetical List of Members and Committees. 205 WirLLIAms,of Mississippi. Rules. Ways and Meauns. WITIIAMSON o.oo, Irrigation of Arid Lands. Mines and Mining. WILSON, of Arizona... .. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Mines and Mining. Territories. \ . WILSON, of Illinois ..... Enrolled Bills. 4 Merchant Marine and Fisheries. [ WiLsonN, of New York .. Post-Office and Post-Roads. WOOD Fah Coinage, Weights, and Measures. WOODVARD.......... .... Industrial Arts and Expositions. Railways and Canals. WRIGHT... . iw... Agriculture. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture, chairman. WUNN ae Industrial Arts and Expositions. Pacific Railroads. NODNG tea ah Elections No. I. Military Affairs. ZONOR oo die et Indian Affairs. Reform in the Civil Service, ne SP ref — 206 Congressional Directory. SOUTHERN LOBBY COAT ROOM i | 7 A8€807 NY3LSv3 ® ® SENATOR'S LOBBY 83101 a ig oT : P. P. T., President pro tempore. Sec., Secretary. C. C,, Chief Clerk. L. C., Legislative Clerk, . Aldrich, Nelson W., Rhode Island. . Alger, Russell A., Michigan. . Allee, J. Frank, Delaware. . Allison, William B., Towa. . Ankeny, Levi, Washington. . Bacon, Augustus O., Georgia. . Bailey, Joseph W., T'exas. . Ball, I. Heisler, Delaware. . Bard, Thomas R., California. 6. Bate, William B., Tennessee. . Berry, Tathes H., Arkansas. . Beveridge, Albert J., Indiana. . Blackburn, Joseph C. S., Kentucky. . Burnham, Henry E., New Hampshire. . Burrows, Julius C., Michigan. . Burton, Joseph R., Kansas. . Carmack, Edward W., Tennessee. . Clapp, Moses E., Minnesota. . Clark, Clarence D., Wyoming. . Clark, William A., Montana. . Clarke, James P., Arkansas. . Clay, Alexander S., Georgia. . Cockrell, Francis M., Missouri. . Crane, W. Murray, Massachusetts. . Culberson, Charles A., Texas. . Cullom, Shelby M., Illinois. . Daniel, John W., Virginia. . Depew, Chauncey M., New York. . Dick, Charles, Ohio. . Dietrich, Charles H., Nebraska. . Dillingham, William P., Vermont. R D., Doorkeeper and Assistants, J. C., Journal Clerk. R., Official Reporters. DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE. . C,, Reading Clerk. P., S., Press Reporters. Sergeant-at-Armes. WiILrLiaAM P. FRYE, President pro tempore of the Senate. 79- 40. 68. (Democrats in Roman. Republicans in /Zalics.) Dolliver, Jonathan P., Iowa. Dryden, John F., New Jersey. Dubois, Fred T., Idaho. . Elkins, Stephen B., West Virginia, . Fairbanks, Charles W., Indiana. . Foraker, Joseph B., Ohio. . Foster, Addison G.,Washington. . Foster, Murphy J., Louisiana. . Frye, William P., Maine. . Fulton, Charles IV., Oregon. Gallinger, Jacob H., New Hampshire. . Gamble, Robert J., South Dakota. . Gorman, Arthur P., Maryland. . Gibson, Paris, Montana. . Hale, Eugene, Maine. . Hansbrough, Henry Clay, North Dakota. 5. Hawley, Joseph R., Connecticut, . Heyburn, Weldon B., Idaho. . Hopkins, Albert J., Illinois. . Kean, John, New Jersey. . Kearns, Thomas, Utah. . Kittredge, A. B., South Dakota. . Knox, Philander C., Pennsylvania. Latimer, Asbury C., South Carolina . Lodge, Henry Cabot, Massachusetts, . Long, Chester I.,"Kansas. . McComas, Louis E., Maryland. . McCreary, James B., Kentucky. . McCumber, Porter J., North Dakota, . McEnery, Samuel D., Iouisiana. . McLaurin, A. J., Mississippi. 65. 12. . Millard, Joseph H., Nebraska. . Mitchell, John H., Oregon. . Money, H. D., Mississippi. . Morgan, John T., Alabama. ' . INelson, Knute, Minnesota. . Newlands, Francis G., Nevada. . Overman, Lee S., North Carolina. . Patterson, Thomas M., Colorado. . Penrose, Boies, Pennsylvania. . Perkins, George C., California. . Pettus, Edmund W., Alabama. . Platt, Orville H., Connecticut. . Platt, Thomas C., New York. . Proctor, Redfield, Vermont. . Quarles, Joseph V., Wisconsin. . Scott, Nathan B., West Virginia. . Simmons, F. McL,., North Carolina. . Smoot, Reed, Utah. . Spooner, John C., Wisconsin. . Stewart, William M., Nevada . Stone, William J., Missouri. . Taliaferro, James P., Florida. . Teller, Henry M., Colorado. . Tillman, Benjamin R., South Carolina. . Warren, Francis E., Wyoming. . Wetmore, George P., Rhode Island. . Vacant. Mallory, Stephen R., Florida. Martin, Thomas S., Virginia. "SL0pPUIS JO U0LVIOT Loz a | 208 DINING 2207000 yt mm NorTHERN DOOR Congressional Directory. - Vi1—aa ac—at-gs - JOSEPH G. CANNON, Speaker. at ry ws DIRECTORY OF THE HOUSE Republicans in Roman. OF REPRESENTATIVES. Union Labor Democrats in CAPITALS. Democrats in ffalics. 317 Acheson, E. F. 309 Adams, H. C. 294 Adams, Robt., jr. 225 Alexander, D. S. 216 Allen, A. L,. 268 Ames, B. 207 Babcock, J. W 305 Bartholdt, R. 223 Bates, A. 1,. 211 Bede, J.-A. 267 Beidler, TA 215 Bingham, i H. 265 Birdsall, B 241 Bishop, R. BY 331 Boutell, H. S. 376 Bowersock, J. D. 353 Bradley, T. W. 288 Brandegee, F. B. 368 Brick, A. 1,. 256 Brooks, F. E. 235 Brown, J. W. 205 Brownlow, W. P. 302 Buckman, C. B. 364 Burke, C. H. 232 Burkett, E.J. 330 Burleigh, E.C. 297 Burton, T. E. 234 Butler, td S. 253 Calderhead, W. A. 308 Campbell, P. P. 378 Cassel, H. B. 358 Connell, Wm. 259 Conner, J. P. 229 Cooper, A. F. 342 Cooper, H. A. 248 Cousins, R. G. 394 Cromer, G. W. 399 Crumpacker, K.D. 292 Currier, F. D. 248 Curtis, C. 395 Cushman, F. W. 275 Dalzell, John. 356 Daniels, M. J. 313 Darragh, A. B. 298 Davidson, J. H. 375 Davis, C. R. 300 Dayton, A. G. 245 Deemer, E. 345 Dixon, J. M. 278 Douglas, W. H. 328 Dovener, B. B. 279 Draper, W. H. 355 Dresser, S. R. WEST SIDE. 314 Driscoll, M. E. 324 Dunwell, C. T. 269 Dwight, J. W. go7 Esch, J.J. 243 Evans, A. . |291 Fordney, J. W. 337 Foss, G. E. 301 Foster, D. J 392 Fowler, C. N. 306 French, B. L. 37: Fuller, C. E. 202 Gaines, J. H. 205 Gardnet, A. P. 286 Gardner, J. J. 290 Gardner, W. 386 Gibson, H.R. 323 Gillet, C. W., 380 Gillett, F. H. 262 Gillette, J. N 329 Goebel, H. P. 312 Graff, J. V. 222 Greene, W. S. 238 Grosvenor, C. H. 333 Hamilton, E. I. 260 Haskins, K. 365 Haugen, G. N. 257 Hedge, T. 214 Hemenway, J.A. 209 Henry, E. S 237 Hepburn, W. P. 270 Hermann, B. 340 Hill, E. J. 276 Hinshaw, BH, 228 Hitt, R. R. 310 Hogg, H.M. 367 Holliday, E. S. 322 Howell, B. F. 281 Howell, J. 261 Huff, G. F 274 Hughes, J. A. 303 Hull, J. A.’L. 338 Jackson, A. H. 379 Jackson, W. H. 400 Jenkins, J. J. 362 Jones, W.1,, 311 Kennedy, J. 204 Ketcham, J. H. 226 Kinkaid, M. P. 280 Knapp, C. L. 343 Knopf, P. 213 Kyle, ’I’. B. 366 Humphrey, W. E. 396 Kalanianaole, J. 212 Lacey, . 384 Lafean, D. F. 320 Landis, C. B. 321 Landis, F. 227 Lawrence, G. P, 293 Lilley, G. IL. 218 Iittauer, I,. N. . 1344 Littlefield, C. E. 277 Lorimer, W. 240 Loud, G. A. 206 Ioudenslager, H.C. 203 Lovering, W. C 360 McCall, S. W. 385 McCarthy, J. J. 332 McCleary, J.T. 242 McCreary, G. D. 387 McGuire, B. S. 282 McLachlan, J. 239 McMorran, H. 315 Mahon, T. M. 210 Mann, J. R. 296 Marsh, B. F. 304 Marshall, Thos. 334 Martin, E. W. 233 Miller, J. M. 208 Minor, E. S. 397 Mondell, F. W. 382 Moon, R. O. 326 Morgan, S. 221 Morrell, E. DeV. 28g Mudd, S. E. 258 Murdock, V. 263 Needham, J.C. 319 Nevin, R. M. 363 Norris, G. W. 336 Olmsted, M. E. 230 Otis, N. P. 352 Otjen, T. 231 Overstreet, J. 347 Palmer, H. W. 369 Parker, R. W. 244 Patterson, G. R. 251 Payne, S. E. 370 Pearre, G. A. 264 Perkins, J. B. 377 Porter, H. K. 217 Powers, I,. 273 Powers, S. L,. 381 Prince, G. W. 247 Reeder, W. A. 316 Roberts, E. W. 388 Rodenberg, W. A. 398 Rodey, B. S 252 Scott, C. F. 255 Sherman, J. S. 318 Shiras, G RE 224 Sibley, Joseph Cc, 266 Sletiip, a; 283 Smith, G. J. 374 Smith, G. W. 359 Smith, S. WwW. 284 Smith, W. 1 287 Smith, W. O. 271 Snapp, H. M. 339 Southard, J. H. 236 Southwick, G. N. 372 Spalding, B. F. 201 Sperry, N. D. 389 Stafford, W. H. 373 Sterling, J. A. 299 Stevens, F. C. 351 Sulloway, C. A. 249 Tawney, J. A. 383 Thomas, Lot. 346 Tirrell, oS Q. 391 Townsend, C. KE. 285 Van Voorhis, H.C, 272 Volstead, A. J. 254 Vreeland, E. B 327 Wachter, F. C. 349 Wanger, I. P. 246 Warner, V. 357 Warnock, W. R. 341 Watson, J. E. 354 Weems, C. L. 350, Wiley, Ww. H. 335 Williamson, J. N. 390 Wilson, W. Ww. 361 Woodyard, H.C. 325 Wright, C. F. 393 Young, H. O. 219 Wadsworth, J. W. 129 Adamson, W. C. 65 Aiken, W. 30 Badger, DelV. C. 82 Baker, R. 133 Bankhead, J. H. 97 Bartlett, C. L. 77 Bassett, E. M. 103 Beall, J. 189 Bell, 71. A. 21 Benny, A. 66 Benton, M. E. 159 Bonynge, R. W. 102 Bowers, E. J. 138 Bowie, S. J. 120 B7 -antley, w. G. 16 Breazeale, P 92 Broussar d, RF. 26 Brown, w. 1. 74 Brundidge, oo 7, 96 Burgess, G. F. 12 Burleson, A. a 5I Burnett, J. z. 143 Butler, J. J. 163 Byrd, A.M. 81 Caldwell, B. F. 121 Candler, E. S., jr. 220 Capron, A. B. 40 Cassingham, J. W. 99 Clark, Champ. 169 Clayton, H. D. 142 Cochran, C. F. 177 Cock: on WW. Bourke 79 Cooper, \S. 114 Cowherd, ‘WwW. S. 192 Croft, 7 G. 171 Crowley, J. B. 19 Davey, R. C. 176 Davis, R. W. 105 De Armond, D. A. 68 Degetau, F. 27 Denny, J. W. 59 Dickerman, C. H. 172 Dinsmore, H. A. 127 Dougherty, John. 118 Emmerich, M. 107 Field, S. 24 Finley, D. E. 4 Fitzgerald, J. J. 111 Fitzpatrick, M. C. 126 Flack, W. H. 113 Flood, H. D. 36 Foster, G. P. 162 Gaines, J. W. EAST SIDE, 153 Garber, H. C. 166 Garner oz: V. 151 Gilbert, G. 152 Cs 0. Ww. 43 Glass, C. 88 Goldfogle, H. M. 104 Gooch, D. L. 89 Goulden, J. A; 148 Granger, D. L. D. 168 Gregg, A. W, 122 Griffith, F. M. 170 Griggs, J. M. 62 Gudger, J. M., jr. 100 Hamlin, C. W, 101 Hardwick, 7. IW. 22 Harrison, F. B. 48 Hay, James. 86 Hearst, W. R. 157 Heflin, Thomas J. 109 Henry, R. L. 10 Hildebrant, C. Q. 132 Hill, WW. S. 175 Hitchcock, G. M. 130 Hopkins, Ca 155 Houston, H. A. 147 Howard, W. M. 83 Hughes, W. 180 Humphreys, B. G. 178 Hunt, J. 7. 161 Hunter, Ww. G. 58 James, 0. M. 71 Johnson, J. T. 106_Jones, W. A. 9 Kehoe, James IV. 149 Keliher, J. A. 144 Kitchin, Claude. 52 Kitchin, W. W. 90 Kline, M. L. C. 139 Kluttz, 7. F. 158 Knowland, J. R. 73 Lamar, R. 76 Lamar, W. B. 28 Lamb, John. 25 Legare, G. S. 7 Lester, R. E. 136 Lever, A. F. 57 Lewis, EB. 54 Lind, 7 39 Lindsay, Geo. H. 187 Little, J. S. 110 LIVERNASH, E.J. 128 Livingston, L. ya 188 Lloyd, Jas. T. 224 Longworth, N. 154 Lucking, A. 185 McAndrews, J. 20 McDermott, A. L. 167 McLain, F. A. 150 McNary, W. S. 42 Macon, R. B. 29 Maddox, J. W. 46 Mahorey, Wm. F. 37 Maynard, H. L. 18 Meyer, Adolph. 6 Miers, R. W. 182 Moon, J. A. 141 Padget, Vir 53 Page, R. IV. 33 Patterson, G. B. 15 Patterson, M. R. 108 Pierce, R. A. 191 Pinckney, John M. 34 Pou, E. WW. 5.8170, A. P. 67 Rainey, H. T. 49 Randell, C. B. 64 Ransdell, J. E. 173" Redd, C. C. 134 Rhea, J. S. 55 Richardson, J. D 38 Richardson, Wm. 116 Rider, I. E. 50 Rixey, J. F. 184 Robb, E. 63 Robertson, S. M. 41 Robinson, J. M. 1 Robinson, J. T. 44 Rucker, W. W. v7 Ruppert, J., jr. 13 Russell, ;. 91 Ryan, W. H. 135 Scarborough, R. B. 146 Scudder, 7. 2 Shackleford, D. Ww. 78.Sheppard, MM. 32.Sherley, \S. 112 ,Shober, F. E. 87.:.Skull, /.-H. 123.5tms, 7. WW... ® 145 Slayden, J. L. 131 Small, J. H. 70 Smith, DH. 124 Smith, W. A. 3I Smith, Ww. R. 8 Snook, J. S. 81 Southall, R. G. 47 Spight, 7. 8o Stanley, A. O. 125 Steenerson, H. 14 Stephens, J. H. 137 Sullivan, J. A. 85 Sullivan, T. D. 60 Sulzer, W. 98 Swanson, C. A. 179 Zalbott, J. F. C. 35 Zate, F. C. 45 Taylor, G. W. 56 Thayer, J. R. 156 7homas, C. R. 160 Thomas, W. A. 183 Trimble, South. 164 Underwood, O. W. 72 Vandiver, W. D. 174 Van Duzer,C. D. 117 Wade, M. J. 61 Wallace, R 140 Webb, 95 Wenner 2% oy 119 Weisse, C. H. 3 Wiley, A. A. 186 Williams, J. R. 69 Williams, J. S. 115 Wilson, F. E. 84 Wilson, J. F. 11 Wood, Ira W. 165 WYNN, W. J. 23 Zenor, W, 1. Rt 75 Sparkman, S. M. "SINYDIUISIAGIY] JO 1013007] 60z 210 Congressional Directory. OFFICERS OF THE SENATE. PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE. President of the Senate pro tempore.—WILLIAM P. FRYE, The Hamilton. Secretary to the President pro tempore.—Arthur I,. Hunt, The Sherman. Messenger to the President pro tempore.—John F. Murphy, 1629 Q street. CHAPLAIN. Rev. Edward Everett Hale, The Mendota. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY. CHARLES GOODWIN BENNETT, Secretary of the Senate, was born and has always resided in the old Bennett homestead in the city of Brooklyn, N. Y.; is a graduate of the Brooklyn High School and of the New York Law School and received the degree of 11. B. from the Universityof the State of New York; was an incor- porator and has since been a director and was chairman of the executive committee of the People’s Bank of that city; was President of the People’s Bridge Association, which brought about the building of the great Williamsburg suspension bridge by the citizens of New York and Brooklyn, which bridge was opened for traffic December 19, 1903; has always been a Republican, and was the unsuccessful candidate in the Fifth New York Congressional district for the Fifty-third Congress; was elected to the Fifty-fourth and reelected to the Fifty-fifth Congresses, serving on the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce; was the unsuccessful candidate for the Fifty-sixth Congress, and was elected Secretary of the United States Senate January 29, 1900. Chief Clerk.—Henry M. Rose, 110 Maryland avenue NE. Financial Clerk.—Richard B. Nixon, 415 M street. Principal Legislative Clerk.—Henry H. Gilfry, 1311 K street. Minute and Journal Clerk.—H. Bowyer McDonald, 1165 Nineteenth street. Enrolling Clerk.—Benjamin S. Platt, The Roanoke. : Assistant Financial Clerk.—Peter M. Wilson, 1901 Q street. Reading Clerk.—Alfred Carroll Parkinson, 103 Maryland avenue NE. Superintendent of Document KRoom.—Amzi Smith, 117 C street SE. First Assistant.—George H. Boyd, 2406 Fourteenth street. Librarian.—Alonzo W. Church, 1706 Oregon avenue. Assistant Librarvians.—FEdward C. Goodwin, 1005 H street; James M. Baker, 1500 Park street; Jacob C. Donaldson, 710 Tenth street. Keeper of Stationery.—Charles N. Richards, 1or Massachusetts avenue. Assistants.— Thomas W. B. Duckwall, 336 Indiana avenue; T. J. Enright. Clerks.—E. 1. Givens, 32 B street NE.; William B. Turner, 811 Quincy street; Clar- ence Johnson, The Wicomico; B. C. Ryder, E. ¥. Mitchell, The Garfield Flats; J. W. Bartlett, 1810 Ninth street; G. A. Davis, 1645 K street; R. Sacket, 33 B street; C. R. Nixon, 415 M street; W. W. Horne, 929 Seventeenth street; Eugene Colwell, 609 Eighth street NE.; G. L. Weiler, 118 Maryland avenue NE.; B.E. Avery, 56 B street NE.; W. G. Lieuallen, 9g Grant Place; Ansel Wold, 201 North Capitol street; Edwin A. Hills, go French street. Messengers.—J. FE. Bethune, The Norfolk; R. R. Dutton, 501 B street NE.; Caleb H. Ellis, 1230 Florida avenue NE.; Frank P. Holmes, jr., 2010 P street. CLERKS AND MESSENGERS TO COMMITTEES. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress.—Clerk, Elliott Rosson Berry, The Metropolitan. Agriculture and Forestry.—Clerk, E. F. Holbrook, 1318 1, street; assistant clerk, William S. Bean, 1312 1, street; messenger, J. Farle Parker, 1349 L, street. Appropriations.—Clerk, Thomas P. Cleaves, 1819 Tenth street; assistant clerks, Albert F. Dawson, 517 Fifth street NE.; A. E. Woods, 1018 Seventh street NE.; messenger, James B. McClure, 245 Delaware avenue NE. Audit and Control Contingent Expenses.—Clerk, John M. Biddle, 2022 Hillyer Place; messenger, Donald H. McLean. : Canadian Relations.—Clerk, Charles W. Halderman, National Hotel. Census.—Clerk, Thomas W. Brahany; messenger, Rollin I. Estes, The Wicomico. Civil Service and Retrenchment.—Clerk, Frank H. Sawyer, 133c Vermont avenue. Claims.—Clerk, Joseph A. Breckons, 1751 Willard street; assistant clerks, I. M. Wells, 1338 New York avenue; F. E. Warren, Senate Post-Office; messenger, C. E. Lane, 1338 New York avenue. Coast and Insular Survey.—Clerk, Arthur IF. Statter, The Gordon; messenger, E. W. Foster, 212 New Jersey avenue. Coast Defenses.—Clerk, C. C. Long, The Shoreham; messenger, Reed Knox, 1527 K street. Commerce.—Clerk, Woodbury Pulsifer, The Brunswick; assistant clerk, Frederick B. Sands, 1415 K street; messenger, Paul S. Hill, The Sherman. Conference of Minority.—Clerk, R. A. Johnson, 2018 Columbia road. he". i —- 2 A Officers of the Senate. 211 Corporations Organized in District of Columbia.—Clerk, Leslie H. Martin, 333 C street. Cuban Relations.—Clerk, Reed Paige Clark, 1424 Eleventh street; assistant clerk, Frederick W. Faton, 1777 Church street. Disposition of Useless Papers in Executive Departments. —Clerk, Edmund P. Lacy, 315 C street. District of Columbia.—Clerk, John H. Walker, The Savoy; assistant clerk, I,. A. Hughes, 1220 N street; messenger, Charles S. Gordon, 3319 Holmead ave. Education and Labor.—Clerk, Harry H. Humrichouse, 2324 North Charles street, Baltimore, Md.; assistant clerk, W. I.eonard Brady, Annapolis Junction, Md. Engrossed Bills.—Clerk, Allen V. Cockrell, 1518 R street; messenger, Walter I. Lampkin, 1639 R street. Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, George William Rouzer, The Rochambeaun; assistant clerk, Harry S. Sheik, 508 A street NE. Examination and Disposition of Documents.—Clerk, Thomas Grant, Riverdale, Md. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.—Clerk, Chauncey E. Richardson, The Savoy. Finance. —Clerk, Arthur B. Shelton, 1712 R street; statistical clerk, Benjamin Durfee, 639 East Capitol street; assistant clerks, Ww. H. May, jr., 920 ‘Nineteenth street; Eugene Davis, The Maury; messenger, George M. Taylor, 218 A street SE. Fisheries.—Clerk, John M. Peffers, gog Thirteenth street. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians.—Clerk, Robert W. Cantrell, 1320 F street. Foreign Relations.—Clerk, William M. Malloy, 1317 Q street; assistant clerk, Garfield Charles, 1203 Q street; messenger, Charles J. Pickett, 1706 Tenth street. Forest Reservations and Protection of Game.—Clerk, William Wallace Smith, 33 B street; messenger, W. S. Burton. Geological Survey.—Clerk, Thomas Sammons, 23 First street NE.; messenger, M. L. Statter. Immigration.—Clerk, W. W. Husband, 1316 I, street; assistant clerk, Julius Arthur Tellier, 1408 Sheridan avenue; messenger, J. S. Abbott, 715 Sixth street. Indian Affairs.—Clerk, Charles J. Kappler, The Olympia; assistant clerk, James D. Pinch, jri, 1321 S street. Indian Depredations.—Clerk, Wm. E. Marsh, 1430 V street. Industrial Expositions.—Clerk, Fred I,. Fishback, 1461 S street. Interoceanic Canals.—Clerk, Harry C. Robertson, The Dewey; assistant clerk, J. Mitchell Handy, 1913 G street. Interstate Commerce.—Clerk, Colin H. Livingstone, 3585 Thirteenth street; assist- ant clerk, F. I. Davison, 1624 Fifteenth street; messenger, E. H. McDermot, Prince Karl. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands.—Clerk, Robert Woodland Gates, The Ontario; messenger, Harvey D. Likens, The Ontario. Judiciary.—Clerk, Chas. Gustavus Phelps, 1314 I, street; assistant clerk, K. Franc Lawler, The Buckingham; messenger, J. W. Curran. Library.—Clerk, Henry Ambler Vale, 1925 Thirteenth street; messenger, James A. Abbott, 1012 South Carolina avenue SE. Manufactures.—Clerk, Addison T. Smith, 122 Sixth street NE.; assistant clerk, William B. Sams, 408 Sixth street. ; Military Affairs.—Clerk, Royal W. Thompson, 2026 H street; assistant clerks, Emery J. Thompson, 2026 H street; KE. J. Waterman, 1312 I, street; messenger, Charles E. Hooks, 115 Sixth street SE. Mines and Mining. —Clerk, John L. Steele, 1742 P street; messenger, M. G. Kearney. Mississippi River and Tributaries. Clerk, Cleveland H. Hicks, 142 A street NE. National Banks.—Clerk, Dr. John Edward Jones, 1618 T street. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, Pitman- Pulsifer, 3317 Holmead avenue; assistant clerk, Harry B. Hanger, The Albemarle. Organization, etc., Executive Departments.—Clerk, J. ¥. Allee, jr., The Highlands; messenger, Newell Ball. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.—Clerk, Charles Edwin Alden, 34 Rhode Island ave.; assistant clerk, Joseph Sagmeister, 1715 De Sales street; messenger, John F. Woods, 1203 F street. Pacific Ratlroads.—Clerk, John H. Pearsons, 1123 Thirteenth street; messenger, Joseph M. Burlew, 422 Second street. Patenits.—Clerk, Thomas B. Roberts, 33 B street; messenger, Charles F. Bower, 1744 K street. Pensions.—Clerk, Ormsby McHarg, 1534 Twenty-second street; assistant clerk, Robert W. Farrar; expert, detailed from Pension Bureau, Dennis M. Kerr, So3 C street SW.; messenger, O. M. Jones. Philippines. Clerk, Robert G. Proctor, 1203 Lydecker avenue; assistant clerk, Geo. Cabot Lodge, 1925 F street; messenger, E.f Clark, Post-Offices and Post-Roads.—Clerk, W. R. Andrews, The Portland; assistant clerk, E. G. Smith, 213 KE street; messenger, John H. O’Brian., 212 Congressional Directory. Potomac River Front.—Clerk, James B. Haynes, The Wicomico. Printing. —Clerk, Albert H. Howe, The Arlington; assistant clerk, Dwight V. Jones, 1328 U street; messenger, Frank FE. Cooksey. Private Land Claims. —Clerk, Thomas F. Dawson, 2572 University place; assistant clerk, C. G. Northup, 814 B street NE. Privileges and Elections.—Clerk, Geo. M. Buck, 315 A street SE.; assistant clerks, James F. Shepherd, 201 East Capitol street; messenger, M. H. Bumphrey. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, Jerry A. Mathews, The Cumberland; assist- ant clerk, J. Karl Bain, 2 Sixth street NE. Public Health and National Quarantine.—Clerk, E. A. Barbour; assistant clerk, J. 0. Jones. Public Lands.—Clerk, Fred. Dennett, The Portner; assistant clerk, Theodore B. Elton, 1803 G street. Railroads.—Clerk, Edmund J. Wells, 1 C street SE.; messenger, 1,. A. Clark. Revision of the Laws.—Clerk, Mortimer Thorn Cowperthwaite, 1611 H street; mes- senger, George FE. Wright. Revolutionary Claims. _Clerk, Benjamin R. Tillman, jr., The Colonial. Rules.—Clerk, Horace C. Reed, 1122 Vermont avenue. Standards, Weights, and Measures.—Clerk, C. A. Badger, 1331 I, street; messenger, James H. Anderson. Territories.—Clerk, Thomas R. Shipp, The Loudoun; assistant clerk, John F,. Hayes; messenger, S. E. Hinshaw, 7 Fifth street NE. To Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands.—Clerk, Henry G. Smith, 324 John Marshall place. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products.—Clerk, John. Warwick Daniel, jr., 1340 Columbia road. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. —Clerk, Robert E. McDowell, 935 K street; messenger, R. A. Gamble. University of the United States.—Clerk, Ralph H. Faxon, 33 B street. Ventilation and Acoustics.—Clerk, Ieonard E. Wales. Woman Suffrage.—Clerk, James Baugh Bussey, The Metropolitan. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS. DANIEI, MOORE RANSDELI, Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate, was born in Indiana, near Indianapolis; attended common school in the country in winter and worked on a farm in summer until he was 16 years old; entered Franklin College and remained three years; taught school during summer while taking his college course; left college to enter the Union Army; served as a noncommissioned officer until May, 1864; lost his right arm at the battle of Resaca, May 15, 1864; afterwards took a commercial course in business college, and taught school for a year; then became deputy recorder of Marion County, Ind. : ; was elected city clerk of Indianapolis in 1867, and reelected in 1869; served in the city council of Indianapolis for two years; engaged in wholesale trade; was elected clerk of the courts of Marion County and served four years; was appointed by the governor a member of the board of commis- sioners to erect a soldiers’ monument in Indianapolis—which is one of the most imposing in the world, costing a half million dollars; was a member of the Republican State committee eight consecutive years; was appointed by President Harrison marshal of the District of Columbia in 1889, serving until January, 1894; was elected Sergeant-at-Arms of the United States Senate January 29, 1900. Clerk lo Sergeant-at-Arms.—E. Livingstone Cornelius, 1619 S street. Assistant Doorkeeper.—Alonzo H. Stewart, 204 Fourth street SE. Acting Assistant Doorvkeeper.—B. W. Layton, Riggs House. Assistant Messenger on floor of Senate.—C. A. Loeffler, 1444 Howard avenue. Assistant Messenger on floor of Senate.—A. D. Sumner, The Colonial. POST-OFFICE. Postmaster of the Senate.—James A. Crystal, 108 Fifth street NE. Assistant Postimaster.— Warren E. Pressey, The Wicomico. Arrival and Departure of Mails. Arrive 8.30 and 10.30 a. m., 12.15 and 3.45 p. m. Depart 9.30 and 10.30 a. m., 1.55 and 4.30 p. m., and upon adjournment. : FOLDING ROOM. Superintendent.—John ¥. Goldenbogen, 1700 I, street. Assistant.—Walter F. Collins, 614 G street SE, Foreman.—H. H. Brewer, 21 B street. HEATING AND VENTILATING. Chicf Engineer.—E. C! Stubbs, Linden, Md. Assistants.—F. E. Dodson, 1654 Sheridan avenue; A. S. Worsley, 123 North Carolina avenue SE.; R. H. Gay, 215 E street; John Edwards, 106 E street. i I oe a Officers of the House. 213 OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE. SPEAKER. The Sealer, —Joseph G. Cannon, 1014 Vermont avenue, Secretary to the Speaker.—1.. White Busbey, 2516 Thirteenth street. Clerk at the Speaker's Table.—Asher C. Hinds, 1450 Binney street. Speaker's Clerk.—Mack Taylor. Messenger.—Henry Neal, 645 South Carolina avenue SE. CHAPLAIN. Rev. Henry N. Couden, D. D., 109 Maryland avenue NE. OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHERS TO COMMITTEES. W. J. Kehoe, 1620 Eighteenth street. M. R. Blumenberg, 21 First street NE. John D. Cremer, 146 D street SE. Harry F. Dodge, 1122 Vermont avenue. Assistant.—]. E. Johnson, 2009 Fourteenth street. OFFICE OF THE CLERK. Clerk of the House.—Alexander McDowell, The Dewey. Chief Clerk.—William J. Browning, 146 Fast Capitol street. Assistant Chief Clerk.—H. 1. Overstreet, 136 Thirteenth street SE. Journal Clerk.—Herman A. Phillips, 1444 Florida avenue. Assistant Journal Clerk.—W. H. H. Wasson, 200 A street SE. Reading Clerks.—Dennis E. Alward, The Dewey: E. I,. Lampson, 138 B street NE. Tally Clerk.—Winthrop C. Jones, 227 New Jersey avenue SE. Printing and Bill Clerk.—M. E. Matlack, 201 C street. Disbursing Clerk.—Henry Robinson, 207 ‘A street SE. Assistant Disbursing Clerk.—C. S. Hoyt, The Varnum. File Clerk.—]. R. Williams, The Richmond. Assistant File Clerk.—Israel D. Johnson, 120 Fourth street SK. Enrolling Clerk.—C. R.' McKenney, The Hamilton. Assistant Enrolling Clerk.—Willis H. Wing, 61 I street. Resolution and Petition Clerk.—Aaron Russell, 1231 T street. Newspaper Clerk.—]. W. H. Reisinger, 208 Delaware avenue NE. Distributing Clerk.—David Moore, 125 Indiana avenue. Document and Bill Clerk. —Iincoln Guynn, 808 Sixth street. Index Clerk.—D. C. Dinger, The Lambert. Assistant Index Clerk.—E. A. Warner, House of Representatives. Stationery Clerk.—John 1,. Morrison, The Driscoll. Docket Clerk.—F. H. Wakefield, The Vendome. Digest of Private Claims Clerks.—James B. Belt, 933 H street; F. G. Hunsicker, 1208 M street; Harold J. Mahin, The Marlborough. Bookkeeper. — Harry Pottenburgh, 312 A street NE. Locksmaith.—Daniel P. Hickling, 232 Third street. Clerks.—Chester Willoughby, 227 New Jersey avenue SE.; W.T. Irelan, 29 B street; Hector C. McRae, 320 A street SE.; R. E. Fleharty, 318 Fast Capitol street; C. D. Atkinson, 507 Fifth street NE.; H. P. Andrews, 417 A street SE.; Charles B. 'Brock- way, The Varnum. Assistant in Disbursing Office.—Charles N. Thomas. Assistant in Stationery Room.—James A. Gibson, 652 C street NE. Assistant in Clerk’s Office. = Jon Iredale, 220 E street. Messenger to Chief Clerk. —D. P. Thomas, 810 North Carolina avenue SE. DOCUMENT ROOM. Supervintendent.—W. P. Scott, 207 A street NE. Document Clerk.—Harry V. Roe, 409 A street SE. Assistant Document Clerk.—Fred G. Brown, 207 A street NE. LIBRARY. Librarvian.—John J. Boobar, 1225 Kenyon street. Assistants. —George W. Sabine, 524 Third street; R. F. Bishop, 127 Steih SE. Assistant in Library.—P. H. Gardner, The Stanhope. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS. Sergeant-at-Arvms.—Henry Casson, 33 B street. Deputy Sergeant-at-Avms.—Edwin S. Pierce, 1412 Chapin street. 214 Congressional Directory. Cashier.—David E. Welch, 33 B street. Zeller.—W. H. Estey, 104 ‘Fifth street NE. Bookkeeper. —FEdward Reichard, 306 North Carolina avenue SE. Assistant Bookkeeper.—C. E. Morley, 33 B street. Pair Clerks.—George FE. Evers, Hyattsville, Md.; J. H. Hollingsworth, 417 Fourth street. Messenger.—james M. Kenney, 146 A street NE. Page.—Iouis E. Reichard, 306 North Carolina avenue SE. Laborer.—Charles H. Christian, 623 B street NE. OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER. Doorkeeper of the House.—F. B. Lyon, The Logan. Clerk to Doorkeeper.—A. B. Burrows, Riggs House. Assistant Doorkeeper.—Bert W. Kennedy, The Vendome. Department Messenger.—Benjamin Vail, 1110 East Capitol street. Assistant Department Messenger.—C. W. Coombs, 306 E street NE. Special Employees.—John T. Chancey, 465 M street; Isaac R. Hill, The Loudoun. Special Messengers.—Felton B. Knight, The Metropolitan; Jos. J. Sinnott, 1723 H street; George Jennison, Hotel Dumbarton; William A. Watson, The Metro- olitan. Chat Ares 1. H. McMichael, 2223 F street; H. D. Norton, 922 I street. Pair Clerk.—James F. English. Messengers.—Charles H. Mann (Press Gallery), 627 A street NE.; John H. Brown, 248 Third street; John E. Cushman, 323 Fast Capitol street; Milton Eby, 923 H street; J. B. Fletcher, 22 Third street SE.; William A. Forbis, 129 Indiana avenue; J. M. Fowler, 16 Fourth street NE.; William I. Hemenway, 501 Second street NE.; Henry B. Herbert, 220 C street; W. R. Householder, 708 Tenth street; W. H. Leonard, 1209 Rhode Island avenue; B. I. Palmer, 1700 Thirteenth street; John R. Pierce, 501 Second street NE.; A. B. Putnam, 218 New Jersey avenue; Emil Rebell, 318 Third street; J. Q. A. Remine, 16 Third street SE.; D. R. Roberts, 214 A street SE.; Wm. H. Rodgers; FE. H. Sharp, 247 North Capitol street; Levi E. Short, 222 New Jersey avenue; C. H. Strobeck, 110 C street SE.; TI. FE. Tracy, Chicago Hotel; Don C. Walters, 515 A street SE.; H. B. Webb, 200 E street; I,. H. Wiley, 708 Tenth street. Messenger to Speaker's Table.—William I,. Nash, 8o7 North Capitol street. Messengers on the Soldiers’ Roll.—E. 1,. Currier; Leroy J. Hooker, 22 Second street NE.; William Irving, 321 A street NE.; Elijah Lewis, 7 C street NE.; Hugh Lewis, 815 Eighth street; James I. McConnell, gos East Capitol street; George H. Morisey, The Roland; Lauritz Olsen, 233 New Jersey avenue; Fernando Page, 51 D street SE.; William H. Rich, 252 Delaware avenue NE.; John Rome, 315 First street SE. ; James H. Shouse, 120 Fourth street SE.; John A. Travis, 1008 Fast Capitol street; E. S. Williams, 153 A street NE. FOLDING ROOM. Soneiplonfonl 1 R. Halvorsen, 503 Second street SE. Chief Clevk.—W. F. Scott, 515 A street SE. Clevks.—]. W. Herndon, Alexandria, Va.; FE. H. Andrews, 111 Maryland avenue NE.; George C. Randall, 1114 B street NE.: - John | i Straight, 336 Eleventh street NE. Foreman.—J. M. McKay, 2123 K street. DOCUMENT ROOM. Superintendent.—Charles J. Sumner. Assistant Superintendent.—J. G. Bunell, The Vendome. Special Employee.—Joel Grayson, Vienna, Va. Assistants in Document Room.—Grant Jarvis, 1536 I street; C. O. Houk, 946 New York avenue; Lewis H. Ludwig, 214 New Jersey avenue; I. Philipson, 216 North Capitol street; William Rodenberg; W. S. Pangborn, 209 First street NE.; M. J. Stanley, 510 FE street; E. F. Dresser, 209 First street NE.; A. F. Dahlgren, 42r Sixth street. CLERKS TO COMMITTEES. Accounts. —William Tyler Page, St. Denis, Baltimore County, Md. Agriculture.—Charles A. Gibson, House of Representatives. Appropriations.—James C. Courts, 1837 Kalorama avenue; assistant clerk, Kennedy °F. Rea, 28 Tennessee avenue NE. Banking ‘and Currency.—Charles S. Greenwood, 1505 Eighth street. Census.—Nelson R. Jacobson, The Litchfield. Claims.—Willis Evans, House of Representatives. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—Amos A. Steele, 128 A street NE. Conference of Minorvity.—Charles A. Fdwards, 1636 Sixteenth street. Tr er ———. Officers of the House. 215 District of Columbia.—Harry Wilder Barney, 503 East Capitol street. Education.—]John 1,. Smith, 417 Fourth street NE. Elections No. 1.—R. Kahnweiler, 1729 Q street. Elections No. 2.—Harry C. Houtz, The Arlington. Elections No. 3.—M. V. Geagan, 1758 Church street. Enrolled Bills.—William F. Broening, Baltimore, Md. Foreign Affairs.—Frederic Lawrence Davis, The Richmond. Immigration and Naturalization.—C. S. Atkinson, 720 Tenth street. Indian Affairs.—H. E. Devendorf, 222 Second street NE. Industrial Arts and Expositions.—Philip McElhone, The Don Carlos. Insular Affairs.—Henry Fayette Carpenter, 1o12 Thirteenth street. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Joseph E. Hill, 214 North Capitol street; assist- ant clerk, James F. Bryan, 6 B street NE. Invalid Pensions.—William H. Topping, 236 North Capitol street; assistant clerks, George A. Bailey, 234 New Jersey avenue, and Arthur W. Phinney, 236 North Capitol street; principal examiner, detailed from Pension Bureau, Herman Gauss, 221 Fifth street SE., Irrigation of Avid Lands.—Arthur J. Carlson, 220 E street. Judiciary.—Henry C. Van Leuven, 918 Eighteenth street; assistant clerk, Leroy J. McNeely, The Ioudoun. Labor.—John G. Shreve, 8 B street NE. Library.—1Leslie T. McCleary, The Regent. Merchant Marine and Fisheries.—Daniel Allen Grosvenor, 1657 Thirty-first street. Military Affairs.—Hermann D. Reeve, 215 Eighth street NK.; assistant clerk, Charles D. I,yon, 238 Delaware avenue NE. Militia.—James Jarden, jr., 34 Corcoran Building. Mines and Mining.—Thomas O. Monk, The Lowell. Naval Affairs.—Benjamin H. Miller 209 A street SE.; assistant clerk, J. Seely Grid- ley, 209 A street SE. Pacific Railroads. —Frank Van Vliet, House of Representatives. Patents.—Charles C. Wright, The Driscoll. Pensions.—Frank H. Barto. Principal examiner, detailed from Pension Bureau, D. S, Porter, 91g Fifteenth street. Post-Offices and Post-Roads.—Edwin 1,. Williams, 717 Tenth street. Printing.— Victor 1,. Ricketts. ’ Private Land Claims.—Daniel G. Davis, 1526 O street. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Alfred FE. Rumer, The Litchfield. Public Lands.—William M. Reece, 210 New Jersey. avenue. Railways and Canals.—Jessie T. Lovell. Reform in the Civil Service.—I,0uis D. Gibbs, 1405 Rhode Island avenue. Revision of the Laws.—John C. Eversman, 1230 Columbia road. : Rivers and Harbors.—James H. Cassidy, The Cumberland; assistant clerk, Joseph H. McGann, 227 New Jersey avenue, SE. Territories.— Thomas C. Hance, The Dewey. War Claims.—William Hertzler, The National; assistant clerk, H. R. Thornton, The National; clerk to continue digest of claims, J. B. Holloway, 20 Third street SE. : Ways and Means.—Hull Greenfield, The Normandie; assistant clerk, Arthur FE. Blauvelt, House of Representatives. HEATING AND VENTILATING. Chief Engineer.—H. W. Taylor, 100 Fifth street NE. Assistant Engineers.—B. H. Morse, 2138 G street; K. B: Burke, 620 Pennsylvania avenue; John S. Logan, 314 Fifth street SE. Elevator Conductors.—Ieonard B. Cook, 485 Maryland avenue SW.; George W. Winters, 132 C street SE.; Michael F. O'Donnell, 412 Second street NE.; Elmer Stanley, 314 Fifth street SK.; John K. Duncan, 1232 C street NE.; Ralph Walker, 631 D street SE. POST-OFFICE. Postmaster.—Joseph C. McElroy, 214 A street SE. Assistant Postmaster.—1,. FE. Bridgeman, 3122 Q street. OFFICE AT CAPITOL. Register Clerk.—Matt Davison, 318 Third street. Mail Clerks. Kennon Vail, 220 C street; Pleasant Unthank, 318 Third street. Branch Mail.—Paul F. Smith, 140 Massachusetts avenue NE. OFFICE AT CIV POST-OFFICE. Clerk in Charge.—Robert J. Duncan, 739 Thirteenth street. Assistant.—John W. Knowlton, 2120 G street. 216 Congressional Divectory. MESSENGERS. Jas. M. Shepard, 318 Third street; John I,. Blair, 214 A street SE.; F. C. Riedesel, 116 Maryland avenue NE.; I. W. Mahoney, 221 First street NE.; H. C. Brooks, 340 C street; James M. Curtis, 1020 Sixth street; Edgar Ellis, 339 C street; John D. Griffith, 232 Third street; Geo. H. Fields, 218 A street SE.; W. R. Wooley, 125 C street NE. Heavy Mail Wagon.—Daniel B. Webster, 1127 C street SE.; Fred Hedge, 1735 Tenth street. Package Wagon.—D. F. Breitenstein, 125 Massachusetts avenue NE.; P. J. Goode, 634% Fourteenth street NE. Mail Contractor.—T. C. Welling, 315 C street SE. ARRIVAI, AND DEPARTURE OF MAILS. Arrive 9, 9.30, and 10.30 a. m., 12.30, 2.30, and 4 p. m. Depart 9.30 and 11.30 a. m., 1.30 and 3.30 p. m., and upon adjournment. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES. SENATE. Theodore F. Shuey, 2127 California avenue. Edward V. Murphy, 2511 Pennsylvania avenue. Henry J. Gensler, 1318 Thirteenth street. Daniel B. Lloyd, 1152 Seventeenth street. Milton W. Blumenberg, The Portland. Assistant.—James W. Murphy, 1020 Massachusetts avenue NE. Assistant.—Fugene C. Moxley, 1150 Seventeenth street. HOUSE. A. C. Welch, 413 Fourth street. Fred Irland, 1339 T street. Reuel Small, The Hamilton. Allister Cochrane, The Driscoll. George C. Lafferty, Metropolitan Club. Samuel H. Gray, The Logan. LAssistant.—John J. Cameron, 513 F street. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. (Office in Statuary Hall.) Clerk in charge at the Capitol. —W. A. Smith, 1302 Roanoke street. WEATHER BUREAU. Senate.—Clerk in charge, J. H. Jones, 1217 New Jersey avenue. House.—Clerk in charge, John C. Stewart, The Portner. . ~ SUPERINTENDENT OF THE CAPITOL. (Office in subbasement of Capitol.) Superintendent.—E]liott Woods, Stoneleigh Court. Chief Clerk.—George H. Williams, 210 E street. Chief Electrical Engineer.—Christian P. Gliem, 642 Fast Capitol street. Clerk.—John Welch, 310 North Carolina avenue SE. THE NATIONAL BOTANIC GARDEN. Superintendent.— William R. Smith, at the Garden, west of the Capitol Grounds. Assistant Superintendent. —C. Leslie Reynolds, 927 S street. THE CAPITOI, POLICE. Captain.—]. P. Megrew, The Plymouth. Lieutenants.—J]. W. Jones, 100 C street SE.; John Hammond, 1432 N street; E. D Sterling, 1016 Thirteenth street. THE DEPARTMENTAL TELEGRAPH. Senate Manager.— William Jeffers, The Loudoun. House Managers.—Joseph M. Thompson and J. J. Constantine, House post-office. a AA ovat yg en inn A —_, - The Capitol. 217 THE CAPITOL. The Capitol is situated in latitude 38° 53” 20.4’/ north and longitude 77° oo’ 35.7” west from Greenwich. It fronts east, and stands on a plateau 88 feet above the level of the Potomac. THE ORIGINAL, BUILDING. 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 original designs were pre- pared by Dr. William Thornton, and 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 1800 and the south wing in 1811. A wooden pas- sageway 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 imme- diately repaired. In 1818 the central portion of the building was commenced, under the architectural superintendence of Charles Bulfinch. The original building was finally completed in 1827. Its cost, including the grading of the grounds, alterations, and repairs, up to 1827, was $2,433,844.13. THE, EXTENSIONS. The corner stone of the extensions was laid on the 4th of July, 1851, by President Fillmore, Daniel Webster officiating as orator. This work was prosecuted under the architectural direction of Thomas U. Walter till 1865, when he resigned, and it was completed under the supervision of Edward Clark. The material used in the walls is white marble from the quarries at Lee, Mass., and that in the columms 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. The Dome of the original central building was constructed of wood, covered with copper. This was replaced in 1856 by the present structure of cast iron. It was completed in 1865. The entire weight of iron used is 8,909,200 pounds. The Dome is crowned 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 97 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. ~ QIzT NF, 7 N \ <= rN S ES NST Ny 9 Ns2fss No 50 N 49 B wn 2 §e © § EY Ny sol wll LS \ =} sb =F on 5 Ke 41) 8 26 a gel ~~ 5 al Nm) NSS my y 07 ae SS N55 N56N57 58Y59N 5 60 N25 § l \ N N N &_ NNN FoSSsSts 5) NS A ais SSN Ns & 8 y sos ) NTR FN Lp ols S SEATS 3d Lok DY n T a 51 ¥ I MN 6 A N FG Ne oo fa & SN Ns = FRYSSN s ad 6 iN / yn 52 T § 5 B Y SNe N 654 li 2% Ly ' \ 62 § 63 tes Ll Xo Q 3 Nam) EET NST ey — SN 3 oo > QM —F = X NS os = = NN ENaNE =) 2 a7 0 42 49 ] x W & N XO N R AS BY 55 s Lo, assd Ssoonyd | § ween QUPENE Blllvealr a 4 3 NN "8s nos asnoasg aw a= Gm o o ° NS SN a R , 9.48 o © © oo a © 8 (73 Fmonz=ae By 288 Ng 44 \ lie ae i} S$ Vian 57 ALE LE Ss = S\N $ \¢ 71g g 70 3 Ls 2 °° N\E = } N18. 13 ANE SNES Ng > FR 1 hi {6 Gok =i 0) §36 % 92ND N 2 Ny YA £70 770 NS \ 66 Lay 36 & S \ \ J NAR NL D SN] N 15% g 19 NS DN NO AN N 73 Ns NN Des PQ AN “Ed a sa oR = NS) = sd ESHER E PIR Ass AVR i se ses R ? B= od So sy Face IN SSS aN \ \ S n N > N K N \ RE=E N As [= = BASEMENT FLOOR. ee — o_o — REL —— THE BASEMENT OF THE CAPITOL. Room. HOUSE WING. . Committee on Invalid Pensions. . Committee on Insular Affairs. Committee on Agriculture. . Stationery room. . Committee on War Claims . Official stenographers to committees. ._ Official Reporters of Debates. b 10. fSpeaker’s private rooms. RON H LN MH 7 11. Committee on Library. 12. Office of Sergeant-at-Arms. 13. House Post-Office. 13%. 5 lcommittee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads. a Clerk’s document room. 15%. Barber shops. 16. Closets. 17. Box room. 18, 19, 20. Restaurant. 21. Merged in restaurant. 22. Committee on Indian Affairs. 23. Committee on Accounts. 24. Committee on War Claims. 25. Elevators. HOUSE COMMITTEES. TERRACE, SOUTH SIDE. Committee on Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. . Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Committee on Expenditures in the Agricultural Department. 5. Committee on Mines and Mining. 6. Committee on Immigration and Naturalization. 7. Committee on the Election of President, Vice- President, and Representatives in Congress. 9. Committee on Irrigation of Arid Lands in the United States. 11. Committee on Expenditureson Public Buildings. 13. Committee on Manufactures. 15. Committee on Elections No. 3. 17. Committee on Expenditures in the Post-Office Department. WN HH NOTE.—Rooms occupied by the:House Committees on Reform in the Civil Service, Leveesand Improvements of Mississippi River, Expenditures in the Department of Justice, Expenditures i in the Navy Department, Ter- ritories, also Office of Index Clerk, are not shown on the diagrams. They are located in the subbasement, west front, on the House side of center of building. Room. MAIN BUILDING. 49. Senate Committee on the Census. 50. Senate Committee on the Library. 51. Senate Committee on Education and Tabor. 52. House Committee on Labor. 53. House Committee on the Census. § [House Committee on Rivers and Harbors. 55. House Committee on Revision of the Laws. 56. House Committee on Education. 57. House Committee on Ventilation and Acoustics. 59. Senate Committee on Pacific Railroads. 60. Senate Committee on Additional Accommoda- tions for the Library of Congress. 61. Storeroom for Congressional I,aw Library. 62. Storeroom Supreme Court. 63. Senate bathroom. . The Supreme Court—consultation room. 6. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Su- preme Court room. 67. Congressional Law Library. 63 {oes 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. 72. Barber shop for House employees. 73. House Committee on Militia. 74. Committee room on Alccholic Iiquor Traffic merged in the Disbursing office. SENATE COMMITTEES. MALTBY BUILDING. 10. Subcommittee on Pensions. 19. Subcommittee on Finance. 22. Manufactures. 24. Trespassers upon Indian Lands. 25. Ventilation and Acoustics. 35. Standards, Weights, and Measures. 41. Forest Reservations. 43. Irrigation. 47. Civil Service and Retrenchment. 50. Subcommittee on Post-Offices and Post-Roads. 55. Corporations Organized in the District of Colum- ia. 58. Geological Survey. 59. Coast and Insular Survey. 63. National Banks. 73. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Departments. 75. Patents. 76. University of the United States. Room. 81. Sibeommithee on Printing. SENATE WING. 24. Committee on Rules. 25. Committee on the Revision of the Laws. 26. Committee on Cuban Relations. 27. Committee on Military Affairs. 28. Committee on the Philippines. 29. Committee on the Judiciary. 30. Committee on Industrial Expositions. 32. Committee on Indian Affairs. 33. Stationery room. 36. Restaurant. 37. Stationery room. 38. Committee on Public Lands. 39. Police Headquarters. 40. Committee on Immigration. 41. Committee on Territories. 42. Janitor’s room. . Ladies’ room. 43. Committee on Agriculture. 44. Committee on Coast Defenses. 45 1committee on Post-Offices and Post-Roads. 47. Senate Post-Office. 48. Committee on Printing. 49. Elevator. 5I. Janitor’s room. SENATE COMMITTEES. TERRACE, NORTH SIDE. 2. Canadian Relations. 4,6. On Potomac River Front. 5. Indian Depredations. 7. Fisheries. 1. Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Executive Departments. 13. To Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. NoTE.—Rooms occupied’ by Senate Committees on Transportation and Sale of Meat Products, and Five Civilized Tribes of Indians are not shown on the dia- rams. They are located in the subbasement, west ront, on the Senate side of center building. re at arent —_ 100240) 2Y[ 612 CT >" 2 "1 STEN i LJ z But g £5 £3 5:5 92 1-1] ad IE ki in ® ® Old Hallo . ROTUNDA. Lane ° 38 B i I I Te. a = i Supreme Court. i Ii 24 ; np 01r39 werooypt i b il 5 0 [a3 lig $1118 "MAO0JIIAL(] JDUOLSSIASTUO) ee ce eo oe © © 000 006 00 6 0 0° 90 ® © 6 00° © 0 © PRINCIPAL FLOOR. a % ies a A MM ES LA i ae THE HOUSE WING. Room. ¥. 2. PAppropriations. . Journal, printing, and file clerks. . Committee on Pensions. . Closets. 8.tMembers’ retiring room. 10. Speaker’s room. 12. Cloakrooms. Joommmittee on Ways and Means. 15. Committee on Military Affairs. 16. Library. 17. Elevators. !feommittee on Naval Affairs. . Committee on the District of Columbia. . Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. 41. Committee on the I,ouisiana Purchase Centennial. . Committee on Patents. . Committee on Expenditures in the Treasury De- partment. PRINCIPAL, FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL. MAIN BUILDING. Room. 33. House document recom. 34. Engrossing and enrolling clerks of the House. 35. House Committee on Enrolled Bills. 36. Office of the Clerk of the House of Representa- tives. If was in this room, then occupied by the Speaker of the House, that ex-President John Quincy Adams died, two days after he fell at his seat in the House, February 23, 1848. 37. Office of the Clerk of the Supreme Court. 38. Robing room of the Judges of the Supreme Court. 39. Withdrawing room of the Supreme Court. 40. Office of the Marshal of the Supreme Court. 41. Senate Committee on Pensions. 42. 43. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. 44. Senate Committee on Pacific Islandsand Porto Rico. 45. Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals. pe Committee on Public Health and National 47.) Quarantine. 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. SENATE WING. Room. 16. Office of the Secretary. 17. Executive clerk. 18. Financial clerk. 19. Chief Clerk. 20. Engrossing and enrolling clerks. 21. leommittee on Appropriations. 23. Closets. . Cloakrooms. 25. Room of the President. 26. The Senators’ reception room. . The Vice-President’s room. 28. Committee on Finance. . Official Reporters of Debates. . Public reception room. 31. Committee on the District of Columbia. '32. Office of the Sergeant-at-Arms. . Elevator. 10040) 2] 122 En A ———————_ 5 Hall of Representatives. GALLERY Fl OOR. Senate ‘Chamber. 9 cece “AU032242(] JVUO0LSSIAEUO) HOUSE WING. Room. 1. Committee on Elections No. 2. 2. Committee on Elections No. 1. 3. Committee on Banking and Currency. 4. Committee on Claims. 5. Committee on Railways and Canals. 6. Lobby. Iveswspaper correspondents’ rooms. 9. Water-closet. 10. Ladies’ retiring room. 11. Committee on the Public I,ands, 12. Committee on Commerce. 13. Committee on Foreign Affairs. 14. Committee on the Judiciary. 15. Elevators. 39. Committee on Mileage. 40. Committee on Pacific Railroads. 41. Conference room of the minority. 42. fcommittee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures. 43. ; 44. Committee on Expdt.in the State Department. 45. Committee on Expdt.in the War Department. 46. Expenditures in the Interior Department. | 47. 48 42. 46. MAIN BUILDING. Room. 27. Senate Library. 28. Senate Library—ILibrarian’s room. 29. Senate Committee on Revolutionary Claims. 30. Senate Committee on Woman Suffrage. ar. 32. Senate document room. 33. 34. Superintendent of the Senate documents. 35. House Library. 36. frtonse document room. 37 38. Clerk's office. 40. Senate document room. . Senate Committee on Transportation Routes to Seaboard. Senate Committee on the Mississippi River and its Tributaries. . Senate Committee on Private Land Claims. . Senate Committee on Contingent Expenses. . Senate Committee on Railroads. [senate Committee on Mines and Mining. . Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills. ee —— ¥ a THE GALLERY STORY OF THE CAPITOL. SENATE WING. Room. 14. Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. 15. : [Comme on Interstate Commerce. 16. 17. Committee on Privileges and Elections. 18. Committee on Commerce. 19. Committee on Examination and Disposition of Documents. 20. Pressassociations; Western Union and Postal Tel- egraphs. 21. Newspaper correspondents’ room. 22. Ladies’ room. 23. Committee on Naval Affairs. ‘100240 2 [ 24. Conference room of the minority. 25. Committee on Claims. 26. Committee on Engrossed Bills. 27. Elevator. 28. Correspondents’ room, gze 224 Congressional Directory. DIRECTORY OF ROOMS, UNITED STATES SENATORS. Senator. Committee. AIDRICH....... Plmance...;. ioc ivi iin ALGER... .v.« Examination and Disposition of Documents. ALTER. ........5 Organization, Conduct, and Expenditures of the Execu- tive Departments. ALLISON =... Appropriations... ............. ANKENY... Coast and Insular Survey..... BACON... Woman Suffrage........... | BAILEY on haa sn sn he SRR BALL. sl Ventilation and Acoustics . . .. BARD hen ny Trvigation rio i comin ay BATE... iir Five Civilized Tribes of Indians BERRY .......- | Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. BEVERIDGE. . . .. Ternlories «i or ae BEACRBURN to ti nai dst mo ore BURNHAM...... Cuban Relations... =. =... BURROWS ...... Privileges and Elections... ... BURTON ...... Forest Reservations .......... CROMACK ou i a ah os TE Cape... .....: To Examine the Several CLARK (Mont.) . CLARK (Wyo.) . CLARKE (Ark.) . CLAY aha COCKRELL, ..... CRANE ©... CULBERSON .... CurLiom..... ... DIETRICH . -..... DILLINGHAM ... DOLLIVER.. DRYDEN .... ... BIEINS =... FAIRBANKS. .... FORAKER ... ... FOSTER (La.) . FOSTER (Wash. ) BRYB PUrLZoN:. ..... io GALLINGER .... CAMBLE ....... HALE ~~. HANSBROUGII . . HAWLEY... HEVBURN ...... ice. Engrossed Bills : Meat Products. Immigration. . .. Pacific Railroads Enrolled Bills .. Geological Survey: ........... Commerce. . .... Seaboard. Naval Affairs ... Public Lands . .. Military Affairs . Manufactures. . . Branches of the Civil Serv- Industrial Expositions... ..... Transportation and Sale of Revisionof Taws :...:....;.. Indian Depredations ......... Trespassers upon Indian Lands. Interstate Commerce ......... Public Buildings and Grounds. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. District of Columbia ......... Transportation Routes to the T,ocation. Senate floor, southeast corner. Gallery floor, north side. Terrace, room IT. Senate floor, northwest corner. Annex, room 59. Gallery floor, back of Document Room. Annex, room 39. Annex, room 25. Annex, room 44. Old building, subbasement, north side. Old building, basement, side. Ground floor, north side. Terrace, room 15. Ground floor, west side. Gallery floor, west side. Annex, room 41. north | Annex, room 37. Terrace, room 13. | Annex, room 13. Old Library space, gallery floor, west side. Terrace, room 3. Annex, room 7. Gallery floor, northeast corner. Ground floor, north side. Annex, room 27. Old: Library space, Senate floor, northwest corner. Old building, subbasement,north- west corner. Ground floor, southwest corner. Terrace, room 5. Annex, room 24. Ground floor, east side. Old building, basement. Old Library space, gallery floor. Old building, basement. Gallery floor, west side. Gallery floor, southwest corner. Old Library space, Senate floor, west side. Annex, roomi 53. Annex, room 58. Gallery floor, northwest corner. Terrace, room 2. Senate floor, east side. Old Library space, gallery floor, north side. Annex, room I3. Gallery floor, east side. Gallery floor, southeast corner. Ground floor, southeast corner. Ground floor, west side. | Annex, room 22, Directory of Rooms, United States Senators. 225 DIRECTORY OF ROOMS—Continued. ! Senator. Committee. Location. HOPKINS .-..... Fisheries a an. oo Terrace, room 7. KEAN... Contingent Expenses. ......... Old Library space, gallery floor, west side. KRARNS. National Banks... ......... Annex, room 63. KITTREDGE. Patents... vo vr or Annex, room 75. KNOX. .- ov. Const Defenses. ........... ... Ground floor, north side. RAIN ER, sr ie aa en Annex, room 5. LODGE ar Philippines... ... >... coer: Ground floor, west side. LONG... University of United States ...| Annex, room 77. MCCOMAS ...... Education and Labor ........ Old building, basement, west side. MCECRBARY ss awison ns Terrace, room I. McCUMBER.. .".. Pensions... v.: os Old Library space, Senate floor, north side. MCE RRR. hn ri a Annex, room 8. MCLAURIN ..... Samide Annex, room 29. MALLORY ih visi ovr as Annex, room 56. MARTIN. ....... Corporations Organized in the | Annex, room 55. District of Columbia. MIT TARD. . =... Potomac River Front... -...... Terrace, room 6. MICHELL. .... Inter-Oceanic Canals... ....... Old Library space, Senate floor, west side. MONEY o.oo ich aise saa sivas Annex, room 69. MoRGAN -...... Public Health and National | Old Library space, Senate floor. Quarantine. NELSON... Mississippi River and its Trib- | Old Library space, gallery floor, utaries. north side. NBWEANDS irs rr a es Annex, room 45. OVERMAN... a Annex, room 34. PANPERSON a a ae Terrace, room 17.. PENROSE... Post-Offices and Post-Roads. ..| Ground floor, north side. PERKINS... ... Civil Service and Retrench- | Annex, room 47. ments. PEUrUSS Disposition of Useless Papers | Annex, room 73. in the Executive Depart- ments. Prave (Conn. Yofilndiciaty =. 0.00... Ground floor, northwest corner. PraTr{N._V.). Printing. 0. «re Ground floor, northeast corner. PROCIOR Agriculture and Forestry ..... Ground floor, north side. QUARLES....... CONUS ire ae Old building, basement, north- west corner. SCOLT aa Mines and Mining ........... Old Library space, gallery floor. k SIMMONS: if. oe ee Annex, room I. SMOOY. Standards, Weights, and Meas- | Annex, room 35. ures. : SPOONER....... Rules 0 aon Ground floor, west side. STEWART... Indian Affairs... Ground floor, south side. MONT: he Annex, room 16. TALIAFERBO J. ries oes oes Annex, room 61. TELIBR.. . :.. Private Iand Claims... ... ... old Library space, a floor, 1] northwest corner. TILLMAN. ...... Revolutionary Claims . ....... Gallery floor, back of document E room. | WARREN... .... Claims. co... io... ... Gallery floor, east side. | WETMORE... ... TAbrmry Old building, basement. 58-3D—2D ED—-1I5 226 Congressional Directory. THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. (Capitol Hill.) The Library of Congress was established in 1800, destroyed in 1814 by the burn- ing 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. Sixty sets of Government publications are at the disposal of the Librarian of Con- gress for exchange, through the Smithsonian, with foreign governments, and this number may be increased up to 100. Other special accessions have been: The Peter Force collection (22,529 volumes, 37,000 pamphlets) purchased, 1867, cost $100,000 the Count de 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 (engravings), gift in 1898 of Mrs. Gardiner G. Hubbard; papers of Andrew Jackson given (1903) by the family of Montgomery Blair; the papers of Robert Morris, purchased 1901; Van Buren papers, gift in 1904 of Mrs. Smith Thompson Van Buren; papers of Chancellor Kent, gift in 1904 of William Kent; Washburne papers, gift in 1904 of Hon. Hempstead Washburne; Polk papers, Andrew Johnson papers, Clayton papers, purchased, 1904. By transfer from the State Department: Papers of the Continental Congress, papers of James Monroe, Alex- ander Hamilton, George Washington, and the Stevens collection of Benjamin Franklin papers; the Weber library of Sanskrit literature, and the Hattala library of Slavic literature, purchased 1904. The collection is now the largest on the Western Hemisphere. It comprised at the end of the fiscal year (June 30, 1904) about 1,281,000 printed books and pamphlets (including the law library of 95,954 volumes, which, while a division of the Library of Congress, still remains at the Capitol), 120,115 manuscripts, 76,031 maps and charts, 388,056 pieces of music, and 157,110 photographs, prints, engravings, and lithographs. Of the printed books, probably one-sixth are duplicates not in use. The collection is rich in history, political science, jurisprudence, in official docu- ments, National, State, and foreign, and in Americana, including important files of American newspapers and original manuscripts (colonial, Revolutionary, and forma- tive periods). A number of the rare books and manuscripts belonging to the Library are exhibited in show cases on the second floor. The Smithsonian deposit is strong in scientific works, and includes the largest assemblage of the transactions of learned 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 2, 1889, 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 IL. 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 33 acres upon a site 10 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 54 miles of shelving, affording space for 2,500,000 octavo volumes. Were the long corridors, now used in part for exhibition purposes, completely shelved, the building would accommodate over 4,000,000 such volumes. The Library is maintained by annual appropriations by Congress for various pur- poses, including the purchase of books. For the year 1904-5 these amounted to $775,845, as follows: $409,745 for services (including the Copyright Office, and includ- ing also the care of the building); $ror,300 for books and periodicals; $39,800 for fuel, supplies, and miscellaneous purposes, including contingent expenses; $40,000 for furniture, shelving, etc., and $185,000 allotment for printing and binding at the Government Printing Office. Library sevvice.—Library proper, 235 employees; Copyright Office, 68; disburse- ment service and care of buildings and grounds, 126. Total, 429. pg i ie. Library of Congress. 227 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 I.ibrarian 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. Of most articles copy- righted 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 fiscal year 1903-4, 184,799 articles. Copyright fees applied and paid into the Treasury for the fiscal year 1903—4 amounted to $72,629. The Librarian of Congress and the Superintendent of Building and Grounds are now appointed by the President of the United States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate (act of 1897). These two officials have the appointment of their respective subordinates. The President, Vice-President, Senators, Representatives, and Delegates in Con- gress are entitled by statute to draw books for home use (though no books can be given out on the orders of members in favor of those-who are not members). The same privilege is extended by statute to Justices of the Supreme Court, the heads of the Executive Departments, and certain other officials. Hours: On week days (except legal holidays) the Library building, Main Reading Room, Periodical Reading Room, Music Division, and Law Library are open from 9 a. m. to 10 p. m.; other parts of the Library, from g a. m. to 4 p. m. On Sundays and certain legal holidays the Building, Main Reading Room, Peri- odical Reading Room, Division of Prints, and Music Division are open from 2 to 10 p. m., the Librarian’s Office and the Division of Bibliography from 2 to 6 p. m. " 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 RUSSELI, YOUNG. 1899 (April 5).-—HERBERT PUTNAM. LIBRARY STAFF. GENERAT, , ADMINISTRATION. Librarian of Congress.—Herbert Putnam, 1818 N street. Chief Assistant Librarian.—A. R. Spofford, 1621 Massachusetts avenue. Librarian's Secretary.—Allen R. Boyd, 2115 O street. Chief Clerk.—Thomas G. Alvord, 1855 Mintwood place. DIVISIONS. Superintendent of Reading Room.—David Hutcheson, 4or B street NE. Chief Assistants in Reading Room.—John G. Morrison, 811 Thirteenth street; Hugh A. Morrison, jr., 2302 First street. In Charge of Reading Room Jor the Blind.—Etta J. Giffin, 313 East Capitol street, Chief of Division of Bibliography.—A. P. C. Griffin, 2007 Kalorama avenue. Chief of Catalogue Division.—]. C. M. Hanson, Brookland, D.C: Chief of Division of Documents.— (Acting), Philip De Witt Phair, 4 B street NE. Chief of Division oS Manuscripts.—Worthington C. Ford, 3430 Folsom place, Cleve- land Park. Chief of Division of Maps and Charts.—P. Lee Phillips, 1707 H street. Chief of Music Division.—Oscar G. Sonneck, 1235 New York avenue. Chief of Order Division.—Edward 1. Burchard, 506 Seward square. Chief of Periodical Division.—Allan B. Slauson, The Woodley. Chief of Division of Prints.—Arthur J. Parsons, 1818 N street. Custodian of Law Library.—George Winfield Scott, 531 Bishteenth street. Register of Copyrights. _Thorvald | Solberg, 198 F street SE. LIBRARY BUILDING AND GROUNDS. Superintendent.—Bernard R. Green, 1738 N street. Chief Clevk.—George N. French, 1834 I street. Chief Engineer.—Charles B. Titlow, 639 Columbia avenue, Baltimore, Md. FElectrician.—D. W. Harding, 318 Ninth street NE. Captain of the Walch,—]. V. Wurdemann, 124 Massachusetts avenue NE. Congressional Directory. THE WHITE HOUSE. (Pennsylvania avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets.) THEODORE ROOSEVELT, President, was born in New York City on October 27, 1858; entered Harvard College in 1876 and graduated in 1880; took up the study of law, butin 1881 was elected to the New York legislature, and was twice reelected; in his second term in the legislature was the candidate of his party for speaker, the majority of the assembly, however, being Democratic; during his third term served as chairman of the committee on cities and of the special committee which investi- gated the abuses in the government of New York City; was a delegate to the State convention in 1884 to choose delegates to the Republican national convention, and was selected as one of the four delegates-at-large from New York to the national convention; later in the same year he went to North Dakota and spent most of his time there for several years on a ranch, engaged in raising cattle; in 1886 was the Republican nominee for mayor of New York City; was appointed a member of the United States Civil Service Commission in May, 1889, by President Harrison; resigned this position in 1895 in order to accept the presidency of the Police Commission of New York City, under Mayor Strong; in April, 1897, was appointed by President McKinley Assistant Secretary of the Navy. Upon the outbreak of the war with Spain in 1898 resigned this post and became lieutenant-colonel of the First United States Volunteer Cavalry; was promoted to the colonelcy of the regiment; was in the fights at Las Guasimas and San Juan; was mustered out with his regiment at Montauk, Tong Island, in September, 1898; was nominated shortly afterwards as the Republican candidate for governor of New York, and elected in November, 1898; was unanimously nominated for Vice-President of the United States by the Repub- lican national convention of 1900, and elected; succeeded to the Presidency upon the death of President McKinley, September 14, 1901; was unanimously nominated for President by the Republican National Convention of 1904, and in the national election of November 8, 1904, over two-thirds of the Presidential electors chosen were Republicans. The popular plurality in favor of the Republican ticket was about two and one-half million votes. WILLIAM LOEB, JRr., of Albany, N. Y., Secretary to the President (1720 Q street), was born in the city of Albany, N. Y., October 9, 1866; had common and high school education; in 1888 was stenographer of the New York State assembly; afterwards was law and general reporter and acted as private secretary to various public officials, among them the president pro tempore of New York State senate, speaker of the assembly, and lieutenant-governor; in 1894, member of the steno- graphic corps of the New York State constitutional convention; in 1895, grand jury and district attorney’s stenographer of Albany County; January 1, 1899, stenographer and private secretary to the governor of New York; March 4, 1901, appointed secre- tary to the Vice-President of the United States; September 25, 1901, appointed assistant secretary to the President; February 18, 1903, appointed secretary to the President. Assistant Secretaries to the President.—Benjamin F. Barnes, 48 R street NE.; Rudolph Forster, 1331 Vermont avenue. Executive Clerks. — Warren S. Young, 2023 I street; William H. Crook, 1473 Park street. Superintendent of Public Buildings and Grounds.—Col. Charles S. Bromwell, 1608 New Hampshire avenue. : WHITE HOUSE 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 0’clock daily, excepting Cabinet days, so far as public business will permit. Executive Departments. 229 The East Room will be open daily, Sundays excepted, for the inspection of visitors, between the hours of 10a. m. and 2 p. m. By direction of the President: WILLIAM LOEB, ]Jr., Secretary to the President. THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. (Seventeenth street, south of Pennsylvania avenue.) JOHN HAY, of the District of Columbia, Secretary of State (8oo Sixteenth street), was born in Salem, Ind., October 8, 1838; graduated at Brown University in 1858, and studied law in Springfield, I1l.; was admitted to practice before the supreme court of Illinois in 1861, but immediately came to Washington as Assistant Secre- tary 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 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.—Francis B. Loomis, 10 Lafayette Square. Seconda Assistant Secretary.—Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth street. Third Assistant Secretary.—Herbert H. D. Peirce, 1901 F street. Assistant Solicitor.—Frederick Van Dyne, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Clerk.—William H. Michael, 2542 Thirteenth street. Chiefs of Bureau: Accounts.—Thomas Morrison, 1443 S street. Appointments.—Robert Brent Mosher, 2418 Fourteenth street. Consular. — Wilbur J. Carr, 1423 R street. Diplomatic.—Sydney Y. Smith, 1731 U street. Indexes and Archives.—Pendleton King, 1449 Massachusetts avenue. LPassport.—Gaillard Hunt, 1711 De Sales street. Rolls and Library.—Andrew Hussey Allen, Stoneleigh Court. Trade Relations.—Frederic Emory, Cosmos Club. Translators.—John S. Martin, jr., 1731 F street; Wilfred Stevens, 20 New York avenue NE. . Private Secretary.—E. J. Babcock, 1334 Thirteenth street. Law Clerk.—James T. Dubois, 1421 Chapin street. Assistant Law Clerk.—Henry 1. Bryan, 604 East Capitol street. DISPATCH AGENTS. I. P. Roosa, 277 Broadway, New York. W. A. Cooper, Post-Office Building, San Francisco. R. Newton Crane, No. 4 Trafalgar Square, London, England. SPECIAL, COMMISSION PLENIPOTENTIARY UNDER TARIFF ACT. Commissioner.—John A. Kasson, 1726 I street. Secretary.—Chapman Coleman, 1421 K street. Assistant Secretary.—John Ball Osborne, 2116 Connecticut avenue. Special Assistant Secretary.—Frank H. Peabody, 1710 F street. UNITED STATES AND MEXICAN WATER BOUNDARY COMMISSION. Commassioner on the part of the United Stales.—Brig. Gen. Anson Mills. Consulting Engineer on the part of the United States.—W. W. Follett. Commaissioner on the part of Mexico.—Sefior Don Jacobo Blanco. 230 Congressional Directory. Consulting Engineer on the part of Mexico.— Secretary lo the United States Commissioner.—W. W. Keblinger. Secretary to the Mexican Commissioner.—Sefior Don Alfredo Longoria. LOUISIANA PURCHASE EXPOSITION COMMISSION (ST. LOUIS, 1903). Commissioners. —Thomas H. Carter, president; John M. Thurston, William Lindsay, George W. McBride, Frederic A. Betts, John M. Allen, Martin H. Glynn, John F. Miller, and Philip D. Scott. Secretary.—Joseph Flory. STATE, WAR, AND NAVY DEPARTMENT BUILDING. (Superintendent’s room, No. 148, first floor, north wing.) Superintendent.—Capt. George W. Baird, U. S. N., 1505 Rhode Island avenue. Clerk.—R. H. Dellett, 1228 Columbia road. THE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY. (Fifteenth street and Pennsylvania avenue.) LESLIE M. SHAW, of Towa, Secretary of the Treasury (1750 Massachusetts avenue), was born in Morristown, Lamoille County, Vt., November 2, 1848. When 4 years of age his people moved to Stowe, where he received a common school education, with a few terms in the village high school and in People’s Academy, at Morrisville. When 21 years of age he went to Iowa, graduated from Cornell College in 1874, and from the Iowa College of Law in 1876, having earned the means with which to educate himself. After graduation he located in Denison, the county seat of Crawford County, Iowa, and engaged in the practice of law. He was led by the demands of the community into the negotiation of farm loans, and from that into general bank- ing at Denison, at Manilla, and at Charter Oak, in the same county. While keeping the practice of law in the foreground, he was thus kept in touch with financial mat- ters, both Fast and West. Until 1896 he took no active part in politics, excepting in national campaigns, when he frequently made speeches in defense of the princi- ples of the Republican party, in which he was a firm believer. In 1896, at the request of the State central committee, he placed his entire time at its disposal. ‘This led to his nomination for governor and election in 1897, and his reelection in 1899, in which he doubled his previous plurality and quadrupled his previous majority. He peremptorily declined a third term, and planned to return to his law practice and business interests. A few days before the close of his term, however, without solicita- tion or suggestion from himself or friends, he was tendered the position of Secretary of the Treasury, and assumed the duties of the office on February 1, 1902. Assistant Secretary.—H. A. Taylor, 2007 Massachusetts avenue. Assistant Secretary.—Robert B. Armstrong, 1509 Twentieth street. Assistant Secretary.—Charles Hallam Keep, 1614 I street. Chief Clerk.— Wallace H. Hills, 2338 Massachusetts avenue. Assistant Superintendent. —Alex. F. McMillan, 1447 Huntington place. Secretary to the Secretary of the Treasury. —J]. H. Edwards, 1800 Belmont avenue. Chiefs of Division : Appointments.—Charles Lyman, 1243 New Jersey avenue. Bookkeeping and Warrants.—W. F. MacLennan, The Woodley. Customs.—James L. Gerry, 1104 East Capitol street. Loans and Curvency.—A. I. Huntington, Vienna, Va. . Mail and Files.—S. M. Gaines, 1257 Hamlin street, Brookland. Miscellaneous. —Lewis Jordan, 1429 Twenty-first street. Printing and Stationery.—George Simmons, 2549 Eleventh street. Public Moneys.—E. B. Daskam, 1433 R street. Revenue-Cutter Service.—Capt. C. F. Shoemaker, 1303 Yale street. Special Agents.—Burton Parker, 1307 H street. Disbursing Clerks.—George A. Bartlett, The Portner; Thomas J. Hobbs, 1622 H street. Captain of the Watch.—H. A. Cobaugh, 823 Twenty-first street. SUPERVISING ARCHITECI’S OFFICE. (Treasury Department Building.) Supervising Architect.—James K. Taylor, The Highlands. Chief Executive Officer.—Charles E. Kemper, 1310 Riggs street, Executive Departments. Chiefs of Division: Accounts.—John W. Parsons, Forest Glen, Md. Gmpniing ==. C. Plant, Glencaryln, Va. XX Inspection, Material, and Repairs.—]. A. Sutherland, The Portner. Law and Record.—]. A. Wetmore, 1311 Columbia road. Technical. —James P. Low, 1328 Corcoran street. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. (Fourteenth and B streets SW.) Director of Bureaw.— William M. Meredith, 1219 Princeton street. Assistant Dirvector.— Thomas J. Sullivan, 1823 Vernon avenue. Accountant.—Fdwin Lamasure, The Victoria. Engraving Division.—Chief, John R. Hill, 1327 Princeton street. Printing Division.—Chief, William C. McKinney, 6oo Twenty-first street. gineering and Drafting. —Francis B. Wheaton, 2406 Eighteenth street. 237 Custodian of Dies, Rolls, and Plates.—Joseph E. Ralph, 1246 Providence street, Brookland. Disbursing Agent.—Van H. Bukey, 1619 Seventeenth street. SECRET SERVICE DIVISION. (I'reasury Department Building.) Chief.—John E. Wilkie, 3520 Morgan avenue. Chief Clerk.—W. H. Moran, 1316 Tenth street. LIFE-SAVING SERVICE. (Builders’ Exchange Building, 721 Thirteenth street.) General Superintendent.—S. 1. Kimball, 1316 Rhode Island avenue. Assistant General Superviniendent.—Horace L. Piper, 1505 1, street. COMPTROLLER OF THE TREASURY. (Treasury Department Building.) Comptroller.—Robert J. Tracewell, 1817 Sixteenth street. Assistant Comptroller.—1,. P. Mitchell, The Leamington. Chief Clerk.—C. M. Foree, 1209 K street. Chief Law Clerk.—]. D. Terrill, 1334 Vermont avenue. REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. (Treasury Department Building.) Register.—Judson W. Lyons, 1320 T street. Assistant Register.—Cyrus Field Adams, 934 S street. Division of Loans.—Chief, C. N. McGroarty, 123 Fifth street NE. Division of Notes, Coupons, and Currency.—Chief, Newton Ferree, 1720 Thirteenth street. AUDITOR FOR THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT. (Treasury Department Building.) Auditor.—W. E. Andrews, 1223 Yale street. Deputy. —A. E. Bowling, Hyattsville, Md. Law Clerk.—T. O. W. Roberts, 918 Twenty-third street. Chiefs of Division: Customs.—J. 1. Heupel, 1430 Howard avenue. Internal Revenue.—Cadwell C. Tyler, 1712 Oregon avenue. Miscellaneous.—W. H. Lemon, 1735 U street. Public Debt.—A. B. Jameson, 3223 School street. AUDITOR FOR THE WAR DEPARTMENT. \ (Winder Building, Seventeenth and F streets.) Auditor. —Frederick E. Rittman, 2016 Columbia road. Deputy.—Edward P. Seeds, 128 C street NE. Disbursing Clevk.—Henry C. Swan, 1129 Dartmouth street. Chiefs of Division: Civil Claims.—W. A. Rogers, 1428 Welling place. Military Claims.—Elias Mann, 1242 Kenesaw avenue. 252 Congressional Directory. i Chiefs of Division—Continued. Paymasters.-—M. J. Hull, The Iowa. Quartermasters.—N. C. Martin, 1523 Grant avenue. | Records.—S. E. Faunce, The Windsor. | Law Board.—Chief, W. C. Eldridge, 322 C street; A. F. Medford, 138 C street NE.; J. Q. Kern, The Albert. AUDITOR FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. (Treasury Department Building.) Auditor.—Robert S. Person, 3112 Q street. | Deputy.—Geo. P. Dunham, 1301 First street. N Indian Division.—Chief, I,ee W. Funk, 1545 I' street. - Army and Navy Pension Division.—Chief, Henry Casey, 1211 Sixth street. Land Files and Miscellaneous Division.—]. E. R. Ray, 3103 Milwaukee street NE. Law Clerk.—Arthur Hendricks, Kensington, Md. AUDITOR FOR THE NAVY DEPARTMENT. (Treasury Department Building.) Auwuditor.— William Wallace Brown, The Buckingham. Deputy.—Robert S. Cowie, 2217 Fourteenth street. Navy Pay and Allotment Division.—Chief, George P. Davis, 1457 Staughton street. Paymasters’ Division.—Chief, Lewis K. Brown, 134 C street SE. Claim, Requisition, and Prize Money Division.— Chief, H. P. R. Holt, The Glad- stone. Law Clerk.—George H. French, 1701 T street. AUDITOR FOR THE STATE AND OTHER DEPARTMENTS. (Treasury Department Building.) Auditor.—FErnst G. Timme, 1343 T street. Deputy.—George W. Esterly, 1324 R street. Miscellaneous Division.—Chief, E. I". Bushnell, 1757 Madison street. Diplomatic and Consular Division.—Chief, C. H. Butler, 1145 Twenty-second street. Division of Judicial Accounts.—Chief, W. O. Bradley, 1007 Massachusetts avenue NE. Law Clerk.—W. W. Scott, 1616 Nineteenth street. AUDITOR FOR THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. (Post-Office Department Building and Union Building.) Auditor.—Joseph J. McCardy, The Chapin. Deputy.—Nolen L. Chew, 2119 First street. Deputy. — Chief Clerk.—]John B. Sleman, 3114 Sixteenth street. Law Clerk.—David H. Fenton, Kensington, Md. Disbursing Clerk.—B. W. Holman, The Cairo. Chiefs of Division. Assorting and Checking.—M. M. Holland, Silver Spring, Md. Bookkeeping .—David W. Duncan, 115 Fifth street NE. : ¥ Collecting. —George A. Darling, 608 E street. @ Foreign.—Daniel N. Burbank, 732 Thirteenth street. Inspecting. —B. A. Allen, 1901 Fourth street. : FPay.—Andrew M. McBath, 924 T street. Recording.—W. S. Belden, 1416 Hopkins street. \ 1h ' TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. (Treasury Department Building.) Treasurer.—Ellis H. Roberts, 1313 Massachusetts avenue. it Assistant Treasurer.—James F. Meline, 2111 O street. : Deputy Assistant Treasurer.—Gideon C. Bantz, 2112 Callow avenue, Baltimore, Md. Chief Clerk.-~—Willard F. Warner, The Concord. Cashier.—FE,. R. True, 1331 Kenyon street. i Assistant Cashier.—W. Howard Gibson, 2136 I, street. - Chiefs of Division. General Accounts.—D. W. Harrington, near Alexandria, Va. Issue.—James A. Sample, 2104 O street; assistant, Parley H. Eaton, 1318 T street. Executive Departments. 233 Chiefs of Division—Continued. Issue and Redemplion.—]. O. Manson, 923 S street. Loans.—Ferd. Weiler, 1316 V street. National Banks.—George Fort, 1525 Twenty-eighth street. Post-Office Accounts.—John W. Lowell, 630 KE street NE. Redemption. —TFranklin W. Lantz, 1319 Nineteenth street. Receiving Teller.—D. W. Herriott, 1127 Roanoke street. Paying Teller.—C. S. Pearce, 1819 Nineteenth street. Assistant Tellers.—R. H. Forsyth, 1522 T street, and A. P. Steward, Garrett Park, Md. Vault Clerk.—A. R. Quaiffe, The Concord. Bookkeeper.—Sherman Platt, The Portner. Assistant Bookkeeper.—W. B. McKelden, 1812 Belmont avenue. Sinking Fund Office.—In charge, Hiram W. Barrett, 3226 N street. National Bank Redemption Agency. Superintendent.—Thomas E. Rogers, The Columbia. Teller.—F. W. Wilson, 1406 Twenty-first street. Bookkeeper.—Allen K. Wagner, 436 New Jersey avenue SE. Assistant Teller.—R. S. Lytle, 1329 Wallach place. COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. (T'reasury Department Building.) © Comptroller.— Wm. Barret Ridgely, The Portland. Deputy Comptroller.—Thomas P. Kane, 1931 Cincinnati street. Chief Clerk.—Geo. T. May, 2119 F street. Chiefs of Division: Issues.—W. W. Eldridge, Kensington, Md. Organization.—W. J. Fowler, 205 Hammond court. Redemption. —Superintendent, KE. E. Schreiner, 1314 R street. Reports.—Elwood S. Gatch, 1839 Sixteenth street. Bond Clerk.—W. D. Swan, 222 First street SE. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAI, REVENUE. (Treasury Department Building.) Commissioner.—John W. Yerkes, The Highlands. Deputies.—Robert Williams, jr., 1912 H street; J. C. Wheeler, 1912 H street. Chief Clerk.—John I’. Bivins, The Windsor. : Chiefs of Division. Accounts.—1,. A. Conner, 1721 Corcoran street. Assessment.—C. A. Bates, Kirk street, West Chevy Chase. Chemistry.—C. A. Crampton, Bethesda, Md. Claims.—]. Lee Adams, Takoma Park. Distilled Spirits.—S. L. Stephenson, 1727 Riggs place. Law.—]. B. T. Tupper, 1333 Twenty-first street. Miscellaneous.—1. R. Hitt, jr. (in charge), 1334 Columbia road. Revenue Agents.—F. D. Sewall, The Hamilton. Stamp.—E,. C. Johnson, The Coywood. Tobacco.—E. 1,. Mills, 409 Fifteenth street. DIRECTOR OF THE MINT. (Treasury Department Building.) Director of the Mint.—George KE. Roberts, 1224 Vermont avenue, Examiner.—Robert E. Preston, 53 K street NE. Computer of Bullion.—B. F. Butler, 418 T street. Adjuster. —Frank W. Braddock, 1313 Fourteenth street. Assayer.—Frederick P. Dewey, Lanier Heights. BUREAU OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND MARINE-HOSPITAIL SERVICE. (Surgeon-General’s Office, 3 B street SE.) Surgeon-General.—Walter Wyman, Stoneleigh Court. Assistant Surgeons-General.—A. H. Glennan, 2435 Columbia road; I. L. Williams, 1309 Columbia road; W. J. Pettus, 1328 Nineteenth street; George T. Vaughan, 1718 I street; H. D. Geddings, The Farragut. Miscellaneous Division.—Chief, Asst. Surg. A. J. McLaughlin, 1410 Binney street. Chief Clerk and Disbursing Agent.—William P. Worcester, 1108 Spring road. 234 Congressional Directory. Hygienic Laboratory. (Twenty-fifth and EB streets.) Director.—Passed Asst. Surg. M. J. Rosenau, 3211 Thirteenth street. Assistant Director.—Passed Asst. Surg. John F. Anderson, 1412 Binney street. Chief of Division of Zoology.—Ch. W. Stiles, 1412 Hopkins place. Chief of Division of Pharmacology.—Reid Hunt, 1223 M street. THE DEPARTMENT OF WAR. (Seventeenth street, south of Pennsylvania avenue.) WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT, of Cincinnati, Ohio, Secretary of War (1603 K street); was born in Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, September 15, 1857; was graduated in 1874 from Woodward High School; graduated from Yale University in 1878; graduated in law from Cincinnati College in 1880, in which year he was admitted to bar of supreme court of Ohio; appointed assistant prosecuting attorney in 1881; resigned in 1882 to become collector of internal revenue, first district, Ohio, under President Arthur; resigned collectorship in 1883 to enter practice of law; in 1887 was appointed by Governor Foraker judge of the superior court of Cincinnati; resigned in 189o to become Solicitor-General of the United States under appointment of President Harrison; resigned in 1892 to become United States circuit judge for sixth judicial circuit; in 1896 became professor and dean of law department of Uni- versity of Cincinnati; resigned in 1900 circuit judgeship and deanship to become, by appointment of President McKinley, president of the United States Philippine Com- mission; in 1901, by appointment of President McKinley, became first civil governor of the Philippine Islands; was appointed Secretary of War by President Roosevelt February 1, 1904. Assistant Secretary of War.—Robert Shaw Oliver, 1753 N street. Chief Clerk.—John C. Scofield, 1614 P street. Private Secretary to Secretary of War.—Fred W. Carpenter, The Marlborough. Clerk to Assistant Secrelary.—Robert E. Parker, The Portner. Clerk to Chief Clerk.—James C. Churchill, 1344 Vermont avenue. Disbursing Clerk.—Sydney E. Smith, 3037 O street. Appointment Clerk.—William D. Searle, 1131 T'welfth street. Chiefs of Division. Correspondence.— John T. Dillon, The Bancroft. Record.—John B. Randolph, 1715 Corcoran street. Requisition and Accounts.—Charles B. Tanner, 3105 Sixteenth street. Supply.—Martin R. Thorp, 316 S street NE. GENERAIL STAFF. (In War Department Building.) Chief of Staff.—Lieut. Gen. Adna R. Chaffee, 1731 K street. Secretary.—Capt. Benj. Alvord, 2 Cooke place. Assistants to Chief of Staff.—Maj. Gen. Geo. L. Gillespie, 1721 Rhode Island avenue. Brig. Gen. Tasker H. Bliss, Cleveland Park (2940 Newark street). Chief of Artillery.—Brig. Gen. John P. Story, 1737 N street. On Duty in the Office of the Chief of Staff.—Col. Arthur 1.. Wagner, 1747 Q street; Lieut. Col. James T. Kerr, 2516 Nineteenth street; Lieut. Col. Crosby P. Miller, The Cairo; Lieut. Col. William W. Wotherspoon, 2007 O street; Maj. George W. Goethals, 1903 S street; Maj. William A. Mann, 1742 P street; Maj. William P. Duvall, 1527 Q street; Maj. Geo. F. E. Harrison, 2437 Columbia road; Maj. William D. Beach, 2112 O street; Maj. John S. Mallory, 1722 Twenty-first street; Maj. Samuel Reber, 1736 N street; Capt. Joseph T. Dickman, 1814 Belmont avenue; Capt. Harry C. Hale, 1754 P street; Capt. James K. Thompson, The Portner; Capt. Charles H. Muir, 1717 Thirty-fifth street; Capt. Frank De W. Ramsey, Army and Navy Club; Capt. Frank McIntyre, 2009 I street; Capt. Grote Hutcheson, 1758 Corcoran street; Capt. Sydney A. Cloman, Army and Navy Club; Capt. Robert E. L. Michie, The Richmond; Capt. Charles T. Menoher, 1832 Oregon avenue; Capt. William G. Haan, The Rochambeau; Capt. Charles D. Rhodes, 1925 S street; Capt. Hugh J. Gallagher, 1710 P street; Capt. Dennis E. Nolan, The Woodley. Chief Clerk.—Nathaniel Hershler, Cleveland Park. ES BS, A Executive Departments. 235 OFFICE OF THE MILITARY SECRETARY. {im War Department Building.) The Military Secretary. C. Ainsworth, The Concord. Assistants.—Brig. Gen. William P. Hall, 1929 S street; Col. Henry P. McCain, 1856 Mintwood place; Lieut. Col. Elbridge R. Hills, 1918 I street; Lieut. Col. Edward Davis, Stoneleigh Court; Lieut. Col. John Tweedale, 1725 P street: Maj. William P, Evans, 2230 Q street; Maj. Edward S. Fowler, 1725 P street. Chief Clevk.—Jjacob Frech, 514 I, street NE. OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR-GENERAL. (In War Department Building.) Inspector-Genera’.—Brig. Gen. George H. Burton, War Department. Assistants.—Col. S. C. Mills, 1821 Nineteenth street; Maj. J. D. C. Hoskins, 1734 K street; Maj. PB. S. Strong. 929 Seventeenth street. Chief Clerk.—Warren H. Orcutt, 509 Kast Capitol street. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL. (In War Department Building.) Judge-Advocate-General.—Brig. Gen. George B. Davis, 1734 Columbia road. Assistants.—Maj. John Biddle Porter, 1732 I street; First Lieut. Charles E. Hay, The Farragut. Chief Clerk.—Iewis W. Call, 1660 Sheridan avenue. OFFICE OF THE QUARTERMASTER-GENERAL. (In War Department Building.) Quartermaster-General.—Brig. Gen. Charles F. Humphrey, Fort Myer, Va, Assistants.—Col. George E. Pond, The Cairo; Lieut. Col. George Ruhlen, 1826 California avenue; Maj. John B. Bellinger, 1839 Vernon avenue; Maj. John ir. French, jr., 2330 ‘Eighteenth street; Maj. James B. Aleshire, 1719 Fighteenth street; Maj. Isaac W. Littell, 1921 S street; Maj. Winthrop S. Wood, The Woodley; Maj. C. B. Baker, 2024 N street; Maj. Thomas H. Slavens, 1722 Fifteenth street; Capt. Joseph T. Crabbs, The Decatur; Capt. Peter C. Hains, jr., 1847 Mint- wood ‘place. Chief Clerk.—Henry D. Saxton, 615 Nineteenth street. In Charge of Depot.—Capt. A. W. Butt, The Dupont. OFFICE OF THE COMMISSARY-GENERAL. (In War Department Building.) Commissary-General.—Brig. Gen. John F. Weston, 1810 Cincinnati street. Assistants.—Col. Henry G. Sharpe, 1713 M street; Maj. W. H. Hart, The Ontario; Capt. Morton J. Henry, 1314 Nineteenth street. Chief Clerk.—Emmet Hamilton, 1518 Ninth street. OFFICE OF THE SURGEON-GENERAL. (In War Department Building.) Surgeon-General.—Brig. Gen. Robert M. O'Reilly, Metropolitan Ciub. Assistants.— Maj. Jefferson R. Kean, 1913 S street; Maj. Merritte W. Ireland, 1917 S street; Maj. Charles F. Mason, 1909 S street. Chief Clerk.—George A. Jones, 1754 Q street. Army Medical Museum and Library. (Seventh and B streets SW.) In Charge.—Col. Charles 1.. Heizmann, 2025 O street. Librarian.—Maj. Walter D. McCaw, 1915 S street. In Charge of Laboratory.—First Lieut. James Carroll, 433 New Jersey avenue SE. In Charge of Field Medical Supply Depot.—Capt. Carl R. Darnall, 1717 Riggs place. Office of Attending Surgeon. (1814 G street.) Attending Surgeon.—Maj. Guy L. Edie, 1907 S street. Assistant.—Contract Surg. F. S. Nash, 1723 Q street. OFFICE OF THE PAYMASTER-GENERAL. (In War Department Building.) Paymaster-General.—Brig. Gen. Francis S. Dodge, 2113 S street. Assistant to Paymaster-General.—Maj. J. B. Houston, The Ontario. Chief Clerk.—T. M. Exley, 1449 Sheridan avenue. 236 Congressional Directory. i Chief Disbursing Officer and Post Paymaster.—Col. C. H. Whipple, The Portner. Paymasters.—Maj. W. Vinson, Fort Myer, Va.; Maj. Geo. E. Pickett, The Ontario. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS. \ (In War Department Building.) - Chief of Engineers.—DBrig. Gen. Alexander Mackenzie, 2469 Eighteenth street. | Assistants.—Maj. Frederic V. Abbot, 2013 Kalorama avenue; Maj. H. F. Hodges, 1850 Mintwood place; Capt. Charles W. Kutz, 2117 O street. On special duty. —Maj. Solomon W. Roessler, 1407 Twenty-first street. : | Chief Clerk.—P. J. Dempsey, 217 South Fairfax street, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ORDNANCE. (In War Department Building.) 3 Chief of Ordnance.—Brig. Gen. William Crozier, 1428 K street. Assistants.—Maj. A. H. Russell, 1807 H street; Capt. Charles B. Wheeler, 2106 R street; Capt. George Montgomery, The Buckingham; Capt. T. C, Dickson, 1765 Church street; Capt. I,. M. Fuller, 1927 S street; er T. L. Ames, 1729 Nineteenth street. Chief Clerk.—]John J. Cook, 925 M street. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAI, OFFICER. (In War Department Building.) Chief Signal Officer.—Brig. Gen. A. W. Greely, 1914 G street. Assistants.—Col. James Allen, The Normandie; Maj. Edgar Russel; TLieut. A. S Briggs, The Concord. Disbursing Officer.—Capt. George S. Gibbs, The Brunswick. Chief Clerk.—George A. Warren, Takoma Park. BUREAU OF INSULAR AFFAIRS. (In War Department Building.) Chief.—Col. Clarence R. Edwards, U. S. A., 1775 Massachusetts avenue. Law Officer.—Charles E. Magoon, The Farragut. In Charge of Insurgent Records.—Capt. John R. M. Taylor, Army and Navy Cap, Chief Clerk.—W. Leon Pepperman, The Grafton. OFFICE OF PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS AND WASHINGTON MONUMENT, | (In Lemon Building.) | In Charge.—Col. Charles S. Bromwell, 1608 New Hampshire avenue, Chief Clerk.—E. F. Concklin, 513 Eleventh street. Landscape Gardener. __George H. Brown, 1357 Roanoke street. Custodian of Monument.—Wm. A. Craig, 1020 Pennsylvania avenue SE. OFFICE, OF WASHINGTON AQUEDUCT. (2728 Pennsylvania avenue.) In Charge.—Lieut. Col. Smith S. Leach, The Richmond. Assistant.—Capt. W. P. Wooten, The Portner. Chief Clerk.—Pickering Dodge, 3019 Dumbarton avenue. ; (Post-office—Manila.) | Commissioners. —Luke FE. Wright, chairman, and governor of the islands; Dean C. Worcester, Henry C. Ide, James F. Smith, W. Cameron Forbes, Trinidad H. Pardo | | COMMISSION TO THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, | de Tavera, Benito Tegarda, and José R. Luzuriaga. ISTHMIAN CANAI, COMMISSION. | | Commissioners.—Rear Admiral John G. Walker, U. S. N. (retired), chairman; | Maj. Gen. George W. Davis, U. S. A. (atively William Barclay Parsons, C. E.; William H. Burr, C. E.; Benjamin M. Harrod, C. E.; C. Ewald Grunsky, C. E 5 Secretary. —D. 1. Murphy. Assistant Secrelary.—Rufus A. ane. Chief Clerfe.—S. E. Redfern. General Counsel.—Charles E. Magoon. ¥ Zreasurer.—Rear Admiral A. S. Kenny, U. S. N. (retired). Deputy Treasurer.—N. S. Faucett. Auditor—W. P. Armstrong. PR tee | GET Ye Deputy Auditor.—W. W. Warwick. = Chief Engineer.—John ¥. Wallace, Ancon, Canal Zone, Isthmus of Panama. : Chief Material and Supplies Department. Paymaster E. CG Tobey, U. S. N., Cris- tobal, Canal Zone, Isthmus of Panama. v Executive Departments. 237 Disbursing Officer.—Paymaster Geo. C. Schafer, U. S. N., Ancon, Canal Zone, Isthmus of Panama. Chief Sanitary Officer.—Col. W. C. Gorgas, Ancon, Canal Zone, Isthmus of Panama. BOARD OF ORDNANCE AND FORTIFICATIONS. (1744 G street.) E | President.—Maj. Gen. G. L. Gillespie, 1721 Rhode Island avenue. Brig. Gen. William Crozier, Chief of Ordnance, 1428 K street; Brig. Gen. John P. H Story, Chief of Artillery, 1737 N street; Brig. Gen. Alexander Mackenzie, Chief of Engineers, 2469 Eighteenth street; Lieut. Col. Ramsay D. Potts, Artillery Corps, Fort Monroe, Va.; Maj. Erasmus M. Weaver, Artillery Corps, Governors Island, N. Y.; Thomas J. Henderson (Princeton, Ill.), 53 B street NE. §! Recorder.—Capt. Tracy C. Dickson, Ordnance Department, 1765 Church street. THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. | (K street, between Vermont avenue and Fifteenth street.) WILLIAM HENRY MOODY, of Haverhill, Mass., Attorney-General (1428 K street), 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 attorney for the eastern district of Massachu- Hl setts from 189o to 1895; was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress to fill a vacancy, Hl and to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses; was appointed Hi Secretary of the Navy and assumed the duties of that office May 1, 1902, in which | office he served until appointed Attorney-General by President Roosevelt to succeed Philander C. Knox, July 1, 1904. Solicitor-General.—Henry M. Hoyt, 1701 Rhode Island avenue. | Assistant to the Attorney-General.—William A. Day, 1736 K street. | Assistant Attorneys-General.—Louis A. Pradt, 1908 F street; Milton D. Purdy, 2135 R street; James C. McReynolds, The Shoreham; Charles H. Robb, The Rocham- E beau; John G. Thompson, The Cairo; William E. Fuller, The Hamilton. I Special Assistant Attorney-General. —Charles W. Russell, 2309 Eighteenth street. Assistant Attorney-Geneval for Interior Department.—¥rank I, Campbell, 1439 Howard avenue (office in Interior Department building). Solicitor for the Department of State.—William 1,. Penfield, The Dewey (office in building of Department of State). Solicitor of the Department of Commerce and Labor.—William Miller Collier, The New Willard (office in building of Department of Commerce and Labor). Bl Solicitor of Internal Revenue.—A. B. Hayes, 3338 Sixteenth street (office in Treasury Department building). Assistant Attorneys.—Oliver E. Pagin, 1736 Columbia road; Felix Brannigan, 1481 Columbia road; George H. Walker, Cleveland Park; Charles F. Kincheloe, Bethesda, Md.; James Alfred Tanner, 1416 N street; Philip M. Ashford, 1930 First street; Edwin C. Brandenburg, 1634 Sixth street; John Q. Thompson, Riggs House; Harry Peyton, 1744 Riggs street; HE. C. Foster, The Portner; Lincoln B. Smith, 1758 Oregon avenue; John W. Trainer, 1830 S street; F. W. Collins, 1820 | Howard avenue; Glenn E. Husted, 1635 Kenesaw avenue; William W. Scott, 914 Westminster street; George M. Anderson, Rockville, Md.; Leslie C. Fuller, 1456 Chapin street. Special Assistant Attorneys.—M. C. Burch, 313 S street NE.; F. E. Hutchins, 1515 Rhode Island avenue; John I,. Lott, The Cecil; R. A. Howard, The Columbia; William R. Harr, 403 Spruce street; Henry C. Lewis, 1918 K street; Reeves T. Strickland, 309 E street. Law Clerk and Examiner of Titles.—A. J. Bentley, 1116 Ninth street. Chief Clerk.—Orin J. Field, 1447 Meridian avenue. | Private Secvetary to the Attorney-General.—John A. Kratz, jr., The Westover. Appointment Clerk.—]. Harwood Graves, The Ethelhurst. General Agent.—Cecil Clay, 1513 S street. Chief of Division of Accounts.—John J. Glover, 1505 R street. Disbursing Clerk.—Alexander C. Caine, 1528 T street. Assistant Attorney in Charge of Dockets.—Sinclair B. Sheibley, 2501 Fourteenth street. Attorney in charge of Pardons.—Peyton Gordon, Gaithersburg, Md. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR OF THE TREASURY. (Treasury Department Building.) Solicttor.—Maurice D. O'Connell, 2116 O street. Assistant Solicitor. —TFelix A. Reeve, 1628 Nineteenth street. Chief Clerk.—Charles E. Vrooman, Hyattsville, Md. 238 Congressional Directory. THE COMMISSION T'0 REVISE THE LAWS. (Bond Building, corner New York avenue and Fourteenth street.) Alex. C. Botkin, chairman, Helena, Mont.; The Farragut. David K. Watson, Columbus, Ohio, Riggs House. William D. Bynum, Indianapolis, Ind., 1645 K street. SPANISH TREATY CLAIMS COMMISSION. . (1411 H street.) Commissioners.—W. KE. Chandler, president, Concord, N. H., 1421 I street; W. A. Maury, 1767 Massachusetts avenue; W. I. Chambers, Sheffield, Ala., 1824 New Hampshire avenue; J. P. Wood, Athens, Ohio, The Dewey; G. J. Diekema, Holland, Mich., The Dewey. Clerk.—W. E. Spear, Boston, Mass., 1704 Thirteenth street. Special Counsel.—Hannis Taylor, 1700 Nineteenth street. THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. (Pennsylvania avenue, between Eleventh and I'welfth streets.) ROBERT J. WYNNE, of Philadelphia, Pa., Postmaster-General (915 Rhode Island Avenue), was born in New York City, N. Y., November 18, 1851; educated in the public schools of that city; moved to Philadelphia, Pa., where he learned telegraphy and was employed by the Bankers’ and Brokers’ Telegraph Company; subsequently becoming chief operator of the Pacific & Atlantic Telegraph Company. After a residence of eight years in Philadelphia, he removed to Washington, D. C., where he was employed on the Cincinnati Gazette under Gen. H. V. Boynton; was correspondent for the Gazette until 1891, when he was appointed private secretary to Hon. Charles Foster, of Ohio, Secretary of the Treasury. On the election of President Cleveland, Mr. Wynne returned to journalism; was correspondent of the Cincinnati Tribune and Philadelphia Bulletin. His articles on national politics, tariff, and finance, secured him an exclusive engagement with the New York Press. He resigned from the latter paper to become First Assistant Postmaster-General. Mr. Wynne was president. of the Gridiron Club; is a member of the Loyal Iegion and of the Army and Navy Club. Nominated Postmaster-General October 10, 1904. Chief Clerk.—Merritt O. Chance, Kensington, Md. - Assistant Chief Clerk.—1L. S. Elmer, 1723 Corcoran street. Private Secretary to Postmaster-General.— Assistant Attorney-General.—Russell P. Goodwin, The Portland. Assistant Attorney.—Edwin W. Lawrence, 1316 1, street. Assistant Attorney.—Richard M. Webster, 1336 Yale street. Appointment Clerk.—William S. Nicholson, Cleveland Park. Superintendent and Disbursing Cierk.—Rufus B. Merchant, 407 Fourth street. Topographer.—A. Von Haake, Hammond Court. OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. First Assistant Postimaster-General.— Chief Clerk.—John J. Howley, 2815 Fourteenth street. Superintendents of Division: Correspondence.—Chief, James R. Ash, The Llewllyn. Dead Letters.—James R. Young, 1001 New Hampshire avenue; chief clerk, Ward Burlingame, 1102 Thirteenth street. Postal Money-Order System.—Edward F. Kimball, 1316 Rhode Island avenue; chief clerk, F. H. Rainey, 402 Spruce street. : Post-Office Supplies. —W. M. Mooney, 1919 I street; assistant, William Schofield, 213 Fifth street NE. Salaries and Allowances.—C. M. Waters, 1518 Tenth street; assistant, Charles P. Grandfield, 949 S street. OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAIL. Second Assistant Postmaster-General.—W. S. Shallenberger, 1863 Mintwood place. Chief Clerk.—George F. Stone, 3124 Q street., Superintendent Rarlway Adjustment.—James H. Crew, 1532 Ninth street; assistant, Joseph Stewart, 1640 Howard avenue. Division of Contracts.—Chief, E. P. Rhoderick, 924 Westminster street. Division of Inspection.—Chief, James B. Cook, Kensington, Md. ‘ Division of Mail Equipment.—Chief, Thomas P. Graham, 1123 Eleventh street. Railway Mail Service.—General Superintendent, James E. White, The Stratford; eves span = - Executive Departments. 239 Assistant General Superintendent, Alexander Grant, The Cecil; chief clerk, John W. Hollyday, 1924 Thirteenth street. Foreign Mails.—Superintendent, N. M. Brooks, 224 A street SE.; chief clerk, Robert I,. Maddox, 1602 Thirteenth street. OFFICE OF THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. Third Assistant Postmaster-General.—Edwin C. Madden, 1303 Clifton street. Chief Clerk.—Arthur M. Travers, The Mendota. System of Postal Finance.—Superintendent, C. Howard Buckler, 409 Sixth street SE. Postage Stamp Supplies and Postmasters’ Accounts.—Superintendent, James H. Reeve, 3601 Milwaukee street. Classification Division.—Superintendent, Harwood M. Bacon, 1735 Willard street. Registry System.—Superintendent, Edwin Sands, The Donald, or 1o12 Thirteenth street. : Redemption Division.—Chief, George D. Scott, 933 N street. Files and Records Division.—Chief, E. S. Hall, 1701 Thirteenth street. Postage Stamp Agent.—John P. Green, 1944 Ninth street. Postal Card Agent. —F. H. Shook, Rumford Falls, Me. Stamped Envelope Agent.—Silas W. Stone, Hartford, Conn. OFFICE OF THE FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. Fourth Assistant Postinaster-General. —Joseph 1. Bristow, 1123 Roanoke street. Chief Clerk.—Charles A. Conrard, The Roland. Division of Appointments.—Chief, Homer Hoch, 920 Massachusetts avenue. Division of Bonds and Commissions.—Chief, Christian B. Dickey, 3212 Seventeenth street. Division of Fost-Office Inspectors and Mail Depredations.—Chief post-office in- spector, William J. Vickery, 1209 K street; chief clerk, Theodore Ingalls, 1224 Thirteenth street. Superintendent City Delivery Service.—FErvin H. Thorp, 138 B street NE. Superintendent Rural Free Delivery.—William R. Spilman, 324 Fifth street SE. Supervisor Rural Free Delivery.—Eugene H. Hathaway, 1210 N street. OFFICE OF THE PURCHASING AGENT. Purchasing Agent.—William E. Cochran, 2464 Wisconsin avenue. Chief Clerk.—O. H. Briggs, 622 C street NE. THE DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY. (Seventeenth street, south of Pennsylvania avenue.) PAUL MORTON, of Chicago, Ill., Secretary of the Navy (1612 K street), was born in Detroit, Mich., May 22, 1857. Attended common school until he was 16 years old; then entered railroad office; continued in the railroading business, with the exception of six years (from 18go to 1896, when he was engaged in the coal and iron business) until appointed Secretary of the Navy; assumed the duties of that office July 1, 1904. Assistant Secretary.—Charles H. Darling, The Portland. Chief Clevk.—B. F. Peters, 140 C street SE. Private Secretary to the Secretary of the Navy.—John Nordhouse, 1343 Kenesaw avenue, Disbursing Clerk.—F. H. Stickney, 607 M street. Commander W. P. Potter, The Highlands. OFFICE OF THE ADMIRAL OF THE NAVY. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) Admiral of the Navy.—George Dewey, 1747 Rhode Island avenue. Aids.—Lieut. Commander Spencer S. Wood, 1819 M street; Lieut, Frank Marble, The Mendota. Secretary.—1Lieut. John W. Crawford, 1902 G street, 240 Congressional Directory. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. (Third floor, east wing.) Chief of Bureaw.—Rear-Admiral N. E. Mason, 1724 P street. Assistant to Chief.—Commander John Hubbard, Navy Department. Chief Clerk.—FE. S. Brandt, 1518 Corcoran street. Lieut. Commander W. McLean, 2109 O street; Lieuts. M. I. Bristol, Army aad Navy Club; N. C. Twining, 1739 Nineteenth street; J. L. Latimer, 2118 Connecti- cut avenue. BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT. (Third floor, east wing.) - Chief of Burveau.—Rear-Admiral H. N. Manney, 1916 N street. Chief Clevk.—A. C. Wrenn, 234 Tenth street NE. Assistants.—1ieut. Commander C. A. Gove, 1819 Q street; Lieut. Commander V. S. Nelson, The Portner; Lieut. Commander J. I.. Jayne, 1747 Church street; Lieuts. C. F. Hughes, The Marlborough; S. S. Robison, The Marlborough. Naval Inspector of Electrical Appliances.—Lieut. Commander G. W. Denfeld, The Rochambeau. Superintendent of Compasses.—Commander George H. Peters, 1354 Columbia road. Special Duty.—lieut. Commander John A. Norris, 1609 Riggs place; Civil Engineer F. T. Chambers, Army and Navy Club; Lieut. I. A. Kaiser, The Rochambeau. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) Hydrographer.—Commander Harry M. Hodges, The Highlands. Assistants.—Lieut. Commanders W. I, Burdick, The Portland; Harry Kimmell, 1721 Riggs place; Commanders R. G. Peck (retired), Army and Navy General Hospital, Fort Bayard, N. Mex.; H. H. Barroll (retired), The Dupont. Hydrographic Engineer.—G. W. Littlehales, 2132 Ie Roy place. Clerk.—Henry 1. Ballentine, 2108 Nineteenth street. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. (Second floor, east wing.) Chief of Bureau.—Rear-Admiral George A. Converse, 1744 M street. Assistant to Bureaw.—Capt. John E. Pillsbury, Stoneleigh Court. Assistants.—Commanders Cameron McR. Winslow, 1229 Nineteenth street; Nathaniel R. Usher, 1908 I street; Lieut. Commanders William S. Sims, 921 Eighteenth street; Henry B. Wilson, 1417 Twenty-first street; Frederick I. Chapin, 1414 Twentieth street; Lieuts. Thomas Washington, 1831 Corcoran street; William K. Harrison, The Stratford; Carl T. Vogelgesang, 2028 Columbia road; Ridley McLean, 1808 Riggs place. Chief Clevk.—Edward W. Callahan, 1908 H street. Clerk to the Naval Academy.—Leonard Draper, 531 Eighteenth street. OFFICE OF NAVAL, INTELLIGENCE. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) Chaef Intelligence Officer.—Capt. Seaton Schroeder, 1816 N street. Lieut. Commanders Richard T. Mulligan, 1432 M street; Augustus F. Fechteler, Chevy Chase; Charles N. Atwater, 2019 Hillyer place; Charles P. Plunkett, The Westover; Lieuts. Lloyd H. Chandler, 2019 Kalorama avenue; Horace P. McIntosh (retired), 1920 Sixteenth street. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. (First floor, east wing.) Chief of Bureau.—Civil Engineer Mordecai TI. Endicott, 1330 R street. Chief Clerk.—Wm. M. Smith, 3105 Eleventh street. Prof. H. M. Paul, 2015 Kalorama avenue. Civil Engineer A. J. Menocal, 1736 K street, Ey Executive Departments. 241 BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS. (First floor, east wing.) Chief of Bureau.—Paymaster-General H. T. B. Harris, 1302 Connecticut avenue. Assistant to Bureau.—Paymaster Samuel McGowan, The Rochambeau. Assistants.—Paymasters W. T. Wallace, 3129 U street; C. J. Peoples, The Farragut. Assistant Paymasters G. M. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth street; J. M. Hancock, 1120 Thirteenth street. ; Civilian Assistant.—Harold J. Pack, The Cumberland. BUREAU OF STEAM ENGINEERING. (Third floor, east wing.) Chief.—Rear-Admiral and Engineer in Chief Charles W. Rae, 1827 Jefferson place. Chief Clevk.—W. H. H. Smith, 27122 H street. Commanders A. F. Dixon, The Albany; A. B. Canaga, 1746 S street; Stacy Potts, 2017 Hillyer place; W. M. Parks, 2104 Eighteenth street. Lieut. Commanders B. C. Bryan, 1734 Corcoran street; W. W. White, The Concord. Lieuts. M. E. Reed, The Iowa; H. V. Butler, 2024 Hillyer place; H. C. Dinger, Army and Navy Club. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. (First floor, south wing.) Chief of Bureau.—Surgeon Gen. P. M. Rixey, gog Sixteenth street. Assistant.—Medical Inspector W. R. Du Bose, 1532 Twenty-second street. Chief Clerk.—Charles T Earle, 216 New York avenue. Special Duty.—Medical Inspector Walter A. McClurg, The Albany; Passed Assist- ant Surgeon P. E. McDonnold, Army and Navy Club. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCIION AND REPAIR. (First floor, east wing.) Chief of Bureauw.—Chief Constructor Washington Lee Capps, 1823 Jefferson place. Chief Clerk.—Sidney I. Besselievre, 315 E street NE. Naval Constructors Joseph H. Linnard, 1708 H street; J. J. Woodward, 1527 Corcoran street; David W. Taylor, navy-yard, Washington, D. C.; F. B. Zahm, The Farragut; H. I. Ferguson, 1841 Vernon avenue; W. P. Robert, The Ontario. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL. (Second floor, east wing, room 288.) Judge-Advocate-General.—Capt. Samuel W. B. Diehl, 1525 P street. Solicitor.—E. P. Hanna, 700 Twentieth street. . Chief Clevk.—Pickens Neagle, 1510 Park street. Lieut. Commander Robert I,. Russell, The Portner. First Lieut. Harry R. Lay, Stoneleigh Court. NAVAI, WAR RECORDS OFFICE AND LIBRARY. (Fourth floor, east wing.) Superintendent.—Charles W. Stewart, 1211 Kenyon street.” NAVAL OBSERVATORY. (Georgetown Heights.) Superintendent. —Rear-Admiral C. M. Chester, at the Observatory. Commander J. M. Robinson, 2016 Hillyer place. Lieut. Commander E. E. Hayden, 1802 Sixteenth street. Profs. A. N. Skinner and W. S. Eichelberger, at the Observatory; F. B. Littell, 2507 Wisconsin avenue. Director of the Nautical Almanac.—Prof. Walter S. Harshman, The Ontario. Assistant Astronomers.—George A. Hill, 3222 Wisconsinavenue ; H. L. Rice, Friend- ship Heights; John C. Hammond, at the Observatory. Assistants (Nautical Almanac Department).—H. B. Hedrick, 3140 Linthicum place; Wm. Auhagen, 2140 P street; Jas. Robertson, 3018 Q street. Clerk.—Thomas Harrison, 2723 N street. Libravian.—W. D. Horigan, 1636 Thirtieth street, 58-3D—2D ED——I6 h 242 Congressional Directory. Ra NAVY-YARD AND STATION, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Foot of Eighth street SE.) Commandant.—Rear-Admiral F. J. Higginson. First Clerk to Commandant.—H. H. Brogden, Halls, Md. Aid to Commandant.—Chief Boatswain J. McLaughlin. Superintendent Naval Gun Factory.—Capt. E. C. Pendleton. Purchasing Pay Officer.—Pay Director I,. A. Frailey, 1506 Twenty-first street. Head of Departments of Yards and Docks and Steam Engineering.—Commander J. M. Bowyer. General Stovekeeper.—Pay Director Stephen Rand. Pay Officer.—Paymaster J. H. Merriam, 808 Eighteenth street. Medical Officers.—Medical Director P. Fitzsimons; Passed Assistant Surgeon J. A. Murphy. Recorder, Board of Labor Employment; Head Department Equipment and Naviga- tion; and Senior Member Board of Inspection.—Commander R. G. Davenport, 1729 G street. Ordnance Duty.—Commander J. M. Bowyer; Lieut. Commander A. A. Ackerman; Lieuts. H. W. Jones, G. N. Hayward, H. G. Macfarland, W. K. Gise, S. P. Fullin- wider, R. C. Bulmer, R. W. McNeely, W. S. Turpin, J. W. Graeme; Chtef Gunner J. J. Walsh; Gunner J. Kenyon. Chaplain.—R. R. Hoes, 1636 Rhode Island avenue. U. S. S. Sylph.—Lieut. F. T. Evans. Commanding Marines.—Maj. E. K. Cole, U. S. M. C. Garrison Duty. —Capt. H. C. Davis, U. 8. M.C.; Lieut. D. C. McDougal, U. S. M. C. Naval Hospital.—Medical Director G. P. Bradley; Surgeon Raymond Spear; Assist- ant Surgeon Hugh T. Nelson. NAVY PAY OFFICE. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) Purchasing Officer.—Pay Director L. A. Frailey, 1506 Twenty-first street. Disbursing Officer.—Pay Inspector Livingston Hunt, 1709 Rhode Island avenue. Chief Clevk.—F. V. Walker, 1526 Corcoran street. NAVAI, HOSPITAL. (Pennsylvania avenue, between Ninth and Tenth streets SE.) Medical Director G. P. Bradley, 1702 P street. Surgeon Raymond Spear, Naval Hospital. Assistant Surgeon H. T. Nelson, Naval Hospital. MUSEUM OF HYGIENE AND MEDICAL SCHOOL. (Twenty-third and FE streets.) Medical Directors R. A. Marmion, The Franconia; John C. Boyd, 1313 P street; P. A. Lovering, 1819 Kalorama avenue. Surgeons C. F. Stokes, 1731 Nineteenth street; H. G. Boyer, The Albany; E.R. Stitt, 1806 R street. Passed Assistant Surgeon. A. W. Balch, 1720 H street. . NAVAL DISPENSARY. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) Medical Director W. S. Dixon, 1516 R street. Surgeon F. L. Pleadwell, Stoneleigh Court. GENERAI, BOARD. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) President.—Admiral George Dewey, 1747 Rhode Island avenue. Rear-Admirals C. E. Clark, The Marlborough; G. A. Converse, 1744 M street; Capts. C. S. Sperry, president of Naval War College, Newport, R. I.; Wm. T. Swinburne, The Highlands; Wm. Swift, 1407 Fifteenth street; Seaton Schroeder, 1816 N street; Richard Wainwright, 1264 New Hampshire avenue, Executive Departments. 243 On duty in connection with the Board. Secretary. —Lieut. F. Marble, The Mendota. : Capt. John E. Pillsbury, Stoneleigh Court; Lieut. Commanders W. I Chambers, 1834 I street, and S. S. Wood, 1819 M street; Lieuts. Philip Andrews, 1738 Riggs Place, and Edward H. Campbell, 2118 Wyoming avenue. BOARD OF INSPECTION AND SURVEY. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) President.—Capt. J. H. Dayton, The Albany. Capt. E. H. C. Leutze, 2012 Hillyer place. Naval Constructor J. J. Woodward, 1527 Corcoran street. Commander I. S. K. Reeves, 1720 Twenty-second street. Maj. Louis J. Magill, 818 Eighteenth street. Recorder.—Commander W. C. Cowles, The Lenox. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) President.—Rear-Admiral Charles E. Clark, The Marlborough. Capts. Harry Knox, The Highlands; Royal R. Ingersoll, The Marlborough. Commander Warner B. Bayley, 1805 Nineteenth street. Recorder.—Charles B. Cheyney, 7 Cooke place. NAVAL, RETIRING BOARD. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) President.—Rear-Admiral Charles E. Clark, The Marlborough. Capts. Harry Knox, The Highlands; Royal R. Ingersoll, The Marlborough. Medical Directors Abel FE. Price, 2233 Q street; John C. Wise, Warrenton, Va. Recorder.—Charles B. Cheyney, 7 Cooke place. BOARD OF MEDICAIL EXAMINERS. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) Medical Directors Francis M. Gunnell (retired), 600 Twentieth street; Adolph A. Hoehling (retired), 1748 Q street; John C. Wise, Warrenton, Va. Recorder.—Charles B. Cheyney, 7 Cooke place. HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS. (Navy Department Annex, Mills Building.) Commandant.—Brig. Gen. George F. Elliott, Marine Barracks. Adjutant and Inspector.—Col. Charles H. Lauchheimer, The Farragut. Assistants.—Majs. Louis J. Magill, 818 Eighteenth street, and Albert S. McLemore, Headquarters Marine Corps. Quartermaster.—Col. Frank I,. Denny, 1634 Connecticut avenue. Assistants.—Maj. Charles IL. McCawley, Metropolitan Club; Capts. Henry I.. Roose- velt, The Marlborough, Hugh I. Matthews, The Farragut. Paymaster.—Col. Green Clay Goodloe, 1103 Sixteenth street. Assistant. —Capt. William G. Powell, The Dupont. Capt. Henry Leonard, 626 D street SE. Ard-de-Camp to the Commandant.—First Lieut. Frank E. Evans, Stoneleigh Court. MARINE BARRACKS. (Eighth street SE.) Commanding .—1ieut. Col. Randolph Dickins. Lieut. Col. Harry K. White. Capt. Robert F. Wynne. First Lieuts. Benjamin B. Woog, Richard S. Hooker, and Thomas H. Brown. 244 Congressional Directory. THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. (Corner of Seventh and F streets.) ETHAN ALLEN HITCHCOCK, of Missouri, Secretary of the Interior (1601 K street), 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 Extraordinary 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, 1750 S street. Assistant Secretary.—Melville W. Miller, The Sherman. Chief Clerk of the Department.—Edward M. Dawson, 1752 S street. First Assistant Attorney.—Samuel V. Proudfit, 57 Quincy street. Private Secretary to the Secretary of the Interior.—W. Scott Smith, 525 T street. Chiefs of Division: Appointment.—John W. Holcombe, 1829 Corcoran street. Disbursing. —George W. Evans, 918 Nineteenth street. Document.—John G. Ames, 1600 Thirteenth street. Indian.—Joseph T. Bender, The Cecil. Indian Territory.—ILuther R. Smith, The Iowa. Lands and Railroads.—]James 1. Parker, 321 Florida avenue, Patents and Miscellaneous.—W. Bertrand Acker, 1732 Fifteenth street. Stationery and Printing. —Amos Hadley, 1330 Harvard street. Board of Pension Appeals.—Chairman, Harrison I. Bruce, 1436 N street. Custodian.—Hiram Buckingham, 1231 Princeton street. Captain of the Walch.—Walter F. Halleck, 635 Maryland avenue NE. GENERAI, LAND OFFICE. (Old Post-Office Department Building.) Commissioner.— William A. Richards, The Portner, Assistant Commissioner. —John H. Fimple, 920 Massachusetts avenue. Chief Cle Recorder. ly i H" ‘Brush, The Rockingham. Chiefs of division. Accounts.—Albert B. White, The Leamington. Contest. —Henry W. Sanford, The Montrose. Drafting .—Frank Bond, The Decatur. Forestry.—Hiram H. Jones, 3341 Seventeenth street. Mineral. —Henry G. Potter, 1106 G street. Preemption.—Isaac R. Conwell, 1302 Columbia road. Public Lands.—Alexander C. Shaw, The Rockingham. Railroad.—Samuel S. Marr, 1318 Corcoran street. Special Service.—George EF. Pollock, Boyd, Md. Surveying.—Charles I. Du Bois, 3417 Brown street. Swamp Land.—Edmond Mallet, 934 I street. Receiving Clevk.—Julius H. Hammond, The Ontario. Law Clerks.—James W. Witten, 19oI "Fifth street; T. Warren Alin, 935 Massa- chusetts avenue. Law Examiners.—John V. Wright, 2015 Hillyer place; F. C. Dezendorf, Laurel, Md. — Be anc : Executive Departments. 245 PATENT OFFICE. (Interior Department Building.) Commissioner.—Frederick 1. Allen, 1523 K street. Assistant Commissioner.—FEdward B. Moore, 1359 Yale street. Chief Clerk.—Charles M. Irelan, 1849 Wyoming avenue. Financial Clerk.—Frank D. Sloat, 1214 I, street. Law Clerks.—John M. Coit, 1213 ILydecker avenue; Cornelius C. Billings, 1702 Ninth street. Examiners-in-Chief.—Solon W. Stocking, 1013 H street; Thomas G. Steward, 1439 Q street; John H. Brickenstein, 1603 Nineteenth street. Principal Examiners: Advertising, Baggage, etc.—G. A. Nixon, The Westover. : Artesian and Oil Wells, Stone Working, Stove Furniture.—A. P. Shaw, 2574 University place. : Builders’ Hardware, Locks, Latches, elc.—A. G. Wilkinson, 1526 K street. Calorifics.—Millard J. Moore, Glencarlyn, Va. Chemastry.—]. B. Littlewood, 415 B street NE. Civil Engineering.—B. W. Pond, 1845 Howard avenue. Classification.—Frank C. Skinner, 3421 Holmead avenue. Llectricity, A.—XLevin H. Campbell, 1750 Erie street. Electricity, B.—G. D. Seely, Cleveland Park. Electricity, C.—Arthur F. Kinnan, 1221 Providence street, Brookland. Farm, Stock, and Products.—G. S. Rafter, 1122 New Hampshire avenue. Fine Arts, Harvesters.—Charles H. Lane, 1339 Q street. Firearms, Ordnance, Marine Propulsion, and Shipbuilding. —T. A. Witherspoon, 26 Towa circle. Gas, Painting, Hides, Skins and Leather, Alcohol, and Oils.—George S. Ely, 300 First street SE. Household Furniture.—Walter Johnson, 58 B street NE. Hydraulics. —F. M. Tryon, 913 Eighth street. Instruments of Precision.—James T. Newton, 1625 R street. Interferences.—C. F. Fitts, 1749 Corcoran street. Lamps and Gas Fittings.—M. R. Sullivan, The Normandie. Land Conveyances.—H. P. Sanders, 1504 Twenty-first street. Leather-working Machinery and Products. —C. Alexander Mason, The Savoy. Liquefaction of Gases, Refrigeration, etc.—Jay F. Bancroft, The Brunswick. Measuring Instruments.—G. I. Morton, 1310 Q street. Mechanical Engineering.—William I. Aughinbaugh, 1245 Kenesaw avenue. Metal Bending and Wire Working.—ILouis W. Maxson, Kensington, Md. Metallurgy.—]. B. Macauley, 1206 P street. Metal Working.—Fugene D. Sewall, 1233 Princeton street. Mills and Threshing. —L,. B. Wynne, 1424 Chapin street. Plastics, Artificial Stones, Lime, and Cement.—C. C. Stauffer, 3238 N street. Pneumatics. —W. W. Townsend, 1447 Kenesaw avenue. Printing, Typewriting and Linotype Machines.—FE. S. Henry, 1320 Columbia . = road. Railway Cars, elc.—George R. Simpson, 111 Twelfth street SE. Sewing Machines.—P. B. Pierce, 1421 Twenty-ninth street. Steam Engineering. —Grenville Lewis, 1811 Third street NE. Zextiles.—I1. U. Townsend, 1221 Kenesaw avenue. Tillage.—William J. Rich, 208 Eleventh street NE. Trade-Marks and Designs.—FE. 1. Chapman, 2112 Wyoming avenue. Velocipedes, Games, and Toys.—James W. Anderson, 1521 T'wenty-eighth street. Washing, Brushing, Abrading.—C. G. Gould, 1617 Thirteenth street. Wood Working .—Ballard N. Morris, 1126 Tenth street, Chiefs of Divisions: Assignment.—Frederick V. Booth, 335 C street. Copy-Sales.—Alex. Mosher, 1730 T'wentieth street. Draftsman.— Wallace W. Hite, The Ethelhurst. : Issue and Gazette.—John W. Babson, 108 Eleventh street SE. Fhotolithographs.—W. W. Mortimer, 1305 Rhode Island avenue. Librarian.—Howard 1,. Prince, The Albemarle. BUREAU OF PENSIONS. (Pension Building, Judiciary Square.) Commissioner. — First Deputy Commissioner.—James 1, Davenport, g40 I' street. 246 Congressional Directory. | Second Deputy Commissioner.—ILeverett M. Kelley, The Cecil. Chief Clerk.—William H. Bayly, 2125 N street. : Assistant Chief Clerk.—Walter J. Brooks, 57 U street. Medical Referee.—Sam Houston, 1411 Tenth street. | Assistant Medical Referee.—Charles F. Whitney, Woodside, Md. | Law Division.—Law Clerk, Stephen A. Cuddy, 701 Twelfth street NE. | Board of Review.—Chief, Thomas W. Dalton, 427 Massachusetts avenue. Medical Division.—Medical referee in charge. Chiefs of Division: Army.—Joseph E. Hart, 515 B street NE. Certificate.—Adolphus B. Bennett, 3406 Mount Pleasant street. | Fastern.—John S. Garrison, Fast End, Falls Church, Va. | : Lianance.—A. H. Thompson, go4 Massachusetts avenue NE. = old War and Navy.—Charles M. Bryant, 934 T street. Record.—Gilbert C. Kniffin, Takoma Park. Southern.—John W. Watson, Langdon. Special Examination. — Alvin 1. Craig, 1321 Riggs street. Western.—Frank A. Warfield, 1535 T' street. Admitted Files.—In charge: Tory Olesen, 644 F, street NE. Superintendent of Building.—George W. Barnes, 103 Fourth street SE. PENSION AGENCY. (615 Fifteenth street.) Pension Agent.—John R. King, Albion Hotel, Baltimore, Md. Chief Clerk.—Allen Bussius, 1341 Emerson street NE. OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS. (01d Post-Office Department Building.) | | Commissioner.—Francis FE. Leupp, 1813 Sixteenth street. | Assistant Commissioner.—Charles F. Larrabee, 1514 Twenty-first street. Superintendent of Indian Schools.—Miss Estelle Reel, The Arlington. Finance Division.—Financial clerk, Samuel E. Slater, 1415 S street. Chiefs of Division. Accounts.—Winfield S. Olive, 302 Indiana avenue. Education.—Josiah H. Dortch, 3558 Thirteenth street. : Land.—James F. Allen. | Miscellaneous.—M. S. Cook, 1328 Twelfth street. Records and Files,—Lewis Y. Ellis, The Cameron. BUREAU OF EDUCATION. (Northeast corner of Eighth and a streets.) Commissioner.— William T. Harris, 1360 Yale street. Chief Clerk.—I,ovick Pierce, 1213 New Jersey avenue. Compiler.—1. Edwards Clarke, 1752 Oregon avenue. Statistician.—Alexander Summers, 621 F street. OFFICE OF THE GEOLOGICAI, SURVEY. s (Hooe Building, 1330 F street.) Director.—Charles D. Walcott, 1743 Twenty-second street. Chief Clerk.—Henry C. Rizer, 1617 Swann street. Chief Disbursing Clerk.—John D. McChesney, 2903 Thirteenth street. Geologist in Charge of Geology.—C. Willard Hayes, 1514 Howard avenue. Chiefs of Division. Correspondence and Records.—A. F. Dunnington, 624 North Carolina avenue SE. Eastern Topography.—H. M. Wilson, 1706 Twenty-first street. Editorial.—Philip C. Warman, 3345 Seventeenth street. Engraving and Printing. —S. J. Kubel, 1000 East Capitol street. Geography and Forestry.—Henry Gannett, 1829 Phelps place. Hydrography and Reclamation.—F. H. Newell, 1827 Phelps place. lllustrations.—John I. Ridgway, Chevy Chase. Mining and Mineral Resources.—David T. Day, 2511 Nineteenth street. Eric - Physical and Chemical Researches.—G. F. Becker, 1815 H street. Western Topography. —E. M. Douglas, Takoma Park. “a Executive Departments. 247 THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. (I'he Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth streets.) JAMES WILSON, of Traer, Tama County, Iowa, Secretary of Agriculture (1022 Vermont avenue), 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 six years previous to becom- ing Secretary of Agriculture was director of the agricultural experiment station and professor of agriculture at the Iowa Agricultural College at Ames; was confirmed Secretary of Agriculture March 5, 1897. Assistant Secvetary.—Willett N. Hays. Chief Clerk.—Sylvester R. Burch, The Sherman. Law Officer.—George P. McCabe, 1458 Howard avenue. Appointment Clerk.-—Joseph B. Bennett, 137 Eleventh street NE. : Private Secretary to the Secretary of Agriculture.—Jasper Wilson, 1022 Vermont avenue. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secrvetary of Agriculture.—Josephine Brigham, 1249 Kenesaw avenue. Chief of Supply Division.—Cyrus B. Lower, 1209 Lydecker ave. Caretaker of Museum.—Nathaniel Shatswell, 702 Thirteenth street. Engineer and Captain of the Walch. WEATHER BUREAU. (Corner Twenty-fourth and M streets.) Chief.— Willis I,. Moore, 1312 Nineteenth street. Assistant Chief.—Henry FE. Williams, The Windsor. Chief Clerk.—Daniel J. Carroll, 1008 Twenty-second street. Editor of Monthly Weather Review.—Prof. Cleveland Abbe, 2017 I street. In Charge Special Research Work.—Prof. Frank H. Bigelow, 1625 Massachusetts avenue. In Charge of Instrument Division.—Prof. Charles F. Marvin, 1404 Binney street. Forecast Division.—In charge, Prof. E. B. Garriott, 1356 Princeton street. Assist- ants, Prof. Alfred J. Henry, 1322 Columbia road; Prof. Harry C. Frankenfield, 1101 Seventeenth street. Chiefs of Division. Climate and Crop.—James Berry, 14 Third street SE. Meteorological Records.—William B. Stockman, 828 Ninth street. Publications.—John P. Church, 201 Third street NE. Supplies.—Frank M. Cleaver, 2311 M street. Telegraph.—Jesse H. Robinson, 1607 S street. Librarian and Climatologist.—Herbert H. Kimball, 2235 Thirteenth street. In Charge of Forecast Districts.—Prof. Henry J. Cox, Chicago, Ill.; Prof. Alexander G. McAdie, San Francisco, Cal.; District Forecaster Edward A. Beals, Portland, Oreg.; District Forecaster John W. Smith, Boston, Mass.; District Forecaster Isaac M. Cline, New Orleans, La.; District Forecaster Frederick H. Brandenburg, Denver, Colo. Inspectors.—Norman B. Conger, Detroit, Mich.; Ferdinand J. Walz, Chicago, Ill.; Henry B. Hersey, Louisville, Ky. BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY. Chief.—D. E. Salmon, The Iowa. Assistant Chief.—Alonzo D. Melvin, in the field. Chief Cleik.—Edward B. Jones, The Woodley. 248 Congressional Directory. Acting Chief of Dairy Division.—Clarence B. Lane, 1230 Roanoke street. Chief of Inspection Division.—A. M. Farrington, 1436 Chapin street. Assistant Chief of Inspection Division.—Henry J. Washburn, 704 B street SW. Zoologist.—Richard W. Hickman, 2329 First street. Editor.—George F. Thompson, 319 B street SE. Expert in Animal Husbandry.—George M. Rommel, 1929 Cincinnati street. Librarian.—Beatrice C. Oberly, The Mendota. Laboratory. (1362 B street SW.) Chief of Biochemic Division.—Marion Dorset, 1321 M street. Chief of Pathological Division.—John R. Mohler, 2317 First street. Acting Assistant Zoologist.—B. H. Ransom, The Augusta. = Experiment Station. (Bethesda, Md.) Superintendent.—F,. C. Schroeder, Bethesda, Md. Expert Assistant.—W. FE. Cotton, 3008% U street. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY. Chief.—Beverly T. Galloway, Takoma Park. Pathologist ard Physiologist, and Chief ir absence of Chief.—Albert F. Woods, Takoma Park. Chief Clerk.— James E. Jones, 412 Eleventh street NE. FEditor.—]. E. Rockwell, 31 S street. Vegetable Pathological and Physiological Investigations. Pathologist and Physiologist.—Albert F. Woods, Takoma Park. Laboratory of Plant Pathology.—FErwin F. Smith in charge, 1460 Staughton street. Laboratory of Plant Physiology.—George T. Moore in charge, Hammond Court. Laboratory of Plant Breeding.—Herbert J. Webber in charge, Takoma Park. Laboratory of Plant Life History.—Walter T. Swingle in charge, 3315 Seventeenth street. Diseases of Orchard Fruils.—Merton B. Waite in charge, 1353 Corcoran street. Cereal Investigations.—Mark A. Carleton in charge, 3409 Brown street. Pacific Coast Laboratory.—Newton B. Pierce in charge, Santa Ana, Cal. Mississippi Valley Iaboratory.—Hermann von Schrenk in charge, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Mo. Subtropical Laboratory.—Peter H. Rolfs in charge, Miami, Fla. Botanical Investigations and Experiments. Botanist.—Frederick V. Coville, 1836 California avenue. Tropical Agriculture.—O. F. Cook in charge, Lanham, Md. Seed- Testing [Laboratory.—Edgar Brown in charge, Lanham, Md. Fiber Investigations.—1,. H. Dewey in charge, 1337 Wallach place. Drug and Medicinal Plant Investigations.— Rodney H. True in charge, 3413 Thir- teenth street NE. Grain Grade Investigations.—Carl S. Scofield in charge, The Ontario. Grass and Forage Plant Investigations. in Agrostologist.—William J. Spillman, 74 S street. Alfalfa and Clover Investigations.—A. S. Hitchcock in charge, 3363 Sixteenth street. Herbarium.—C. V. Piper in charge, 1 S street NE. Range Management.—David Griffiths in charge, Takoma Park. Horticultural Varieties.—C. R. Ball in charge, 1621 First street. Executive Assistant.—D. A. Brodil, The Lincoln. Pomological Investigations. Pomologist.—G. B. Brackett, 1010 I street. Assistant Pomologist.—G. Harold Powell, 404 W street NE. Field Investigations.—W. A. Taylor in charge, 55 Q street NE. Fruit District Investigations.—H. P, Gould in charge, 1219 Thirteenth street. Grape Investigations.—George C. Husmann in charge, 1308 Q street. Experimental Gardens and Grounds. T (Directed by Chief of Bureau.) Head Gardener.—E. M. Byrnes, 11 M street. Executive Departments. 249 Arlington Experimental Farm. (Directed by Chief of Bureau.) Horticulturist in Charge.—1,. C. Corbett, Takoma Park. Seed and Plant Introduction and Distribution. (Directed by Chief of Bureau.) Botanist in Charge.—A. J. Pieters, Takoma Park. - Agricultural Explorer.—David G. Fairchild, 1440 Massachusetts avenue. Expert Plant Propagator.—George W. Oliver, 84 M street. Superintendent of Weighing and Mailing Section.—R. J. Whittleton, 131 A street NE. Tea-Culture Experiments. (Directed by Chief of Bureau.) Physiologist in Charge.—Rodney H. True, 3413 Thirteenth street NE. Expert in Field Investigations.—Charles U. Shepard, Pinehurst, Summerville, S. C. BUREAU OF FORESTRY. - (Atlantic Building, 928-930 F street.) Forester and Chief—Gifford Pinchot, 1615 Rhode Island avenue. : Associate Forester in Charge of Forest Measurements.—Overton W. Price, Braddock Heights, Va. Assistant Foresters in Charge of— : Forest Management.—Thomas H. Sherrard, 815 Vermont avenue. Dendrology.—George B. Sudworth, 2949 Newark street, Cleveland Park. Forest Extension.—William 1,. Hall, Hyattsville, Md. Records.—James B. Adams, Gaithersburg, Md. Expert in Charge of Forest Products.—Hermann von Schrenck, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, Mo. BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY. Chemist and Chief.—Harvey W. Wiley, 1314 Tenth street. Division of Foods.—Willard D. Bigelow, 1445 Binney street. Sugar Laboratory.—Under the direction of the Chief of Bureau. Dairy Laboratory.—G. E. Patrick, gor Sixteenth street. Plant Analysis Laboratory.—C. C. Moore, 227 New Jersey avenue SE. Insecticide and Agricultural Water Laboratory.—John K. Haywood, 1210 T street. Division of Tests.—Logan W. Page, 2336 Massachusetts avenue. Drug Laboratory.—ILyman F. Kebler, 1332 Whitney avenue. Contracts Laboratory.—1,. S. Munson, Seventh street and Omaha avenue. Microchemic Laboratory.—B. IT. Howard, 1366 North Carolina avenue NE. Leather and Paper Laboratory.—F. P. Veitch, College Park, Md. Chief Clerk.—M. S. Tidd, 113 N. Alfred street, Alexandria, Va. BUREAU OF SOILS. Soil Physicist and Chief of Bureaw.—Milton Whitney, Takoma Park. Chief Clerk.—A. G. Rice, 1343 Clifton street. Soil Physicist.—ILyman J. Briggs, 3451 Mount Pleasant street. Soil Chemist.—Frank K. Cameron, The Columbia. Chief of Division Soil Management.—Frank D. Gardner, 3524 Morgan avenue. Scientist in Charge of Soil Survey Work.—George N. Coffey, 920 Massachusetts avenue. Scientist in Charge of Alkali Reclamation Investigations.—Clarence W. Dorsey, Chevy Chase, Md. Expert in Charge of Tobacco Investigations.—George T. McNess, 41 T street. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. Statistician and Chief.—John Hyde, Lanier Heights. Associate Statistician.—FEdwin S. Holmes, jr., 1308 Whitney avenue. Assistant Statistician.—Stephen D. Fessenden, 1414 Binney street. Chief Clerk.—C. C. Clark, 1517 Rhode Island avenue. Statistical Expert in Charge of Foreign Crop Reports.—Edward T. Peters, 58 Saver- nake road, Hampstead, London, N. W., England. Chief of Division of Foreign Markels.—George K. Holmes, 1323 Kenesaw avenue; assistant, Frank R. Rutter, 2750 Fourteenth street. Chief of Division of Domestic Crop Reports.—Victor H. Olmsted, The Plymouth. 250 Congressional Directory. BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY. Entomologist and Chief.—1,. O. Howard, 2026 Hillyer place. In Charge of— Apiculture.—Frank Benton, 1213 Rhode Island avenue. Bollworm Investigations.—A. L.. Quaintance, 1809 Twenty-fourth street. Breeding Experiments.—F. H. Chittenden, 1323 Vermont avenue. Cotton Boll Weevil Investigations.—W. D. Hunter, Victoria, Tex. Experimental Field Work.—C. 1,. Marlatt, 1440 Massachusetts avenue. Field Crop Investigations.—¥. M. Webster, Urbana, 111. Forest Insect Investigations.—A. D. Hopkins, 1307 Thirteenth street. DIVISION OF BIOILLOGICAI, SURVEY. Biologist and Chief.—C. Hart Merriam, 1919 Sixteenth street. Assistant Chief.—A. K. Fisher, 1505 T street. Assistant in Charge Game Preservation.—T'. S. Palmer, 1604 Thirteenth street. Assistant in Charge Economic Relations of Birds.—F. E. 1. Beal, Branchville, Md. OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS. Director.—A. C. True, 1604 Seventeenth street. Assistant Divector and Editor of Experiment Station Record.—F,. W. Allen, 1725 Riggs place. Chief of Editorial Division.—W. H. Beal, 1725 Riggs place. Editorial Staff.—Meteorology, Fertilizers, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering, W. H. Beal; Botany and Diseases of Plants, Walter H. Evans; Foods and Animal Production, C. F. Langworthy, 1604 Seventeenth street; Field Crops, J. I. Schulte, 1921 Thirteenth street; Entomology and Veterinary Science, E. V. Wilcox, Takoma Park; Horticulture, C. B. Smith, Takoma Park; Chemistry, Dairy Farming, and Dairying, H. W. Lawson, 1122 New Hampshire avenue; Agricultural Institutions, D. J. Crosby, Lanham, Md. Chief of Division of Insular Stations.—Walter H. Evans, Cleveland Park. In Charge of Alaska Experiment Stations.—C. C. Georgeson, Sitka, Alaska. In Charge of Hawaii Experiment Station.—]. G. Smith, Honolulu, H. I. In Charge of Porto Rico Experiment Station.—David W. May, Mayaguez, P. R. Chief of Nutrition Investigations.—W. O. Atwater, Middletown, Conn. Chief of Irrigation Investigations.—Elwood Mead, 1513 Rhode Island avenue. Farmers’ Institute Specialist.—John Hamilton, 1241 Princeton street. Chief Clerk.—Mrs. C. E. Johnston, Takoma Park. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS AND DISBURSEMENTS. Chief and Disbursing Clevk.—Frank I,. Evans, 1828 Cincinnati street. Assistant Chief of Division (in Charge of Weather Bureau Accounts).—A. Zap- pone, 2222 First street. : Cashier.—M. E. Fagan, Hyattsville, Md. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. Editor and Chief.—George William Hill, 2120 G street. Associate Editor.—Joseph A. Arnold, 134 Sixth street NE. First Assistant FEditor.—B. D. Stallings, 948 S street. Assistant in Charge of Document Section.—Robert B. Handy, 23 Eighth street SE. Chief Clerk.—A. 1. Mudd, 1925 Fifteenth street. LIBRARY. Librarian.—Josephine A. Clark, 1322 Twelfth street. Assistant Librarian.—Claribel R. Barnett, 1519 Rhode Island avenue. OFFICE OF PUBLIC-ROAD INQUIRIES. Director.—Martin Dodge, Landover, Md. Assistant Director.—Maurice O. Eldridge, 1828 Ninth street, Executive Departments. 251 (513-515 Fourteenth street.) DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND LABOR. | VICTOR HOWARD METCALF, of Oakland, Cal., Secretary of Commerce and Labor (The Arlington), 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 Senator 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 partner- ship 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, Fifty-seventh and Fifty- eighth Congresses; was appointed Secretary of Commerce and Labor July 1, 1904. Assistant Secretary.—Lawrence O. Murray, The Farragut. Chief Clerk.—Frank H. Bowen, 1500 Providence street, Brookland. Disbursing Clevk.—William 1,. Soleau, Garrett Park, Md. Private Secretary to the Secretary.—Raymond F. Crist, 1201 Whitney avenue. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary. —Otis B. Goodall, 1128 New Hampshire avenue, BUREAU OF CORPORATIONS. | ; (513-515 Fourteenth street.) Commissioner.—James Rudolph Garfield, 2137 Le Roy place. Deputy Commissioner.—Herbert Knox Smith, The Farragut. Chief Clerk.—Warren R. Choate, Rockville, Md. BUREAU OF MANUFACTURES. (513-515 Fourteenth street.) Commissioner.—]. Hampton Moore. BUREAU OF LABOR. (National Safe Deposit Building, corner Fifteenth street and New York avenue.) Commissioner.—Charles P. Niell. Chief Clerk.—G. W. W. Hanger, The Albemarle. LIGHT-HOUSE BOARD. (Builders’ Exchange Building, 721 Thirteenth street.) ‘Hon. Victor H. Metcalf, Secretary of Commerce and Labor, ex officio President of the Board. Chairman.—Rear-Admiral Robley D. Evans, U. S. N., 324 Indiana avenue. Col. Walter S. Franklin, 24 East Vernon place, Baltimore, Md. Dr. Henry S. Pritchett, Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. Col. Amos Stickney, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., Army Building, New York, N. Y. Capt. Geo. C. Reiter, U. S. N., The Highlands. Maj. Harry ¥. Hodges, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., 1850 Mintwood place. Naval Secretary.—Capt. Uriel Sebree, U. S. N., 1266 New Hampshire avenue. Engineer Secretary.—1Lieut. Col. Daniel W. Lockwood, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., The Portner. Chief Clerk.—A. B. Johnson, The Plymouth. BUREAU OF THE CENSUS. (B street, between First and Second streets.) Director.—S. N. D. North, 1414 Twenty-first street. Chief Clerk.—William S. Rossiter, 1742 Riggs place. Disbursing and Appointment Clerk.—John W. Langley, The Marlborough. Chief Statisticians: Agriculture.—Ie Grand Powers, 3107 Sixteenth street. Manufactures.—William M. Steuart, The Kensington. Population.— William C. Hunt, 928 Westminster street. Vital Statistics. —William A. King, 717 North Carolina avenue SE. Geographer.—Charles S. Sloane, 1521 Tenth street. Expert Chiefs of Division: Agriculture.—~Hart Momsen, Garrett Park, Md. 252 Congressional Directory. Director's Office.—ILeon B. Leavitt, 30121 U street. Disbursements.—Thomas S. Merrill, 2560 Wisconsin avenue. Manufactures.—Joseph D. Lewis, 1909 H street. LPopulation.—William H. Jarvis, Takoma Park; Edward W. Koch, Woodside, Md. Revision and Results.—Joseph A. Hill, 1329 N street. Vital Statistics. —Richard C. Lappin, 203 East Capitol street. COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY. (New Jersey avenue, near B street SE.) Superintendent.—Otto H. Tittmann, 1624 Riggs place. Assistant Superintendent.—Frank Walley Perkins, 1620 Q street. Assistant in Charge of the Officc.—Andrew Braid, The Columbia. Inspector of Hydrography and Topography.—Herbert G. Ogden, 1324 Nineteenth street, : Inspector of Charts.—Gershom Bradford, 312 A street SE. Disbursing Agent.—Scott Nesbit, 1754 OQ street. FEditor.—Isaac Winston, The Portner. Chiefs of Division: Computing .—John F. Hayford, 231 Second street SE. Drawing and Engraving. —Will Ward Duffield, 1633 Q street. Instrument. — Ernest G. Fischer, The FEthelhurst. Library and Archives.—C. B. Guittard, go4 K street. Tervestrial Magnetism.—ILouis A. Bauer, The Ontario. 7idal.—Teland P. Shidy, 1617 Marion street. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. (Adams Building, 1335 F street.) Chief of Bureau.—Oscar P. Austin, 1620 Massachusetts avenue. Chief Clerk.—]. N. Whitney, 1619 Seventeenth street. _ STEAMBOAT INSPECTION SERVICE. (Builders’ Exchange Building, 721 Thirteenth street.) Supervising Inspector-General.—George Uhler, 1433 Euclid place. Chief Clerk.—William F. Gatchell, 604 E street NE. BUREAU OF FISHERIES. (Office, corner Sixth and B streets SW.) Commissioner.—George M. Bowers, The Shoreham. Deputy Commissioner.—Hugh M. Smith, 1209 M street. Chief Clerk.—I1. H. Dunlap, 1728 Q street. Assistant in Charge of Division of Inquiry Respecting Food Fishes.—B.W. Ever- man, 412 T street. Assistant in Charge of Division of Fish Culture.—John W. Titcomb, 1605 Kenesaw avenue. Assistant in Charge of Division of Statistics and Methods.—A. B. Alexander, 1000 Ninth street. ; Disbursing Agent.—W. P. Titcomb, 2237 Q street. Architect and Engineer.—Hector von Bayer, 2016 Thirteenth street. "BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. (Builders’ Exchange Building, 721 Thirteenth street.) Commaissioner.—FEugene Tyler Chamberlain, 1769 Willard street. Deputy Commassioner.—Thomas B. Sanders, 2309 M street. BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION. (513-515 Fourteenth street.) Commissioner-General.—F. P. Sargent, The Kensington. Chief Clerk.—F. H. Larned, 1904 Cincinnati street. Commissioners of Immigration. William Williams, Ellis Island, New York Harbor; George B. Billings, Long Wharf, Boston, Mass.; John J. S. Rodgers, Delaware Insurance Building, Philadel- phia, Pa.; Louis T. Weis, Manufacturer’s Record Building, Baltimore, Md.; Hart H. North, San Francisco, Cal.; David Healy, Vancouver, British Columbia; Robert Watchorn, Montreal, Province of Quebec; Graham L. Rice,, San Juan, P, R. gp Executive Departments. 253 BUREAU OF STANDARDS. (Pierce Mill Road.) Director.—S. W. Stratton, The Farragut. Physicist. —Edward B. Rosa, The Ontario. Associate Physicists.—1,. A. Fischer, 923 Massachusetts avenue; F. A. Wolff, 1429 R street; K. FE. Guthe, Lenox street, Chevy Chase, Md.; C. W. Waidner, 1429 R street. Chemist.—William A. Noyes, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Chemist.—H. N. Stokes, 3102 U street. Secretary. —Henry D. Hubbard, The Northampton. Chief Engineer.—C. EF. Sponsler, 1450 Binney street. THE INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. (Sun Building, 1317 F street.) [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the 3 designates those whose daughters accompany them.] ’ Commissioners.—Martin A. Knapp, of New York, chairman, Stoneleigh Court; * Judson C. Clements, of Georgia, 2113 Bancroft place; * James D. Yeomans, of Iowa, The Cumberland; * Charles A. Prouty, of Vermont, The Portner; * Joseph W. Fifer, of Illinois, The Cairo. - Secretary. —Edward A, Moseley, 1113 Sixteenth street. THE CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION. (Offices, corner Eighth and E streets.) Commissioners.— President, John C. Black, 1825 Nineteenth street; Alford W. Cooley, 1911 N street; Henry F. Greene, 1527 Thirty-first street. Chief Examiner.—Frank M. Kiggins, 1237 Kenesaw avenue. Secretary.—John IT. Doyle, 1322 Twelfth street. THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. (Corner North Capitol and G streets.) Public Printer.—F. W. Palmer, 1715 Eighteenth street. Chief Clevk.—Henry I’. Brian, 34 I street. Private Secretary to the Public Printer. —F. A. Collins, 125 Tenth street NE. Foreman of Printing.—Oscar J. Ricketts, 2018 Fifteenth street. Foreman of Binding.—P. J. Byrne, 105 Maryland avenue NE. CONGRESSIONATI, RECORD. Foreman in Charge.—John R. Berg, 319 F street NE. Clerk in Charge at Capitol.—W. A. Smith, 1302 Roanoke street. OFFICE OF SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS. Superintendent of Documents. —1,. C. Ferrell, 1951 Baltimore street. THE BOARD ON GEOGRAPHIC NAMES. Chairman.—Henry Gannett, Geological Survey, Department of the Interior. Secretary.—Charles S. Sloane, Bureau of the Census, Department of Commerce and Labor. Andrew H. Allen, Bureau of Rolls and Library, Department of State. Frank Bond, General Land Office, Department of the Interior. Henry T. Brian, Government Printing Office. Adolph von Haake, Post-Office Department. Capt. Harry M. Hodges, Hydrographic Office, Department of the Navy. John Hyde, Bureau of Statistics, Department of Agriculture. Arnold B. Johnson, Light-House Board, Department of Commerce and Labor. Capt. Charles W. Kutz, Office of Chief of Engineers, Department of War. Otis T. Mason, National Museum, Smithsonian Institution. Herbert G. Ogden, Coast and Geodetic Survey, Department of Commerce and Labor. 254 Congressional Directory. NATIONAL HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. Branches.—Central, Dayton, Ohio; Northwestern, Milwaukee, Wis. ; Southern, Hamp- ton, Va.; Fastern, "Togus, Me.; : Western, Leavenworth, Kans. ; © Marion, Marion, Ind.; Pacific, Santa Monica, Cal.; Danville, Danville, IL; : Mountain, Johnson City, Tenn: Battle Mountain Sanitarium, Hot Springs, 5. Dak; Secretary of War, ex officiis, Washington, D. C.; Gen. “Martin T. Ahn president, New York Life Building, New York, N.Y. term expires 1910; Gen. Thomas J. Henderson, first vice-president, Princeton, Ill. —term expires 1908; Gen. J. Mar- shall Brown, second vice-president, Portland, Me.—term expires 1908; Gen. Charles M. Anderson, secretary, Greenville, Ohio—term expires 1906; Capt. Henry E. Palmer, Omaha, Nebr.—term expires 1910; Col. Walter P. Brownlow, Jonesboro, Tenn. term expires 1908; John M. Holley, esq., La Crosse, Wis. — term expires 1910; Maj. William Warner, Kansas City, Mo. — term expires 1906; Col. Henry H. Markham, Pasadena, Cal. ~term expires 1910; Franklin L Darphy, esq., Newark, N&T- term expires "1906. General Treasurer.—Maj. Moses Harris. THE SOLDIERS HOME. BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS. (Office, Room 219, War Department, west wing.) H. C. Corbin, Major-General, Adjutant-General U. S. A. Fred C. Ainsworth, the Military Secretary. Hamilton S. Hawkins, Brigadier-General, U. S. A. (retired), Governor of the Soldiers’ Home. John F. Weston, Commissary-General of Subsistence U. S. A. George B.Davis, Judge-Advocate-General U. S. A. Robert M. O'Reilly, Surgeon-General U. S. A. Charles F. Humphrey, Quartermaster-General U. S. A. Alexander Mackenzie, Chief of Engineers, U. S. A. Secretary of the Board.—N. Hershler. OFFICERS OF THE HOME. (Residing at the Home.) Governorv.—Brig. Gen. Hamilton S. Hawkins, U. S. A. (retired). Deputy Governor.—Brig. Gen. Edward B. Williston, U. S. A. (retired). Secretary and Treasurer.—Maj. Henry M. Kendall, U. S. A. (retired). Attending Surgeon.—Maj. William H. Arthur, surgeon, U. S. A. THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. (The Mall.) Presiding Officer ex officio.—Theodore Roosevelt, 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. Assistant in Charge of Office.—F. W. Hodge, Garrett Park, Md. Members of the Institution.— Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States; Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the United States, chancellor; John Hay, Secretary of State; Leslie M. Shaw, Secretary of the Treasury; William H. Taft, Secretary of War; William H. Moody, Attorney-General; Robert J. Wynne, Post- master-General; Paul Morton, Secretary of the Navy; Ethan Allen Hitchcock, Secretary of the Interior; James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture; Victor H. Met- calf, Secretary of Commerce and Labor. Regents of the Institution.—Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the United States, chancellor; William P. Frye, President pro tempore United States Senate; Shelby M. Cullom, member of the Senate; Orville H. Platt, member of the Senate; Francis M. Cockrell, member of the Senate; Robert R. Hitt, member of the House of Repre- sentatives; Robert Adams, jr., member of the House of Representatives; Hugh A. Dinsmore, member of the House of Representatives; James B. Angell, citizen of Michigan (Ann Arbor); Andrew D. White, citizen of New York (Ithaca); Richard Olney, citizen of Massachusetts (Boston); George Gray, citizen of Delaware (Wil- Executive Departments. 255 mington); John B. Henderson, citizen of Washington, D. C.; Alexander Graham Bell, citizen of Washington, D. C. Executive Committee.—John B. Henderson, of Washington, D. C.; Alexander Gra- ham Bell, of Washington, D. C.; Robert R. Hitt, of Illinois. THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. Keeper ex officio.—S. P. Langley, Metropolitan Club. Assistant Secretary in Charge.—Richard Rathbun, 1622 Massachusetts avenue. Administrative Assistant.—W. de C. Ravenel, 1611 Riggs place. Head Curators.—F. W. True, G. P. Merrill, Otis I’. Mason. Curators.—Robert Ridgway, I,. Stejneger. Honorary Curators.—Cyrus Adler, Tarleton H. Bean, A. H. Clark, F. W. Clarke, F.V. Coville, W. H. Dall, J. M. Flint, Paul Haupt, W. H. Holmes, I. O. Howard, W. L. Ralph, Richard Rathbun, Chas. D. Walcott, I. F. Ward. Chief of Correspondence and Documents.—Randolph I. Geare, 1318 Columbia road. Disbursing Clerk.—W. W. Karr, 1918 Baltimore street. Librarian.—Cyrus Adler, 1627 R street. Registrar.—S. C. Brown, 305 New Jersey avenue SE. Editor.—Marcus Benjamin, 1703 Q street. THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY. (Office in Adams Building, 1333 F street.) Chief.—W. H. Holmes, 1444 Staughton street. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGES. Acting Curator.—F. W. Hodge, Garrett Park, Md. Chief Clerk.—W. Irving Adams, The Ontario. THE NATIONAI, ZOOLOGICAI, PARK. (Adams Mill road.) : Superintendent.—Frank Baker, 1728 Columbia road. Assistant Superintendent.—A. B. Baker, 1845 Lanier avenue. THE, ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY. Diyector.—S. P. Langley, Metropolitan Club. Aid.—C. G. Abbot, 36 Q street NE. THE WASHINGTON NATIONAI, MONUMENT SOCIETY. (Organized 1833. Incorporated 1859. Acts of August 2, 1876; October 1, 1888.) President ex officio.—Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States. First Vice-President.—Mr. Justice Henry B. Brown, 1720 Sixteenth street. Second Vice-President. —A. R. Spofford, Library of Congress. Zrveasurer.—Daniel B. Clarke, 1422 Massachusetts avenue. Secretary. —Frederick 1. Harvey, The Goodwin. Members.—Daniel B. Clarke, Ainsworth R. Spofford, Francis M. Gunnell, Martin F. Morris, Samuel R. Franklin, George S. Boutwell, Edward M. Gallaudet, Samuel H. Kauffmann, John M. Schofield, Henry B. Brown, William A. Maury, Henry A. Willard, Charles C. Glover, Samuel P. Langley, Frederick I. Harvey, R. Ross Perry, John M. Wilson, and Aldis B. Browne. 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- 256 Congressional Directory. islative and executive branches of the Government. The annual reports are published by Congress as House and Senate documents. Two meetings are held each year. The annual meeting is held in April, at Washington; the other in November, at such place as may be determined by the council. President.—Alexander Agassiz, Cambridge, Mass. Vice-Prestdent.—Ira Remsen, Baltimore, Md. Foreign Secretary.—Simon Newcomb, Washington, D. C. Home Secretary.—Arnold Hague, Washington, D. C. Treasurer.—S. ¥. Emmons, 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 Congress, through the Secretary of the Smith- sonian Institution, and published as Congressional documents. President.—Goldwin Smith, Toronto, Canada. Vice-Presidents.—John Bach McMaster, Philadelphia, Pa.; Simeon E. Baldwin, New Haven, Conn. Secretary.—A. Howard Clark, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. Corvesponding Secvetary.—Charles H. Haskins, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. Treasurer.—Clarence W. Bowen, 130 Fulton street, New York, N. VY. INTERNATIONAL BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS. Director.— William Woodville Rockhill, 1828 I street, Secretary.—N. Veloz-Goiticoa, 1748 P street. Librarian and Chief Translator.—Dr. José Ignacio Rodriguez, 1340 Vermont ave- nue. Chief Clerk and Editor.—Williams C. Fox, The Portner. UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT BOARD LOUISIANA PURCHASE EXPOSITION. (St. Louis office: U. S. Government Building, Exposition Grounds.) (Washington office: T'reasury Department.) Chairman.—W. H. Hills, representative Treasury Department. William H. Michael, representative Department of State. John C. Scofield, representative War Department. Cecil Clay, representative Department of Justice. Merritt O. Chance, representative Post-Office Department. B. F. Peters, representative Navy Department. Edward M. Dawson, representative Department of the Interior. S. R. Burch, representative Department of Agriculture. Carroll D. Wright, representative Department of Commerce and Labo. W. de C. Ravenel, representative Bureau of Fisheries. G. W. W. Hanger, representative Bureau of Labor. F. W. True, representative Smithsonian Institution and National Museum. Williams C. Fox, representative Bureau of the American Republics. Secretary.—W. V. Cox. Disbursing Officer.— William M. Geddes, A a. { A T—— “ Sapien ~~ Department Duties. 257 aa ¢. S— DEPARTMENT DUTIES. THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. SECRETARY OF STATE. “Wg a 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 SECRETARIES 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. CHIEFY 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. i 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. 58-3D—2D ED——17 258 Congressional Directory. BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS. Matters relating to appointments; the preparation of commissions, exequaturs, and warrants of extradition; custedy of the Great Seal, of applications and recommenda- tiens for office, etc. PASSPORT BUREAU. Examination of applications for passports, issuance of passports and authentica- tions, and correspondence relating thereto. BUREAU OF TRADE RELATIONS. Prepares instructions to consular officers for reports to be printed by the Depart: ment of Commerce and Labor; revises and transmits such reports to said Department and to other branches of the Government service, and compiles commercial informa- tion for the use of the Department of State. OFFICE OF THE LAW CLERK. Preparation for publication and indexing the laws and resolutions of Congress, the public treaties, and the proclamations of the President. SUPERINTENDENT OF BUILDING. The superintendent of the State, War, and Navy Department building is the execu- tive officer of the commission created by Congress, consisting of the Secretaries of State, War, and Navy, for the government of this building. He has charge of, care, preservation, repairing, warming, ventilating, lighting, and cleaning of the building, grounds, and approaches, and disburses the special appropriations for this purpose; he has charge of all the employees of the building proper, and appoints them by direction of the Secretaries. THE DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY. SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY. The Secretary of the Treasury is charged by law with the management of the national finances. He prepares plans for the improvement of the revenue and for the support of the public credit; superintends the collection of the revenue, and directs 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 administration of the Life-Saving, Revenue-Cutter, and the Public Health 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, Surgeon- General of the Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service, General Superintendent of the Life-Saving Service, and in the following divisions: Bookkeeping and warrants; appointments; customs; public moneys; loans and currency; revenue-cutter; sta- tionery, printing, and blanks; mails and files; special agents, and miscellaneous. ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF THE TREASURY. To Assistant Secretary Taylor is assigned the general direction and supervision of all matters relating to the public business assigned to the following offices and divisions: The Office of the Supervising Architect; the Office of the Chief Clerk and Superintendent; the miscellaneous division, the division of mails and files, and the Office of Internal Revenue. To Assistant Secretary Armstrong 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 offices and divisions: The Office of the Surgeon-General, Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service; the Office of the Life- Saving Service; the division of customs; the division of special agents, and the divi- sion of Revenue-Cutter Service, “ E.& »— Department Duties. 259 To Assistant Secretary Keep 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. 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 Department; the superintendency 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, watchmen, firemen, laborers, and other employees connected with the care and protection of the Treas- ury building and its annexes in Washington, D. C.; the expenditure of the appro- priations for contingent expenses, Treasury Department, and appropriations for heating, lighting, furnishing, and care of all United States buildings throughout the country under the control of the Treasury Department, and the apportionment of the appropriation, and expenditures therefrom, for the pay of assistant cus- todians, janitors, firemen, watchmen, laborers, and for other service; supervises disbursement of appropriations made for Louisiana Purchase Exposition and other expositions; the distribution of the mail; the custody of the records and files and library of the Secretary’s Office; the answering of all calls from Congress and else- where for copies of papers, records, etc.; the checking of all mail written in the division of appointments relating to the personnel of the Treasury Department and the appropriation ‘Pay of assistant custodians and janitors;’”’ the enforcement of the general regulations of the Department, and the charge of all business of the Secretary’s Office unassigned. SUPERVISING ARCHITECT. The duties of the Supervising Architect are of a technical character and are com- plex and varied. They embrace, subject, however, in all cases, to the direction and approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, matters pertaining to the selection of sites for public buildings; securing necessary State cession of jurisdiction; the preparation of estimates, drawings, etc., for approval by the cabinet officers, as required by law, preliminary to the erection of court-houses, custom-houses, post-offices, marine hos- pitals, ete.; securing, under what is known as the Tarsney Act, competitive designs, and completing all arrangements thereunder; arranging all details incident to the Government entering into contracts for construction, etc. He is also charged with the duty of maintaining and keeping in repair all buildings under the control of the Treasury Department not in the District of Columbia; maintaining and keeping in a proper state of efficiency and capacity all heating apparatus and hoisting systems in these buildings, including those in the District of Columbia; and control of the sup- ply of vaults, safes, etc., for all public buildings. The Supervising Architect frequently has occasion to respond to requests from other Departments in matters requiring architectural or engineering skill. COMPTROLIER 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 260 Congressional Directory. regulations of the Department the Comptroller passes upon the sufficiency of author- ities to indorse warrants 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, are 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, Revenue-Cutter Service, Life- Saving Service, Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service, public buildings, secret service, 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; Revenue-Cutter Serv- ice; Life-Saving Service; Public Health and 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, tlie Military Academy, and to all other business within the jurisdiction of the Department of War, and cer- tifies the balances arising thereon to the division of hookkeeping and warrants, and sends a copy of each certificate to the Secretary of War. The work is distributed among six divisions, as follows: Records division, civil claims division, military claims division, quartermaster’s division, paymaster’s division, and law board. AUDITOR FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. The Auditor for the Interior Department is required to examine and settle all claims and accounts for receipts or expenditures of public moneys arising in the Department of the Interior or in any of the offices or bureaus under the jurisdiction of that Department. He is also charged with the supervision of all advances of pub- lic moneys to the various disbursing officers under the Interior Department. The work incidental to the performance of these duties is distributed among the follow- ing three divisions: Land, Files, and Miscellaneous Division. — Accounts of receivers of public moneys as such and as special disbursing agents; of United States surveyors-general and deputy surveyors; of the disbursing clerk of the Interior Department and of the disbursing officers of the Geological Survey, Howard University, Government Hospital for the Insane, and Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb; of the Commissioner of Patents, and of all receiving and disbursing officers of the Depart- ment of the Interior, exclusive of those in the Pension and Indian service. Army and Navy Pensions Division.— Accounts of United States pension agents on account of disbursements made under appropriations for army and navy pensions, salaries of pension agents, and all expenses of pension agencies; accounts under . w Department Duties. 261 the several pension appropriations; keeps and corrects from day to day pension rolls embracing the names of all pensioners of the United States. Law and Claims Division.—All questions of law affecting claims and accounts examined and settled in the office; claims for reimbursement from accrued pensions of expenses of last sickness and burial of pensioners under act of March 2, 1895; pension checks in cases where the payees have died without indorsing them, and recommendation to the Secretary of the Treasury regarding their payment. Indian Division.—Accounts of United States Indian agents, special agents, in- spectors, general superintendent of schools, superintendents of schools, supervisors of Indian schools, allotting agents, disbursing officers’ special commissions, examiners of surveys, secretary of board of Indian commissioners, superintendents of Indian warehouses, receiving and shipping clerks, and other accounts of a miscellaneous nature relating to the Indian service, including the cost and transportation of goods and supplies. 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 ithe 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 Furope, 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 individual 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, the Secretary of Agriculture, and the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, and of all bureaus and offices under their direction; all accounts relat- ing to all other business within the jurisdiction of the Departments of State, Justice, Agriculture, and Commerce and Labor; 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, District of Columbia, Court of Claims and its judgments, Smithsonian Institution, Territorial governments, the Senate, the House of Repre- sentatives, 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 registers the warrants upon the Treasury issued in liquidation of indebtedness; 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 262 Congressional Directory. 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. The work of the office is assigned as follows: The two Deputy Auditors for the Post-Office Department are, by direction of the Auditor, charged with the following duties: (1) To examine and sign in the name of the Auditor all reports to the Postmaster-General for the payment of mail trans- portation; all certificates of vouchers from the bookkeeping division for the con- sideration of the Postmaster-General; all collection drafts upon delinquent and late postmasters; all certificates for the payment of money orders more than one year old, and all miscellaneous reports and papers, except letters and requisitions, and has control of the appropriations for furniture, carpets, and miscellaneous items and purchases made thereunder. In the absence of the Auditor the Deputy Auditor per- forming the above duties acts as Auditor. (2) To examine and sign in the name of the Auditor all reports from the collecting division for the payment of balances due late postmasters, and all post-office warrants issued in payment of expenses of the postal service. Has supervision of the files of the Bureau, and receives bids, and personally superintends the sale and destruction of old money orders, money-order statements, and other papers annually, as prescribed by law, in conjunction with the officer of the Post-Office Department designated by the Postmaster-General. In the absence of the Auditor and the Deputy Auditor whose duties are first described, the Deputy charged with the last-named duties acts as Auditor. 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 clerks and 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. 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 postal 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. The 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 affecting 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 money-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. 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 by, TE Department Duties. 263 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.—Adjusts and 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 paymerit 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 in the subtreasuries at Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Iouis, New Orleans, and San Francisco, and in the national-bank United States depositories; is redemption agent for national-bank notes; is trustee for bonds held to secure national-bank circulation and public Jeposits in national banks; is custo- dian of miscellaneous trust funds; is fiscal agent for paying interest on the public debt; is special disbursing officer for the Porto Rico tariff fund and for the Philip- pine Islands tariff fund; is fiscal agent for paying the land purchase bonds of the Philippine Islands, principal and interest; is agent for paying interest on Spanish indemnity certificates, and is ex officio commissioner of the sinking fund of the District of Columbia. Assistant Treasurer of the United Stales.—Authorized by the Treasurer, with the consent of the Secretary of the Treasury, to act in the place and discharge any or all of the duties of the Treasurer of the United States. Deputy Assistant Treasurer of the United States.—Authorized by the Treasurer, with the consent of the Secretary of the Treasury, to act in the place and discharge any or all of the duties of the Treasurer of the United States. The duties are performed under the direction of the Treasurer in the following divisions: Division of the Chief Clerk.—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 supplies; has charge of all reports and circulars and the mailing thereof; issues duplicates of lost or destroyed interest and transfer checks, and Treasury warrants, and disburses the salaries of employees. Division of the Cashier.—XKeeps the transfer accounts of subtreasuries and accounts of disbursing 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 General Accounts.—Receives daily from the subtreasuries, and weekly from the national banks designated as depositories 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 depositories; directs the payment of all warrants issued against appropriations by Congress; directs the shipment of standard silver dollars and subsidiary silver coin from the subtreas- uries and mints; and examines, verifies, and combines the accounts of the above- named offices into one account, entitled the ‘‘ General account of receipts and expenditures of the Treasurer of the United States.” - Division of Post-Office Accounts.—Receives and registers all Post-Office Depart- ment warrants, makes out and mails to the Assistant Treasurers of the United States daily notices of such warrants drawn on each of them; receives from the sub- treasury offices weekly transcripts for service of the Post-Office Department; checks the receipts and payments thereon; issues certificates of deposit for balances due from postmasters deposited with the Treasurer of the United States, and prepares the Treasurer’s quarterly account of all receipts and expenditures of the Post-Office Department. aa 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 264 Congressional Directory. 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- 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. Division of Accounts of Issue and Redemption.—Keeps the records and accounts relating to the issue and redemption of United States paper currency; accounts with the reserve fund and trust funds; prepares the daily statement of the cash in the Treasury, and tabulates reports from Treasury offices showing the various kinds of money received and disbursed on all accounts. 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 Louisville 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 Fr vem mom 4 A PS LE PPS oat ins Department Duties. 265 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 Currency.—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 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, receives daily reports of their operations, directs the coinage to be executed, reviews the accounts, authorizes all expenditures, superintends the annual settlements of the several insti- tutions, 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. . Tests of the weight and fineness of coins struck at the mints are made in the assay laboratory under his charge. Ie publishes quarterly an estimate of the value of the standard coins of foreign countries for custom-house and other public purposes. Two annual reports are prepared by the Director, one giving the operations of the mint service for the fiscal year, printed in the Finance Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, the other giving the statistics of the production of the precious metals for the calendar year. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAT, REVENUE. The Commissioner has general superintendence of the collection of all internal- revenue taxes, 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, regu- lations, forms, blanks, hydrometers, stationery, etc. The business of his office is divided into the several subjects-matter 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, and preparation of statistical records. Law.—Seizures, forfeitures, compromises, suits, special taxes, etc., distraints, and lands purchased on same for (or otherwise forfeited to) the United States. Claims.— Abatement of taxes and penalties erroneously assessed, refunding of taxes and penalties illegally collected or refundable under remedial statutes. Claims of collectors for credit on account of taxes uncollectible, or on account of duplicate charges, and redemption of stamps other than unused documentary and proprietary. 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.; examination and reference of billsof agents, gaugers, etc.; miscellaneous claims under appropriation acts (except for abatement, refunding, and drawback) and estimates for appropriations by Congress, 266 Congressional Directory. Distilled spivits.-——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. Assessments.— Assessments, 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- nation of their accounts. 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 col- tectors’ offices, and other miscellaneous scientific work. Miscellaneous.—Matters pertaining to manufacturers’ reports and to the collection of the tax on oleomargarine and on adulterated, process, or renovated butter, filled cheese, and mixed flour.” = ke PUBLIC HEALTH AND MARINE-HOSPITATI, SERVICE. The Surgeon-General of the Public Healthand Marine-Hospital Service 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 merchant vessels of the United States (ocean, lake, and river) and vessels of the Light-House Service and officers and men of the Revenue-Cutter Service, Coast and Geodetic Survey, and surfmen of the Life-Saving Service. This supervision includes the purveying of medical and other supplies, the assignment of orders to medical officers, the examination of requi- sitions, vouchers, and property returns, and all matters pertaining to the service. Under his direction all applicants for pilots’ licenses are examined for the detec- tion of color-blindness. Ordinary seamen on request of the master or agent are examined physically to determine their fitness before shipment, and a like examina- tion is made of the candidates for admission to the Revenue-Cutter 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 governing 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 and spread of contagious disease and is also charged with the conduct of the quarantine service of the United States. Under the act of July 1, 1902, the name of the Marine-Hospital Service was changed to that of the Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service, and the Surgeon- General, in the interest of the public health, is authorized to call conferences at least once a year of the State and Territorial boards of health, quarantine authorities, and State health officers (the District of Columbia included) for the purpose of con- sidering matters relating to the public health. Under the law he is charged with the direction of the hygienic laboratory for the investigation of contagious and infectious disease and other matters relating to the public health; with the publication of the weekly Public Health Reports of the United States, including the collection and publication of vital statistics, and is responsible for the proper enforcement of the ‘‘Act to regulate the sale of viruses, serums, toxins, and analogous products in the District of Columbia, to regulate interstate traffic in said articles, and for other purposes,’ approved July 1, 1902. Under the law of March 28, 1890, 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 Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service. 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. 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 uy ry yu AP a Department Duties. 267 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, as contemplated by the act of June 20, 1874, and to submit to the Secretary of the Treasury, for transmission to Congress, an annual report of the expenditures of the moneys appropriated for the maintenance of the Life-Saving Service and of the operations of said service during the year, THE DEPARTMENT OF WAR. SECRETARY OF WAR. The Secretary of War is head of the War Department, and performs such duties as are required of him by law or may be enjoined upon him by the President con- cerning the military service. He is charged by law with the supervision of all estimates of appropriations for the expenses of the Department, including the military establishment; of all pur- chases of army supplies; of all expenditures for the support, transportation, and maintenance of the Army, and of such expenditures of a civil nature as may be placed by Congress under his direction. : He also has supervision of the United States Military Academy at West Point and of military education in the Army, of the Board of Ordnance and Fortification, of the various battlefield commissions, and of the publication of the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion. He has charge of all matters relating to national defense and seacoast fortifica- tions, army ordnance, river and harbor improvements, the prevention of obstruction to navigation, and the establishment of harbor lines, and all plans and locations of bridges authorized by Congress to be constructed over the navigable waters of the United States require his approval. He also has charge of the establishment or abandonment of military posts, and of all matters relating to leases, revocable licenses, and all other privileges upon lands under the control of the War Department, ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF WAR. To the Assistant Secretary of War is assigned the general direction and supervision of all matters relating to rivers and harbors; bridges over navigable waters of the United States; leases, revocable licenses, and all other privileges upon lands under the control of the War Department; inspections relating to the military establish- ment; Record and Pension Office business; recruiting service, discharges, commuta- tion of rations, courts-martial, and other questions relating to enlisted men, including clemency cases and matters relating to prisoners at military prisons and peniten- tiaries. He also has charge of all matters relating to the militia; the supervision of miscel- laneous claims and accounts; preliminary examination of questions relating to Cuba and the Philippines, and final disposition of all ordinary routine matters relating to said islands; matters relating to national cemeteries, boards of survey, open-market purchases, and medals of honor. : CHIEF CLERK. Under the immediate direction of the Secretary and the Assistant Secretary of War, the chief clerk has the custody of the records and files, and is charged with supervision of the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the official mail and the correspondence of the Secretary’s Office; of all matters affecting the civil force of the War Department, the departments at large, and the military governments; War Department printing and binding, and official advertising and job printing for the Army and the War Department; requisitions for and routine business pertaining to militia supplies; War Department supplies; routine calls for information from the 268 Congressional Directory. records; expenditures from appropriations for contingent expenses and stationery for the War Department, and matters of routine character not requiring the personal action of the Secretary or the Assistant Secretary of War, THE GENERAL STAFF. The General Staff Corps was organized under the provisions of act of Congress approved February 14, 1903. Its principal duties are to prepare plans for the national defense and for the mobilization of the military forces in time of war; to investigate and report upon all questions affecting the efficiency of the Army and its state of preparation for military operations; to render professional aid and assistance to the Secretary of War and to general officers and other superior commanders and to act as their agents in informing and coordinating the action of all the different officers who are subject to the supervision of the Chief of Staff, and to perform such other military duties not otherwise assigned by law as may be from time to time prescribed by the President. The Chief of Staff, under direction of the President, or of the Secretary of War under the direction of the President, has supervision of all troops of the line and of the Military Secretary’s, Inspector-General’s, Judge-Advocate-General’s, Quartermaster’s, Subsistence, Medical, Pay, and Ordnance Departments, the Corps of Engineers and the Signal Corps, and performs such other military duties not otherwise assigned by law as may be assigned to him by the President. Duties formerly prescribed by statute for the Commanding General of the Army as a member of the Board of Ord- nance and Fortification and of the Board of Commissioners of the Soldiers’ Home are performed by the Chief of Staff or some other officer designated by the President. THE MILITARY BUREAUS. The chiefs of the military bureaus of the War Department are officers of the Regular Army of the United States and a part of the military establishment, viz: The Military Secretary’s Department is the department of records, orders, and cor- respondence of the Army and the militia. The Military Secretary is charged with the duty of recording, authenticating, and communicating to troops and individuals in the military service all orders, instructions, and regulations issued by the Secretary of War through the Chief of Staff; of preparing and distributing commissions; of compiling and issuing the Army Register and the Army List and Directory; of con- solidating the general returns of the Army; of arranging and preserving the reports of officers detailed to visit encampments of militia; of preparing the annual returns of the militia required by law to be submitted to Congress; of managing the recruit- ing service; and of recording and issuing orders from the War Department remitting or mitigating sentences of general prisoners who have been discharged from the mil- itary service. The Military Secretary is vested by law with the charge, under the Secretary of War, ‘of the military and hospital records of the volunteer armies and the pension and other business of the War Department connected therewith;”’ and of the publication and distribution of the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion. He also has charge of the historical records and business of the permanent military establishment, including all pension, pay, bounty, and other business pertaining to or based upon the military or medical histories of former officers or enlisted men. The archives of The Military Secretary’s office include all military records of the Revolutionary war; the records of all organizations, officers, and enlisted men that have been in the military service of the United States since the Revolutionary war; the records of the movements and operations of troops; the medical and hospital records of the Army; all reports of physical examination of recruits and all identifi- cation cards; the records of the Provost-Marshal-General’s bureau; the records of - the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands; the Confederate records, including those pertaining to the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of the Confederate government. 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. I | Department Duties. 269 The Commissary-General of Subsistence has administrative control of the Subsist- ence Department; the disbursement of its appropriations; the providing of rations and their issue to the Army; the purchase and distribution of articles authorized to be kept for sale to officers and enlisted men; 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. Fhe 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, the library of the Surgeon-General’s Office, and the general hospitals are 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 his officers and seeing that they duly account for the same, and with a preliminary examination of their accounts; also with the payment of allotments made by enlisted men of the Army for the benefit of their families. 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 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 mili- tary 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 duties are comprised that of determining the general principles of construction and of prescribing in detail the models and forms of all military weapons employed in war. They comprise also the duty of prescribing the regulations for the proof and inspection of all these weapons, for 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 cables, and the duty of collecting and transmitting information for the Army by telegraph or otherwise, and all other duties usually pertaining to military signaling. To the Chief of the Bureau of Insular Affairs, under the immediate direction of the Secretary of War, is assigned all matters pertaining to civil government in the island possessions of the United States subject to the jurisdiction of the War Department. The Bureau is the repository of all the civil records of the Philippines and of the late government of occupation of Cuba, as well as of the records of Porto Rico during the time in which the War Department exercised jurisdiction over that country. It is required to furnish information relative to these subjects. It prepares, compiles, and arranges for publication executive documents containing such information. It makes a comptroller’s review of the expenditures and receipts of the Philippine government, and prepares final statements for presentation to Congress of all such accounts. It makes the purchase and shipment of supplies in and from the United States for the Philippine government, and a preliminary audit of all such expend- itures of Philippine government funds in the United States is made in this Bureau before final accounting of same to the Philippine government, It has charge of 270 Congressional Directory. appointments to the Philippine civil service, including arrangements for transporta- tion of employees and their families. It gathers complete statistics of insular com- merce, imports and exports, as well as of shipping and immigration, and monthly summaries of same are published and distributed. The duties of the law officer of the Bureau consist in investigating such propositions of law in matters relating to the administration of civil affairs in the islands under the jurisdiction of the War Department as require consideration, and submitting verbal or written reports thereon. The Bureau of Insular Affairs is part of the machinery of the Philippine government, and is the only office in the United States in any way charged with the civil government of the Philippine Islands. 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 respective Departments; he appears in the Supreme Court of the United States in cases of especial gravity and importance; he exercises a general superintendence and direction over United States attorneys and marshals in all judicial districts in the States and Territories; and he provides special counsel for the United Stateswhenever required by any Department of the Government. SOLICITOR-GENERAL. The Solicitor-General assists the Attorney-General in the performance of his gen- eral duties, and by special provision of law, in case of a vacancy in the Office of Attorney-General, or of his absence or disability, exercises all those duties. Under the direction of the Attorney-General, he has general charge of the business of the Government in the Supreme Court of the United States, and is assisted in the con- duct and argument of cases therein by the Assistant Attorneys-General. He also, with the approval of the Attorney-General, prepares opinions rendered to the Presi- dent and the heads of the Executive Departments, and confers with and directs the law officers of the Government throughout the country in the performance of their duties. When the Attorney-General so directs, any case in which the United States is inter- ested, in any court of the United States, may be conducted and argued by the Solicitor-General; and he may be sent by the Attorney-General to attend to the interests of the United States in any State court, or elsewhere. THE ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL. The Assistant to the Attorney-General has special charge of all suits and other matters arising under the Federal antitrust and interstate commerce laws, and performs such other duties as may be required of him by the Attorney-General. ASSISTANT ATTORNEYS-GENERAL. 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 con- duct of the defense of the United States in the Court of Claims including French spoliation claims; one with the defense of Indian depredation claims; one with the defense of claims before the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission, and another with matters relating to insular and Territorial affairs. All these are in turn assisted by a number of assistant attorneys, law clerks, stenographers, clerks, and interpreters. 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 Solicitor of the Treasury, the Solicitor of Internal Revenue, Treasury Department, the Solicitor for the Department of State, and the Solicitor of the Department of Commerce and Labor. SOLICITOR FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. The Solicitor is the chief law officer of the Department. He advises the Secre- tary and Assistant Secretaries upon questions of municipal and international law referred to him, passes upon claims of citizens of the United States against foreign governments, claims of subjects or citizens of foreign governments against the Department Duties. 271 United States, and upon application for the extradition of criminals. The Assistant Solicitor acts as Solicitor in the absence of the latter, and in the division of the work of the office has general charge of extradition and citizenship matters. 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. THE SOLICITOR OF THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND ILLABOR. The Solicitor is the chief law officer of the Department. His duties are to act as legal adviser for the Secretary of Commerce and Labor and the chiefs of the various bureaus of said Department; to prepare and examine all contracts and bonds entered into or required by the said Department; and to render such legal services in connec- tion with matters arising in the administrative work of the Department of Commerce and Labor as may be required of him by the Attorney-General, SOLICITOR OF INTERNAI, REVENUE. A Solicitor of Internal Revenue was added to the Internal-Revenue Office corps by the act of July 13, 1866 (14 Stat., 170), but by the act of June 22, 1870 (16 Stat. 162), organizing the Department of Justice, the Solicitor was formally transferred to that Department. He is the law officer and legal adviser of the Commissioner. The only duties of which mention is made by law are in connection with internal-rev- enue compromise cases, section 3229, Revised Statutes. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY-GENERAL 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 Land 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 a num- ber of assistant attorneys. : THE CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk supervises, under the direction of the Attorney-General, the duties of the clerks and employees of the Department, has charge of the receipt, dis- tribution, and transmission of the official mail, of the purchase of supplies for the - Department, and expenditures from appropriations for contingent expenses, of applications for leave of absence, of requisitions for printing and binding, the preparation of the annual report, of all horses, wagons, and carriages employed, and has the custody of the general records and files. He superintends all buildings, occupied by the Department in Washington, D. C. THE GENERAL AGENT. The general agent has charge of all matters relating to United States prisoners, jails, and the penitentiaries at Fort Leavenworth, Kauns., and Atlanta, Ga., directs the work of special agents and examiners in the examination of the offices and records of United States court officials throughout the United States, and has supervision of the division of accounts. THE DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS. The division of accounts examines and audits the accounts of all United States attorneys, marshals, clerks of United States courts, and other officers or persons under the Department of Justice having accounts against the United States, and con- ducts all correspondence relating to them, Such accounts, after approval by the 272 Congressional Directory. . Attorney-General, are transmitted to the Auditor for the State and other Depart- ments, Treasury Department, for settlement. This division also compiles the esti- mates for annual appropriations. THE ATTORNEY IN CHARGE OF PARDONS. The attorney in charge of pardons takes charge of all applications for Executive clemency, except those in Army and Navy cases, which are referred to the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy, respectively; of the briefing of the cases and the correspondence in relation to them. THE APPOINTMENT CLERK. The appointment clerk has charge of all matters relating to applications, recom- mendations, and appointments, including certifications by the Civil Service Com- mission; conducts correspondence pertaining thereto; prepares nominations sent to the Senate; prepares commissions for the officers and employees of the Department in Washington, and commissions for United States judges, attorneys, and marshals and other officers under the Department. He also compiles the Biennial Register of the Department of Justice. HE, DISBURSING CLERK. The disbursing clerk disburses funds from more than forty appropriations under the direction of the Attorney-General, including the salaries of the justices of the Supreme Court of the United States, the judges of the other United States courts throughout the country, including the Territories; of the United States attorneys, marshals, and other court officials, and of the officials of the Department proper; the contingent expenses of the Department and other miscellaneous appropriations. THE EXAMINER OF TITLES. The examiner of titles prepares opinions upon the title to lands belonging to or sought to be acquired by the Government for public purposes, and conducts the cor- respondence in relation to questions of title. 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 and the purchasing agent, who are appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate; appoints all post- masters 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, THE CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk is charged with the general superintendence of the clerical, labor, and watch forces of the Department; the care of the Department and other buildings rented in connection therewith, and of all furniture and public property therein; the supervision of the preparation of estimates for the departmental and postal service; the keeping of the journals and order books; the supervision of the advertising; of requisitions upon the Treasury, and the expenditure of the appropriations for the departmental service; as well as the consideration of requisitions upon the Public Printer for printing and binding. He is charged with the compilation of matter for the Official Postal Guide, its publication and distribution; the consideration of appli- cations for post-route maps, and the supervision of their issue and sale; the furnish- ing of information regarding Government telegraph accounts; the miscellaneous business correspondence of the Postmaster-General’s Office; and the performance of such other duties as may be required by the Postmaster-General. FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The First Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the following divisions, viz: Division of Salary and Allowance.—The duty of readjusting the salaries of Presi- dential postmasters; the consideration of allowances to postmasters for advertising, canceling machines and motors and power therefor, clerk hire, fuel, light, miscel- laneous and incidental expenses, rent; the supervision of correspondence with Civil Service Commission relative to clerks in post-offices; the supervision of correspond- ence relative to bonds of clerks in post-offices, box rents, charges against clerks in ~ Department Duties. 273 post-offices, hours of closing post-offices, key deposits, leave of absence of Presiden- tial postmasters; the establishment of stations and substations; the consideration of lease cases and changes of site of Presidential post-offices. Division of Dead Letters.—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. Division of Correspondence. —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. 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. Likewise the preparation of contracts for the purchase of envelopes for the use of the several Executive Departments. Division of Postal-Money-Order System.—Under the immediate direction of the Superintendent, who has supervision and control thereof, including the domestic money-order business and the superintendence of the money-order correspondence with foreign countries, as well as the preparation of postal conventions for the exchange of money orders therewith, and the conduct of correspondence relating to these subjects. SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Second Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the transportation of all mails. His office embraces six divisions, viz: The Division of Railway Adjustment prepares cases authorizing the transportation of mails byrailroads, cable and electric roads, wagonsand pneumatic tubesin cities, and by mail messengers, the establishment of railway postal-car service, and changes in existing service; prepares orders and instructions for the weighing of mails, receives the returns and computes basis of pay therefrom; prepares cases for the adjustment of allowances to railroads for carrying the mails and for postal cars, and attends to all correspondence relating to these matters. The Division of Contracts prepares all advertisements inviting proposals for star and steamboat service, receives the proposals, prepares orders for the award of contracts, attends to the execution of contracts, prepares cases and orders for the establishment of new service or changes in existing service, attends to all correspondence relating thereto, and prepares statistics and reports of mail service required by law. 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 Auditor for the Post-Office Department, and the correspondence relative to nonperformance of con- tract requirements for carrying the mails. The Division of Mail Equipment is charged with the preparation of advertisements inviting proposals for furnishing mail bags, mail locks and keys, label cases, and mail- bag cord fasteners; 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 Division of Railway Mail 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 Division of Foreign Mails has charge of all foreign postal arrangements (except those relating to the money-order system), including the preparation of postal con- 58-30—2D ED——18 274 Congressional Directory. ‘ 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 postal subjects named below, embraced in the following divisions of his Bureau: Division of Postal Finance.—The financial system, involving the collection of all moneys due the Department, the payment, by warrant or draft, of accounts chargeable against appropriations for the postal service, the designation of depositories for postal funds, and the supervision and instruction of all postmasters relative to the dispo- sition of the postal revenue from whatever source. Division of Postage Stamp Supplies.—The supervision and collection of postal rev- enue through the issue of postage stamps, stamped envelopes, newspaper wrappers, and postal cards, and the keeping of postmasters’ accounts relative thereto; also the supplying of postmasters with envelopes for their official use, including registered- package and registered-tag envelopes. Division of Classification of Mail Malter.—The general control of all business relating to the classification of domestic mail matter and therates of postage thereon, including the determination of the admissibility of publications to the second class of mail matter and their right to continue in that class, the general supervision of those therein, and the instruction of postmasters relative thereto; also, the use of pen- alty envelopes and the franking privilege. : Division of Registered Mails.—The supervision and management of the registered- mail service and the conductof correspondence relating thereto and the preparation _ of record forms used therein, the establishment and control of all through registry exchanges, the compilation of registry statistics, and the instruction of all postmas- ters in registry matters. Division of Redemption of Stamped Paper.—The duty of receiving, disposing of, and authorizing credits for redeemed, damaged, and unsalable supplies of stamped paper returned by postmasters. Division of Files, Mails, and Records.—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 and records. The Bureau of the Third Assistant Postmaster-General also has the supervision of proposals and letting of contracts for furnishing the Post-Office Department with postage stamps, stamped envelopes, newspaper wrappers, and postal cards, registered- package, tag, official, and dead-letter envelopes, and envelopes for the use of each of the several Executive Departments. FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. The Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the Bureau including the divisions of appointments, of bonds and commissions, of post-office inspectors and mail depredations, of city delivery, and of rural delivery. Division of Appointments.—The duty of preparing all cases for establishment, dis- continuance, and change of name or site of post-offices, and for the appointment of ~ '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. Division of City Delivery.—The superintendent of city free delivery has immediate charge of the extension of the service where it is in operation; the establishment of service at offices becoming entitled to it under the law; allowances for horse hire, for wagon collection service, for bicycles, and for the employment of emergency and temporary carriers; the bonding of carriers and substitutes; the discipline of carriers; the recording of all changes in the service, such as appointments, promotions, trans- fers, removals, and reinstatements; the examination of schedules of deliveries and collections, and the management of the special-delivery service. : Division of Rural Delivery.—Investigating and laying out rural free-delivery routes initiatory to the installation of a daily delivery and collection of mails in Te Department Duties. 275 country districts; establishment of such service and furnishing necessary supplies; appointment and discipline of rural carriers; and direct supervision and maintenance of the service. THE PURCHASING AGENT. The Purchasing Agent supervises the purchase of all supplies both for the Post- Office Department proper and for all branches of the Postal Service. He reviews all requisitions and authorizations for supplies, and if proper honors the same. He passes upon the sufficiency and propriety of all specifications for proposals, prepares and issues the advertisements and forms for proposals necessary to the making of contracts; reviews the reports of the committees on awards and recommends to the Postmaster-Gen eral such action as in his judgment should be taken thereon. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY-GENERAI FOR THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. The Assistant Attorney-General for the Post-Office Department is the chief law officer of that Department. His duties are to give opinions on questions of law relat- ing to the work of the Department presented to him by the Postmaster-General, his assistants,-the superintendents and chiefs of the several divisions and bureaus, and the postmasters throughout the country. To him are referred for consideration and recommendation applications for pardon for crimes committed against the postal laws, certifications by the Auditor for the Post-Office Department of proposed compro- mises of liabilities against the United States, and of the remission of fines, penalties, and forfeitures under the statutes; all claims for loss presented by postmasters, occa- sioned by fire, burglary, and other unavoidable casualty; and all cases of alleged violations of the fraud and lottery law. Discussions on questions of law, oral and in writing, are heard by him. 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- tendence of construction, manning, armament, equipment, and employment of vessels of war. 5 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. 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 276 Congressional Directory. 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; rovides 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, hinnacles, flags, signallights, running lights, and standing lights on board vessels, including all electrical apparatus for lighting purposes and searchlights, 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 ‘aud cables, rigging, sails, galleys, and cooking utensils, the Naval Observatory, Nautical Almanac, compass offices, and pilotage. It hasunder 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. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. The duties of the Bureau of Ordnance comprise all that relates to the torpedo station, naval proving grounds, and magazines on shore; to the manufacture of offensive and defensive arms and apparatus (including torpedoes), all ammunition and war explosives; procures all machinery, apparatus, equipment, material, and supplies required by or for use with the above; recommends the armament to be carried by vessels of the Navy; the material, kind, and quality of the armor; the interior dimensions of revolving turrets and their requirements as regards rotation. It fixes, within the carrying power of vessels as determined by the Bureau of Con- struction and Repair, the location and command of the armament, and distributes the thickness of the armor; inspects the installation of the permanent fixtures of the armament and its accessories on board ship, and the methods of storing, hand- ling, and transporting ammunition and torpedoes; designs and constructs turret- ammunition hoists; determines the requirements of all ammunition hoists, and the method of construction of armories and ammunition rooms on board ship, and, in conjunction with the Bureau of Construction and Repair, determines upon their location and that of ammunition hoists. Itinstalls the armament and its accessories which are not permanently attached to any portion of the structure of the hull, excepting turret guns, turret mounts, and ammunition hoists, etc.; has cognizance of all electrically operated ammunition hoists, rammers, and gun-elevating gear which are in turrets, of electric range finders, of electric training and elevating gear for gun mounts not in turrets, of electrically operated air compressors for charging torpedoes, and of all battle-order and range transmitters and indicators; designs internal arrangements of buildings at navy-yards where ordnance work is performed; designs, erects, and maintains all shops and buildings constructed for its own pur- poses outside the limits of navy-yards. It is charged with the purchase, sale, and transfer of all land and buildings in connection therewith, except at navy-yards, and with the preservation of public property under its control. It determines upon and procures all the tools, stores, stationery, blank books, forms, material, means, and appliances of every kind required in its shops, including fuel and transportation. It superintends all work done under it, and estimates for and defrays from its own funds the cost necessary to carry out its duties as above defined. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. The duties of the Bureau of Construction and Repair comprise the responsibility for the structural strength and stability of all ships built for the Navy; all that relates to designing, building, fitting, and repairing the hulls of ships, turrets, spars, capstans, windlasses, steering gear, and ventilating apparatus, and, after consulta- tion with the Bureau of Ordnance, and according to the requirements thereof as determined by that Bureau, the designing, construction, and installation of inde- | | i ep — Department Duties. 277 pendent ammunition hoists, and the installation of the permanent fixtures of all other ammunition hoists and their appurtenances; placing and securing armor after the material, quality, and distribution of thickness have been determined by the Bureau of Ordnance; placing and securing on board ship, to the satisfaction of the Bureau of Ordnance, the permanent fixtures of the armament and its accessories as manufactured and supplied by that Bureau; installing the turret guns, turret mounts, and ammunition hoists, and such other mounts as require simultaneous structural work in connection with installation or removal; care and preservation of ships in ordinary, and requisitioning for or manufacturing all the equipage and supplies for ships prescribed by the authorized allowance Jists. The Bureau of Construction and Repair also, after conference with the Bureau of Ordnance, designs the arrange- ments for centering the turrets, the character of the roller paths and their supports, and furnishes that Bureau every opportunity to inspect the installation on board of all permanent fixtures of the armament and accessories supplied by said Bureau. It has cognizance of all electric turret-turning machinery and of all electrically operated aminunition hoists (except turret hoists), the same to conform to the requirements of the Bureau of Ordnance as to power, speed, and control. It also has cognizance of stationary electrically operated fans or blowers for hull ventilation, boat cranes, deck winches, capstans, steering engines and telemotors therefor, and hand pumps not in the engine or fire rooms, and of electric launches and other boats supplied with electric motive power. It has charge of the docking of ships, and also designs the slips and the various buildings and shops, so far as their internal arrangements are concerned, where its work is executed, and is charged with the operating and cleaning of dry docks. 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 storesand supplies and their custody, transfer, and issue, upon authorized requisitions, except those of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, the Marine Corps, and those exempt by Regulation Circular No. 51. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL. It 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 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- 278 Congressional Directory. 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 4o 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 Hot Springs Reservation, Arkansas; Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, and the Yosemite, Sequoia, and General Grant parks, California; forest reservations; distribution of appropriations for agricultural and mechanical colleges in the States and Territories; the custody and distribution of certain public documents; and supervision of cer- tain hospitals and eleemosynary institutions in the District of Columbia. He also exercises certain powers and duties in relation to the Territories of the United States. FIRST ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE 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; repayments of money for 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. \ Department Duties. 279 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 laws; 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, Freedmen’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. Is required by law to edit and publish the Official Register of the United States. 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 inventions, discoveries, and improvements thereon, and also the registration of trade-marks, prints, and labels. He is by statute made the tribunal of last resort in the Patent Office, and has appellate jurisdiction in the trial of interference cases, of the patentability of inventions, and of registration of trade-marks. He is aided by an Assistant Commissioner, chief clerk, 3 examiners in chief, an examiner of interferences, and 39 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 GENERAL, LAND OFFICE. The Commissioner of the General Land 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 Indian tribes of the United States (exclusive of Alaska)—their lands, moneys, schools, purchase of supplies, and general welfare. He reports annually as to the condition of each tribe. He is aided by an Assistant Commissioner, who under the law also performs the duties of chief clerk. COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION. The duties of the Commissioner of Education are to collect such statistics and facts as shall show the condition and progress of education in the several States and Territories, and to diffuse such information respecting the organization and 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. He is also charged with the education of children in Alaska, and the administration of the endowment fund for the support of colleges for the benefit of agriculture and mechanic arts. 280 Congressional Directory. DIRECTOR OF THE GEOLOGICAI, SURVEY. The Director of the Geological Survey has charge of the classification of public lands and examination of the geological structure, mineral resources, and products of the national domain, and the survey of forest reserves, including the preparation of topographic and geologic maps; also the measurement of streams and determina- tion of the water supply of the United States, including the investigation of under- ground waters and artesian wells; and also the reclamation of arid lands, including the engineering operations to be carried on by the use of the reclamation fund created by act of June 17, 1902, from proceeds of sales of public lands. THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE. The Secretary 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 supervi- sion’ over the agricultural experiment stations deriving support from the National Treasury; has control of the quarantine stations for imported cattle, of interstate quarantine rendered necessary by sheep and cattle diseases, and of the inspection of cattle-carrying vessels; and directs the inspection of domestic meats and of all imported food products. He also is charged with carrying into effect the laws pro- hibiting the transportation by interstate commerce of game killed in violation of local laws and excluding from importation certain noxious animals, and has author- ity to control the importation of other animals. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE. 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 Agri- culture 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, and of the records and correspondence of the Secretary’s office; of all expenditures from appropriations for contingent expenses, stationery, etc.; is responsible for the enforcement of the general regulations of the Department; and is custodian of the buildings occupied by the Department of Agriculture. APPOINTMENT CLERK. The Appointment Clerk is charged by the Secretary with the decision of all ques- tions affecting appointments, transfers, promotions, reductions, details, furloughs, and removals in their relation to the Civil Service regulations, and with the prepa- ration of all papers necessitated thereby. He has charge of all correspondence of the Department with the United States Civil Service Commission, and of all certifi- cates and communications issued by that Commission to the Department, and deals with all questions affecting positions in the classified service. He is the recorder and custodian of the oaths of office and personal reports of all persons appointed in the Department, and of all reports of the several chiefs of bureaus, divisions, and offices respecting the efficiency of the several clerks and employees under their respective supervision in the Department. He has the custody and use of the Department seal. : 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 navigation; the gauging 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. = . Department Duties. 281 THE BUREAU OF ANIMAI, 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 animals, and of the quarantine stations for imported neat cattle, other ruminants, and swine; generally supervises the inter- state movement of animals and reports on the condition and means of improving the animal industries of the country. It makes special investigations in regard to dairy subjects, inspects and certifies dairy products for export, and supervises the manu- facture and interstate commerce of renovated butter. BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY. The Bureau of Chemistry couducts investigations of fertilizers, and agricultural 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 inspects imported food products and excludes from entry those injurious to health or which are falsely branded or labeled. It inspects food products exported to foreign countries where physical and chemical tests are required for such products. It cooperates with the chemists of the agri- cultural experiment stations in all matters pertaining to the relations of chemistry to agricultural interests. It also cooperates with the other scientific divisions of the Department in all matters relating to chemistry, and conducts investigations of a chemical nature for other Departments of the Government at the request of their respective Secretaries. BUREAU 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, trav- eling agents, and other agencies, and obtains similar information from foreign coun- tries through special agents, assisted by consular, agricultural, and commercial authorities. He records, tabulates, and coordinates statistics of agricultural pro- duction, distribution, and consumption, the authorized data of governments, insti- tutes, societies, boards of trade, and individual experts; and issues a monthly crop report for the information of producers and consumers, Division of Foreign Markets. The division 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, adjusts, and paysall accounts and claims against the Department; decides questions involving the expenditure of public funds; prepares advertisements, schedules, contracts for annual supplies, leases, agreements, bonds, and letters of authority; writes, for the signature of the Secretary, all letters to the Treasury Department pertaining to fiscal matters and all letters to the Department of Justice; attends to litigation in which the Department is interested; issues requisitions for the purchase of supplies and requests for pas- senger and for freight transportation; prepares the annual estimates of appropria- tions; and transacts all other business relating to the financial interests of the Department, 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, Hawaii, and Porto Rico. It seeks to promote the interests of agricultural education and investigation throughout the United States. It collects and disseminates gen- eral information regarding the colleges and stations, and publishes accounts of agri- cultural investigations at home and abroad. It also indicates lines of inquiry, aids in the conduct of cooperative experiments, reports upon the expenditures and work 282 Congressional Directory. of the stations, and in general furnishes them with such advice and assistance as will best promote the purposes for which they were established. It investigates and ‘reports upon the progress of the farmers’ institutes in the several States and Terri- tories, and aids in making such organizations more effective for the dissemination of the results of the work of the Department and the stations. It is also charged with investigations on the nutritive value and economy of human foods and on irrigation and agricultural engineering, which are largely conducted in cooperation with the colleges and stations. BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY. The Bureau of Entomology obtains and disseminates information regarding injuri- ous insects affecting field crops, fruits, small fruits, and truck crops, forest and forest products, and stored products; studies insects in relation to diseases of man and other animals and as animal parasites; experiments with the introduction of beneficial insects and with the fungous and other diseases of insects, and conducts experiments and tests with insecticides and insecticide machinery. It is further charged with the investigations in apiculture and sericulture. The information gained is disseminated in the form of general reports, bulletins, and circulars. A good deal of museum work is done in connection with the department of insects of the National Museum, and insects are identified for experiment stations and other public institutions and private individuals. DIVISION OF 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, recommends measures for the preservation of beneficial and the destruction of injurious species, and has been charged with carrying into effect the provisions of the Federal laws for the importation and pro- tection of birds, contained in the act of Congress of May 25, 1900, and game law of Alaska contained i in the act of June 7, 1902. BUREAU OF FORESTRY. The Bureau of Forestry gives practical assistance in the conservative handling of national, State, and private forest lands, and in methods of utilizing forest prod- ucts; investigates methods and kinds of trees for planting, and gives practical assistance to tree planters; conducts operations in forest planting on important reserves which have been seriously denuded by fire; studies commercially valuable trees to determine their best management and use; tests the strength and durability of construction timbers, railroad ties, and telephone poles, and methods of increas- | ing their durability through seasoning and preservative treatment; investigates the control and prevention of forest fires, and other forest problems; conducts examina- “tions to ascertain necessary changes in the boundaries of existing national forest reserves and areas suitable for new reserves, and advises, when requested, concern- ing State legislation to encourage the holding and protecting of growing timber. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY. The Bureau of Plant Industry studies plant life in all its relations to agriculture. It includes vegetable pathological and physiological investigations, botanical investi- gations and experiments, pomological investigations, grass and forage plant investiga- tions, experimental gardens and grounds, the Arlington experimental farm, Congres- sional seed distribution, seed and plant introduction, and tea culture experiments. Vegetable Pathological and Physiological Investigations. These investigations have for their objects the study of diseases of agricultural crops and economic plants, hutrition of plants, rotation of crops, and the general application of the principles of pathology and physiology to agriculture, the problems of crop improvement, and the production of better varieties of agricultural plants and of crops resistant to disease by means of breeding and selection. Botanical Investigations and Experiments. This office investigates botanical problems, including the purity and value of seeds; methods of controlling the spread of weeds and preventing their introduction into this country; the injurious effects and antidotes in the case of poisonous plants; the native plant resources of the country, and other phases of economic botany. ( Department Duties. 283 Grass and Forage Plant Investigations. This office studies the natural history, geographical distribution, and uses of grasses and forage plants, as well as their adaptation to special soils and climates; introduces promising foreign varieties, and investigates the methods of cultivation of native and foreign sorts, : : Pomological Investigations. This branch of the Bureau collects and distributes information in regard to the fruit interests of the United States; investigates the habits and peculiar qualities of fruits and their adaptability to various soils and climates, and conditions of culture. It studies the methods of harvesting, handling, and storing fruits, with a view to improving our own markets and extending them into foreign countries, Experimental Gardens and Grounds. This branch is charged with the care and ornamentation of the parks surrounding the Department buildings; with the duties connected with the conservatories and gardens, and with the testing and propagating of economic plants. It carries on investigations for the purpose of determining the best methods of improving the cul- ture of plants under glass, and other lines of investigation connected with intensive horticulture, Congressional Seed Distribution. This office is charged with the purchase and distribution of valuable seeds. The seeds are distributed in allotments to Senators, Representatives, Delegates in Con- gress, and the agricultural experiment stations, and also by the Secretary of Agri- culture, as provided for by the law. : Seed and Plant Introduction. This work has for its object the securing from all parts of the world of seeds and plants of new and valuable agricultural crops adaptéd to different parts of the United States. Arlington Experimental Farm. The experiment farm is designed ultimately to become an adjunct to all branches of the Department. It will carry on investigations im the testing of agricultural crops, fruits, and vegetables. Tea Culture Experiments. This branch of the Bureau has for its object the study of tea with a view to producing it in this country. Experiments are conducted in tea culture, and methods of grow- ing, curing, and handling the tea are being worked out. The work is carried on at Summerville, S, C., and at Pierce, Tex. BUREAU OF SOILS. The Bureau of Soils has for its objects the investigation of soils in their relation to crops, the mapping of soils, the investigation, mapping, and reclamation of alkali lands, and the investigation 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 and promotes investi- ‘gations and experiments regarding the best methods of road making and road- making materials, and prepares publications on this subject, DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. The division of publications edits all publications of the Department, including Farmers’ Bulletins and other agricultural reports ordered printed by the Congress, with the exception of those issued by the Weather Bureau. It supervises all print- ing, binding, and illustration work of the Department, and is the authorized medium of all official communications between the Department of Agriculture and the Gov- ernment Printing Office. It directs the distribution of publications with the exception of those turned over by law to the Superintendent of Documents for sale at the price fixed by him; issues, in the form of press notices, official information of interest to agriculturists, and distributes to agricultural and other periodicals and writers synopses of Department publications. 284 Congressional Directory. IIBRARY. The librarian of the Department library purchases all books and periodicals and supervises their arrangement and cataloguing; prepares for publication a quarterly bulletin containing current accessions to the library, also prepares bibliographies and controls the publication and distribution of printed index cards for the Yearbook and other publications of the Department, and has charge of the foreign mailing lists of the Department publications. THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND LABOR. SECRETARY OF COMMERCE AND LABOR. The Secretary of Commerce and Labor is charged with the work of promoting the commerce of the United States, and its mining, manufacturing, shipping, fishery, transportation, and labor interests. His duties also comprise the investigation of the organization and management of corporations (excepting railroads) engaged in interstate commerce; the gathering and publication of information regarding labor interests and labor controversies in this and other countries; the administration of the Light-House Service, and the aid and protection to shipping thereby; the taking of the census, and the collection and publication of statistical information connected therewith; the making of coast and geodetic surveys; the collecting of statistics relating to foreign and domestic commerce; the inspection of steamboats, and the enforcement of laws relating thereto for the protection of life and property; the supervision of the fisheries as administered by the Federal Government; the super- vision and control of the Alaskan fur-seal, salmon, and other fisheries; the jurisdic- tion over merchant vessels, their registry, licensing, measurement, entry, clearance, transfers, movement of their cargoes and passengers, and laws relating thereto, and to seamen of the United States; the supervision of the immigration of aliens, and the enforcement of the laws relating thereto, and to the exclusion of Chinese; the custody, construction, maintenance, and application of standards of weights and measurements; and the gathering and supplying of information regarding industries and markets for the fostering of manufacturing. He has power to call upon other Departments for statistical data obtained by them. For the proper accomplishment of any or all of the aforesaid work, it is by law provided that all duties performed, and all the powers and authority possessed or exercised, at the date of the creation of said Department, by the head of any Execu- tive Department in and over any bureau, office, officer, board, branch, or division of the public service transferred to said Department, or any business arising therefrom or pertaining thereto, or in relation to the duties and authority conferred by law upon such bureau, office, officer, board, branch, or division of the public service, whether of appellate or advisory character or otherwise, are vested in and exercised by the Secretary of Commerce and Labor. It is his further duty to make such special investigations and furnish such infor- mation to the President or Congress as may be required by them on the foregoing subject-matters and to make annual reports to Congress upon the work of said Department. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk, under the immediate direction of the Secretary, has the general supervision of the clerks and employees of the Department; the superintendency of all buildings occupied by the Department in Washington, D. C.; the direction of the watchmen, engineers, mechanics, firemen, laborers, and other emplovees connected with the care and protection of the Department buildings; the care of the horses, wagons, and carriages employed; the expenditure of the appropriations for contingent expenses, rents, and printing and binding; the receipt, distribution, and transmis- sion 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 and records; the duty of passing upon all appointment papers affecting the personnel of the Department; the enforcement of the general regulations of the Department, and the charge of all business of the Secretary’s Office unassigned. BUREAU OF CORPORATIONS. The Bureau of Corporations is authorized, under the direction of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, to investigate the organization, conduct, and management - of the business of any corporation, joint stock company, or corporate combination engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, except common carriers subject to the SEE Department Duties. 285 interstate-commerce act; to gather such information and data as will enable the President to make recommendation to Congress for legislation for the regulation of interstate and foreign commerce; to report the data so collected to the President from time to time as he may require, and to make public such part of said information ag the President may direct. It is also the duty of the Bureau of Corporations, under the direction of the Secre- tary of Commerce and Labor, to gather, compile, publish, and supply useful infor- mation concerning corporations engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, includ- ing corporations engaged in insurance. BUREAU OF LABOR. The Bureau of Labor is charged with the duty of acquiring and diffusing 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. It is especially charged to investigate the causes of and facts relating to all con- troversies and disputes between employers and employees as they may occur, and which may happen to interfere with the welfare of the people of the several States. It is also authorized, by act of March 2, 1895, to publish a bulletin on the condi- tion 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 United States. This bulletin is issued every other month. By section 76 of an act to provide a government for the Territory of Hawaii, approved April 30, 1900, it is made the duty of the Bureau to collect and present in annual reports statistical details relating to all departments of labor in the Territory of Hawail, especially those statistics which relate to the commercial, industrial, social, educational, and sanitary condition of the laboring classes. LIGHT-HOUSE BOARD. The Light-House Board has charge, under the superintendence of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, of all administrative duties relating to the construction and maintenance of light-houses, light vessels, light-house depots, beacons, fog signals, buoys, and their appendages, and has charge of all records and property appertaining to the Light-House Establishment, BUREAU OF THE CENSUS. The Bureau of the Census is charged with the duty of taking the periodical censuses of the United States and of collecting such special statistics as are required py Congress, including the collection in 1905 of the statistics of manufacturing establishments conducted under the factory system, and the collection annually of statistics of births and deaths in registration areas, statistics of the cotton production of the country as returned by the ginners, and (by transfer from the Bureau of Labor) statistics of cities of 30,000 or more inhabitants. Under the proclamation of the President dated September 30, 1902, the Bureau is charged with the compilation and tabulation of the returns of the Philippine census, taken as of March 2, 1903, under the direction of the Philippine Commission, COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY. The Coast and Geodetic Survey is charged with the survey of the coasts of the United States and coasts under the jurisdiction thereof and the publication of charts covering said coasts. This includes base measuré, triangulation, topography, and hydrography along said coasts; the survey of rivers to the head of tide-water or ship navigation; deep-sea soundings, temperature, and current observations along said coasts and throughout the Gulf and Japan streams; magnetic observations and researches, and the publication of maps showing the variations of terrestrial mag- netism; gravity research; determination of heights; the determination of geographic positions by astronomic observations for latitude, longitude, and azimuth, and by triangulation, to furnish reference points for State surveys. The results obtained are published in annual reports, with professional papers and discussions of results as appendices; charts upon various scales, including sailing charts, general charts of the coast, and harbor charts; tide tables issued annually, in advance; Coast Pilots, with sailing directions covering the navigable waters; Notices to Mariners, issued monthly and containing current information necessary for safe navigation; catalogues of charts and publications, and such other svecial publications as may be required to carry out the organic law governing the Survey. 286 Congressional Directory. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. The Bureau of Statistics collects and publishes the statistics of our foreign com- merce, embracing tables showing the imports and exports, respectively, by countries and customs districts; the transit trade inward and outward by countries and by customs districts; imported commodities warehoused, withdrawn from, and remaining in warehouse; the imports of merchandise entered for consumption, showing quan- tity, 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 nationali- ties of the foreign vessels. The Bureau also collects and publishes information in regard to the leading com- mercial movements in our internal commerce, among which are the commerce of the Great Lakes; the commercial movements at interior centers, at Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific seaports; shipments of coal and coke; ocean freight rates, etc. The Bureau also publishes daily and monthly the reports received from United States consuls and special reports on various subjects supplied by consuls on special request; also, annually, the declared exports from foreign countries to the United States furnished by consuls, and the annual report laid before Congress entitled ‘Commercial Relations of the United States.”” Prior to July 1, 1903, these reports were published by the Bureau of Foreign Commerce of the Department of State. This duty was transferred to the Bureau of Statistics of the Department of Commerce and Labor by the act of February 14, 1903, creating that Department. STEAMBOAT-INSPECTION SERVICE. The Steamboat-Inspection Service is charged with the duty of inspecting steam vessels, the licensing of the officers of vessels, and the administration of the laws relating to such vessels and their officers for the protection of life and property. The Supervising Inspector-General and the supervising inspectors constitute a board that meets annually at Washington, and establishes regulations for carrying out the provisions of the steamboat-inspection laws. BUREAU OF FISHERIES. The work of the Bureau of Fisheries comprises (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. : BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. The Bureau of Navigation is charged with general superinkendence of the com- mercial marine and merchant seamen of the United States, except so far as super- vision is lodged with other officers of the Government. It 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. It 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 Commerce and Labor the operations of the laws relative to navigation. BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION. The Bureau of Immigration is charged with the administration of the laws relating to immigration and of the Chinese exclusion laws. It supervises all expenditures under the appropriations for ‘Expenses of regulating immigration’ and the “Enforcement of the Chinese exclusion act.” It causes alleged violations of the immigration, Chinese exclusion, and alien contract-labor laws to be investigated, and when prosecution is deemed advisable submits evidence for that purpose to the proper United States district attorney. BUREAU OF STANDARDS. The functions of the Bureau of Standards are as follows: The custody of the standards; the comparison of the standards used in scientific investigations, engi- neering, manufacturing, commerce, and educational institutions with the standards adopted or recognized by the Government; the construction, when necessary, of A Department Duties. 287 standards, their multiples and subdivisions; the testing and calibration of standard measuring apparatus; the solution of problems which arise in connection with standards; the determination of physical constants and properties of materials, when such data are of great importance to scientific or manufacturing interests and are not to be obtained of sufficient accuracy elsewhere. The Bureau is authorized to exer- cise its functions for the Government of the United States, for any State or municipal government within the United States, or for any scientific society, educational insti- tution, firm, corporation, or individual within the United States engaged in manu- facturing or other pursuits requiring the use of standards or standard measuring instruments. For all comparisons, calibrations, tests, or investigations, except those performed for the Government of the United States or State governments, a reason- able fee will be charged. : 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. The act of February 11, 1903, provides that suits in equity brought under the act to regulate commerce, wherein the United States is complainant, may be expedited and given precedence over other suits, and that appeals from the circuit court lie only to the Supreme Court. The act of February 19, 1903, commonly called the Elkins Law, makes a carrier corporation liable to conviction for violation of the act to regulate commerce, penalizes the offering, soliciting, or receiving of rebates, allows proceedings in the courts by injunction to restrain departures from published rates, and makes the expediting act of February 11, 1903, include cases prosecuted under the direction of the Attorney-General in the name of the Commission. 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 288 Congressional Directory. that locomotive engines used in moving interstate traffic shall be fitted with a power 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 March 2, 1903, amended this act so as to make its provisions apply to Territories and the District of Columbia to all cases when ‘couplers of whatever design are brought together, and to all locomotives, cars, and other equipment of any rail- road engaged in interstate traffic, except logging cars and cars used upon street rail- ways, and also to power or train brakes used in railway operation. 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 Tabor 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 act of March 3, 1901, ‘‘requiring common carriers engaged in interstate com- merce to make reports of all accidents to the Interstate Commerce Commission,” makes it the duty of such carrier to monthly report, under oath, all collisions and derailments of its trains and accidents to its passengers, and to its employees while on duty in its service, and to state the nature and causes thereof. The act prescribes that a fine shall be imposed against any such carrier failing to make the report so required. 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, not more than two of whom shall be adherents of the same political party, 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. The act requires that the rules shall provide, among other things, for open competitive examinations for testing the fitness of applicants for the classified service, the mak- ing of appointments from among those passing with highest grades, an apportion- ment of appointments in the Departments at Washington among the States and Territories, a period of probation before absolute appointment, and the prohibition of the use of official authority to coerce the political action of any person or body. The act also provides for investigations touching the enforcement of the rules, 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. : THE CLASSIFIED SERVICE. There are about 280,000 positions in the executive civil service, of which 135,482 are classified subject to competitive examination under the civil-service rules. The total expenditure for salaries in the executive civil service is about $180,000,000. Persons merely employed as laborers or workmen and persons nominated for con- firmation by the Senate are exempted from the requirements of classification. Within these limits certain classes of positions are excepted from examination, among them being employees at post-offices not having free delivery, Indians in the Indian service, attorneys, pension examining surgeons, deputy collectors of internal revenue, office deputy marshals, and a few employees whose duties are of an impor- tant confidential or fiduciary nature, : Department Duties. EXAMINATIONS. Examinations are held in every State and Territory at least twice a year. The examinations range in scope from technical, professional, or scientific subjects to those based wholly upon the age, physical condition, experience, and character as a workman of the applicant, and in some cases do not require ability to read or write. During the fiscal year ended June 30, 1904, 127,846 persons were examined, of whom 100,078 passed and 48,293 were appointed. THE FILLING OF VACANCIES. A vacancy is filled from among the three persons of the sex called for standing highest on the appropriate register, the order being determined by the relative rat- ing, except that the names of persons preferred under section 1754, Revised Statutes, come before all others. Until the rating of all papers of an examination is completed the identity of no applicant is known. A vacancy may also be filled by promotion, reduction, transfer, or reinstatement. VETERAN PREFERENCE. Persons discharged from the military or naval service by reason of disability result- ing from wounds or sickness incurred in the line of duty who receive a rating of at least 65 are certified first for appointment. All others are required to obtain a rating of 70 or more to become eligible. The rule barring reinstatement after a separation of one year does not apply to any person honorably discharged after service in the civil war or the war with Spain, or his widow, or an army nurse of either war. THE ISTHMIAN CANAL COMMISSION EMPLOYEES. On November 15, 1904, the President, by Executive order, placed the employees of the Isthmian Canal Commission under the provisions of the civil-service act and rules, excepting persons employed merely as laborers, persons whose appointments are confirmed by the Senate, and engineers detailed from the United States Army. This order, however, excepts from the requirement of competitive examination a number of fiduciary and confidential positions. With these exceptions all positions of whatever character or designation under the Canal Commission, whether in the United States or upon the Isthmus of Panama, are subject to the requirement of competitive examination. Vacancies in clerical and other positions in the office of the Canal Commission in Washington will be filled as far as practicable from suit- able existing registers of eligibles, but for positions on the Isthmus of Panama ex- aminations will be held at various cities throughout the United States and also upon the Isthmus, as the needs of the service may require. Qualified eligibles on existing registers may, however, be certified to such positions in the absence of registers pre- pared as a result of special examinations for the Canal Commission. At the present time the number of employees needed in many branches of the work can not be defi- nitely stated, but as rapidly as the needs of this service are known, examinations will be announced indicating the particular requirements of the positions to be filled, the salary to be paid, and other necessary information. THE PHILIPPINE CIVIL, SERVICE. Appointments to the insular civil service of the Philippines are made under an act passed by the Philippine Commission and rules promulgated by the governor of the islands. ‘The municipal service of Manila is also classified and subject to the provi- sions of the act and rules, which are similar to those of the United States. The United States Civil Service Commission, under an Executive order, assists the Philippine Board by conducting examinations in the United States for the Philippine service and in all other practicable ways. These examinations are held only for positions for which competent natives can not be found, the natives being preferred for appointment. 3 The transfer is permissible, of classified employees who have served for three years, from the Philippine service to the Federal service. THE CIVIL, SERVICE IN PORTO RICO AND HAWAII, The Federal positions in Porto Rico and Hawaii by act of Congress fall within the scope of the civil-service act and are filled in the same ways as competitive positions in the United States. The competitive system does not extend to the insular and municipal positions of the islands. 58-3D—2D ED——IQ 290 Congressional Directory. UNCLASSIFIED LABORERS. Appointments of unclassified laborers in the Departments at Washington and at Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, and St. Louis under Executive order are required to be made in accordance with regulations restricting appointment to applicants who are rated highest in physical condition. The system is outside the civil-service act and rules. DEMAND FOR ELIGIBLES WITH CERTAIN QUALIFICATIONS. There is an increasing demand for male clerks qualified as stenographers and typewriters, for draftsmen of the various kinds, and for civil, mechanical, and elec- trical engineers; also for teachers, matrons, seamstresses, and physicians in the Indian service. Persons who become eligible in any of the examinations scheduled to be held dur- ing the spring of 1g9o5 for positions outside of Washington, D. C., which are not apportioned will have a good chance of appointment. The same is true of those who pass examinations for apportioned positions if they are legal residents of States or Territories which have received less than their full share of appointments. A manual containing all information needful to applicants is furnished by the Civil Service Commission upon request. 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- ized to sell at cost any public document in his charge the distribution of which is not specifically directed. 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 INTERNATIONAL BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS. The International Bureau of the American Republics was established under the recommendation of the International American Conference in 18go for the purpose of maintaining closer relations between the several Republics of the Western Hem- isphere. It was reorganized by the International American Conference of 1901 and its scope widened by imposing many new and important duties. A prominent fea- ture of the new arrangement was the foundation of the Columbus Memorial Library. pre The Judiciary. 291 The International Bureau corresponds, through the diplomatic representatives of the several Governments in Washington, with the executive departments of these Gov- ernments, and is required to furnish such information as it possesses or can obtain to any of the Republics making requests. It is the custodian of the archives of the International American Conferences, and is especially charged with the performance of duties imposed upon it by these conferences. The International Bureau is sus- tained by contributions from the American Republics in proportion to their popula- tion. It publishes a monthly bulletin containing the latest official information respecting the resources, commerce, and general features of the American Republics, as well as maps and geographical sketches of these countries, which publications are considered public documents and as such are carried free in the mails of all the Republics. . 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 LL. D. was conferred upon him by the Northwestern University and by Bowdoin College in 1888, by Harvard in 1890, by Yale and Dartmouth in 1901; 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 1872 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. 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 Leavenworth, Kans., in 1859, where he resided until he removed to Washington to enter upon his present duties; in 1861 was appointed United States commissioner; dur- ing 1863 and 1864 was judge of the probate and criminal courts of I.eavenworth County; from January, 1865, to January, 1869, was judge of the district court; in 1869 and 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 circuit court of the United States for the Eighth district; was appointed to his present position, to succeed Justice Stanley Matthews, deceased, in December, 1889, and was commissioned December 18, 1889. 292 Congressional Divectory. HENRY BILLINGS BROWN, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in South Lee, Mass., March 2, 1836; was graduated from Yale College in 1856; studied law for some time in a private office; attended lectures 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. Iincoln, 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 LL. D. from the University of Michigan in 1887 and from Yale University in 1891. 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 Iouisiana 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, 1894. 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 T'remain & 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 to the 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. OLIVER WENDELIL HOLMES, of Boston, Mass., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Boston, Mass., March 8, 1841; graduated from Harvard College in 1861; July 10, 1861, commissioned first lieutenant of the Twentieth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry; October 21, shot through the breast at Balls Bluff; March 23, 1862, commissioned captain; shot through the neck at Antietam, September 17; shot in the heel at Maryes Heights, Fredericksburg, on = The Judiciary. 203 May 3, 1863; on January 29, 1864, appointed aid-de-camp to Brig. Gen. H. G. Wright and served with him until expiration of term of service; brevets as major, lieutenant-colonel, and colonel; Harvard Law School LI. B., 1866; in 1873 published twelfth edition of Kent’s Commentaries, and from 1870 to 1873 editor of the American Law Review, in which, then and later, he published a number of articles leading up to his book entitled, The Common Law (Little, Brown & Co., 1881), first, however, delivered in the form of lectures at the Lowell Institute. An article on ‘‘ Early English equity,” in the English Law Quarterly Review, April, 1885, also may be mentioned, and later ones in the Harvard Law Review. From 1873 to 1882 he prac- ticed law in the firm of Shattuck, Holmes & Munroe; in 1882 took a professorship at the law school of Harvard College, and on December 8 of that year was commissioned a member of the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts; on August 2, 1899, he was made chief justice of the same court. He has published a volume of speeches (Little, Brown & Co.); LL. D., Yale and Harvard. WILLIAM R. DAY was born .in Ravenna, Ohio, April 17, 1849, being a son of Judge Luther Day, of the supreme court of Ohio. In 1866 he entered the academic department of the University of Michigan, where he graduated in 1870; he also spent one year in the law department of that institution. In 1872 he was admitted to the Ohio bar and began the practice of law in Canton, Stark County, Ohio, where he was elected judge of the court of common pleas in 1886. In 188g9he was appointed United States district judge for the northern district of Ohio by President Harrison, which position he declined. In April, 1897, he was appointed Assistant Secretary of State by President McKinley, and in April, 1898, was made Secretary of State, which posi- tion he resigned to accept the chairmanship of the Commission which negotiated the treaty of peace with Spain at the close of the Spanish-American war, In February, 1899, he was appointed United States circuit judge for the sixth judicial circuit by President McKinley. In February, 1903, he was made justice of the United States Supreme Court by President Roosevelt, taking the oath of office March 2 of that year. RESIDENCES OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE AND ASSOCIATE JUSTICES OF THE, SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the g designates those whose daughters accompany them.] % Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, 1801 F street. ; * 94% Mr. Justice Harlan, Fourteenth street and Euclid place. * 4 Mr. Justice Brewer, 1923 Sixteenth street. * Mr. Justice Brown, 1720 Sixteenth street. * Mr. Justice White, 1717 Rhode Island avenue. * Mr. Justice Peckham, 1217 Connecticut avenue. * 44 Mr. Justice McKenna, 1705 Rhode Island avenue. * Mr. Justice Holmes, 1720 I street. * Mr. Justice Day, 1301 Clifton street. RETIRED. * Mr. Justice Shiras, Stoneleigh Court. OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT. Clerk.—James H. McKenney, 1523 Rhode Island avenue. Deputy Clerk.—Charles B. Beall, 1339 Fifteenth street. Marshal.—]. M. Wright, Metropolitan Club. Reporter.—Charles Henry Butler, 1535 I street. CIRCUI'T COURTS OF THE UNI'UED. STATES, First Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Holmes. Districts of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island. : Circuit Judges.—I,e Baron B. Colt, Bristol, R. I., and William I,. Putnam, Portland, Me. Second Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Peckham. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut, Northern New York, Southern New York, Eastern New York, and Western New York. : 204 Congressional Dirvectory. Circuit Judges.—William J. Wallace, Albany, N. Y.; E. Henry Lacombe, New York, N. Y.; William K. Townsend, New Haven, Conn., and Alfred C. Coxe, Utica, N. VY. Third Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Brown. Districts of New Jersey, Eastern Penn- sylvania, Middle Pennsylvania, Western Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Circuit Judges.—Marcus W. Acheson, Pittsburg, Pa.; George M. Dallas, Philadel- phia, Pa., and George Gray, Wilmington, Del. Fourth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Chief Justice Fuller. Districts of Maryland, Northern West Virginia, Southern West Virginia, Eastern Virginia, Western Virginia, Fastern North Carolina, Western North Carolina, and South Carolina. Circuit Judges.—Nathan Goff, Clarksburg, W. Va., and Jeter C. Pritchard, Ashe- ville, N. C. Iiifth 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, Fastern Louisiana, Western Louisiana, Northern Texas, Southern Texas, Fastern Texas, and Western Texas. Circuit Judges.—Don A. Pardee, Atlanta, Ga.; Andrew P. McCormick, Dallas, Tex., and David D. Shelby, Huntsville, Ala. Sixth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Harlan. Districts of Northern Ohio, Southern Ohio, Fastern Michigan, Western Michigan, Eastern Kentucky, Western Kentucky, Fastern Tennessee, Middle Tennessee, and Western Tennessee. Circuit Judges.—Henry F. Severens, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Horace H. Lurton, Nashville, Tenn., and John K. Richards, Cincinnati, Ohio. Seventh Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Day. Districts of Indiana, Northern Illinois, Southern Illinois, Eastern Wisconsin, and Western Wisconsin. Circuit Judges.—James G. Jenkins, Milwaukee, Wis.; Peter S. Grosscup, Chicago, I11., and Francis E. Baker, Indianapolis, Ind. : Eighth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Brewer. Districts of Minnesota, Northern Towa, Southern Iowa, Fastern Missouri, Western Missouri, Eastern Arkansas, Western Arkansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, and Utah; Indian Territory, Northern; Indian Territory, Western; Indian Territory, Central; Indian Territory, Southern; and Territories of New Mexico and Oklahoma. Circuit Judges.—Walter H. Sanborn, St. Paul, Minn.; Amos M. Thayer, St. Louis, Mo.; Willis Van Devanter, Cheyenne, Wyo., and William C. Hook, Leavenworth, Kans. Ninth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice McKenna. Districts of Northern California, Southern California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, Washington, Idaho, and Territories of Alaska, Arizona, and Hawaii. Circuit Judges.—William B. Gilbert, Portland, Oreg.; Erskine M. Ross, Los Angeles, Cal.,, and William W. Morrow, San Francisco, Cal. COURT OF CLAIMS. (Corner Pennsylvania avenue and Seventeenth street.) Chief Justice Charles C. Nott, 2029 Q street. Judge Lawrence Weldon, The Hamilton. Judge Stanton J. Peelle, The Concord. Judge Charles B. Howry, Court of Claims. Judge Francis M. Wright, Stoneleigh Court. Chief Clerk.—Archibald Hopkins, 1826 Massachusetts avenue. Assistant Clerk.—John Randolph, 28 I street. 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 elaims the party would be entitled to redress BT eS — The Judiciary. 295 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 ren 2, 1887, chapter 359 (24 Stat. L., 505, and 1 Supplement to R. S., 2d ed., p. 559). There 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 3oth day of September, 1800.” The time of filing claims is limited to two years from the passage of the act, and all claims not presented within that time are forever barred. The court finds the facts and the law, and 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 consideration of every naval conflict that took place and the rights of all the officers and men engaged. By the act of April 29, 1902 (31 Stat. L., 176), Congress conferred jurisdiction upon the court of all claims against the United States arising out of the payment of customs duties to the military authorities in the island of Porto Rico upon articles imported from the several States, with authority to render judgment against the United States with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from date of payment of said duties to date of judgment, such claim to be filed within six months from the date of the passage of this act. 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 street and Pennsylvania avenue NW., on the first Monday in December each year, and continues into the following summer and until all cases ready for trial are disposed of. Cases may be commenced and entered at any time, whether the court be in session or not. 8 296 Congressional Directory. COURT OF APPEALS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. (In United States court-house.) Chief Justicc.—Seth Shepherd, 1447 Massachusetts avenue. Associate Justices.—Martin ¥. Morris, 1314 Massachusetts avenue; Charles H. Duell. Clerk.—H. W. Hodges, 2208 Q street. Assistant Clerk.—Moncure Burke, 1802 Wyoming avenue. | SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. (In United States court-house.) Chief Justice.—Harry M. Clabaugh, 1842 Mintwood place. Associate Justices.—]Job Barnard, 1306 Rhode Island avenue; Thomas H. Anderson, 1531 New Hampshire avenue; Ashley M. Gould, 1931 Sixteenth street; Daniel Thew Wright, 1832 Sixteenth street: Wendell P. ‘Stafford, 1603 Kenesaw avenue. Retired Justices.—Andrew Wylie, 1205 Fourteenth street; Edward F. Bingham, The Grafton; Alexander B. Hagner, 1818 H street. Clerk. — John R. Young, 1522 R street. JUSTICES OF THE PEACE. Charles S. Bundy, Columbian Building. Thomas H. Callan, 627 F street. Samuel R. Church, 210 F street. Emanuel M. Hewlett, 317 John Marshall place. Samuel C. Mills, 1205 G street. Lewis I. O’Neal, 456 D street. Halbert E. Paine, 1323 Thirty-second street. : ] Luke C. Strider, Fendall Building. Robert H. Terrell, 707 G street. H. Randall Webb, Central Bank Building. UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE. (In United States court-house.) United States Attorney.—Morgan H. Beach, 1626 Nineteenth street. Assistants.—Alexander R. Mullowny, 1411 V street; Charles A. Keigwin, 1111 Massa- chusetts avenue; Charles H. Turner, 3038 U street; J. S. Easby-Smith, 1532 T street. UNILED STATES MARSHAI’S OFFICE. (In United States court-house.) United States Marshal.—Aulick Palmer, 1401 Staughton street. Chief Office Deputy United States Marshal.—William B. Robison, The Gladstone. REGISTER OF WILLS AND CLERK OF THE PROBATE COURT. y (In United States court-house.) Register and Clerk.—James Tanner, 1416 N street. Deputies.—W. C. Taylor, 1400 Twenty-first street; Michael J. Griffith, 1629 P street. RECORDER’S OFFICE. (In United States court-house.) Recorder of Deeds.—John C. Dancy, 2139 L street. Deputy Recorder of Deeds.—Robert W. Dutton, 1426 Columbia road. Y Governors of the several States and Territories. 297 GOVERNORS OF THE SEVERAI, STATES AND TERRI- TORIES. Salary. i Term Stes and Terrt- Capitals. Governors. of serv-| Expiration of term. ories. fe. STATES. Years. Alabama.......... Montgomery ..... William D. Jelks.... 4 Arkansas... 50 Little Rock. ..... Jefferson Davis ..... 2 California ......... Sacramento...... George C. Pardee.... 4 Colorado -........-. Denver... i a0 James H. Peabody .. 2 Connecticut....... Hartford :.......: Henry Roberts...... 2 Delaware. ......... Dover’ cio. nu Preston lea......... 4 Florida............ Tallahassee ...... Mapleon B. Brow- 4 ard. Georgia .-.--..-.., Atlanta... oo... Joseph M. Terrell... 2 Idaho... .-......... Boisei.,......... F.R. Gooding ....... 2 Tllineis......o.. ..& Springfield.......| Charles$S. Deneen... 4 Indiana ........... Indianapolis ..... J. Frank Hanly...... 4 Towa. abun Des Moines ...... Albert B. Cummins. 2 Xansas............ fopeka..........m BE. W.Hoch.......... 2 Kentucky .......... Frankfort. ....... J. C. W. Beckham... 4 Louisiana ......... Baton Rouge..... N.C. Blanchard ..... 4 Maine. ...... io cos Augusta .......... William T. Cobb .... 2 Maryland......... Annapolis........ Edward Warfield... 4 Massachusetts ....| Boston ........... W.I1,. Douglas....... 1 Michigan)... .... Lansing... ci... B.M. Warner........ 2 Minnesoia ......... St. Paul ...-t iol John A. Johnson .... 2 Mississippi. .......| Jackson.......... James K. Vardeman. 4 Missourl ;.....:.. Jefferson City....| Joseph W.Folk..... 4 Montana .-i........ Helena ........... J. K.Toole........... 4 Nebraska .........| Lincoln .....:....| John H.Mickey..... 2 Nevada. ...:......» Carson City ...... John Sparks'........ 4 New Hampshire..| Concord.......... John Mclane....... 2 New Jersey ....... Trenton.....-.... Edwin C. Stokes .... 3 New York ........ Albany........... Frank W. Higgins .. 2 North Carolina:...|: Raleigh ........... Robert B. Glenn .... 4 North Dakota..... Bismarck ......-. HB. ¥.Sazles.......... 2 Ohio. didi es Columbus. .......| Myron I’. Herrick ... 2 Oregon ctveicee.=: Salemi... .. geo E.Chamber- 4 | Jan. 1907 ain. Pennsylvania ..... Harrisburg....... Samuel W. Penny- 4) Jan. 1907 vei eiceinnis packer. Rhode Island ..... Providence....:.. GYR. Oiler... r-Jan., 1906. ni cia South Carolina....| Columbia......... Duncan C. Heyward 2 | DEC. IO0B . ov oles eaiaiets South Dakota. ..... Plerre....... 0.5 Samuel H. Elrod.... 2: TAN. 1007 » Carlos C. Arosemena, Secretary of Legation. 4 4 Sefior Don G. de Obaldia, J., Attaché. Sefior Don Jorge E. Boyd, Honorary Attaché, The Connecticut. Mr. Frank Dunlap Pavey, Counselor of Legation, 32 Nassau street, New York City. PARAGUAY. (Office of the I,egation, The Normandie Annex.) Sefior Don Cecilio Baez, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Sefior Don Reinaldo Bibolini, Attaché. (Absent.) PERSIA. (Office of the Iegation, 1743 Eighteenth street.) Morteza Khan, appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent. ) PERU. (Office of the Legation, The Connecticut.) Sefior Manuel Alvarez Calderon , Envoy Pye and Minister Plenipotentiary. The Connecticut. a A RE ab pera RE = nn me se A ¥ = -_T The Diplomatic Corps. 301 Sefior Alfredo Alvarez Calderon, Second Secretary, The Connecticut. Sefior IManuel R. Candamo, Attaché, The Connecticut. PORTUGAL. (Office of the I,egation, 1909 N street.) Viscount de Alte, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. RUSSIA. (Office of the Embassy, 1500 Rhode Island avenue.) 2 Comte Cassini, Master of the Imperial Court, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary, 1500 Rhode Island avenue. Mr. Theodore Hansen, First Secretary, 1502 P street. Mr. André Bobroff, Second Secretary. (Absent.) Mr. Stanislas Gutoroski, Attaché. (Absent.) Baron E. Schilling, Attaché, 1500 Rhode Island avenue. Colonel Raspopow, Military Attaché, The Highlands. * Commander Alexandre Boutakoff, Naval Attaché, 1325 M street. * Mr. Gregory Vilankine, Financial Agent, 1501 Eighteenth street. SALVADOR. (Address care of Consulate of Salvador, 18 Broadway, New York.) * Mr. Rafael S. Lopez, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Mr. Federico Mejia, Secretary of Legation. (Absent. ) SIAM. (Office of the Legation, The Arlington.) Phya Akharaj Varadhara, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. * Mr. Edward H. Loftus, Secretary of Legation. Mom Luang Kruaval, Attaché, The Sherman. Nai Cheun, Student Attaché, The Hamilton. SPAIN. (Office of the Legation, The Farragut.) Sefior Don Emilio de Ojeda, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Sefior Don Juan Riafio, First Secretary of Legation. Sefior Don Manuel Walls y Merino, Second Secretary of Legation. *4 Lieut. Col. Federico de Monteverde, Military Attaché, 312 West Ninety-ninth street, New York City. SWEDEN AND NORWAY. (Office of the Legation, 2117 S street.) Mr. A. Grip, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2117 S street. * Mr. C. Hauge, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) SWITZERLAND. (Office of the Legation, 2013 Hillyer place.) Mr. Jt du Martheray, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent Mr. Ernst Probst, Secretary of Legation, and Chargé d’Affaires ad interim, 1618 Nineteenth street. TURKEY. (Address of the Legation, 2101 S street.) Chékib Bey, appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Djelal Munif Bey, First Secretary, 24 State street, New York City. Sidky Bey, Second Secretary. (Absent.) Aziz Bey, Lieutenant-Colonel and Aid-de-Camp of His Imperial Majesty, Militry Attaché, 24 State street, New York City. URUGUAY. (Office of the Legation, The Portland.) Sefior Dr. Eduardo Acevedo Diaz, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Sefior Don Pedro Requeria Bermfidez, First Secretary of Legation. VENEZUELA. hd (Office of the Legation, 2007 O street.) Sefior Don Augusto F. Pulido, First Secretary of Legation, and Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim, 2007 O street. 302 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS. ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. 3nppes Arthur M. Beaupré, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Buenos Ayres. Charles Dunning White, Secretary of Legation, Buenos Ayres. Lieut. Raymond W. Hardenbergh, Military Attaché, Buenos Ayres. Bellamy Storer, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Vienna. Chandler Hale, Secretary of Embassy, Vienna. George B. Rives, Second Secretary, Vienna. Lieut. Commander William I,. Howard, Naval Attaché, Berlin. Capt. Floyd W. Harris, Military Attaché, Vienna. BELGIUM. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. : Lawrence Townsend, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Brussels. Stanton Sickles, Secretary of Legation, Brussels. BOLIVIA. William B. Sorsby, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Ia Paz. BRAZIL, David E. Thompson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Rio de Janeiro. . Thomas C. Dawson, Secretary of Legation, Rio de Janeiro. BULGARIA. John B. Jackson, Diplomatic Agent, Athens. CHILE. Henry I. Wilson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Santiago. Edward Winslow Ames, Secretary of Legation, Santiago. CHINA. Edwin H. Conger, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Pekin. John Gardner Coolidge, Secretary of Legation, Pekin. Henry P. Fletcher, Second Secretary, Pekin. Lieut. Irving V. Gillis, Naval Attaché, Tokyo (Yedo). Capt. André W. Brewster, Military Attaché, Pekin. Edward T. Williams, Chinese Secretary, Pekin. COLOMBIA. William W. Russell, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Bogota. Alban G. Snyder, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Bogota. COSTA RICA, NICARAGUA, AND SAN SALVADOR. TNR — IT ror mee SSS re William TI.. Moris. Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, San José. James G. Bailey, Secretary of Legation, San José. CUBA. Herbert G. Squiers, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Habana. Jacob Sleeper, Secretary of Legation, Habana. George L. Lorillard, Second Secretary, Habana. DENMARK. Laurits S. Swenson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Copenhagen. Nelson O’Shaughnessy, Secretary of Legation, Copenhagen. \ DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. f Thomas C. Dawson, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Santo Domingo. Capt. Charles Young, Military Attaché, Port au Prince, —— "ame United States Embassies and Legations. 303 ECUADOR. Archibald J. Sampson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Quito. FRANCE. Horace Porter, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Paris. Henry Vignaud, Secretary of Embassy, Paris. Arthur Bailly-Blanchard, Second Secretary of Embassy, Paris. Lewis Einstein, Third Secretary of Embassy, Paris. ; Lieut. Commander Roy Campbell Smith, Naval Attaché, Paris. Capt. T. Bentley Mott, Military Attaché, Paris. GERMAN EMPIRE. Charlemagne Tower, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Berlin. H. Percival Dodge, Secretary of Embassy, Berlin. R. S. Reynolds Hitt, Second Secretary of Embassy, Berlin. Francis G. Landon, Third Secretary of Embassy, Berlin. Lieut. Commander William I,. Howard, Naval Attaché, Berlin. Capt. William S. Biddle, jr., Military 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, Londor. C. W. Wadsworth, Third Secretary of Embassy, London. Capt. Charles H. Stockton, Naval Attaché, London. Maj. John H. Beacom, Military Attaché, London. GREECE, ROUMANIA, AND SERVIA, John B. Jackson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Athens. Charles S. Wilson Secretary of Legation, Athens. GUATEMALA AND HONDURAS. Leslie Combs, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Guatemala City. Philip M. Brown, Secretary of Legation, Guatemala City. HAITI. William F. Powell, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Port au Prince. Capt. Charles Young, Military Attaché, Port au Prince. ITALY. George V. IL. Meyer, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Rome. Lewis Morris Iddings, Secretary of Embassy, Rome. Leonard M. Thomas, Second Secretary of Embassy, Rome. Lieut. Commander William I,. Howard, Naval Attaché, Berlin. Maj. Frank A. Edwards. Military Attaché, Rome. : JAPAN. Lloyd C. Griscom, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Tokyo. Huntington Wilson, Secretary of Legation, Tokyo. ; John M. Ferguson, Second Secretary of Iegation, Tokyo. Lieut. Irving V. Gillis, Naval Attaché, Tokyo. Capt. John J. Pershing, Military Attaché, Tokyo. ‘KOREA. Horace N. Allen, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Seoul. Gordon Paddock, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Seoul. Capt. André W. Brewster, Military Attaché, Pekin. LIBERIA. Ernest Lyon, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Monrovia. - George W. Ellis, Secretary of Legation, Monrovia. MEXICO. Powell Clayton, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Mexico. Fenton R. McCreery, Secretary of Embassy, Mexico. William Heimke, Second Secretary of Embassy, Mexico. Philip M. Hoefele, Third Secretary of Embassy, Mexico. Capt. Horace M. Reeve, Military Attaché, Mexico, 304 Congressional Directory. NETHERLANDS AND IL,UXEMBURG. Stanford Newel, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, The Hague. John W. Garrett, Secretary of Legation, The Hague. PANAMA. John Barrett, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Panama. Joseph W. J. Lee, Secretary of Legation, Panama. PARAGUAY AND URUGUAY. William R. Finch, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Montevideo, Uruguay. PERSIA. Richmond Pearson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Teheran. John Tyler, Interpreter, Teheran. PERU. Irving B. Dudley, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Lima. Richard R. Neill, Secretary of Legation, Lima. PORTUGAL. Charles Page Bryan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Lisbon. William Blumenthal, Secretary of Legation, Lisbon. RUSSIA. Robert S. McCormick, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, St. Petersburg. Spencer F. Eddy, Secretary of Embassy, St. Petersburg. Robert Woods Bliss, Second Secretary of Embassy, St. Petersburg. Lieut. Commander Roy Campbell Smith, Naval Attaché, Paris. Capt. T. Bentley Mott, Military Attaché, Paris. SIAM. Hamilton King, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Bangkok. Montgomery Schuyler, jr., Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Bangkok. SPAIN. Arthur S. Hardy, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Madrid. Robert M. Winthrop, Secretary of Legation, Madrid. SWEDEN AND NORWAY. William W. Thomas, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Stockholm. E. L.. Adams, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Stockholm. SWITZERLAND. David Jayne Hill, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Berne. Roger S. G. Boutell, Secretary of Legation, Berne. TURKEY. John G. A. Leishman, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Con- stantinople. Peter Augustus Jay, Secretary of Legation, Constantinople. U. Grant Smith, Second Secretary, Constantinople. VENEZUELA. Herbert W. Bowen, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Caracas. Norman Hutchinson, Secretary of Legation, Caracas. Capt. Frank Parker, Military Attaché, Caracas. EGVPT. John W. Riddle, Agent and Consul-General, Cairo. | | Consuls and Consulates. 305 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS. UNITED STATES CONSULATES-GENERAI, CONSULATES, COMMERCIAL AGENCIES, CONSULAR AGENCIES, AND CONSULAR CLERKS. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Aarau; Switzerland... ...... ... Alfred CiTevis ...... Agent. Aberdeen, Scotland.............. Adolph Danziger... .. Do. Abo Binland aac ai Victor Forselius...... Do. Acajutla, Salvador....0......... Prank Wager ........ Do. Acapulco, Mexicoi............n. George W. Dickinson.| Consul. Dobosaimd ns nine George W. Maxwell. .| Vice-consul. Adelaide, Australia... ......000 Charles A. Murphy...| Agent. Aden, Arabia... hi san Gee William W. Masterson| Consul. Alberton, Prince Edward Island. . Albert Town, West Indies........ Aleppo, Syria... oul ina Alexandretta, Syria... .... 00 Alexandria, Egypt. ..... on. Algiers, Algeria, Africa... .... ... Alicante, Spain.iiy i. sonia Almeria, Spain... coo onik Amapala, Hondwas. ...........: Amherstburg, Ontario... ......... JBC En I ate Fa Son A Ancona; Maly: i. Fuvn i oo. ia 4 Angers, Pranee..... .......... 0 Annaberg, Germany... ... ......: Annapolis, Nova Scotia. .......... Salis, West Indies... ........0 Apia, Samoa, and Nukualofa, Tonga. Dotti i es 58-3D—2D ED——20 W. H. Lockerman ... George B. Wordman. . John W. Overton .... Frank M. Brundage .. William J. Reuters... Albert Glidden....... José GC. Maura ........ Frederick Poché.. ... W.R. Davis ......... James Hewat. .... ... .. Daniel S. Kidder... ... Louis IL. Legembre . . . Thomas M. Macgeagh . Henry W, Carey... Algar E. Carlton... ... William Heyden..... Chester W. Martin. . .. YoA Hough. ....... Charles Tassencourt. . John H. Pesler........ DE I SY JiUng Bing......... Prank D-Hill........ I.eon Ponsolle ....... John BE. Winter ....... Franz M. Jaeger ..... Jacob M. Owen....... William R. Estes .... Samuel Galbraith . ... Charles C. Greene. . .. Prank D. Aller. ....... Church Howe... ...... Stanislas H. Haine... Alfred M, Vollmer... Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Vice-consul, Consul ; Vice and deputy consul. - Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul and marshal. Interpreter. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul, Vice and deputy consul. Comnsul-general. Vice and deputy consul- general. Deputy consul-general, Comnsul-general. Vice-consul-general, 306 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Ardeaju, Brazil oo... von Juiz Schmdt........ Agent. Arlen Chile... a. iri John W.Tutz-... .\... Consul. 5 pe RE Eee Ln atl RCS Tee Vice-consul. Arichat, Nova Scotia. ............ Stanage Binet... .... Agent. Armprior, Ontario... oviin Arthur Burwash...... Do. Assloot, Beypt ..... cohen ia George W. Bey... ... Do. Asuncion, Paraguay... ... oo... John N. Ruffin... .... Consul. HR I RE SR W. C.de Korab...... Vice-consul. Athens, Greece... ~. 0 a George Horton... ... Consul. | a Sg George M. Marino ...| Vice-consul. Athlone, Ireland... oo i John Burgess... ...... Agent. Auckland, New Zealand. ......... Augsburg, Germany .............. Aux Cayes, Haiti. 2: oo, Azua, Santo Domingo... ... ..... Bagdad, Turkey i von, Bahia Blanca, Argentina. ......... Bahia, Brazil. oo. an Bahia de Cardquez, Ecuador. ... Ballymena, Ireland ........... ... Bamberg, Germany ....... 0... Banes, Cuba on le el bio. 5 Baracoa, Cuba... i. oh Jia nial, Barbados, West Indies. ........... Barcelona, Venezuela............. Bal, aly. oo .ot etn don, Barmen, Germany... ............ Barnsley, England... .......... Barranquilla, Colombia. .......... Barrie, Ontario... ois Barrington, Nova Scotia.......... Bagel, Switzerland... i 0 0 Don SCE fn eases Bassorah, Turkey: -.00 oo... a0. Bastia, Corsica. oh... ivi vii on Batavia, Java: efectos Ly Bathurst, New Brunswick........ Batum, Russia... oni. 0.00 Bay Bulls, Newfoundland ........ Beira, Africa... «havi havens Beirut, Sysld. oii oda DOS A AT pn Ye Belfast Ireland iin oid vo. ins, Bo sir andes a Belgrade, Servia ni... 0000 Belize, British Honduras. ........ 1B Te RRS TE SO He Sn Belleville, Ontario. .............% Frank Dillingham... Leonard A.Bachelder. G..Oberndorf...... ... Ernest-1,. Dutton .... John Hardy... ..... ... Rudolph Hiirner. .... Walter T. Jones...... Henry W. Furniss. . .. Joshua P. W. Rowe .. Alberto Santos. ...... Wilson McKeown. . .. William Bardel ...... Albert Kiessling... ... Montgomery Schuy- ler, jr. Joseph P. Selden. .... George Bayliss. ....... Arthur Field Lindley. David F. Wilbur..... Arthur]. Clare ...... Benjamin H. Ridgely. H. Henderson Rider. . Ignacio H: Baie. ..... Nicholas Schuck. .... ‘Theodore J.Blutharot | John A. Ritterhaus. .. Charles McNaughton. Claiz A. Orr... August Strunz, jr.... A. E. H. Creswicke. . Thos. W. Robertson. . George Gifford. ...... Samuel Hollinger. . .. Henry P.Chalk...... Simon Damiani... ... B.S. Rairden........ Leopold T'. Haasmann Benedict C. Mullins. . William H. Stuart . .. Hamilton Weeks. . ... AW. H. Glenny ..... G. Bie Ravndal ...... Wm. C. Magelssen. .. Samuel S. Knabenshue Edward Harvey. ..... Christian Vogelli .... William L. Avery.... William E. Swigert . . Michael J. Hendrick. . DOs iia SSE ..| William N. Ponton... Comnsul-general. Vice-consul-general. Agent. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Agent, Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Do Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Deputy consul. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consuls and Consulates. 307 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. TE TL Ce LR Se 8 A a 2 LR Se Bilbao, Spain. 0 i aise Birmingham, Englands... 0a Black River, Jamaica... .......... Bloemfontein, Orange River Col- ony. Bluefields, Nicaragua............ Bocas del Toro, Panama. 2........ Bogota, Colombia... .............. | ERE i SES SR ie Bologna, Maly... =... 00 0x Bombay, Indias... c.... 5: 500 Don Sian Sas Bonacca, Honduras... .........., Bonaire, West Indies ....... anda Bone, Algeria. ..i.. oo nonin Bordeaux, France... i. i... BB Ee rR Boulogne-sur-mer, France. ....... Pdi, England Se Brake and Nordenhamm,Germany Brantford, Ontario... ............ Brava, Cape Verde Islands. ....... Bremen, Germany... ........ Sans Bremerhaven-Geestemiinde, Ger- many. Breslau, Germany... ............. Dre EA Re Ba Bridgewater, Nova Scotia......... Brisbane, Queensland ............ Bristol, Fngland a... 0... 000 Po... isnnaain ola DO thr ai Brunswick, Germany............. Doe i a Bucaramanga, Colombia. ......... Bucharest, Roumania............ Dada Hungary. ......:.. ia Buenos Ayres, Argentina .......... Doom oon wa Cabane, Quebec... iii. 0.0 Cadiz, Spain. ....x.-- nian es Edwin S. Cunningham Thorwald K. Beyer... Frank H.Mason ..... Dean B. Mason ...... Frederick von Versen. Edward Higgins. .... Leo J. Frankenthal. .. Carlos Yensen ....... Marshal Halstead. ... Frederick M. Burton. . Ernest Harker....... C. M. Farquharson... Henry BE. Gill. ....... Alban G. Snyder ..... Sam. B. Koppel ...... Carlo Gardini...... 2 William I. Pee... ... Henry T. Dodge... ... William Bayly....... Gottlob W. Hellmund Antoine Felix Garbe. . Albion W. Tourgee. .. Lows J. Fricot....... William Whitman. . .. Prastus S, Day......... Thomas I,. Renton... Richard B. Nicholls. . . Wilhelm Clemens. ... Martin W. McEwen .. Antonio J. Nunes. . ... Henry W. Diederich . Francis A. Bryce... ... Frederick Hoyermann John H. Schnabel. ... Ernest A. Man. ...... Richard Wackerow .. William H. Owen. ... William J.Weatherill. Lorin A. Lathrop..... Gerard Mosely....... KE. Scott Hotchkiss. . . Harry B. White... ... Luis Edelman ....... Talbot J. Albert. ..... Julius Seckel......... George W. Roosevelt. Gregory Phelan... ... Maurice Gerbeault . .. Gustave Volkman. ... William (5. Boxshall. . Frank Dyer Chester. . Daniel Mayer. ....... Walter F. Walker. ... J. Wirt Halle, 0s Victor H, Morgan. .’ 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. Consul-general. Vice- -consul-general. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul, Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Do. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. - Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Vice-consul-general. Consul-general. Vice and deputy consui- general. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. hag Do. 308 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Caglingi, Italy... 0... 00 Catherean, Cuba Jo. on vi Cairo, . Egypt atl Rea i DOs. nes, ee a Campeche, Mexico i... .....0. 0 Campobello Id., New Brunswick. . Cannes; Prance.. Lo. 0. 00 Canton, Chima. 70. Cape Canso, Nova Scotia. ........ Cape Gracias a Dios, Nicaragua. . Capri, Dols RI Se Ca Caracas, Venezuela ............. Cardenas, Cuba”... 0. dna, Cardiff, Wales......... iE Caving, Maly... ot. oh ons Carlisle, England... ....... 0 i Carlabad Ametvial. our 00 00 Carrara, Tally: Jo ir os 0 Cartagena, Colombia... ........ .. ad Venezuela... |=. U0 Casa-Blanca, Morocco. ........... Cassel, Germany. SE a an Castellamare di Stabia, Italy... ... : Do... oi. ree it Prance i ain i Cayenne, British Guiana ......... Ceara, Brazil, ol cn. oo, Ceiba, Bondumg.”. = 0.0 Cette, France. ids oiiih Champerico, Guatemala. ......... Charleroi, Belgium’... ... nF Charlottetown, Prince Edward Id. J: James S, Benedict”... Alphonse Dol. ....... P.B, Anderson....... John W. Riddle...... Fred. G. Morgan ...... Joseph C. Grew... .\.. James B. Milner... ... Henry I. A.Lunings . RF. Patterson... ... Olin M. Bakine...... John C. Morong. .. ... Henry] Eder... .:.. Alfred I. M. Gott- schalk. C. Hamilton Jones ... Charles Murray...... Joseph Espinola ..... John I. Alexander. ... J.B.Cognet.........: Julina G. Tay........ P. S. Heintzleman ... Alfred W. Hart ...... William P. Henley... Edward Trumner .... IL. W. Livingston... .. Theo. Behrmann . . ... William R. Bigham .. Clifford M. Knight. .. Thomas S. Jerome. . .. Rudolph Dolge ...... Edward B. Webster . . Daniel T. Phillips. ... Ernest I. Phillips... Francesco Crochiolo. . Thomas S. Strong . . .. John 8. Twells....... Sigmund Freund... .. Ulisse Boceaccl ... ... Luther T. Ellsworth. . William B. MacMaster Joseph Bowron ...... Charles Clementson . . José Blasing. ....... .. Conrad H. Toel ...... Gustav C. Kothe....... C. S. Crowninshield .. James Drinkwater. . Alex. Heingartner. . .. JacohRitter.......... Hans Dietiker. ....... Charles H. Fourrage . AB dFrota....... Dean BR. Wood ....... William C. Wildt..... Carl D. Hagelin ..... Carl G. Heitman ...".. A. H. Michaelson... ... Delmar]. Vail... .. John I. Crockett... .. Charles E. Monteith. . Ward Stanworth bs Joseph C. Routhier. 2%: Henry Rieckel, jr . Agent. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Comnsul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Agent. Consul-general. Vice-con. gen., marshal. Agent. Commercial agent. Vice-commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul : Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Agent. ETN ED a Consuls and Consulates. 309 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Chemainus, British Columbia. ... Chemnitz, Germany .............. Cherbourg, France... ..:.... ou Cheverie, Nova Scotia. .......... Chiclayo, Perms. iii oa as Chihuahua, Mexico. ............. Chimbote, Periie:. init... hs Chittagong, India ........ oi Christchurch, New Zealand. ...... Christiania, Norway... ......... Christiansand, Norway........... Christiansted, West Indies. ....... Chungking, China... ....o... 0 Cienfuegos, Cuba. nooo... Ciudad Bolivar, Venezuela. ....... Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.-......... Qivita Vecchia, Italy... 00... Clarenceville, Quebec. ........... Clinton, Ontario. ................. Coaticook, Ouebec..............., D Coatzacoalcos, Mexico. .......... So Germany a Cockburn Harbor, West Indies. .. Cognac, France... ooo iis, Cologne, Germany............... PO re re Ee ns Cookshire, Quebec... ............ Copenhagen, Denmark. ........_. Doses ns in en Coquimbe, Chile... ........0. 0. A Cordoba, Argentina.............000 Corfu, Creede. ie 0 J Sriniac i rs Seed ee Cl Bo Tn al John Fowler... ...... Henry A. C. Emery .. Charles F. Fondey. . .. James S. Gibson... ... Joseph F. Monaghan. Fredk. J. Dietzman. .. Ernest C. Meyer... ... H. J. E. Hainneville. . John G. Burgess... .. Theodore Stechmann. WoW. Malls: :........ Charles M. Leonard. . Vietor Pizet......: .. John 1,. Brown....... Frank Graham... .... Henry Bordewich.... Lauritz BE. Bronn..... Berne Reinhardt. .... A.J. Blackwood. ..... M. M. Langhorne..... Max]. Baehr......... Vincent B. Lombard. . Robert Henderson. . . . Charles W. Kindrick . Lewis A. Martin ..... John A. Bormet .:: ... James B. Ingle....... Thomas H. Derrick .. AO Pattison... Franklin D. Hale .... Francis Williams . ... Alfred R. Stubbs. .... Harry D. Sayler... ... Frederick D. Langen- heim. C.H.Dutham........ Rlise Jouard......... Charles E. Barnes. . .. Charles Lesimple .... WilliamSmall'.... ... Charles Macdonell. .. William Morey... . ... Elmer IL.. Morey. Oscar Malmros.... ... Jesse M. Hyatt. .....". B..D. Manton. ....... William Smith-Lyte. .| William EF. Given. ... Raymond R. Frazier . Albert G. Michelson. . Charles E. Hancock. . Henry Palazio....... Daniel Swiney....... James W. Scott. ...... George B. Dawson. . .. John E. Hamilton. ... Consul-general. Vice and deputy consul- general. Marshal. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Agent. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice and deputy consul- general. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Consul-general. Vice and deputy consul- general and marshal. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Commercial agent. 310 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Cornwall, Ontario............ ..: Coro, Venezuela... ............. Coronel, Chile... .......0. Corunna, Spain. ........ ......... Cotean. Onehec. . 3.0 iis a Courtright, Ontario. ............. Crefeld, Germany... = .o. Cronstadt, Russia... ........ Fi Cucuta, Colombia................ Cumberland, British Columbia . .. Curacao, West Indies... ......... Damascus, Syria... ............. Danzig, Germany... .. 7. ne 0 Dardanelles, Turkey... ........ Dartmouth, England............. David, Panama... Lina Dawson City, Yukon Territory ... Deloraine, Manitoba. ............ Derby, England................. Denia, Spain... oie one Deseronto, Omiario. ic: Dieppe, Bramce. Digby, Nova Scotia. ............. Dijon, France... .. Lo. 0 hha Dover, England... .,... FN A Dresden, Germany... of. ol DO. ae hat Drontheim, Norway ............. Dapiin, Treland. ..... ii Dunedin, New Zealand. .......... Dunfermline, Scotland. .......... Dunkirk; Brance =. ........ i. er Dunmore Town, West Indies. . ... Durango, Mexico. 0 Lr IR a eS Sl ei a Durban, Cape of Good Hope, Africa Dosssiion Germany Loud Fast Doli, Cape of Good Hope, Africa. Eanhan, Scotland... .........» al New Brunswick ..... Fibenstock, Germany............ Emerson, Manitoba. ............. Bnsenada, Mexico... ....... 5... Basen, Germany... 2... ol. Bien, Peru. ......« cnt oilaviinn ist David A. Flack. ..... Josiah 1,. Senior. .... Benj. R. Robertson .. Julio Harmony. ...... Enrique Fraga. ...... Thomas Stapleton. ... Pred W. Baby... ..... Thomas R. Wallace .. W. Bruce Wallace. ... Peter Wigius......... Philip Tillinghast, jr. George W. Clinton. . . Rlias H. Cheney... ... John Gaerste.. ..... =... Edwin V. Morgan. ... Frnst A. Classzen.... Frank Calvert. ....... Jasper Bartlett ..:.... William D. Gillespie ; Teo Bergholz -.... ... | G. Carlton Woodward Albert M. Herron. ... Charles Kirk FEddowes Joseph R. Moran .... Charles A. Milliner . . . Raoulle Bourgeois. . . . William B. Stewart. . . Chas. Taurean ......... Arthur G. Fuller .. ... Charles Y,. Cole... ... Alfred C. Johnson.... Paul E. Schilling. ... Claus Berg. .......... Alfred K. Moe ....... Arthur Donn Piatt ... John C. Higgins... ... Allan Baxter...... a Fred’k O. Bridgeman. John N. McCunn..... Charles Drysdale .-... Benjamin Morel... ... Norman E. B. Munro. James A. Teroy....... Walter C. Bishop .... Jolin 2. Rennie: .... Peter Lieber......... William Essenwein . . William H. Fuller. . .. Rufus Fleming....... Frederick P. Piatt ... J. Adolphe Guy ...... Ernest I,. Harris... ... Emil Schmidt... .... Duncan McArthur. . .. Everett E. Bailey. ... Victor Wankowski... Ferdinand Servat .... Harry 1,. Mefford . ... Louis'G. Marquina. . . Vice and deputy com- mercial agent. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Deputy consul-general. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Do. BE male 2 ES ak 2 Consuls and Consulates. 311 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Palmouth, England... ......c...os Howard Fox......... Consul. Do. ii nines se R. Barclay Fox ...... Vice and deputy consul. Pave, Portugal .... oo cia. i, Frederico L. Cortes ..| Agent. Payal Azores... 5. ou iin, Moyses Benarus. ..... Do. Fernie, British Columbia... ....... John R. Pollock....... Do. Finme Hungary... .... 0... FiorelloH.La Guordia Do. Florence; Taly... oo 0. Francis B. Keen ..... Consul. Do. 0 nat ana eke Spirito Bernardi... ... Vice and deputy consul. Flores cAzores. oi. a0 Si James Mackay....... Agent. Flushing, Netherlands. ......... Pieter ¥. Aver..:..... Do. Port Brie, Ontario... 0. 0.0L Horace J. Harvey ....| Consul. Fort William, Ontario... .......... .. Frankfort-on-the-Main, Germany. Fredericksted, West Indies... .... Fredericton, New Brunswick... .. Freemantle, Australia. ........... Frontera, Mexico. ............... Buachaw, China... 0a isan Galashiels, Scotland. ............ Galt, Ontario... ...oi a... PT Galway, Treland.........oei i. Georgetown, Prince Edward Island Cera, f Germany. ci coo. he oi, Ghent, Belgivwm. 00 oss Gibraltar, Spain... ...... on Girgenti, Maly... 0c. oo 0 Glasgow, Scotland...............: Doe asa st Gloucester, England... ........... Goderich, Ontario... . ........... Gonatves, Haiti. Jo coi wae Gorée-Dakar, Africa............. Gothenberg, Sweden............. Governor’s Harbor, West Indies. . Grand Canary, Canary Islands. ... Grand Manan, New Brunswick. . . Grand:Mére, Quebec... ..... 7... Grenada, West Indies............ Lewis H. Manly...... C.aW. Jarvis: 0c. Richard Guenther. ... George H. Murphy... S. W. Hanauer ...... Robert IL. Merwin... .. James T. Sharkey. ... Prank B, Perrot... E. Theophilus Liefeld. Benjamin F. Liefeld. . Samuel L. Gracey. ... Wilbur T. Gracey.... Thomas C. Jones. .... William J. G. Reid... John Stalker... .:.. James Ryerson....... Robert A. Tennant... Almar F. Dickson. ... John Carter... ....... H. L. Washington. ... TH Mander... James Jeffrey Roche. . Angelo Boragino.. ... Federico Scerni...... George H. Moulton .. Gustav H. Richtir. ... A. J. MacDonald..... Frank R. Mowrer .... Julius A. Van Hee... Richard L. Sprague. . . PrancisCiotta........ Samuel M. Taylor... . William Gibson... ... John McFadzean..... Edward A.Creevey. . Adam Schramm... ... Arnold H. Palin. ..... John H. Shirley....... William Campbell. . .. J. William Woél ..... Peter Strickland..... Robert S. S. Bergh... C. W. E. Lindquist ... Abner W. Griffin.... Peter Swanston ...... Henry PE. Fraser... .. BF. H. Russell ........ Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Agent. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul and marshal. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Deputy consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Do. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. 312 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Grenoble, Prance................ Charles P. H. Nason .| Consul. SBE SNe Sa re i CR Thomas W. Murton. ..| Vice and deputy consul. Greenock, Scotland. ......... James A. Love....... Agent. Green Turtle Cay, West Indies. ..| Edward W. Bethell. .. Do. Grenville, Quebec... ........... =. CnC OE Guadalajara, Mexico... can Guadaloupe, Mexico... ........+ Guadelonpe, West Indies... ....... Guanajuato, Mexico. ............ Guantanamo, Cuba .............. * Guatemala, Central America... ... Ray Mexico: t--... 0 anth Guelph, Ontario. 0.0, hess Aly Great Britain... ..... Haida, Auslrin. 2. oi Hail, Syria... 0h on 00 Hakodate, Japan”... 0... ...00 Halifax, Nova Scoetia............. Hohhot, Sweden. 1. .... 2.0 Helsinsfors, Finland... =... ©... Hemmingford, Quebec........... Hereford, Quebec... ......... Hobart, Tasmania............ 2 Holyhead, Wales. vi. .......... .'. Honda, Colombia... ......... ..... Honfleur, France. ............... Hongkong, China: Joo 0 Huelva, Spain... -.......00.... Hull, Bagland.. oo... 00000... DG, vs a a Philip Carroll. ....... Alex. Pridham....... Michael long ....... Edward B. Light..... William B. Davis... .. George B. Anderson. . J. O. Florandin ...... Dwight Furness... ... Thomas H. Truslow. . Alfred A. Winslow. . .| William Owen....... Herman R. Dietrich. . Frank M. Crocker. ... Charles N. Daly...... George A. Oxnard. . .. William Carey....... Prank Siller......... Gottlieb Schumacher. Edward J. King...... William R. Holloway . George Hill... .... Hugh Pitcairn......:. Otto W. Hellmrich... Frnest H. I. Mum- menhoff. W. Maxwell Greene. . William H. Heyl . ... James M. Shepard. . .. Richard Butler....... George E. Anderson. . Frederick D. Cloud. . . James Johnston... ... Amos l,. Sorle....... Jay White!s......... ‘Thomas H. Norton .. Ernest W. Riggs. .... Frank Steinhart .. Joseph A. Springer... Alex. M. Thackara... John Preston Beecher. Lars Virgin. ......... Victor Ek... ... W.W. -Wark......... John R. Nichols... -... Alex. G. Webster... .. CB. Webster ........ Sigmund Rees... ... Richard D. Roberts. . . John Owen. .....:... Henry M. Hardy. . ... Fdward S. Bragg..... Harry M. Hobbins ... Benjamin F. Stone ... David J. Bailey....... William J. Alcock. ... Walter C. Hamm -. .... Frnest'F, Hallen..... Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy cant Agent. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul-general. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, 0. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul-general. Deputy consul-general. Vice and deputy consul- general, Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Comnsul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice-consul, Agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. A ee Ee —— a . — A Consuls and Consulates. 313 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Huntingdon, Quebec... .... +. John Dineen......... Agent. lptes, Odie. [ratory oan Charles S. Winans ...| Consul. DO. aa nhl Ta A, Edward E. Muecke ..| Vice-consul. Jacme), Haiti. ono ih ko Lonis Vital... 0... Agent. Jeremde, Hat. oud i iiin vil St.Charles Villedrouin Do. Jeres de la Frontera, Spain....... Milton M. Price... -.. Do. Jersey, Great Britain... ...... BE. B Renouf......... Do. Jernsalem, Syria... 0h... 0... Selah Merrill ........ Consul. OY is i RAR US Herbert BE. Clark... .. Vice-consul. Johannesberg, Transvaal. ........ Nicholas]. Worthing- | Agent. ton. Karachi, India ...oc.nivis oie Edward L. Rogers. ... Do. Kehl, Germany A RE eh Joseph I. Brittain ....| Consul. Do... ow Herman Fuchs ..... Vice and deputy consul. Kidderminster, England ......... James Morton. ....... Agent. Kiel, Germany. .......i..civ.ann B.H.J. Sartori... .... Do. Kimberly, Cape of Good Hope, | Gardner Williams . . .. Do. Africa. Kingston, OntarioL. i... Marshall H.T'witchell.| Consul. Kirkealdy, Scotland... loi, Yobe, Japan... rn PO. isis KOnigsherg, Germany......... ... Ia Guaira, Venezuela ............ Laguna de Terminos, Mexico. . ... La Libertad, San Salvador. ....... Langen Schwalbach, Germany. . .. 1a Palma, Spain ...... Fran, La Paz, MeR1C0. 5 «vito vs Ia Rochelle, France............. . Ia Union, Salvador ............... Launceston, Tasmania. ........... Teeds, Bngland .. -...... ons Sn Bngland.. oi 00 Leipsic, Germany Sire rs Ae 1 A sh mime St RL, a) Lethbrides, Alberta. .o- i... 0. Levis, Ounebec. ...c...0in.h av Libau, Russia, ve. oe suns HugoSmit........... Tdcata, Tialy... on oie oon Arthur Verderame. . .. Yiege, Belgium... 00a. 0 James C. McNally. ... Po. re Lr nh John Gross ...... ae Yille, Bramee. J. ...cot is. i nates Christopher J. King. . Limerick, Ireland ............... Edmund Ludlow..... Yimoges, Prance ........ . ......; Walter T. Griffin..... 0s ns da Bi Auguste Jouhannaud . Tandsay, Ontario... ai. James M. Knowlson. . Lineboro, Quebec: .......... haa Yishon, Portugal .......~ i... DIO th rete Tew slr tea Th ts Matthew H. Folger... G. H. Bridgman ..... William H. Orrett. ... J. Lockhart Innes.... Samuel S. Lyon...... Hunter Sharp...:-... Alexander Eckhardt . Carl Bailey Hurst. ... German Hahn. ....... Henry Hussey. ....... Frnest Grebert....... Manuel Yanes ....... Jemes Viosca ........ George H. Jackson... Oscar Dahl... ....... Samuel FB, Tord ..-.- Lindsay Tulloch ..... Lewis Dexter........ William Ward ....... Edmund Ward....... James A. Smith... FmilioMasi'......... S. 8 Puidge....... Southard P. Warner. . Frederick Nachod.. .. Rudolph Fricke... ... Charles B. Bowman . . Charles M. Barclay... Hoel S. Beebe. ....... Jacob H. Thieriot .... Robert H. Kinchant. . Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. 314 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Liverpool, Nova Scotia........... Livingston, Guatemala. .......... 1lanelly, Wales...\..........c.... oo Lockport, Nova Scotia........... Yondon, Bugland. =... on eh AI oh Bn Sh Cn Do Londonderry, Ireland. ........... Lourengo Marquez, Africa. ....... Tlorient, Brance .......... 0... 00 Louisburg, Nova Scotia .......... Tabeck, Germany... oun, Lucerne, Switzerland ............ Lunenburg, Nova Scotia.......... Yurgan, Ireland... ......c.. Luxemburg, Netherlands ........ Lyon, France «a... 0 000. Macassar, Celebes ............... Macelo, Brazil... ....0..... 5. Macoris, Santo Domingo. ........ Madras, British India............ Madrid, Spain... ...-.. oon conn Magdeburg, Gompmly. eR eR Malmo, Swedell.. ............00u Malta, Maltalslands............. ManzZes, Brazil... a..i lis Manogua, Nicarasna ....cui her PO ae Ss ST a ri as Manta, Benador ..-. =... coo, Manganillo,Cuba. ............ 0.0 Manzanillo, Mexico. ......... .... Markneukirchen, Germany....... Marseille, France ................ James Boyle......:.. William J. Sulis. .. ... ‘William Pierce... ... Jason M. Mack ...... Edward Reed........ William Bowen ...... William McMillan ... H. Clay Evans. ...... Richard Westacott . .. Francis W. Frigout. .. Henry S. Culver. .. >. Alfred Talbot. .... ..... Pk Rodger... 0... W. Stanley Hollis. ... Fritz Bridler... ......... Teon Deprez......... Henry C. V. LeVatte. . Wolfgang Goedertz .. Henry H. Morgan ... Julius Hartmann. .... Daniel M. Owen... ... F. W. Magahan...... Ernest Derulle.... .. : John € "overt... .... Thomas N. Browne... Karl Aver:........i.... Oscar Falco; ........ Edward C. Reed . . ... Henry Scott ......... Maddin Summers... . Frank S. Hanna ...... James I.. A. Burrell .. Walter Schumann. ... Walter Housing... ... David BR. Bareh...... Thomas R. Geary .... Albert S. Troughton. . Hugo Lindgren... ... John H. Grout... .... W. H. Howard-Row- 1-2s0mn. George F. Pell... . Chester Donaldson . . . Arthur O. Wallace. . .. William H. Bradley .. John I. Doyle....... John W. Thomas. .... Heaton W. Harris. . .. Paul Gonzenbach .... Myron H. Emory .... R.VanlUckie........ E. H. Plumacher .... Federico Ritter... ... Oskar T. H. Sinram.. Joquim B. do Prado . W.F.L. Fiedler... ... Robert P. Skinner. . Allan Mactarlane. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent, Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Agen* Con.al. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul-general, Vice-consul-general. Deputy consul-general. TI Consuls and Consulates. 315 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Martinique, West Indies. ......... Maskat, Arabia... ov ise BO is a EE Matagalpa, Nicaragua. ........... Matamoras, Mexico. ...... /...... Matanzas, Caba......i 0. vives Mathewtown, West Indies. ....... Mazatlan, Mexico... ... sii ais Mentone, Prance........ i. Mersine; Syria. on ove avin. Messina i Haly.. 0,00 vo Midland, Ontario. .--............ Milan, Italy... oo... vcd Bo a en SNE Miragoane, Haiti... .......... Mogador, Moroceo. .. ::. cvuiansun Mollendo, Perwt.....c... a. ai Monaco, France. .:..0 to .00 Moncton, New Brunswick. ....... Monte Christi, Santo Domingo. . .. Montego Bay, Jamaica, West Indies Monterey, Mexico........ coi Pos. aes Can Montevideo, Uruguay............ 13 yt eA a el Montreal, Quebec... -............ 0 LE de gs a i Te Montserrat, West Indies. ......... Moscow, Bassin... =v... vious \ ET Sn SR Sa Mukden, Chita... sna. ain, Os Re sR, Munich, Germany............... AB Ir eae Re Pel EE DO arias alanis Mytilene, Turkey....... ........- Nanaimo, British Columbia. . .. . . Nankin, China: ci nih ol von. Napanee, Ontario... ... ov Jes Naples, Ttaly. .. cori son oes DO vee ce enh co dei taie John BF. Jewell... .... Jacques D. Schnegg. . Archibald Mackirdy. . Mahomed Fazel... ... Isaac A. Manning. ... P. Merrill Griffith. ... J. Bielenberg 0... ... William W. Handley. Daniel D. Sargent. ... Louis Kaiger........ Gustavus A. Kaiser. . . Henry W. Albro...... John P. Bray... ...... Alfred P. Merrill. .... Wilbur K. Bouton ... Achille Isnard....... Charles M. Caughy. .. Joseph H. Pierce..... James R. Parsons, jr.. Charles C. Eberhardt. Francis J. McCollum. Harlan W. Brush .... Henry P. Smith. ..... George S. Kelway. ... Emil Goldenberg .... George Broome...... Enrique Meier... ... Emile de Loth....... Gustave Beutelspacher Chipman A. Steeves. . Ernest Lyon... ..... AP. Camphor....... Isaac. Petit... ...... G. L. P. Corinaldi.... Philip C. Hanna . .... Francis Stewart...... John E: Hopley...:. Thomas W. Howard. . Alanson W. Edwards . Patrick Gorman... ... Prederick Driver. .... Samuel Smith ....... Thomas Smith. ...... Fleming D. Chesire. . . Clarence Clow ....... William F. Wright... Abraham Schlesinger. Ulysses J. Bywater ... Michael M. Fottion .. Charles B. Harris .... Roger S. Green. ...... George S. Schetky ... William Martin. ..... Sehawa Singh........ Louis Goldschmidt... Hiram D. Bennett. ... William Templeton... A. Homer Byington .. Homer M, Byington. . Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general., Deputy consul-general. 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. 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. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Marshal. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. 316 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. - Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. s Naples, Maly... coi... 0 iio. Zefirino G. Massimino| Deputy consul. Nassau, West Indies... ........... Julian Potter ......... Consul. EI A a Henry Mostyn. ...... Vice and deputy consul. | Natal, Beagil, i. 0 0. 00s, Henry J. Green...... Agent. | Nelson, British Columbia ........ Walter S. Riblet...... Do. | Neustadt-on-der-Hardt, Bavaria,.| Leopold Blum........ Do. Germany bg Nevis, West Indies............... Charles C. Greaves... Do. Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England. ..| Horace W. Metcalf. ..| Consul. Be... aia Hetherington Nixon .| Vice and deputy consul. Newcastle, New South Wales. .... Frederic W. Goding ..| Consul. Bo. er oh ans Stewart Keightly.....| Vice and deputy consul. Newcastle, New Brunswick. ...... Byron N. Call... Agent. Newport, Wales... coo vas William E. Heard... . Do. Niagara Falls, Ontario ........... Wm. H. H. Webster ..| Consul. Dolan rang on Neville B. Colcock. ...| Vice and deputy consul. NIceAPrance... vu. in Harold S. Van Buren.| Consul. Ea LR AttilioPiattl......... Vice-consul. Niuchwang, China... .......... Henry B, Miller ..... Consul-general. Por om nl lands J. J. Fred. Bandinel...| Vice and dep. con. gen. I SR Charles McCaslin ....| Marshal. Nogales; Mexico. t....... 0 ni E A R, Morawelz...... Consul. D0. re no TAT Samuel F. Noon ..... Vice and deputy consul. Norfolk Island, New South Wales.| Isaac Robinson... ... Agent. North Bay, Canada. 0... ... 7. Daniel J. McKeown. . Do. North Portal, Assiniboia ......... iW. H Dorsey ........ Do. ] Nottingham, England. ........... Frank W. Mahin..... Consul. 4 SE DRT Augustus E. Ingram. .| Vice-consul. Din te ns serine wot ina Thomas H. Cook ....| Deputy consul. Nuevitag Cubg. ih. a oes John EF. Hanson... ..:| Agent, Nuevo Laredo, Mexico........... Alonzo B. Garrett . ...| Consul. Bah i en rR James G- Burr... ... Vice and deputy consul. Nuremberg, Germany ........... George KE. Baldwin ...| Consul. EE I SS PR A Oscar Bock ........ +: Vice and deputy consul. Ocos, Guatemala. >... oo Samuel Wolford ..... Agent. Odessa, Russia, wo i cia Thomas E. Heenan. ..| Consul. Do. mnie Chas. W. du Bouchet.| Vice-consul. Oporto, Portugal... ....... William Stave... .. Agent. Oran Aleerin, N00 0s ol ir Benj. A. Courcelle. ... Do. | Orillia, Ontario... =o. .c.. 20 08 Ernest A. Wakefield. .| Consul. | Do; him rn dR Aa Robert H-Tupp..-..- Vice and deputy consul. i Ottawa Qmiarior hr oo. John G. Foster ....... Consul-general. | LC SH Ee Horace M. Sanford. ..| Vice and dep. con. gen. Owen Sound, Ontario............ 'W. I. Robertson...... Agent. Oaxaca, MexiCo laa cies on Charles H. Arthur... . Do. Padang, Sumatra........ apt Cornelius G. Veth ... Do. Pajta, Pernt oii, cir, an Louis Blacker........ Do. Palermo, Italy... wt... red William H. Bishop. ..| Consul. , i 5 et ER a Se Giovanni Paternitiz . .| Vice and deputy consul. Palmerston, Ontario. ...... 00.0. Richard A. Shea ..... Agent. Panama, Panama..." .... Hezekiah A. Gudger..| Consul-general. Don. oS Fao Lie Re Felix Ehrman ....... Vice-consul-general. Para Bragil ri man ve so oe Tounis H.Aymé ...... Consul. Do. vanes oi Ll Julius F. Tiedeman. ..| Vice and deputy consul. Paramaribo, British Guiana ...... Arthur Deyo... ..... Agent. Paris, Onlario. tie vo. oh bi, W.W.Hume......... Do. Paris, Brance. . i 00s oo i fis John K. Gowdy...... Consul-general. 5 Dost cusranss ta dad a Paul F. Paquet....... Vice-consul-general. - Do. uence teas lr eel Hanson C.Coxe...... Deputy consul-general. J | Parral, Mexico... 24... James]. Yong ....... Agent. = Parrsboro, Neova Scotia. .......... Laurence H. Hoke... Do. Parry Sound, Ontario.......... | Walter R.Foot....... Do. A e | - | Consuls and Consulates. 317 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Paspebiac, Quebec... 2... 0k Patras, Greece A Ee ART ea Poin) Edison nde Pernambuco, Brazil... ........... Pictou, Nova Scotia..:...... =... Pirmng, Greece: 7... huh Plauen, Germany Rah iE Hi Do Pointde Galle, India........%....\ Port Antonio, Jamaica, West Indies Port aux Basques, Newfoundland. . Portde Paix, Haitl............ .. ' Port Elizabeth, South Africa... ... Port Hawkesbury and Mulgrave, Nova Scotia. Port Hope, Ontario, ............. Port Maria, West Indies........... Port Morant,West Indies. ........ Port Powan, Ontario... 00 7. Port BL Port St. Mary's, Spain... ...... Port Santen, Falkland Islands. . Portas Englind. [0000 Prague, Austria. ............ 0 Puebla, Mexico... .. no icine Puerto Cabello, Venezuela. ....... | BLA Re RL et DE a Do. odio Pugwash and Wallace, Nova Scotia Punta Arenas, Chile... =... ...... Punta Arenas, Costa Rica........ Daniel Bisson. .:..... James V. Long....... P.7T Lontos.......... J. G Hulnagle.... ... George A. Hufnagle. . OttoSchule-."...... William L. Sewell. . .. Enrique Bachilleres . . Prank J. Bell... =... I, Rampmeyer....... Jacob F. Beringer... .. John R. Davies... .... Marino T. Sourmely. .| Hugo Muench . ....... W. H. H. Spielmeyer. Joseph G. Stephens. . John J. Stephens... .. Jean Steiger... .. 4 Nicholas R. Snyder .. Daniel H. Jackson. ... JohnB. Terres... ....... Alexander Battiste.. . . James W. Keating ... Carl Abegg 0... John A. Chabaud..... Alexander Bain... .... Harey PDL... John Harcourt... .... Pierre Paul Demers .. B, Percy Scott..-.... Harry M. Blythe..... Reuben R. Baker... ... Cecil C. Langlois .... George B. Killmaster.. William H. Meek .... Harry Broadbent. .... Frank R. Gallaher... J John EB. Rowan...... Louis Williams . ..... John Main ....%: Phas Urbain J. Ledoux.... Arnold Weissberger . . Martin R. Sackett. ... James Buckley....... Joseph E. Proffit..... Henry. J. Meyer... ... E. H. Thompson... .. John M. Gilkey...... William M. Chambers Jerome B. Peterson. .. William E. Alger... .. George C. Clement... Thomas Simpson. . ... Arthur W. Lithgow .. Conrad W. Morris. ... Moritz Brana ......... ... Leon A. Marquez .... Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent, Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consu- Consul. Vice and deputy consu'. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Do. 318 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. { Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Ouebon, Canada: oc. oo William W. Henry ...| Consul. En RHE ED Frank S. Stocking ...| Vice-consul. Lonty Colombia’. oo. 00. Henry G. Granger. ...| Agent. Rangoon, Burmah. .............. William Q. Rowett. .. Do. Rat Portage, Ontario... ......... G. Clayton Frisbie... Do. Redditch, England... ....... 0.0 H.C. Browning... ... Do. Reggio, Italy... ...... oii: Carlo Celesti....... .. Do. Reichenberg, Austria ....0........ Silas C. McFarland ..| Consul. | ER Re A RS Se a Stefan Wagner... .... Vice and deputy consul. Rennes, Prance..... ... i000 Ernest Folliard ...... Agent. Revel, Russia ........... Shan, Christian Rotermann. Do. Rheims, France .......i...n000, William A. Prickett. .| Consul. Doc August Douce ........ Vice and deputy consul. Richibucto, New Brunswick. ..... Thomas O. Murray ...| Agent. Riga, Russia... 7. 0.0 on cai N. P. A. Bornholdt...| Consul. 3 RS IR Se Christian F.Z.Schulin | Vice and deputy consul. Rimouski, Ouebec............... BE. H, Dennison. ...:: Commercial agent. DO, ibe ee Michel Ringuet, jr...| Vice and dep. com. agt. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil...... 0... Fugen Seeger... ..... Consul-general. Do. oe vintisd ba ioi: Chamberlain. ..| Vice and dep. con. gen. Dos ionamin oils Lanai Th C. Irvine .. Vice-consul-general. Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. ....... Jorge Vereker ....... Agent. Ritzebiittel and Cuxhaven, Ger- | J. G. F. Starke....... Do. many. River Hebert, Nova Scotia ....... J. Fred Moffatt .....-. Do. Rodi aly... . 0 hoes a0, ’F; del Giudice... .. Do. Rome, Tialy....... =o oo Hector de Castro... .. Consul-general. | 1A dee eRe Charles M. Wood... ... Vice and dep. con. gen. Rosario, Argentina... ... oo... ... James M. Ayers... ... Consul. Poul a ae Eben M. Flagg ...... Vice and deputy consul, Rosean, Dominica... ...5. Henry A. Frampton. .| Agent. Rossland, British Columbia ...... George A. Ohren.. ... Do. Rostoff-on-Don, Russia .......... George R. Martin. ... Do. Rotterdam, Netherlands... ....... Soren Listoe......... Consul-general. Doss Na i Aire H. Voorwinden. .| Vice and dep. con. gen. Do......0. cocoons John G. Lamont ..... Deputy consul-general. Roubaix, France...... .. ...L. William P. Atwell. ...| Consul. Bi Se RN DD Gaston Thiery....... Vice-consul. Do... oi cian bi saias Alfred C. Harrison ...| Deputy consul. Rouen, France .-................ Thornwell Haynes. ..| Consul. Dos onl Loe nda LA E. M. J. Dellepiane. ..| Vice-consul. Ruatan, Honduras... .......00.0. David Warren .......| Agent. St. Ann’s Bay, West Indies...... A.B. D.Rerrie....... Do. St. Andrews, New Brunswick... .. George H. Stickney. . Do. St. Catharines, Ontario........... Leonard H. Collard. . . Do. St. Christopher, West Indies..... Joseph E. Haven..... Commercial agent. DO ea aE Emile S. Delisle... .. Vice commercial agent. ! St. Eiienne, Prance.............. Hilary S. Brunot..... Consul. 1 4 En eS a i Hastings Burroughs. .| Vice and deputy consul. St. Eustatius, West Indies. ....... J.G.C. Byery..: .... Agent, St. Gall, Switzerland... .......:. Thomas W. Peters. ...| Consul-general. DO. ir Hernando De Soto ...| Vice and dep. con. gen. St. George, New Brunswick. ..... Edward Milliken. . ... Agent. St. George, Bermuda............. William D. Fox...... Vice commercial agent. St. Helena (island of)... .. .... Robert P, Pooley..... Consul. EA DRE a John W. Broadway ...| Vice-consul. St: Helens, Wales, .... 0.00000 John Hammill ...... -.| Agent. \ St. Hyacinthe, Quebec........... Joseph M. Authier. ...| Commercial agent. ; dB A SS a Francis Bartels....... Vice and dep. com.agent. St. John, New Brunswick........ Tra B. Myers... >. Consul. 1 Posh se nian Sabi ay Leonard M. Jewett. ..; Vice and deputy consul. | St. John’s, Newfoundland......., I George O. Cornelius. .| Consul. Consuls and Consulates. 319 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank, St. John’s, Newfoundland ........ Henry F. Bradshaw ..| Vice-consul. Sti John's, Ounebec... co... i... . Charles Deal......... Consul. 0 ESI John Donaghy....... Vice and deputy consul. St. Lucia, West Indies........... ‘William Petet........ Agent. St. Malo, Brance...........c.0v00 Raymond Moulton... Do. St. Marve, Hall me ons aioas an Charles Miot......... Do. St. Martin, West Indies. o.oo nn sis, miei on, Consul. St. Marys, Scilly Islands......... St. Michael’s, Azores............ DO ane a ss res St. Petersburg, Russia... ......... Dgiics ac santas Re St. Pierre, St. Pierre Island ...... Fr nt lt hry ih a EN St. Stephen, New Brunswick ..... 1B Se SR ee We he St. Thomas, Ontario... .....i.... 1B Rea SL REL Re ee St. Thomas, West Indies ......... D0 a Sl eh Cs a St. Vincent, Cape Verde Islands. . St. Vincent, West Indies......... Sagua la Grande, Cuba .......... Saigon, Cochin China... ......... Salaverry, Perm. 0... illo Salonica, Turkey... ax... .... Salt Cay, West Indies’. ...........; Saltillo; Mexico ..n'. 0. vi. uss ves Samana, Santo Domingo. ........ Samarang, Java iio un Samsoun, Turkey... ...... 5...) Sanchez, Santo Domingo. ........ Sandakan, Borneo..............- Santander, Spain... ....... . x 0 San Feliu de Guixols, Spain. ..... San Jorge, Azores... ....... ni San José, Costa Rica............. San José, Mexico....:.......5.., San José de Guatemala........... San Juan del Norte, Nicaragua . .. San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua ..... San Tuis Potosi, Mexico ......... San Pedro Sula, Honduras ....... San Bemo, Haly: «cin a, San Salvador... 0 Santa Marta, Colombia........... Santiago, Panama... .... 0. wu Santiago de Cuba, Cuba.......... .| Thomas C. Dawson .. erwood. John Banfield, jr ..... Geo. H. Pickerill......... W. W. Nicholls...... Ethelbert Watts ..... John Mueller... ... Charles N. Freeman . . George H. Frecker. .. C.A. McCullough .... Charlie N. Vroom. ... Michael J. Burke .... Wm, H.King .....:. Christopher H. Payne Anders E. Schroder . . Jodo B. Guimaraes. . . . Ernest A. Richards. .. Jom BiJova ......... Edward Schnéegans. . Lauritz L. Stang. ..... George W. Chase. .... P. H. Lazarro. .:. ..... Daniel F. Harriott. . .. Victor I,. Duhaime. .. Thomas N. Jeffries... Federico Lample..... B. Caulfeild-Stoker . . . G. C. Stephopoulo.. .. José C. Ariza... ... A. Tucker Wardrop .. Faustino Odriozola. . . Francis Esteva....... J.-J. Cardoza... John C. Caldwell..... Charles S. Caldwell. . . Arthur Embleton .... Frank Sims Swan... . John Tedd Hill... . Henry A. Paton...... Charles Holmann . ... Sewall E. Cross...... J: M. Mitchell, jr... Albert Ameglio ...... John Jenkins ........ Howard C. Woodsum. William A. Trout. .... Nathaniel I. Hill..... Ross E. Holaday ..... Charles E. Little..... Juan A. Read. ....... Jesse H. Johnson .... Wm. H. Lawrence. ! .. Neal McMillan ...... Arthur]. Chester.... Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-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. / Do. Commercial agent. Vice commercial agent. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. 320 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Savannah la Mar, West Indies. ... Schiedam, Netherlands .......... Seoul, Korea... . oi icv is Setubal, Portugal... ...... ....... Soils, 5 Spal A pa Shelburne, Nova Scotia. ......... Sherbrooke, Ouebec’: .." ..... 5 Sierra Mojada, Mexico........... Spon, Straits Settlements. . . . Sivas, hs Smyrna, Turkey Lo Sonneberg, Germany ............ Seerabaya, Java... 0 aE Soran, Germany. 0, LL 0A LS Sorel, Quebec 1a. oh... Sorrento, aly 00a Souris, Prince Edward Island. .... Southampton, England. ......... Do Sa Onebec......... cui Stavanger, Norway. ......... 0 Senn Germany, io, he Slt Ontario) 7. 0 es Suez, Bovptii iil en Summerside, Prince Edward Id. , . Sunderland, England. ........... Sundsvall, Sweden......... ....; Suva, Fiji Islands... . 0... 000 Swansea, Wales. i. ............ 00 Swinemiinde, Germany .......... Sydney, New South Wales....... Do George W. Shotts... .. George A. Hunter. ... Chas. S. Farquharson. Anders C. Nelson .... Gordon Paddock... .. John P.T. O'Neill. ... Richard M. Bartleman | Walter Saberton ..... John Goodnow....... James W. Davidson . . ‘Julian H. Arnold .... Geo. A. Derby... .... Charles N. Daniels... Herbert Hughes ..... Luther]. Parr........ Fdward M. Bill ...... Paul lang. ......5... Geo. E. Borlase...... John T. Williams... ... Warren See Lovejoy. . William Q. Marsh. . .. Oscar F. Williams. . .. Thomas Davidson. . .. Milo A. Jewett....... Rufus W. Lane. ...... Ernest A. Magnifico. . James W. Wilkinson. . Joseph J. Landger. ... BE Dumont ....... Adolph Kaulen ...... B. N. Powell,...... .. William B. Murphy .. Isaie Sylvestre. ...... Francesco Cianpa.... Caleb C. Carlton; jr... Albert W. Swalm..... Richard Jones ....... Felix S. S. Johnson .. G. M. Hastings... .... B. F. Butterfield... ... B. M. Rasmussen. .... John BE. Kehl ........ Henry Harder. ....... Edward L. Adams. ... Axel Georgii... Carl P. Gerell........ A.C Seyfert... .. Wm. S. Dingman .... Edward H. Ozmun . .. William Hahn....... Norman T. M. Hillary. St. Leger A. Touhay. . Richard Blunt ....... Thomas A. Horan. ... Victor Svensson ..... Leslie B.' Brown. .... Griffith W. Prees..... William D. Rees..... Gustav Ludwig ...... Orlando H. Baker.... Henry I. Jones ...... George N, West, ..... Commercial agent. Vice and dep. com. agt. Agent. Do. Consul-general. Agent. Do. Vice-consul. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul-general. Deputy consul-general. Marshal. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Commercial agent. Vice and dep.com.agent. Agent. 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. Commercial agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul, Consuls and Consulates. 321 UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Sydney, Nova Scotia ............ John E. Burchell... .. Vice-consul. ont, Sosisky Islands. ...... =. William F. Doty ..... Consul. Rr rR er Re J. Lamb Doty ........| Vice and deputy consul. Pl Chile... 7... Joseph O. Smith..... Agent. Tamatave, Madagascar. .......... Wm. EH. Hunt... .... Consul. Do. ian ns sil ani Joseph. de ILanete | Vice-consul. Tarragona, Spain... oo... iw Teguoinnl pz, Honduras... .; Tlacotalpan, Mexico... ....... .. lopolebampo, Mexico... ....... .s Toronto, Ontario...... Townsville, Queensland. ......... Trapani, Italy Ea Trebizond, Tarkey. oi... oii Tripoli, Syria... 0. . cr Troon, Scotland i=... Lo Xroyes, France... ..0. «ivi Truxillo, Honduras... ............ Do. dea a eh Utilla, Honduras Valdivia, Chile Valencia, Spain... .........s Valencia, Venezuela Valera, Venezuela... ........... 58-3D—2D ED——2I David de Floris. Samuel E. Magill .... Neill BE. Pressly... ... Fred. D, Pisher ...... Alexander C. Lambert Samuel R. Gummer. . Hoffman Philip...... Louis J. Agostini. .... William E. Alger .... George Bernhard. . ... John'byler..... ...... Philip S. Elliott...... Sol Berliner. ......... R.C. Griltiths... .... . Henrique de Castro. . . James H. Worman ... W. W. Braman, jr.... James W. Ragsdale. .. Allen W. Murphy. ... Henry J. Langdon... . August Sattler... .. Edwin N. Gunsaulus. David S. Tovell George C. Carothers. . Benjamin A. Jouve... W. J. H. Muché J. H. Rogers Constantino Serraino. Edward J. Sullivan... Vital Ojalvo .......... Stephen J. Young... Frederick W.Hossfeld Felician Slataper. .... Robert Heingartner. . Alvin Smith Spencer J. Kirton .... Iralards........... Peter H. Waddell. ... Gaston Baltet. ....... John T. Glynn Auguste J. Proux .... William P. Smyth. ... John H. Copestake. .. Pietro Cuneo Hugo Pizzotl........ Thomas P. Moffatt... W. Stanley Jones .... Alphonse J. Lespinesse John B. Richardson .. Ben Waskon Baker... Robert N. Williams . . Henry A. Johnson .. Joseph I. Byrne. ...... S. A. Braschi CURL ve A Ji JR mL FO Tok Jar Je Si SC OC CT BA THE Re $y Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Vice-consul-general. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice con. gen. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. and mar. Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. | Consul. Vice-consul. | Consul. | Vice-consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Agent. Do, 302 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS—Continued. Consular office. Consular officer. Rank. Verviers, Belgium... ....... Vevey, Switzerland oo...» Victoria, Brazile. oho. 00, 000 Victoria, British Columbia. ....... SUBSE aes I SL i on Victoria, MeXiCo. . ian oes Victoriaville, Quebec ............ Vienna, Austria... ...... =... Vigo, Spain. 0 5 ae Viadivostock, Siberia ............ Wallaceburg, Ontario. ........... Waterford, Ireland. ......... Bat Waterloo, Quebec. i... ..... Weimar, Germany. =........ 5... Wellington, New Zealand. ....... West Hartlepool, England. ....... Weymouth England... .... 0... Wiborg, Finland... ....... 0.0. Weishaden, Germany... ..... .... ... Windsor, Nova Scotia... ........ Winnipeg, Manitoba.’ ...... ... D0. Cit SE EE sr Ria Winterthur, Switzerland ......... Woodstock, New Brunswick... ... Wolverhampton, England. ....... Nala, Syria... ....o Ce Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. ......... ile ar TR ey a eh Zacatecas, Mexico... ....... .... Zanzibar, Africa... 2... ... ...... R. E. Mansfield ...... Robert S. Atkins. .... I,.. Edwin Dudley.... ¥..J. Schofield... .... Paul Nash. ...... Alexander Thayer. ... William W. Canada. . Emerto De Lux...... HemryDodt......... Theodore F. Dwight . JeanZinzen. ......... Abraham E. Smith. .. Roy E. Peabody ..... William J. Storms. . .. George KE. Beaudet . .. William A. Rublee.. .. Alvesto S. Hogue. . ... Enrique Mulder...... Richard T. Greener .. Charles B. Jackson... Clarence R. Slocum . . Witold Fouchas ..... William H. Farrell. .. Charles M. Eastman. . ‘Thomas E. Moore. ... Paul Teichmann ..... John Dunean ........ Hans C. Nielsen. ..... Frederick W. Fuller . . CB Fkstrom....... J.B. Breuer ........... Joseph T. Hoke... ... Jolin Nalder =... .... Roland J. Hemmich. . Daniel Chater... ..... Samuel H. Shank. ... Alexander McMillan . Hermann Griiebler. .. ‘Frank C. Denison. ... John R. Lindow...... John Neve... ....... BN. Hardegg.......... Martin J. Carter... ... Ernest H. Armstrong. B.C Bellows... - John Mclean... ....... George H. Scidmore. . E.von Gehren... .. .. Mason Mitchell... ... HarrisR. Childs. - .. William J. Pike... ... Herbert Smith....... Adam ILieberknecht . . W. A. Steinmann... .. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Comnsul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Agent. Commercial agent. Do. Vice and dep. com. agt. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy. consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul-general. Vice and dep. con. gen. Deputy consul-general. Agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Consul. Vice and deputy consul. 1 | | Consular Clerks. 2323 CONSULAR CLERKS. [Authorized by the act of Congress approved June 20, 1864. | Charles M. Wood. ..... Rome. Dean B. Mason... .... Berlin. George H. Scidmore... Yokohama. . Maddin Summers ... . Madrid. St. Leger A. Touhay.... Suez. Hernando De Soto... .. St. Gall. George H. Murphy. #.. Frankfort-on- Augustus E. Ingram... Nottingham, Main. Frederic W.Cauldwell.. Paris. William Dulany Hunter Washington. Homer M. Byington ... Naples. Richard Westacott.. ... London. Roy H, Neely... |... Habana. STUDENT INTERPRETERS IN CHINA. Julean H. Arnold........ Shanghai. Albert W. Pontious..... Peking. Frederick D. Cloud...... Hangchow. Charles L. L. Williams . Peking. Clarence Clowe. ......... Mukden. George F. Smithers .... Peking. P. S. Heintzleman. ...... Canton. Hubert G. Baugh....... Peking. Willard B. Hull ......... Peking. 324 Congressional Directory. FOREIGN CONSULS IN THE UNITED STATES ARGENTINA—BELGIUM. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. ARGENTINA. Mobile, Ala............. Manuel 8, Macias...n.............; Consul. Tloyd DD. Bated..... on... os Vice-consul. San Francisco, Cal...... GeorgedelUrioste............. 5. Consul. Apalachicola, Fla ....... Willlam]. Owen. ..h.. coi. Vice-consul. Fernandina, Bla ........ Thomas C.Borden... 2... 5.0. ..... Consul. Pensacola, Fla.......... J Harris Pierpont in aei oc... Do. Warren FE. Anderson. ............... Vice-consul. Brunswick, CGa.......... RosendoTortas...... ...... ...... ..- Consul. Savannah, Ga........... Andiés BE. Moynelo................ Vice-consul. Chicago, Ill.............. P.lL.Hudson. ovens Consul. New Orleans, Ia........ AlfredYe Blanc... ............ ... Do. Bangor, Me............. J. Swett Rowe. ....... ...-. .. Do. Portland, Me........~... Clarence W. Small. .,..... ..... Do. Baltimore, Md... ...... James BF. Ferguson, 5... .. Do. Boston, Mass. ...... ..... Guillermo McKissock ............ Do. Gulf Portand Ship Island,| Felix S. de Castro................ Do. Miss. Pascagoula, Miss........ Juan lL. Dantzler... ......... 5; Vice-consul. St. Louis, Mo........... Salvador A. Pratto............ ~~... joConsul, Bufialo, N. V.....0...... Jorge M. Tornquist.. 5.0 oh Do. New York City, N. Y....| José Vicente Fernandez........... Consul-general, For the United States. Pedro Rodriquez Fleijel .......... Vice-consul. Wilmington, XN. C.... ... George Harriss... . .. Saglsta Do. Philadelphia, Pa........ William P. Wilson................ Consul. Norfolk, Va... .......... Guillermo Klyver ....... v0... Vice-consul. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Mobile, Aln............. YW. B. Stomtz.. o.oo Consul. San Francisco, Cal... ... Francis Korbel, ..................] Do. Pensacola, Bla. ......... HH Baars, |. ae Vice-consul. Savannah, Ga... ........ Bdward Korow,................., Do. Honolulu, Hawaii....... F. A Schaeffer. .................. | Temporary consul. Chicago, 11........... Alexander Nuber........-...... ..% Consul. - New Orleans, Ia........ Franz Hindermmann .... ........... Do. Baltimore, Md .......... G-Loms Hester... iain nn Do. For Maryland and Delaware. Boston, Mass. ......c +... Arthar- Donner... n.. ........ Do. St. Longs, Mo........... PerdinandPiehm..... ... =... .. Do. New York City, N. V.... Hazleton, Pa.......... .. Philadelphia, Pa’. ...... Pittsburg, Pa............ Manila, P.1............ San Juan, P.R.......... Charleston, S.C... Galveston, Tex.......... Richmond, Va... .:..... Milwaukee, Wis. ....... BELGIUM. Mobile, Ala... .....—..... 1.05 Angeles, Cal... ... San Francisco, Cal...... Thomas Dessewffy von Csernek and Tarkeo. ee Sue Siatielies Te elie tesieie. Sete TRL een sie ele ein Ce ilei el te Toul ary Theodor Ritter von Thodorovich. . Adalbert Merle. . =... . =... ..... Alplhions Debrunner ...... ....... .. Joannes D. Stubbe......... lea Charles: Witte. =. m0. JohniReymershoffer .............. Christophorus I,. D. Borchers... ... Anton G. Veith... 0 Robert B.du Mont... ...........-.. For Alabama. BR Halewyel..s. oi For Washington, Montana, Oregon, Idaho, California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Alaska, and Hawaiian Is- lands. Comnsul-general. Consular agent. In charge of consu- late. Consul-general. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Foreign Consuls in the United States. BELGIUM—BOLIVIA. 325 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. BELGIUM—continued. Denver, Colo. ......... JF Mignolet. =. Consul. For Colorado, Wyoming, and New Mexico. Jacksonville, Fla... ..... J. Butteenbach.... on... Vice-consul. Pensacola, Fla... ...... WD. Howe... o.oo Do. Aflanta, Ga... ...... Taurent de Give... ..c iv oiin. Consul. Savannah, Ga. ........%. Leopold Chargler................. Do. Honolulu, Hawaii. ...... Rel. Tange Sao adn lio Vice-consul. Chicago Il... Ch. Hemrolin.o, fo. or. ..| Consul. Tounisville, Ry... ....... St. De Ridder ov Jiang Do. For Kentucky, Tennessee, and Ohio. New Orleans, La........ CS. Schaefer... Jot... ov vil Do. Boston, Mass. ...... =~ ... B.S. Mansfield... 0. 0 an Do. For Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. Ph, Mansfield... .....~--..... ...| Vice-consul. Detroit, Mich ......: wv Théophile Francois. .... ..cccooco-: Consul. St.Tonis, Mo ......-..-.. T.Secuenot. s. =, wo roan, Do. For Arkansas and Missouri. Omaha, Nebr... .... ADelanmey.: oc ise a Do. For Kansas and Nebraska. | New Vork Clty, N-V....| Plesve Mali-... voc anid. : Do. Philadelphia, Pa........ Pittsburg, Pa, oie... .v. Charleston, S.C......... Galveston, Tex. ......... Norfolk and Newport News, Va. Richmond, Va........... Seatile, Wash... .-..... Green Bay, Wis... ....., .. BOLIVIA. San Diego, Cal.......... San Francisco, Cal ...... Chicago, Hl... Baltimore,"Md......-... For New York, New Jersey, Connecti- cut, and Rhode Island. PanlHagemans ........«. .....o" For the United States. Jo Wellens = So aa 0 For eastern Pennsylvania. TrNoesersi se oa eee For the counties of Allegheny, Arm- strong, Beaver, Butler, Cambria, Cameron, Clarion, Clearfield, Craw- ford, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson, Law- rence, McKean, Mércer, Somerset, Venango, Warren, Washington, and Westmoreland. Ch le Nionnois «is 0.00.0. 0s For the Philippines. LaBrave, aah. on. cee a For the departments of Mayaguez and Aguadilla. TB. Prats, a For the departments of Ponce and . Guayama. Co ReNO7 i. a ia For Porto Rico. LL.B. Soldat si oni nn For the departments of Arecibo, Bayamon, and Humacao, and the island of Vieques. D. McKay Frost... .. Rata For North and South Carolina. J Vanden Broeck..... -. ........ For Texas, Indian Territory, and Ok- lahoma. 7.2. Andvé Moth... 0 0L W.ONolting...........«....... For Virginia and West Virginia. B.C Neufelder..:.. is .v oni vai GB. Brice. lori ni For Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Da- kota, and South Dakota. Philip Mose. slow. or ee José Agwivre Achd. i... ai. For California, Nevada, Oregon, Wash- ington, and Arizona. Frederick Harnwell . ............. Raymond M. Glacken .............. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul-general. Consul. Do. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul. Consul- general. Consul. Do. 326 Congressional Directory. BOLIVIA—CHINA. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. BOIL IVIA—continued. Kansas City, Mo........ ... New York City, N. V.... Philadelphia, Pa... .... BRAZIL, Mobile, Ala................ San Francisco, Cal ...... Pensacola, Fla........... Brunswick, Ga. ......... Savannah, Ga... eae New Orleans, Ia........ Calais; Me... .... ovo Baltimore, Md..... ..... Boston, Mass... :......... Pascagoula, Miss. ....... St. Louis, Mon... New York City, N. V.... Philadelphia,Pa ........ Norfolk, Va. . a oa Richmond, Va .......... CHILE. San Francisco, Cal... .. Ea Savannah, Ga........... Honolulu, Hawaii. ... ... Chicago, 111... =... .. Isthmian Canal Zone (Panama). Baltimore, Md ..........; Boston, Mass... ........ New York City, N. ¥.. .. Portland, Orez.......... Philadelphia, Pa........ Manila, PT... San’ Juan, P.'R..... Port Townsend, Wash. . . Pacoma, Wash... ...... CHINA. San Francisco, Cal... .... Honolulu, Hawaii ....... Boston, Mass Hr Sh New York City, N. ¥Y.... Manila, P.1...0..0... BdwinR. Heath... 7... .......... Joaquin Nella =. 00 ooo Wilired HH. Scheff... .............. Luiz M, Moragnez. ..........5:.: T26. McGonigal.. iia. sdo ov Archibald Barnard... 0. John, Borras onions. Walter B:Cook....... o.oo. os, BoD. Walter... has i William S. Adams: =... 5... eS inchs... vs fess CharlesDittman... .... 0 ~: Emanuel Dittman ................. William A. Murchie .............. LeonceRabillon. ......... a Jayme Mackay d’Almeida. ........ Pedro Mackay d’Almeida......... Vicemte Ros, oi. on Andrew. Gray... lh Affonso de Figueiredo... ..... .... Antonio Fontoura Xavier.......... Framncisco:G. BP. Lefo. ...... i... Napoleon Bonaparte Kelly. ....... OQ. Kimbell. Bartop Myers... in. ver Franle A. Gilbert) noi George Annesley Barksdale. ...... Robert I. Brooke: .i-. a oahu nt B. Mejla lo aa Roberto P. Reppatd—... 7... »... H.RBenjes...... inicio IM. ]- Steffens... 0s r i, Jeronimo Ossa.............~.. ..=.. R.GC. Leupold... ..coviivui.n he Horacio N, Bisher... vc... .-. PedericoABeelen. . vo io 00 For the United States. Fernando CG. Ewald... .. v.-. ...... Dudley Bartlett... ......o0....... BE Pastery Mora... .... io: Manuel Fernandez Nater. ......... OscarKlocker . =. ssn iva. J. Tennant Steeb,. .....F ........ OWE King. its, Chang Choh-Taf av a and, Shah Ral-fa =. 0 0. a Tk Wing ...oo viuasinn. oo Mun-yvewChung .................. IiCing-kwel... .. a... Honorary consul. In charge. Honorary consul. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-consul. - Do: Do. Commercial agent. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-consul. Do. Commercial agent. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Do. Commercial agent. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. Vice-consul. Commercial agent. In charge. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Consul-general. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Acting con. gen. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Honorary vice-con- sul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul, Foreign Consuls in the United States. COLOMBIA —CUBA. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. COLOMBIA. Mobile, Ala........... Leonardo D. Le Baron ............ Consul. San Francisco, Cal. ...... Bscipion Canal... oo. Do. New:Haven, Conn... ... Alejandro ¥. Ramirez. ..0.:....... Do. Chicago, Ill... ...:.. Frskine M. Phelps..t 0s... 0... Consul. José Miguel Rosales... ........... Vice-consul. New Orleans, la........ Alfonso Delgado... a .0io ou. Consul. Baltimore, Md .......... BW. Peldner ..cniny. vis ious Do. Boston, Mass........-... Jorge Vargas Heredia... . oc i... Do. Detroit Vc ir en Eh Ti rs ee Do. St.Tounis, Mo .:-........ Jo Arbuckles oats he Do New York City, N.Y... .. Philadelphia, Pa ........ San Juan, P.R.......... Norfolk, Va............. INDEPENDENT STATE OF THE CONGO. Baltimore, Md. .......... COSTA RICA. Mobile, Ala.........../. San Francisco, Cal... .... Denver, Colona... ...ou Chicago, l:............ New Orleans, la........ Baltimore, Md... ...... Boston; Mass. ...........5 St. Tous; Ma. i... .. New York City, N. Y.... Cincinnati, Ohio:......... Portland, Oreg...... .... Philadelphia, Pa.....:.. Galveston, Tex.......... Notfollz, Va . =... =... CUBA. Mobile, Ala... ox Jacksonville, Fla. ....... Rey West, Fla... ........ Pensacola, Fla........... Tampa, Fla... ....... Brunswick, Ga.......... Savannah, Ga:.......... Chicage, Hl. ~.......... New Orleans, Ia ........ Baltimore, Md:.........» Boston, Mass... ...... ... St.Loniss Mo... =i. New York City, N.Y .... Philadelphia, Pa . ....... Dr. Luis Borique Borrilla. ......... William Harper «ovine Wenceslao Borda... oo... Howard P. Wilsons... onion. ins Jamee G.- Whiteley itor). il. Poul B, Rapier... 7... vans Bncarnacion Mejia. ........... Tin Qasimire Barela .. .~........ ..-. Berthold Singet 00... i... . TamapC. Quintero... 0. x... John Marshall Quintero. .......... William A. Riordan... .. DR Joseph J-Corbett.. iia: Bhen Richards... 00. oii Juan I. Ulloa CG. ial ah. Juan J. Ulloa G.i od nvm... Louis Chable ...... a8 oo Paul B, Walker... 000 oe Grandville G. Ames... 5... .... Gustave Niederlein. ..... ......... HenryiMeosle ooo Fonsi. Chins, M. Barnett oo. oo. Leopoldo Dolz y Arango ......... José Alejandro Huan . ............ Antonio Diaz y-Carrosco.. —....... Vincent]. Vidal, “50... Francisco F. Mendoza y Rodriguez. With jurisdiction over Port Tampa. RosendoTorras: .. oan rl o ois A.B. Moynelo........ rR Berthold Singer..2.:... 2.0. Manuel Izagnirre ..c.............. José Manuel Espin............... José Monz6n vy Aguirre... ........ Venturo Portuondo Tamayo ..... = Octavid Zayasy Adan «i....... ..s For the United States. Antonio Altamira y Polo.......... Mariano Rocafort y Marcayda .... with jurisdiction over Wilmington, Arecibe, P.Ru el, Fernando Aleman y Vallee ....... Consul-general. Vice consul-general. Consul. Do. Do. Consul. Consul. Acting consul. Consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Comnsul-general., Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul. Honorary consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. y Do. Do; Honorary consul. | Consul. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. 328 Congressional Directory. CUBA—DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. cuBA——continued. Mayaguez, P.R.......... Alberto Bravo Gonzalez. .......... Consul. Sam Juan, P.B .......... Salvador Rosy Pochet ........... Do. Norfolk, Va 5... .. CM EBovler.... .... Do. With jurisdiction over Newport News and Portsmouth. DENMARK. Mobile, Aln;:.........- Tome Domald =. ro, oo. Vice-consul. Little Rock, Ark........ August Sundlolm =................ Do. San Prancisco, Cal. ...... HA. DBirkhelme 00 Consul. Denver, Colo, ..........- Vigoo Egede Baérresen,...... .... Vice-consul. For Colorado. Apalachicola, Fla ....... Sol Braglv... nao uli. Do. Pensacola, Fla...~....... Carl McKenzieOerting ........... Do. Savannah, Ga... ........ JB tolst n Do. Honolulu, Hawaii....... A. R. Maclarlane,.....c.0 uu... Consul. Boise City, Idaho. ....... WalterS. Beuce.....-. . o Vice-consul. Chicago, Ul... ......... Christian I. Hansson... ........ Consul. YE .oAssens ca aa Vice-consul. Cedar Falls, Iowa ....... Vicocolgnghy ..............a.... Do. For Towa. Kansas City, Kans ...... Jep. Hansen Mailand .............. Do. Youisyille, Ry ........... Charles BB. Currie. ..........0 =. .¢ Consul. For Kentucky, Tennessee, and Ohio. New Orleans, Ia........ Thyge Seegaard. .. 5 .c...or ov» Vice-consul. For Iouisiana, Florida, Alabama, Mis- sissippi, Arkansas, Texas, Indian Territory, and New Mexico. Ballimore,Md........... Morris Whilvidge............... .. Consul. Boston, Mass... -........ Gustaf Lundberg... ........ .. Do. Detroit, Mich........... Peter SOrensen.. viva vin even Vice-consul. St, Paul, Minn... ........ Jom GC Nelsons... 0... Do. Seranton, Mise... oan toa heel Saha. Do. St. TonisyMoi...o.... CoE. Bamloge = ola 2 oma. Do. Omaha, Nebr.............. TheodorOlsen. .: .....5. no... Do. Lovelocks, Nev......... Peter Anker... oii vv iininin vss Do. Perth Amboy, N..J...... LP. Holm... .....hai.. io. Do. New Vork City, N.Y... .LJolm EB. Leerbeck.......civ vivre: Acting consul, BC ore Se a a Vice-consul. Wilmington, N. C....... Alexander Severin Heide........... Do. Fargo, N.Dak........... Henry yogh oo onvas vic. ion Do. Cleveland, Ohio. ........ Mail 1. Thomsen. ............... Do. Portland, Oreg. ......... Willlam Bisen ii oo. isthe Do.: Philadelphia, Pa... ...... FN. Wallemrs inti “: Do. Manila, P Bian 0 Robert Henry Wood...........;..... Consul. Humaeao,P. Ri... ...- Antonio: ROT... veda oy ".| Vice-consul. Mayaguez, P.R......... Albert Bravo... i ves a. Do. Porice, B.R:. 7... ... 5% Carlos Armstrong ................. Consul. San Juan, P.R.......... T.GC.L Waymonth..,........ ..... Vice-consul. Vieques’ (Crab Island), | Victor Duteil.."..\...... o.oo oo. Do. PR. Charleston, S.C......... James M, Selgnions ..o.0 Lo... Do. Galveston, lex. ......... Jens Maller... Do. Salt Take City Utah... .| Peter Hansen... ..........0....... Do. Newport News, Va...... Carl Hugo Arnal .......... 0... 0. Do. Norfolk, Va. '...... .... Charles M, Barmeit .... .... ...... Do. Seattle, Wash... ........ John P. Jacobsen... .............. Do. Racine, Wis... ......:. Peter Bering Nelson............... Do. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Chicago, IN... ....... Frederick W. Job. .....oh ov. Vice-consul. Baltimore, Md ........... William A. Riordan .............. Do. BE We ———— Foreign Consuls in the United States. 329 DOMINICAN REPUBLIC—FRANCE. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC— continued. Boston, Mass............ Osvaldo Bazil... 0... Consul. New York City, N.Y... Wilmington, N.C. ...... Philadelphia, Pa ........ Aguadilla, P.R.... .... Arecibo, P-Re.......0. Humaecao, P..R............ Mayaguez, P.R .\........ Ponce, P. Ri... = San Juan. P. R.......... Vieques, P- Ri... . ECUADOR. 10s Angeles, Cal. ....... San Francisco,Cal....... Chicago, 11... ....... New Orleans, I1a........ Boston, Mass. ............ New York City, N.Y .... Cincinnati, Ohio......... Philadelphia, Pa. ....... Manila, P.X oo... oo FRANCE. Birmingham, Ala. ....... Mobile, Aln............. Nome City, Alaska...... los:Angeles, Cal... .... San: Francisco,Cal.. .... SanJose, Cal... ........ Denver, Colo... .... Apalachicola, Fla. ....... Tampa, Fla... 5 Savannah, Ga... ....... Honolulu, H.T........ -. Chicago, TH... ......-. Younwsville, Ky... ....... New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md. ......... Boston, Mass... ..-.....- Detroit, Mich... .5..... St. Paul, Minn. ....... Kansas City, Mo........ St: Lonis, Mo...o....... Prancisco L. Vasquez .............: Andrew]. Howell, Jr... . i... .. Thomas 'B. Wanamaker... ........ Dr. Tomas Rovira. ................ Angel Sanz y Ambros. ...........- Amtomie Bolg... 5. 0.neh ooh Yurigque A. Bousset .....v.. s.o rvs Jose Antonio Balaguer ............ J. Eugenio Medina y Cortés....... 1ANIeano Sarrid ., . =: cits noni dens Tomas L. Duque ................. Alejandro Noboa ..., viv oesan cov: Pablo A. Andrade. ....c.........: Tails Mle ci 0d ns in Demetrius Iglesias Castro ......... Gustavo Pression. coi arin sven Serafin'S, Withee S.......- ~~. ..+. Rafael Zevallasi.......cvivic ovo David S.. Reinberg is: ....... 0... Cassius A, CFCC ori vom ris 5s Ricardo E.Barretio i... .....oviv. + - Guillermo Oliveras Haal.......... CharlessM. Barnett... ............ Stmonllotz 5... aia JeanMarques, rh ty ves Albert Schmeider.......... ..... Auguste Pusenot .. ...,.. 7. ........ Etienne Marie Louis Lanel ....... For Alaska, Arizona, Utah, California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington. Pedro de Saisset. «vo. coi on vs A Bourquin. .. sui oli videos oh Antoine Jean Murat. .............. Vicente Guerra... 0. ive. RB. Chagtanet t0....... oo... Jean Antoine Vizzavona .......... Henri Antoine Joseph Mérou...... For Colorado, North Dakota, South Da- kota, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Michel Hermann... .........-...-. Pierre Maria Richard. ...... ..... For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Geor- gia, Louisiana, New Mexico, Ten- nessee, Indian Territory, and Texas. Teonce Rabillom.... cob vil no. Duncan Bailly Blanchard. ......... Joseph Belanger....... 5... .:.. Francois Célestin Boucher......... Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Honorary consul- general. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Honorary consul. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul - general. Consular agent. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Honorary consul in charge of vice-con- sulate. Consul. Consular agent. Comnsul-general. Consular agent. Do. Do. 33° Congressional Directory. FRANCE—GERMANY. Residence. FRANCE—continued. New York City, N. Y.... Cincinnati, Ohio......... : Portland; Oreg.......... Philadelphia, Pa. ....... Manila. PY... .... Adjuntas, P. R Salimas, P.R ........... Sam Joan, PR 7 on. Utmabo, P.R............ Brownsville, Tex........ Dallag, Tex. ow Bl Paso, Tex: .......... Galveston, Tex........... San Antonio, Tex....... Seattle, Wagh........... Tacoma, Wash'.......... GERMANY. Mobile, Ala. ............ San Francisco, Cal...... Washington, D. C....... Pensacola, Fla... ....... Darlett; Gori na iia Atlanta, Ga.......... Savannah, Ga........... Honolulu, TL.T.... i... Chicago; lll. ........ New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md... ....... Boston, Mass St. Paul Minn... Stites St. Lomis, Mo... ....... New York City, N. Y.... Wilmington, N. C....... Cincinnati, Ohio Name and jurisdiction. Rank. Arecibo, P.R ........ .-. Arroyo-Guayama, P. R. .. Barres, PR... Ponce, PR... ..... Soufflot de Magny.................. For North Carolina, South Carolina, Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey; New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Virginia, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Yucene €, Pocley....... 0. Charles Henri ILabbé.............. Bdomard Pesoll:.o.-... =... .. Charles A. Pinard............ Rafael Janery Soler... ...... Ei. Vineent Antovelti ......... ..;. Joseph Rojas Cortes .... ........ De¥elicl lf saan Josephy Marie Lota... ............... Marquis de Moy (Georges Alex- ander Gaston). Ange Figueroa Velez Celestin Jagow ........ vino Jean Baptiste Adone............ A. Courchesne.................. Auguste MarieJouve ...... ........ For the State of Texas. Edmond P..Clandon... ........... Pierre Jean Baptiste Joujon-Roche. ClintonPeyre Ferry... Bo HODOr vs ce i a For Alabama. Adolph Rosenthal ..... 0.0... ... For Arizona, California, and Nevada. Custav Dittmar. ....... i... oxo Henry Boyer... voor. Angnst Schmidt... .... ..- coo oi Dr. Brich Zoepfiel.......--......... Ernst Bichhorn.... ....... .... H. Alexander Isenberg... ......... Walther Wever....... 0... For Illinois (except St. Clair, Madison, and Monroe counties), Towa, Michi- gan, Nebraska, and Wisconsin. Doctor Zitelman... ,... .. +s. ia Ferdinand von Nordenflycht... .. For Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. Georg A.vonljingen.............. For Maryland and the District of Columbia. Wilhelm Theodor Reincke........ For Maine, Massachusetts, Hampshire, and Rhode Island. Johannes Grunow ............... .. FriederichhRielofl....... ..-..~.... For Arkansas, Colorado, Indian Ter- ritory, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, New Mexico, and St. Clair, Madison, and Monroe counties in Illinois. Mr. vonReden. in. 00... 0 Karl Blinz: o.oo vn silva Rudolph Franksen ... ........... George ll, Peschaw. 200.0. =. Rarl Poller... ol ion x. For Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and West Virginia. Consul-general Consular agent. Do. Consul. Consul-general. Consular agent. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Consul-general. Consular agent. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Acting consul. Consul. mL Foreign Consuls in the United States. GERMANY—GREAT BRITAIN. Residence. GERMANY—continued. Portland, Oreg. so. Philadelphia, Pa... ...; Manila, BP... wn... CebsPel ir. Aguadilla, P.R...... : Mayaguez, P.R......... Ponce, PB. 0 00 Sanjuan, PR. ra Charleston, S:C......... Galveston, Tex. .........: Norfolk, Va... .......... Richmond; Va. .......... Tacoma, Wash ....... a Seattle, Wash... =... GREAT BRITAIN. Mobile, Ala... on... 1.08 Angeles, Cal... .. San Diego, Cal... ... ... San Francisco, Cal....... Denver, Colo... oo vs Apalachicola, Fla....... Fernandina, Fla. ........ Jacksonville, Fla. ....... Rey West, Fla,......... Pensacola, Fla... Port Tampa; Pla. oo... Punta Gorda, Fla. ...... Brunswick, Ga........ =, Darien, Ga. ooo de Savannah, Ga..........: Honolulu, Hawaii. ...... Chicago, Ill.5 os... New Orleans, Ia........ Portland, Me... .......... Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass... ...... .-.. Biloxl, Migs:.. oo. oo. Kansas City, Mo........ St. Lonis, Mo:.....+..... Name and jurisdiction. Oswald Yohan. i i.oa For Oregon and Idaho. Pred. Ritschl =... vs ia 0 on For Delaware and Pennsylvania. Franz Gronenwald: .—....,........=. For the Philippine Islands and Guam. HC Duings coir ae ain iit GeorgSanders. i... 2000 Hubert Koberg......... hiv. Jolin Umbaely S00 0k WaldemarHepp: >. 00. Charles Otto Witte, . ..... . 0.0... .. Jlins Bunge. >... i. Williamlamb...... ....... Carl Bmiil Vietor ......5 oo Hons Giese i, voi hii ol Fdmund Joshua Seiders .... ........ Charles White Mortimer .......... For the district of Ios Angeles. William To Allen. cvs Courtenay Walter Bennett ..... ... Wellesly Moore. =. i oni... Harold: V. Pearce... ...o.. in: To FaPodern ss 5 is aman a B.V.Nicholl....o ve iia Bdward Sudlow:: . i ode W-l-B avler...cuniian oonL Prederick’ Bonar... .o.n = bio... John Bradley. Sc wives oo, Albert Folger Dewey ©. 750. .v. RosendoTorras. oi J ia al. Robert MANSON... ooh eae vin sos Henry Watts Russell de Coétlogon. For North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Tennessee. William R- Hoare. .o.000. . Alexander Binn ....... .Sivicvad in. For Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Minne- sota, Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, Mon- tana, Wyoming, Missouri, Okla- homa, and Indian Territory. Th. Hdward Erskine... .........: Heury Thomas Carew-Hunt....... For Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. James A. Donnelly... =o... J.B. Keating 0. vei too Gilbert:-Brager sou. ooo ao ‘For Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, and Kentucky. Abraham George Coates. ......."-. William Wyndham ............... For Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine, William Hugh Montgomery Sin- clair. . ; James] Lemon... foi na PoankS. Yome o.oo. Western Bascome. . ..... .....o 0 Acting consul. Consul. Do. In charge. Vice-consul. In charge. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. 332 Congressional Directory. GREAT BRITAIN—GUATEMALA. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. GREAT BRITAIN —cont’d. Omaha, Nebr........ ... New York City, N. ¥.... Wilmington, N. C....... Astoria, Oreg... i... .... Portland, Oreg..=%... ... Philadelphia, Pa~-....... Cebz PT. oo aes Holle, PB. ....i.......o Manila, P.I.......... Arecibo, BR... : Arroyo de Guayana, P. R. Humocao, P.B........<. Mavagtiez, P.R=......... Ponce, B.B 0... San Juan, B.R ........... Providence, R. 1 ........ Beauforl, S.-C... Charleston, S.C... .... Galveston, Tex.......... Sabine Pasd, Tex........ Apia, Samoa. ............ Newport News, Va....... Norfolk, Va............. Richmond, Va.......... Port Townsend, Wash. . . Seattle, Wash........... Tacoma, Wash .......... GREECE. San Prancisco, Cal. ..... Chicago, (Al... . ... Boston, Mass............ Towell, Mags. .......... St. Tonis, Mo............ Butte, Mont... =... .... New York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa........ Nashville, Tenn. ........ GUATEMALA. Mobile, Ala. ....... Ens San-Diego, Cal=.%....... San Francisco, Cal... ... Mathew Alexander Hall........... Sir Percy Sanderson, K. C. M. G.. For New York, Delaware, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. CharlesiClive Bayley... ........ Charles Alexander S. Perceval... .. Joseph Poulter Smithers....... ... JameaSprumt ........ ou Ls Peter 1, Cherry... sic. in... James laidlaw..... cn James Ernest Laidlaw... .... .. For Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. Willred Powell... .... For Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan. Charles Lyons Markham Pearson. . Charles Agustin Fulcher... ....... William: Joseph Kenny ............ David Wilson... 5... ova... John Charles McCormick......... Antonio Reig, 0 a For Humocao, Noguabo, and Fajardo. Gerhardt Monefeldt.............. Fernando Miguel:Toro ....oui.. William Brown Churchward ...... Thomas:G.T. Waymouth ......... George A. Stockwell............ 2 Jolin Ernest. Ressler...... ........ For Beaufort and Port Royal. Alexander Harkness... ........... James Cuthbert Roach... ........ .. Horace Dickinson Nugent......... For Texas and New Mexico. JolmR. Adams... ..........cc..o Thomas Trood ........ oo ove ooo James Hanghton.. ..... o.oo Barton Myers. .........dc....... + Philip Arthur Sherard Brine. ...... Oscar Klocker........ Eat a Bernard Pelly. oo. oi coca. Rev: J.B, Alexander.....:........ Henry SaMartin.. ....... ci... Nikolaos Sallopoulos ............. Demosthenes Th. Timayenis...... M. Intron... ive cl San Demetrius Jannopoulos ........... G. N. Usolometes.... |... on. DD. NoBotassi- =o. inn vce. coon S.Bdwin Megargee.... ........, Panteles Ch. Panagiotopoulos. .. ... Juan Marquez. ................. Ormond W. Follin ...... = .:..... Felipe Galicia=......1 0. 0.00... Angel Pefia. 0 il... 00 0. Rank. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Consul. First vice-consul. Second vice-consul Vice-consul. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Consul-General, Consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Proconsul. Consul. Do. Acting vice-consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Honorary vice-con- sul. Consul-general. Vice-consul, Foreign Consuls in the United States. 333 GUATEMALA—ITALY. Sai A Residence. Name and jurisdiction. - Rank. GUATEMALA—continued. ; Pensacola, Fla........... Vincente FE. I. Vidal... .......... Honorary vice-con- sul. Chicago, 11.5. ......... George FP. Stone... ui. ion. Honorary consul. Kansas City, Kans... ... Bdwin BR. Heath. ..... vein... Do. Louisville, Byconi... Shirley M. Crawford =... 1... .. Do. New Orleans, 1a........ Julio Novellas: o.oo oo co. Consul-general. Baltimore, Md... .,...:- C. Morion Stewart, jr... . on... Honorary consul- general. Boston, Mass. ..... ..... Benjamin Preston Clark .......... Honorary consul. St. louis; Mo..........-. LniD, Kingsland >... a... .. Honorary consul- general. New York City, N.Y... ..[ Joaquin Vela... oo... oon Consul-general. Philadelphia, Pa........ Gustay Niederlein. =”. ..........--. Honorary consul. San Juan, PB, B.......... Manuel M. Sama... ............. Do. Galveston, Tex. -....... J. Merrow, te. Do. Seattle, Wash........... Andrew J.Balliet................. Do. HAITI Mobile; Ala... ........ Jean Margues....... oi an Vice-consul. Savannah, Ga. .......... A Bilarris. oo nh ei Do. Chicago dl). ow Cuthbert Singleton. =... ...... ... Consul. | & Bangor, Me... o..... Pre. McConyville.................. Do. | Boston, Mass............ Benjamin C. Clark... ......... Do. New York City, N. V....| Geffrard Cesvet........ .......... Consul-general. B.D. Bassett toi civ io Vice-consul. Wilmington, N. C....... William M-Comming . 00... Do. Mayaguez, P.R......... José Blanch. = ....0...... Do. San Juan, P.R ....... Charles Vére i. 0... as Consular agent. HONDURAS. Mobile, Ala............... Ranion Viada. .. nol. hs Consul. Tne M. Moragiiez..............., ... Vice-consul. 1.08 Angeles, Cal........ Tomgsl,. Duqué.. .. 0... ....... Consul. San Diego; Cal... .... TomdsDowell.. ov .. 000... 0, Do. San Francisco, Cal ...... Benjamin Bloon. ox. .0h 0. Consul-general. Chicago, Jl... .. .... = George FB. Stone... /= 000... Do. Kansas City, Kans. ..... BdwinR. Heath. o.oo Do. Yoowsville, Ry .......... James BB, Buckmer. ia. on Do. New Orleans, Ia........ Joan J. Pernandez. 00 Do. B-Hermamdez. .. o.oo. Vice-consul. ‘ A Baltimore, Md ........:: C. Morton Stewart, jr............x Consul-general. f Detroit, Mich. .... =... Carlos M. Grebus.. ............... Consul. Guillermo G, Grifaths..... ....... | Vice-consul. St: Louis, Mo........... 1. DD. Kingsland... 0 on... Consul-general. New York City, N.V....[ Dr. Salvator Cordova ............. Do. 1. Willard Helin ....c oan 0s | Vice-consul. Cincinnati, Ohlo........ BRPetere vase Do. Philadelphia, Pa ........ Robett J. Winsmiore............... | Consul-general. Galveston, Tex... ....... A Berle fs, co ae Consul. Seattle, Wash.......... R.Chileotl. 2. 1. sr es os Do. YTALY; Mabile, Aln.c.. 0... Angelo Yestorazzl., ......0 0-00 0s Consular agent. eo T.08 Angeles, Cal........ Benedetto Castruccio ............. | Do. San Francisco, Cal....... Carlo Filippo Serra. 7... onc... . + ' Consul-general. : For California, Nevada, Oregon, Wash- ington, Alaska, Arizona, Idaho, Mon- | tana, Wyoming, and New Mexico. | Denver, Colo. ........... Pasquale Coste... cowie, | Consul. New Haven, Conn....... Michele:RicClo. =... ve von ve ns | Consular agent. 334 Congressional Directory. ETALY. Residence. TT'AILY —continued. Washington, D. C....... Pensacola, Fla........... Tampa, Flac... Savannah, Ga........... Honolulu, HT. .......... Chicago, heaved, on Lowmisville, Ky ............ New Orleans, Ia........ Bangor, Me........... Baltimore, Md... ...... .. Boston, Mass, ............. Calumet; Mich......5... Detroit, Mich... ......... Vicksburg, Miss... ....... Kansas City, Mo, 0... .. St. Younis, Mo... .......... Butte, Mont ....... ... Newark, N.J...v. ...... Trenton, NJ cv. Albany, N.Y...» Buffalo, N.Y... ....... New York City, N. Y.... Cincinnati, Ohio. ..... a Cleveland, Ohio. ....- ... Portland, bres. Sa Dubois, Pa Sh Pittsburg, Pa........ Scranton; Pa. .......n.... Manila, B.1............. Mayaguez, P.R....... ~.. Ponee, P.R. ...... 7... Providence, R.T...... ... Charleston, S.C... .... Memphis, Tenn... ..,. Galveston, Tex... ....... Norfolls, Va...=......... Seattle, Wash... ........ Name and jurisdiction. Rank. AntonioRavaioll ........ Giovanni B. Caflero........-. . Giovanni Savarese. ............... Trapani Luigi. . 2... = conan. Federico Augusto Schaefer. . . .. ... For the Territory of Hawaii. Antonio Ladislao Rozwadowski. . For Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Iowa, Wisconsin, Minne. sota, Missouri, North and South Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas. Ginseppe Cuneo... 0. ov Giacomo:Fara Forni... .... =... .. For Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi, Ar- kansas, Alabama, Florida, ‘I'ennes- see, Oklahoma, and Indian Terri- tory Rowland W. Stewart... ..... = Prospero Schiaffino.... . ... ..,. Onorato Gaetani d’Aragona di Castelmola. For Massachusetts, Vermont, Hampshire, and Maine. Rocco-Bringisl ovis nadia Giacomo RubesTisa................ Cardiello Pietro di Antonio. ....... New Giuseppe Gerardo Lancieri........ DPomenico:Ginocchio... i... .. SavineRubeoslisa.. i 5. 5 Dr. Alfredo Magnani ....=........ Dr. Giuseppe Scarlata'... .... L ... Germano Placido Baccelli......... Giovanni Banchettl... ........... For New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and New Jersey. Gustavo Tosti. o.oo mos Nicola Ceres Boies. ooh ay Ferdinando Candiani d-Olivola. ... Giuseppe Federicie. i oie. 0s Gerolamo: Naselli.....0 a. wu... For Pennsylvania, Delaware, Mary- land, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. Angelo dall’ Aste Brandolini...... LionelloScelstoi. ver. iin. Svan XE ISA ss sn aii re ih as Francisco Reyes’... oo ov. For the Philippine Islands. Alfredo Saliva. =. vc inne os Signor Bregaro. .. viii. Alessandro Bozzo....;. inveninio For Porto Rico. Mariano Vervena......... daa Giovanni Sottile-.. .... 5 00. RolandoArata.. ov. hin. Pairmont, W.Va........ In charge of consu- late. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Honorary consul. Consular agent. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. yp ee Foreign Consuls in the United States. 335 JAPAN—MEXICO. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. JAPAN. Mobile, Ala............. William Peter Hutchison ......... Honorary consul. San Francisco, Cal... ... UyenoRisaburo:.. . .....-...... Consul. Honolulu, Hawaii. ...... MiElSaitow of aaa Consul-general. Chicaso Tl... cv oo Shimidzu Seizaburo .. =~... .. ... Consul. New Orleans, La, ....... John W. Phillips... ............. Honorary consul. Boston, Mass .... 5. Osborne Howes. ........ 5... Do. New York City, N.Y... . SadaguchiUchida ..... ....cve oc on Comnsul-general. Portland, Oreg.......... Touneji Aiba ue iain. Consular agent. Philadelphia, Pa ........ J. Branklin McFadden. .......... Honorary consul. Manila, B. 1 ..ovn cos Nord Goro... om hv aa Consul. Galveston, lex ......... J. HH. langbelm: 00.500 Honorary consul. Seattle, Wash. .......... SabuwroHisamidzu.... o.oo. 5. Consul-general. KOREA. San Francisco, Cal...... Po BaBostwicke ooo ois Honorary consul. New York City, N. V....| William H. Stevens, .............. Consul-general. LIBERIA. Mobile Ala. ni... George W. Iovejoy ....ni.. 0 Consul. San Francisco, Cal...... Ray P. Saffeld 0... Do. Atlanta, Ga... MH. M Tamers ola la. Do. New Orleans, La Sosa Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass. ......~....... St. Toms, Mo... ...... Jersey City, N.J.......... New York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa... ..... Manila, P.1............. Galveston, Tex ......... MEXICO. Mobile, Ala... -o. i... Douglas, Ariz........... NaCo, Ariz... ovis Nogales, Arig... ...... Phoenix, Ariz... .....: Solomonsville, Ariz ..... Bucson, Ariz. .... i... Yuma, Ariz... i... vs Calexico, Cal... .. 5 Y.08 Angeles, Cal ........ San Diego, Cal.- ... ~... San Francisco, Cal... ... Denver, Colo... ......... Pensacola, Fla. ......... Honolulu, Hawaii. ...... Chicago, NL. xii. New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md... ....... Boston, Mass... ......- For the southern States and District of Columbia. Vo. HF, Reynolds... 7... . =. 5.00. WoR Holman ioc niin oa Charles Hall Adams... ....... .... For the United States. HutchinsInge ,. ......0....... Albert W. Minnick... ............ Frederick W. Yates... ............. Charles, "Geyer.%.. ....... i. 2! Thomas). Hunt... 0. vi... Robert CGC. Moot .. =. RoSunimers. sane JR Glhson........ eine Be TeconardoD.leBaron............ AnfonioMaza. . noe an MaximinoGavito:. o.oo. n. .. For Bisbee and Naco. Manuel Mascareflas........ ...... Agustin Pifia--.. 5 i. 60000 Benjamin Pizarro... 4. oa For Solomonsville and dependencies. ArtiroM. Elias... o.oo Daniel BE. Montes =... ... For Calexico and dependencies. Guillermo Andrade... . - .... Joaquin Diaz Prieto... ....... Doctor Plutarco Ornelas... ....... For fan Francisco and dependencies. CasimirooBarela.. ....... ....0.. AdelnidoiYosé Orbizt.. =o 3 oo. 0, Abraham Diaz. cae vol asl av Jaime N.Moreno...«.nii- sn oan Guillermo lanza =. Felipe Berriozabaloi.. i. .ii do... Anselmo dela Portilla. ........... José V.Dosal.. .....v Arturo P,. Cushing... ......... Frederick O. Houlhgton. ............ Vice-consul. Consul. Consul-general. - Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Do. ‘Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. 336 Congressional Directory. MEXICO—NETHERLANDS. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. MEXICO—continued. Pascagoula, Miss. ....... Kansas City, Mo... ..... St. Louis, Moe. ...:0.55 New York City, N. Y.... Cincinnati,’ Ohio... ..... Porfland, Oreg.......... Philadélphia, Pa. ....:.. Mama, P.Y............ Mayaguez, P. R......... Ponce PB. Ri ho... San Juan, P. R Brownsville, Tex ........ Eagle Pass, Tex......... El Paso, Tex:...2.2..... Galveston, Tex. ......... Laredo, Tex Port Arthur, Tex. ....... Rio Grande City, Tex.... Sabine Pass, Tex. ....... San: Anfenio, Tex....... Norfolk; Va.......... MONACO. San Francisco, Cal...... New York City, N. Y.... NETHERLANDS. Mobile, Ala. o........... San Francisco, Cal... ... Pensacola, Fla. ......... Savannah, Ga... ......... Honolulu, Hawaii....... Chicago, Ill. .....ona.. i New Orleans, ILa........ Baltimore, Md .......... Boston, Mass, .....=..... Grand Rapids, Mich... .. St. Paul. Minn... ..... Shieldsboro, Miss St. Tonis, Me:.....m..:...; Vicemte Ros... roo vir toa Rafael G. Acosta Hiram S. Thompsen. =. ......... Rafael P. Serrano Cayetano Romero For New York and dependeticies. Antonio Leon Grajeda............ Frnesto Subekurski Frank A. Spencer Jie. Baz eo, For Philadelphia and dependencies. | Caspar Wistar Haines.v oo... ...... Fyvaristo Battle Hernandez ........ Federico Gatell y Garcia de Quevedo José Miguel Morales y Alvarado... Manuel Paniagua y Oller Miguel Barragan Francisco de P. Villasana ......... Francisco Mallen’... ............. Jacobo Blanco... or... Angel Gonzalez de la Torre For Galveston and dependencies. Antonio V. Lomeli = W.H. Gilliland... .-...0--...... = Albertoleal i arin... na W.H. Gilliland... —............... Eatique Ornelas... ............ For San Antonio and dependencies. Arthur Cameron Humphreys... ... For Norfolk and Newport News. Ray P.Saffold............ 5... Auguste Jouve A Zeline.. Pa W.de Bruyn Kops... -.............. For Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. H.M.. von Holt. 5... oasis GCG. Bukholl jur-... ein For Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Da- kota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Mon- tana, and Idaho. W. J. Hammond For I,ouisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. R. H. Mottu CoN Dasey a lon os. ian iin For Massachusetts, Maine, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Ver- mont. Jacob Steketee Theodore BB. Koch. ...... I. H:Non-Goliren.'., =. a... For Bay St. Louis. BB. Hangsma.. =... ov oon Gerrit H. Tenbroek For Missouri, Towa, Kansas,Colorado, Arkansas, Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona, ais eke eis esis sie a 3 ie ee Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul-gen. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Hon. vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul, Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul, [id Foreign Consuls in the United States. NETHERLANDS—PARAGUAY. 337 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. NETHER, ANDS—cont’d. New York City, N. V..... Cincinnati, Ohio Philadelphia, Pa Manila, P.1.7..... =... Bonee, PB. R... ..¢c....0% San Juan, PB. B... ....... Galveston, Tex......... Port Arthur, Tex. ....... Newport News, Va Noriolls, Va. =0 5.0... NICARAGUA. Mobile; Alain... 1.08 Angeles, Cal........ San Diego, Cal... ....... San Francisco, Cal Chicago, I11 Kansas City, Kans. ...... Louisville, Ky New Orleans, 1a........ Baltimore, Md Boston, Mass.............. Detroit, Mich. .:........ St.-Tounis, Mo... ....... New York City, N. V.... eet elu eriatie ature wien Philadelphia, Pa Ponce, P. R San Juan, P. R Manila, P. I Galveston, Tex. ......... Norfolk, Va ..... .... .... Newport News, Va Seattle, Wash. ........, PANAMA. Mobile, Aln...... ~...... San Francisco, Cal...... Hilo, Hawaii New Orleans, Ia........ St. Louis, Mo... ....... New York City, N. V. ... Philadelphia, Pa. ......: PARAGUAY. Mobile, Ala, ........ ii. Wilmington, Del........ Washington, D. C.......]. Savannah, Ga Chicago JIL... 0... Indianapolis, Ind Baltimore, Md 58-3D—2D ED——22 YR Phnfen. 2. 0 For New York, New Jersey, and Con- necticut. H. Pluijgers For Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Arnold Waly 2s on P. K. A. Meerkamp van Embden. . AnjoCornelioCrebas. ..... ....... TamsiBrave... ora whan Otto Wantzelius a. 5.05. 5. Albert E. Lee B.S Blint......... rae a] A. J. M. Vuylsteke James Haughton Barton Myers Luis M. Moragitez........ 0 0. 0050s Tomasl. Duaué.. ................ Tomas Dowell Dr. Felipe Rodriguez Mayorga ... George EB. Stone’, ........... .... Edw B. Westh.. .... 0... JamesE Buckner. ................ Ramén Echazarreta James Ferguson... ......-.... Charles Hall Adams... ........ .. Arthur I,. Bresler 1.0. Kingsland. noc o.. Pare Adolfo D. Straus Bolafios Alverez Kiliaen Van Rensselaer........... CA Gres. a ah a Francisco Cancio y Vendrell Ramon M. Capote Trinidad Lacayo Julio Damen. oo. coi A Verrier. 00 haa iE Charles M. Barnett. ............... Carl Hugo Arnal W.Chileptt rb ae Francisco Arias Alejandro de la Guardia Rodman C. Pell FlorentinSouza .=.. .. ...-. Rodeo Perez. «ic iinus aes Edward E. Prince RanlAmador. oi oa vis Elliott K. Rickarby Theodore Ail elsen.... oo... Charles EF. Coffin Willlam BE. Tove... -............ Consul-general. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Deo. Consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul-general. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul ad int. Consul ad int. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Vice-consul. Do. ; Consul-general. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Congressional Directory. PARAGUAY—PORTUGAL. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. PARAGUAY—continued. Detroit, Mich... ........ Kansas City, Me... ....... St. Toms, Mo. ..........: Newark, NoJ.=......... Trenton, N. .J........... Buffalo, N.Y... ..... New York City, N. Y.... Rochester, NoV....... Cindinnati, Ohie........ Philadelphia, Pa........ San Juan, P.R-......... Norfolk, Va. ........ Richmond, Va ........... PERSIA. Chicago, lL. :...... St. louis, Mo... ........ New York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa ........ PERU. San Diego, Cal... ........ San Francisco, Cal ...... Honolulu, Hawaii... .... Chicago, Hl... ~....... Panama, Isthmian Canal Zone. Baltimore, Md ........ ... Boston, Mass.............. New York City, N. Y.... Portland, Oreg .......... Philadelphia, Pa ........ San Juan, P. R.......... Port Townsend, Wash . .. PORTUGAL. San Francisco, Cal ...... Washington, D.C ....... Pensacola, Blo... . Brunswick, Ga .........: Savannah, Ga.....-..- Honolulu, HL... ...... Chicago, IM. ...... . New Orleans, 1a........ Baltimore, Md"... ....... Boston, Mass... +... ...-- New Bedford, Mass. ..... Joh Walker: ail vi oe vs W.C.Winshorongh =.=... ...... Charles VM, Prynne.. + 0... ... James A. Coe... 2 hoa Richard C. Oliphant... ..... Charles HL. Bonnell. 0... =... Felix Aucaigne.... co... ......... William Evarts Richards........:.. William Wallace White. .......... John M. Ives... toe. BE. H. Hargmve onto a AlphonseA.Rutis................ William Mill Buller............... Manuel Fernandez Juncos ........ For Porto Rico. Carlos Bargret, or. oa For Norfolk and Newport News. MoD Hoge oom cvene ds Richard Crane, jr... coi viens Milton Seropyat.......... oc... HR. Pall na Dikran Khan Kelekian. .......... Alphonse A. Rutts. ............... With jurisdiction over New Jersey. Haig Herant Pakradooni......... Fol Lone, eo 0 0 Enrique Gran... oo van Bruce Cartwright... .... 0. Yeopoldo Arnaud... i... Pt. Victor R Cardenas... ..... ... 0. GCG. HH. EB. Kehrhahn.... =... Eugenio C. Andres... ........... Bduardo Higginson... ... Reginald Thompson... ........... Wilfredo H. Scholl»... 0a vs. P. Santiseban y Chavarri.......... Albert Bartlett = 2 For Port Townsend and Puget Sound. Ignacio R. da Costa Duarte. ....... For California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington. Hentiquelaidley................. Emmanuele Fronani ............. Jan Boras. cis ei Rosendolorras. =... vines vv Taig Trapani... 0. iio vans Antonio de Souza Canavarro ...... 8. Chapman Simins... ............ Maurice Generelly................ Frank Prick, dr... o.oo voi evi Viscount de Valleda Costa........ For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Jayme Mackay d’Almeida......... For Boston. Joao Carlos da Silva Pitta... ....... Vice-consul. Do. Comnsul-general. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Consul. Do. Vice-consul. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul. Consul-general. Consul. Comnsul-general. Vice-consul. Vice-consul. Consul. - Consul-general. Consul. Do. Consul-general. Consular agent. - Honorary consul. Vice-consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. : Do. Do. Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Foreign Consuls in the United States. 3339 PORTUGAL —SPAIN. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. PORTUGAL —continued. New York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa........ Manila, P.L. anv San Juan, PB. Re... a Newport News, Va...... RUSSIA. Mobile Alas... 0 San Francisco, Cal ...... Pensacola, Fla. ......... Savannah, Ga... ......... Chicago, 11L.........i... Baltimore, M4... ...... Poston, Mass. ..........- New York City, N.Y.... Porfland,Oreg-........ Philadelphia, Pa........ MamilasP. Bi a Galveston, Tex. ......... SALVADOR. San Diego, Cal. ......... San Francisco, Cal....... New Orleans; Ia........ Boston, Mass ........... St. Tous, Mo... ...... New York City, N.Y.... SIAM. New Vork City, N. Y.... SPAIN. Mobile, Ala. .-........... San Francisco, Cal...... Fernandina, Fla ........ Jacksonville, Fla... .:.. Pensacola, Bla. ......... Tampa, Fla, «0.0... Brunswick, Ga.......... Savannah, Ga........... Honolulu, H. 1 .... ..... Chicago, lil... .......-. Luis de Sonsa Monteiro Ferreira d Castro. ; For all the States except California, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington.- Tionel Havenaers:...... =o... ... JohneMason 5000 coo Miguel Osorio y Cembrano....... For the Philippine Islands. Manuel Gomez de Aranjo Barros .. Dr. Esteban Garcia Cabrera ....... James Hanghton ................. For Norfolk and Newport News. Murray Wheeler... 0... Paul Koznkévitch-.... .. Horace CG. Platt .. o.oo. PanninChipley ............-..... William W. Williamson... ... ee Albert Schlippenbach.... ......... Cliarlea Nive = 0 Charles BE, Wymam-.............. Nicolas Lodygensky.............. Gustave Wilson. —. i... . =... Willam BR. Tucker.............~.. G.deBirard. oo James Moller: ....... iin Tunis Mendelson... ovine. Bucaornacion Mejia... ........ For the United States. Paul Gelpi vcs iio. coins George Andrew lewis ............ L.D. Kingsland ................. Braesto Schernikow. -... oc... ov. Tsanc Smith. cos. 0 ovas. on Loring T. Hildreth............... Yuis Marty Moragues. ............ For the State of Alabama. For the States of California, Utah, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Wash- ington, Oregon, and Nevada, and for the Territories of Arizona and Alaska. Orel Martin Goldaracena y Eche- varria. Santiago Carrio... o.oo veins Juan Ferrer y Quintana........... Juan. Borras .............. Ble, Vicente Guerra. :.. ig... LL Rosendo'Torras =. o.oo. oa ison “For the State of Georgia, except ; Brunswick. Luiz Fernandez Alvarez. .......... Berthold Singer... vv. inna en, Comnsul-general. Consular agent. Vice-consui, Consul. Do. Vice-consul, Do. Vice-constl. Consul. Vice-consul, Do. Vice-consul, Do. Consul-general. Vice-consul. Do. Acting vice-consul. Do. Hon. vice-consul. Consul-general. Hon. vice-consul. Honorary consul. Do. Do. Consul-general. Consul. Hon. vice-consul. Honorary consul. Hon. vice-consul. 340 Congressional Directory. SPAIN—SWEDEN AND NORWAY. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. SPAIN—continued. New Orleans, Ya. oon ld von srw i wantin sina Consul, Baltimore, Md...... ..... Prospero Schiaflino...:...... =... Hon. vice-consul. For Maryland and the District of Columbia. Boston, Mass...........; Pedro Mackay de Almeida ........ Do. Gulfport, Miss ........ «i Prank Poster... ui nts Do. _ For Gulfport and its district. Pascagoula, Miss. ....... Vicente BOS... oi ovis aus svi Do. For the State of Mississippi. Stitonls, Mo ...........; José Maria Trigo de Claver........ Do. For the State of Missouri. New York City, N.Y ....| Eusebio de Bonilla y Martel....... Consul-general. For the United States. Mariano Fabregas y Sotelo ....... Vice-consul. Philadelphia, Pa... ...... Horace Chester Newcomb......... Hon. vice-consul. For Pennsylvania and Delaware, Cebit B-Coiava oil vis Jesus Sanchez Mellado ........... Do. Holo: Palins inh Rafael Secoy Fabres............. Consul. Manila, PL... vi Emilio de Perera y Bleas ......... Consul-general. Nicolas Maria Rivero y Custodio ..| Vice-consul. Agmadilla, P.R......... Emilio Mazarredo .,........: aus Hon. vice-consul. For Aguadilla and its district. Arecibo, PB. B.. .. a Angel Sanz y Ambros... .......... Do. For Arecibo, Camuy, Ciales, Hatillo, Barceloneta, Manati, Morovis, Que- bradillas, Utuado, and Vega Baja. Arroyo Guayama, P. R...| Policarpo de Echevarria y Diaz. ... Do. For Guayama, Arroyo, Salinas, Pati- llas, and Maunabo. Humagcao, P.R........... Antonia Maria Oms yCall......... Do. For Humacao, Ceiba, Fajardo, Lu- quillo, Naguabo, Piedras, Yabucoa, Hato. Grande or San I,orenzo, and Juncos. Mayasuez, P.R......... Juan Vazquez y Lopez Amor ...... Honorary consul. For Mayaguez, Afiasco, Las Marias, Cabo Rojo, San German, Hormi- gueros, Lajas, Sabana Grande, and Maricao. Francisco Pelegri Roger .......... Hon. vice-consul. Ponce] PRs... iviiiiv Florencio Suarez ........ ==. =». vs Do. For the District of Ponce. San: Juan, P.B........ > Enrique de Vedia y San Miguel ...| Consul. Viequez,/P. R........... Charleston, S.C. ........ Brownsville, Tex........ Galveston, Tex.......... Norfolk, Va. ...... =o. . SWEDEN AND NORWAY. Mobile, Ala... ..... 2... Nome, Alaska. .......... San Diego; Cal... .... ... San Francisco, Cal... ... San Pedro,;iCal......... .. Denver, Colo... ...:...... Washington, D.C....... Apalachicoln, Fla ....... Tomas Rodriguez y Rodriguez. . . . Ramiro Rodriguez Ozores........: For Viequez and its district. Antonie Gusiaver ...... 0... For the State of South Carolina. Simon Celaya ......... co... ous Hendrich Mosgle ... —...~........... For the State of Texas, except Browns: ville. David Dumphreys................ For Norfolk and Newport News. Youwis Donald. Se coro... Lv Rasmus Thorolf Lyng ........ .... John Engebretsen ... 0... 0. Ronde, Lunda: on. oa. . For California, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska. Henry Tmnd, jroo. iv.s George Ho Peck Jr ii. o/s. 7 ah Hjalmar RB. Sahlgaard............ Angust Peterson... .....c Antoine J. Murat... wo .....0.. Vice-consul. Hon. vice-consul. Do. Hon. vice-consul. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul, Do. Do. Do. Do. Foreign Consuls in the United States. 341 SWEDEN AND NORWAY—SWITZERLAND. Residence. SWEDEN AND NORWAY— continued. Key West, ‘Fla. ........ Pensacola, Fla... .......: Chicago, Ill... .... >. Sioux City, Iowa. ....... New Orleans, Ia. ....... Poriland Me ........... St. Youis,Mo......... Omaha, Nebr ,........... New York City, N. Y.... Wilmington, N.C... ... Grand Forks, N. Dak. ... Cleveland, Ohijo......... Portland, Oreg.=...... Philadelphia, Pa........ Manila, P.Y....o.. ni, Ponce, P. RR... o.oo Beaufort, S.C........... Charleston, S. C........... Galveston, Tex. ....... Salt Lake City, Utah .... Norfolk, Va. ....cc...... Port Townsend, Wash. . . Seattle, Wash........... Madison, Wis........... SWITZERLAND. San Francisco, Cal... .... Denver, Colo. ....0.... Chicago, Il...... .. i -. Louisville. Ry... ........ New Orleans, 1a........ St. Paul, Minn... ...... St. Tons, Mo........... Name and jurisdiction. Rank. William J. Hl: Caylor. ... 0.0... Olaf Rye Wulfsberg.......... RosendoXorras... ... .. .... ..v. .. { James leeRankm................ Heinrich W. Schwnidt.. ......... .; For the Sandwich Islands. WW. Piotenhiamer. 0.50.0 John R. Lindgren... hui vs. 0 Gustavus Nelson Swan. ........... Pearl Wight... as ooo, Tewksbury L. Sweat. =... 0... Herman Rauschenberg... ......... Glertilools il hn iS , Daniel Frederick Pagelson........ Engebreth H. Hobe -. ............. Fredrik Waage: 7, 5:2. 5.5 Emeric M. Stenberg. +... .... Chrisfoplier Bava»... 00s. For Atlantic and Gulf coast ports. Thorvald Hansen Ri RR Tanrentius I, Malar... ....... Artin Wilson. eri bs I N.Wallemi. oon W.-C. Stevenson i... i. veins vo. George Henryilohse =... .. Joaquin F. Fernandez... ....... For Porto Rico. NielsChristenisen.....,..-........ Adolph Frederick Lawson ........ WilliamTamb, i... cova... Oscar Blocker... ia ui ins Andrew Chilberg. .. 0... ...... Halle Steensland .......c...n..... Antoine Borelini i... ani. For California and Nevada. Panl Weiss... cons botinn. Lan 5 For Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona. The Legation of Switzerland in Washing- ton has charge of consular matters in the District of Columbia, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Flor- ida, and Montana. Arnold Holinger. .......= ........ For Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, and northern Illinois. J. C. Baumberger ih oan) For Kentucky and Tennessee. Emile chun... oii ess For Louisiana, Alabama, Arkansas, and Mississippi. Gollfried Stamm 5... 00. For Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. Jacques Bull. ho ah a | Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice-consul. In charge. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Acting Vice: consul. Vice- consul. Do. Consul. Do. 342 Congressional Directory. SWITZERLAND—URUGUAY. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. SWITZERLAND—cont’d. New York City, N.Y..... Jacques Bertschmann.......... ... Consul. Cincinnati, Ohio......... Portland, Oreg.... .... Philadelphia, Pa. ....... Manila; BL, ss Galveston, Tex. ......... TURKEY. San Francisco, Cal... .... Washington, DC ....... Chicage 11: -......... Boston, Mass... ......... New. York City, N.Y. ... URUGUAY. Mobile, Ala... ........... San Francisco, Cal... ... Fernandina, Fla ........ Jacksonville, Fla. ....... Pensacola, Pla.......... St. Augustine, Fla... ..... Brunswick, Ga.......... Savannah, Ga... ........ Chicaso, HL. 0 New Orleans, 1a........ Bangor, Me............. Calaig, Me...0%... Portland, Me........... Baltimore, Md ............ Boston, Mass... ..... ..... Scranton, Miss... ....... New York City, N. V...... Cincinnati, Ohio. ....... Philadelphia, Pa... ..... Manila, P.T. os Charlesion, S. C......... Galveston, Tex. ......... Port Arthur and Sabine Pass, Tex. Noriollr,-Na.......o.5..% Richmond, Va......;... For New York, Maine, New Hamp- shire, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, and Connecticut. James BE. Robert... 5. 0 Frederick-Jean Diem............. For Ohio and Indiana. CharlesBircher...... ........... .. For Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. Re. Bormady,. oof ivi in. on For Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Emile Sprangli....... es Jean Preisig.......: nh A Ulrich Maller... oon in George B, Hall... =r via Doctor Schoenfeld. oo... Charles Henvofin. 0... 0 i. Mr Macomber oi... vos, Arie Bey... oa Youis-M, Moragues... .. .....0 5, Jos6Coslan, oon cE Antoine Jean Murat. ............... George 1, Baltzell. =... nn. 0, Simon P--Carreras. 0. vii James C. Watson... cv... Francisco B. Genovar.. ........... RosendoTorras . cs os a ces. For Brunswick and Darien. Ramon Esteve... 0 na oes Juan Mott os sean Gilbert Xl. Greens. va iio For Louisiana. RoW. Stewarte. oasis W. A Murchie...-. James B, Marrett..-..... ........ Prudencio de Murguiondo ........ For the United States. Leonce Rabillon. vi. in. ivr Arthur Camel. = 0. For Boston and Salem. Vicente Ros tor 0 a a. For Mississippi, and islands adjacent thereto, including Ship Island. Thomas A. Bddy.............. Adolfo Alonso Criado............ ... Bdward B.- Peters... = =.=... AMoOMoSans. he Mamuel Peypoch..............-. Antonio Gastaver....... oc Enrique Schroeder ............... Juan R. Adams... 0... oan. Carlog MM. Barnett o.oo on. For Norfolk, Newport News, and Yorktown. George H, Barksdale. ....... ....... | | Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Consul. Consul-general. Do. Do. Honorary con. gen. Do. Vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice-consul. Do. Do. Consul. ' Consul-general. Consul. Vice-consul, Do. Consul. Vice-consul, Do. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. \ | | The District of Columbia. 343 VENEZUELA. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. VENEZUELA. San Francisco, Cal... ... AdclloCannl. =... xi a i as Honorary consul. Pensacola, Fla. ........- LX Borrash a ada a Do. Chicago, Tl. ~~ Pedro @lvizua,.. ae. Do. Des Moines, Towa ........ Philip Hanna... .. +. =... Solan Do. New Orleans, ILa........ Emiliano Martinez... .... 5... Consul. Baltimore, Md... .......-; James V. Wagner... nl a... on Honorary consul. Detroit, Mich... ..... =. Fug, Alex, Bresler.... :......... ... Do. Ste Paul, Minn... ....... J MM: Poltgelser.. 2... ohn. Do. Jersey City, N. J........ Pranz Miller. o.oo. oan Do. New York City, N. Y.... Cincinnati, Ohio......... Pedro Rafael Rincones ........... MarcialiSalas 0. 0. a ae Pan Walker... ir ian Consul-general. Vice-consul. Honorary consul. Philadelphia, Pa... ..... E-Salcedo Ochoa. ............ Consul. Geb, Po Lao. oan Mariano Veloso del Rosario. ...... Do. Arecibo, P.R..... ..-. Honorato Berga 'y Pastor.......... Vice-consul. Mayaguez, P.R.......... Alejandro Brave... ..... oh Do. Ponce, PR... ovo SanJuan, P.R.. Galveston, Tex ......... Jose Miguel Morales y Alvarado... Eduardo Diaz Tecana.. .....--.-.- Eduardo Villar... =... = on Robert: Bornefeld.. —........... Hon. vice-consul. Consul. Vice-consul. Honorary consul. Norfolk, Va. ............ HuoodAemal, 00 oc. Do. For Norfolk and Newport News. THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. DISTRICT GOVERNMENT. (Offices, 464 Louisiana avenue.) Commissioner.—Henry B. F. Macfarland, president of the Board, 1816 F street. Private Secretary.—Waldo C. Hibbs, 1501 Park street. Commissioner.— Henry 1. West, 1364 Harvard street. Private Secretary.—Iouis C. Wilson, 1324 S street. Commissioner.—Maj. John Biddle, 1517 I, street. Private Secretary.—Daniel E. Garges, 647 A street NE. Assistants to Engineer Commissioner.—Capt. Chester Ha~ding, 1816 Belmont ave- nue; Capt. Jay J. Morrow, The Woodley. Secretary.—William Tindall, 2103 California avenue. Assistant Secretary.—William F. Meyers, 216 A street SE. DISTRICT OFFICERS. Assessor.—Hopewell H. Darneille, 2523 Thirteenth street. Assistant Assessors.—T. Fred. Alvey, 308 East Capitol street; J. T. Petty, 33310 street. Board of Assistant Assessors of Personal Property.—Alex. McKenzie, 1004 East Capitol street; Francis Nye, 1507 Park street. Board of Assistant Assessors of Real Estate, and Excise Board. —FE.W.W. Griffin, 1721 First street; Mathew Trimble, 1320 Rhode Island avenue; S. T. Kalbfus, 213 A street NE. Chief Clerk Excise Board.—Roger Williams, 18 Third street NE. Auditor.—John R. Garrison, 1437 R street. Deputy Auditor.—Alonzo Tweedale, 2719 Fourteenth street. Board of Control, Rock Creek Park.—The Commissioners of the District of Columbia, the Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army: : Secretary.—Maj. John Biddle, U.S. A., District Building. 344 Congressional Directory. Board of Education ( Thirteenth and K streets).—Henry V. Boynton, president: J. Holdsworth Gordon, vice-president; Richard Kingsman, Mrs. Henry I, West, James F. Bundy, Mrs. John R. Francis, E. Southard Parker; A. T. Stuart, super- intendent; Walter F. Rodrick, secretary. : Board of Charities.—S. W. Woodward, president; Chas. P. Neill, vice-president; Geo. W. Cook, John Joy Edson, Simon Wolf; Geo. S. Wilson, secretary, Oak Grove. Board of Trustees Public Library (Ninth and K streets).—Theo. W. Noyes, presi- dent; Charles J. Bell, James I'. Dubois, John B. Larner, R. Ross Perry, Ainsworth R. Spofford, Rufus H. Thayer, B. H. Warner, S. W. Woodward; Geo. F. Bowerman, librarian. Board of Children’s Guardians (472 Louisiana avenue).—Wm. J. Miller, presi- dent; John F. Cook, vice-president; Miss Mary Ella Moore, Mrs. Mary L. D. Mac- farland, J. B. T. Tupper, Thos. E. Sewell, Rev. Louis Stern, B. Pickman Mann; Mrs. Eliza A. Babson; secretary. Board of Medical Examiners.—Joseph T. Johnson, president; George N. Acker, George C. Ober, Charles V. Purvis, Jos. S. Wall. Board of Homeopathic Medical Examiners.—]. B. G. Custis, president; Chas. A. Davis, William R. King, T. I,. McDonald, S. S. Stearns. fon Board of Eclectic Medical Examiners.—Elbert G. Benson, president; E. J. Collins, Thomas Robinson, M. I. Julihn, R. R. Roberts. Board of Medical Supervisors.—Jos. Taber Johnson, J. B. G. Custis, Elbert G. Ben- son, L. C. Williamson, B. F. Leighton; William C. Woodward, health officer, secretary. Board of Trustees of Reform School for Boys.—Cecil Clay, president; James E. Fitch, Crosby S. Noyes, S. W. Curriden, William M. Shuster, Henry F. Blount, George Truesdell, H. B. F. Macfarland, W. P. Dillingham, J. J. Jenkins; J. C. Kalleen, superintendent. Board of Trustees of Reform School jor Girls. —Chapin Brown, president; Mrs. W.W. Rockhill, Fairfax Harrison, J. Wesley Bovee, Maude K. Wetmore, Walter V. R. Berry, Mrs. Ward Thoron, Alexander C. Caine. Board of Trustees of Industrial Home School.—]. Ormond Wilson, president; Bernard T. Janney, vice-president; Mrs. Huldah W. Blackford, secretary; Mrs. Lucie E. Blount, Walter C. Clephane, William B. Gurley, James B. Nourse, Mrs. Emily L. Nourse, J. B. T. Tupper. Chemist and Inspector of Asphalt and Cement.—A. W. Dow, 1724 Q street. Collector of Taxes.—F,. G. Davis, 2211 R street. Deputy Collector.—C. W. Collins, 37 C street NE. Commussioners of Flour Inspection.—Theo. J. Mayer, First and Indiana avenue; George W. Cissel, B. B. Earnshaw. Commissioners of Pharmacy. —Frank C. Henry, president; Harry A. Johnston, Murray Galt Motter, Fred T. Hafelfinger, Francis P. Morgan, M. D. Coroner.—Dr. Ramsey Nevitt, 618 Third street. Corporation Counsel.—A. B. Duvall, 1831 M street. Assistant Corporation Counsel. —FEdw. H. Thomas, 916 F street; James L. Pugh, jr., 3300 Seventeenth street; A. Leftwich Sinclair, The Victoria. Dental Examiners.—John H. London, president, 1115 G street; W. E. Dieffenderfer, secretary, 514 Colorado Building. Disbursing Officer.—Charles C. Rogers, 1428 Welling place. Deputy Disbursing Officer.—E. E. Jones, Silver Spring, Md. District Building Commission.—The Secretary of the Treasury, the Commissioners of the District of Columbia. Executive Officer.—Maj. John Biddle, U.S. A., District Building. Supervisor of Construction. —Capt. Chester Harding, U. S. A., District Building. Engineer Department.—Chief clerk, Abner VY. Lakenan, 604 Tenth street SW. Electrical Engineer.— Walter C. Allen, 1340 Columbia road. Engineer of Highways.—C. B. Hunt, 1815 M street. Lngineer of Bridges.—W. J. Douglas, 1412 Twenty-ninth street. Engineer in Charge of Street Exlension.—Wm. P. Richards, 1 37 S street. Harbor Master.—]. R. Sutton, 1519 Eighth street. Inspectors of— boilers.—E. F. Vermillion, 123 Thirteenth street NE. Buildings.—Snowden Ashford, 716 Nineteenth street. Fuel.—John C. Howard, 1149 New Hampshire avenue. Gas and Meters.—FElmer G. Runyan, 300 R street NE. Plumbing. —H. B. Davis, The Stratford. Permit Clerk.—H. M. Woodward, Brookland. Physicians to the Poor.— Jesse Ramsburg, The Portner; A. J. Hall, 928 I street; James Stuart, 937 R street; P, C. Hunt, 1815 M street; C. E. Ferguson, 1648 North The District of Columbia. 345 Capitol street; Howard Fisher, The Mendota; J. R. Tubman, 1222 Eleventh street; \ John P. Gunion, 927 O street; W. G. Suter, 13 H street; A. B. Hooe, 1110 New : York avenue; James C. Dowling, 732 “Third street SW.; G. C. Clark, 321 Fast A Capitol street; IL. J. Battle, 306 E street; H. S. Medford, 151 C street NE.; F. F. [ Repetti, 149 B street SE.; J. A. Watson, 201 Monroe street, Anacostia; A. W. Boswell, 609 Ninth street NE.; Johnson Elliott, 718 H street NE.; Homeopathic— E. S. Lothrop, 807 East Capitol street; I. W. Dennison, 1312 I, street; F, A, Swart- wout, 12 Iowa circle. Property Clerk.—R. D. Simms, 3148 Q street. | Sealer of Weights and Measures.— William C. Haskell, The Cumberland. Special Assessment Clerk.—John W. Daniel, 1622 Riggs place. | Superintendents of: Insurance..—Thomas R. Drake, 1515 Rhode Island avenue. | Municipal Lodging House.—A. H. Tyson, 312 Twelfth street. Parking.—Trueman Lanham, Lanham, Md. Roads.—Morris Hacker, Chevy Chase, Md. Sewers.—David E. McComb, The Plaza. Streets.—H. N. Moss, 1790 Lanier avenue. Street Cleaning.—Harrison Stidham. Washington Asylum, Nineteenth and C streets SE.—ILouis F. Zinkhan; visiting physician, D. Percy Hickling, 1304 Rhode Island avenue. Water Department,—W, A. McFarland, The Westover, Surveyor. Veterinary Surgeon.—C. B. Robinson, 222 C street. Water Registrar.—H. L. Karpeles, 1648 Third street, FIRE DEPARTMENT. Chief Engineer.— William ‘I’. Belt, 233 North Capitol street. Deputy Chief Engineer.—Frank J. Wagner, 1910 Eighth street. : Battalion Chief Engineers.—Andrew J. Sullivan, 3152 P street; James Keliher, 89 P street; Samuel R. Henry, 327 A street NE. Five Marshal.—Sidney Bieber, 630 G street SE. \ Assistant to Fire Marshal.—Philip W. Nicholson, 1619 New Jersey avenue. Lngine Houses: A No. 1, K street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets; captain, T. I O’Connor. i No. 2, D street, between Fourteenth and Fifteenth streets; captain, John Carrington. No. 3, Delaware avenue and C street NE.; captain, C. B. Proctor. No. 4, Virginia avenue, between Four-and-a-half and Sixth streets SW.; captain, A. L. Grimm. | No. 5, M street, near Thirty-second street; captain, C. A. Kreamer. No. 6, Massachusetts avenue, between Fourth and Fifth streets; captain, H. C. Egloff. | No. 7, R street, between Ninth and Tenth streets; captain, P. J. Hollohan. No. 8, North Carolina avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets SE.; cap- tain, C. W. Hopkins. No. 9, U street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets; captain, P. D. Martin. No. 10, Maryland avenue, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets NE.; captain, C. E. Schrom. No. 11, Fourteenth street, between Kenyon street and Kenesaw avenue; cap- tain, P. R. Davis. No. 12, North Capitol and Quincy streets; captain, H. W. Wright. No. 14, Eighth street, between D and E streets; captain, J. W. Smith, No. 15, Anacostia; captain, C. R. Kuhns. : No. 16, D street, between Twelfth and Thirteenth streets; captain, C. E.: Harper. No. 17, Brookland lieutenant, C. A. E. Watt. Truck A, North Capitol street, near C street NE.; captain, T. Donohue. Truck B, New Hampshire avenue and M street; captain, A. M. Donaldson. 4 : Truck C, Ohio avenue and Fourteenth street; captain, W. A. Dixon. of Truck D, M street, near New Jersey avenue; captain, C. F. Beers. Teh E, S street, between Thirty-fourth and Thirty-fifth streets; captain, J: T. Young. Truck F, Whitney avenue, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets; cap- tain, A. C Buscher, 346 Congressional Directory. Engine Houses—Continued. Truck H, Congress Heights; captain, W. E. Luskey. Chemical Company No. 2, Brightwood; captain, Timothy J. Brown. Chemical Company No. 3, Tenley; captain, I. D. McLane. Chemical Company No. 5, Congress Heights; captain, William E. Luskey. HEALTH DEPARTMENT. Health Officer.— William C. Woodward, 508 I street. Deputy and Chief Clerk.—Harry Clay McLean, 1373 Kenesaw avenue, Deputy and Chief Inspector.— William C. Fowler, 1141 Fifth street. ~ Chemist.—]. D. Hird, 305 T street NE. Medical Sanitary Inspector. —John E. Walsh, 202 East Capitol street. Poundmaster.—Samuel Einstein, 3406 N street. METROPOLITAN POLICE. Major and Supervintendent.—Richard Sylvester, 1223 Roanoke street. Chief, also Property Clerk.—]. Arthur Kemp, 237 Tenth street NE. - Police Surgeons.—Dr. FE, P, Vale, Dr. W. T. Burch, Dr. J. S. Wall, Dr. C. C. Marbury. : Sanitary Officer.—]. A. Frank, 502 G street NE. Hack Inspector.—A. R. Lamb, 1723 New Jersey avenue. Inspector of Fharmacy.—C. W. Proctor, 538 First street SE. Detective Headquarters.—Capt. R. H. Boardman, 1218 M street NE. Captains.—Isaac Pearson, 1514 T street; F. KE. Cross, 319 Ninth street SE.; Harry L. Gessford, 416 Fourth street SE.; John A. Swindells, 3313 R street. Station Houses: First precinct, Twelfth street, between C and D streets; Lieut. IT’. B. Amiss. Second precinct, Fifth street, between M and N streets; Lieut. Michael Byrnes. Third precinct, K street, between Twentieth and Twenty-first streets; Tieut. R. B. Boyle, Fourth precinct, E street, between Four-and-a-half and Sixth streets SW.; Lieut. W. H. Mathews. Fifth precinct, 243 Tenth street SE.; Lieut. F. F. McCathran. Substation, Anacostia. Sixth precinct, New Jersey avenue, between D and E streets; Lieut. J. A. Moore. Seventh precinct, Q street, between Thirty-second and Thirty-third streets, and substation, Tenley; Lieut. W. W. Jordan. Eighth precinct, U street, between Ninth and Tenth streets; Lieut. Anthony Shilling. Ninth precinct, Ninth street, near Maryland avenue NE.; Lieut. John C. Daley. Tenth precinct, Whitney avenue, between Brightwood and Sherman avenues; Lieut. H. B. Elliott. Night Inspector.—1ieut. George H. Williams. House of detention, 505 Eighteenth street; superintendent, John Gallaher. POLICE COURT. (Sixth and D streets.) Judges.—Charles F. Scott, 1483 Columbia road; I. G. Kimball, 620 North Carolina avenue SE. Clerk.—Joseph Y. Potts, 200 Indiana avenue. ORIGIN AND FORM OF GOVERNMENT. The District of Columbia was established under the authority and direction of acts of Congress approved July 16, 1790, and March 3, 1791, which were passed to give effect to a clause in the eighth’ section of the first article of the Constitution of the United States, giving Congress the power— “To exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever over such district (not exceeding ten miles square) as may, by cession of particular States and the accept- ance of Congress, become the seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like authority over all places purchased, by the consent of the legislature of the State in which the same shall be, for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dockyards, and other needful buildings. n rm, RT. The District of Columbia. 347 The local government of the District of Columbia is a municipal corporation hav- ing jurisdiction over the territory which ‘was ceded by the State of Maryland to the Congress of the United States for the permanent seat of the Government of the United States.” : This government is administered by a board of three Commissioners having in general equal powers and duties. Two of these Commissioners, who must have been actual residents of the District for three years next before their appointment and have during that period claimed residence nowhere else, are appointed from civil life by the President of the United States and confirmed by the Senate of the United States for a term of three years each and until their successors are appointed and qualified. The other Commissioner is detailed from time to time by the President of the United States from the Engineer Corps of the United States Army, and shall not be required to perform any other duty. This Commissioner shall be selected from among the captains or officers of higher grade having served at least fifteen years in the Corps of Engineers of the Army of the United States. Three officers of the same corps, junior to said Commissioner, may be detailed to assist him by the President of the United States. The senior officer of the Corps of Engineers of the Army who shall for the time being be detailed to act as assistant (and in case of his absence from the District or disability, the junior officer so detailed) shall, in the event of the absence from the District or disability of the Commissioner who shall for the time being be detailed from the Corps of Engineers, perform all the duties imposed by law upon said Commissioner. The salary of each of the Commissioners is $5,000 per annum. One of said Commissioners shall be chosen president of the Board of Commis- sioners at their first meeting, and annually and whenever a vacancy shall occur thereafter. : The Commissioners are in a general way vested with jurisdiction covering all the ordinary features of municipal government. Congress has by sundry statutes empowered the Commissioners to make building regulations; plumbing regulations; to make and enforce all such reasonable and usual police regulations as they may deem necessary for the protection of lives, limbs, health, comfort, and quiet of all persons, and the protection of all property within the District, and other regulations of a municipal nature. THE COLUMBIA INSTITUTION FOR THE DEAF AND DUMB. (Kendall Green.) OFFICERS OF THE CORPORATION. Patron ex officio.—Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States. President.—Edward M. Gallaudet, Kendall Green. Secretary.—Charles S. Bradley, 1722 N street. J Treasurer.—Lewis J. Davis, 1411 Massachusetts avenue. Diyectors.—Francis M. Cockrell, Senator from Missouri; Charles N. Fowler, Representative from New Jersey; Thetus W. Sims, Representative from Tennessee; Joseph R. Hawley, Senator from Connecticut; David J. Brewer, John W. Foster, Lewis J. Davis, R. Ross Perry, citizens of Washington, D. C.; John B. Wight, citizen of New York. : In its educational work the institution is divided into two departments, as follows: I. GALLAUDET COLLEGE, Faculty. President and Professor of Moral and Political Science.—Edward M. Gallaudet. Vice-President and Professor of Languages.—Edward A. Fay. Emeritus Professor of Natural Science, and Lecturer on Fedagogy.—John W, Chickering. Professors of— Applied Mathematics and Fedagogy.—Percival Hall. History and English.—John B. Hotchkiss. Mathematics and Latin.—Amos G. Draper. Natural Science.—Charles R. Ely. Assistant Professor of Latin.—Allan B. Fay. Assistant Professor of Natural Science —Herbert E. Day. 348 Congressional Directory, Instructors in— Drawing .— Arthur D. Bryant. Engineering.—Isaac Allison. LEnglish.—FElizabeth Peet. Gymmnastics.—Albert ¥. Adams and Bessie B. Harley. History and Librarian.—Albert C. Gaw. Department of Articulation. Professor in charge.—Percival Hall. Instructors.—Kate H. Fish, Albert C. Gaw. Normal fellows.—H. A. Quitmeyer, B. A., Concordia College, Indiana; M. Eugenia Thornton, B. S., Isbell College, Alabama; Nellie Nichol, B. I.., Monmouth Col- lege, Illinois. Normal students.—Annie R. Kiesel, Central High School, Washington, D. C.; Yun Chung Kim, Seoul College, Korea; Howard E. Thompson, Frederick College, Maryland. : II. THE KENDALL, SCHOOL. Principal.—James Denison. Assistant Instructors.—Melville Ballard, Bertha G. Paterson, Anna S. Gaw (in articu- lation), Elizabeth Peet (in articulation), Theodore A. Kiesel, Sarah H. Porter, Clara C. Taliaferro, Arthur D. Bryant (in drawing). Officers of the Domestic Department.—Wallace G. Fowler, supervisor and disbursing agent; D. Kerfoot Shute, attending physician; Myrtle M. Ellis, matron; Mrs. Amanda W. Temple, associate matron; Isaac Allison, master of shop; Edward Man- gum, 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 ¥ streets.) BOARD OF TRUSTEES. President.—Samuel H. Kauffmann, 1421 Massachusetts avenue. Vice-President and Treasurer.—Charles C. Glover, 1703 K street. Secretary and Director.— Frederick B. McGuire, 1333 Connecticut avenue. Assistant Divector.—C. Powell Minnigerode, The Portner. William Corcoran Eustis, Leesburg, Va.; Thomas Hyde, 1537 Twenty-eighth street; Bernard R. Green, 1738 N street; John M. Wilson, 1773 Massachusetts avenue; Arthur Jeffrey Parsons, 1818 N street; R. Ross Perry, 1309 P street. GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL FOR THE INSANE. (St. Elizabeth, Nichols avenue, beyond Anacostia.) BOARD OF VISITORS. President.~—F. M. Gunnell, M. D., ex-Surgeon-General, U, S. Navy; William A. Maury; Mrs. A. M. Gangewer; Walter Wyman, M. D., Surgeon-General Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service; Brig. Gen. John Moore, U. S. Army; S. H. Kauffmann; Rev. Teunis S, Hamlin; G. Lloyd Magruder, M. D.; Mrs. Gardiner Hubbard, : MEDICAL, OFFICERS. Superintendent.— William A. White, M. D. First Assistant Physician.—Maurice J. Stack, M. D. Second Assistant Physician.—Charles H. Clark, M. D. Senior Assistant Physicians.—B. R. Logie, M. D.; J. E. Toner, M. D. Junior Assistant Physicians.—Harry R. Hummer, M. D.; Alfred Glascock, M. D. Night Medical Officer.—George H. Schwinn, M. D. Medical Internes.—W. H. Hough, M. D.; W. F. Hemler, M. D.; H. J. Nichols, M. D.; A.C. Fitch, M.D, Pathologist.—1. W. Blackburn. Clinical Assistant to Pathologist.—Cornelius De Weese, M. D. The District of Columbia. 349 Dentist.—A. D. Weakley, D. D. S. Ophthalmologist.— Arthur H. Kimball, M. D. Veterinary.—John P. Turner, V. M. D. f ’ SPECIAI, OFFICERS. Purchasing Agent.—A. FE. Offutt. Chief of Training School.—Catherine FE. Cramer. HOWARD UNIVERSITY. (University Hill, between Fourth and Sixth streets, near Brightwood avenue.) OFFICERS OF THE CORPORATION. Patron ex officio.—E. A. Hitchcock, Secretary of the Interior. President Board of Trustees.—Rev. IT. S. Hamlin, D. D., 1316 Connecticut avenue. President.—Rev. John Gordon, D. D., Howard University. Secretary and Treasurer.—George H. Safford, 2445 Brightwood avenue. Executive Committee.—Rev. John Gordon, chairman; George H. Safford, secretary; G. W. Balloch; F. H. Smith; John F. Cook; Rev. Wm. V. Tunnell, S. T. B. Congressional Honorary 1Trustece.—William B. Allison, Senator from Iowa. Dean of Faculty of Department of Theology.e—Isaac Clark. DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE. Robert Reyburn, Emeritus Professor of Physiology and Professor of Hygiene and Preventive Medicine. 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. James F. Bundy, Secretary and Treasurer. | COLLEGE DEPARTMENT. A F.W. Fairfield, Professor of Greek Language, Literature, and of Political Economy. TEACHERS’ COLLEGE. L. B. Moore, Professor of Pedagogy and Latin. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT. George J. Cummings, Professor of Ancient Languages and Literature. COMMERCIAL, DEPARTMENT. George W. Cook, Professor of Civics and Commercial Law. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. | W. P. Hay, Instructor. DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC. Abbie I,. Williams, Instructor and Musical Director. INDUSTRIAT, DEPARTMENT, | Teachers.—Fred. C. Whitcomb, director; Ralph W. Norris, printing; Florence A; Hill, domestic art; Annie F. Burbank, domestic science; John F. Akers, carpentry. Mrs. I. M. Howard, sewing; I. M. Jacobs, matron Miner Hall; FE. P. Messer, house- r keeper. The exercises of the medical department are in brick building, Freedman’s Hos- pital; of the law department, at 420 Fifth street. All the other departments meet in the University building. Visitors at any hour of the day and in all departments are warmly welcomed. | ih = Ria ho a Se Ral i a’This department is undenominational and wholly supported by personal benefactions. 350 Congressional Directory. . WASHINGTON CITY POST-OFFICE. Postmaster.—John A. Merritt, The Farragut. : Assistant Postmaster.—Madison Davis, 316 A street SE. MAIN OFFICE. General-delivery window never closed. Stamps can be purchased at any time, day or night. Money-order and registered-letter business transacted at all the sta- tions throughout the city. : Special-delivery messengers can be obtained upon application to the Senate and House of Representatives post-offices, or to any of the stations of the Washington City post-office that are provided with Government telephone service, for the delivery of local special-delivery letters. At stations not having a Government telephone, appli- cants may have to pay for the use of the station clerk’s phone. MONEY-ORDER DIVISION. [Office hours: g a. m. to 11.30 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 11.30 p. m. From 8 a. m. to 6 p. m., at Benning Station, Brightwood Station, Brookland Station, Takoma Park Station, Tennallytown Station, and Stations A, B,C, D, F, G, H, and K, stations 1,2, 3,4, 5,96, 7, 5,9, 10, I1, 12,13, 14, 15, 16,17, 18, 10,20, 21, 22, 23,24, 25, 26,27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 34, 35,36, 37, 38,39,40, 41, 42,44, 45, 46,47,43, 49, 50, 51, 52,53, 54, 55, 57, 58, 59, 60, and 61. A single money order may include any amount from 1 cent to $100, inclusive, but must not contain the fractional part of a cent. There is no limit as to number in the issue of money orders; any number may be sent. Domestic money orders issued, payable in Canada, Cuba, Hawaii, Newfoundland, the Phil- ippine Islands, Porto Rico, Tutuila (Samoa), and Windward Islands. = United States postal money orders are issued on domestic forms, payable by the United States postal agent at Shanghai, China. The United States postal agent at Shanghai, China, is now authorized to issue domestic money orders payable by money-order offices in United States. Domestic rate of fees will be collected. Fees collected on domestic money orders, and those payable in Canada,Cuba, Hawaii, Newfoundland, the Philippine Islands, Porto Rico, Shanghai, Tutuila (Samoa), and Windward Islands: On orders not exceeding $2.50............. $0.03 | Over $30 and not exceeding $40......:..... $o.15 Over $2.50 and not exceeding $5........... .05 |- Over $40 and not exceeding $50. ...... ...: .18 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 375.....-..-.: .25 Over $20 and not exceeding $30........... 12 | Over $75 and not exceeding $100........... .30 INTERNATIONAI, MONEY ORDERS. International money orders are issued at main office, Brookland Station, and Sta- tions A, B,C, D, F, G, H, K, 6,and 30. 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 235% cents; French and Swiss franc and Ital- ian lire at 194%; cents; Swedish and Norwegian kroner at 27 cents; Netherlands florin at 40% cents; Portugal milreis at $1.09; Russian rouble at 514% cents, f1=1 rouble 941% copecks. International money orders issued payable in Africa, Algeria, Apia (Samoa), Arabia, Australia, Austria, Azores, Bahamas, Belgium, Bermuda, Beirut, Bolivia, British “Bechuanaland, Borneo, British Guiana, British Honduras, Bulgaria, Cape Colony, Ceylon, Chile, China, Costa Rica, Crete, Cyprus, Danish West Indies, Denmark, Dutch Fast Indies, Egypt, Falkland Islands, Faroe Islands, Fiji Islands, Finland, Formosa, France, Fusan (Korea), Germany, Gibraltar, Great Britain and Ireland, Heligoland, Holland, Honduras, Hongkong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Italy, Jaffa, Jamaica, Japan, Jask (Persia), Java, Jerusalem, Korea, Leeward Islands, Liberia, Luxemburg, Ma- _deira, Malacca, Malta, Mexico, Montenegro, Morocco, Mukho (Korea), Netherlands, New South Wales, New Zealand, North Borneo, Northern Nigeria, Norway, Orange Free State, Palestine, Panama, Persia, Peru, Pescadores Islands, Portugal, Queens- land, Rhodes, Rhodesia, Roumania, Russia, St. Helena, Salvador, Servia, Seychelle Islands, Siam, Smyrna, South Australia, Spice Islands, Straits Settlements, Sumatra, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Tasmania, Tobago, Transvaal, Trinidad, Tripoli, Tunis, Turkey, Victoria, Wales, Western Australia, West Indies, Windward Islands, Zam- besia, Zanzibar, and Zululand (South Africa). | | | | \ ( NS I <= — Washington City Post-Office. 351 Rates of fees for money orders payable in— Austria, Denmark, Netherlands, Bahamas, Egypt, New Zealand, Belgium, Hungary, Norway, Bermuda, Jamaica. Peru, Bolivia, Japan, Sweden, British Guiana, Teeward Islands, Switzerland, British Honduras, Liberia, Transvaal, Chile, Luxemburg, Trinidad. Costa Rica, Mexico, Qrders for floorless . ...... c.icniirinn es $0.08 | Over $50 and not exceeding $60............ $o. 30 Over $10 and not exceeding $20............ .Io | Over $60 and not exceeding $70............ +35 Over $20 and not exceeding $30. ........... .I5 Over $70 and not exceeding $80............ . 40 Over $30 and not exceeding $40... ......... . 20 Over $80 and not exceeding $go0............ . 45 Over $40 and not exceeding $50. ........... .25 | Over $90 and not exceeding $100.....,..... . 50 Fees collected on all other international money orders (see exceptions under head of domestic rates): Not exceeding $10 +. cor vee iin $0.70 | Not exceeding 360. vs. ra. 2 rovece animes ". $o.60 Notexceeding $20... ass iss 20 [= NOL €XCEeAITIT B70: svn invite eats vsnrmans .70 Not'exceeding $30... nae oe. nay, 30 Not exceeding $80. Lo vou es .80 Not exceeding M0... « +. os vaien vate ness qo i= Not exceeding o0....c nina nn Sn .90 Not exceeding $50... viitesr een iain :505| Not'exceeding $100: .. vrs: ie vsranrevisss 1.00 The maximum amount for which a single international money order may be drawn is, for orders payable in— United Kingdom of Great The Colony of ‘I'rinidad and Britain and Ireland........ 420 108. 8d. = $100 XoDbAZO: ive did ieee £20 108. 8d. = $100 Cape Colony... «vs. ove es L10:58. 4d. = “sol-Austria.. i... 0. a0. en Sood Brancs 515s 1100 Tamalea. .. ...o..cavya, 2 20:108:8d. = Too -ilungany ee, Francs 515 = 100 New Zealand ..L.. oiiannt #4201108. 8d. ==! ‘100 | British Guiana... ............ 420 108. 8d. = 100 Queensland.................. 2 20.108.8d.== Joo [FBermuda.. ... iv eee uinen 420 108. 8d. = 100 France, Algeria,and Tunis... Francs 515= 100 | South Australia.............. 420 108. 8d. = 100 Belgium... co asin Francs 515= 100 | Luxemburg, Grand Duchy Switzerland. co Francs 515= 100 olin nm ana Francs 515= 100 LE re Ree ot ae he ca Tire ss =— coo Salvador in ae es Be re ele 100 Portugal... ....c........ Milrels oz reig soos S100 | LIONG ROME fo. . freee arn paisa ra Sees 100 The Netherlands...... Florinsoasgocls. = rool Bgypt..oo oi. ee Li 100 Cermany....... iat See Se Marks f1S4t==vool Chde Sr he. nl i eh a roi dae 100 Sweden... unin iok Kronor 371.75= 100 | British Honduras............ 420 108. 8d. = 100 NOLWAY «ve siuis cists nisin von vie Tenor 37T-7558 Hor MEXICO Tt 0: hcs e e es e e 100 Denmark... .........., ELE Kronor 371.75= Too‘ Russia... ....... 194 rubles 33 copecks = 100 Japan: ee Gr a TOO: APIA er a 418.41 marks = 100 Honduras)... choi caiaanan, ee IooisGreece on cin ne en Francs 515 = 100 New South Wales............ 20-108. 8d == roo Bova: 2 sees 100 Victoria i oh san 420 108. 8d. = 100 | Costa Rico 100 Hasmamia. ch an ow, 420 108. 8d. = 100 | Liberia 100 Windward Islands........... 420 108. 8d. = 100 | Transvaal 100 TeewardIslands............. £20 108: 800 =m 000: | POuLS i i ins sient dain vias Swink pints awe 100 Bahamas. .:...... oc... ve 420 108. 8d. = 100 The amount payable in Mexico is governed by the rate of exchange on the day of certification at Laredo, Tex. There is no limit as to number in the issue of international money orders. Any number may be sent. REGISTRY DIVISION. Registered Malter.—Letters or parcels can be registered at main office at all hours of the day and night, and at all stations during such hours as they are open. All valuable letters and parcels, as well as those the delivery of which is of impor- tance to the sender, should be registered if sent in the mails. An indemnity, not to exceed $25, will be paid for the value of lost domestic registered first-class mail matter. Letter carriers are required to accept for registration all matter presented to them properly prepared. Private and official matter is accepted for registration at the post-offices of the Senate and House of Representatives. Franked matter may be sent to any post- office in the United States, Canada, Cuba, and Mexico, upon the prepayment, by postage stamps affixed, of the registry fee of 8 cents. Letters may be registered to any post-office in the world upon the prepayment of 8 cents in addition to the regular postage. Parcels-post packages may be registered for the following countries: Bahamas, Barbados, Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Danish West Indies, British Honduras, Jamaica (including the Turks and Caicos Islands), Leeward Islands, Mexico, Salva- dor, British Guiana, Windward Islands (Grenada, St. Vincent, the Grenadines, and St. Lucia), Newfoundland, Republic of Honduras, Trinidad (including Tobago), Ger- many, Guatemala, Nicaragua, New Zealand, Venezuela, Hongkong, Japan, and Nor- 352 Congressional Directory. way, upon the prepayment of 8 cents registration fee in addition to the regular postage of 12 cents a pound or fraction thereof. Parcels-post packages will be accepted for mailing up to 11 pounds in weight for all the countries named, except Germany and Hongkong, Japan and Norway, and some portions of Mexico, where the limit of weight is fixed at 4 pounds 6 ounces. Postage is 20 cents a pound or fraction thereof on parcels-post matter for Bolivia and Chile. The maximum value of parcels-post packages to Germany, Hongkong, Japan, and Norway is $50. POSTAGE RATES. The domestic letter rate is 2 cents an ounce or fraction thereof, and it applies to the island possessions of the United States, Cuba, Canada, Mexico, Shanghai (China), and the Canal Zone, Isthmus of Panama. The foreign letter rate is 5 cents a half ounce or fraction thereof, and itapplies to all other foreign countries in the Universal Postal Union. CITY DELIVERY AND COLLECTION (MAIN OFFICE). (Postage on local letters or other first-class matter, 2 cents for every ounce or fraction thereof.) Delivery by carriers on four-trip routes, 7.15 and 10.15 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, 7.15 and 10.30 a. m., 12.15, 3.15, 5, 7.15, and 10.30 p. m. Collections on business routes commence at 5.30, 7.20, 8.40, 10, and 11.20 a. m., 12.40, 2, 3.30, 5, 6.45, 8.40, and 11.55 p. m. Collections on residence routes com- mence at 7.20, 9.20, and 11.20 a. m., 1.20, 4, 6.45, 8.45, and 11.15 p. m. Sundays, 5 and 11.30 p. m. Holidays, 9.30 a. m., 5 and 11.30 p. m. DEPARTURE OF THROUGH PASSENGER TRAINS. [Schedules subject to change.] ATLANTIC COAST LINE. For Charleston, Augusta, Macon, Savannah, Jacksonville, and Florida and Cuban points—4.30 a. m.; 3.45 p. m. (Florida and West Indian Limited); 8.10 p. m. daily except Sunday (New York and Florida Special). BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. For Chicago and Northwest—11.00 a. m.; 5.30 p. m. For Cincinnati, St. Louis, Louisville, and Indianapolis—10.05 a. m.; 4.05 p. nL.; 12.45 night. " For Pittsburg and Cleveland—11.00 a. m.; 9.15 p. m.; 12.40 night. For Wheeling—10.05 a. m; 5.30 p. m. : For Columbus—5.30 p. mi. For Philadelphia, New York, and the East—2.57, 7.00, 9.00, and 11.00 a. m. (except Sunday); 1.00, 3.00 (Royal Limited), 5.00, 7.00 (except Sunday, to Philadelphia only), 8.00 (to Philadelphia only), and 11.30 p. m. For Atlantic City—7.00, 9.00, and 11.00 a. m.; 1.00, week days only, and 3 p. m. For Baltimore—Trains every hour, on the hour, week days, from 7.00 a. m. to 8.00 p. m. CHESAPEAKE & OHIO RAILWAY. For Cincinnati, Louisville, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Chicago, and the West and Southwest (through sleepers and a la carte dining cars)—2.30 and 11.10 p. m. daily. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD LINES. For New York—6.55, 8.50, 10.00 (dining car), and 11.00 a. m. (dining car); 12.35 (dining car), 3.15, 4.00 (Congressional Limited, all parlor, observation, and dining cars), 4.45 (dining car), 6.50 and 10.00 p. m.; 12.30 night. On Sundays, 8.50 (dining car) and 11.00 a. m. (dining car); 12.01, 3.15 (dining car), 4.00 (Congressional Limited, all parlor, observation, and dining cars), 4.45 (dining car), 6.50, and 10.00 p. m.; 12.30 night. For Boston—7.40 a. m. week days and 5.35 p. m. daily. For Pittsburg—7.50 and 10.50 a. m.; 3.30, 5.40, 7.15, 7.45, and 10.40 p. m. For Chicago and the West—7.50 and 10.50 a. m.; 3.30, 5.40, 7.45, and 10.40 p. m, For Cincinnati, St. Louis and the West—7.50 and 10.50 a. m.; 3.30 and 7.15; and 7.45 p. m. for Cincinnati only. For Buffalo (via Emporium Junction)—7.50 a. m. and 7.15 p. m. daily. For Buffalo, Rochester, and Northern Central Railway points—7.50 and 10.50 a. m. week days, 7.45 p. m. except Saturdays, and 10.40 p. m. Saturday only. Departure of Through Passenger Trains. 353 SEABOARD AIR LINE. For Raleigh, Columbia, Savannah, Jacksonville, Palm Beach, Tampa, Havana, Atlanta, Montgomery, New Orleans, and the Southwest—10.46 a. m.; 6.25 p. m. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. For Charlotte, Atlanta, Birmingham, and New Orleans—i11.15 a. m. (U. S. Fast Mail); 7.30 (New York and Atlanta Express) and 10.45 p. m. (Washington and Southwestern Limited). For New Orleans, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Memphis, and Birmingham—11.15 a. m.; 10.00 (New York and Memphis Limited, via Lynchburg) and 10.45 p. m. For Augusta, Aiken, Savannah, Jacksonville, and all Florida points—r10.51 a. mi. (Washington and Florida Limited); 6.55 p. m. (Southern’s Palm Limited during winter months); 9.50 p. m. (New York and Florida Express). 58-3D—2D ED——23 354 Congressional Directory. — NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED IN THE PRESS GALLERIES. Paper represented. Name. Office. Albany Journal..................... 0... Chas. W. Metzgar .......... 43 Corcoran Building. Albuquerque Citizen...................... Ira M; Bond... .... Aa aes 42 F st Alexandria Gazette. vu. ..i vei od bis Anaconda Standard... cides Saas Arkansas Democratic... i a dats Arkansas Gazelle... 0. Gh da, Associated Press. ......... neds Atlanta Constitution ...................... Atlanta Jonrnal.................0.0. 00. Atlanta News ...........ccccconnnnviiinnen Baltimore Evening Herald ............... Baltimore News. ...... 0. bhi Baltimore Sunt... vias he eot oh ahiviissae Birmingham Age-Herald.................. Birmingham News. ..................o.... Bisbee Review. .... 6... a tn Boise (Idaho) Statesman... .............-. Boston Evening Herald -.................. Boston Globe ....... oo av. ana a sn, Boston Herald o.oo amu on aisha Boston Transeripl...... Sia San siohin, Bridgeport Evening Post.........~....... Brooklyn Dally Bagle ... o.oo ins Brooklyn Standard Union................ Brooklyn Limes... oon i inane Buffalo Bvening News.................... Buffalo limes. oie ioe iio Camden Daily Courier . ied Yr Td Charleston News and Courier. ........... Charleston Post a. eis ines onetinkss sais Chicago Daily News ................. ..... Chicago Evening Post..c.........0uo..on Chicago Inter-Ocean.......... ............ Chicago Journal ........................... Chicago Record-Herald ...............0.... Chicago Tribune... ... coin u sila, Cincinnati Commercial Tribune........... Cincinnati Baquirer.... .. 5 b. oui van Cincinnati Post. BS nena ies Cincinnati Times-Star........... 0.000% Cleveland Teader...............0 oa] Cleveland Plain Dealer ............ ........ | Cleveland Press... om vivo vine sialiaste sates | Cleveland World... 0 00 isa siainil Cologne Gazette... ....... hi and in, Columbia (8, C.) State... ov. vi... Columbus Citizen i... ashi a Columbus Dispatch............. ELAR Dallas NEWS. o.oo. vr ainsi eins a lasts Des Moines Register and Leader.......... Detroit Evening News.............. 0... Detroit Free Press, i. ci inisicior nomeers Detroit: Journal... po. iii. ou eie vn odnhs, Detroit Limes uo ical va vuviainee Cr Detroit Bribune . oh iia inn. Duluth Herald... ono i aon os Duluth News-Tribune...............0..... Fort Worth Record... . cous ove siiivneves Fort Worth Telegram... .v..ssss srs, Hubert Snowden .......... A.W. Greeley............ i Clifford Rose... ........... C.'A. Boynton, supt .........". Arthur W. Dunn........... Elmer BE. Palne............ Harry A. Colman .......... EdwinM. Hood..... ..n".. Horace J. Mock ..... ....... R.O.Balley. . .... ...0.... Jackson S. Elliott .......... Charles A. Cotterill......... Jo RK, Ohl hry Milt HSawl oe. aio nl Louis Garthe. iu. colo John S.Shriver............ Edward E. Coyle.......... J. W.: Bennett .......~.... John P. Miller .............. Hal IL. Smith .........-.... William M. Mason....... Watterson Stealey ......... Louis Brownlow ........... Jesse L. Carmichael... ..... A. MauriceLow.. ......... Otto Carmichael. .......... Charles J. Roman... :..... Robert Lincoln O’Brien... . 1, WW. Phavis,..... cca Addison B. Atkins......... Harris M.Crist.............. Albert Halstead..... ....... J. 0: Hammitt. o.oo... Edwin S. Hoskins ......... CA. Hamilton ........... Cicero W. Harris... ........ RM. TATner. visas H.T. Hopkins... .=5. 2... W. A. Hildebrand.......... Florence KE. Sullivan....... H.C-Hallam .. 000 Leroy X. Vernon .......... Edward B. Clark... ......... John E. Monk............. H. Gilson Gardner ......... Walter Wellman........... John ’L-Suter:a.. dao, William B.Curtish.... 0... Raymond Patterson. ....... J.C. O’Laughlin............ Henry C.iBiggs.....s....... C.. 8S. Watts. ai anss 8S. B. Johnson... ..nu. coy Fred Starek........0.....v. Gus J. Karger... ..... uo John S: Shriver... 0... J. B."Morrow..............- Geo. UU. Marvin .-o.- .. ... Jacob Waldeck............. Woodworth Clum..... .... Hermann Balz.......0 056 I. Memminger....... ...0 Geo. U. Marvin... .......... H.B. Nesbitt... ain w in W.G.Steretl .. i is oo John'Saure.... ...0 0 cui, . John Fitzgibbon........... Hugo A. Gilmartin ....... Edward B.Clark...... -... Frank H. Hosford . es John Fitzgibbon .... ...... Chas. B. Tockwood . reall Francis J. Carmody........ C. Arthur Williams eee H.W, Schulz , aie a Alexandria, Va. Post Building. Colorado Building. Wyatt Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Colorado Building. Colorado Building. Wyatt Building. 1410 Pennsylvania ave. 1410 Pennsylvania ave. Post Building. Post Building. Sun Building. Sun Building. Sun Building. 1421 G st. Colorado Building. sor Fourteenth st. 501 Fourteenth st. Wyatt Building. 1229 Pennsylvania ave. 608 Fourteenth st. 608 Fourteenth st. Wyatt Buildin Colorado Buil ing. Colorado Building. so1 Fourteenth st. 146 East Capitol st. 1417 G st. 1816 Seventh st. 1417 G st. Colorado Building. Colorado Building. Post Building. Post Building. 1403 F st. Colorado Building. 1413 G st. 1413 G st. Home Life Building. 1403 F st. 1403 F st. 1403 F st. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1517 H st. 1517 H st. 1517 H st. 501 Fourteenth st. 1410 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. sot Fourteenth st. Star Building. 212 F st. Colorado Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Post Building. Metropolitan Hotel. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Post Building. Post Building. Colorado Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 501 Fourteenth st. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Colorado Building. 501 Fourteenth st. tT SG pg yr = Newspapers Represented. NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED, ETC.—Continued. 355 Paper represented. Name, Office. Galveston NEWS i. dees ve satin vne selves W. G. Sterefl. i... Metropolitan Hotel. Grand Rapids Evening Press.............. John Fitzgibbon ........... 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Hearst’s Boston American ................ M. EF. Tighe................ Post Building. JS. Dunnigan. i... Gls Post Building. T. 8 Fyvans...v..oa 00 Post Building. Hearst's Chicago American-Examiner....| M.F. Tighe ................ Post Building. 28: Dunnigan: ii. Post Building. J. S. Evans.. .....| Post Building. Houston Post em. coda shonin das Indianapolis News ..................... sik Indianapolis Sentinel ..................... Indianapolis Star... Jueves Joplin (Mo.) Globe........................ Kansas City Journal....... ne a Kansas Cliv Star. retin dios tliat tis Kansas Cliy Times... vu. ee sessions oe Ta Crosse. Chronicle... 2... inroads, Tewiston Journal. ........ oo LiL Tincoln: Daily Star......... vic ui, London Morning Post.................... Yondon Daily Telegraph.................. T.ondon Morning Leader....... .......h 0% L038 Angeles Examiner: ..............0..., TosAngeles Hxpress......... so..0u Llu. 1,08 Angeles Record.............. SE IIS Tos Angeles TIMES, ius i oo isisalioesd Louisville Courier-Journal ................ Y.ouisville Evening Post... ......... no... Manila Times .....5 overlain on. Memphis Commercial Appeal . ee Memphis Morning News ................. Milwaukee Free Press ........ 5h. Ji. bis Mifwanliee Jonmal se. A EE Milwaukee Sentinel.. 3 Milwaukee Wisconsin ................... Minneapolis Journal... ...... ude... Minneapolis Tribune ....o....... 0. o.oo Montgomery Advertiser:...-!.... oo. Muskogee Times. . i ee Fe Nashville AMETIOan.,. Nashville Banner: .. co. oeshiniasvesnn Nashville Daily News .... Sa Newark Evening and Sunday News. ..... New Orleans Picayune... ... ...........0. New Orleans States . is RES New Orleans Times-Democrat ............ New York American and Eve. Journal... New York Commercial... oii, New York Bvening Post ............. cn 0 New York Evening Telegram -........... New York Evening World........ hei New Nor Globe coun sues» sinners New York Herald... . 0 a vaia nme New York Journal of Commerce ......... New York Press... i. cc. oose vee iui New York Staats-Zeitung ................. New York Sun (Press Association) ....... NeW York Times . o.. ..cih nls ss nile duis viv New York World... ... 0. i os eine. Norfolk Dispatch... 0 is nine Norfolk Virginian-Pilot... ...............¢. Ohio State Journal... ......, Omaha Bee... oo. Stites se eee C. Arthur williams . any James P. Hornaday~........ Frank H. Hosford .... .... LouisT udlow i... 00 0s HB Nesbitt ibis H.B. Nesbitt. .: 7.05 5. F. A. Johnson Ernest G, Walker.......... A Rodsrael Liana on A. Masies LOW ais ah ak RK OhL nee LE S. Little anni, M, RB. Tighe. ....: Re eRe Fe JS. Dunnigan. +... 5 cine. SS HVanS ae H. Gilson Gardner......... RilSHazardc oie sian Edward S. Little... ... 0... ¢ 0. 0. Stealey:....... a. Watterson Stealey ......... Louis Brownlow ........... Robert M, Gates. ....... 0... RAIL Watkins. 0 ool an Ralph M. McKenzie ....... H. Gilson Gardner.......... Arthur; J.Dodge......:... John B.- Monk ............ Charles B. Lockweod ...... W.W.jermane...... 5... H.C. Stevens... oi mire. Francis J. Carmody........ B.A. Johnson .............. R. H. Watkins. . a Albert Ford Fergusot . AR R.M. Moorman ..........25. Louis Brownlow ........... Isnac:Gregg. .... .......... J-Martin Miller... .......0.. Corry M. Stadden . 0 R. H. Watkins. . SER Frank Michinard.......... M. EB. Tighe. ......... PRA JS. Dunnigan... 0.5 JoiSBvans oan Walter I, Clark... 05.0 Edward G.Lowry.......... R.M.Tarper ............0. 5 Samuel G. Blythe... ... H.H.Smith. coo inning John -Snure:. ... ic. oils Henry Shroff Brown....... WalterC. Emerson... ..... Robert Halsey Patchin .... John Cassel Williams. ..... Jackson Tinker. vii ..... Reginald Schroeder. ....... Richard V.Oulahan ....... William T. Bingham....... Philip HR. Patchin. ©... 0... John M: Carson -.... ih 0. Chas. Willis Thompson... . JA. Truesdell... Richard Lee Fearn ........ George Griswold Hill...... Harry.R. Bureill):.....:...0 Samuel G. Blythe .......... Charles S.; Albert... 0. Bwan Justice +... 0... W. J: Showalter............ Walter BE. Haryris-.......... Jesse Carmichael .......... Hdgar C. Snyder... ....... IL, William Thavis..,,..... Colorado Building. Post Building. Colorado Building. Post Building. sor Fourteenth st. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Post Building. Star Building. 1410 G st. 1417 G st. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Colorado Building. 501 Fourteenth st. Post Building. 1421 G st. 1421 G st. Colorado Building. 1417 G st. Post Building. Colorado Building. 1221 New York ave. Colorado Building. 1403 F st. 1403 F st. 501 Fourteenth st. Colorado Building. Colorado Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Colorado Building. Star Buildin Wyatt Building. Colorado Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Colorado Building. Post Building. Colorado Building. Colorado Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. 1417 G st. 44 Wyatt Building. 734 Fifteenth st. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave, 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 734 Fifteenth st. 734 Fifteenth st. 734 Fifteenth st. 206 Corcoran Building. Wyatt Building. Post Building. 1417 G st. 1417 G st. 1417 G st. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. 1322 F st. 1322 F st. 1322 F st. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 913 Eighth st. Colorado Building. 1406 G st. so1 Fourteenth st. 1229 Pennsylvania ave. 356 Congressional Directory. NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED, ETC.—Continued. Paper represented. Name. Office. Oshkosh Northwestern. ................... H.C. Stevens, ..........o.0. Colorado Building. Paterson Call... . ch. i. oa as Ralph M. McKenzie ....... 1221 New York ave. Philadelphia Evening Telegraph ......... Albert Halstead... ....... Wyatt Building. Philadelphia Inquirer-....-.............. Chas. W. Campbell......... 1410-1412 G st. W.B. Shaw... oi 00 1410-1412 G st. Philadelphia North American... ... .... Philadelphia Press: ............. 00 0, Philadelphia PublicTedger..... -........ Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph ........... Pittsburg Gazette... 0.0. 0 a, Pittsburg Digpatel. ........ooiinn n, Piltsburgdieader..... 0... li. ii 00 on Plttshurg Post... Ce re Pittsburg Press... oo. alsa Plitshurg Limes. oi. Portland Oregonian ......... .......c..... Porismonth Star), oh on oa a, Publishers’ Press Association and Scripps-McRae Press Association. Raleigh Morning Post... 0... Richmond News-Leader ....... PIA : Richmond Times-Dispatch ............... St. Louis Chronicles... oi LL... St. Louis Globe-Democrat ................. St. Lonis'Post-Dispatch.................... St.TonisRepublic.. .. ..... 0... ih St. Touls Westliche Post... 0. on... St.Paul Dispatch. of. i snes. St. Paul Ploneer Press... ... chris Saginaw NEWS... uo. hes seis Salt lake Deseret News’... co... Salt Take Telegram. i. v0 inl. 0h Salt Lake’ Fribune...............0. FRI San:Anteonio HEpress ......c LL ... Sandusky Register............- 5.00.0. San Francisco.Bulletin............ ....... San Francisco Call....... Re San Francisco Chronicle........... ...... San Francisco Examiner.................. Savannah Morning News................. Seattle Post-Intelligencer...... .......... Seattle Times. i a ena South McAlester News... .... ian, Spokane Chronicle... nn co ni Springfield Republican... ...... ....0.. .. Syracuse HeralG oo... as nary Tacoma News... co ol Sa aa maine Topeka Capifal is 0 a Toronto Globe ....... eR Se CR TorontosWeorld: .... a, BOY RIMES. ea ah a as Wall Street Journal... ...... Sn Washington Evening Star................ Washington News Association............ Washington Pest. ani ann hier foes, Washington Times 0 as Wheeling Daily News......... ........... Wheeling Register. .......c.vev. nian vss Angus McSween............ James:'S. Henty............. Thomas F. Edmunds....... John M. Cavson....... ...5 J. Av lruesdell ...... ...0. Chas. Willis Thompson.... B-B.Johns....... 0... LoW. Strayer .. ooo lle AUT Helss,, oon Norborne Robinson .. .... Charles W. Metzgar... ..... MauriceSplain...... ...... H.B. Nesbitt... ...... 0... Henry Balley. ona dae Isanc'Orege ol. oii, Harry]. Brown..... ...... Norborne Robinson. ....... BE... Been, mgr............ Henty B. Bland... .0c. 0x W.G Miller... o.oo 00 J. G. Graves Thompson. ... AACE na aE I.Cooke ...... nonin W. J. Showalter ....... hs Walter B. Harris .......... Jewell H./Aubere.......... Charles P. RKeyser............. Jesse I,. Carmichael ....... D. Hastings MacAdam..... RB. W.Connex...-........... PV. DeGraw... 00 EF. A. Johnson ...........5. Arthur J. Dodge ............ John F. Monk ......0. 00... Prank HH. Hosford.:........ GC. A. Hamilton... 00.0, Pov. DeGraw... nh Albert FE. Philips........... C. Arthur Williams... ..... B.B. Johns... ooo SamW. Walle... oa. 00. Ira FB. Bennett... J. MB Bighe ons J.-S. Dunnigan: io, SC BvANS RM: LATRCL LL. sof in vies os Walter BE. Clark ........... W.W. Jermane. =... 0000 HH. C.Stevens is. vi. Albert Ford Ferguson..... C.B. Lockwood...... ARN Richard Hooker ........... CP Hunt colin ho XN. Bloons: . obi gnnn Gus]. Barger... on I. WillilamThavis.......... Walter B. Clark’... 0. Hdgar €C. Sayder............ Chas. A. Hamilton ........ JohniBoeyle. on... 0 0 NO, Messenger....o... Charles BiRern.. 0. 2... Irving C. Norwood......... Sheldon'S. Cline............ Ernest G, Walker...... .... Geo. REBrown... v.ll John K_ Stauffer... ........ James Hay, jr... 0 2.0 0. BdwinRyals............... Francis J. Carmody........ Harry J. Brown............ 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1403 F st. 1403 F st. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Wyatt Building. Wyatt Building. 43 Corcoran Building. Post Building. Post Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1417 G st. Wyatt Building. 501 Fourteenth st. 501 Fourteenth st. 501 ourteenth st. sor Fourteenth st. 501 Fourteenth st. 501 Fourteenth st. 1417 G st. Colorado Building. Colorado Building. Colorado Building. sor Fourteenth st. Fourteenth and F sts. Fourteenth and F sts. 1406 G st. 20 Wyatt Building. 20 Wyatt Building. 210 Maryland ave. NE. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1403 F st. 1403 F st. Colorado Building. sor Fourteenth st. 210 Maryland ave. NE. National Hotel. Colorado Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. 1417 G st. 1417 G st. Colorado Building. Colorado Building. Star Building. sor Fourteenth st. 206 Corcoran Building. Colorado Building. 1417 G st. 501 Fourteenth st. 1345 Pennsylvania ave, sor Fourteenth st. 1229 Pennsylvania ave, 1417 G st. sor Fourteenth st. 501 Fourteenth st. 1420 F st. - 1101 Pennsylvania ave. 1101 Pennsylvania ave. 1101 Pennsylvania ave. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. Post Building. Post Building. Times Building. Times Building. Times Building. 1345 Pennsylvania ave. 1417 G st. Qh Gil ll | ~~ —— Members of the Press. 337 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS WHO ARE ENTITLED TO AD- MISSION TO THE PRESS GALLERIES. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the { designates those whose daughters accompany them; the | designates those having other ladies with them. ] Name. Paper represented. Residence. * Albert, Charles S.......... * Atkins, Addison B......... rt Aubere, Jewell H.......... ABANCY, 0. shinies Balz, Hermann. ............. Bennett, Ira Fl ............. *Bennett, John W.......... % Bigos Henry C....0......., Bingham, William T........ * Blythe, Samuel’'G.......... Bond, Ira MM... | Boyle, John................ #1 Boynton, C. A. ............. * Brown, George R............ X Brown; Harry J. ..........< * Brown, Henry Shroff. ..... Brownlow, Louis............ Burrill, Harry’ R'........... #* Campbell, C. W....... ...... Carmichael, Jesse L,........... Carmichael, Otto... .......... Carmody, Francis] .....:.. *Carson, John M ........... *I Clark, Kdward B ......... %* Clark, Walter ¥...:........ *Cline, Sheldon S........... *Clum, Woodworth......... XColman, Harry A .......... Connon, Bo We. ....i oil Copke, dl are er, * Cotterill, Charles A........ Couch, W. 8S ..a on Coyle, Fdward E .......... Crist, Harris M............ *} Curtis, William E ........ ¥ DeGraw; P. V...n....... Dodge, ArthurJ........... * Dunn, Arthur W........... Dunnigan, J..S......... 0. | Edmunds, Thomas F ...... Bland, Henry BE... ...... 0 Blliott, Jackson S............. * Emerson, Walter C........ *|Brly, Alfred A... ......_.. Bvans, J..S... cco. o un *¥| Fearn, Richard Lee....... Ferguson, Albert Ford ..... Fitzgibbon, John... ......... * Gardner, H. Gilson........ Garthe, Tonls ... nv... 0. 3Gates, Robert M'..:........ Gilmartin, Hugo A........... E@reeley, ASW .....0.. 0. RX Crege, Isaac .. 0 ce Hall, HENTY vr iis v si dovisive vs | | New York World... 0 hn sais sn. Brooklyn Eagle. ......co.. 0 aia... St. 1.ouis Globe-Demeocrat......... 5... Associated: Press... 5. oii uinnd Cologne Gazelle... oui oh nian San Francisco Chronicle. ......L....i0. Baltimore NEWS. vss valerie ies anisilsinaie 2 Chicago Tribune........ 50. a... New NYork Sani... nisi inal New York World, N. Y. Evening World. Albuquerque Citizen .o..... 0.0 ie. Wall Street Journal... 00 iol. Superintendent Associated Press........ Washington'Post ..... LL 0 Portland Oregonian, Wheeling Regis- ter, Tacoma News. New York Herald... 02 ior arias Louisville Evening Post, Nashville Ban- ner, Birmingham News. New Vork Tribune... ada, Philadelphia Inquirer ............ >... Boston Evening Herald, St. Louis Post- Dispatch, Ohio State Journal. Boston Herald. ....... co ln snl a Minneapolis Tribune, Wheeling Daily News, Duluth News-Tribune, Charles- ton Daily Mail. Philadelphia I,edger, New York Times. . Chicago Evening Post, Detroit Journal. . Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Toronto Globe, New York Commercial. Washington News Association .......... Cleveland World. 5 io loool, Associated Press’... il mil St. Toms Republic... oi sei Publishers’ Press Association and Scripps-McRae Press Association. Associated Press” oi... 0 ao. Cleveland Plain Dealer....... ry BS Baltimore Evening Herald......:....... Brooklyn Hagle...to oh an aha Chicago Record-Herald................. St. ILouis Westliche Post, Salt ILake Telegram. Milwaukee Sentinel, St. Paul Pioneer Press. Associated Press... joivaesisn ae New York American-Journal, Chicago American-Examiner, San Francisco Examiner, I,os Angeles Examiner. Philadelphia Pressy.... oc... 0... Publishers’ Press Association and Scripps-McRae Press Association. Associdled Press: «uc bi New York Hemald....-.....0 aha Publishers’ Press Association and Scripps-McRae Press Association. New York American-Journal, Chicago American-Examiner, San Francisco Examiner, Boston American. New York I'ribunes. 0.0. ws. Muskogee Times, South McAlester News Detreit Evening News, Detroit Tribune, Grand Rapids Press. Chicago Journal, I.os Angeles Express, Milwaukee Journal. Baltimore American... ..... i. cnet. Memphis Commercial Appeal............ Detrolt Free Press... sit cues sree Anaconda Standavd.... ..... .. 0... 0. Nashville Daily News, Pittsburg Times. Pittsburg Times IEEE EEE EEE EEE IR 2548 University place. 1318 Fifteenth st. 3529 Eslin ave. Star Building. 212 F st. The Hawarden. 3026 O st. The Gladstone. 927 Farragut square, 1509 Thirteenth st. 42 F st. Hotel Montrose. 1357 Princeton st. 2224 F st. 1450 Meridian st. 1922 I st. 1631 Nineteenth st. 29 Quincy st. NE. 924 Fourteenth st. 1338 New York ave. 40 C st. NE 1332 Vermont ave. 1414 Fifteenth st. 2156 California ave. 1249 Kenesaw st. The Royalton. 1258 Columbia road. 626 I, st. ne. 1631 Nineteenth st. 2212 G st. 232 Ninth st. SE. The Portner. 1801 Connecticut ave. 210 Maryland ave. NE. 1303 H st. ‘The Albemarle. The Shoreham, 1217 K st. 510 Thirteenth st. 1320 New York ave. The Buckingham. The New Willard. 2202 Massachusetts ave. Cherrydale, Va. 1623 Thirteenth st. The Rochambeau. The Riggs. 1517 Rhode Island ave. 706 Eleventh st. .358 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS, Congressional Directory. Name. Paper represented. FTC. —Continued. Residence. I Hallam, H.C. ....... oi *Talstead, Albert... .... =... *+ Hamilton, Chas. A........ Hammith, J. 0 .............. Harris, Cicero MWh Harris, Walter B............ Hay, James, Jr... no. * § Hazard, R. H * Heiss, A. B......... re Henry, James'S-.........ca.. Hildebrand, W. A .......... [| * Hill, George Griswold .. + Hood, I Mains. ove. Hooker, Richard......:..... * Hopkins, Henry T......... *!| Hornaday, James FP ...... *'Hosford, Frank H ......... * ++ Hoskins, Edwin S ...... Hunt, CoP. oa tesa, Israel, ACR ris Fae ® | Jermane, W. W..........i. * Johns, E. B Johnson, B.A... oid ii om # Johnson, Sil... 0... a. |i Justice, Bwan........~. = *Karger,Cus:J.......qi.. *liReen, BT, 0... ioe vn *Rern, Charles H .......... * | Keyser, Charles P... .... *Yarner, RM... o.oo Ck lindsay, RH, o.oo ®T ttle, Edward S. =... 5... ®J.ockwood, Chas. B.......". * Tow, A. Maurice ......... * Lowry, Edward Br * Ludlow, Louis... .......v. MacAdam, D. Hastings..... * MacBride, W. C............ McKenzie, Ralph M ........ .*McSween, Angus......... Marvin, Geo. U.........5 Mason, Wm, M............... Memminger, I,... i. 00s Messenger, N.O..........: % Metzoar, Chas. W... ...... Michinard, Frank .......... *+ Miller, Y Martin.....- oc. * Miller, JohmiPil~. oa * || Miller, Withar G.: * Mock, Horace J............ Monk, John'EK .............. Moorman, R. M............. Fi Morrow, J.B. a... ao # Nesbitt, FH. Brod i 0. * Norwood, Irving C . * O’Brien, Robert Iincoln. . * Ohl, J. Winder 20 anghlin, J. C........... XOnlahan, RV ....0 000 *| Paine, Elmer I-.......... Patchin, Phillp We... 0... * Patchin, Robert Halsey... . Chicago Chronicle 5. id ves insvss ne Brooklyn Standard-Union, Philadelphia Evening Telegraph. Rochester Post-Express, Salt Iake Deseret News, ‘I'roy Times, Buffalo Times. Brooklyn times... or oe. Camden Daily Courier.............0..... Richmond Times-Dispatch, Norfolk Vir- ginian-Pilot. Washington Himes. ....... ts sivas St. Louis Chronicle, T,os Angeles Record. Pittsburg Dispatch... 0 on. 5 Philadelphia Press... viii ons aay, Charlotte Observer. .................e.. Associated Press... loool iii ane Springfield’ Republican:.......0.......00 Charleston Post. ...... 5 annul oh IndianapolisNews..... i... a 0 Detroit Times, Indianapolis Sentinel, Saginaw News, Kalamazoo Gazette- News. Buffalo Evening News, Syracuse Herald. Terre Haute Tribune-Gazette, Bisbee Review, Boise Idaho Statesman. Yincoln Daily Star... .....cvenisice sos vedsss Minneapolis Journal, Seattle Times..... Toledo Blade, Sandusky Register, Pitts- burg Chronicle Telegraph. St. Paul Dispatch, Minneapolis Tribune, La Crosse Chronicle, Cincinnati Enquirer... ........ 0 0 veh vs New YorkiWorld. i eserves. isos cat on Cincinnati Post, Toledo News- Bee... Publishers’ Press Association and Scripps-McRae Press Association. Washington Evening Star............... St. Louis Globe-Democrat............... Charleston News and Courier, Savan- nah Morning News, New York Tele- gram, Buffalo Express. EaAnsas-City-Star. ..... oii s,s Sis eases San Francisco Bulletin, Ios Angeles Times, ILondon Morning Ieader, Montreal Star. Milwaukee Wisconsin, Duluth Herald, Spokane Chronicle. Boston Globe, I,ondon Morning Post. ... New York Evening Post................ IndianapolisiStar oi ivi voer hs Ghvinn St. Louis RepublHe .-.. ovr. 0. ait ae. Cincinnati Enquirer, o.oo von venies Paterson Call, Milwaukee Free Press.... Philadelphia North American........... i Columbus Citizen, Cleveland Leader... Baltimore Sum. ceca. she ies de ele Columbia (S.C.) State.............. AE Washington Evening Star.......... Zs Albany Journal, Pittsburg Leader ...... New Orleans Times-Democrat .......... Newark Evening and Sunday News... . Baltimore Sun 5. See La Publishers’ Press Association and Scripps-McRae Press Association. Associated Press... 0 oi lo ar Milwaukee Sentinel, St. Paul Pioneer Press, Chicago Inter Ocean. Nashville American, Atlanta News, Arkansas Gazette. Cleveland Teader. .... 5... covevciinesn Pittsburg Press, Kansas City Star, Kan- sas City Times, Columbus Dispatch. | Washington Bvening Star..............- Boston: Branscriplt =. i: rots ee ees Atlanta Constitution, London Daily Telegraph, Manila Times. Chicago Tribune...... Te RA dh eae INEW VOTE SHI. sin vee as skaledsmiaitinien » ASSoclated Press. i... ooisreiei vs online sits New Nork'Sun. i. cr re vies vances New York Herald ...o cocoa sivativnisins 410 Third st. 2208 Massachusetts ave. 1032 Dartmouth st. 1510 H st. 146 Fast Capitol st. 929 K st 1759 P st. 2446 S.Dakota ave. NE. 1460 Howard ave. 218 North Capitol st. 1723 G st. 209 Twelfth st. SW. 1832 Jefferson Place. 1816 Seventh st. 1419 Howard ave. 141 Massachusetts ave. NE. 1934 First st. Langdon, D.C. 931 New York ave. 40 V st. 3429 Holmead ave. The Cecil. 909 New. York ave. 2467 Eighteenth st. Chevy Chase, Md. 1328 Harvard st. The Vivan. 529 KEighteenth st. The Maury. Cleveland Park. 1004 Fleventh st. 1730 Connecticut ave. The Dewey. 250 Eighth st. NK. 1925 K st. ; The Oxford. = 1723 G st. 1831 F st. The Rochambeau. 1320 New York ave. Hammond court. 2475 Eighteenth st. The Arlington. The Victoria. 1673 Park st. The Garfield. 1907 Fourteenth st. 3123 Thirteenth st. ‘The Decatur. The Cosmos Club. 1734 K street, 1866 Wyoming ave. 1421 Twentieth st. 2700 Thirteenth st. 916 Nineteenth st. 916 Nineteenth st. 7% Members of the Press. 359 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS, ETC.—Continued. Name. Paper represented. Residence. * Patterson, Raymond...... Chicago. Tribune. 5... 1309 Kenyon st. Pence; Pit. oii Raleigh Morning Post................... The Cumberland. Philips, Albert F............ Salt Take Tribune......c........ RI National Hotel. 2 Price, W. Wisi ooh, Richmond News-I.eader South Brookland, D. C. | Robinson, Norborne. ..... Portsmouth Star, Pittsburg Dispatch. ...| The Lambert. Roman, Charles J...... . .. Bostom Herald. a aes 1938 Fifteenth st. * Rose, Clifford... Arkansas Democrat... .. 0 The Raleigh. Ryals Edwin... .......0. on Washington Times........... ryt ie ER Ln 717 Thirteenth st. | Saul. MICH nia Atlanta Journal. ul wri anh 1328 Gat. *Schrader, Fred F........... KansasCity Journal. .z . oo lull oes 3554 Morgan ave. * Schroeder, Reginald....... New York Staats-Zeitung ............... 1523 O st. Schulz, TL W. roi nine: Joplin Globe, Fort Worth Telegram ....| 1203 Twentieth st. ¥Shaw, W. B.....i. 5a. ais Philadelphia Inquirer... ii. 0 2574 University place. Showalter, W. J... oi... ... Richmond News-Leader, Norfolk Dis- | 913 Eighth st. Shriver; John S...0-....... Smithy ITE. ae somith-Hal IT. oo. ho... Snowden, Hubert Snure, Johm..... co vuie * Snyder, Edgar C Splain, Maurice * |Stadden, Corry M.......... * Starek, Fred Stauffer, Jom K...........% * Stealey, || Stealey, Watterson Sterett, W. G ¥| Stevens, H.C..... 0... EStrayer, I. W. sian or ns Sullivan, Florence E........ X Suter, John Fir... 0... Thavis, T,. William ........... *’ Thompson, Charles Willis . * Thompson, J. G. Graves... Tighe MoE... iii Tinker, Jackson *Pruesdell, J. A 5 *| Vernon, Leroy T.......... Waldeck, Jacob ses en * Walker, Ernest G.... . *Wall, Sam. W Watts, €. S-....° ian asa * |[Williams, John Cassel . .. patch. Cincinnati Times-Star, Baltimore Amer- ican. New York Evening World Baltimore Sun New York Globe and Commercial Ad- vertiser, Des Moines Register and Leader. Omaha Bee, Toronto World. ............. Pittsburg Post New Orleans Picayune Cincinnati Enquirer Washington Times Louisville Courier-Journal Louisville Courier-Journal, Birmingham Age-Herald. Galveston and Dallas News Minneapolis Journal, Oshkosh North- western, Seattle Times. Pittshurg Gazette... 0X Sl soe Chicago'Chyonicle. ... ovine Chicago'Record-Tlerald. .;,... ic... Bridgeport Evening Post, Topeka Capi- tal, Omaha World-Herald. New York Times, Philadelphia Ledger. . Publishers’ Press Association and Scripps-McRae Press Association. New York American-Journal, Chicago American-EXaminer, San Francisco Examiner, Boston Anierican. New: York Press. co... hi a ams Philadelphia Ledger, New York Times. . Chicago Dally News :..... 000000 Cleveland: Press. oo 0. on oan iy Washington Post, Jeswiston Journal..... San Francisco Call Memphis Morning News, New Orleans States, Montgomery Advertiser, Knox- ville Sentinel. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune......... Chicago Record-Herald.. : Houston Post, Fort Worth ‘Record, San Antonio Expr ess. New York Journal of Commerce The Arlington. 1521 Caroline st. 717 Tenth st. Alexandria, Va. 1320 New York ave. 1108 Yale st. 1304 Whitney ave. 3002 Thirteenth st. 1527 I st. 1728 Pst. Metropolitan Hotel. 1224 Highth st. 1414 Kenesaw ave. The Farragut. 215 H st. 1114 Twenty-fifth st. Kensington, Md. ‘I'he Prince Karl. The Wexford. 1121 Harvard st. 1462 Binney st. sit Thirteenth st. 1706 P st. The Plymouth. 1336 R st. 1305 H st. 1409 Twenty-first st. The Portner. The Brunswick. Charles H. Mann, Doorkeeper House Press Gallery; residence, 627 A st. NE. James D. Preston, Doorkeeper Senate Press Gallery; residence, The Montgomery. 360 Congressional Directory. - RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES. | | I. Persons desiring admission to the press galleries shall make application to the . Speaker, as required by Rule XXX VI of the House of Representatives, and to the Com- hs 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 I become so employed while accepting the privileges of the galleries. Visiting jour- I 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- b ing one seat shall be assigned to each paper; and it shall be the duty of the Standing Committee, at their discretion, to report violations of the privileges of the 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: JosEPH G. CANNON, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Approved by the Committee on Rules of the Senate. JorN C. SPOONER, Ii Chairman Committee on Rules. JorN M. CARSON, Chairman, ELMER E. PAINE, JoEN P. MILLER, RAYMOND PATI'ERSON, W. W. JERMANE, Secretary, Standing Committee of Correspondents. rg H— eX ——r—— Home and City Residences. 361 SENATORS, REPRESENTATIVES, AND DELEGATES. NAMES, HOME POST-OFFICES, WASHINGTON ADDRESSES, AND PAGE ON WHICH BIOGRAPHY APPEARS. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the | designates those whose daughters accompany them; the | designates those having other ladies with them. ] THE SENATE. ||WirLLiaM P. FRYE, President pro tempore, The Hamilton. CHARLES G. BENNETT, Secretary, Metropolitan Club. *11|| DANIEL, M. RANSDELL, Sergeant-at-Arms, 130 B street NE. *t||Rev. EDWARD EVERETT HALE, Chaplain, The Mendota. SENATORS. Name H i Biog- : ome post-office. Washington address. raphy. Page. * Aldrich, Nelson W......... Providence, R.1....| The Arlington......... 108 *Alger, Russell A... . Detroit, Mich... ... 1401 Sixteenth street. .. 52 *Allee, |. Frank... . ........ Dover, Del... The Highlands... .... 13 Allison, William B........ .... Dubuque, Iowa. . . .. The Arlington... .. EL 30 RiAnkeny devi... ho Walla Walla, Wash .| The Highlands. ....... 125 Bacon, Augustus O............ Macon,:Ga..:....... 1757 Oregon avenue ... 15 Hi Balley, Joseph Wc ......... Gainesville, Tex .. ..| 1003 N street... ...... 116 Ball, 1. Heisler... ... Faulkland, Del ....| The Porstland.......... x3 ®i1 Bard, ThomasR ...... «> +»| Hueneme, Cal... The Normandie ....... 6 2ll Bate, William B...........-. Nashville, Tenn... ..| Ebbitt House.......... 112 * Berry. James H...........5. Bentonville, Ark...| The Metropolitan... ... 4 Beveridge, Albert J... .... ... Indianapolis, Ind .| The Portland. ....... .. 27 *tBlackburn, Joseph C. S..... Versailles, Ky...... 1702 Nineteenth street. . 36 *#l| Burnham, Henry E....... Manchester, N: H ..| The Richmond ........ 70 Burrows, Julius C. ........ ... Kalamazoo, Mich. .| 1406 Mass. avenue. .... 51 *Burton, Joseph B.. ......... Abilene, Kans ..... The Hamilton.......... 34 *Carmack, Edward W......... Memphis, Tenn... ..] The Ebhitt............ 113 Clapp, Moses F., ........o.oi St.Paul, Minu ..... The Dewey. cu... 55 Clark, Clarence D:....-.. . ... Bvanston, Wyo. ...| Riggs House ...... ....... 132 XClark, Willlam A... —.... Butte, Mont. ..... .. 1915 Mass. avenue... .. 66 Clarke, James PP... ..... i... Lite Rock Ark un ocaiiini.t. shania 4 Clay, Alexander S............ | Marietta, Ga....... Riggs House ........... 15 liiCockrell, Francis M .. ..... .... | Warrensburg, Mo ..| 15183 R street... ....... 61 Crane, W. Muriay............ Dalton, Mass ...... The Arlington. ......:. 47 *{{Culberson, Charles A ....... Dallas, Tex, ..oo.ou The Normandie. ....... 116 ®iCullom, Shelby M .......... Springfield, Il1..... 1413 Mass. avenue ..... 19 jj. Daniel, Jom W-.......... +s Lynchburg, Va..... 1794 Lanier avenue :... 122 ® Depew, Chauncey M ........ New York, N.Y ....| 1671 H street ..... ..... 74 ¥ Dick, Clinrles.. 7... =. Akron, Ohio........ 1821 Adams Mill Road . 92 t||| Dietrich, Charles H....... Hastings, Nebr... ... The Arlington......... 67 Dillingham, William P....... Montpelier, Vi ....|: [he Cochran. .....%.. 121 *|| Dolliver, Jonathan P....... Fort Dodge, Iowa ..| 1415 Mass. avenue ..... 3% #iDryden, John B............ Newark, N. J...... 1526 N. H. avenue... .. 73 * Dubois, Bred 1... oi: Blackfoot, Idaho ...| 2010’ R street... ... ... 18 $i Blkins, Stephen B ........ Elkins, W.Va...... 1626 Ki street. oo... ... 126 %1 Fairbanks, Charles W...... Indianapolis, Ind. ..| 1800 Mass. avenue ..... 27 *t} Foraker, Joseph B.......... Cincinnati, Ohio ...| 1500 Sixteenth street... 9I *|||| Poster, Addison G ... ..... Tacoma, Wash... ... 2731 S street... . 5... 125 Poster, Murphy J ............ Pranklin, 1a. ..-... The Cochran .......... 40 362 Congressional Directory. SENATORS—Continued. Name. ji: Frye, William P .....x..... *Pulion,; Charles W. .... ..« *Gallinger; Jacob H......... %Gamble, Robert J. =... -:. Gibson, Paris .....v. caves ®t Gorman, Arthur P......... Hale, Fuagene ........... =... *|| Hansbrough, Henry C ..... ¥i Hawley, Joseph R ......... ¥*Heyburn, Weldon B......... *1{Hopkins, Albert J. ~........ Ji Kean, John... .... =... Kearng, Thomas .......... 00. Kittredge, AlfredB........... %* Knox, Philander C.......... *j Latimer, Asbury C.......... *T.odge, Henry Cabot... ..... #*Tong, Chesterl 000-00 fF McComas, TonisB..... 1... *McCreary, James B.........., * McCumber, PorterJ......... 7McEnery, Samuel Di... ... ... *t|| McLaurin, Anselm J....... Mallory, Stephen R ........ = %/ Martin,.ThomasS.......... T Millard, Joseph TL. 0, Mitchell, JohnH ............ Money, HernandoD ......... Til Morgan, John ZL... ...... *+ Nelson, Knute... ....... *tNewlands, Francis G. ...... ®Overman, Lee S,. ..\. 0... Patterson, Thomas M ........ Penrose, Boles. .i Perkins, George C ....).... #*ll|| Pettus, Edmund W ........ * Platt, Orville X. 2 2........... 2:Platt, Thomas CC: .. =... .. Proctor, Redfield ............ ®Quarles Joseph VV... ....... % Scott, Nathan B....... i. Simmons, Furnifold McL, . .... Smoot, Reed... . ..0 0h tSpooner, John C..... . ¥Stewart, William M.......... 9 Stone, William J .........; *i Taliaferro, James P........ Aeller, Henry M.... . Tillman; Benjamin BR. ...... + Warren, Francis E.......... %i Wetmore, George P....... Home post-office. Iewiston, Me. ..... Astoria, Oreg ...... Concord, N. H..... Yankton, S. Dak. .. Great Falls, Mont. . Lanrel, Md ........ Ellsworth, Me... ... Devils Lake, N. Dak Hartford, Conn.... Wallace, Idaho .... Aurora, Il. ...... Elizabeth, N.J ..... Salt Lake City, Utah Sioux Falls, S. Dak. Pittsburg, Pa... Belton, S.C... 0 Nahant, Mass. ..... Medicine Lodge, Kans. Williamsport, Md . . Richmond, Ky..... Wahpeton, N. Dak . New Orleans, La ... Brandon, Miss... .s Pensacola, Fla..... Scottsville, Va..... Omaha, Nebr ...... Portland, Oreg .. ... Carrollton, Miss. . .. Selma, Ala... .. Alexandria, Minn .. Reno; Ney...... Salisbury, N.C... .. Denver, Colo....... Philadelphia, Pa... Selma, Ala... .... Meriden, Conn... .. Owego, N.Y... .:. Proector,>Vi........ Milwaukee, Wis ... Wheeling, W. Va... Raleich, N.C. Provo, Utah ....... Madison, Wis ...... Carson City, Nev... St. Tous, Mo... .. Jacksonville, Fla. . . Central City, Colo... Trenton 8. C.. =. Cheyenne, Wyo. ... Newport, R.1...... Washington address. Bros: raphy Page. The Hamilion...... -.. 43 The Portland. ..... ... 98 The Richmond... ..... 70 The Cochran .........¢. 112 The Cochran ........ 66 432. 1% street... ns 44 1001 Sixteenth street. .. 42 1755: 0) street... 90 1716: N:street......... .. 181 The Normandie ....... 19 New Willard .......... 19 700 street... 0. oa 71 TheRaleigh............ 120 The Shoreham ........ 112 1527.1 street =r, 0 99 The Cochran... ..0 110 1765 Mass. avenue .. ... 46 1455 Mass. avenue... .. 34 16253: K street... 7... 44 The Cochran... .... i.. 36 1534 22d street ......... 91 The Metropolitan... ... 40 The Metropolitan... ... 58 The National. ......... 13 The Gordon ... .......... 122 New Willard .......... 67 1433 Rhode Island ave . 97 a ds Aa 58 315 John Marshall place I 649 Fast Capitol street. . 55 Woodley, Woodley Lane 69 The Cochran =... 5. L 87 rn EE BS Sve 9 New Willard. ......... 99 Stoneleigh Court... 6 2g Bstreet 0... I The Arlington......... IT New Willard .......... 74 15351, street... 2. 10. 121 The Normandie. ....... 129 New Willard .......... 127 Rigas House .. =... 87 The Highlands. ....... 120 1109 Sixteenth street. . . 128 The Normandie ...... .. 69 The Highlands... ... 61 The Arlington... . 14 Rises House... ...... 9 The Colonial ...... =. 109 New Willard ......... 132 J60g Kstreet ... 0. 109 ne S00 Lo Home and City Residences. 363 fs f : THE HOUSE. t1]|JosEPH G. CANNON, Speaker, 1014 Vermont avenue. ALEXANDER MCDOWELL, Clerk, The Dewey. *HENRY CASSON, Sergeant-at-Arms, 33 B street. *+||FRANK B. LYON, Doorkeeper, The Logan. JoserH C. McELRoOY, Postmaster, oy A street SE. *t|Rev. HENRY NOBLE COUDEN, D. D., Chaplain, 1310 Columbia road. REPRESENTATIVES. Name. Home post-office. Washington address. or Page. *+Acheson, Ernest F....... Washington, Pa ...... rr Kstreet.. 0.00 106 ®jAdams,; Henry € ....... Madison, Wis......... The Richmond .......". 129 Adams, Robert, jr... ..... Philadelphia, Pa...... Metropolitan Club. .... 100 *Adamson, William C...... Carrollton, Ga. ....... The Oxford... 16 1 Aiken, Wyatt... io. io Abbeville, S.C ....... The Metropolitan ..... 110 i ¥Alexander,D. 8... il... Buffalo, N. V ......... The Normandie....... 87 i JAllen, Amost, on 0 Alfred; Me... The Roland... ..-..... 43 | Ames, Butler... ........ Towell, Masgs.......... Stoneleigh Court. ..... 48 *Babcock, Joseph W ..... Necedah, Wis ........ IT Bstreet oi cl. ool 129 %+iBadger, De Witt C...... Columbus, Ohio ...... The Bbbitt ........... 95 =llBaker, Robert.......... Brooklyn, N. ¥ ....... 1437 Rhode Island ave. 77 | ¥Bankhead, John H........ Payette Ala ........: Riggs House. ; 3 i : *||Bartholdt, Richard ...... 1. St. Lonis, Mo ......... 1746 M Street. 64 ¢ *Dartlett, Charles I... 5 Macon, Ga... .....5.; Riggs House... ....... 17 f *Bassett, Edward M ....... Brooklyn, N.Y ......: The Normandie ....... 2 Bates, Arthur Xl, .-. 0... Meadville, Pa........ The Normandie ....... 106 | Beall, Jack... i x soo Waxahachie, Tex..... The Cairo... -...... : 117 | Bede, J. Adamo... 0 Pine City, Minn... ... 415 Q street... 57 | *+Beidler, Jacob A... .... Cleveland, Ohio. ..... ‘The Shoreham ........ 97 *Bell, Theodore A .......... Napa, Cal... =. . The Cairo. iu. ica. 7 | *Benuy, Allan... :.......... Bayonne; N. J... 0... The Fredonia... .... 74 ¥Benton, Meecenas FE ...... Neosho, Mo... -......- I73Y OQ street, o.oo. 65 Bingham, Henry H...... .. Philadelphia, Pa ..... Normandie Annex..... 99 Birdsall, Benjamin P....... Clarion, Towa ........ The Hamilton... . ... 31 *|| Bishop, Roswell P ....... Ludington, Mich ..... 127 Sixth street SE.... 54 *Bonynge, Robert W ...... Denver, Colo... 5. --. TheCoivol. ... 1. 0. 10 *|Bontell, Henry SS... ... ..--. Chicage, TIL... ....... The Highlands. ....... 22 Bowers, Baton J........... Bay St. Louis, Miss. ..| 1323 Rhode Island ave. 60 *t||Bowersock, Justin D....| Lawrence, Kans...... The Hamilton.........: 35 *Bowie, Sydney J.......... Anniston, Ala... ..... The Cochran........... 2 Bradley, Thomas W....... Walden, N.Y... .....+. The Arlington ..-..... 82 | Brandegee, Frank B....... New London, Conn. ..| The Cochran.......... 12 | *Brantley, William G ...... Brunswick, Ga ....... The Chapin... vx... 18 *lBreazeale, Phanor........ Natchitoches, Ia ..... The Cochran. ......... 41 ! *Brick, Abraham 1, ..... "South Bend, Ind... :.. The Normandie ....... 30 i *Brooks, Franklin F ...... Colorado Springs, Colo| 1521 K street.....- .... 10 *Broussard, Robert F...... New Iberia, La....... Ricgs House... ....... 41 8 *+Brown, James W ........ Pifisburg, Pa. ..... . The Connecticut ...... 108 | *|| Brown, Webster E....... Rhinelander,Wis ..... The Hamilion....-.... 131 | Brownlow, Walter P....... Jonesboro, Tenn . ..... 1018 East Capitol street 113 | *Brundidge, Stephen, jr. ..| Searcy, Ark.......... The Portland ........ .. 4 i Buckman, Clarence B...... Little Falls, Minn . ...| The National ......... 57 *Burgess, George. ...... Gonzales, Tex ....:.... The Normandie ....... 118 | (4 ¥ Burke, Charles ....... Pierre, S. Dak........ TheDewey.-........... 112 : : *Burkett, Elmer]. ......... lincoln, Nebr......... The Dewey ........... 67 : § *Purleigh, Bdwin C........ Augusta, Me..v....... The Raleigh... ........ 44 { #| Burleson, Albert S....... Austin, Tex... ...... 1272 N. Hampshire ave. 118 ; 364 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Name. Home post-office. Washington address Biogs ; * [raphy Page. *Burnett,Johnl,.........: Gadsden, Ala. ........ o35 RK street... i... 3 Burton, Theodore FE. ....... Cleveland, Ohio ...... 732 Seventeenth® street. 97 *l|| Butler, James J.......... St. Louis, Mo......... The Raleigh oc... 64 Z[|[Butler, Thomas S. ...... West Chester, Pa ..... 1330 K street. ......... 101 *1Byrd, Adam M ......... Philadelphia, Miss. ...| The Metropolitan ..... 60 Calderhead, William A ..... Marysville, Kans ..... TheDewey.. ::.-..... 35 ¥1Caldwell,Ben F......... Chatham, Il ......... Ebbitt louse... .. =: 25 *Campbell, Philip? ....... Pittsburg, Kans ...-.. The Dewey ........ ... 35 Candler, Ezekiel S., jr...... Corinth, Miss: -...... The Varnum........ .: 58 ji Cannon, Joseph G ...... Danville, To. 0 1014 Vermont avenue. . 24 Capron, Adin B............ Stillwater, R. 1... ... The Cochran’. :-. an 109 #{7Cassel, Fl. Burd... ...... Marietta, Pa... ..... The Shoreham ........ 102 Cassingham, John W ...... Coshocton, Ohio ..... The Driscoll ........ 96 Castor, George A... ..-.. .. Philadelphia, Pa ..... New Willard. ........ 100 *Clark, Champ... ......- Bowling Green, Mo. ..| 1501 Eleventh street... 63 Clayton, Henry D......... -- Eufaula, Ala.......... Rices House. ......... 2 Cochran, Charles EF... ... .. St. Joseph, Mo". ...... The National. ..... .... 62 Cochran, W. Bourke ....... New York City....... 1333 Sixteenth street .. 79 Connell, William ...... ..... Seranton Pas Lo nll, sr a 102 ®Conner, James PP... .. 0... Denison, Iowa........ The Hamilton......... 33 *Cooper, Allen B........... Uniontown, Pa....... The Dewey... . 55. 106 *Cooper, Henry A’, ..0..... Racine, Wis... ....... The Bverelt. .... ..... | 120 *ittliCooper,SamE ........ Beanmont, Tex. ....... The Metropolitan... ... 117 Cousins, Robert G......... Tipton, Towa ......... New Willard .......... 32 *Cowherd, William S. ...... Kansas City, Mo ..... The Highlands... -... 63 Croft, Theodore G... .. .... Atken;S:C IoBstreet NE... 110 *lCromer, George W ....... Muncie. Ind... FheDewey...... i... 29 * Crowley, Joseph B........ Robinson, 111 ..... ... The National... ...+ . 26 *Crumpacker,EdgarD ..... Valparaiso, Ind +. ... The Dewey .v...o.vv. 30 XCurrier, Frank D.... 1... Canaan, N..H ........ The Dewey:......... 71 Curtis, Charles .0. ‘Topeka, Kans... -.. .. The National... ....... 34 ¥||Cushman, Francis W....| Tacoma, Wash ....... gga Mistreet i... oon 126 *Dalzell, John... .... 0. Pittsburg, Pa... ...... 1605 N. Hampshire ave 107 *Danjels, Milton] ......... Riverside, Cal. ....... The Hamilton... ..... -. 8 Darragh, ArchibaldB ...... St. Louis, Mich... ..... ‘Fhe Hamilton......... 55 *itDavey, RobertC .......| New Orleans, Ia ..... Riges House... ...... 41 Davidson, James H ........ Oshkosh, Wis. ....... The Dewey 0... ... 131 *Pavis, Charles R......... St. Peter, Minn. ...... Riggs House. ......... 56 2 Davis, Robert W .......... Palatlen, Fla ..-... The Oxford... ..o..-: 14 *Dayton, Alston G......... Philippi, W. Va...... The Marlborough ..... 127 #2:De Armond, David A’... ..[ Butler, Mo ...... ..... The Varnum .. 2... .o. 63 *7itlDeemer, Elias... ..... Williamsport, Pa ..... The Arlington... .... 103 Denny, James W ... i... Baltimore, Md. oc dos sn aaa 45 Dickerman, Charles F.....)- Milton, Pa ..........» The Shoreham ........ 103 Dinsmore, Hugh A ........ Payetteville, Ark ..... 1314 XK street... .... i. 5 *Dixon, Joseph M..... .... Missoula, Mont ...... ITT Kstreet.......... 67 #*7Dougherty, John ........ Liberty, Mo-....,.. Ebbitt House .......... 62 Douglas, William H ....... New York, N.Y .. ..... New Willard .......... 81 *|Dovener, Blackburn B ...| Wheeling, W.Va ..... Riggs House.,......... 127 *¥Draper, William H ...... Lansingburg, N.Y... .[ The Cochran.......... 83 *Dresser, Solomon R....... Bradford, Pa......... New Willard ..... ..... 105 Driscoll, Michael E....... Syracuse, N. ¥....... .. The Cairo... ....»:+. 85 *Punwell, Charles. .... .. Brooklyn, N. V.: The Normandie ....... 76 *Dwight, John W.......... Dryden, N. V ..:. 0. The Arlington... .» 85 *7ll|Bmerich, Martin ....... Chicago, THL.......... ., The Cairo: ....,....... 20 Bech, JolinJ.............. Ia Crosse, Wis ....... oz Istreet............ 130 TBvane Alvin... .o on. Bbensburg, Pa... The Dewey........... 104 Bield, Scotto. oe Calvert, Tex... The Cochran......- 118 Binley, David B........ ..5. Norkville, S.C... .... The National .......... 111 *Fitzgerald, John J ........ Brooklyn, N. V...... 1324 Massachusettsave. 78 *Pitzpatrick, Morgan C....| Hartsville, Tenn ..... Phe National ......... 114 Flack, William H ......... Malone, N. ¥........ ya da i rr Ss | 84 ————— em oi MEE re — oP Ye ee — y RY Home and City Residences. 365 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Name. Home post-office. Washington address. hie raphy. S Page. Flood, Henry D .....0 00... West Appomattox, Va. 2028 P street......... 125 *tFordney, Joseph W...... Saginaw, Mich ....... The Dewey ......."... 54 Foss, George Edmund ..... Chicago, Ill... 0. The Grafton vo. wn... 22 ®Poster, David: J ui. oo; Burlington, Nt... 1445 Massachusetts ave. 121 Foster, George P..........} Chicago, Tl ...... = The Portland. ........ 21 *Fowler,Charles N........ Rlizabeth, N.J ....... The Shoreham ........ 73 *French, Burton L,....... .. Moscow, Idaho... .... 1508 Qstreet..’. is 19 ¥Fuller, Charles EB... Belvidere, NL... 0c Riggs House... .. [2.0 22 Gaines, John W........... Nashville, Tenn ...... 1325 Gslreet..... 7% 1 115 ®Gaines, Joseph H...... ... Charleston, W. Va. ...| The Cairo............. 127 *Garber, Harvey C........ Greenville, Ohio ... .| New Willard.......... 93 Gardner, Augustus P...... Hamilton, Mass. ..... The Albany... ..... J. 49 2ilGardner; Jom J... 55 Atlantic City, N.J .....| The Dewey ... 1.50. 72 *tGardner, Washington ....| Albion, Mich......... 1303 Clifton street. .... 53 *Garner, John N........:.. Uvalde, Tex. ........: 1311 Kstreet.......... 120 ®i7Gibson, Henry R. .... .... Knoxville, Tenn ..... 1815 Sixteenth street. . . ¥13 *jGilbert, George G. ...... Shelbyville, Ky ...... ‘Fhe National... ....'.. .. 39 Gillespie, Oscar W.......... Port Worth, Tex. ..... The National: 00. x. 119 ¥Gillet, Charles W ........ Addison, N.V......... The Hamilton: ........ 86 Gillett, Frederick H ....... Springfield, Mass . . ... 1428 K street... 0.0 47 Gillett, James N..... 5... . Borel, Cali cris, oo nian i ainsi 7 Glass, Carter... on. Tynchburg, Va....... The Normandie... .... 124 Goebel, Herman P. ........ Cincinnati, Ohio. ..... The Cochran ......."... 92 Goldfogle, Henry M....... New York, NUN il ean lad ans 78 *tillGooch, D. Linn... .... Covington, Ky... The Shoreham... ..... 38 #*Goulden, Joseph A..... 4 NewYork, N.Y ...... 1739 Corcoran street . . . 82 *iGraff, Joseph V. i... .. Peoria, TI... The Dewey .... ....... 23 ||Granger, Daniel L.D ..... Providence, R.1...... gol Sixteenth street....[ ‘Ico Greene, William S......... Fall River, Mass. ..... 816 Connecticut ave . .. 51 *7|Gregg, Alexander W....| Palestine, Tex........ 1737 Corcoran street . . . 119 *+tGriftith, Francis M ..... Vevay, Ind... 2... 2. The Varnum .......... 28 Griggs, James M .. 0... Dawson, Ga... ....... 1870 California avenue. 15 ¥Grosvenor, Charles H ....| Athens, Ohio......... The Dewey ........... 95 ¥Gudger, James M. jr... .... Asheville, N.C ...... Riggs House. ...... 90 *Hamilton, Edward L, ..... Niles, Mich ........... TheDewey... ......... 53 *Hamlin, Courtney W...... Springfield, Mo... .. 201 N. Capitol street. . . 63 *Hardwick, Thomas W..... Sandersville, Ga ..... Riggs House"... . .. 18 *Harrison, Francis B..... .. New York, N. Y .. ..| 1301 Sixteenth street .. 8o *{ Haskins, Kittredge ..... | Brattleboro, Vt. ..... TheCochran .......... 121 Haugen, Gilbert N..... .... Northwood, Iowa... ... The Normandie ....... 31 Hay, James vin 0 00 Madison, Va .......... The Bancroft........., 124 Hearst, William R......... New NYork, NoX oll nanan aw 79 *iHedge, Thomas .......... Burlington, Iowa . .... The Portland ......... 31 Heflin, J. Thomas... ..... Lafayette, Ala........ The Metropolitan... ... 3 Hemenway, James A ...... Boonville, Ind. ....... The Portland... 27 XjHenry, BS. Stevens... Rockville,Conn ...... zn Westreel. ois II Henry; Robert], .......... Waco, Tex 70 Riggs House ’........ 119 *t|| Hepburn, William P....; Clarinda, Iowa ....... 1124 E. Capitol street. . 32 *iHermann, Binger........ Roseburg, Oreg....... 1307 Roanoke street . . . 98 *||Hildebrant, Charles Q ...| Wilmington, Ohio ....| The Sherman ......... 93 *fH1ll, Ebenezer J......... .. Norwalk, Conn ....... TheiCochraf.......0. 7 12 Hill, Wilson'S.. 5.0 Winond, Miss... 0 The Metropolitan ..... 60 *||Hinshaw, Edmund H. ...| Fairbury, Nebr....... 214 N. Capitol street... 68 *Hitchcock, Gilbert M..... Omaha, Nebr ..... 0... The Shoreham ........ 68 *Ht, Robert: R00. Mount Morris, 111... ... 1507 K street... /...0 22 *Hogz, Herschel M.... |... .. Telluride, Colo....-. 1433 Huntington place. 10 *|Bolliday, Elias §... | Brazil, Ind. ..... 0. FEbbitt House™.",... .... 28 *Hopkins, Frank A. ....... Prestonsburg, Ky. . ... Riggs House. .... .. 39 *7 Houston, Henry A ... ... Millsboro, Del... ...... Riggs House...) ..... 13 *Howard, William M ...... Lexington, Ga. ... ... The Bancroft. ......... 7 *Howell, Benjamin F,.....| New Brunswick, N.J..| The Cochran. ... cei 72 366: Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Name. ome post-office. Washington address. Gul : : Page. Howell, Joseph ...........: Logan, Btaly... os 0. The Driscoll. :....5v 120 * Huff, George F ....... ... Greensburg, Pa....... 1315 Sixteenth street. . . 105 *Hughes, James A... .:...: Huntington, W. Va ..| Riggs House ......... 128 Hughes, William ........... Paterson, Now i oi The St. James... 73 *tHull, John A F......... Des Moines, Iowa... .. The Cairo... iia. 32 * Humphrey, William E .. ..| Seattle, Wash ........ 930 M street... ....... 126 * Humphreys, Benjamin G. .| Greenville, Miss. ..... The Varnum..... ade 59 Hunt, JehnT.......u. St. Louis, Mo... 7 E-street... c.vi rs 64 * Hunter, W. Godfrey .....| Burkesville, Ky...... The St. James... ...... 40 *¥+Jackson, Amos H ....... Freemont, Ohio... . 7... Ebbitt House. ........ 95 Jackson, William H........ Salisbury, Md ........ The Arlington... 45 */| James, Ollie M.......... Marion, Kyi... 0... The Cairo ....vo...... 37 ®jenkins,JohnJ........... Chippewa Falls, Wis. .| The Hamilton ........ 132 *|| Johnson, Joseph T......... Spartanburg, S. C..... 214 N. Capitol street. ..| 111 #Jones, Wesley L.......... North Yakima, Wash .| 227 New Jersey ave. SKE. 126 *Jones, William A......... Warsaw, Va ........... 1709: Q street. ......... 122 Kehoe, James IN ........... Maysville, Ky ........ 1620 Kighteenth street. 39 Keliher, John A oi. Boston, Mass ......... The Shoreham. ....... 50 *1 Kennedy, James. ....... Youngstown, Ohio. ...| Riggs House.......... 96 Ketcham, John H ......... Dover Plains, N.Y..... The Arlington ........ 83 Binkaid, M.P......0.0.. 00 O'Neill, Nebr. .... ...... Tera Kostreet. io. 0... 69 ®il Kitchin, Claude... 2. Scotland Neck, N.C ...| The Driscoll ........... 88 Kitchin, William W ....... Roxboro, N. C....... The Normandie....... 89 24 Kline, Marcus C. I, ... .[ ‘Allentown, Pa .< ..... = Riggs House... ...... 103 *11Kluttz, Theodore F ..... Salisbury, N.C... The Colomial..., ......., 89 *Knapp, Charles 1, ..4....: Lowville, N.Y .... ... The Normandie ....:.. 85 ®Kuoph, Philip... ven Chicago, JIL... 5. el, The Dewey . oi. 0, 21 Knowland, Joseph R ...... Alameda, Cal .......... The Arlington ........ 7 *17 Ryle, ThomasB......... Troy, Olio... The Hamilton..." .. 93 *Yacey,JohuPF............ Oskaloosa, Iowa...... Riggs House: u 0 32 * Lafean, Daniel F....... vi Vork, Pa nS New: Willard. .... .. ..... 105 ZTamar, Robert... ......... Houston, Mo... ....... 1404 M street. ..0... x. 65 ¥TLamar, William B........ Monticello, Fla...... The Shoreham. ....... 14 Flamb, John, ............. Richmond, Va .... ... The National .......... 123 Tandis, Charles B.......... Delphi, Ind... io... The Portland .. ... .. .;. 29 Landis, Frederick ......... Logansport, Ind . . . . .. he Portland i.>... =. 30 *Tawrence, George P... .... North Adams, Mass. ..| The Cochran.......... 47 “21 egaré, George 8S... = Charleston, S.C... the Dewey... oii. 110 *Lester, Rufus B ........... Savannah, Ga ........ The: Cairol, nino 15 Lever, Asbury B ......o... lexington, 8.C ...... 206 Delaware ave. NE . III *flewis, ElijahB........ Montezuma, Ga ...... The Metropolitan . .... 16 ®lilley, George l,......:,: Waterbury, Conn..... New Willard. ....... ... II *2rLind, John: oni Minneapolis, Minn ....| The Cairo ...... ..... 56 ii lindsay, George FH... ... Brooklyn, N.Y ....... The Raleigh... .......... 76 Littaner, Tucius N........... Gloversville, N.Y ....| The Albany........... 84 Little, Jom So... 5.000.005 Greenwood, Ark ..... The Varnum........... 5 * 1 Littlefield, Charles E . ...| Rockland, Me .......| The Hamilton ........ 43 Livernash, Edward J....... San Francisco, Cal ...| The Hawthorne. ....... 7 Livingston, Leonidas F....| Covington, Ga ....... 1916 Baltimore street . . 16 *1loyd, James. T........ Shelbyville, Mo. ..... 1314 Connecticut ave . . 62 || Longworth, Nicholas. ....| Cincinnati, Ohio ..... 1321 Connecticut ave . . 92 Yorimer,Willilam.......... Chicago, Ill... 1. ot The Raleigh.......... 21 jl Loud, George A. .... ... Au Sable, Mich....... The Dewey. 6. vat 54 * Loudenslager, Henry C ...| Paulsboro, N.J ....... The Dewey. ..i....i.. .00. v2 T Lovering, William C. .. ... Xannton, Mass ....... The Arlington ......... 51 *| Lucking, Alfred . ........ Detroit, Mich. ..... :: The Dewey ........... 52 McAndrews, James. ....... Chicago, 11. ois The Raleigh .......... 21 McCall, Samuel W......... Winchester, Mass. . ... The Shoreham ........ 49 McCarthy, John}. ......... Ponca, Nebr... 208 Delaware ave. NE. . 68 * McCleary, James T ....... Mankato, Minn. ...... he Regent. ....% 1... 56 *McCreary, George D....., Philadelphia, Pa... ... Stoneleigh Court... .,, 101 Se Si iit v or -~ a I Home and City Residences. 367 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Name Home i Biog- . post-office. Washington address. raphy Page. McDermott, Allan I,....... Jersey City, N.J...... 1307 Qo street .......... 74 Mclachlan, James ........ Pasadena, Cal ......... New Willard. ......... 8 Mclain, Frank A. ......... Gloster, Miss ........ The Varpum.......... 61 *ttMcMorran, Henry ...... Port Huron, Mich ....| The Normandie. ...... 54 ¥| McNary, William S...... Boston, Mass... ... vss 1205 New Hampshire 50 avenue. ¥Macon, Robert B....... .... Helena, Ark Joc The Varnum.,,..;.. 4 ¥Maddox, John W........... Rome, Ga. ....... 0, The Metropolitan ..... 17 Mahon, Thaddeus M . ...... Chambersburg, Pa ....| The Oxford ........... 104 *Mann, James R.... Chicago, 111. ........ 1720 Q street... 0k 20. Marsh, Benjamin ¥........ Warsaw, I11 .....0 0. New Willard........... 23 ¥Marshall, Thomas F ...... Oakes, N. Dak....... The Cochran... ..n5 9I ¥Martin, Bben'W.. ...... 0... Deadwood, S. Dak ....| TheDriscoll .......... 112 Maynard, Harry 1L......... Portsmouth, Va ...... The Rochambeau ..... 123 *Mevyer, Adolph; ii vn New Orleans, Ia ..... 1700. Q street. ......... 41 Miers, Robert W ............. Bloomington, Ind ....| Riggs House.......... 27 *Miller, James M .......... Council Grove, Kans. .| 3213 Thirteenth street . 35 *iMinor, Edward S$ ......... Sturgeon Bay, Wis ....| 49 D street SE... .. > 131 *¥Mondell, Frank W........ Newcastle, Wyo ...... The Cochran...» 4 130 Moon, John A... .... Chattanooga, Tem ia. co. y vasa Linas 100 *+Moon, Reuben O ........ Philadelphia, Pa. ..... New Willard.......... 104 Morgan, Stephen... ... Oak Hill, Chio........ 210 Delaware ave. NE . 94 ¥Morrell, Edward de V..... Philadelphia, Pa...... t7or Wostreet... non 101 Mudd, Sydney FE .......... Yaplata, Md odio ono is coin) Bi 46 * Murdock, Victor... =... Wichita, Kans... ..... The Cochran. ......... 36 *Needham, James C........ Modesto, Cal ......... The Normandie....... 8 *Nevin, Bobert M....... ...: Dayton, Ohio .-...... TheCochran.... 3... 92 ¥Norris, George W........ ... McCook, Nebr... .. 113 First street NE . .. 68 ¥[Olmsted, Marlin BE... ...... Harrisburg, Pa’... 0. The Arlington... ~... To4 #Otis, Norton PP. iii.ii. Yonkers, N. Vo... «ii The Portland ....... .. 82 FOtjen, Theobold. .......... Milwaukee, Wis. ..... The Dewey... 1... 0 130 *Overstreet, Jesse. ... .... 0! Indianapolis, Ind . . . .. The Portland ......... 29 *ti Padgett, Lemuel P ....| Columbia, Tenn... ... Rigg House .......... 115 *Page,Bobert N........... Aberdeen, N.C ....... Riggs House. ......... 8&9 *iPaliner, Henry W-... | .. Wilkesbarre, Pa... ... The Arlington ...... 0 102 *jParker, BR. Wayne ....... Newark, No. J... 1723 Rhode Island ave. 73 ||| Patterson, George R..... Aghland, Pa... ...... 1745 Q street... ....... 102 Patterson, Gilbert B ....... Maxton, N.C... 0.0 ‘The Metropolitan ..... 89 *Patterson, Malcolm R ... | Memphis, Tenn ...... The Portland. ........ 116 *Payne, Sereno B-.......... Auburn, N. Vo. Toa The Normandie. ...... 85 *Pearre, George A |... Cumberland, Md. ..... The Bancroft... 46 Perkins, James B...... ..4 Rochester, N. VV... 1705 MH siveet iL... Jo. 86 *Pilerce, Rice A wv rl) Union City, Tenn ..... FEbbitt House ...... .-. 115 Pinckney, John M........... Hempstead, Tex. ..... 1011 Thirteenth street . 118 *} Porter, H. Kirke... Pitisburg, Pal. ..... 21 Lafayette square ... 108 Pou, Edward W ........... Smithfield, N.C... ... Riggs House. ......... 89 *Powers, lLlewellyn........ Houlton, Me... .. New Willard... .. Aa 44 -*¥Powers, Samuel, ........ Newton, Mass. .... =.["The Arlington ........ 50 *||||/| Prince, George W ..... Galesburg, Tl... . 3113 Thirteenth street. 23 *Pujo, Arséne P.. i... 0. Take Charles, Ta..... TheCochran..... .... 42 *Rainey, Henry T... i. 4 Carrollton, 11.2... fhe Driscoll... ... 25 ¥Randel], Choice B.......... Sherman, Tex ........ The National .......... 117 *Ransdell, Joseph E ....... Lake Providence, 1a..| The Cairo ............ ; 42 Reeder, William A ........ Togan; Kans: ou 202 A street SE... 36 *lBeid, Charles C .57..... Morrilton, Ark... uf Se 5 Rhed, Jorn 8S... ............ Bushville, Ky... 0 The Raleigh... 37 Richardson, James D ...... Murfreesboro, Tenn. ..| 1103 Sixth street ...... 114 ttRichardson, William... .. Huntsville; Ala’, Riggs House. ..-....... 3 Rider, Ira Bdgar .... .. ... New York, N. V..... 417 A street SE... ... 8o *liRixey, John B.,.,...; Brandy, Va........... 1700 Fifteenth street ..| 124 368 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Name, Home post-office. Washington address. Blog: i raphy. s Page. Robb, Edward ......0i. 0 Perryville, Mo........ The Varnum...... cv. 64 *Roberts, Ernest W........ Chelsea, Mass ..... ... 2924 Fourteenth street. 49 * Robertson, Samuel M..... Baton Rouge, Ia..... Riggs House .......... 42 * Robinson, JamesM .. ...; Fort Wayne, Ind ..... The Driscoll i iv. 30 ¥*|| Robinson, Joseph T ..... Lonoke Arki,.......... Ebbitt House. ...... x! 5 *Rodenberg, William A. ...| East St. Louis, Il. .... The Dewey:.....o-.i.s 25 *Rucker, William W ...... Keytesville, Mo ...... The Auburn: ..... .. i 62 Ruppert, Jacob, jr ..-.... .« New York, N.V...... New Willard. ....0....0 81 Russell, Gordon .......... .. Lyler. Tex. o.oo iin The Varnum... ... 0... 117 Ryan, Wiliam H ........ Buffalo, NY Jouve! The Cairo, civil, 86 Scarborough, Robert B..... Conway, 8S: C......... The Metropolitan ..... IIT: ®Scott, Charles BB. .... ..... .. Tola, Kans. 5. oo The Dewey... i 34 * ||| Scudder, Townsend. . . .. Glen Head, N.Y... The Highlands... .. 75 * ||| Shackleford, Dorsey W .| Jefferson City, Mo....| The National ......... 63 || Sheppard, Morris ........ Texarkana, Tex ...... The Normandie....... 116 | Sherley, Swager........... Louisville, Ky... 2. New Willard... 38 *Sherman, James S........ Ullca; Nao inican ld The Normandie....... 85 *Shiras, George, 3d. ....: 7.1 Allegheny, Pa. i... Stoneleigh Court...... 107 *1 || Shober, Francis E ..... New York, N. VY... Riges House ..5i.... 82 Shull, Joseph HL. :.. 0... Stroudsburg, Pa...... The Hamilton ............ 106 EiSibley, Joseph € .... i... Pranklin, Pa ......... 52 Kstreet vv. oi 107 271 Sims, Thetus W... .... .. Linden, Tenn. .....:. 1538 Seventeenth st... 115 *| | Slayden, James L . ... ... San Antonio, Tex..... 1631 Rstreet.......... 119 2+ Slemp, Campbell... ... Big Stone Gap, Va'...| Ebbitt House......... 124 Small John H..... -..... Washington, N.C. ilo sr iss dans 88 ¥Smith, David H...... 4... Hodgensville, Ky... .. Riggs Honse........... 38 ®Smith, George J......... +x Kingston, N.Y... ... New Willard ......... 84 ®Smith, George W ......... Murphysboro, Il . . . .. 1313 Columbia road ... 26 *Smith, Samuel W ........ Pontiac, Mich ........ The Buckingham ..... 53 XSmith, Walter I. ........... Council Bluffs, Iowa ..| The Hamilton ........ 33 *Smith, William Alden. ...| Grand Rapids, Mich..| New Willard ......... 53 Smith, William O......... Punxsutawney, Pa. ...| The Driscoll.......... 107 Smith, WilliamR ......... Colorado, Tex... i val os chasse sail int, 120 *Snapp, Howard M........ Joliet, TL. ois inion The Cairo... ws. 22 *| Snook, John 'S, ......... Paulding, Ohio....... Sto H street... 5 93 Southall, Robert G ........ Amelia, Va .......... 723 Hl street i... oo 123 * Southard, James H....... Toledo, Ohio......... Fhe Hamilton... ...... 94 Southwick, George N ...... Albany, NV... 0.0. The Normandie....... 83 * Spalding, Burleigh F..... Fargo, N. Dak .. .. 821 N.Carolina ave. SE. 9I Sparkman, Stephen M ..... Tampa, Fla... 7... 00% The Metropolitan ..... 14 *4 Sperry, Nehemiah D..... New Haven, Conn. ...| The Buckingham... ... 12 #11 Spight, Thomas ....... Ripley, Miss ........ ~The Varnum..........- 59 Stafford, William H ....... Milwaukee, Wis ..... The Cochran... ...... 130 *Stanley, Augustus O...... Henderson, Ky ...... 1325 G street o.oo 37 * Steenerson, Halvor. ...... Crookston, Minn... .. The Colonial... ...0 0. 58 *1 7 Stephens, John H ... =. Vernon, Tex .,...:.. The Fredonia... .... 119 ¥Sterling, John'A:......... Bloomington, I11..... The Calvo i. uo 24 * Stevens, Fred C.......... St. Panl, Minn'....... The Cairo ......7... 57 XSullivan, JohnA ......... Boston, Mass .......- 1730 Corcoran street. . . 50 Sullivan, Timothy D ..... +p New York, NV... TheRegent. i. vis; 78 Tl Sulloway, Cyrus A....| Manchester, N.H.....| 234 New Jersey ave. ... 71 Sulzer, William. ......... NewYork, N. ¥V...... 131 Bstreet SE ....... 79 *Swanson, Claude A ....... Chatham Va......... 1710 Sixteenth street . . 123 Talbott, J. Frederick C .....[ Lutherville, Md. cial. i. ovr Jo sii ain. 45 Fate, Parish Carter........ Jasper, Gao iasn I'he National... ...... 17 Tawney, James A. ......... Winona, Minn ....... Riggs House. ......... 55 ’Faylor, George W.. ......... Demopolis, Aln......, Yoi3 P street. o........ 2 *4 i Thayer, John B ....... Worcester, Mass...... The Normandie....... 48 *||Thomas, CharlesR....... Newbern, N.C ....... Riggs House........:. 88 HM Thomas, Lot... .....v.... Storm Lake, Towa ....| Riggs House.......... 33 Thomas, W, Aubrey......s Niles, Ohio......... swothe Raleigh iv, ve vs 97 y _ ie y Home and City Residences. 369 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Name. Home post-office. Washington address. oy Page. *Pirrell, Charles Q:....5. Natick, Mass ....... The Normandie....... 48 *Townsend, Charles K . . ... Jackson, Mich... .:.5..[ The Dewey. .......... 52 Zl Frimble, Southi........... Frankfort, Ky ....... Riggs House.......... 39 *Underwood, Oscar W . . ... Birmingham, Ala... .. Stoneleigh Court... ... 4 *t|| Vendiver, Willard D.... Cape Girardeau, Mo ..| 1400 Twenty-first street 65 *¥Van Duzer, Clarence D....| Tonopah, Nev... .. |... New Willard.......... 70 Van Voorhis, Henry C. ..... Zanesville, Ohio... ... The Dewey... ...5.. 96 *|| Volstead, Andrew J ..... Granite Falls, Minn ..| 231 Mass. ave. NE..... 57 *tVreeland, Edward B. .... Salamanca, N. Y...... The Dewey... i... 87 Wachter, Frank C......... Baltimore, Md... vb aniianaian socials 45 Wade, Martin] .... 5. 0: Iowa City, Jowa...... The Hamilton ........ 31 *tWadsworth, James W ....| Geneseo, N.Y........ 1755 IE street... 86 Wallace, Robert M......... Mag 10lia, Ark ........ The Metropolitan ..... 6 *Wanger, Irving P..... Norristown, Pa....... 1217 Vermont avenue. . 101 *Warner, Vespasian. .... JaClinton, TW. in ini The Calvo... cova i 24 *tttWarnock, Willian: R ..| Urbana, Ohio ........ The Highlands ....... 94 Watson, James XB ...... 0. Rushville, Ind". ...: .. The Portland: ....... ..; 29 Webb, Edwin ¥Y ........... Shelby, No. C2. on: Riggs House. ......... 90 *| Webber, Amos R........ Elyria, Ohio... 1... The Driscoll: ..... 95 Weems, Capell 1........... St. Clairsville, Ohio ..|: Riggs Homnse...... i... .. 96 Weisse, Charles HH 5... .. Sheboygan Falls, Wis. The Dewey .......:.., 130 “Wiley, Ariosto- A... .. 5 Montgomery, Ala. .... The Metropolitan ..... 2 *Wiley, Willlam H ........|[ Hast Orange, N. J....| The Highlands ....... 73 *Williams, James R ....... Carmi, NL... bv. is The Driscoll... .: oA 26 *t|| Williams, John S...... Yazoo City, Miss .. ... The Metropolitan ..... 61 tWilliamson, John N ...... Prineville, Oreg.... . .. {ror N streef. 0.0 0, 99 Wilson, Frank BE. ........ Brooklyn, N. Y...... The Raleigh. 5.0... 76 *Wilson, William W....... Chicago, Tl... ........ The Dewey ............. 20 Wood, Tra W.............. Trenton, N. J ........ The Normandie... ... 72 *Woodyard, Harry C ...... Spencer, W. Va....... Riggs House... .o: 5 127 Wright, Charles B....... Susquehanna, Pa. .... New Willard... ....... 103 Wynn, William J.......... San Francisco, Cal....[;The Donald ........., 8 HiYoung, HH. Olin... Ishpeming, Mich. .... The Hamilton. ........: 55 Zenor, William 1. ......... Corydon, Ind ....... & 213 North Capitol oes) 28 DELEGATES. | *Kalanianaole, Jonah K . ... Honolulu, Hawaii . Lm The Dewey... ........ [> 133 McGuire, Bird S........... 0. Guthrie, Okla... ...... Fhe Raleigh... =. .... a #*1||Rodey, Bernard S...... Albuquerque, N. Mex. i Riggs Honse. ... ...... [134 #Wilson, John EB .«......... Prescott, Ariz ........ The Dewey .........0 Jip Bete eal naal YOR RESIDENT COMMISSIONER FROM PORTO RICO. , ; | | * Degetau, Federico... .... San Juan........ 0... 134 58-3D—2D ED—24 | 1761 Pistreet. 0 | 370 Congressional Directory. \ ( DIRECTORY OF APARTMENT HOUSES, CLUBS, AND il HOTELS. Albany, corner of Seventeenth and H streets. Albemarle, corner Seventeenth and T streets. Arlington, corner of Vermont avenue and H street. : | Army and Navy Club, Connecticut avenue and I street. ih Auburn, 2148 Pennsylvania avenue. ith | Augusta, corner New York and New Jersey avenues. Il Bancroft, corner of H and Eighteenth streets. Brunswick, I street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets. Buckingham, 918 Fifteenth street. Cairo, Q street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets. Cecil, corner Fifteenth and I, streets. | Chapin, 1415 Chapin street. Chicago, 345 Pennsylvania avenue. | Cochran, corner of Fourteenth and K streets. | Colonial, corner of Fifteenth and H streets. | Columbia, 1405 Binney street. Concord, corner New Hampshire and Oregon avenues. Connecticut, Connecticut avenue and M street. Cosmos Club, 1520 H street. Coywood, 1223-1225 I, street. lit Cumberland, Massachusetts avenue, near Fourteenth street. ii} Decatur, Florida avenue near R street. Dewey, I, street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets. Dumbarton, 623 Pennsylvania avenue. Dupont, 1717 Twentieth street. Ebbitt House, corner of Fourteenth and F streets. ; Ethelhurst, Fifteenth and I, streets. : Everett, H street, between Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets. : ! Farragut, corner Seventeenth and I streets. Fredonia, H street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets. Garfield, gor Thirteenth street. Gladstone, 1423 R street. Goodwin, 1417 Park street. Gordon, Sixteenth street, between I and K streets. Grafton, Connecticut avenue, corner of De Sales street. Hamilton, corner of Fourteenth and K streets. Hawthorne, 1527 I street. Highlands, "Connecticut and California avenues. Towa, corner Thirteenth and O streets. Lambert, 131 A street NE. Teamington, corner Fourteenth and Clifton streets. | Lenox, 1523 I, street. f | | Don Carlos, 2007 O street. \ | Donald, 1o10 Thirteenth street. ; | Driscoll, corner First and B streets. : ¢ i | Lincoln, corner Tenth and H streets. Litchfield, go6-910 Fourteenth street. Llewellyn, 2224 F street. Logan, Iowa circle. Loudoun, Fast Capitol street, between Third and Fourth streets. Lowell, 1907 Fourteenth street. : Marlborough, 817 Eighteenth street. Maury, corner of Nineteenth and G streets. | Mendota, Twentieth street and Kalorama avenue. | Metropolitan Club, Vermont avenue and H street (Arlington Annex). 4 Metropolitan Hotel, Pennsylvania avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets. 2 Montrose, Fourteenth and H streets. National, corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Sixth street. New Willard, Fourteenth street and Pennsylvania avenue, Norfolk, 205 D street N BH, : Directory of Apartment Houses, Clubs, and Hotels. 371 Normandie, corner of Fifteenth and I streets. 4 Normandie Annex, 1405 I street. \ Northampton, 1405 W street. f Olympia, corner Fourteenth and Roanoke streets. Ontario, Ontario avenue. Oxford, corner of Fourteenth street and New York avenue. | Plaza, Washington circle. Plymouth, 1236 Eleventh street. | Portland, corner of Fourteenth street and Vermont avenue. | J Portner, corner of Fifteenth and U streets. Raleigh, corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Twelfth street. Regent, Fifteenth street and Pennsylvania avenue. | Richburn, Thirteenth and G streets. | Richmond, Seventeenth and H streets. | Riggs House, corner of Fifteenth and G streets. | Roanoke, 1348 Roanoke street. Rochambeau, 815 Connecticut avenu | Rockingham, Rhode Island avenue. : | Roland, corner Second street and Maryland avenue NE. | St. James, corner Sixth street and Pennsylvania avenue. | Savoy, 2804 Fourteenth street. | Sherman, corner Fifteenth and I, streets. i | Shoreham, corner of Fifteenth and H streets. | Stanhope, corner First and H streets. : | Stoneleigh Court, Connecticut avenue and 1, street. Stratford, corner Fourteenth street and Sheridan avenue. : | Varnum, corner of New Jersey avenue and C street SE. Victoria, 2522 Fourteenth street. | Westover, corner of Sixteenth and U streets. Wicomico, 225 New Jersey avenue. Windsor, 1425 T street. i \ Woodley, Columbia road between Nineteenth and Iwentieth streets. or Woodley, Woodley lane. | | | { | { Congressional Directory. 372 4 ¥ ALABAMA. LAUDERDALE TT ee te \ — — ] or 7 >isronp | % COLBERT} © - Jy EQ! TD oe ] PERE [rrankun | Zi Morean [ varion WINSTON icon = | LE. I WALKER BLOUNT Sag i |= FAYETTE] PA | 0 I 2 rnin I frmmtret 1 NEFFERSON/ & TRS | NS | ae Wh ; Jy [7ISKENS TusGALoosA Ro hr & \ Pe CLAY I : Em Be I S Ban ’ 7 es Land LQ §C00sA 5 ile ,, \ fs Za HAL a | Pe ALE X iF Q 'SUMTER \ PERRY i 8 | AUTAUGA O4\iON % at ES i SO 4 MACON <0 ALIAS RUSSELL He: “eof Nol We iF WILCOX ] |Z ¢ v BARB | ; {BUTLER ! our } 4 | = m—-A S 7 A Q Cs ~ Ff 5 foovon 1D fa X a | OS J gl Sak : |g 2: F 2 (ESCAMBIA | Tr \ 4 Ff - | i 3 Tr— e— o ——d lS, J\ FL = y¥7 3° 3 [] [ ] np ’S Lo ad Maps of Congressional Districts. 373 ARKANSAS. ® 10nR i Fr ; % P&Z Futon SN po ) BENTON P~oT0n, jmoonei Bp BY PuTor, Cl fe ' Prado Xe) : vo hail rapame is . Ng iy | ' J rm ¢ i PENDENCE / > CRAIGHEAD 1 & RD oy ——— — {INDE ; spear tl & >i) / (4 JER) Iie) | Q & el " &§ | POINSETT & PS oF 1JOHNSON/ JVAN BUREN | "3 CH 8 ag IS: h3 ] 7’ A ER ty i ai £1 Vz Se { poPE. | y cross | & ‘ ARE 1CON= 1 eruik- | whiTE & a | & TT LOGAN iway | FA RRS 2 NT fem ; ) S$ IST.FRANCIS! = (2) v m= lem — mm 2 RRY 3 < o ’ - YELL) ~~ PE Sara 1 re \ 2, ) LEE | SCOTT / A, Line Botan Ga) 7. | 4 | Nl 2 21 ~— 7 | Tay 2A "1E el ¢ I | m= gone oN et POLK Towed GARLAND *\ _ ~~ 2 A) ' ~ oo | 1 I on le oy | \ [ : HOT 1 5, ON ! Vu, rE toe Yo SPRING! 0 SN S4 3) EO x eh me 6! fly) fine oh, < 1 £ | a 2) ] ! LL JE % has BE [> i oh HRS {DALLAS | 4% Mp | & pnt Sz, \ Re, Ly 6 ' po 1) [] ol S Na ~ 4, | Y, | Yen€ a Se msl i me aR SR © RR 7 v ll Jet. 2 19 DREW z ry wb El ane t <7 i Ss LR Ss | = /.& /COLUMBIA | indi NE 2S UNION { AsuLey | EF L - Ne J ! \ | ® conde ee 374 Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA. N= I HUMBOLDT So 0 LASSEN “PLUMAS | | I l —_—————— SAN FRANCISCO SANTA CLARA SAN MATEO SAN — —_— ——— ~NGY SAN MIGUEL © of; | ; SEDewick] N. ! | LOGAN b———-- A | i {PHILLIPS | be 2 pees fe Ss ro bh is | BENT | SQ » Ce a er <0 | & ky Ter HUERRANOS Sd od dE > | RIO | ; | —N / Lo ™ V ionmipna, fy 3 ; Gok hee %, LS--77 LAS ANIMAS | BACA | oo CONEJOS | 2 ¥$ Pn —— pod - - - . J. an EE ems "SPILUISI(T J0U0ISSIASUOY) Jo SEV IY] SLE 376 Congressional Directory. CONNECTICUT. | — C—O C— — © — — — S— rr — —— WVYHANIM NEW LONDON a ut °F —— Xt HARTFORD a ————— -—— -— -- - HARTFORD NEW HAVEN LITCHFIELD FAIRFIELD 377 5 3 = Q = u S o 3 = 2 = N 5 ¥ FB S Aa w [9 S DELAWARE BAY — — -— —— et EE SE OF CD S—— a —— G— ap GE—— SUSSEX - emmme> © -— nc — —— | S—— 378 Congressional Directory. FLORIDA. / Sg MADISONT « . 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LEE BAG IHE TAZEWELL MASON hgy, ——f NAOT ADAMS BROWN, CASS rl P GFIELD — MORGAN re | 118 To : | MONTGOMERY] | KANKAKEE NDERSON —— | 5 $n — As 1 WARREN ; = -— Oo > - m Sb > = Oo oO (w) nl o po) oo Roe - M¢ LEAN DEWITT 2 CHAMPAIG oN S ---1 & $ 3 \ST.CLAIR 3 Kon EN Nl — ~ JreuinTon MEY -——- NS | -— | EFFING - FAYETTE! “Haw | JASPER | CRAW- 23 FORD ARION JCLAY oa SM wayne & < aie ICP 8 & = RANDOLPHIPERRY | i | | | | 332 i= Congressional Directory. INDIANA. - S— SS— > Summ ¥ Put rs | : oe ILA PORTEY JOSEPHIELKHART EA GRANGE, STEUBEN I An NoaLt oY STARKE MARSHALL! | osclusko fi > -12- ad WHITLEY] ALLEN | PORTER | , I | | | l I I | I —- =) — — Oem © esm—— ¢ | = U5 lpuLaski FULTON Salon | = | 2 | ar inl 3 ZL { | [BENTON yaa jensen [bd = a2 FF RANDOLPH) v2 3 =, = S 1 HENRY | : E LS ae LEMARION S | |Z = 9 = Ra INDIANAPOLIS = | ra tebom-l By TT > RUSH ' &1 S$ yoil KE : Ss a ; 2 as 160 | MORGANE wo QQ ° S Bagl FRANKLIN NY RN : | & NS TITER KP SENS & we Ll EN i | Nv Os © = ME Re 14 Bh =<. 1 J JACKSON 1S S$ Arr 0000 GEFFERSON NSS % ORANGE 3 “2 "pike fousois}, or -=1% TT TT rr ee i [ [ : [ HOWARD \ MITCHELL! 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BREE Eh 4 [ Fr TT TT Te ae Comer fer wie & | MONT- 1: a er CLARK COMANCHEBARBER! HARPER “| SUMNER COWLEY An rT £ | [ —a xX | . - - ! in os | - . ol -d dw —— — ES _< 7 — AE DE " sen I Malle —- f = ee ——— Va ~ — _— = — , 2 ‘SVSNV2L ge *AU012241(] JVUO0ISSIATUO") < Co ER SR A Mal — EE - TT : ; — ray [94] i i ( Uh ETN . o! sega o\ Fi Ya 5 p NIT 7 2 BR, \BRACK* 5 AA 5, 6° PA EN 7 Nef \° y 7 Es 3 4 agent MASH, Le eg Ren] ON <” "2 OWEN = = Ss 4 HARRI-! SEE ~ » 400 HENRY 7 TSON, Vg, i Ming 9 Hats] 3) S (@,1 *“OLD- Ze 2 2a I Sz i rd N f or - San = Pal & 2 ZN IE 2 S + GrERSS oh ~ Lx a . NE FEE 1. >’ \ 74 ww Amen MORGAN vg » Q by & Cranceiy 2 £3 CLARK 2 de 3 Sly JN, 0 S A in > Hh ~4 Wg 7 a PAE A Z 0] a. ¢ — rz ~~. Op ) RN ( oN_~ A rN Jogi bere : 5 2 RX % Se XX” Sh w MADISON\ESTILLN - On “©. ; S > in, N ASHINGY = 10 Bo rLovoy jo A HERDER ect gf BRECK-T - ) N~ ? ee 7 ih ? oO g. / = RR IGE, HARDIN , of / sn BREATH ITT} ) PIKE oS 3 UNION J --{ (0 rs hos + ¢ "MARION. Clog, i Z lo! S } 9° A llianueie J To, 1 Se \ KNOTT § . i ] J & GRAYSON baad 2 LATAYLOR %, Ta i ,~ N Ac; =e 3 4 4 % \ Eats & N. » =X cRiTTENDE = NZ HART L GREEN = oA LEAR TC N. & \ &t INSD hE ! yoy AQ S : oz ’ or L286 we) ADAIR i Vint \- UREL , \ @ hy 1& \ S. od Vi J Lo to] S ’ A an VU MET- / fr Le PULASKI yopsbory yu Lien = £ —_ 1. -— ZN 0 nt al 76-2 _/warreN 7 “7, Shire) pel TA EE KNOX b a : ALLIED Cor", von Is Ayr Fe 18, oo ss prt n 3, A an IIR CER Tr CARS oo \- LOGAN / y EAD opined J WHITLEY Nf 7 pues LISLE: W IMARSHALL, TRIGG IMP Ll A | SON! ey” MONROE of J TON: Nl Nan fy, = ! Np. Yn! w — c— — C—— in J} Gyr 5 ICALLOWAYS Laon X. ——— lb ——o m——y 98¢ Pry ———y TSS ee" R am—— yy ] ' 3 @ \ E : | 5 i 1 © 5 YCLAIBORNE: UNION 186 y ] 1 eR , 1,X N. 0 2 On hin © Cap WS : . b> 5 «@ | ™ / “4 A =a RRo(, A AME JLINCOLN | _ _7s5'\ ded = =I Sabina Ghat ge C xX ON FE EEN ‘ IBIENVILLE Wf 7 N a JACKSON; { 7,7 ynoie0 = es go dg \DE SOTO "oy 2 5 BA wey 8, & és ——==—1y } . 2 %, “i i S \ ey 5, £7 i? < 7 o SABINE 1__ "Oo GRANT 2 8 = S 1 S on X58 Oo < No er v N. ) \ \ ‘5 = 3 } rapies | eN © 3 3 «. VERNON 2 rt. my ere {oN Yo fX WESTER TS \ 4s, 2 S ow hn -- = QVFELIaNA | 1% \ Joy Me. : A \ Ops d £ oe Lee. 2 S \ i We alana we J o 7 » ST. LANDRY LS Baton RobeeS J ; ( CALCASIEY : T-==v \, Rouge ) ine I bh [p E==7A0s43143r§0 387 Maps of Congressional Districts. 2, i ¢ . — A x] es 2 3 N % c10 O Cm— e Se— — — — — hn wns a y | ~ | ey Ld \ 7 4 i ( | 2 o . | \ em —m———————— = s = 3 « i Zz a Q | l Vii h St rovosse a . Q i ny Q Q 7 . Q ———l em mm — ro Q > / 3 : ed 4 C= QS ly = eo i I ) ° i gE J | ny i D [ PISCATAQUIS \ Z Wor ™ ; \ 5 ry « w o~2 oS i | Sw = iz, eS . | [= o > a AEN TL ~ S y 8 SSS fl SOMERSET 2 os X \ a . MNDROSCOGG!N SN nN wl ~~ A 4 . w\ I om 4 Nl ~~) Pa ' Sy J gre me > Bm OXFORD eM A AE ey - re ——ei el TRE 4 388 Congressional Directory. 2,5. CITY. 2. BALTIMORE CO. - — - — S— | li De a [m] = Oo Sie ' XN = Yor, N = ~ Q [] 5 Jy, LN lo Ake . £8 iS IS ‘~S Fietk | 2 ALLEGANY a) / . —— © EE———— © S— p—— * CCE © ED P v—— 13 . . MARYLAND. | POEL S SEANN 4 // 394039 3ONINd/” \ 2 wn yD: L - i ” = £9) ° a 390 Congressional Directory. MICHIGAN. : O° 3 MANITOY A | 74 | LLORES HASHTER 7 3S ~ ry = N | LENAWEE, SHAY . error 1 1° | “NS (/MONROE = —sxr—-— t+ -r- oD \4 Q > MOWER] (WO) iS, Maps of Congressional Districts. 391 MINNESOTA. ys 1 KITTSON (ROSEAU | or V0 | - Sama ET { o NS. e— : I Bo Crm. MARSHALL | wo = : L?™\ i he es mi Zz « S FT Zz < * a © |} | RED xy = ; NN.” i Sime jw =z wi - | I | LAKE |& ¢< ND | . Voie | SE =) mses col ae Lm \ ~--YtEIn* | ST.LOUIS : Po re we pia) = : ! NORMAN |G | : on | A ET {=z 1---- +8 Jat | BECKER F) } Py ! Lb CLAY | > ) \ £0 frmeneen Rnd ris Leal ud z Sl z (CARLTON | N. »X OTTERTAL IS i! = [| AITKIN boom . A \s | 6 E; Q = 5 —~ lin ETT 1 al oY) TODD MORRISONYS | && ¢ RSE NS SEs = & EO ! | als i wr SES hes eR & et) 2 Sy = £1) SuprorE -—=d&G Ble He, STONE =~ wd ard 4 Ns) I N) LAC- ~7%, |S Shin 2 fi. an MEDICINE | RE oA SERENE OS %COTT [DAKOTA Ss 3 = rr? 4% --1& 1 $1 2 IREDWOOD GET LoS - IS 2) TASUEUR RICE S fwasashA SEE x! Led 1 4, (EE! oF jcoTTON %, | 2 16 &! an ; ml ol b ! Oo \ Sy : . - - cmm— © ’ 1 ATH Hp {End vy | id T . . -—" Sr iy X/ = y A Ae Li ! TLE LD, ov FE 2 | | NOSHOVF lmennt TROT Tee ii HE ie f | us 7, A NF 2 EY KN o = : Te n | F===-=- ddl |Z a Bo a SIE SA [RG So 1 1 4, 'G D oOo { % 3 4 | ¢ Tr >= | Na Aiea Ae DOL: 2 g bi “2, | % Ley 0 i | nN 4 NO.LN3E | -OLNOdL —— Pj mmm, = | OF) 40 0} 2 | UW Ih p r= pel od Sl ch iA o . : 3 3 £4 NAOHTYDI 20 I~ aT a = fire dei-anp srs EN i ’b, <2, WEE = Vy = ; 24, a > © oe | Q a Sy, %, S13 IS ; = 1 S “ss [%, oO i Sz So NS ] ~ l } I fa ge T1% 0 RE © yt 2 S 7) , ——— 3 2 5 45 mley ©, TI04UYOY 0 Zo, Yo Wy 2.5 F 2 ~ tL vy Vs i = o Ww NS , £77 x \ % Sg Q = o ! [&] = > ON by —_— &, 3 be i 2 x oe > 2 = Pen Sy 2 wl ~ by, 5 Moy, = 4 A 2 3, 9 ! RY x A > ' 1 Uns & 5° >: 00 % =n 3 DRONA SUNFLOWER” Awl SET _ | SUNFLOWER | hy , ~~. srw yo. y io Te i RO I Jy \ w = TI i BOLIVAR MM Sp LE dy 3 {2/595 = [ \ [ y MM glo 1 Z : NN SAQY Ig = ts Lv | \D Io j-62 QQ | A TORE Ce ee D8 oC be Hd 1%, . \ lw | Cran) Sa | Zr, ne oN 9) 72 © % N Maps of Congressional Districts. MISSOURI. SN, Q 2. 3), 1 Z Oo / © 3 SY : Zs z % z Aire EN 5 Dei Cf 2, 7 ES 2 4 2 AE mm = a >= a BUCHAN ) NOLONIHSYM / / 4 ~ 393 ST.LOUIS 10-11 =12 394 Congressional Directory. MONTANA. - eEm—— msm a ey | | I (} . [] l — | | 2 : | = z l O > oO ! . | 4 on —3 r = 2 ine 1 x fen) ( ! > : vo | 5S 2 > ’ ’ | | | [] | | | | n | A Zz ) = I ‘ = $4 | 75) = —~—=d | \ — i z J (0) | = oC rr a e 5d 9y ou ps ! a A \ ult | IIMs! | \ To pn ia | 2 ca © | ¢ ! 1 pe WET W¥vdo | L be) Vs = prea ' ! [ AT 7 9S (4 ~) Nl << [J oF oN a Ld =) | ge \ -— aaa TE y, W RS BS \ ; — BN =) 13]. © a A_-- = m= jc H m=? Cyr ¢0O p YE = 7 Lr” Fe———— = = ee \, = | 2 | 71 oc = 5d a 7 | Ls 4 Y So | r as Vo | << | 2 yr 3 | od [ > '\ | a r= > | a. [] ’ Lu} [] 2 C Sr —~——— Er gl) | << | — & FT | [J oq / = ” « | Le / = Wa 0 aid [1 / = ——————————— ——— Maps of Congressional Districts. 395 NEBRASKA. ier ~— Sw? di Quionvale / Noxia Hey [] ——-a-dzb V2 + YVQ30, = | [5 : ‘ %, 0, ( > er¥oapf ws 2, ” Sd ul Oo, 0, ! 3 = Fg Ly D0 <, 0 0, ] Zz LY 2 1 “4 NE {F402 BE: > a) 1 9) rh tay 0 = 1% 1% | Is! i in 20, Hh] Ni H = Deelah I> 2 wile ©, 1 SS re a Eo 3% 9 2% 4 ex se: Claes J \ I y [E\ dou | Bl. El syd y UL RE Re RI ay ol = ) <= |S) wows |B 8 hol | 3 TSE ah P= 21.2 E I =m 2 Thanh Bla Pre Yo Ter ‘ LEE io I 2 | 3 ) = = : 2 d > J EE aon 3 £12 [-o 2 r=) Seite i ’ = vg lel = = 1%, L 3) ] o J wn r= = = — ge = | 2 LF) oo I % wl imal elie lw VE IF 129 1 [J Zz g i. = | u | a | Ey Wes woh RE Ta ranean Ht ~ Feta. —— Ta. — me 5 I | NVAI43HS l 73n3a . [] I poole . [] | [5 | sIMva !' @ INNIAIHO | > i [] : 1 8 a Jie th ae 2 4 M | a | w I 4 2 Xnols wo 2! 2 | E128 | ! | 8 1 @a! ¢ SR a Te Congressional Directory. 396 NEVADA. mT mr em + te = tm mn + ee tr 3 en + | [ | [ v | | [ Ll | | Zz | = ' : o I a ——— — — — o ; Id 7 | ec iss o E / ; Zz XX : X / | wd o | = / | Ll | 2 | fom 1 EEE LJ Ir ne as! a = | os i vy¥3¥na : w . i ' = | > sd ibe Sa Sg 7, = | | i / HCL Eh y e | | | . vy 7 | OY ] yr pe tie ah i / -~ \ 2 bul = \ is . i 33 1 y oA ; ’ . : B& ! ad / 7 | I / ar \ ig Na @ Oo / —_— \ / Ns / . [re] 2 Fw X s = Oo & | = } > / A A i: Ld ’ £ / od < / 3) sid I Fh I 0s EE / RT =p Si. Sf Fore Soon 0 BES CS SIRE ih La EN OV LA ¥ — 1 N EI 7 << | XY ! ] 397 Maps of Congressional Districts. a S009 NEW HAMPSHIRE. HT Eerrrremerem ROCKINGHAM - ~~ . —— gu, 7 \ J SA 28 Voyage] ™N +7 % ABE YU tome on Et B,C emt ET s El AL Hs ET? DBI, |B mui 20 ONE Nd 5 EARS... 2 Zz yg \ Yo, KN ‘en Reel 4 Ss | og X FER 0 6 [3 A TZ2E" \pETER™ | SS =) Re) 398 Congressional Directory. NEW JERSEY. SUSSEX | vewarx CUMBERLAND - \ \ N : \ $ oe \ \ & / < Ao = | Pe ST.LAWRENCE \ ZF _.» 7 Ff \ 26 . } : | S77 ESSEX Xr 7&7 /&! 3 S ) 7} ts 2 en. 0SWEGO y 2) : pe—""T ’ A ’ ; Zu oO (N1aGARA (ORLEANS 2 gra? Srna i ol 2 = . pene Boo | wavne 30 = = = \ GENESEE ¢ p-—-- © 2% 3 [] ! 2 i Vio =\xz | S SS BUFFALO 135 34¢ 5 ONTARIO w \S ~ S 36 NRE 5 % 3 one | AE YATES Ro 2) S Py 3 Jenne lg tos & SEN N S a : inn ioy Xx . \ % > od Ny iS Se Wall Ph vl > 80, io 1. 1) S lS STEUBEN W-Rp1-wm=2 1 "Fo, 71 : <2 re Iw 1% rin) x [2 LT EA EO x J IF ! = Sa 4 2 Nt 20 i ORANGE ™S NA SE 3,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18% NEW YOR) 7, RICHMOND (BD (2 2,3,4,5,6,77 7, 66¢ ’ #4 - i = og on SoAGATES £5 . - = rn pe 4, G43 [OX 5% [rove Qik surerk 15, 7 A DANES hy ~ BERTIE RA @ m [2] 223.3 2 -— Nu) ————— Fit a AN 4, 3 4, SR 7G MOORE HARNETT Shiai OT Ee LITRE ERT © SIRT a Be y iy % “10 “HENDERS Si fr (©) ~ , © IMACON 5, @, (TRAN-\SON nL 7, Zs CUMBERLAND [oe Siiay \Z 2 SYA : a Nv win 3 -— | ZAR TN Bb . ] | 4 53 0 (PR * A CA ts —— oak ® — scot™ A ] he ™ | BLADEN Voi] Nou Re ji 7 COLUMBUS _~/ ot ™N fi / NN ° / ND IX Np” “2 Ee = ms, "VNI'IOIVD HILION oot “A A40§2241(] JVU01SSIATUO) Maps of Congressional Districts. 401 NORTH DAKOTA. e — I ANVTHOIY : 1 ar | | | ik [ wn | = el ; pian ing » phere iy { | = | oc | = | } — << | wn | on = | = Zz ZX rab. LB = 0 | I Er fry : ml APN aD = Eo slg Heed Ee2 oo Bd = yo iin iia yy © EE vd Bd no Ei — — ——— | Fn | T yd Fn | Pe for LJ pak o n | — | | oe = | o | (O} | << | wl | v = | | ~ | 2 | 0 | 2 | oq > 1 = | = | Le | | Ss | 1 WV wn Le ———y ; xr 2 28g 2 oc | 7) YINMOL 2 > pata uy b= I SE | oO | | pe iden of LL Tiy -— Sie ol ik. = isi ul | | ~ 0 2 ’ Phnmeofeder hy I by 0 | oO | NNAM ; lew 200 = 2 : | 2 | on ; = 5) -_ | 5S la | ha-anaEehal ae 26 S : = | [75] pe fom on] : ITUANGYL or =matormad B00 | ; fr PF r r= i. aN Ea - | ell BL fen on boo ~’ ee Se ; o ITTIVHLNAON “+ ££ LE = 3 ’ fe § EE fad = I — | — [ i pe dk wo z | an | SS 3. 1% | odd [| = Ri Sree Ee AYINNY 14 2 CIYTilA i ] : sianfle Bol wn, fer) 2, 21 5 2 | | + g¥04ng aayTIv; X SONITIIgE 1 2 l ah ® EEE, © EEE © esm— —— o e— dr = am 58-3D —2D ED——26 zob SANDUSKY | ERIE DEFIANCE _ HENRY [Woop L} 18 wai} ee 3 17 : S 3 HOLMES |! ry S pra. TUSCARAWAS LE 4 w RN. | cosHOCTON | i k 3 N Eh Te i ii op me i Rs Pe — ] 1, iGUERNSEY] 16 s N ’ ] S%, : r= 4 r NN Cp Lop ho Re N. N f I; -- ThoBLE ~ S 1 3 | Tule & rom Ki i MO w13 me S 1M. ee FAYETTE) eR IT ROAN bd SY : \ 1 |BuTLER WARREN (CLINTON il aa | ” - ! ROSS | ATHENS nf a yl 1 VINTON ye 3 = [] Cc oc x Se ea 44 | mm = 9 ; 5, 3) BROWN i > ADAMS | ro GALLIA ' SCIOTO o LAWRENCE, Maps of Congressional Districts. 403 OREGON. oc ul xX EY X [] NN “a h = \ ny | [S mde a wem me —— (S i ———y ? eS 1 RR AEN a | | 2 i - 1 i [J FE ] | | : i : | 2 J = I = - Fm—— = = - < < ] | x | x MOHNMOW: } gang = § ts H ir lam | ! [ a i — ad I J es y3t3aum J i t AVITTO ' ase - N l | | Ad Ll Aa < 5 ~ 0 A e | i o | g | : Te on) or a A a lr mm oo Eo HLVAVIA : : E [] | ——— o_o. a = \ 1 2 < 1 ! ’ \ = wy Re \ - ' , \ z ! } ~ 1 ew ; al ? i fet \ = ! z 7 ) Qo . Ss | %: \ 2) = s © / < ~ = = r -=’ GT a x 5 RANE | 2. = RL f ; oY 2 : S 2 | lo? LF | wn 2 sats YO # »’ ~ oN ! = L ” O : N. Prd yf rr [ - — - omm—- i. - ; - — gor RR \ ass 25 BRADFORD pus, ™N rE ian 28 M¢KEAN | poTTER! TIOGA | "1a Iwavae St LL I en Vile CAkepom x 4 N_ W 0 cLEARFIELDS2] / CENTER : ) <& =) i Sis” os - S yay ~ AS 4 i S/F — PHILADELPHIA - & i & - - J - - 1,2,3,4.5,6. tot ‘VINVA'TASNNAJI "NA0pI241(T 0201552451107) Maps of Congressional Districts. 405 RHODE ISLAND. —- Caney TWOOR- To ) Ped : \NORTH SOCKET / z y BURRILLVILLE SMITHFIELD 2 : 1 > J / \ > amet Fume i ae ein py rm Sn ST | St = '§ Zz |- o ; 1< ° : 3 MITHFIELD GLOUCESTER i \ Ta { om mm mp — + | } 2 Yo Tel ’ | $x | Ea | : ! FOSTER | SCITUATE LT \ | ~— | : \ CRA \ \ \ | 3 Sn on Gm an wn Cw — — — — T | 4 | : COVENTRY 2 & en mag fm re re TT <<} a St leasT 27 \ L WEST GREENWICH IGREENWICH = . t 4 z i L — mm — — be cp E \ § nS : \ ol] EXETER pA I Cemmgr—] Le Lows ) \ \ | E - ! S = * ’ 4, eit) \ = i | rh Er ES | 5 h NG o a 32 | Zz / RICHMOND { A SLR ) SOUTH S /KINGSTON i 3 oo I Sh) Block I or New Shoreliane. TNT (2%) Bo] & m £9 %.. {YORK IN Z 13 J a =< Z ———— > - - ay— 0 — - VEL ie 4%, “CHESTER sZ\. = - A. <\ Z [CHESTER Iss. 0. o NS I 2a x FIELD DN 3 mad \ 2 \ SpA oC LN. a EO a ane 9 7" NLAURENS FAIRFIELD! £ AN N or AT 4 SERSHAWA Re JE 7 SHARIN. ABBE= ,3 RA &/ 9) i \ s ISA CoLUMB ee, ~ 10/ ° \ 2 > Gn LEXINGTON > ~~~ W2¢ ra 3 * ne : 2 % or 7 Rs / NR ORANGEBURG =< AIKEN ARNWELL ’/ ND Y = (®] » a. ~N = «= & VX 'VNI'TOY VO HILAOS EN ©) [op "A40122.43(T 701015524510) Maps of Congressional Districts. 407 SOUTH DAKOTA. =< | - os — ) — SS | hs: . — TTI 4g, 1%, 20, LNOIN ll : 13n3d ] “4, ) oe oy! eR rg 5% Ee 7 Ll 20 5 a. i EAT Fc - x lL... 2 FTE 2%. 2.1% 2 ES RE Tr na rE . 2,’ i he 4 To 0 | ee | Oo re r—Z— Ble Bm SLE ATG AE lay te oc Tr ee BV) 1 5 22 Em < ELF 0%, 2,22 | = Sealer wha bet % x SIE Ele ae RE BE Ne - hg) —— nT a ~ I = Lo mY, : = | = | ; Pe a oie boii 1 oO = T [ | 2.4 FES 1 aa0l [} | shea or | 4 I eh | Fos mw aon pare | Ie} wl =) Nd > | | = | = iD | 1 ! | wn | = 1 — L gir Ss dis > ' sr SC aL | © | Oo | i) [} WB SS ie ems rt ei \ OMERY RoserTson ff 1 MACON rs CLAY PICKED A Sop, yg iNCs, ign $ | — Te STEWART! § Pe K\ es SF 4 (07 2 ord 3 Q : £ /0BION hen HENRY 6 / RX JUTE rcs 0 1 a a 3% 2 / fILSONISITH 4° ait S AE ra SHVIL BS [2 ie Po CARROLLI © 5 3 . os 8 I o S Teh z 3 SEL N Sr 2 = ~Yo, i TieTON - {CHESTER} 219 _ o N i 10 #0 H3 [ J sar = N . SHELBY FAYETTE Cale N 1 ! xX S——— $ AI | a ei < ws — — { ar 5 ’ i a -n Nand A 0 TN : Mo N <6 N C NT, oW~WooRg, 2 SRay PR - . EN %, AT SON 2 VIRsgp, £ \Worps GREER Wil: = GIR I Le ~ ABARGER ARCHER. 7 00mg ARNE Chips S o 7 = PN SES am ” O, % Bay 3% UBB 7 EN r 0, NE nb ng, go TMS Lonogy, Nou « pd ER, \ \r. y RY's EN . - he \~ Pa \ SYVXHL SIALISUT JU0ISSILSU0) Jo STVIY 6ot 410 Congressional Directory. UTAH ETE) A \ : | <® /cAcHE YX |

WASATCH ' \ { UTAH | UINTA hes Ma iE | —_— nl ! A ls | [] JUAB 2 mpl ae v, ( | Sonne Ch) carson’ hb: | po peel fel | TY eere ] : | I I / | MILLARD or [ | ' 7 2 EMERY {. GRAND ~/SEVIER: | x mt rr” | h ’ iy BY Ati SEE — a —————] \ | [lee LE SAE a | | / 4 IRON 21 = - GARFIELD ¢ y | | : boa pletema a & SAN JUAN | | = ~P | ' WASHINGTON | KANE 7 [ A ) Ee 2 na < / ADDISON Maps of Congressional Districts. 411 VERMONT. ORLEANS / \ he [ DG A > 3 Li y) /, of n | ’ ¢ «0 / \ uw [] / \ y y ~ / hi : v 2 ) x \ [4 $ 2 / Q 4 $ < : ~ ) 7 x » ? oO WASHINGTON MONTPELIER ya Tall ~ I sf / So RUTLAND WINDSOR N= —-— - - WINDHAM BENNINGTON ca OL S&, 7 ’ \ NR o - a) Ao S Gi ©, MATHEWS ~ Pay AMHERST) sy AN SISSY Qu at ~~ . oS 4 SoTETOY APPO~ S \ Sr 2%, \GIL 2 MAT- C25 AMELIA Ey ACK, i Gis oy Moun BEDFORD TOXIN /H r= = PET 5 ZR lh Fi, Nd EanpeelY” Nz \NOT9- bres » . NS \ - A / o- bp 5 YL WISE A i =) ly, A A NZS Or J RusseLLy -—- ang ) °/8 of 8 J Me, BNL RSE OY SS [o) 7 > NE > donic Y ey SINS = . 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To << EAN > Dw. — = & oe A, INVOAOET, ams gman Ty |S / 7 —= 7 _3Hg 133NNVZO IM ER | nil JOA JC AE ELL BR TITAN EAT] 18 / = 3 -ONIHovMl x Ro -L= o yi rns or 4 { 3 os ERIE 0 ON Ik. natn © ova | 2 1 w 3 2) . wil A-aNIME SI 3 wzl---7% ] 1lsayos rag 2 i a wal I ’ SALI fy nl =00! = fnN33uo Eek RTGS fi, ah oy = | > == 5 ro 4 ( = e =< | ~ === - = I nn %, [ OJ uw | / : SE emote i BEG Be a A — LET) us r | = %,) 9! za & f < LS rd = iE Joe cy FZ aC, 5) 2 a 5 S doe Oo = Tu JE Sp Ki = 1 SE : 5 ale < oe SLES, nd MS LL STAR pions z= = 3 | | | = = | ¢ x od | ro —-" - . 4 -_— 1 i I i 3: = tides Boo yi y an 1 1 a x rie) «= 2 Lal = grt 2 oy 8 gD 2 4 OTE EB = TO, oc = Mlle os 6 7 oe ox | Soy > | a / > = ESL J (ANE = SIN gi 4, — — ¢ = oO NY37yy \ Ve dys Np’ CGR a aE 2 | Ay ria vs rin x Y S Nungksw 8 he 1 0v44n8 = [ *: gE broeed 5 Lise t” : I= | i: BEd Ye © x = t wf i > / —m— el wv I~ ! ” oc yy Er 2 | / 2 Ki 2 — | Q | ¥, | Se yyw So. 416 Congressional Directory. WYOMING. mm— o— ssw — s— V5 S—— @ S— — ——) (== Fr Tr | | . I | @ | | 1 ue i 2 | | ! ! = %. | 0 | | or % 2 is ! < D1 | xX | Oo \ oc | 3 * | . oO - I] | oO wn | | . I EAE MEE SR pp Te mn L | =z Ley er 3 [ 1 Zz I I } < ’ i m . ; i 3 ! < be ow om pi) ISSIR i 4 ee = = ow —— ns ml ' fa nd ’ =z | : o I ’ | n | =z [ =z bs | 2 1 oOo | Oo | x 7% | m a = o | | oc = 2 I i £ Q | | » | > ! Re en — CE © — — —— — — —— — 417 Maps of Congressional Districts. ARIZONA. ee = em © cn = in © — ey . — —— — — ——— — ; | | | : it~ 1 L-~ | JHOVd VY 5 = : ( } x | ' r-——~*%-1 © ] | i | ! \ 1 ' OFCYAVN | eS ; H 1 < } Ll] a | \ ] 1 ee ! [ a ne nos 5 wee amo = Fe IT) i F GLEE SE 4 Gr | ” " . I oo ~ \ 1 | | \ pede z i 7 - | | D rr” I = | | iar Load Oo | : 2 = y / | I = = = | = =] J / I o. I oe ——d ’ 3 / I | O { ) < & nore met = } —_— o bd i ° J x / eB » (&) I o. / o z 4 = / RE I i < }. 5% | r > L i | 1 } ! : i TT Tree - a Si dh | 0, Sl, SO r= a Ne G0 co ED CS EB oR em ER CE me G0 Sm oa Lem / ; ! / JAVHONW : / ! YWNA - Ses vp we 27 58-3D—2D ED A= : ey me . 3; MAU! Ceti Congressional Directory. HAWAII 418 SUNION l | 3 QUAY nm py | a LEONARD WOOD NEW MEXICO. ‘BERNALILLO Maps of Congressional Districts De dn SIERRA le wn m= = = —-— ozt SSSR ye fo here re spo UO GRANT | KAY > j BEAVER | 1 | emt teld mL : WOODWARD ] WO0O0DS | TT i 3. va 0SAGES 4 ; | GARFIELD! NOBLE Yi, ‘ | SLA a SE IES ] L] | & i : oq Gay ne | Fuse 0 | \ | & | SXXGUTHRIE BE aE gle [Roser 2) | _ _IGANADIAN! OKLA- Linco 3 3 . MIL 2 CUSTER Phare ' HOMA | a | X a — on onan w—" 7) Oo NN LWICHITAS 2s = S Smo VL WASHITAY : < > 3 ipl] Sl —t mo - = Lb % 1 § [ON KIOWAS | GREER =~ ) COMANCHES i o 3 | APACHES i / UNOFFICAL LIST OF REPRESENTATIVES AND DELEGATES | | THE FIFTY-NINTH CONGRESS. | ELECT, [Republicans in Roman (251), Democrats in zzaZc (135). Those marked * served in the Fifty-eighth Congress. Those marked f served in a previous House. Whole number, 386.] | ALABAMA. | George W. Taylor* ..... Demopolis. John H. Bankhead* ..Fayette. | Aviosio A. Wilev™... -.- Montgomery. | John L. Burnett* ....Gadsden. ] Henry D. Clayion®. ..... Kufaula. William Richardson * . Huntsville. Sydney. J. Bowie®. ... ... Anniston. Oscar W. Underwood* . Birmingham. f. Thomas Heflin®:...... Lafayette. ARKANSAS. Robert Bruce Macon *. ... Helena. Charles C. Reid* ....Morrillton. Stephen Brundidge, jr. * . Searcy. Joseph 1. Robinson *. Lonoke. 4 Soin C. Floyd... ...... Yellville. Robert M. Wallace*. . . Magnolia. i ¢ Holm SS: Lillle... Greenwood. CALIFORNIA. James N. Gillett™®.. ...... Fureka. Hveris'A. Hayes...... San Jose. | D. BE. McKinley......... Santa Rosa. James C. Needham * . . Modesta. Joseph R. Knowland* ...Alameda. James McLachlan * ...Pasadena. Julius Rahm yf... . 0... San Prancisco: (S.C. Smith, .......... Bakersfield. | COLORADO. | AT LARGE. i Pranklin RB Brooks ™ . vil Cr ai a es rin va ee Colorado Springs. 1 Robert W. Bonynge*. ...Denver. | Herschel M. Hogg *. . . Telluride. CONNECTICUT. a | AT TLARGE. George, TAHEYS vic rl or i Be ty i dst aes Waterbury. E. Stevens Henry*...... Rockville. Frank B. Brandegee *. . New London. | Nehemiah D. Sperry *....New Haven. Fhenezer J. Hill®..... Norwalk. i I DELAWARE. | AT LARGE. iran BR. Burton. is oh se i hs a Lewes. | 4 FI,ORIDA. i { Stephen MM. Sparkman*. Tampa. “William B. Lamar*. Tallahassee. | Frank Cloak iol, Lake City. | { 421 422 Congressional Directory. GEORGIA. \ Bufus E. Lester. ..... Savannah. Gordon Lee, .oova ins Chickamauga 5% Somes M. Griggs®....... Dawson. William M. Howard *.1exington. A Elijah B. Lewis* ...... Montezuma. Thomas M. Bell. . . ... Gainesville. r William C. Adamson* . Carrollton. Leoridas FF. Livingston*. Covington. Charles L. Bartlelt* . ... Macon. Thomas W. Hardwick* . William G. Brantley *. . Sandersville, Brunswick. | | | IDAHO Barton I. Prencht i oo aio Sie a ie ae Moscow ILLINOIS. Martin B. Madden ...... Chicago. Benjamin F. Marsh * ... Warsaw. | James BR. Mann™. ....... Chicago. George W. Prince ....Galesburg. | William W. Wilson * . ...Chicago Joseph V. Graff *. ..... Peoria. | Charles F. Wharton ..... Chicago John A. Sterling® ..... Bloomington. Antony Michalek. ....... Chicago Joseph G. Cannon*.... Danville. | William Torimer® ...... Chicago William B. McKinley. . . Champaign. | Philip. Knopf ®,... ... Chicago Henry T. Rainey* ....Carrollton. Charles McGavin.,....... Chicago Zeno] Rives, ......... Litchfield. Henry S. Boutell =... Chicago. Wm. A. Rodenberg*. . . Hast St. Louis. George Fdmund Foss*. . . Chicago. Frank S. Dickson ..... Ramsey. Howard M. Snapp* ..... Joliet. PleasantT. Chapman. ..Vierna. Charles B. Fuller® .... .. Belvidere. George W. Smith®, .. .. Murphysboro. Robert B. Hitt®, .,.-... Mount Morris. ; INDIANA. | James A. Hemenway * ...Booneville. George W. Cromer* ... Muncie. | John Ci Clianey..=.. oo Sullivan. Charles B. Landis *.. ..Delphi. NS | William 1. Zenor* ..... Corydon. Edgar D.Crumpacker* . Valparaiso. Lincoln Dizon ......... North Vernon. | Frederick Landis¥*..... Logansport. Hlias 8. Holliday >... ..... Brazil. Newton W. Gilbert ....Fort Wayne. James FE. Watson*....... Rushville. Abraham I,. Brick *. ...South Bend. Jesse Overstreet: .... Indianapolis. : IOWA. | : 2 Thomas Hedge® ...... . Burlington. Jona AT. Hull®,.,.... Des Moines. | Albert F. Dawson ....... Preston. William P. Hepburn * . . Clarinda. Benjamin P. Birdsall *...Clarion. Walter I. Smith *. |... Council Bluffs. Gilbert N. Haugen *. . ... Northwood. James P..Conner®. .... Denison. Robert G. Cousins * ..... Tipton. Elhert H. Hubbard . ...Sioux City. John PP Lacey ®. v.00. Oskaloosa. KANSAS. AT LARGE, Charles’ P.-Scott® i. os rs re Sa ha Tola. Charles Curtis®....... . Topeka. Wm, A. Calderhead *.. Marysville. Justin D. Bowersock * .. Lawrence. William A. Reeder*...Logan. Philip P. Campbell %..... Pittsburg. Victor Murdock ™...... Wichita. James M. Miller® . 5... Council Grove. KENTUCKY. Ollie ML. Jomes™: .....:: Marion. South. Trimble®. ...... Frankfort. Augustus O. Stanley*...Henderson. George G. Gilbert*. ... Shelbyville. . James M. Richardson ... Glasgow. Joseph B. Bennett . ....Greenup. | David H. Smith%....... Hodgensville. | Frank A. Hop tins*. ..Prestonburg. : Sagar Sherley® ....... Touisville. David C. Edwards. .... Tondon. Joseph L.. Rlinock:...... Covington. — Pcp Unofficial List, Fifty-ninth Congress. Adolf Meyer*........ Robert C. Davey*. ... R. FF. Droussaja®... TLLOUISTANA. New Orleans. New Orleans. . New Iberia. John T, Watkins ..... Minden. Joseph I. Ransdell* . SM. Robertson. .. MAINE. Amos L. Allen*...... Alfred. Edwin C. Burleigh* . Charles FE, Littlefield *. Rockland. Llewellyn Powers™ .. MARYLAND. Thomas A. Smith... Ridgely. Jol Gill, fr......... Joshua FF. C. Talbolt* .1utherville. Sydney E. Mudd*. .. Frank C. Wachter*, . , Baltimore, George A. Pearre*. ,. MASSACHUSETTS. George P. Lawrence ® . North Adams Samuel W. McCall * , Frederick H. Gillett * . Springfield. John A. Keliler* . .. Rockwood Hoar. ..... Worcester. Whilliam S. McNary *. Charles Q. Tirrell* ...Natick. Johan A. Sullivan* .. Butler Ames™ ........ Lowell. John W. Weeks. ...... Augustus P. Gardner*. Hamilton. William S. Greene * Ernest W., Roberts * , . Chelsea. William C, Lovering *, MICHIGAN. Edwin Denby ........ Detroit. Henry McMorran* , , Charles E. Townsend *. Jackson. Joseph W. Fordney *. . Washington Gardner*. Albion. Roswell P. Bishop* .. Edward I,. Hamilton *. Niles. George A. Loud *..... William Alden Smith*. Grand Rapids. A.B. Daragh®*. .... ... Samuel W, Smith *, .. Pontiac. H. Olin Young *.... MINNESOTA James A. Tawney * ... Winona. Charles B. Buckman *, James T. McCleary *. . Mankato. Andrew J. Volstead * . Charles R. Davis®....St. Peter. 4 J.Adam Bede, Fred C. Stevens™. .... St.Paul. Halvor Steenerson * . Loren Fletcherft...... Minneapolis. MISSISSIPPI. ZS Candler, 71.7. .Corinth, Adam WM, Byrd*. .... Thomas Spight™. .. ... Ripley. Laton J. Bowers* . .. B. G. Humphreys*. ..Greenville. Lrank A. McLain* . Wilson .S. Hail* ..... Winona. John S. Williams* . . MISSOURI. James ZT. Lioyd*® ..... Shelbyville. Clamp Clark ....... William W. Rucker” .Keytesville. Richard Bartholdt *. . Frank B. Keppler..... Kingston. Jokn-T Hunl*.... .... Frank B. Fulkerson. ..St. Joseph. Ernest E. Wood. ..... Hdgar C: Ellis... ...... Kansas City. Marion E. Rhodes. .. D. A. De Armond* ..Butler. William T. Tindall. .. John Welborn... . -. TLexington. Cassius M. Shartel. .. D, W, Shackleford *. .. Jefferson City. Arthur P. Murphy... MONTANA. AT ILARGE. 423 .Lake Providence. .Baton Rouge. Arsenic P. Pyjo™ ..... ILake Charles. . Augusta. .Houlton. Baltimore. .La Hlata. . Cumberland. . Winchester. . Boston. Boston. . Boston. Newton. .. Fall River. Taunton. . Port Huron. Saginaw. Ludington. Au Sable. St. Louis. Ishpeming. Little Falls. Granite Falls. Pine City. . Crookston. Philadelphia. . Bay St. Louis. . Gloster. . Yazoo City. Bowling Green. .St. Louis. St. Louis. St. Louis. . Potosi. . Sparta. . Neosho. .Crocker. Joseph M. Dixon*......... I Ea SS ee Missoula. Congressional Direclory. John 1.. Kennedy ....Omaha. George W. Norris*. ... McCook. { John J. McCarthy* ... Ponca. Moses P. Kinkaid *....O’Neill. | 424 | NEBRASKA. Elmer J. Burkett *....Lincoln. Edmund H. Hinshaw * Fairbury. © | NEVADA. | AT LARGE. | | Clarence L2. Van Damen | i. vers cient ha sags, Tonopah. | NEW HAMPSHIRE. | Cyrus A. Sulloway¥*. ..Manchester. | Frank D. Currier®..... Canaan. NEW JERSEY. | H. C. Loudenslager*. . Paulsboro. Henry €. Allen®... ... Paterson. Richard W. Parker *. . Newark. William H. Wiley *. ...Fast Orange. Marshall Van Winkle. . Jersey City. I John J. Gardner*..... Atlantic City. [ + Benj. ¥, Howell ™.". ... New Brunswick. I Ira W. Wood*........ Trenton. | Charles N. Fowler. *. . Elizabeth. A. L. McDermott*. .. Jersey City. | NEW YORK. | William W. Cocks. ...0ld Westbury. Thomas W. Bradley * . . Walden. I : George H. Lindsay*. .Brooklyn. John H. Ketcham¥* . .. Dover Plains. Charles T. Dunwell *. . Brooklyn. William H. Draper*...Troy. Charles B, law... : Brooklyn. George N. Southwick *. Albany. | George E. Waldo..... Brooklyn. E. J. Lefevre... Newpaltz. 3 William M. Calder. ...Brooklyn. Lucius N. Littauer¥. . . . Gloversville. at John J. Fitzgerald*. . New York. William H. Flack* ....Malone. Timothy D. Sullivan* . New York. James S. Sherman ¥*. . . Utica. Henry M. Goldfogle*. New York. Charles I,. Knapp*....Loweville. William Suizer®..... New York. Michael E. Driscoll *. . Syracuse. William R. Hearst*. .New York. John W, Dwight*....; Dryden. William B. Cochran*.New York. Sereno E. Payne*..... Auburn. Herbert Parsons...... New York. James Breck Perkins*. Rochester. Charles A. Towne... New York. J. Sloat Bassett... ... Elmira. James Van V. Olcott. . New York. James W. Wadsworth* . . Geneseo. Jacob Ruppert, jr.* ... New York. William H. Ryan *. ... Buffalo. William S. Bennett. ..New York. De Alva S. Alexander*. . Buffalo. Joseph A. Goulden* . . New York. Edward B. Vreeland *. , Salamanca. John EF. Andrus ...... Yonkers. NORTH CAROLINA. Join H. Siall® ..... Washington. Gilbert B. Patterson *. . Maxton. Clayde Kitchin... Scotland Neck. Robevi N, Page®...... Biscoe. Charles R. Thomas * .Newbern. E.Spencer Blackburn 1 . Wilkesboro. Edward W. Pou. ... Smithfield. Edwin Y. Webb* ..... Shelby. William W. Kitchin * Roxboro. James M. Gudger, jr. * . Asheville, NORTH DAKOTA. AT LARGE. Thomas F. Marshall *, Oakes. | A. J. Gronma-.......... Lakota — 0 Unofficial List, Fifty-ninth Congress. 425 Nicholas Longworth *. . Cincinnati. Herman P. Goebel *. ..Cincinnati. Robert M. Nevin¥, .... Dayton. Harvey C. Garber*. ... Greenville. William W. Campbell. . Napoleon. Thomas FE. Scroggy. ...Xenia. J. Warren Keifert..... Springfield. OHIO. Edward I. Taylor, jr.Columbus, Grant E. Mouser ..... Marion. Amos R. Webber *. ... Elyria. Beman G. Dawes. ... . Marietta. Capell I. Weems*. ...St. Clairsville. Martin I. Smysert... Wooster. James Kennedy ®..... Youngstown. Ralph D, Cole... .....: Findlay. W. Aubrey Thomas*. . Niles. James H. Southard *. . .Toledo. Jacob A. Beidler*®..... Willoughby. Henry T. Bannon ..... Portsmouth. Theodore E. Burton *. Cleveland. Charles H. Grosvenor *, Athens. OREGON. Binger Hermann®..... Roseburg. | John N. Williamson*. The Dalles. PENNSYLVANIA. = Henry H. Bingham *. . Philadelphia. Robert Adams, jr.* ...Philadelphia. George A. Castor®....Philadelphia. Reuben O. Moon*. ... Philadelphia. Edward DeV. Morrell*. Philadelphia. George D. McCreary *. Philadelphia. Thomas S. Butler *.... West Chester. Irving P. Wanger*. ... Norristown. H. Burd Cassel®.... Marietta. ‘Thomas H. Dale... Scranton. Henry W. Palmer* ...Wilkesbarre. George R. Patterson *. Ashland. Marcus C. L. Kline*. . Allentown. Mial BB. Lilly: =o... Towanda. Elias Deemer®..... .. Williamsport. BE. W. Samuel-.......... Mount Carmel. Thaddeus M. Mahon *Chambersburg. Marlin E. Olmsted *. . Harrisburg. John M. Reynolds . ..Bedford. Daniel F. Lafean *... York. Solomon R. Dresser * Bradford. George BF. Huff >... Greensburg. Allen F. Cooper *....Uniontown. Ernest F. Acheson *. . Washington. Arthur I,. Bates* ....Meadville. Gustav A. Schneebeli Nazareth. William O. Smith * . . Punxsutawney. Joseph C. Sibley *....Franklin. William H. Graham { Allegheny. John Dalzell >... 5 Pittsburg. James F. Burke... Pittsburg. A.J. Barchfield ...... Pittsburg. RHODE ISLAND. Daniel l.. D. Granger* Providence. Adin B..Capron*....; Smithfield. SOUTH CAROLINA. George S. Legare* . . .. Charleston. James O. Patterson. ...Barnwell. Wyatt Aden. ....... Abbeville. Joseph 1. Johnson *. ... Spartanburg. SOUTH DAKOTA. AT T,ARGE. Charles H. Burke * . . . Pierre. David E. Finley*. .. Yorkville. J. Edward Ellerbe . . . Sellers. Asbury F. Lever *. ...Wallaceville. | Eben W. Martin* . ... Deadwood. TENNESSEE. Walter P. Brownlow *. . Jonesboro. Nathan W. Hale....... Knoxville. John A. Moont....... Chattanooga. NGC Buller. ......... Gainesboro. William C. Houston... Woodbury. John Wesley Gaines* Nashville. Lemuel P. Padgett*. .Columbia. Thetus W. Sims* .... Linden. Finis J. Garvell . ..... Dresden. Malcolm R. Patterson* Memphis. 426 Congressional Directory. TEXAS. Morris Sheppard* .... Texarkana. George F. Burgess* . Gonzales. ML. Brocks.., ......: San Augustine. Albert S. Burleson *. . Austin. Gordon Russell* .... .Tyler. Robert L. Henry *. ... Waco. Choice B. Randell” ...Sherman. Oscar W. Gillespie *. . Fort Worth. Jk Bealls... ....... Waxahachie. John H. Stephens* ... Vernon. Stoll Field, .. i. Calvert. James L. Slayden* ...San Antonio. Alexander W. Gregg ™* . Palestine. - John N. Garner* ....Uvalde. John M. Pinckney *. .. Hempstead. William R, Sw:ith* . .Colorado. UTAH. AT LARGE. Joseph Howell ®.o. oov. or ori rs a a aa ad Wellsville. VERMONT. | David |. Fester® .. .... Burlington. | Kittredge Haskins® .. Brattleboro. VIRGINIA. William A. Jones* .... Warsaw. Copter Glasst oo. 0:5 Lynchburg. Harry L. Maynard*. . .Portsmouth. James Hay: .......... Madison. John Lamb* . .... .....Richmond. Jolin FF. Rixey®...... Brandy. Robert G. Southall* ...Amelia. Campbell Slemp* ....Big Stone Gap. Claude A. Swanson * . Chatham. Henry D, Flood* ....W, Appomattox. WASHINGTON. AT LARGE. Wesley 1,. Jones™ ..... North Yakima. Wm. FE. Humphrey * Seattle. Francis W. Cushman *. . Tacoma. | ; : WEST VIRGINIA. Blackburn B. Dovener* . Wheeling. Harry C. Woodyard* . Spencer. Alston G. Dayton * .... Philippi. James A. Hughes * .. Huntington. Joseph Holt Gaines*. ..Charl :ston. WISCONSIN. 5 Henry A. Cooper™®..... Racine. Jom J. Esch*........ La Crosse. Henry C. Adams™®..... Madison. James H. Davidson *. .Oshkosh. Joseph W. Babcock *. . .Necedah. Edward S. Minor *. ...Sturgeon Bay. Theobold Otjen™.....: Milwaukee. Webster HE. Brown *. . . Rhinelander. William H. Stafford * .. Milwaukee. John J. Jenkins®*..... Chippewa Falls. Charles H. Weisse*. .. Sheboygan Falls. WYOMING. Frank W. Mondell™. ... 0 laa Newcastle, TERRITORIAL DELEGATES. ARIZONA. - Marcus A. Smith i. ei nie a aad Tucson. Williath H. Andrews... ooo i i aii Nar ES eae Santa Fe. RY Unofficial List, Fifty-ninth Congress. 427 ' OKLAHOMA. Ew ov) = = oH 1% = o ®) EB i ¢) * RI ora Lh Gh a ep ser Re el Me De Sa SS Pawnee. Jonah Kalanlamaole®. io oo Sh Sn aaa aaa Honolulu. | PORTO RICO. : RESIDENT COMMISSIONER. |] 2a $e ALPHABETICAL, INDEX. The following is a list of the names of persons given in the Directory, located in Washington for official purposes, whose names are not otherwise alphabetically arranged, together with their positions and addresses. All addresses, except as otherwise noted, are northwest: Page. Abbe, Prof. Cleveland, editor Weather Review, zorzIlstreel 0. 0 0 uns, 247 Abbot, C. G., aid, Astrophysical Observa- tory, 36 Q street NW rr as 255 Abbot, Maj. Frederic V., Assistant Chief of Engineers, U.S. Army, 2013 Kalorama AVENE Le a Se 236 Abbott, James A., Senate messenger, 1012 South Carolina avenue ST 211 Abbott, Jas. S., Senate messenger, 715 Bixthsfrcel vr 211 Ackerman, Commander A. A., ordnance duty, navy- A ee a rei 242 Acker, George N., Board of Medical Ex- aminers, District of Columbia........... 344 Acker, W. Bertrand, division chief, Interior Department, 1732 Fifteenth street....... 244 Adams, Albert F., instructor, Gallaudet College eR Rs a 348 Adams, Cyrus Field, Assistant Register of the Treasury, 934 Ssitect co. 231 Adams, James B., assistant forester, Gaith- eras Md i 249 Adams, J. Lee, division chief, Bureau In- ternal Revenue, Takoma Park........... 233 Adams, Robert, jr., Representative from Pennsylvania, Regent, Smithsonian In- stitubion vs. Ce 254 Adams, W. Irving, chief clerk Interna- tional Exchanges, The Ontario... ...... 255 Adee, Alvey A., Second Assistant Secre- tary of State, 1019 Fifteenth street ...... 229 Adee, Assistant Paymaster G. N., assistant Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, 1019 Bifteenth stmeet. . 0. a deans 241 Adler, Cyrus: Honorary curator, National Museum, 10 BR sleet. hh ae 255 Librarian National Museum .......... 255 Agassiz, Alexander, president National Academy of Sciences, Cambridge, Mass. 256 Ainsworth, Maj.-Gen. F. C.: The Military Secretary U. S. Army, The Concord. citi... i. ens 235 Commissioner of Soldiers’ Home...... 254 Akers, John F., teacher, Howard Univer- SH A RE I Se LS SAS SE 349 Akin, I". Warren, law clerk, Land Office, 035 Massachusettsavenue................ 244 | Alden, Charles Edwin, clerk Senate Com- mittee on Pacific Islands and Porto Rico, 24 Rhode Island avenue... ................ 211 Aleshire, Maj. J. B., Assistant Quartermas- ter-General, 1719 Highteenth street... -.. 235 Alexander, A B., Fish Commission, 1000 Ninth street EE PB RR LR eR or 252 Allee, J. F., jr., clerk Senate Committee Organization, ‘etc., Executive Depart- ment, The Highlands AER Ta EIR EA 211 Allen, Andrew Hussey: Chief of Bureau of Rolls and Library, Department of State, The Stoneleigh Er ee LE I PRR RT 229 Board on Geographic Names . 253 Allen, B. A., division chief, Auditor for Post-Office’ Department, 1901 Fourth GEVCEL ici sive eiovie sisreivn sini vinis sis eleieielnn » ee 232 Allen, E. W., editor Experiment Station Record, 1725 Riggs plac€..coeev. oo. SE 250 Allen, Frederick I., Commissioner of Pat- ents, 1523 K street EE Ce Fn RNR er, Page. 245 Allen, Col. James, assistant chief, Signal. Office, U. S. A., The Normandie . Allen, cy 12 , division chief, Office of Indian Aire a Ee Allen, John M., Commissioner Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission ...... Allen, W. C., District electrical engineer, 1340 COMBI Tod x Allison, Isaac, instructor in Gallaudet College and master of shop, Kendall TR EP a IR Sa OR es Allison, Wm. B., Senator from Iowa, honor- ary trustee, Howard University... ...... Altamira, I ieut. Col. Don Ignacio, Mexi- can embassy, 1803 Fourteenth street . Alte, Visconde de, minister from Por tugal. Alvey, 1 Pred., assistant assessor, 308 Kast Capitol Sheets. Alvord, Capt. Benj., secretary, General Staff, U. S. Army, 2 Cook place.......... Alvord, Thomas G., chief clerk; Library of Congress, 1855 Mintwood place APTS Alward, Dennis E., reading clerk, House of Representatives, The Dewey:............ Ames, John G., division chief, Interior Department, 1600 Thirteenth street ..... Ames, Capt. T.I,., Assistant Chief of Ord- nance, 1729 Nineteenth street... ......... Amiss, 3 B., lieutenant of police.......... Anderson, George M., assistant attorney, Department o Justice, Rockville, Md ... Anderson, J. F., assistant director, hygienic laboratory, Marine- Hospital Service, 1412 Binney sireet a oo a ee Anderson, J. H., Senate messenger........ Anderson, James W., principal patent ex- aminer (acting), 1521 Twenty-eighth RE ee le Sa De sm ea cL Anderson, Thomas H., associate justice, supreme court, District of Columbia, 1531 New Hampshire avenue ....... oho... Andrews, HE. H., clerk, House folding room, III Maryland avenue, NE .. Andrews, H. P., clerk in Office of Clerk, House of Representatives, 417 A street Andrews, Mr. Lillian Herbert, Colondiian legation, New-York, N,V... outs Andrews, Lieut. Philip, duty with General Board, Navy Department, 1738 Riggs PIACE wt ie eshte a se a sega se ei Andrews, W. E., Auditor for the Treasury Department, 1223 Yale street...... ceees Andrews, W. R., clerk Senate Committee on Post- ~Offices and Post- Roads, The Port- AIA Ss es nr eee Angell, J. B., Regent, Smithsonian Institu- tion, Ann Arbor, Miche hol hihi Armstrong, Robert B. , Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 1509 Twentieth street. . Armstrong, W. P., auditor, Isthmian Canal CONMMISBION . vices ss so rs les cs wines Arnold, Joseph A., associate editor, Agri- cultural Department, 134 Sixth street NE. Arosemena, Mr. C. C., legation of Panama. Arthur, Maj. William H. , surgeon, Soldiers’ Homer 429 236 246 230 344 348 349 300 307 343 234 227 213 244 236 346 237 234 212 250 300 430 Alphabetical Index. Page. Ash, James R., division chief, Post-Office Department, The Llewellyn: :.... ...... 238 Ashford, Philip M., assistant attorney, Togo Birst street... nc lL an a 237 Ashford, Snowden, inspector of buildings, 716 Nineteenth street. ................... 344 Assis-Brasil, Mr. J. KF. de, minister from Bagley 298 Atkinson, C. D., clerk, House of Repre- sentatives, 507 Fifth street NE........... 213 Atkinson, C. S., clerk House Committee on Immigration and Naturalization, 720 ‘Penthistreet i. nt a ia a al 215 Atwater, Lieut. Commander C. N., Office of Naval Intelligence, 2019 Hillyer place... 240 Atwater, W. O., Office of Experiment Sta- tions, NA a COIL. +. es diate ov sinin 250 Aughinbaugh, William L,., principal patent examiner, 1245 Kenesaw avente......... 245 Auhagen, William, Nautical Almanac, CT EIA SE ro fe SRE SI SRI SBE 241 Austin, Oscar P., Chief Bureau of Statis- tics, Department of Commerce and Iabor, 1620 Massachusetts avenue....... 252 Avery, B. E., clerk, Secretary’s Office, Sen- ate, =6:B street NB. ol. hth sy 210 Aziz Bey, Turkish legation................ 301 Azpiroz, 'Sefior Don Manuel de, ambassa- dor from Mexico,1413 I'street........... 300 Azpiroz, Sefior Don Rodrigo de, Mexican embassy, 1113. Istreet. vo nl dil. 300 Babcock, H. J., private secretary to Secre- tary of State, 1334 Thirteenth street . 229 Babson, John W. , division chief, Patent Of- fice, 108 Eleventh street SE ............. 245 Babson, Mrs. Eliza A. secretary Board of Children’s:Guardians................v... 344 Bacon, Howard M., division superintendent, Post-Office Department, 1735 Willard Street... vi es eT i ees 239 Badger, C. A., clerk Senate Committee on Standard Weights and Measures, I33I a PTR EL a nL En Sr a 212 Baez, Sefior Don Cecilio, The Normandie, minister from Paraguay SR Ra 300 Bailey, G. A., assistant clerk House Com- mittee on Invalid Pensions, 234 New Jer- SCY AVENE... si sroin sion nicnins schuinhininis sbi s 215 Bain, J. Karl, assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on Public Buildin gs and Grounds, z8ixthatreet NB... ro 212 Baird, Capt. George W., U.S. Navy, Super- intendent State, War, and Navy Depart- ment building, 1505 Rhode Island ave- YL ETL a al ON Se a Be 230 Baker, A. B., clerk, Zoological Park, 1845 Lanier AvVeHUE. LL esr i at 255 Baker, Frank, superintendent Zoological Park, 1728 Columbia road. ...........:... 255 Baker James M.,assistantSenate librarian, 1506 Park atreet. ee 210 Baker, Maj. C. B., Assistant Quartermaster- General, 2024 Ntreet. 235 Baldwin, Simeon 5. V.P, American His- torical Association, New Haven ......... 256 Ball, C. R., Bureau of Plant Industry, 1621 Birstalreet 248 Ball, Newell, Senate messenger ........... 211 Ballard; Melville, instructor, Kendall Le] Renin pa ese a ST ee a Ee 348 Ballentine, Henry I., clerk in Byer graphic Office, 2108 Nineteenth street . 240 Ralloch, G. W., Howard University ......... 349 Balsh, P. A. Surg. A. W., Museum of Hy- giene and Medical School, 1720 H street. 242 Bancroft, Jay F., principal patent exam- iner, THE Brunewick. vos aes ves 245 Bantz, Gideon C., deputy assistant treas- urer of the United States, Baltimore, Baquerizo, Dr. Alfredo, minister from BeHadOr. . ve vids miie is innetsmeiisivis sieeales 299 Barbour, E. A., clerk Senate Committee on PublicHealth......... ... of. aires 212 Barnard, Job, associate justice supreme court District of Columbia, 1306 Rhode Islandiavenue. .t.. . oi ihe ees 296 Barnes, Benjamin F., assistant secretary to President, 48 R SUC NE... rae creer. 228 Page. Barnes, George W., superintendent Bu- reau of Pensions, 103 Fourth street SE... 246 - Barnett, Claribel R., assistant librarian, ; Agricultural Department, 1519 Rhode Island avenue... ici win nr 250 Barney, Harry W., clerk House Committee on District of Columbia, 503 East Capitol Ee SS pa 216 Barrett, H. W., sinking fund officer, U. S. Preasury, 3226-N-street ........c0. noe, 233 Barroll, Commander H. H. (retired), Hy- drographic Office, The Dupont.......... 240 Bartlett, George A., disbursing clerk, Treasury Department, The Portner...... 230 Bartlett, Joseph W., clerk, Secretary’s Office, Senate, 1810 Ninth street....n..... 210 Barto, Frank H. , clerk House Committee ON PENSIONS a1 sr heres tans raise 215 Barton, W. M., physician to poor, 1309 H oar) RAR ELEN St Ble La fn Ta an Ra 345 Bates, C. A., division chief, Bureau of Internal Revenue, Kirk street, Chevy CaS od ai ce Cn dei sh Ce aes ea 233 Battle, I.. J., physician to poor, 306 H street. 345 Bauer, Louis A., Coast and Geodetic Sur- vey, The OMAHD. ts a 252 Bayer, Hector von, Bureau of Fisheries, zor6 Thirteenth street... ...... Le... 252 Bayley, Commander Warner B., Naval Examining Board, 818 Eighteenth street. 243 Bayly, William H., chief clerk Bureau of . Pensions, 2125 Nistreets on cree 246 Beach, Maj. William D., General Staff, 2112 JECT Be EE ee A Sa He 234 Beach, Morgan H., United States attorney, 1626 Nineteenth street ...ine. oo. . o 296 Beal, F. KE. L., Biological Survey, Agricul- ture Department, Branchville, Md ...... 250 Beal, W. H., division chief, Office of Ex- periment Stations, 1725 Riggs place... ... 250 Beall, Charles B. , deputy clerk Supreme Court of the United States, 1339 Fifteenth aE street, oh i Lt en Se re a, 293 Bean, W. S., assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on Agriculture and Forestry, 1312 2 Ia pe Bee Ee pa i In 210 Becker, G. division chief, Geological Survey, 5 Matrect... 246 Beers, C. F. sopiain; fire department...... 345 Belden, Ww. S., division chief, Auditor for Post- ee Department, 1416 Hopkins ot re LE NER Sa tt Be SS 232 Bell, A. C., assistant clerk to Howse Com- mittee on Accounts, House of Representa- a Ee SE he SE he 214 Bell, Alexander Graham, Regent Smith- sonian Institution... oli. 254 Bell, Chas. J., trustee public library...... 344 Bellinger, Maj. J. B., Assistant Quarter- master-General, 183g Vernon avenue . 235 Belt, James B. , clerk to Digest of Private Claims, House of Representatives, 933 H Ea a i 213 Belt, W. I, chief fire department, 233 North Capitol BLIGE rere, rine 345 Bender, Joseph T'., division chief, Interior Deparfment, The Ceetl ie i as 244 Benjamin, Marcus, editor, National Mu- Senm,; 1703.0) Stress tila doce cul 255 Bennett, Adolphus B., division chief, Pen- sion Biireau, 3406 Mount Pleasant street. 246 Bennett, Charles Goodwin, Secretary of the Senate, biography, Metropolitan Club . 210 Bennett, Joseph B., appointment clerk, Department of Agriculture, 137 Eleventh Street NE. Sis ise Gnesi e sun saiin 247 Benson, Klbert G.: Board of eclectic medical examiners, District of Columbia... .... Luin, 344 Board of medical supervisors, District of Columbia. oo. oo on eG. 343 Bentley, A. J., examiner of titles, Depart- ment of Justice, 1716 Ninth street... ..... 237 Benton, Frank, division of entomology, Argyle Park ii eo ded vt i ri, 250 Berg, John R., foreman Congressional Record, 319 F Breet NE i co ins 253 Bermudez, Sefior Don Pedro Requeria, le- ZION OL UTHZIRY vv vivre sn ressas onions 301 ~ Ae Ll | { { Alphabetical Index. Page. Berry, E. R., clerk Senate Committee on Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress, Metropolitan Hotel. Berry, James, division chief, Weather Bureau, 14 Third street SE ............... Berry, Walter V. R., board of trustees Re- form School for Girls, District of Colum- pe I CE CE Besselievre, S. I., chief clerk Bureau of Con- struction and Repair, 315 KE street NE... Bethune, J. F., messenger, Secretary’s Office, Senate, The Norfolk.............. Betts, Fredric A., Commissioner, I,ouisiana Purchase Exposition Commission ....... Beyer, Naval Surgeon H. G., Museum of Jivpiens and Medical School, The Al- BY +d ls oh a a le Bibolini, Sefior Don R., legation of Para- TIRE Ene TS ie TTR Le Ss So Biddle, John M., clerk Senate Committee to Audit and Control Contingent Ex- penses,; zoz2 Hillyer place..&.. 5... Biddle, Maj. John: District Commissioner, 1517 I, street. Secretary Rock Creek ‘Park Board . Hxecutive officer District building Bigelow, Prof. Frank H. , Weather Bureau, 1625 Massachusetts av CRUE ass iii Bigelow, Willard D., Bureau of Chemistry, 1445 Binney street. Rr rr I RO Billings, Cornelius C., law clerk, Patent Office, 1702 Ninth street. Bingham, Edward F., retired justice, sti preme court, District of Columbia, The Craton eh a ras Bishop, R. F., assistant House librarian, 127 Sixth street SB aa es Bivins, John T'., chief clerk Bureau of In- terna Revente, The Windsor......--...- Black, John C., "president Civil Service Commission, 1825 Nineteenth street. . Blackburn, I. Ww. , pathologist, Government Hospital formnsane. Blackford, Mrs. Huldah W., secretary board of trustees of Industrial Honie School, District of Columbia ENTS Blanco, Sefior Don Jacobo, Commissioner on part of Mexico, United States and Mexican Water Boundary Commission. . Blauvelt, Arthur K., assistant clerk House Committee on ways and: Means. ....... Bliss, Brig. Gen. I’. H., assistant to Chief of Staff, U.S. A. , Cleveland Park.. Blount, Henry F., board of trustees Boys’ Reform School, "District of Columbia. . Blount, Mrs. Lucie E., board of trustees of Industrial Home School, District of Co- Inmbid oon Sr aaa a a Blumenberg, M. R., stenographer to House committees, 21 First street NE ltn Blumenberg, "Milton W. , official reporter, Senate, The Portland o..v.. cui vi Boardman, Capt. R. H., detective head- quarters, 218M street NE. .......0 Bobroff, Mr. André, Russian embassy Bond, Frank: Division chief, I,and Office, The De- CARNE. J els sa an Board on Geographic Names.......... Boobar, John J., House librarian, 1225 Kenyon'strect. ... ive micean fo ny, Booth, Frederick V., division chief, Patent Office, ass Catreet. vin col aL Borghetti, Signor Riccardo, Italian em- bassy, 1034 Connecticut avenue.......... Boswell, A. W., physician to poor, 609 Nth street NB. i niet Botkin, Alexander C., chairman Commis- sion to Revise the Laws, The Farragut.. Bourk, Miss I,., Haitian legation .......... Boutakoff, Commander Alexandre, Russian embassy, 1325 VEStreet viv vivid s vise 296 346 244 253 213 245 300 345 238 299 301 431 Page. Boutwell, George S., Washington National Monument Association .................. 25, Bovee, J. Wesley, board of trustees Reform School for Girls, District of Columbia.. 344 Bowen, Clarence w., treasurer American Historical Association, 130 Fulton street, New-York, No XY. a vaio oo ein aas 256 Bowen, Frank H. , chief clerk, Department of Commerce and Tabor, 1500 Providence street, Brookland i... ..... i aa nina 251 Bower, C. F., Senate messenger, 1744 K EA Sea a 211 Bowerman, Geos B., Public Librarian . 344 Bowers, George M , Fish Commissioner, The Shorehill crs. ir i eas 252 Bowling, A. H., Deputy Auditor for the Treasury Department, Hyattsville, Md.. 231 Bowyer, Commander J. M.,navy-yard. .. 242 Hood, Allen R., secretary to Librarian of Congress, 2r15 OQ 8treet. colin ii oa Ll 227 Boyd, George H., assistant superintendent Senate document room, 2406 Fourteenth Sireek. i en sete LS Sele eee 210 Boyd, Medical Director John C., U. S. N., Museum of Hygiene, 1313 P street Casares 242 Boyd, Sefior Don Jorge E., legation of PATTER oii on oe inie siniste wis tie vstiests aialaters 300 Boyle, R. B., lieutenant of police. ......... 346 Boynton, H. IV, president board of educa- BONE ee a Ee 44 Brackett, G. B., Bureau of Plant Industry, Srorodistrect duc. Lor vi a 248 Braddock, Frank W., adjuster, Bureau of the Mint, 1313 Fourteenth street......... 2; Bradford, Gershom, Coast and Geodetic Survey, sr2Astreet SE... conn 252 Bradley, Charles S., secretary Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, 1722 NeStreet!, ea a ee, 347 Bradley, Medical Director George P., naval hospital, 1702 P street ............. 242 Bradley, W. O., division chief, Auditor for State and other Departments, 1007 Massa- chusefisiavenue NH. o.oo a 232 Brady, W. Leonard, assistant clerk Senate Committee on Xducation and I,abor, Annapolis Junction, Md............. ou. 211 Brahany, T. W., clerk Senate Committee ON CENSUS ILS i ee a a 210 Braid, Andrew, Coast and Geodetic Sur- vey, The Columbia. ois vai em 252 Brandenburg, Hdwin C., assistant attor- ney, 1634 Sixth street 0 nan Ly 237 Brandt, E. S., chief clerk Naval Bureau of Ordnance, 1518 Corcoran street ...... 240 Brannigan, Felix, assistant attorney, 1481 Columbia read tl sa canon, 237 Breckons, Joseph A., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Claims, 1751 Willard street........ 210 Breitenstein, D. F., House post-office, 125 Massachusetts avente ................... 215 Brewer, David J Associate justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography), 1923 Six- teenth street... conn ai, 291-293 Director, Columbia Institution for Deaf and Dumb. .... Brewer, H. H., foreman Senate “folding room, 21 B ER 212 Brian, Henry Ta: Chief clerk, Government Printing Of- foe zalstreet: san 253 Board on Geographic N ames.......... 253 Brickenstein, John H., examiner in chief, Patent Office, 1603 Nineteenth street . 245 Bridgeman, I,. E., assistant postmaster, House of Representatives, 3122 Q street... 215 Briggs, Lieut. A. S., The Concord, assistant to Chief Signal Officer 5... ite a 236 Briggs, Lyman J., soil physicist, 3451 Mount Pleasant SETORL. hte ets oat Vadis dn 249 Briggs, O. H., chief clerk Purchasing Agent, Post-Office Department, 622 C street NI. Lr Aa a ah 239 Brigham, Josephine, private secretary to Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, 1249 Kennesaw avenue, ... vue ivessainivavinraes 247 432 Page, Bristol, Iieut. M. I,., Naval Bureau of Ord- nance, Army and Navy Club Bristow, Joseph I,., Fourth Assistant Post- 240 master-General, 1123 Roanoke street . 239 Brockway, Charles B., Clerk’s Office, House of Representatives, "The Varnum........ 213 Brodie, D. A., Bureau of Plant Industry, ‘The Lincoln Rh a a SS ne 248 Broening, W. F., clerk House Committee on Enrolled Bills, Baltimore, Md... 215 Brogden, H. H., clerk to commandant navy-yard, Halls, Md ronan 242 Bromwell, Col. Charles S.: Superintendent of Public Buildingsand Grounds, 1608 New Hampshire ave- $1 11 Leona aS LE Ee a Sp RE 228 In charge Washington Monument .... 236 Brooks, H. C., House Post-Office, 340 C SETCCH ie neta n ich Cel dirtviie tutte win a Seis terete 216 Brooks, N. M., Superintendent of Foreign Mails, 224 A street SI. ooh ia vain 240 Brooks, Walter J., assistant chief clerk Bureau of Pensions, 57 U: street. ......... 246 Brown, Aldis B., member the Washing- ton National Monument Society......... 255 Brown, Chapin, president board of trustees Reform School for Girls, District of Co- lambia o.oo. na Ls 344 Brow, Edgar, Bureau of Plant Industry, Lanham, MA a Sr he ea 248 Brown, Fred. G., Clerk’s document room House of Representatives, 207 A street NE i i ah he a waa 1a 213 Brown, George H., landscape gardener, public buildings and grounds, 1357 Roa- noke:street ol iain pend Rn 236 Brown, Henry Billings: Associate justice, Supreme Court of the United States, 1720 Sixteenth street (OloTTapNY Ye. eis ai eis Sis nies 292-293 First vice-president Washington Na- tional Monument Association ....... 255 Brown, John H., House messenger, 248 Phir streets erin es 214 Brown, Lewis K., division chief, Auditor for Navy Department, 134 C street SK.. 232 Brown, S. C., registrar National Museum, 305 New Jersey avenue SB... on Ve 255 Brown, I. J., captain, fire department .... 346 Brown, ILieut.jThomas H. (U. 8. M. C.), Marine Barracks... ve otis sais 5 243 Brown, William W., Auditor for the Navy Department, ‘The ‘Buckingham RTLE sal 232 Browning, William J., chief clerk House of Representatives, 146 Fast Capitol gfreet. Ln a, a ie 213 Bruce, Harrison I,., chairman board of pension appeals, 1436 U street........... 244 Brun, Mr. Constantin, minister from Den- Tere Senate Ile 299 Brush, Chester H., recorder Land Office, The "Rockingham RE Ae 244 Bryan, Henry I,., assistant law clerk, Department of State, 604 Fast Capitol Sireet, i. Loi ul ev dS. ED 229 Bryan, Lieut. Commander B. C., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 1734 Cor: coran street. 241 Bryan, J. F., Assistant Clerk House Com- mittee on Interstate and Foreign Com- merce, 6B street, NE... 0. en 215 Bryant, Arthur D., instructor, Gallaudet ~ College and Kendall School . ............ 348 Bryant, Charles M., division chief, Bureau of Pensions, 934 hotrest- ine 246 Buck, George M. , clerk Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections, 315 A street en A ae Ee ee 212 Buckingham, Hiram, custodian, Interior Department, 1231 Princeton street....... 244 Buckler, C. Howard, superintendent sys- tem of postal finance, 409 Sixth street SE 239 Bukey, Van H. , disbursing agent, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 1619 Seven- teenth Street (ves coset iit ios es savin ss 232 Bulmer, Lieut. R. c, ‘Ordnance duty, Navy- Nard SE aS 242 Bumphrey, M. H.; Senate messenger...... 212 Bunau-Varilla, Séfior Don Philippo, Min- ister from Panama, New Willard vs0e0e 300 Alphabetical Index. Call, I,ewis W., chief clerk Office Judge- Advocate-General, U. S. Army, 1660 Sher- idan AVENUE vv rrr risivsisscisisisvvivvrr ory voy Page. Bundy, Charles S., jus‘ice of the peace, Co- lumbian Building: diary pl SAAT 296 Bundy, Jas. F Board of education ...... SELIG aol ee 344 Howard University ........... an .. 349 Bunell, J. G., assistant superintendent, House document room, The Vendome... 214 Burbank, Annie F¥., teacher, Howard Uni- NETSIEYS Ml i seve ai sraidinn iain wee Bo Sade aa as 349 Burbank, Daniel N., division chief, Auditor for Post-Office Department, 732 ‘Thir- teenthistreet in os ia ants 232 Burch, M. C., assistant attorney, 313 S street INTER tse whe rei ciate monte on de tene uhaiebi ds Sn wa een at 2 Burch, Dr. W. I., police surgeon........... on Burch, S. R.: Chief clerk Department of Agricul- ture, he Sherman... 00.0 vo. 247 United States Government Board, St. Touis Bxpesition.. ol. ncn. oh 256 Burchard, Edward I,., chief of order divi- sion, Library of Congress, 506 Seward Square IR Ee ne TER 227 Burdick, Lieut. Commander W. I,., assist- ant hydrographer, The Portland. ....... 240 Burke, E. B., assistant engineer, House of Representatives, 620 Pennsylvania ave- BE a SRE A 215 Burke, Moncure, Assistant Clerk District Court of Appeal yas ra RE CR 296 Burlew, Joseph M. messenger Senate Commiftee on Pacific Railroads, 422 Sec- ond street... oul nia nL rd 211 Burlingame, Ward, chief clerk dead letter division, r1o2z Thirteenth street...... .... 238 " Burr, William H., Isthmian Canal Com- 2 mission. a a SR RR SL 236 Burrows, A. 5. clerk to Doorkeeper, House of Representatives, Riggs House. 186 Burton, Brig. Gen. G. H., Inspector-Gen- eral, War Department... co. 000. 235 Burton, W. S., Senate messenger.......... 211 Busbey, I,. White, secretary to the Speaker, 2516 Khirteenth street....... 0... ..... A 213 Bushnell, E. 'I'., division chief, Auditor for State and other Departments, 1757 Madi- SONSERCCl rl. doll, nti An Ee A Sona, 232 Buscher, A. J., captain, fire department.. 345 Bussche-Haddenhausen, Freiherrvon dem, German embassy, 1843 Sistreet. Ln 0 299 Bussey, James R., clerk Senate Committee on Woman Suffrage, The Metropolitan.. 212 Bussius, Allen, chief clerk pension agency, 1341 Emerson street NE. . 246 Butler, B. F., computer of bullion, Bureau of the Mint, AS streets Jini aa, 233 Butler, C. H. chief Diplomatic and Con- sular Division, Treasury Department, Y145 twenty-second street’, ........ ..... 232 Butler, Charles Henry, reporter Supreme Court of the United States, 1535 I street.. 293 Butler, Lieut. H. V., Bureau of Steam En- gineering, 2024 Hill er place... tains. 241 Butt, Capt. A. W., depot quartermaster, The DRPONL. se rd sten oh bee ol Sete aha in 235 Bynum, William D., Commission to Revise the Laws, 1645 X street... oo... 0... 238 Byrne, P. J., foreman of binding, Govern- ment Printing Office, 105 Maryland ave- ne: NE ws a Od sin Te ae 253 Byrnes, E. M., Bureau of Plant Industry, GR EI ee 248 Byrnes, Michael, lieutenant of police...... 346 Caine, Alexander C.: Board of trustees Reform School for Girls, District of Columbia, 1528 T' Street. ne rE a 344 Disbursing clerk Department of Justice 237 Caldera, Sefior Alfredo Alvarez, Peruvian egation, 1034 Connecticut avenue....... 300 con eron, Sefior Don I., minister from Bolivia ia oo se a a UN 298 Calderon, Sefior Manuel Alvarez, minister from: Peru, The Connecticut... .......... 298 Calderon, Sefior Don Manuel de la Vegay, Cuban legation, The Connecticut...’ .... 299 Alphabetical Index. 433 Page. Callahan, Edward W., chief clerk Bureau of Navigation, 1908 H street ............. 240 Callan, Thomas H., justice of the peace, 627 Breet oe tee sd a 296 Calvo, Sefior Don Joaquin Bernardo, min- ister from Costa Rica, 1329 Eighteenth STEROL. Fi, Seite shite eal aes oid alain isla toate lta we 298 Camercn, Frank K., soil chemist, The Co- IMD i ce i sete sia swans le 249 Cameron, John J., assistant to official re- porters, House of Representatives, 513 F RL a a A 216 Campbell, Lieut. E. H., duty with general board, Navy Department, 2118 Wyoming AVE IIG ey a ir hr Ns eae 243 Campbell, Frank I,., Assistant Attorney- General for the Interior Department, 1430 HOWATA VENUE i.e divers veicrneis 237 Campbell, Levin H., principal patent ex- aminer, 1750 Erie rE a 245 Candamo, Mr. Manuel R., Peruvian lega- tion; The Connecticul........... oo. ves 300 Cannon, Joseph G., Speaker, House of Rep- resentatives, 1014 Vermont avenue...... 213 Canoga, Commander A. B. , Bureau of Steam Engineering, 1746 S street I ST 241 Canseco, Sefior Don Criséforo, Mexican embassy, 14351 streets iiaii ies 300 Cantrell, Robert W., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Five Civilized Tribes of Indians, zoiR sree. aiid cin le is see 211 Capps, Rear-Admiral W. I,., Chief Con- struetor Navy, 1823 Jefferson Place...... 241 Carleson, A. J., clerk House Committee on Irrigation. gzo I istreet. cl es 215 Carleton, Mark A., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, 3409 Brown Street. aa 248 Carpenter, Fred W., private secretary to Secretary of War, The Marlborough .. 234 Carpenter, Henry H., clerk House Com- mittee on Insular Affairs, 1012 Fifteenth BENE, Li ives sie Skin ihe luluia ble aia ts kata iulee 215 Carr, Capt. D. J., disbursing officer, Signal Corps, Sud dS street lien lL co Vai, 236 Carr, Wilbur J., Chief of Consular Bureau, State Department, 1423 R street ......... 229 Carrington, John, captain, fire depart- 1311531 | A RR Ce Sl Sa Re Mr Re EI RA 345 Carroll, Daniel J., chief clerk Weather Bureau, 1008 Twenty-second street...... 247 Carroll, Lieut. James, Army Medical Mu- seum, 433 New Jersey avenue SE........ 235 Carter, Thomas H., president Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission (St. TOMS T0038) sensi ie nein smi this hy eves As 230 Casey, Henry, division chief, Office Auditor for Interior Department, 1211 Sixth [51 i fod BRE SR ee SO SS 232 Cassidy, James H., clerk House Committee on Riversand Harbors, The Cumberland, 215 Cassini, Count, ambassador from Russia, 1500 Rhode Island avenue. ............... 301 Casson, Henry, Sergeant-at-Arms of the House, 33 B street cians dis a 213 Castellot, Senor Don José, jr., Mexican embassy, 1314 Fourteenth street......... 300 Centaro, Signor Roberto, Italian embassy, ¥325 GI SITeeti or cs tain ih ie a Af aie uses 300 Chaffee, Lieut. Gen. Adna R., Chief of Gen- eral Staff 1731 WT streel.. i 0 iii 234 Chamberlain, Eugene Tyler, Chief Bu- reau of Navigation, Department of Commerceand Labor, 176gWillard street. 252 Chambers, Civil Engineer F. T., Bureau of Equipment, Army and Navy Club....... 240 Chambers, W. L., Spanish Treaty Claims Commission, 1824 New Hampshireavenue 238 Chambers, Lieut. Commander W. I., duty with General Board, Navy Department, IB Listreet, oii fr an se dd rales 243 Chambrun, Viscount Charles de, French embassy, Stoneleigh Court.............. 299 Chance, Merritt O.: Chief clerk, Post-Office Department, Kensington, Md... 0.0.0 wantin. 238 Government Board, St. I,ouis Exposi- BOM a Sr RR aN aa 256 Chancey, John T., special employee, House of Representatives, 465M street... .... 214 58-3D—2D ED—28 Page. Chandler, Lieut. I,loyd H., office of Naval Intelligence, 2019 Kalorama avenue... 240 Chandler, W. E., president Spanish Treaty Claims Commission, 1421 1 street. ..... 238 Chapin, Iieut. Commander Frederick Lr. ie assistant, Bureau of Navigation, 1414 entieth SITEEL. ae itire n er 240 Chapman, E. L., principal patent examiner, : 2112 Wyoming AVENE. fe ie live inte o Sieiainin 245 Charles, Garfield, assistant clerk Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, 1203 Q aie eae Klee ee i bes ed Ie ae re 211 ony Bey (appointed), minister from Urey i oh a hs Sed ri a 0s 30% Chester, Rear-Admiral C. M., Superintend- ent Naval Observatory. ........... uve 241 Chew, Nolen I,., Deputy Auditor for Post- Office Department, 211g First street: ..... 232 Cheyney, Charles B., 7 Cooke place: Recorder naval examining board ...... 243 Recorder naval retiring board ........ 243, Recorder board of naval medical ex- arminens i Le Si Se 243, Chickering, John W. , professor Gallaudet ern I GR Sl a nee 347 Chittenden, F. H., division of entomology, 1323 Vermont avenue OE I A 1 250 Choate, Warren R., chief clerk Bureau of Corporations, Rockville, Mdina, 251 Chong, Moo Hong, Korean legation...... 300 Christian, Charles H., laborer, Sergeant- at-Arms, House of Representatives, 623 B Street NID. .ovioy rehire nie oininintin siviyiale pt\ sian 214 Chunan Chang, Mr., Chinese legation, The WESIOVEL ivi, ohn oats sis sisis'sints slain oi aiainlwinleliiniainte 298 Church, Alonzo W., Senate librarian, 1706 Oregon ER rh GO I LE 210 Church, John P., division chief, Weather Bur ea, 201 Third street NE............. 247 Church, Samuel R., justice of the peace, 210 F streets. Lin i a va ee a, 296 Churchill, James C., clerk to chief clerk, War Department, 1344 Vermontavenue.. 234 Cissel, George W., flour inspector......... 344 Clabaugh, Harry M., chief justice supreme court of the District of Columbia, 1842 Mintwood Place IE AR ERR 296 Clark, A. rs curator, National Museum.. 255 Sete y American Historical Associa- 5 Pry Fa Or lS ES i Le ae 256 Clark, C. & chief clerk Bureau of Statis- tics, Department of Agriculture, 1517 Rhode Tolatid Avenue, «io os ihns corres 249 Clark, Charles H., M. D., physician, Hos- pital forthe Insane... ....c7. 0h. o. 348 Clark BK.‘ Senate messenger... ......... 211 Clark, G. C,, physician to the poor, 1110 New York avenue... vocab ast ae ir 345 Clark,Isaac, professor, Howard University. 349 Clark, Josephine A., librarian Agricultural Department, 1322 Twelfth street......... 250 Clark,'I.."A., Senate messenger... .i...... ... 212 Clark, Reed P., clerk Senate Committee on Cuban Relations, 1424 Eleventh Clarke, Rear-Admiral C. E., The Marl- borough: General Board ........ RR A 242 President naval examining and retir- ing boards... ori cha nn 243 Clarke, Daniel B., treasurer Washington National Monument Association, 1422 Massachusettsavenue........... ....0.5. 255 Clarke, I. Edwards, Office of Education, 1752 OTegON AVENUE... uum eernnnererenns 246 Clay, Cecil: General agent Department of Justice, I513iS street. cosas ne i 237 Representative Department of Justice, Government Board Louisiana Pur- chase TXPOSILION. = i... herve inc viven es 256 Board of trustees of Boys’ Reform School, District of Columbia... ..... 344 Cleaver, Frank M., division chief, Weather Bureau, 2311 M street eet we cisiovoeieie siniy Disieis 247 Cleaves, Thomas P., clerk Senate Com- mittee on Appropriations, 1819 Tenth Stree... i re Sa re sruiatoteiaten IRE 210 434 Alphabetical Index. Page. Clements, Judson C., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, 2113 Bancroft place....... Clephane, Walter C., Board of Trustees of Industrial Home School, District of Co- ambi eh a A Cloman, Capt. S. A., office of Chief of Staff, U. S. Army, Army and Navy Club....... Cobaugh, H. A., captain of the watch, Treasury Department, 823 I'wenty-first ry CE A EB en Cochran, W. E., Purchasing Agent, Post- Office Department, 2464 Wisconsin ave- 1 EH A a Re LGR Si Cochrane, Allister, official reporter, House of Representatives, The Driscoll......... Cockrell, Allen V., clerk Senate Committee on Engrossed Bills, 1518 R street ........ Cockrell, Francis M., Senator from Mis- souri: Regent, Smithsonian Institution....... Director, Columbia Institution for Deaf and DUM. os eo Coffey, Geo. N., Bureau of Soils, Depar t- ment of Agr iculture, 923 H Street. ....... Coit, John M., law clerk, Patent Office, 1213 Iydecker AVENE oi tli on Cole, Maj. E. K., U.S. M.C., Navy-Yard... Coleman, Chapman, secretary special com- mission plenipotentiary under tariff act, FAZER SITE. Ld oy ie oe i er Collier, William M., solicitor, Department of Commerce and Labor, New Willard. Collins, C. W., deputy collector of taxes, 37 C Street INTE. v. culo tb eerste Cae ws Collins, E. J. board of eclectic medical ex- aminers, District of Columbia ........... Collins, KF. A., private secretary to Public Printer, 125 pr enth street NE.. Collins, F. W., assistant attorney, 5 "1820 Howard avenue... sonra ess Collins, Walter F., assistant superintend- ent of the Senate folding room, 614 Stree SI. oo re ee sees Colwell, E., clerk, Office Secretary Senate, 609 Eighth Sireat NE... a Concklin, E. F., chief clerk Office Superin- tendent Public Buildings and Grounds, 513 Bleventh street... ve oh... Conner, I,. A., division chief, Bureau of Internal Revenue, 1721 Corcoran street. . Conrard, Charles A., chief clerk Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General, The Ro- andy sid se eas rg a fa alate datvin Crease Constantine, J. J., House manager depart- mental telegraph, House Post-Office.... Converse, Rear-Admiral G. A.: Chief Bureau of Navigation, 1744 M BH a rT i a LD General Board, Navy Department..... Conwell, Isaac R., division chief, Land Office, 1302 Columbia road... ............. Cook, George W.: Board of Charities... i... eer Professor, Howard University......... Cook, James T, division chief, Post-Office Department, Kensington, ML Cook, John F.: Board of Children’s Guardians ........ Howard University’... ...0.. 00s Cook, John J., chief clerk Office Chief of Ordnance, U. S. Army, 925 M street. ...... Cook, Leonard B., elevator conductor, House of Representatives, 485 Maryland avenue SW... .. oo... esse ses aie Cook, M. S., division chief, Indian Office, 1328 FWElLIE SLICE. oii ees eis Cook, O. F., Bureau of Plant Industry, Lanham, Md a Cooksey, Frank E., Senate messenger... .. Cooley, Alford W., Civil Service Commis- sioner, 1911 N SHOE. ure. aver sss vinesain Coombs, C. W., assistant Department mes- aE House of Representatives, 306 E street NE Cooper, W. A., dispatch agent, State De- partment, post- -office building, San Fran- Le A He Ta So SS Bl Corbett, I,. C., Bureau of Plant Industry, Takoma Pari, vo. ress .sssssivesseiseieiise 253 344 234 230 239 216 245 242 240 242 244 343 349 238 344 349 236 215 246 248 212 253 214 229 249 Page. Corbin, Maj. Gen. Henry C,, Commissioner, Soldiers Home... vires sweat 254 Corea, Sefior Don Juis F., minister from Nicaragua A EE Li 300 Cornelius, KE. Livingstone, clerktoSergeant- at-Arms of the Senate, 1619 S street. ..... 212 Cotton, W. E., Bureau of Animal Industry, 300874 Ustieet on... hs 248 Couden, Rev. Henry N., D. D., Chaplain of the House, 109 Maryland avenue NE. 213 Courts, James c clerk House Committee on Appropriations, 1837 Kalorama ave- eR re rr SR 214 Coville, Frederick V.: Bureau of Plant Industry, 1836 Califor- EET Fn La SS 248 Honorary curator, National Museum. 255 Cowie, Robert S., Deputy Auditor for Navy Department, 2217 Fourteenth street ..... 232 Cowles, Capt. Willian: S., assistant to Bu- reau of Navigation, 1733 N street . ; 240 Cowles, Commander W. C., recorder ‘naval board of inspection and survey, The ET Ma SR Lr FS 243 Cowperthwaite, M. T., clerk Senate Com- mittee on Revision of the I,aws, 1611 H CE eR SE Se Si TR 212 Cox, S. C., physician to poor, 2018 I street... 344 Cox, W.V., secretary Government Board TLouisiana Purchase Exposition.......... 250 Crabbs, Capt. Joseph T., Assistant Quar- termaster-General, The Decatur......... 235 Craig, Alvin I,., acting division chief, Bu- reau of Pensions, 1321 Riggs street ...... 246 Craig, William A., custodian Washington Monument, 1020 Pennsylvania avenue Pen TY. Te le Lye eels 5 ans ka x winnie hein wivku ord ate B 236 Cramer, Catharine E., chief of training 3 school, Hospital for Theane. oo 348 Crampton, C. A., division chief, Bureau of Internal Revenue, Bethesda, Md ........ 233 Crane, R. Newton, London, England, dis- patch agent, State Department.......... 229 Crawford, Lieut. John W., secretary to Ad- miral’ Dewey, 1902 (G street. .............. 239 Cremer, John D., stenographer, House committees, 146 D street SE....... ....%. 213 Crew, James H., superintendent railway mail adjustment, 1532 Ninth street ...... 238 Crist, Raymond F., private secretary to the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, 1Zor Whitney avenue. .................... 251 Crook, William H. executive clerk, White . House, 1473 Parlostreet oo. ares 228 Crosby, D. J., Office of Experiment Sta- tions, Lanham, Md.......... oc. 0. 250 Cross, FE. E., captain of police, 319 Ninth: street SRD Ln Len a Sn Re 346 Crozier, Brig. Gen. William: Chief of Ordnance, U. S. Army, 1428 K sfreet re se eR 236 Board of Ordnance and Fortifications... 237 Crystal, James A., Postmaster of the Sen- ate; 103 Bifth street NE... co.ah a. 212 Cuddy, Stephen A., law clerk, Bureau of Pensions, 701 Twelfth street NE. ........ 246 Cullom, S. M., Senator from Illinois, Re- gent, ‘Smithsonian Institution ........... 254 Cummings, George J., professor, Howard University o.com ane 349 Curran, J. W., Senate messenger.......... 211 Curriden, S. Ww, board of trustees Boys’ Reform School, District of Columbia. . 344 Currier; EK. I.., House messenger, 217 Sixth street SI 0. in Cea ay 214 Curtis, James M., messenger, House post- office, 1020 Sixth Street. ....... nove. oun. 215 Curtis, O. H., clerk, Secretary’s Office, Senate, 1914 street... EA 210 Cushman, John ¥., House messenger, 323 East Capitol Street... a 214 Custis, J. B. G.: Board of homeopathic medical examin- ers, District of Columbia............. 344 Board of medical Supervisors, District of Columbia ... . 343 Dahlgren, A. F., assistant House docu- ‘ment room, 421 "Sixth street ............. 214 Daley, John C., lieutenant of police........ 346 a Ch —— ———— Page. Dall, W. H., honorary curator, National HATES Ce HR Ra Su Te Sa Dalton, Thomas W., chief pension board of review, 427 Massachusetts avenue... . Dancy, John C., recorder of deeds, 2139 I, 21 BENE SR Rt LC I Sp I Daniel, John W., assessment clerk, 1622 Riggs place..... a ae Daniel, John W., jr., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Transportation and Sale of Meat Products, 1340 Columbia road... ......... Darling, Charles H., Assistant Secretary of the Navy, The Portland ................: Darling, George A., division chief, Office Auditor for Post-Office Department, 608 Xstreet ot ants te Darnall, Capt. Carl R., Army Medical Mu- seum, Riges place... -.. 0 oh bial Darneille, Hopewell H., assessor, 2523 Thir- teentiviatreet oir a ed Daskam, E. B., division chief, Treasury Department, 7433 R street... doo. ie. en Davenport, Commander R. G., navy-yard, 1720:G SUreCl. ie ris iss tie See ' Davenport, James L., First Deputy Com- missioner of Pensions, g40 IT street....... Davis, Chas. A., board of homeopathic medical examiners, District of Columbia. Davis, Daniel G., clerk House Committee PrivateLand Claims, 1526 O street ....... Davis, E. G., collector of taxes, 2211 R 38 CL RE ST me LIE a SE, Davis, Lieut. Col. Edward, assistant mili- tary secretary U. S. Army, Stoneleigh Court, .v.-eur RL Ea Or By Davis, Eugene, assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on Finance, The Maury.......... Davis, Frederic L., clerk House Commit- tee on Foreign Affairs, The Richmond Davis, George A., clerk, Secretary’s Office, Senate, 164535 street... J. oo vin Davis, Brig. Gen. George B.: Judge-Advocate-General, U. S. Army, 1734 Columbia road... hi... oe, Commissioner, Soldiers’ Home......... Davis, George P., division chief, Auditor for Navy Department, 1457 Staughton street. Davis, \Maj. Gen. George W., Isthmian Canal Commission... 0. Li. oon Davis, H. B., inspector of plumbing, The Stratford oe os ed es Davis, Capt. H. C., U. S. M. C., garrison duty, Navy=Vard ......... o.oo ids Davis, Lewis J., treasurer and director Columbia Institution for Deaf and Dumb, 1411 Massachusetts avenue............... Davis, Madison, assistant postmaster Washington City, 316 A street SE ....... Davis, Peter R., captain, fire department.. Davison, F. 1,., assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on Interstate Commerce, 1624 Fif- teenth street... ...... Rios plein pe WE Se es Davison, Matt., register clerk House post- office, 318 Third street: ... 0.0. he. ci... Dawson, Albert F., assistant clerk Senate Committee on Appropriations, 517 Fifth L508 a Re ER Al REI A ie Le Se Dawson, Edward M.: Chief clerk Interior Department, 1752 SSlreet.. .. on i ie aes Government Board Louisiana Purchase Exposition... ivi. vie. Dawson, Thomas F., clerk Senate Com- mittee on Private Land Claims, 2572 Uni- versity place... ....... nc Siete inl deisle vinings Day, David T., division chief, Geological Survey, 2511 Nineteenth street........... Day, Herbert R., professor, Gallaudet Col- lege a Sa ES SE Day, W. A., assistant to Attorney-General, Ye street. oo, Lan a aR Day, William R., associate justice, Su- preme Court of the United States (biog- raphy), 130r Clifton street...........% 7; Dayton, Capt. J. H., president Naval Board of Inspection and Survey, The Albany. . Dellett, R. H., clerk, superintendent State, War, and Navy building, 1228 Columbia TORE, vv vis vid sare vin viviaisn ss sn miniolots ss ain ts 255 246 296 Alphabetical Index. 435 Page. Dempsey, P. J., chief clerk Office Chief of Engineers, U.S. Army, Alexandria, Va. Denfeld, Lieut. Commander G. W., naval inspector naval appliances, I'he Rocham- bean. loess anh RRR Denison, James, principal Kendall School. Dennett, Fred, clerk Senate Committee on Public Lands, The Portner .. ........ Dennison, I. W., physician to the poor, 1312 EE Ba ER RR I CR ae Denny, Col. Frank I,., U.S. Marine Corps, quartermaster, 1634 Connecticut avenue. Dering, Mr. Herbert G., British Embassy, 1136 Nineteenth street ...... icra os Desportes de la Fosse, Mr., French Em- bassy, 1714 Connecticut avenue.......... Devendorf, H. E., clerk House Committee on Indian Affairs, 222 Second street NE. Deweese, Cornelius, assistant pathologist, Hospital for TNSane: .... vives io dear as Dewey, Frederick P., Bureau of the Mint, Tanier Helghtae aio rae Dewey, George: Admiral of the Navy, 1747 Rhode Island AVEC oss alesis Saas s RCS ies eR President general board............... Dewey, I. H., Bureau of Plant Industry, I337 Wallachiplace o.oo 00k Diaz, Sefior Dr. Eduardo Acevedo, minister from Uruguay, The Normandie. ......... Dickey, Christian B., division chief, Post- Office Department, 3212 Seventeenth 18 ARR SO I Tr CS Dickins, Lieut. Col. Randolph, command- ing Marine Barracks. oa Soar Sia ia Dickman, Capt. J. T., General Staff, 1814 Belmontavenue .. ou ui i ian sa Dickson, Capt. T. C.: Assistant Chief of Ordnance, U. S.. Army, 1765 Church street ............ Recorder, Board of Ordnance and For- tifications, 1765 Church street........ Dieffenderfer, W. E., dental examiner, 514 Colorado Building... ...i oi ican. Diehl, Capt. Sam. W. B., judge-advocate- general, Navy Department, 1525 P street. Diekema, G. J., Spanish Treaty Claims Commission, The Dewey ...... ......... Dillingham, W. P., board of trustees Boys’ Reform School, District of Columbia... Dillon, John T., division chief, War Depart- ment, The Bancroft 0.0. on ln as Dinger, D. C., index clerk, House of Rep- resentatives, ‘The Tambert............ 0 Dinger, Lieut. H. C., Bureau of Steam En- gineering, Army and Navy Club.... .... Dinsmore, Hugh A., Representative from Arkansas, Regent, Smithsonian Institu- Hon. isn; Ts ee A Dixon, Commander A. F., Bureau of Steam Engineering, The Albany............... Dixon, W. A., captain, fire department ... Dixon, Medical Director W. S., naval dis- pensgary, 1516 street... un cL Djelal Munif Bey, Turkish legation........ Dodge, Brig. Gen. Francis S., Paymaster- General U. S. Army, 2113 S street........ Dodge, Harry F., official stenographer, House of Representatives, 1122 Vermont AVENE, dy a a Sas Tos Dodge, Martin, director Public-Road In- quisies,; Tandover, Md ..... 00.0... 0. 0 Dodge, Pickering, chief clerk Office Wash- ington Aqueduct, 3019 Dumbarton ave- TRE a a I Re Dodson, F. E., assistant engineer, Senate, 1654 Sheridan'avenue:. ii. 00 J. Donaldson, A. M., captain fire depart- ment, District of Columbia .............. ; Donaldson, Jacob C., assistant Senate li- brarian, 710: Tenth street. ............... Donohue, Timothy, captain, fire depart- TCT La, se Le ea le SL Dorset, Marion, Chief of Biochemic Divi- sion. ¥3zr:-M street... 0 ioe ry Dorsey, Clarence W., Bureau of Soils, Chevy Chase, Md... ....... 00. ah ant Dortch, Josiah H., division chief, Indian Office, 3558 Thirteenth street vovevevee... 236 240 348 249 436 Page. Dougherty, H. K., assistantattorney, Span- ish Treaty Claims Commission, 2476 On- farfoavenues. Lh aes a Douglas, E. M., Geological Survey, Ta- ROMA TATE Coo tuis ra seins wa has Satta Douglas, W. J., engineer of bridges, 1412 Twenty-ninth street ..................... Dow, A. W., ELE ERE ee Be SSR LE et SS Dowling, James C., physician to the poor, District of Columbia, 732 Third street SW. Doyle, John T., secretary Civil Service Commission, 1322 ‘Twelfth street......... Drake, Thomas E., superintendent of insur- ance, 1515 Rhode Island avenue . Drapet, Amos G., professor, Gallaudet Col- Cr pS Re BI OR SA AA EE Draper, Leonard, clerk to Naval Academy, 531 Fighteenth street.. ; Dresser, KE. F., assistant Howse ‘document room, 209 First street NE. mo, Du Bois, Charles I,., division chief, Land Office; 3417 Brown street... ... .... Dubois, James T.: Law clerk, State Department, The pi Trustee publiclibrary................. Du Bose, W. R., Assistant Chief Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, 1532 Twenty- second street, Li a sh, Duckwall, T. W. B., assistant keeper of stationery, Senate, 336 Indiana avenue. . Duell, Charles H., Associate Justice, Dis- trict Conrt of Appealsiioi. oo Ll Duffield, Will Ward, Coast and Geodetic Survey, 16323 Q street =. 2 ool Duncan, David W., division chief, Auditor for Post-Office Department, 115 Fifth street NE... ii on he Duncan, John K., elevator conductor, House of Representatives, 1232 C street NI Fo a a Duncan, Robert J., clerk House post-office, 730 Thirteenth street... ..-.. Ln... Dunham, George P., Deputy Auditor for Interior Department, 1301 First street... Dunlap, I. H., chief clerk Fish Commission, 72500 street. a ae SL Ee Dunnington, A. F., division chief, Geolog- ical Survey, 624 North Carolina avenue Durand, Right Honorable Sir Henry Mor- timer, British Ambassador, 1300 Con- NecHOUL AVENUE. . os tvs hits a rans Durfee, Benjamin, statistical clerk Senate Committee on Finance, 639 East Capitol Be CL a SR Tr Dutton, R. P., messenger, Office Secretary of the Senate, 501 B street I EE Dutton, R. W., deputy recorder of deeds, 1426 Columbia 100d vere cri Duvall, A. B., corporation counsel, 1831 M street Pe BT AE LO Ne Re Ct Duvall, Maj. William P., General Staff, 1527 LILES LS Se eR AR SS Earle, Charles T., chief clerk Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, 216 New York Tine £11 LG SS RE CS EE ie SE Earnshaw, B. B., flourinspector.......... Easby-Smith, J. S., Assistant U. S. Attor- ney. 1532 street. oink tai Eaton, Frederick W., assistant clerk Sen- ate Committee on Cuban Relations, 1777 Churchistreel Jul no hn. Eaton, P. H., assistant division chief, U. S. Treasury, 1318 Bietreet. ni. cnn Edie, Maj. Guy L., attending surgeon, U.S. Army, a1007:S street... oo. Loan ha Edson, John Joy, Board of Charities...... Edwards, Col. Clarence R., Chief Bureau of Insular Affairs, 1775 Massachusetts Ret) FL NI Tn Sl EI ci Edwards, J. H., private secretary to Secre- tary of the Treasury, 1800 Belmont ave- TE RL A SRG eR SR ER Edwards, John, assistant engineer, Senate, 05 EL Lo rR Se Er A Sr Egloff, H. C., captain Fire Department, District of Columbia cv vsvssnravessvoioness 235 344 Alphabetical Index. Page, Eichelberger, Prof. W. S., Naval Observa- BOLY or rats nie ats wi dies rae i a ye Einstein, Samuel, EE et RRA er AEM i Re Eldridge, Maurice O., assistant director Public-Road Inquiries, 1828 Ninth street. Eldridge, W. C., law board, Auditor for War Department, 322 C street sate ati Eldridge, W. W., division chief, Comptroller of the Currency, Kensington, Md... Eliot, Johnson, physician to poor, 718 H Street NB a a i rede a Elliott, Brig. Gen. Geo. F., commandant, Marine Barracks. a to En Elliott, Lieut. H. B., metropolitan police, District of Columbia ooo x ors eee as Ellis, Caleb H., Senate messenger, 1230 Florida avenue NE he eer aes Ellis, Edgar, messenger, House post-office, 930: C Street... i a eh Ellis, Lewis Y., division chief, Indian Office, PhE CAMBION oo oe ors aris i a Ellis, Myrtle M., matron, Kendall School. Elmer, 12S, assistant chief clerk, Post- Office Department, 1723 Corcoran street. Elton, Theodore B., assistant clerk Sen- ate Committee on Public Lands, 1803 G al Se Se Ee a le SRO my Charles R., professor, Gallaudet Col- deme a I a oh ent Ely, George S., principal patent examiner, 300 First street S Emmons, S. F., treasurer National Acad- emy of re a Emory, Frederic, Chief of Bureau of I'rade Relations, Department of State, Cosmos | 3 ES I CR Re Sr a LE SURE) Endicott, Civil Engineer Mordecai TT. Chief Bureau of Yards and Docks, 1330 SCY A Sa CR Ee Se DS a English, James F., pair clerk, House of Representatives... 5... 0.0 oe, Enright, J.T. assistant, Senate Stationery Sn Ee RB es Esterly, George W., Deputy Auditor for State and other Departments, 1324 R I) A a Sa a a Ea Te Baty) W..H., teller, ‘House of Representa- tives, 104 Fifth Street NE... ..novvsvensn Etzel, Maj. Otto von, German embassy, 1723 Riggs place... i Eustis, William Corcoran, Corcoran Art Gallery, Leesburg, Va... cl oi Evans, First Lieut. Frank E:, aid-de-camp to commandant Marine Corps, Stone- leigh Corl oot ooo a Nn? Evans, Frank L.,chiefand disbursing clerk Agricultural Department, 1828 Cincinnati EE Te DC I i SR Bo Evans, Lieut. Frank T., commanding U.S. S. Sylph, Navy-Yard.. colar Soin oy Evans, George W., division chief, Interior Department, 918 ‘Nineteenth street ...... Evans, Rear Admiral Robley D., Chair- man Light-House Board, 324 Indiana avenues whl a ae a a Evans, Maj. W. P., assistant military sec- retary U.S. Army, 2230 Q street... ..... Evans, Walter H., division chief, Office of Experiment Stations, Cleveland Park... Evans, Willis, clerk House Committee on CIAIMIS Sic ose ve a as pnd ds “street CI CRB i Evers, George F., pair clerk, House of Rep- resentatives, Hyattsville, Md Eversman, John C., clerk House Commniit- tee on Revision of Laws, 1230 Columbia SS RR an El Ewart, W. H. Lee, British embassy, Stone- leigh [0p 11} yee ra a Re Se Exley, T. M., chief clerk Office Paymaster- General U. S. Army, 1449 Sheridan ave- 1 nC Sa i A SS Fagan, M. E., division accounts and dis- bursements, Department of Agriculture, Hyattsville, Md... ielsivisa is alsainivlsty ivy 213 346 201 235 250 Alphabetical Index. Page. Fairchild, David G., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, 1440 Massachusetts avenue.......... Fairfield, F. W., professor, Howard Univer- Ta Cr BE HM Do Faramond de lafajole, Lieut. Commander de, French embassy, The Portland...... Farrar, R. W., assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on Pensions... 5 onion. Farrington, A. M., Bureau of Animal In- dustry, 1436 Chapin street . Faunce, S.E., division chief, ‘Auditor for War Department, The Windsor. ......... Faucett, N. S., deputy treasurer, Isthmian Canal COMMUSEION - ovr nvensssrsnrsssssn Faxon, R. H., clerk Senate Committee on University ‘of the United States, 533 B 3 ot Te rR LL SR Ss 2 po Seis A., vice- president Gallaudet College... vin ill alter. Fechteler, Lieut. Commander Augustus F., Office of Naval Intelligence, Chevy Chase, Maryland..........cL.. LL... 0 Fenton, David H., law clerk, Auditor for the Post-Office Department, Kensing- tom Md. ee Ferguson, C. E., physician to the poor, Dis- trict of Columbia, 1648 North Capitol BETEeE Lr a ee et ae Ferguson, Naval Constructor H. L., 1841 Vernon avenue i lb sve. di elds se wase Ferree, Newton, division chief, Office of Register of the Treasury, 1720 Thirteenth Fra Ree UE NE Se ee hE RE Ferreira, M. Alfredo de M. Gomez, Brazil- ian Minister (ad interim), The Arlington. Ferrell, I. C., Superintendent of Docu- ments, 10951 Baltimore street. .........:.. Fessenden, Stephen D., assistant statisti- cian, Agricultural Department, 1414 Binney street... oo cuit vaa ead Field, Orin J., chief clerk Department of Justice, 1447 Meridian avenue ........... Fields, George H., post-office, House of Representatives, 218 A street SE. ........ Fifer, Joseph W., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, ‘The Cairo... ........ oui: Fimple, John H., Assistant Commissioner Land Office, 920 Massachusetts avenue . Finch, James D., jr., assistant clerk Sen- ate Committee on Indian Affairs, 1321 SH BE Le en ANI Se Ea Fish, Kate H., instructor, Gallaudet Col- lege. rl cai LT nae nn Fischer, Ernest G., Coast and Geodetic Survey, The Ethelhurst. 2... 0... ...... Fischer, I,. A., Bureau of Standards, 923 Massachusetts avenue ........ J... ..... Fishback, Fred L., clerk Senate Committee on Industrial Expositions, 1461 S street . Fisher, A. K., assistant chief division of biological stiry ey, 1505 T street . Ss Fisher, Howard, physician to the ‘poor, District of Columbia, The Mendota ..... Fitch, A. C., medical interne, Hospital for Hn LR re A SO OR aa Fitch, Jas. E., board of trustees, Boys’ Re- form School, District of Columbia....... Fitts, C. F., principal patent examiner, 1740: COrcCoran Street oi c.t vinci ve vise Fitzsimons, Medical Director P.,navy-yard. Fleharty, R. E., Office of the Clerk, House of Representatives, 318 Fast ‘Capitol RS A EE Li Fletcher, J. B., House messenger, 22 Third street LS I a Flory, Joseph, secretary Louisiana Pur- chase Exposition Commission........... Follett, W. W., consulting engineer on part of the United States, United States and Mexican Water Boundary Commis- I RT AO NE RE SIA SR Tl STOTT Re Forbis, William A., House messenger, 129 IndIona avenue. o.os cos tire sin n Ford, Worthington C., chief of division of manuscripts, Library of Congress, 3430 Folsom place, Cleveland Park ........... 249 241 437 Page. Foree, C. M., chief clerk Comptroller of the Treasury, 1200'K street... ... co. dro. 231 Forster, Rudolph, executive clerk, White House, 1335. Vermont avenues... ......q... 228 Forsyth, R. H., assistant teller, Treasurer of the United States, 1522 T street....... 233 Fort, George, division chief, Treasurer of the United States, 1525 Twenty-eighth I BR A i RY 233 Foster, E. C., assistant attorney, The Port- ANE I or td whieh Ae wie ca le dhs EAL ae 237 Foster, E. W., Senate messenger, 212 New Jersey avenue wh oo ava les movies sinters 211 Foster, John W., director, Columbia Insti- tution for Deaf and Dumb............... 347 Foster, Lieut. Col. H. J., British embassy.. 299 Fournier, Captain, French embassy, 1034 Connecticut avenue, .... ..........vovena 299 Fowler, Charles N., Representative from New Jersey, director of Columbia Institu- tion for Deaf and Dumb ....... oe. 347 Fowler, Maj. KE. S., assistant military sec- retary, UU. S.Atmy, 1725. P street... ic... 23§ Fowler, J. M., House messenger, 16 Fourth street Br ERNE a Ea Ri he i Se 214 Fowler, Wallace G., supervisor Kenaall School a a ES TS ae TS 348 Fowler, William C., chief inspector health department, 1141 Fifth street ............ 346 Fowler, W. J., division chief, Comptroller of the Currency, 205 Hammond court ... 233 Fox, Williams C.: Chief clerk Bureau of American Re- publics, Fhe Poriner........ uv. .c a 256 Government Board I,ouisiana Purchase Exposition... ........... LoL 256 Frailey, Pay Director I,. A., purchasing pay officer in navy- yan; 1506 Twenty-first street. . 242 Francis, Mrs. John 2 board of education. . 344 Frank, J. A. , Sanitary officer, 502 G street I I TE 346 Frankenfield, Prof. Harry C., district fore- caster; 1101 Seventeenth street..........- 247 Franklin, Col. Walter S., Light-House Board, Baltimore, Md... .....0.C 0... 251 Franklin, Samuel R., Washington National Monument Association..... ............. 255 Frech, Jacob, chief clerk, military secre- tary’ s office, 514 1, Street NB. os oer ors 235 French, George H., law clerk, Auditor for Navy "Department, 1701. T Street. ves 222 French, George N., chief clerk, super- intendent of Library of Congress, 1834 EE a BP 227 French, Maj. John T., jr., Assistant Quar- termaster - General, 2339 FKighteenth EE 235 Frye, William P.: President pro tempore of the Senate, ‘Phe Hamilton... au eiseies veoiseins 210 Regent, Smithsonian Institution ...... 254 Fuller, I.eslie C., assistant attorney, Department of Justice, 1456 Chapin street. ..... A Gs 237 Fuller, Capt. I,. M., assistant chief of Ord- Nance, 1027 Sistreet i. o.cn fo rely ceiston svi 236 Fuller, Melville W.: Chief Justice Supreme Court of the United States (biography), 18or F SECC loc oioin veinut pele vu a idin With Siviniata 201, 293 Chancellor, member, and Regent, Smithsonian Institution ............. 254 Fuller, William E., Assistant Attorney- General, ‘The Hamilton... ...:...... 237 Fullinwider, Lieut. S. P., ordnance duty, navy- yard’ i AN a OR a ER Cie 242 Funk, Lee W., division chief, Auditor for Interior Department, 1545 T street...... 232 Gaines, S. M., division chief, Treasury De- partment, 1257 Hamlin street, Brookland. 231 Gallagher, Capt. Hugh J., General Staff, 1710 Stree ln i ses Saari seinieinieie wis 234 Gallaher, John, superintendent house of detention, so5 Eighteenth street......... 346 Gallaudet, Edward M.: President Columbia Institution for Deaf and Dumb, Kendall Green...... 347 Washington National Monument Asso- CIAION a ov ire witiatvteials da mat ont te aie 255 438 Alphabetical Index. Page. Galloway, Beverly T., Chief Bureau of Plant Industry, Takoma Park........... Gamble, R. A., Senate messenger....... Gamboa, Sefior Don Federico, Mexican embassy, 1722 Connecticut avenue ....... Gangewer,- Mrs. A. M., board of visitors, Hospital for the Insane..... i... 5.0.0 Gannett, Henry, 1829 Phelps place: Geological Survey... ti. cui irae Board on Geographic Names.......... Gardner, F. D., Bureau of Soils, Depart- ment of Agriculture, 3524 Morgan avenue Gardner, P. H., clerk, library House of Representatives, The ‘Stanhope Sree are ele Garfield, James R., Commissioner of Cor- porations, 2137 Le Roy place............. Garges, Daniel E., private secretary to Dis- trict Commissioner, 647 A street NE..... Garriott, Prof. E. B., division chief, ‘Weather Bureau, i356 Princeton street... Garrison, John R., district auditor, 1437 R HE BR RS eg SR a BRS Garrison, John S., division chief, Bureau of Pensions, Falls Church, Va Gatch, Elwood S., division chief, Comp- troller of the Currency, 1839 Sixteenth 0 BE Sr CR a Se PE SIR Gatchell, William F., chief clerk Steam- boat-Inspection Service, 604 E street Gates, Robert Woodland, clerk Senate Committee on Irrigation, "The Ontario . Gauss, Herman, principal examiner, Pen sion Bureau, 221 Fifth street SE......... Gaw, Albert &. instructor, Gallaudet Col- AEG iat. tions sini aviuisioiriod a sins Shia b oipin ale vas iais le Gaw, Anna S., instructor, Kendall School. Gay, R. H., assistant engineer, Senate, 215 JE ER ee a EE i Ce Geagan, M. V., clerk House Committee on Elections No. 3, 1758 Church street ...... Geare, Randolph I., division chief, Na- tional Museum, 1318 Columbia road ..... Geddes, William M.; disbursing officer Government Board Louisiana Purchase Bx positions ii ws i haa Geddings, H. D., Assistant Surgeon-Gen- eral, Marine- Hospital Service, The Far- ragut a Ts uunera tre A7ets wlabubet on swears fale ia Gensler, Henry J., official reporter, Senate, 1318 Thirteenth street. .........oo........ Georgeson, C. C., Alaska experiment sta- a sy oy ET BRE OR Rl Le SR Gerry, James L., division chief, Treasury Department, 1104 East Capitol street. . Gessford, Harry I,., captain of police, 416 Pott StICCt BH vo. s c rs suiine ras: Gibbs, Capt. Geo. S., disbursing officer Sig- nal Corps. U.S. Aes The Brunswick ..... Gibbs, L. D., clerk House Committee Re- form in the Civil Service, 1405 Rhode Is- landiavenue, Li ol mn ti a Rs Gibson, Charles A., clerk House Com- mittee on Agriculture, House of Repre- sentatives... io i cn sii a ai seh Gibson, James A., assistant in stationery room, House of Representatives, 652 C street INI sein i Patil win iataiaiat sa tviotatat aldo wt diate se Gibson, W. Howard, assistant cashier, Treasurer of the United States, 2136 I, UK Br A A rR LR I SR Giffin, Etta J., in charge of reading room for the blind, Library of Congress, 313 East Capitol glrGet vs Gilder, Joseph B., dispatch agent, State Department, No. 4 Trafalgar square, London, England Ne Gilfry, Henry H., legislative clerk of the Senate, 1311 K eI a Gillespie, Maj. Gen. George I..: Assistant to Chief of Staff, 0.8 Army, 1721 Rhode Island avenue ........... President Board of Ordnance and For- fificationsi. inh si nnn sae Sea Gise, Lieut. W. K., ordnance duty, navy- yard... eta ee eae Giskra, Baron Carl von, counselor Austria- Hungarian embassy ............ kat 248 212 348 348 214 213 232 Page. Givens, E. L., clerk, Secretary’s Office, Sen- ate, 32 Bistreet NH... nc, ean, Rh Glascock, Alfred, physician, Hospital for HERE Ee SE Ce SSE i ne ie Le Glenn, M. V., clerk House Committee on Flections No. 3, 1520 Q:'street............. Glennan, A. H., Assistant Surgeon-Gen- eral, Marine-Hospital Service, 1724 S Gliem, Christian P., chief electrical engi- neer of the Capitol, 642 East Capitol BEFCECE vii ole illus fated inie wr witinleiola ince is ntsin te Glover, Charles C.: Treasurer Corcoran Art Gallery, 1703 K SC i BS Sl SG Washington National Monument As- SOCIALION i. fivninr vs coabisisits sotin a ans Glover, John J., division chief, Department of Justice, 1505 R street’... citi 0 ios Glynn, Martin H.,Commissioner, I,ouisiana * Purchase Exposition Commission ....... Goethals, Maj. George W., General Staff, 1003S Street dd) et rt ee se oe Goldenbogen, John F., superintendent Sen- ate folding room, 1700 I, street........... Goode, P. J., House messenger, 634 % Four- teenth street i Ene a Se EE by La Goodall, Otis B., private secretary to Assist- ant Secretary of Commerce and Labor, 1128 New Hampshire avenue ............ Goodloe, Col. Green Clay, U. S. Marine Corps, paymaster, 1103 Sixteenth street. . Goodwin, Edward C., Assistant Librarian of Senate, 1005 H Street... .... 0c 0. Goodwin, Russell P., Assistant Attorney- General for the Post-Office Department, The Portland: iho. hvees vida dit bl Gordon, Charles S., Senate messenger, 3319 Holmead avenue a... cates iin suena susie Gordon, Rev. John, president Howard Uni- versity I al ete vt nine me aa ee ee et ee Gordon, Peyton, Gaithersburg, Md., attor- ney in chinrge of pardons... dieses. soins Gorgas, Col. W. C., chief sanitary officer, Isthmian Canal Commission, Ancon, PARR wears ov cies sine sionision styiairaie doin dl insle Gould, Ashley M. associate justice, supreme court, District of Columbia, 1931 Six- teenthistreet .. i... but. oon UAL, Gould, C. G., principal patent examiner, 1617. Thirteenth street. ............onte. Gould, H. P., Bureau of Plant Industry, 1219 Chirteenthesireet. ...0 oi claire Gove, Lieut. Commander C. A., Bureau of Equipment, Navy Department, The Gor- AON i a AE al de ea Graeme, Lieut. J. W., navy-yard .......... Graham, Thomas P., division chief, Post- Office Department, 1123 Eleventh street. Grandfield, Charles P., assistant division superintendent, Post-Office Department, 040: SISETCEE cvs cc Sli es niin rants Grant, Alexander, Assistant General ‘Sue perintendent Railway Mail Service, The Cell tr AS A A RS RE Grant, Thomas, clerk Senate Committee on Examination and Disposition of Docu- ments; Riverdale, Md: .........0 0 ceeds Graves, i HL , appointment clerk Depart- ment of Justice, The Ethelhurst......... Gray, George, Regent, Smithsonian Insti- tution, Wilminglon, Del. i... ... co... 00. Gray, Samuel H..stenographer, House com- mittees, THE Logan .. uv cso eie seis nines Grayson, Joel, special employee, House document room, Vienna, Va .......:..... Greely, Brig. Gen. A. W., Chief Signal Officer U. S. Army, 1914 G street......... Green, Bernard R.: Superintendent of Library of Congress, 1730 IN SLIERl sy, avs Say spain les disteidse Corcoran Art Gallery ........ iil... Green, John P., postage-stamp agent, 1944 Ninmthistreet : 20a 0 coe il SL Oui, Greene, Henry F., Civil Service Commis- sioner, 1527 Thirty-first street.......... . 210 348 240 242 227 348 -_ bh . Halvorsen, J. R., Alphabetical Index. Page. Greenfield, Hull, clerk House Committee on Ways and Means, The Normandie... Greenwood, Chas. S., clerk House Com- mittee on Banking and Currency, 1505 Bighth street ............. 00, Gridley, J. S., assistant clerk House Com- mittée on Naval Affairs, 209 A street SE. Griffin, A. P. C., chief of division of bibli- ography, Library of Congress, 2007 Kalo- THIMBAVENNC 5 iii fam va Sones snleniaini Griffin, E. W. W., assistant assessor, 1721 Ey A NG RR REO SE Griffith, John D., messenger, House post- office, 232 Third Streets oor ones ores Griffith, Michael J., deputy recorder of deeds, 1620 street... 0 cei tr, Griffiths, David, Bureau of Plant Industry, SR TAKOMA Parl. a Grimm, A. 1,., captain, fire depattnrent., Grip, Mr. A., minister from Sweden and Norway, 21 17 S street. i ea ee Grosvenor, Daniel A., clerk House Com- mittee on Merchant Marine and Fish- eries, 1657 Thirty-first street ............. Grunsky, Carl Ewald, Isthmian Canal COMMISSION. rec a a ater ti ain Guittard, C. B., Coastand Geodetic Survey, 904 K AER Gunion, John P., physician to the poor, District of Columbia, 027 O street... .... Gunnell, Medical Director F. M. (retired): Board of medical examiners, 600 Twentieth streetl... hw Washington National Monument Asso- 610 Ly A EA Jone Ba SR President board of visitors, Hospital for Insane. ro et eh ae Gurley, William B., board of trustees of Industrial Home School, District of Co- OD ade Ra ate Gurney, Mr. Hugh, British embassy, 1829 Jeflerson.place...........0 ve. a. Gutoroski, Mr. Stanislas, Russian em- LE A EE RO SR es Guyn, Lincoln, document and bill clerk, House of Representatives, 808 Sixth CR a en Re a Haan, Capt. N. G., General Staff, U.S. A., The Rochambean .. .... i riven Hacker, Morris, superintendent of roads, Chevy Chase, Md Hadley, Amos, division chief, Interior De- partment, 1330 Harvard street Fe leiere sretidte te Hafelfinger, Fred 7T., commissioner of PRATMACY oi. ii i oh fra vas sae Hagner, Alexander B., retired justice, su- preme court of the District of Columbia, SSH street Lon nL Hague, Arnold, home secretary National Academy of Sciences fo Hains, Capt. Peter C., jr., Assistant Quarter- master-General, U. S. Army, 1847 Mint- woodpldece Li Halderman, C. W., clerk Senate Committee on Canadian Relations, The National... Hale, Capt. Harry C., General Staff, 1754 P street. .... a Sa i La Hale, Rev. E. E., Senate chaplain, The Mendota a i. . ei oh SL Hall, E. S., division chief, Post-Office De- partment, 1701 Thirteenth street........ Hall, A. J., physician to the poor, District of Columbia, gaS ll street... nol. Hall, Brig. Gen. W. P., Assistant Military Secretary, U.S. Army, 1920.8 street...... Hall, Percival, professor Gallaudet College. Hall, William’ L., assistant forester, Hyatts- ville. MA. cs os i Halleck, Walter F. , captain of the watch, Interior Department, 635 Maryland ave. NE etn ine sin od arn OR SE Sal Se 0 superintendent House folding room, 503 Second street SE...... Hamilton, Emmet, chief clerk Commis- sary-General’s Office, 1518 Ninth street. . Hamilton, John, Office ‘of Experiment Sta- tions, 1241 Princeton street, vvorvvorrss 215 214 215 227 235 348 439 Page. Hamlin, Rev. T. S.: President Board of Trustees, Howard University, 1316 Connecticut avenue. Board of visitors, Government Hospital etn BY CT hy Cha TR Rs Hammond, John, lieutenant, Capitol po- lice, 1432 Wstrett. or Hammond, John C., assistant astronomer, Naval Observatory rN RTS Sl Hammond, Julius H., receiving clerk, Land 216 | 241 | i 348 | Office, THE OMATIO oc. eee ne ines 244 1 Hance, T. C., clerk House Committee on | Territories, "The DEWEY vives cs nes 215 | Hancock, Assistant Paymaster J. M., as- sistant Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, | 1120. Thirteenth street... ....0. 0h) 241 | Handy, J. M., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee on Interoceanic Canals, 1913 G i fo I SE Se ei 211 Handy, Robert B., assistant editor, Agri- i cultural Department, 23 Eighth street SE 250 Hanger, G. Chief al ream of Labor, The Al- ! DEMIATIE eee Vin eens vice Ege nn se a 251 | Government Board I,ouisiana Purchase BX DoSItION . .. ev ci sme is aienie si iannte 255 Hanger, Harry B., assistant clerk Senate Committee on Naval Affairs, The Albe- p11 Lh RL EE I Se 211 | Hanihira, Mr. Masanao, Japanese legation, 110 IN Street. dc... re so sc en 300 Hanna, E. P., solicitor, Navy Department, | 700 TWENTIOtH SLIEEL enn rnnnssnensennss 241 | Hansen, Mr. Theodore, Russian embassy, 1302: PB sirect .... nih, LL re 301 Hanson, J. C. M., chief of catalogue divi- | sion, Library of Congress, Brookland, | D. Cc SN SE GS NI oS AI 227 | Hantey, M. J., assistant House document i room, 510 KE Sreet oa 214 i Harding, Capt. Chester: | Assistant to Engineer Commissioner, 1 1816Belmont avenue .......... 0... 343 Supervisor of construction............. 344 Harding, D. W., electrician, Library or ii Congress, 318 Ninth street NE........... 227 i Harlan, John Marshall, associate justice, il Supreme Court of the United States i (biography), Fourteenth street and lt Huclidiplace. .....<.... =......0...00 291, 203 i Harley, Bessie B. instructor, Gallaudet Col- i UG In RI Lr tl GE 348 if Harper, C. E.: ih Foreman, fire department............. 345 iH Captain, fire department, District of I Columbia... nL. es 345 il Harr, W. R.,” special assistant attorney, | 403 ‘spruce CE SR RE 235 itl Harrington, D. W., division chief, Office of if Treasurer of the United States, Alexan- | LR Se EL Ce el Sn 232 i Harris, Paymaster-General H. T. B., U. S. | Navy, 1302 Connecticut avenue .......... 241 Harris, William T., Commissioner of Edu- cation 1360 Yalestreet, . oo lo. 246 Harrison, Fairfax, board of trustees Re- form School for Girls, District of Co- \ mbla ied fh Sa 344 | Harrison, Maj. Geo. FE. E., Office of Chief of | Staff, U.S Army, 2437 Columbia road. . 234 | Harrison, Thomas, clerk, Naval Observa- tory, 2723 N street Ee be iene aware aa AT 241 f Harrison, Lieut. William K., assistant Bu- | reau of Navigation, The Stratford ...... 240 Harrod, Benjamin N., Isthmian Canal COMMISION. or in 236 Harshman, Prof. Walter S., Director Nau- tical Almanac, TheOntarlo..... 0. con. 241 Hart, Joseph E., Chief of Army Division, Bureau of Pensions, 515 B street NE..... 246 Hart, Maj. W. H., Assistant Commissary- General; The Ontario... ...c. i. ceive hia 235 Harvey, F. L., secretary Washington Na- tonal Monument Association, The Good- i Ere Sh I Re ARI RN 255 Haskell Wn. C., sealer of weights and measures, The Cumberland... i. cose vs 345 440 Alphabetical Index. Page. Haskins, Charles H., secretary American Historical Association , Cambridge, Mass. Hathaway, Fugene H., Supervisor rural free délivery, 1210 N street. SOR Hauge, Mr. C., Swedish legation . Sent, Hawkins, Brig. Gen. Hamilton S. (retired), governor of the Soldiers’ Home ......... Hawley, Joseph R., Senator from Connecti- cut, director of Columbia Institution for Deaf and DMD. oes oh irs ernie Hay, Lieut.C. E., Assistant Judge-Advocate- General, U. S. Army, The Farragut..... Hay, John Secretary of State, 800 Sixteenth street (blography)..... non Loins, Member Smithsonian Institution ..... Hay, W. P., instructor Howard University. Hayden, Lieut. Commander E. E., Naval Observatory, 1802:S:street, .... ho. vain Hayes, Arthur B., solicitor of internal reve- nue,i3338 Sixteenth street... ...... 00, Hayes, C. Willard, Geological Survey, 1514 Howardavenue Li... sini cy nies Hayes, John F., assistant clerk Senate Committee on Tr erritories. co ln Hayford, John F., Coast and Geodetic Survey, 231 Second street SE ............ Haynes, J. B., clerk Senate Committee on Potomac River Front, The Wicomico . Hays, W. N., Assistant Secretary of Agri- CHILHIEE iat ns I es re Ad iu wi me an Hayward, Lieut. G. N., ordnance duty, NAVY=VATA oe coils don elves saicnishivmiaivivminisie Haywood, John K., Bureau of Chemistry, 1210 Street uy. ie ans dress tenuis ie ree Heath, Mr. Henry G. K., counselor in charge of legation Dominican Republic, New York, N a Ci Hans-Georg, German embassy, 1527 Rhode Island AVRITNEH a es a a at a aie Hedge, Fred, driver, House post-office, 1735 Wenthistreet,. . ott sa di vee, Tonal lly Hedrick, H. B., Nautical Almanac, 3140 FAinthicum place... che tenet ni de sins Heizmann, Col. C. I., in charge of Army Medical Museum, 2025 Oistreet:...".. J... ‘Hemenway, William I., House messenger, sor Second street NE. .......c.vc.. svi... Hemler, W. F., medical interne, Hospital formnsane. oo a Henderson, J. B., Regent, Smithsonian In- stitution, "Washington. . Henderson, T. J., Board of Ordnance and Fortifications, 53 B street NE. cL... x, Hendricks, Arthur, law clerk, Auditor for Interior Department, Kensington, Md A Hengelmiiller von Hengervar, Mr. Ladis- laus, ambassador from Austria-Hungary, 1307.Connecticat avenue... ..... 0.0. 2 Henry, Capt. M. J., Assistant Commissary- General, 1314 Nineteenth street... ...... Henry, E. S., principal patent examiner, 1520 Columbia road... rr Li, Henry, Frank C., president commission of pharmacy, District of Columbia....... Henry, Prof. Alfred J., Weather Bureau, 1322 Columbia read... i. nica Henry, Samuel R., battalion chief, fire en- gineer, District of Columbia, 327 A street N C0 ee a Sr AE Tr Herndon, J. W., clerk, House folding room, Alexandria, Va ie I hl We Tv SOS Seen Ba Le BR Herriott, D. W., receiving teller, Treasurer of the United States, 1127 Roanoke street. Hershler, N.: Secretary Board of Commissioners, Soldiers Homes 0, Ja Ls naii ois Chief clerk General Staff, Cleveland Park... ...» Hertzler, William, ‘clerk House Committee on War Claims, The National yi. .venvs 229 349 Page, Heupel, J. L., division chief, Auditor for the Treasury Department, 1430 Howard ir Ee ee Hewlett, Emanuel M., justice of the peace, 317 John Marshall place... Hibbs, Waldo C., private secretary to Dis- trict Commissioner, 1501 Park street ..... Hickling, D. Percy, visiting physician, Washington asylum, 1304 Rhode Island AV CTINE he sha ee ef eai Ae a Ea ir fon Tra Hickling, Daniel P., locksmith, House of Representatives, 232 Third street........ Hickman, Richard W., Bureau of Animal Industry, 2329 First street... ..... 55% 0. Hicks, Cleveland H., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Mississippi River and Tributaries, Mz A street, NE. ...c.... 0.0 dhs Higginson, Rear-Admiral F. J., Comman- dant navy-yard .....v. cio cies ina, Hill, Florence A., teacher, Howard Univer- A i ER I i BR Hill, George A.; Naval Observatory, 3222 WISCONSIN AVENE oon. oe oe ins ean Hill, George William, editor, Agricultural Départment, a120:G street... nny Hill, Isaac R., special employee, House of Representatives, The Loudoun .......... Hill, John R., division chief, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 1688 Thirty- first street. on i iva. te a ae Hill, J. A., expert division chief, Census Bureau, 1329 Nigtreet......Cod a Lia ss, Hill, Joseph E., clerk House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 214 North Capitol street. .. 0... Li... Hill, Paul S., Senate messenger, The Sher- IAL Hills, Edwin A., clerk, office of Secretary of the Senate, 903 Frenchstreell......... Hills, Lieut. Col. E. R., Assistant Military Secretary, U. S. Army, 1918 I street... Hills, Wallace H.: Chief clerk Treasury Department, 1315 Riggs street. ooh ive ssomihiss si Government Board Louisiana Purchase Bxposition hn le anes Hinds, Asher C., clerk at the Speaker’s table, 1450: Binney street... ...... Hinshaw, S. E., Senate messenger, 7 Fifth street SE. ol a ene Se Hioki, Mr. Eki, Japanese legation, 1300 Vermont avenues. .... onli nnihann iy, Hird, J. D., chemist, District of Columbia, gos iistreet NE... ......... cL. Hitchcock, A. S., Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of Agriculture, 3363 Six- teenth.streel o.oo ial eos, Hitchcock, Ethan Allen: Secretary of the Interior (impr or Kistreet......o.. oc, oni oh aL. Patron ex officio, Howard University. . Hite, Wallace W., division chief, Patent Office, The Bthelhurst «oi enoeenonienss Hitt, 1. K. jr., division chief, Bureau of In- ternal Revenue, 1334 Columbia road..... Hitt, R. R., Representative from Illinois, Regent of Smithsonian Institution...... Hobbs, Thomas J., disbursing clerk, Treas- ury Department, 1622 H street............ Hock, Homer, division chief, Post-Office Deparment; 920 Massachusetts avenue. . Hodge, F. W Assistant in charge of office Smithso- nian Institution, Garrett Park, Md . Curator of International Exchanges. . Hodges, Commander Harry M., chief hy- drographer, ahs Highlands .......00L0. Hodges, Maj. H. F.: Assistant Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army, 1850 Mintwood place ......... Light-House Board ...... ...... 0... Hodges, Capt. Harry M., U.S. N., Board on Geographic Names ..... Hodgson, Maj. EF. G., Assistant Quarternias- ter-General, The Highlands’. ELA y 231 296 343 345 213 248 211 244 349 233 255 236 251 253 235 Z; <5 # Alphabetical Index. Page, Hoehling, Medical Director A.A. (retired), board of medical examiners, 1748 O SH BB SL 243 Hoes, R. R., chaplain, navy-yard, 1636 Rhode Tland GVenue io. oo ioe basa ssare 242 Holbrook, E. F., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Agriculture and Forestry, 1318 I, CTR SAS Se I 210 Holcombe, John W., division chief, Depart- ment of the Interior, 1829 Corcoran street 244 Holland, M. M., division chief, Auditor for Post-Office Department, Silver Spring, 1.5 (1 Eb RE Rs a ae BRR ER OE 232 Hollingsworth, J. H., pair clerk, House of Representatives, 417 Fourth street....... 214 Hollohan, P. 3 captain, fire department... 345 Holloway, J. B,, clerk to continue digest of war claims, House of Representatives, 20 TIITAStICet SB -vo iv isviirs vieansnsnriae 215 Hollyday, John W., chief clerk Railway Mail Service, 1924 Thirteenth street ..... 239 Holman, B. W., disbursing clerk, Auditor for the Post-Office Department, The SE LE ROA ct el DARE SRE Re HR LS 233 Holmes, Edwin S., jr., Bureau of Statistics, ; Department of Agriculture, 1308 Whitney AVEMUE iis Van a ravi cole Sh wads, 249 Holmes, Frank P., jr., Senate messenger, 2070 P street coil aad aiisaiiia iii iit 210 Holmes, George K., Bureau of Statistics, Department of Agriculture, 1323 Kene- SEW AVENUE Searcy caisisio nie sinnials 5 aitnisinigtels slenie 249 Holmes, Oliver W., associate justice, Su- preme Court of the United States (biog- raphy), I7zodstreet iv. cco. aL 292, 203 Holmes, W. H.: : Chief Bureau of American Ethnology, 1444 -Staughton street .............5" 255 Honorary curator, National Museum.. 255 Holt, H. P. R., division chief, Auditor for Navy Department, The Gladstone ...... 233 Hooe, A. B., physician to poor, 1110 N street ar PR a Rr 345 Hooker, Leroy J., House Messenger 22 Sec- ond street NI 213 Hooker, Lieut. Richard S, ‘Marine Bar- TACKS ca a Re 243 Hooks, Charles E., Senate messenger, 115 Sixthstreet SBo citi son Seiiuing 211 Hooper, J. E., foreman, fire department.. 345 Hopkins, A. D., Division of Entomology, 916 Fourteenth Street. ..... vc... .veensss 296 Hopkins, Archibald, clerk Court of Claims, 1826 Massachusetts avenue............... 294 Hopkins, C. W., captain, fire department. 345 Horigan, W. D., librarian Naval Observa- tory, 1636 Thirtieth street... i.......o..... 241 Horne, W. W., clerk, Office Secretary Senate, 929 Seventeenth street. .......... 210 Hoskins, Maj. J. D. C., Assistant Inspector- General, 1734 K street Sane Re 235 Hotchkiss, John B., professor, Gallaudet College ede LS Sn a 347 Houk, C. O., assistant in House document room, 046 New York avenue. ............. 214 Householder, W. R., House messenger, 708 Tenthisbreer i rm a ian 214 Houston, Maj. J. B., paymaster, U. S. Army, THE OMEATIO is. oii ists ae td 235 Houston, Sam, pension medical referee, qr Tenthistreet li len ulna 246 Houtz, Harry C.,clerk House Committee on Elections No. 2, The Arlington.......... 215 Howard, B. T., Bureau of Chemistry, De- partment of Agriculture, 1366 North Carolina avenue, SF... cuni il asi i 249 Howard, John C., inspector of fuel, 1149 New Hampshire avenuie................- 344 Howard, Mrs. J. M., teacher, Howard Uni- versity ATER R RS QAM TR SL i Rs a 349 Howard, I,. O.: Chief Entomologist, Department of Agriculture, 2026 Hillyerplace San 250 Honorary curator, Smithsonian Na- tional Museam. ;.-i. ch. anil n a 255 Howard, R. A., assistant attorney, The Columbia ao i a Raa Oa 237 Howe, Albert H., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Printing, The Arlington.......... 212 441 Page, Howley, John J., chief clerk First Assistant Postmaster-General, 2815 Fourteenth Street: (Lioive dated a ee Pre Je, Hough, W. H., medical interne, Hospital for Insane. Celli nnn nd Howry, Charles B., judge, Court of Claims. Hoyos, Count Frederick, attaché, Austro- Hungarian embassy... .... .....5 a hole Hoyt, C. S.,assistant disbursingclerk House of Representatives, The Varnum........ Hoyt, Henry M., Solicitor-General, 1701 Rhode Island avenue. ...... ...c 0... 00 Huang Fu-yao, Mr., Chinese legation..... Hubbard ,Commander John, assistant chief, Bureau of Ordnance, Navy Department. Hubbard, Henry D., secretary Bureau of Standards, The Northampton. Hubbard, Mrs. Gardiner, board of visitors, Hospital forinsane. iii teins doe Hughes, I,. A., assistant clerk Senate Committee on District of Columbia, 1220 INSITeeE Jo. naa ea a sr Hull, M. J., division chief, Auditor for War Department, The Jowa............. Hummer, Harry R., physician, Hospital for the InSame vi... fo ov dol Suis dettnin worn nly Humphrey, Brig. Gen. C. F.: Quartermaster-General, Fort Meyer... Commissioner, Soldiers’ Home... .... Humrichouse, H. H., clerk Senate Com- mittee on Education and Labor, 2324 N. Charles street, Baltimore, Md ........... Hunsicker, F. G., clerk digest of private claims, House of Representatives, 1208 M SEreal tr i oe iyi Se gia ta nee We roe Hunt, Arthur I,., secretary to the Presi- dent pro tempore of the Senate, The Sherman... un ioi tare irrdado Jovi Hunt, C. B., engineer of highways, Dis- trict of Columbia, 1815 M street ........ Hunt, Gailiard, Chief of Passport Bureau, State Department, 1711 De Sales street. . Hunt, Presley C., physician to the poor, IBIS VM SEreCt io trie esas cet i Hunt, William C., chief statistician Census Office, 928 Westminster street ........... Hunt, Pay Inspector Iivingstone, disburs- ing officer, Navy Pay Office, aro Rhode Island avenue. Ean AE eR M street .. rE A I RAG I De ae ai Hunter, W. D., division of entomology, Vic- tonia, Bex. i, Sr eR SE Huntington, A. T., division chief, Treas- ury Department, "Vienna, Vaso aronts Husband, W. W., clerk Senate Committee on Immigration, 1310 I streetivonie. ions Husmann, George C., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, 1308 Q Sheet... er Husted, G. E., assistant attorney, 1625 Kenesaw AVEINIE oi. vit ews tives pinnae deinen Hutcheson, David, superintendent of read- ing room, Library of Congress, 401 B SIrectiNE LI «eels oe oe seis inetenivniuhi als bets Hutcheson, Capt. Grote, Office of Chief of Staff, U. S. Army, 1758 Cochran street ... Hutchins, F. E., assistant attorney, 1515 Rhode Island avenue............. li... ol Hyde, John: Statistician, Agricultural Department, Lanier Heights LN Board on Geographic Names. Hyde, Thomas, Corcoran Art Gallery, 1537 Twenty-eighth street... eon Lu dn Ide, Henry C., Philippine Commissioner, MAI or oie iti iin sas writs So Ingalls, Theodore, chief clerk division of post-office inspectors, 1224 Thirteenth street ir ese Ss see ae Ate aie Ingersoll, Capt. Royal R., The Marl- borough: Naval Examining Board... .»..v- ee Naval Retiring Board.................. Iredale, John, assistant in Clerk’s office, House of Representatives, 220 KE street . Irelan, Charles M., chief clerk Patent Office, 1849 Wyoming AVENUE vases Irelan, W.I%, clerk, Office of Clerk House of Representatives, 29 B street ..ocvevnrnnns 348 294 237 296 235 254 243 243 442 : Alphabetical Index. Page, Ireland, Maj. Merritte W., Assistant Sur- geon-General, U. S. Army, 1917 S street. 235 Irland, Fred, official reporter, House of Representatives, 1339 T street ........... 216 Irving, William, House messenger, 321 A streeb NIG fol Sh ri da ea 214 Jacobson, N. R., clerk House Committee on Census, The Litchfield ............... 214 Jacobs, L. M., matron Minor Hall, Howard University roar foal Susi as nan 349 Jacobson, Nelson R., clerk House Commit- ECC ONICENSUS: oes vein wives lois wtleinieitio sini nis 214 Jameson, A. B., division chief, Auditor for the Treasury Department, 3223 School street... i ina. a ae 231 Janney, Bernard T., vice-president board of trustees of Industrial Home School, Districtiof Columbia. iis... di en 344 Jarvis, Grant, assistant in House document room, 1536 I Street dan Senile: 214 Jarvis, William H., division chief, Census Lh cOhce Takoma Park... bovis. venir 252 Jayne, Lieut. Commander J. 1,., assistant chief, Bureau of Equipment, “The Marl borough er Ds er PE RR TT 240 Jeffers, William, Senate manager depart- mental telegraph, The Loudoun......... 216 Jenkins, J. J., board of trustees Boys’ Re- form School, District of Columbia. . 344 Jennison, George, special messenger, House of Representatives, Hotel Dum- barton. in. en eenL lardn ah ra 214 Johns, E. B., clerk House Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, 121 Maryland avenue, NE................... 04 214 Johnson, A. B., The Plymouth: Chief clerk Light-House Board........ 251 Board on Geographic Names.... ..... 253 Johnson, Clarence, clerk, Secretary’ s Office, Senate, The WiHCOMIED «she ob abhan 210 Johnson, E. C., division chief, Bureau of Internal Revenue, The Coywood...... 233 Johnson, Israel O., assistant file clerk, House of Representatives, 120 Fourth street SB. bi rile, 213 Johnson, J. E., assistant to stenographers to House committees, 2009 Fourteenth HE HLT EI Oe Ll Se ta NS 213 Johnson, Joseph T.: Board of medical examiners, District of:Columbia. coos i vi dois Vuelos 344 Board of medical supervisors, District of:Columbla, ira. ies iad 344 Johnson, R. A., clerk Conference of Senate Minority, 2018 Columbia road............ 211 Johnson, Walter, principal patent exam- iner, 58 B street NE. co msn in, 245 Johnston, Mrs. C. E., chief clerk Office of Experiment Stations, ‘fakoma Park..... 250 Johnston, Harry A., commissioner of PRATIMACY . tale. stl Hal Slee iittnts 344 Jones, D. V., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee on Printing, 1328 U street ......... 212 Jones, Dr. John E., clerk Senate Commit- tee on National Banks, 1618 T street.... 211 Jones, E. B., Bureau of Animal Industry, The Woodley I ER EN 247 Jones, E. E., deputy disbursing officer, District of - Columbia, Silver Spring, Md Si aii vie ah ia vis sae 344 Jones, George A., chief clerk Office Sur- geon-General U. S. Army, 1754 Q street.. 235 Jones, Hiram H., division chief, Land Office, 3341 Seventeenth street. ind, 244 Jones, J. A., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee on Public Health. ....... 0... 212 Jones, J. H., clerk in charge Weather Bu- reau, Senate, 1217 New Jersey avenue . 216 Jones, J. W. , lieutenant, Capitol police, 100 Een Wc sensh Miss 216 Jones, James E., chief clerk Bureau of Plant Industry, 412 Eleventh street NE.. 248 Jones, Lieut. H. W., navy-yard............ 242 Jones, O., Senate messenger... ............. 211 Jones, Winthrop C., tally clerk, House of Representatives, 227 New Jersey avenue. 214 Jordan, James, jr., clerk House Committee on Militia, 34 Corcoran Building ........ 215 Jordan, I.ewis, division chief, Treasury Department, 1429 Twenty-first street.... 230 Page. Jordan, W. W., lieutenant of police ....... 346 Joubert, Sefior Don Emilio C., chargé da affaires, Dominican Republic. a ral 299 Julihu, M. IL., board of eclectic medical examiners, District of Columbia .....«.%: 344 Jusserand, Mr. J. J., French ambassador, 1640 Rhode Island avenue ............... 299 Kaiser, Lieut. L. A., Bureau of Equipment, The ROchambeat... .. cocoon en iv sen 240 Kalbfus, S. T., assistant assessor, 213 A street NE ERA UR SU a RS 343 Kalleen, J. C., superintendent Boys’ Re- form School, District of Columbia. ...... 344 Kalmweiler, R., clerk House Committee on Elections No. I, 1729:Q street ......n... 214 Kane, Thomas P., Deputy Comptroller of the Currency, 1931 Cincinnati street ..... 233 Kappler, Charles J., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Indian Affairs, The Olympia..... 211 Karpeles, H. J., water registrar, 1648 Third SEreet Lh ea ES ea ee 345 Karr, W. W., disbursing clerk National : Museum, 1918 Baltimore street..... sivvine 255 Kasson, John A., commissioner special commission plenipotentiary under tariff act; ¥7e6ilstreet ... cL wali. venient 229 Kauffmann, Samuel H.: President Corcoran Art Gallery, 1421 Massachusetts avenue......... 0.000 348 Board of visitors, Hospital for Insane.. 348 Washington National Monument As- SOCIAtION: id i a Ea RES 255 Kean, Maj. Jefferson R., Assistant Sur- geon- -General, 1913 S street. 2 Cea 235 Kearney, M. G., Senate messenger. . 211 Kebler, Lyman F., Bureau of Chemistry, 1332 Whitney AVENE ots teaver 249 Keblinger, W. W., secretary to United States Commissioner, United States and Mexican Water Boundary Commission... 230 Keep, Charles H., Assistant Secretary of the ‘Preasury, 1614 I street. .... nS od 230 Kehoe, W. J., stenographer to House com- mittees, 1620 Eighteenth street.......... 213 Keigwin, Charles A. assistant United States district attorney, 1111 Massachusetts ave- a ES J ER a 296 Keliher, James, battalion chief fire en- gineer, Sg Pistreel...... il ue. hun 345 Kelley, Leverett M., Second Deputy Com- missioner of Pensions, The Cecil, tuoi 245 Kemp, J. A., property clerk, 237 Tenth Street INE Li... Jou nia a hei 346 Kemper, Charles E., chief executive officer, Supervising Architect’s Office, 1310 Riggs 1 fd i a DI A OR St SEE NE 230 Kendall, Maj. Henry M. (retired), secretary and treasurer Soldiers’ Home ........... 254 Kennedy, B. W., Assistant Doorkeeper, House of Representatives, The Vendome. 214 Kenney, James M., messenger, Sergeant- at-Arms, House of Representatives, 146 Astreet NE... con nan ral Snag 214 Kenny, Rear-Admiral A. S. (retired), treas- urer Isthmian Canal Commission........ 236 Kenyon, Adelaide, assistant clerk, House Committee on Military Affairs........... 215 Kenyon, Gunner J., ordnance duty, navy- varQ Cnn er rae pm, 242 Kern, J. Q., law board, Auditor for War De- partment, The ATDErt. i os sian nia 232 Kerr, Dennis M., expert detailed to Sen- ate Committee on Pensions, 803 C street i EE eS ES en AR 211 Kerr, Lieut. Col. James T., General Staff, 2560 Nineteenth street ol... =i 234 Bhan Gen. Isaac, minister from Per- TR ate a ha NS es a A TER 300 Kidd, M.S. chief clerk Bureau of Chem- istry, Department of Agriculture, 113 North Alfred street, Alexandria, Va ..... 249 Kiesel, Annie R. , normal student, Gallau- det.College our tou han, 348 Kiesel, Theodore A., instructor, Kendall BENOOL errs ths ah ra ir 348 Kiggins, Frank M., chief examiner, Civil Service Commission, 1237 Kenesaw ave- rsh Ar RR 253 Kimball, Arthur H., ophthalmologist, Hos- pital fOr INISANE verre senss sieve eit aie 349 Alphabetical Index. ; Page. Page. Kimball, Edward F., superintendent Langley, S. P.: hr money-order system, 1316 Rhode Island Secretary Smithsonian Institution, € A AVERUCH (i hi Sides ite vaid aie 238 Metropolitan Club... wai Au 254 4 Kimball, Herbert H., librarian, Weather Keeper ex officio National Museum . 255 Bureau, 223 5 Thirteenth street. i. oat 247 Director Astrophysical Observatory... 255 Kimball, Y a> , judge, police court, 620 North Washington National Monument As Carolina avenueSE. i. dh i 346 SOCIAtION «v/a. or ddweie int are satd 255 Kimball, S.1.,General Superintendent Life- Langworthy, C. F., Office of Experiment Saving Service, 1316 Rhode Island avenue 231 Stations, 1604 Seventeenth street ........ 250 Kimmell, Lieut. Commander Harry, assist- - Lanham, Trueman, superintendent of ant hydrographer, Navy Department, parking, Ianham Mad. ....0. 0 0h a 345 i 1721 Riggs place...............0....ceott. 240 | Lantz, F. W., division chief, U.S. Treasury. 233 | Kincheloe, Charles F., assistant attorney, Lappin, R. c, division chief, Census Office, i Bethesda, Md + oe rae i 237 203 Fast Capitol Street «..............o.u. 252 King, John R., pension agent, Albion Larned, F. H., chief clerk Bureau of Immi- Hotel, Baltimore, Ma. ss ea A 246 gration, 1904 Cincinnati street ........... 252 King, Pendleton, Chief of Bureau of In- Larner, John B., trustee, public library .. 344 dexesand Archives, Department of State, Larrabee, Charles F., Assistant Commis- 1449 Massachusetts avenue............... 229 sioner of Indian Affairs, 1514 Twenty-first King, William A., chief statistician, Census Sheet ee a SE 246 Office, 717 North Carolina avenue SE.. 251 | Latimer, Lieut. J. L., Bureau of Ordnance, King, William R., board of homeopathic Navy Department, 2118 Connecticut ave. 240 medical examiners, District of Columbia. 344 | Lauchheimer, Lieut. Col. Charles H., Adju- Kingsman, Richard, board of education. . 344 tant and Inspector, Marine Corps, The Kinnan, Arthur F., principal patent ex- Rarragul is sin ve onde aa hi 243 aminer, Brookland, cre he 345- | Lawrence, Edwin W., assistant attorney, Knapp, Martin A., Chairman Interstate Post-Office Department, 1316 I, street. . 238 Commerce Commission, Stoneleigh Court 251 | Lawler, K. Franc, assistant clerk Senate / Kniffen, Gilbert C., division chief, Bureau Committee on’Judicilary ..-..... 0... 211 y of Pensions, Takoma Park............... 246 | Lawson, H. W., Office of Experiment Sta- } Knight, Felton B., special messenger, tions, 1122 New Hampshire avenue...... 250 { House of Representatives, The Metro- Lay, Lieut. H. R., Office Judge-Advocate- } polifans ill si ei i ei 214 General U. S. Navy, Stoneleigh Court. . 241 i Knowlton, John W., clerk House post- Layton,B.W. ,Acting Assistant Doorkeeper, office, 2120:G Street:........ ik. toiaiutetn 215 Senate, Riggs HOUSE Wee de oe nels be iat 212 Knox, Capt. Harry: Leach, Lieut. Col. S. S., in charge Wash- Naval Examining Board, The High- ington Aqueduct, The Richmond........ 236 Mana i a er de 243 | Leavitt, Leon B., division chief, Bureau of Naval Retiring: Board... .. 0. 0.0.0. 243 Census, 'gol2), U street... ooo 252 Knox, Reed, Senate messenger, 1527 K Legarda, Benito, Philippine Commissioner, streets, at ra EA CL SS alee 210 Manila aod boi i ea vn ve, 237 : Koch, Edward W., division chief, Bureau Léger, Mr. J. N., minister from Haiti, 1429 +3 of Census, Woodside, Md ................ 252 Rhode Island avenue....... .... ... 299 Kratz, John A., jr., private secretary to Leighton, B. F.: Attorney-General, The Westover... ..... 237 Board of Medical Supervisors, District Kreamer, C. A., captain, fire department.. 345 of iColumbig or ad RR 344 Kubel, S. J., division chief, Geological Sur- Professor Howard University.......... 349 vey, 1000 Fast Capitol Sloeet. oa 246 | Lemon, W. H., division chief, Auditor Kubota, Mr. Bunzo, Japanese legation, 1310 for the Treasury Department, 1735 U N Street. io a 299 YO Be SR CS 231 Kuhns, C. RB, captain, fire department.. 345 | Leonard,Capt. Henry, assistant paymaster, Kutz, Capt. C SW. Marine Corps, 626 D street SE... ....... 243 Assistant ‘Chief of Engineers, U. S. A. Leonard, W. H., House messenger, 1209 . arrzaOstireet.. Lo ran eas 236 Rhode Island avenue ...... ... 000 214 Board on Geographic Names ...... ... 253 | Leupp, F. E., Commissioner Indian Affairs, Kwai, Mr. Yung, Chinese legation ........ 298 1813 Sixteenth street.... 246 Kwoh-cheng, Mr. L,., Chinese legation, The Leutze, Capt. E. H. C., Board of Inspection Portier Uk Sa Nn a Ae, 298 and Survey, Navy Department, 2012 Hill- Labastida, Sefior Don Luis G., jr., Mexican yerplace .........L. LL SE 243 embassy, The Hamiltons............L.., 300 | Lewis, Elijah, House messenger, 7 C street Lacy, Edmund P., clerk Senate Commit- NE a a Rw es 214 tee on Disposition of Useless Paper, 315 Lewis, Grenville, principal patent exam- Cstrect i. vou i Ca 211 iner, 1311 Third street NE............... 245 Lafferty, George C., official reporter, House . Lewis, Henry C., special assistant attorney, of Representatives, Metropolitan Club.. 216 CE By BS a Re i A SE 237 y ILakenan, A. Y., chief clerk engineer de- Lewis, Hugh, House messenger, 815 Eighth 27g partment, District of Columbia, 604 Tenth street. an ee a LES, 214 streeb SW. 2 Cli on oo When ib cE, 344 | Lewis, Joseph D., division chief, Census ILamasure, Edwin, accountant, Bureau of Office; 1909 H Streel ii 252 Engraving and Printing, The Victoria.. 231 Liang-Cheng, Sir Chentung, minister from Lamb, A. R., hack inspector, 1723 New Jer- CRIN 2, a a a ER 208 SCY AVENUE vd wuluhtia itv ve sn eaten goin 346 | Iieuallen, W. G., clerk, Secretary’s Office, Lampkin, Walter IL., messenger, Senate, Senate, 2 9 Grant place in. 00 nn 210 1630-R Street. viv cise cos Anil al UL, 211 | Likens, H. D., Senate messenger, The On- Lampson, E. L., reading clerk House of tarlieor dita de i i srs ask Eas 211 Representatives, 133 B sireet NE. ........ 213 | Lima, E. Silva Rinaldo de, Brazilian lega- Lan, Commander Luis A., Argentine lega- ton; 1417 Hopkins street, uti sig, 298 tion, 1333 Harvard: street cou clini. 298 Lindsay, William, Commissioner, Tomisl Lane, C. E., Senate messenger, 1338 New ana Purchase Exposition Commission. . 230 York avenue: i... di harass ool 210 | Linnard, Naval Constructor Joseph HH. Lane, Charles H., principal patent exam- Bureau of Construction and Repair, 1708 v iner, 1339 Q SITCOl. io ies ata 245 LSE Ee SS SH EN Sa SR EL, 241 oe Lane, Clarence B., Bureau of Animal Indus- Littell, Maj.I.W., Assistant Quartermaster- try, 1230 Roanoke Street ................. 248 General, 1g21:S street... .. LLL 0. 235 Lane, R. A., assistant secretary Isthmian Littell, Prof. F. B., Naval Observatory, 2507 Canal COMMISSION . ....vvwn er onnennnenn 236 Wisconsinavenue ... oil. colina. 241 Langley, John W., disbursing clerk Cen- Littlehales, G. W., hydrographic engineer, sus Office, The Marlborough, ane 251 2132.1, ROY PIECE ov rissnrs votre vunicinvaioi 24¢ 444 Alphabetical Index. Page. Littlewood, J. B., principal patent exam- iner, 415 B street NE Livingstone, Colin H., clerk Senate Com- mittee on Interstate Commerce, 3585 Thirteenth street i... ovis ovens Lloyd, Daniel B., official reporter Senate, 1152 Seventeenth street... .. i... Lockwood, Lieut. Col. Daniel W., engineer secretary Light-House Board, The Port- Lodge, George Cabot, assistant clerk Sen- ate Committee on the Philippines, 1925 F oy eS A SE EN A Loeb, William, jr., secretary to President (biography), 1720/Q street... .. i... ..... Loeffler, C. A., assistant messenger, Senate, 444 Howard avenue ...... ... soa id Loftus, Mr. Edward H., Siamese legation, The ATHOGEON:. vi voi doivsleils iv daivins, sais ialee Logan, John S., assistant engineer,- House of Representatives, 314 Fifth street....... Logie, B. R., M. D., physician, Hospital for TRGAINC vv Sales wiieiiared sian oaia soon iiata sta Saale London, J. H., president dental examiners, {ECE BRT 6 wo ARR ES EE Bl LR Long, C. C.,, clerk Senate Committee Coast Defenses, The Shoreham ................ Longoria, Sefior Don Alfredo, secretary to Mexican Commissioner, United States and Mexican Water Boundary Commis- Fr Fe i CoN Se Looker, Henry B., surveyor, 3100 Newark SUreel. re ie sh as eee a ee a Lothrop, E. S., physician to poor, 807 East Caplio) street. i. unis si Cai vi se sila Lott, John L., assistant attorney, The Cecil. Lovell, J. T., clerk House Committee on Railways and Canals..............0 0a Tovering, Medical Director P. A., Museum of Hygiene and Medical Schoel, 1819 Kalorama a Velev. isis sive weiss satan vials siaiaie Low, James P., division chief, Supervising Architect’s Office, 1328 Corcoran street .. T,owell, John W., division chief, T'reasurer of the United States, 630 E street NE... . Lower, Cyrus B., division chief, Agricul- ture Department, 1209 I,ydecker ave.... Ludwig, Lewis H., assistant in House doc- « ument room, 214 New Jersey avenue.... Luskey, William E., foreman, fire depart- 1131 ER Es ey LEE Luzuriaga, José R., Philippine Commis- sioner, Manila Lo. a ai ainioaiina, Lyman, Charles, division chief, Treasury Department, 1243 New Jersey avenue ... Lyon, C. D., assistant clerk House Com- mittee on Military Affairs, 238 Delaware AVENUE NE. ieo vivar dante nine oe MINERS Lyon, F. B., Doorkeeper House of Repre- sentatives, The Logan. .. iit ie I,yons, Judson W., Register of the Treasury, 1gzo streets i, cee aaa SOA Lytle, R. S., assistant teller, National Bank Redemption Agency, 1329 Wallach PIC Ci Lae cased er le e McBath, Andrew M., division chief, Audi- tor for Post-Office Department, 924 T £1 5 ao ERE EOE i rs NR FS McBride, George W.,Commissioner, Louisi- ana Purchase Exposition Commission... McCabe, George P., law officer, Depart- ment of Agriculture, 1458 Howard ave. McCain, Col. Henry P., assistant military secretary, U. S. Army, 1856 Mintwood PIRCE X00 elias Sia aaa hh anh ase McCardy, Joseph J., Auditor for Post-Office Department, The Chapint......v.ueive eels McCathran, F. F., lieutenant of police..... McCaw, Maj. Walter D., Librarian, Army Medical Museum, 1915 S street........... McCawley, Maj. Charles I,., U. S. M. C,, assistant quartermaster, Metropolitan lu McChesney, John D., disbursing clerk Geo- logical Survey, 2903 Thirteenth street... 345 237 345 230 246 Page. McCleary, Leslie T., clerk House Com- mittee on Library, Regent Hotel ....... McClure, James B., Senate messenger, Senate, 245 Delaware avenue NE ........ McClurg, Medical Inspector Walter A., Naval Bureau Medicine and Surgery, he Abang i Rn vii dee cde McComb, David EK. superintendent of sewers, ‘Lhe Plaza... livia Siig McConnell, James I., House messenger, 905 Hast Capitol street ...... oh McDermott, E. H., Senate messenger, The Prince War]... oie vn coisas Sani aie welints McDonald, H. Bowyer, journal clerk of the Senate, 1165 Nineteenth street....... McDonald, T. I., board of homeopathic medical examiners, District of Columbia. McDowell, Alexander, Clerk of the House, TRE DICWEY vn ears sins sian sissies rsteivsce ile McDowell, Robert E., clerk Senate Com- mittee on Transportation Routes to the Seaboard, gzs K street ..........o. 0 McDonnold, Passed Assistant Surgeon P. E., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Navy Department, Army and Navy Club. McDougal, Lieut. D. C., U. S. M. C., navy- ard MosThone, Philip, clerk House Committee on Industrial Arts and Expositions, The Don Carles, a SR ART, McElroy, Joseph C., Postmaster House of Representatives, 214 A street SE........ McFarland, W. A., superintendent water department, The Westover.............. McGann, J. H., assistant clerk House Com- mittee on Rivers and Harbors, 227 New Jersey avenue SE. McGowan, Paymaster Samuel, assistant to Bureau of Supplics and Accounts, Navy Department, The Rochambeau.......... McGroarty, C. N., division chief, Register of the Treasury, 123 Fifth street NE ..... McGuire, Frederick B., secretary Corcoran Art Gallery, 1333 Connecticut avenue... . McHarg, Ormsby, clerk Senate Committee on Pensions, 1534 Twenty-second street . McIntosh, Lieut. Horace P. (retired), Office of Naval Intelligence, 1920 Sixteenth Ly WL Ge RR SR McIntyre, Capt. Frank F., General Staff, 2000 Stree LL a ‘McKay, J. M.,foreman House folding room, ie BUTE RR SE McKelden, W. B., assistant bookkeeper, Treasurer of the United States, The McKenna, Joseph, associate justice, Supreme Court of the United States 2I1 233 (biography), 1705 Rhode Island avenue.292-293 McKenney, C. R., enrolling clerk House of Representatives, The Hamilton ...... McKenney, James H., Clerk, Supreme Court of the United States, 1523 Rhode Ila AVE +4 Sui sieht tae ss tae McKenzie, Alex., assistant assessor, 1004. East Capitolistreet. olvevevois dere valle ; McKinney, W. C., chief printing division, Bureau of Printing and Engraving, 60o Twenty-first street..... s eaisninsion's sie isiniennte McLane, T. D., captain, fire department. McLaughlin, A. J., assistant surgeon, Ma- rine-Hospital Service, 1410 Binney street. McLaughlin, Chief Boatswain J., aid to Commandant, navy-yard............ selects McLean, D. H., Senate messenger........ McLean, Harry C., deputy health officer, 1373 Kennesaw avenue .. ....u dati. ve McLean, Lieut. Ridley, Bureau of Naviga- tion, The Cumberlandi.....c. ihe. 500. McLean, Lieut. Commander W., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy Department, 1808 Riggs DIE PAN a CN AS RAL i a McLemore, Capt. A. S., assistant adjutant and inspector, U. S. Marine Corps....... MacLennan, W. F., division chief, Treas- ury Department, The Woodley.......... McMaster, John Bach, vice-president American Historical Association, Phila- AEIDNIG es vsews sis snunivsininn vrivranas waves 213 203 343 231 346 233 242 211 346 240 240 243 230 256 Alphabetical Index. Page. McMichael, I. H., chief page House of Representatives, 2223 FW streef..,. 0. io. McMillan, Alex. F., assistant superintend- ent, Treasury Department, 1447 Hunting- fonplace si... on Le Si McNeely, Leroy J., assistant clerk House Committee on Judiciary, The Loudoun.. McNeely, Lieut. R. W., ordnance duty, NAVY-VOTA oi ihivns as maiaieieepslebiore ais McNess, Geo. T., Bureau of Soils, 41 T Tn I Be rR or I I SS ARE McReynolds, J. C., Assistant Attorney- General, I'he Shoreham'................. McRae, Hector C., clerk, Office of Clerk House of Rope 320 A street S CSUR Be a A Kt SE SR ee Macchi di Cellere, Count Vincenzo, Italian embassy, 1213 Connecticut avenue....... Macey, James T., chief clerk General Tand Office, The. Portner.: on... oh. Macfarland, Henry B. F.: District Commissioner, 1816 F street... Board of trustees Boys’ Reform School, District of Columbia. =i... on oe. Macfarland, Lieut. H. T., navy-yard, 1727 Rstreet lua a ie i neers v alee Macfarland, Mrs. Mary I. D., Board of Children’s Guardians. .....:.0L 0 oo. Mackenzie, Brig. Gen. A.: Board of Ordnance and Fortifications, 2160 Bighteenth street. ............... Chiefiof Bngineers..............2 0 ie. Liglit-House Board... ...... ees ois Soldiers’ Home Board. . Madden, Edwin C., Third Assistant Post- master-General, 1303 Clifton street...... Maddox, Robert I,., chief clerk foreign mails, 1602 ‘Thirteenth street............. Magill, Maj. L. J.: Assistant adjutant and inspector, U. S. M. C,, 818 Eighteenth street ... Board of Inspection and Survey, Navy Department. ea nid sni lise LL Magoon, Charles E.: General counsel, Isthmian CanalCom- TSBION.. ha sess ae Law officer, Bureau of Insular Affairs, The Barmagil. cr es hash aaa Magruder, Dr. G. L,., board of visitors, Hos- pial foriInsane in. vil re a Mahoney, I. W., House post-office, 221 First Street INI. ae a de eee Mallet, Edmond, division chief, Iand Office; ona Tislreet i i 0,000 oh Laue, Malloy, William M., clerk Senate Com- mittee; on Foreign Relations, 1317 Q Slreet I a de a ae ES a ea Mallory, Maj. John S., General Staff, 1722 Twenty-firstistreet,....... 0 0. cai Mangum, Edward, farmer and gardener, Rendall Schoo] ore sii Mann, B. P., Board of Children’s Guardians. Mann, Charles H., House messenger (press gallery), 627 A strect NE... ot. Mann, Elias, division chief, Auditor for War Department, 1242 Kenesaw ave- ue en Ns Ra sae Mann, Maj. W. R., General Staff, U. S. A., 742 Pigtreel lo busin a Lan, nl Manney, Rear-Admiral H. N., chief Bureau of Equipment, U. S. N., The BR ODI i a a i a Ra eee ae Manson, J. O., division chief, Treasurer of the United States, 923 S'street............ Marble, Lieut. Frank, U. S. N.: Aid to Admiral Dewey, The Mendota. . Ceneral-board foi ea on Marbury, Dr. C. C., police surgeon......... Marlatt, C.-I,., division of entomology, 1440 Massachusetts avenue. .............. Marmion, Medical Director R. A., U.S. N., Museum of Hygiene, The Franconia. . Marsh, Wm. E., clerk Senate Committee on Indian Depredations, 1430 V street. Martheray, Mr. Fernand du, Swiss minis- BCE vio os niin es veins namin sie vnivr st vieibisie siaia ne 214 230 215 242 249 237 213 237 254 445 Page, Martin, John S., jr., translator, State De- partment, 1731 F street Martin, I,. H., clerk Senate Committee on Corporations in the District of Columbia, EE I CE Martin, Oberleutnant Alexander Gustav, German embassy, 1708 H street.......... Martin, N. C., division chief, Auditor for War Department, 1523 Grant avenue. Martin, P. D., captain, fire department. . Marvin, Prof. Charles F. , Weather Bureau, 1404 Binney SErCCh. Catia de ae Mason, C. Alexander, principal patent examiner, The Savoy ........ ... 005... Mason, Maj. Chas. F., Assistant Surgeon- General, U. S. Army, 1909 S street....... Mason, Rear Admiral N. E., Chief Bureau of Ordnance, Navy Department, 1724 P AE EA RR A DN Mason, Otis T.: Head curator, National Museum....... Board on Geographic Names... vans Mathews, Jerry A., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Public Buildings and Grounds, The Cumberinnd. od Ra Se i a Mathews, W. H., lieutenant of police...... Matthews, Capt. H. I,., assistant quarter- master, U. S. M. C., The Farragut ....... Matlack, M. E., printing and bill clerk, House of Representatives, 201 C street... Maury, W. A.: Spanish Treaty Claims Commission, 1767 Massachusetts avenue ...... ... Washington National Monument Asso- ciation. hee is tiie ha de nih ea Board of visitors, Hospital for Insane. . Maxson, Louis W., principal patent exami- ner, Kensington; Md vio. oa coos oii io May, David W., Office of Experiment Sta- tion, Department of Agriculture, Maya- guez, PB ois sieivaivielevinisieis io vistainieisisiatoiviv inlets May, Geo. T., chief clerk Comptroller of the Currency, 2rig Bistreet ..... coon. May, W. H., jt., assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on ‘Finance, 920 Thirteenth street. Mayer, Theo. J., flourinspector, First street and Indianaavenue..........io ooo aiine Mayor des Planches, Signor Edmondo, ambassador from Italy TA ee CUA Mead, Elwood, Office of Experiment Sta- tions, 1513 Rhode Island avenue......... Medford, A. F., law board, Auditor for War Department, 138.C Street NE ............ Medford, H. S., physician to the poor, Dis- trict of Columbia, 151 C street NE........ Megrew, J. P., captain Capitol police, The Plymouth ................L....... nh. ooies Mejia, M. Federico, legation of Salvador... Meline, James F., assistant treasurer of the United States, 2111 O street.......... Melvin, Alonzo D., Assistant Chief Bureau of Animal Industry... oii. gs, Menocal, Civil Engineer A. J., Bureau of Yards and Docks, 1716 K street.......... Menoher, Capt. Charles T., General Staff, 1832 Oregon AVENE 0 dieeiteiiso J wins ie Merchant, Rufus B., disbursing clerk, Post- Office Department, 407 Fourth street..... Meredith, William M., Director Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 1219 Princeton SELECT (aes iinis winiois tivioiois tales Siete einieibiniulnis sien Mérou, Sefior Don Martin Garcia, minister from the Argentine Republic............ Merriam, C. Hart, biologist, 1919 Sixteenth SECC cuca iene soni « sivsin sisis ately siobuie io iuiuis Merriam, Paymaster J. H., pay officer Navy-yard, 808 Eighteenth street........ Merrill, G. P., head curator, National Mu- SEIT i ante de hss lev ale ot Bebe we’ Merrill, T. S., expert division chief, Census Bureau, 2560 Wisconsin avenue .......... Morte, John A., postmaster, Washington, , The Far ragut ER AE OE ANON PA E. P., housekeeper, Howard Uni- NETILLY bo iniis sie sae wtis sive vie i ate Se tien die Metcalf, Victor Howard: Secretary Commerce and I,abor (biog- raphy) The Arlington...» «eve svosia 229 211 299 232 345 247 245 235 240 255 253 212 346 213 255 348 446 Page. Metcalf, Victor Howard—Continued. Ex-officio president Light-HouseBoard. Member Smithsonian Institution...... Meyers, Wm. F., librarian to District Com- missioners, 216 A street ST iw ieuieiele iets siete s Michael, William H.: Chief clerk State Department, 2542 ‘Thirieenthistreet lo, 200, soiini Government Board I,ouisiana Purchase Bxpositlon':, lv sri esis Michie, Capt. R. E., Office of the Chief of Staff, U. S.;A., The Richmond... .... ix Miller, B. H., clerk House Committee on Naval Affairs, 209 A street SE............ Miller, Lieut. Col. Crosby P., General Staff, TRIE CHILO: Saat hes ai enna a a Miller, John F.] Commissioner, Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission ....... Miller, Melville W., Assistant Secretary of the Interior, The Sherman.............. Miller, N. M., assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on Interoceanic Canals, 232 Third I el RR RE LR PR ee ER a Ter Miller, William J., president Board of Children’s: Guardians... 5. oi tail, Milligan, Lieut. Commander Richard T., Office of Naval Intelligence, 1432 M SUECEL «iv svat hoi rd ails ales Si die in ila aor e Mills, Brig. Gen. Anson, Commissioner on part of United States, ‘United States and Mexican Water Boundary Commission. . Mills, Col. S. C., Assistant Inspector-Gen- eral, 1821 Nineteenth street.............. Mills, E. L,., division chief, Bureau of Inter- nal’ Revenue, 409 Fifteenth street. . Mills, Samuel Cc, justice of the peace, "1205 G street TE FA A RIA CNL SEL Salt Milton, Eby, House messenger,g23 Hstreet. Minnigerode, C. P., assistant director Cor- coran Art Gallery, The Portner.......... Mitchell, E. F., clerk, Secretary’s Office, Senate The Garfield.:...........v. vie. Mitchell, I,. P., Assistant Comptroller of the Treasury, The Leamington.......... Mohler, John R., Bureau of Animal In- dustry,i2317 Bigst street i. co al. Mom I,uang Kruaval, Siamese legation.. Momsen, Hart, division chief, Census Office, ‘Garrett Park, Md mais iad niin Moncheur, Baron, Ei from Belgium, 1710 HEStEeCt i. BL Ss eee SS Sle Monk, T. O., clerk House Committee on Mines and Mining, The Lowell Montagna, Signor Giulio Cesare, Italian embassy, 1708 H street................... Monteverde, Lieut. Col. Federico de, Span- ish legation, 37 2West Ninety-ninthstreet, New York, Montgomery, at George, Assistant Chief of Ordnance, U. S. Army, The Bucking- Moody, William Henry: Attorney-General (biography), 1428 K Street vl. ii Si Sa ie dW as Member Smithsonian Institution ..... Mooney, W. M., division superintendent, Post-Office Department, 1919 I street. . Moore, Brig. Gen. John, board of visitors, Hospital TOF INSANE « iuisn vi so mmaales sivas Moore, C.C., Bureau of Chemistry, 227 New Jersey ry LR Moore, David, distributing clerk, House of Representatives, 125 Indiana avenue. Moore, Edward B., Assistant Commis- sioner of Patents, 1359 Yale street........ Moore, George T., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, Hammond Court .................... Moore, J. A., lieutenant of police.......... Moore, I. H., Commissioner of Manufac- rE OO eae Moore, L,. B., professor Howard University. Moore, Miss Mary Ella, Board of Chil- Arenls Guardians, i. vee visser sinnvaisns Moore, Millard J., principal patent exam- iner, Glencarlyn, Va Moore, Willis I,., Chief Weather Bureau, 1312 Nineteenth Street. ...........v.eu... Moran, W. H., chief clerk secret service division, 1316 ‘Tenth street... uvvivoesss / 251 248 346 251 349 344 245 247 231 Alphabetical Index. a Page. Morisey, George H., House messenger, The Roland... oo aes hai ah va ses Morley, C. E., Office Sergeant-at-Arms, House of Representatives, 33 Bistreet. Morris, Ballard N., principal patent exam- iner, 1126 Tenth SfreRt os Morris, Martin F.: Associate justice, court of appeals, 1314 Massachusetts avenue... .........00. Washington National Monument As- NR LH ATE PLAIN SR IR Morrison, Hugh A., jr., chief assistant in reading room, Library of Congress, 2302 Birstoslreet ide Liu ios Ten a Morrison, John G., chief assistant in read- ing room, Library of Congress, 811 Thir- LEERER SEER nat vs ale ah aL dari Morrison, John I,., stationery clerk, House of Representatives, The Driscoll ........ Morrison, Thomas, Chief Bureau of Ac- counts, State Department, 1443 S street. Morse, B. H., assistant engineer, House of Representatives, 2138 G* ‘street... ...... Morse, Charles E., disbursing clerk, Bu- reau of Labor, 1633 Twenty- ninth street. Morteza, Khan, appointed Turkish Minis- | RE eh SASL Mortimer, W. T., division chief Patent Of- fice, 1305 Rhode Island avenue........... Morton, G. L., principal patent examiner, 1310/0): Sire. i. cus i ro re an i es Se Morton, Paul: Secretary of the Navy (biography), 1612 RK stfeet .. Member of the Smithsonian Institu- HOM A A Moseley, Edward A., secretary Interstate Commerce Commission, 1113 Sixteenth Mosher, Alexander, chief, Patent Office, m7zo twentieth street... 2... 0.00, Mosher, Robert Brent, chief of Bureau of Appointments, State Department, 2418 Fourteenth street. ... .. ns ona. Moss, H. N., superintendent of streets, 1790 Lanier avenue. . ........ Loe a Motter, Murray Galt, commissioner of pharmacy a Te Se fh Mout, Thos. O., clerk House Committee on Mines and Mining, I211° YT; street... 0. 0k Moxley, Eugene C., assistant to offi- cial reporters, Senate, 1150 Seventeenth Cay RS ea a Da Mudd, A. J., Division of Publications, De- partment of Agriculture, 1925 Fifteenth SEBEL re eh kes ae Te Muir, Capt. C. H., office Chief of Staff, 1717 Thirty=fifth street... ..... cov tov, Mullowny, Alexander R., assistant United States attorney, 1411:V street... ........% Munson, I. S., Bureau of Chemistry, De- partment of Agriculture, Seventh street andiOmaha avenue... .... oh... 0h a Munoz, Sefior Don Jorge, Minister from Guatemala, The Arlington .............. Murphy, D. I., secretary Isthmian Canal COMMISSION ©. i ds vs ssw Murphy, Edward V., official reporter, Senate, 2511 Pennsylvania avenue ...... Murphy, James W., assistant to official re- porters, Senate, 1020 Massachusetts ave- G Ths Ca RR Rs Se Glee MR ALES TT Murphy, John F., messenger to the Presi- dent pro tempore of the Senate, 1629 QIBITECE: Lo eiv vu toi snisinsis tiivih vhs is sinis ils Murphy, Passed Assistant Surgeon G. A., medical officer, Navy-Yard Murray, Lawrence O., Assistant Secretary Department of Commerce and Labor, The Rarragulii, dose suiniichduoles sles slit ote sis Nai Cheun, Siamese legation .............. Nash, Contract Surgeon F. S., assistant attending surgeon, U. S. Army, 1723 Q street. Nash, William L,., messenger to Speaker’ Ss table, 807 North Capitol Street. ao Neagle, Pickens, chief clerk Office Judge- - Advocate-General U. S. Navy, 1510 Park SLECEl. Clie. v vivivis vasiniv vse sein vluives sve vie uve 214 3) <> Alphabetical Index. Page. Board of Charities... 0... .. 00... Commissionerof Tabor. ... 0s Nelson, Lieut. Commander V. S., assist- ant chief Bureau of Equipment, The Port- a Tare ate a Se el EE Nelson, Assistant Surgeon H. I., Naval Hospital, on od San nie Teal Nesbit, Scott, disbursing agent, Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1754 Q street..... Nevitt, Dr. Ramsey, coroner, 618 Third Simon, foreign secretary National Academy of Sciences .......... Newell, F. H., division chief, Geological Survey, 1520 Phelps place. .... ..... .... Newton, James T., principal patent exam- iner, 165 Rstreel. ... 0 Lo nL nL Nichol, Nellie, Normal Fellow, Gallaudet College re i a ha a, Nichols, H. J., medical interne, Hospital foramsdaner, Ll an ae Nicholson, Philip W., assistant fire marshal District of Columbia, 1619 New Jersey AVENE Ws a aL a aR Nicholson, William S., appointment clerk Post-Office Department, Cleveland Park. Nixon, C. R., clerk, Secretary’s Office, Senate, 415M streets. oo 00 ann Nn Nixon, G. A., principal patent examiner, The Westover. oi Hl thas Nixon, Richard B., financial clerk of the Senate, 415 M street. .. 0. 0.0, ashe Nolan, Capt. Dennis E., office of Chief of Staff, U. S. Army, The Woodley......... Nordhouse, John, private secretary to Sec- retary of Navy, 1343 Kenesaw avenue... Norris, Lieut. Commander J. A., special duty, Bureau of Equipment, 1609 Riggs DIAC sr a Se er ss Norris, Ralph W., teacher, Howard Uni- versity a ana North, S. N. D., Director of the Census, 1414 Twenty-first street. ...... io... 0. Northup, C. G., assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on PublicL,and Claims, 814 B street NI ee Se nT Sn Norton, H. D., chief page House of Repre- sentatives, gz YT street... oo in Nott, Charles C., chief justice Court of Claims, 2029: Q'sireel’, in. ia Nourse, Mrs. Emily I,., board of trustees of Industrial Home School, District of Columbia voc, «oii LR a es Nourse, James B.,board of trustees of Indus- trial Home School, District of Columbia. Noyes, Crosby S., board of trustees Boys’ Reform School, District of Columbia... . Noyes, Theo. W., president board of trus- teesipubliclibrary’.. oo. oni ule Noyes, William A., chemist, Bureau of tandards, Chevy Chase, Md ............ Nye, Francis, assistant assessor, 1507 Park LRT SS UL Sa an a oil Ober, George C., board of medical exam- iners, District of Columbia .............. Oberly, Beatrice C., librarian Bureau of Animal Industry, The Mendota......... O'Brian, J. H., Senate messenger.......... O'Connell, Maurice D., Solicitor of the Treasury, 2116 OQ street. ln lo 0 O'Connor, T., captain, fire department... . O’Donnell, Michael F., elevator conductor, House of Representatives, 412 Second re NI rs rh hae a ates Offutt, A. KE., purchasing agent Hospital for Insane. i. (ons lh ii, Ogden, Herbert G.: Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1324 Nine- teenth street... tos or La ORs Board on Geographic Names .......... Ojeda, Sefior Don Emilio de, minister from Spain, 1785 Massachusetts avenue ....... Olesen, Tory, Bureau of Pensions, 644 E Street NE ie ieee be vate sin einai wioluine 213 300 248 211 237 345 215 349 252 253 301 246 447 Page, Olive, Winfield S., division chief, Indian Office, 302 Indiana avenue ............... Oliver, George W., Bureau of Plant Indus- ry Sa M street cs ci a ao Oliver, Robert Shaw, Assistant Secretary of War, 1753 Nigtreet ou an. a. Olmsted, V. H., Bureau of Statistics, De- partment of Agriculture, The Plymouth. Olney, Richard, Regent, Smithsonian Insti- tution, Boston," Mass, i... Lu. on 00 Olsen, Lauritz, House messenger, 233 New Jersey avenue............. AO ns O’Neal, Lewis I., justice of the peace, 456 D street... od Ln. Ey A I Orcutt, W. H., chief clerk Inspector-Gen- eral, 509 Fast Capitol street............ oa O’Reilly, Brig. Gen. Robert M.: Surgeon-General U. S. Army.......... Commissioner, Soldiers’ Home, Metro- politan Club... i. in a Osborne, John B., assistant secretary spe- cial commission .plenipotentiary under tariff act, 2116 Connecticut avenue....... Overstreet, H. I,., assistant chief clerk House of Representatives, 136 Thirteenth Sree SI a Ce aa Pack, Harold J., assistant, Bureau of Sup- plies and Accounts, The Cumberland ... Page, Fernando, House messenger, 51 D Te EE I MT en SR Page, Logan W., Bureau of Chemistry, 2336 Massachusettsavenue 5 hha Page, William Tyler, clerk House Com- mittee on Accounts, St. Denis, Md ...... Pagin, Oliver E., assistant attorney, De- partment of Justice, 1736 Columbia road. Paine, Halbert E., justice of the peace, 1323 Thirty-second street -..... 0 nie oi 10 Palmer, Aulick, United States marshal, 1401 Staughton street... =. Sl. too. JL. Palmer, B. I., House Fhirteenth street... 0 asia Palmer, ¥. W., Public Printer, 1715 Eight- eenthistreet qu, 08 oli oo i aT Palmer, T. S., division of biological sur- vey, 1604 Thirteenthistreet.. ..0. 0. 0, Pangborn, W. S., Assistant House Docu- ment Room, 209 First street NE......... Pardo de Tavera, Trinidad H., Philippine Commissioner, Manila... ....... ...0 5 Parker, Burton, division chief, Treasury Department, 1307. Hi street nl. nL. 0k Parker, KE. Southard, board of education, District of Columbig. oii bho od ON TS ae UE Parker, James I., division chief, Interior Department, 321 Florida avenue......... Parker, Robert E., clerk to Assistant Sec- retary of War, The Portner....... 5... Parkinson, Alfred Carroll, reading clerk of the Senate, 103 Maryland avenue NE a a me elie Parks, Commander Wythe M., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 2104 Eighteenth LE I AE A BR HE Parsons, Arthur J.: Chief of division of prints, Library of Congress; 1818 Nistreet.....).. .... a0 Corcoran Art Gallery... ui iil Parsons, John W., division chief, Supervis- ing Architect’s Office, Forest Glen, Md. . Parsons, William Barclay, Isthmian Canal Commission (nro Paterson, Bertha G., instructor, Kendall SeROoYi ir rar ES Patrick, G. E., Bureau of Chemistry, gor Sixteentlrstreet ...., la. anu ail Paul, Prof. H. M., U.S. Navy, Bureau of Yards and Docks, 2015 Kalorama avenue Pavey, Mr. Frank Dunlap: Counselor, legation of Ecuador, 32 Nassau street, New York City ....... TLegationof Panama... ... 5000s, Peabody, Frank H., special assistant secre- tary, special commission plenipoten- tiary under tariff act, 1710 F street....... Pearce, C. S., paying teller, Treasurer of the United States, 1819 Nineteenth street. 246 249 253 229 234 448 Alphabetical Index. Page, Pearson, Isaac, captain of police; 1514 T Ci a A LI EER Pearsons, John H., clerk to Senate Com- mittee on Pacific Railroads, 1123 Thir- teenthistreet:. Jove ooh an noni, Peck, Commander R. G. (retired), assist- ant hydrographer, Navy Department .. Peckham, Rufus W associate justice, Supreme Court of the United States 345 211 240 (biography), 1217 Connecticut avenue... 292-293 Peelle, Stanton J., judge, Court of Claims, The Concord rr se i Peet, Elizabeth, instructor, Gallaudet Col- lege and Kendall School. -............... Pefters, J. N., clerk Senate Committee on Fisheries, 909 Thirteenth street......... Peirce, Herbert H. D., Third Assistant Secretary of State, 1901 BE street........ 0. Pendleton, Capt. E. C., Superintendent Naval Cun Factory... viscimasivisns Penfield, William I,., solicitor, State De- partment, The Dewey. .... i... vaninsns Peoples, Paymaster C. J., assistant Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, The Farragut Pepperman, W. Leon, chief clerk Bureau of Insular Affairs, The Grafton.......... Perkins, Frank Walley, Assistant Superin- tendent Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1620 A I i Ne RR soon Perry, R. Ross: Washington National Monument As- sociation, 1309 P street .-............. {Crustee, public library ...............- Director, Columbia Institution for Deaf a Corcoran Art Gallery.............0..... Person, Robert S., Auditor forthe Interior Department, 3112 Q street......... salves Peters, B. I: Chief clerk Navy Department, 140 C street SIL. 5 el Ara Government Board Iouisiana Pur- chase Exposition... anal, Peters, Commander G. H., superintendent of compasses, 1354 Columbia road ....... Peters, Edward T., statistical expert, Ag- ricultural Department, I,ondon, Eng- Tand ie Sader se SE ha ed Pettus, W. J., Assistant Surgeon- General, Marine- Hospital Service, 1328 Nine- feenthistreet o.oo in iain il vi civil Petty, J. T., assistant assessor, District of Columbia, 333 Ostrect, uv on i ey Peyton, Harry, assistant attorney, 1744 Riggs place ....... coven inen nev, Pfister, Lieut. Carlo, Italian Embassy..... Phair, ’p, De W., division chief, Library of Congress, 4 B street NE ei mae Phelps, Charles G., clerk Senate Committee on Judiciary, 1314 I street ........ ...... Philipson, 1,., assistant, House Document Room, 416 North Capitol street.......... Phillips, Herman A., journal clerk House of Representatives, 1444 Florida avenue. “Phillips, P. Lee, chief of division of maps and charts, Library of Congress, 1707 H TR Pe En er Ten Phinney, A. W., assistant clerk House Com- mittee on Invalid Pensions, 236 North Capifolistreetin i. do nl siiinuio du. cons Phya Akharaj Varadhara, minister from I Ls i a sins Boas Pickett, Charles J., Senate messenger, 1706 Menthistreet. si moor ovdainal dasa] Pickett, Maj. G. E., paymaster, The On- HATO, i SR a Sa a eee Pierce, Edwin S., Deputy Sergeant-at-Arms of the House, 1412 Chapin street......... Pierce, John R., House messenger, 50I Sec- ondistreet NT I... loa Se Pierce, I,ovick, chief clerk Office of Educa- tion, 1213 New Jersey avenue... ......... Pierce, Newton B., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, Santa Ana, on Pea Pierce, P. B., principal patent examiner, 1421 Twenty-ninth Street. sb sn aia tin Pieters, A. J., Bureau of Plant Industry, Takoma Park ............ oho dintulas Sates us shots Page. Pillsbury, Capt. J. E.: Assistant to Bureau of Navigation, Stoneleigh Court. ........ 0.0.0. 0: Duty with General Board, Navy De- partments. J fl naa Pinchot, Gifford, forester, 1615 Rhode Island avenue, i. oS dieui ionamin sss sais Piper, C. V., Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of Agriculture, 1 S street. Piper, Horace I,., Assistant General Super- intendent Life-Saving Service, 1505 I, greet... hs es eT, Plant, J. C., division chief, Supervising Architect's Office, Glencarlyn, V. TEE 2 Platt, Benjamin S., enrolling pF of the Senate, The Roanoke... oer iva, Platt, O. H., Senator from Connecticut, Regent of Smithsonian Institution ...... Platt, Sherman, bookkeeper, Treasurer of the United States, The Portner.... i... Pleadwell, Surg. F. L., Naval Dispensary, Stoneleigh BY 1 BE ee Se SER A Be Plunkett, “Lieut. Commander Chas. P., office of Naval Intelligence, The West- OV CT. oles le tole hu inreinisintoiel sien ote ute sw nteln iets eis Tare ellie Pollock, George F., division chief, I,and Office. Boyd, Md. oc. 0. 0 levis Pond, B. W., principal patent examiner, 1845 Howard avenue. ..... ... i hu cuiians Pond, Col. G. E.; Assistant Quartermaster- General, The Calro. i. ie dint ative Porter, D. S., principal examiner, Pension Bureau; T4100 street oo. in laid veel Porter, Maj. B., Assistant Judge-Ad- vocate-General, U. S. Army, 1732 I Porter, Sarah H., instructor, Kendall School baer Sr RR Pottenberg, Harry, bookkeeper, Office of Clerk House of Representatives, 312 A street NES ee aia Ph san ns Potter, Henry G., division chief, Land Of- fice, 1106 G Street. nish Potter, Commander W. P., office Secretary of the Navy, The Highlands IER Potts, Joseph: Y., clerk police court, 200 Indianaavenue .....oo 0. ens shi vue Potts, Commander Stacy, Bureau of Steam Engineering, 2019 Hillyer place......... Potts, Lieut. Col. R. D., Board of Ordnance and Fortifications, Fort Monroe, Va..... Pouciana, Senor Don Raphael D., Guate- malan Iegation, The Arlington......... Powell, Capt. W. G., U. S. M. C,, assistant paymaster, The Mendota... 0. vrs e Powell, G. Harold, Bureau of Plant Indus- try, 404 W street NE a Powers, Le Grand, chief statistician Cen- sus Office, 3107 Sixteenth street.......... Pradt, I,ouis A., Assistant Attorney-Gen- eral, 1908 F Street... che Pressey, Warren E., assistant postmaster of the Senate, The Wicomico... -...-i Preston, Robert E., examiner, Bureau of the Mint, 53 K SECC NE .\ avn raresniss Price, Medical Director Abel F. , Naval Re- tiring Board; 2233.0 street. cucu. cede cones Price, Overton W., assistant forester, Brad- dock Heights, VA Prince de Béarn, French embassy......... Prince, Howard L,., librarian Patent Office, The Albemarle... ... oir vipias te rien’ Pritchett, Dr. Henry S., Light-House Board, BOStON, MASS. iv. oars ss sien ohn sis Probst, Mr. Ernest, Swiss legation, 1618 Nineteenth street. ... .cii.... ni. i dos, Proctor, C. B., captain, fire department... Proctor, C. W., inspector of pharmacy, 538 Pirstistreet SE a. oh fe tse inyviss ene Proctor, Robert G., clerk Senate Commit- tee on the Philippines, 1203 I, ydecker AVENE Lh Je pans ad heen Proudfit, Samuel V., first assistant attorney Interior Department, 57 Quincy street. . Prouty, Charles A., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, The Porttier. ............. Pugh, James L,., jr., assistant corporation counsel, 3300 Seventeenth street. ........ 240 243 249 248 231 fr A Iphabetical Index. Pulido, Sefior Don Augusto F.,legation of Venezuela, z007 O'street’.. ..... ..... 0. Pulsifer, Pitman, clerk Senate Committee on Naval Affairs, 3317 Holmead avenue. . Pulsifer, Woodbuty, clerk Senate Commit- tee on Commerce, The Brunswick ...... Purdy, Milton D., Assistant Attorney- General, 213s Bistreet. “ov iis. coon Purvis, Chas. V., board of medical ex- aminers, District of Columbia...... .... Putnam, A. B., House messenger, 218 New J erSey AVENUE. i veri tani oid sees Putnam, Herbert, Librarian of Congress, BIS Nsbreet vu... i ei hd, Quaiffe, A. R., vault clerk, Treasurer of the United States, The Concord.............. Quaintance, A. I., Bureau of Entomology, Department of Agriculture, 1809 Twenty- foumthistreet | 70 wl Lohan Quesada, Sefior Don Gonzalo de, minister from Cuba, 1006 Sixteenth street......... Quitmuir, H. A., Normal Fellow, Gallaudet College i a ii vse Rae, Rear-Admiral Charles W., Chief Bu- reau of Steam Engineering, 1827 Jeffer- OIE PIA ne Fr ae eer Rafter, G. S., Chief Patent Office, 1122 New Hampshire avenue. 5. 0000.0 Rainey, F. H., chief clerk money-order system, qoz'Spruce street... . ou Ralph, Joseph K., custodian dies, rolls, and plates, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 1246 Providence street, Brook- nd. i ie Ralph, W. L., honorary curator, National Museam, "Che Portner i... 0 vai Ramirez, Sefior Don Osvaldo, Chilean lega- tion, The Grafton... i. one-iiis,s Ramsburgh, Jesse, physician to poor, The POINT ive, erieiir es nemioats nian diay Ramsay, Capt. F. De Witt, Army and Navy Club, Office Chief of Staff, U. S. Army." Rand, Pay Director Stephen, general store- keeper, Navy Yard... 0. 0 oa. Randall, George C., clerk House folding room, rig Bstreet NE.......... oy Randolph, John, assistant clerk, Court of Claims; 28 Tstreet oo. coco. c ail Randolph, John B., division chief, War De- partment, 1715 Corcoran street. .......... Page. 30I 211 Ransdell, Daniel M., Sergeant-at-Arms- Senate (biography), 130 B street NE .... Ransom, B. H., acting assistant zoologist, The Augusta v8, 0 dn ia Tn Raspopow, Colonel, Russian embassy, The Highlands . i. oii cite. Rathbun, Richard: Assistant Secretary Smithsonian Insti- tution, 1622 Massachusetts avenue... In charge of National Museum ........ HONOTATY CUTALOL «ovo ve sh Sens aason nis Ravaioli, Prof, Antonio, Italian embassy. . Ravenel, W. de C.: Administrative assistant, National Museum, 1611 Riggs place............ Government Board Louisiana Purchase Exposition. i... one Rawson de Chair, Capt. Dudley, British embassy, 1912 Sunderland Place.... .... Ray, J. E. R., division chief, Auditor for the Interior Department, 3103 Milwaukee arn EE Lee SR i re ae Rea, Kennedy F., assistant clerk House Committee on Appropriations, 7 T'ennes- SCE avenue, i. 2 Reber, Maj. Samuel, General Staff, 1736 N rhe ORR SR Se CL saa ad Reece, William M., clerk House Commit- tee on Public ILands, House of Repre- sentatives, 210 New Jersey avenue....... Reed, Horace C., clerk Senate Committee on Rules, 1122 Vermont avenue.......... Reed, Lieut. M. E., Bureau of Steam En- gineering, Thelowa...... .. ... 0s. 58-3D—2D ED——29 449 Page, Reel, Estelle, superintendent Indian schools, The Arlington... .. soi. 246 Reeve, Felix A., Assistant Solicitor of the Treasury, 1628 Nineteenth street ........ 241 Reeve, Herman D., clerk House Commit- . tee on Military Affairs, 215 Eighth Street NI J fo cr Sh ae naa 215 Reeve, James H., superintendent postmas- ters’ supplies and accounts, 3601 Milwau- Ths ERE En ER Ll Se 239 Reeves, Commander J. S. K., board of in- spection and survey, 1720 T'wenty-second Street. vison, FT a a Cin 243 Reichard, Edward, bookkeeper, Sergean - at-Arms House of Representatives, 306 North Carolina avenue SE... ........... 214 Reichard, Iouis K., page, Sergeant-at- Arms House of Representatives, 306 North Carolinaavenne SE............... 214 Reid, Sefior William Alfredo, Bolivian Iega- nnn na A SRE ES 298 Reisinger, J. W. H., newspaper clerk, House of Representatives, 208 Delaware avenue NI... oo ees we wate 213 Reiter, Capt. George C., Light-House Board, Che Highlands. i... viene ve 251 Remine, J. Q. A., House messenger, 16 Third slreelt SB icv. iia i 214 Remsen, Ira, vice-president National Acad- emy of Sciences, Baltimore, Md ......... 256 Repetti, F. F., physician to poor, 149 B IR a a Lr en 345 Reyburn, Robert, professor Howard Uni- NETH. i in an a a a 349 Reyes, Sefior Jorge, Argentine I.egation, The CGraffon i cor ii soni 298 Reynolds, C. Leslie, assistant superintend- ent of Botanic Garden, 927 S street...... 216 Rhoderick, E. P., division chief, Post-Office Department, g24 Westminster street... .. 238 Rhodes, Capt. Charles D., General Staff, Ee i He es es Sa eR SE 234 Riafio, Sefior Don Juan, Spanish legation. 3or Rice, Albert G., chief clerk Bureau of Soils, dz Cliftonstreet i. oes 249 Rice, G. L., Commissioner of Immigration, San Juan PeR i ah he 252 Rice, H. I,., Naval Observatory, Friendship Helohis or a ad on es 241 Rich, William H., House messenger, 252 Delaware avenue NE... in ivr eaten 214 Rich, William J., patent examiner, 208 Fleventhistreet NE. .... oii. .oveiees 245 Richards, Charles N., keeper of stationery, Senate, 101 Massachusetts avenue........ 210 Richards, Julian W., secretary to the Speaker, I'he Normandie................ 213 Richards, William A., Commissioner I and Office ’Fhe Portier... ou... ives ites 244 Richards, William P., engineer of street extension fiz7S street... ... 0 oe. 344 Richardson, Chauncey E., clerk Senate Committee to Examine the Civil Service, The Savoviis. ooo nt nt ee 211 Ricketts, Oscar J., foreman of printing, Government Printing Office, 2018 Fif- teenth gtreet .. sou ii ihr vivant Noda 253 Ricketts, V. L., clerk House Committee on Printing cl a a ae 215 Ridgely, William Barret, Comptroller of the Currency, The Portland... ......... 233 Ridgway, John I,., division chief, Geolog- ical Survey, Chevy Chase, Md............ 246 Ridgway, Robert, curator, National Mu- BCHNES sii eian ee dies nts sion ae diate 255 Riedesel, ¥. C., House Post-Office, 116 Maryland avenue NE......... ...... ow. 216 Rittman, Frederick E., Auditor for the War Department, 2016 Columbia road......... 231 Rivero, Sefior Don Antonio Martin, Cuban legation, 1502 Vermont avenue........... 299 Rixey, Surg. Gen. P. M., U. S. Navy, Chief Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, g9og Sixteenth street... oi i rte ee 241 Rizer, Henry C., chief clerk Geological Sur- vey, 1617 Swann street... 00... 246 Robb, Charles H., Assistant Attorney-Gen- eral, The Rochambeau....... Rn pa rE 450 Alphabetical Index. Page. Robert, Naval Constructor W. P., Bureau of Construction and Repair, The Ontario... Roberts, D. R., House messenger, 214 A SLEECt SH cit oh ie vr sin wints sis tint satan Roberts, Ellis H., Treasurer of the United States, 1313 Massachusetts avenue, Roberts, George E., Director of the Mint, 1224 Vermont BVOC. cvs is. (iris Roberts, R. R., board of eclectic medical examiners, District of Columbia... Roberts, Thomas B.; clerk Senate Comi- mittee on Patents, 33 Bostock. Dona ie Roberts, IT. O. W., law clerk, Auditor for the Treasury Department, 918 Twenty- third street. oi. niins a sat hae Robertson, Harry C., clerk Senate Com- mittee on Interoceanic Canals, The DEWEY vis ovens vrssvsn vont devi Robertson, James, Nautical Almanac, 3018 yn ES Im SO Ere Yo Robinson, C. B., veterinary surgeon, 222 C ID Ko ah DN Re Robinson, Henry, disbursing clerk, House of Representatives, 207 A street SE...... Robinson, Commander J. M., Naval Ob- servatory, 2016 Hillyer place. ale aA ae Robinson, Jesse H., division chief, Weather Bureau, 1607 S Steet, cis Robinson, Thomas, board of eclectic med- ical examiners, District of Columbia.... Robison, Tio Com. S. S., Assistant Chief Bureau of Equipment, The Marlborough Robison, William B., deputy United States marshal, The Gladstont.. .cceeee: son ars. Roca, Lieut. Col. Enrique, legation of Ecuador NE IE Ae SEA Rockhill, William W., Director Bureau of American Republics, 1828 1 street ....... Rockhill, Mrs. W. W., board of trustees Reform School for Girls, District of ColMDIR ior se vrs anise vs vis uwivie pi lslbnuten's Rockwell, J. E., Editor, Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of Agriculture, CI A ER ST Ea I LR Ee Rodrick, Walter F., Sscrsry board of CATCALION, ie sis cavsinian sive sas suis ovis Sete Rodriguez, Dr. I= Ignacio, chief trans- lator Bureau of American Republics, 1340 Vermont avenue oes vie mise w sist nn vive Roe, Harry V., document room, House of Representatives, 409 A street SE. Loe Roessler, Maj. S. W., Office Chief of Engi- neers, 1407 Twenty-first streef,.. 000 Rogers, Charles C., disbursing officer of the District of Columbia, 1428 Welling Places: io ih nl ie dan a Ee ne Rogers, Thomas E., Superintendent Na- tional Bank Redemption Agency, The ColUMDIR 5 alisha ves en etnies Rogers, W. A., division chief, Auditor for War Department, 1428 Welling place .. Rogers, William H., House messenger. . Roijen, Mr. J. H. "van, legation of the Netherlands, 1714 1 Birdel ss a Rolfs, Peter H., Bureau of Plant Industry, Miami, EE RR eR es TBR Rome, John, House messenger, 315 First glreet SH o.oo ev i Cai Sad Rommel, George M., Bureau of Animal Industry, 1929 Cincinnati street.......... Roosa, I. P., dispatch agent, State Depart- ment, post-office building, New York. Roosevelt, Capt. Henry L., Assistant Quar- termaster, Marine Corps, The Marl- borough, is ie se sei Evid Roosevelt, Theodore: President of the United States, White House (biography)... error. Presiding officer ex officio and mem- ber Smithsonian Institution......... President ex officio Washington Na- tional Monument Association. ....... Patron ex officio Columbia Institution for Dealand Dumb ........ .civov.n. Rosa, Edward B., physicist, Bureau of Standards, The Ontario .. sr: ceases Rose, Henry M., Chief Clerk of the Senate, iro Maryland avenue NE, . vs vo vsiveveiovs 241 214 232 233 344 211 231 211 240 Page. Rosenau, M. J., director hygienic labora- tory, Mariné- Hospital Service, 3211 Thir- teenth Street... coicici i vicina svnvinsides Rossiter, William S., division chief, Bureau of Census, 1742 Riggs place... iar aeanie Rouzer, George W., clerk Senate Com- mittee on Enrolled Bills, The Rocham- STARR Le sl TR Rubido-Zichy, Mr. Ivan von, attaché Aus- tria-Hungarian embassy................. Ruhlen, Lieut. Col. George, Assistant Quar- termaster-General, 1826 California ave- RS I ee ml Bd Rumer, Alfred E., clerk House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds, The ElHchRelds, i. vii seis raid famaini aneeid Runyan, E. G., inspector of gas and me- ters, 300 R street NE. dovver insane Russel, Maj. Bdgen, Assistant Chief Signal Officer, U.S. A Russell, Maj. A. H., Assistant Chief of Ord- nance, U.S. A. , 1807 I street.... oc... Russell, Aaron, resolution and petition clerk, House of Representatives, 1231 T YR od A a ee ee Russell, Charles W., Assistant Attorney- General, 2309 Eighteenth street... uv. Russell, Tieuf. Com. R. I. ., Office Judge- Advocate-General U.S. Navy, ThePortner Rutter, F. R., Bureau of Statistics, Depart- ment of Agriculture, 2750 Fourteenth SITEEL, i. sist vente ius nisiommiaie sin ote cavisievusnle Ryan, Thomas, First Assistant Secretary of the Interior, 1750: Sistreet soo in an Ryder, Bayard ie clerk, Secretary’s Office, TT ENT Re Ge I RAE Sabine, George W., assistant House libra- rian, 524 TIRE SLICE os crams esitens Sabree, Capt. Uriel, Naval Secretary Light- House Board, 1266 New Hampshire avenue Sacket, Rodney, clerk, Secretary’s Office, Senate, 9S BD BETCCl sv nits hiss ante ek Safford, George H., secretary Howard Uni- versity, 2445 Brightwood avenue.... =... Sagaseta, Sefior Don Manuel Torres vy, Mexican embassy, 1725 Twenty-first HA Fo A SE Se ee Sagmeister, Joseph, assistant clerk Senate Committee on Pacific Islands and Porto Rico, 1715 De Sales streel....... cane h ii Salmon, D. E., Chief Bureau of Animal In- dustry, WHE LOWE. ivi veinrias an sin inieiaie Sammons, Thomas, clerk Senate Commit- tee on Geological Survey, 23 First street NE iT i Cee tee hea tai Sample, James A division chief, Treas- urer of the United States, 2104 O ‘street. Sams, W. B., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee on Manufactures, 408 Sixth street. Sanders, H. P., principal patent examiner, 1504 Twenty-first greet. nice ie Sanders, Thomas B., Deputy Commissioner of Navigation, Department of Commerce and Labor, 2300 M street... ............, Sands, Edwin, superintendent postal regis- try system RE ES CPR CRS Sands, FE. B., assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on Commerce, 1415. XK street. ou. Sanford, Henry W., division chief, Land Office, The Montrose roe oories sity Sargeant, F. F., Commissioner-General of Immigration, "The Kensington... Sawyer, Frank H., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Civil Service, 1330 Vermontavenue. Saxton, Henry D., chief clerk Office Quartermaster-General, 615 Nineteenth CU Hated BE rs a er Fes nr Schafer, Paymaster G. C., U. S. N., disburs- ing officer, Ancon, Panama Eels Beta Scheller-Steinwartz, Herr Robert G., Ger- Man embBassy:. .... fines vest tamer Schilling, Baron E., Russian embassy, 1500 Rhode Island avenue .................... Schofield, J. M., Washington National Monument ASSOCIAION oer 27 ves cme Schofield, William, assistant division sup- erintendent, Post-Office Department, 213 Fifth sleet NE, ovo orivorrrivsivinssens 234 344 «< 2 <5 > | { | v ) 2 i 3 - Alphabetical Index. Page. Schreiner, HE. ¥., superintendent redemp- tion division, Comptroller of the Cur- rency, 1314 R Steet. Schroeder, Capt. Seaton: Chief Intelligence Officer, 1816 N street General board on a a Schroeder, E. C., Sources of Animal Indus- try, Bethesda, Schrom, C. E., Ting fire department. . Schulte 1 1 , Office of Experiment Stations, 1921 ‘Fhirtcenth street «cen. oze sro Schwinn, Geo. W., night medical officer, Hospital for Insane... 0.5 a Scofield, Carl$S., Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of Agriculture, The Ontario. Scofield, John C.: Chief clerk War Department, 1614 P Fyn a SR Be ES Government Board I,ouisiana Purchase BX position. os ra ea Seas Scott, Charles F., judge, police court, 1483 Columbin road, ch in Scott, George D., division chief, Post-Office Department, 033 N street. ur. coin, Seer ens Scott, Geo. Winfield, custodian law library, Library of Congress, 531 Kighteenth An rr et Scott, Philip D., Commissioner, I,ouisiana Purchase Exposition Commission ...... Scott, W. F., chief clerk House folding TOOM, SISA Street SH. ure renee Scott, W. P., clerk, document room, House of Representatives, 207 A street NE ..... Scott, W. W., law clerk, Auditor for State and other Departments, 1616 Nineteenth Slreel. itn ih on vvinvsc ene ve eicion tains ee Scott, William W., assistant attorney, De- partment of Justice, 914 Westminster SIPC otis srr sen i tie saline Scriven, Maj. George P., Assistant Chief Signal Officer, U. S. Army, 2009 N street. Searle, William D., appointment clerk War Department, 1131 Twelfth street . Seeds, Edward P., Deputy Auditor for the War Department, 128 C street NE. ...... Seely, G. D., principal patent examiner, Clevelnd Path . oo Seney, Fred. M., clerk Capitol police, The SAVOY criss retin sion dnienieiilo ss sie slviie sia nis sie Serooskerken, Baron E. LI., van Tuyll van, Legation of the Netherlands, 1812 I ITER rer tr a Sewall, Hugene D., principal patent ex- aminer, 1233 Princeton Street vin i Sewall, F. D., division chief, Bureau of Internal Revenue, The Hamilton ....... Sewell, Thomas ¥., Board of Children’s Guardians... er. Shadd, F. J., Howard University.....,..... Shallenberger, W. S., Second Assistant Postmaster-General, 1863 - Mintwood Sharp, E. H., House messenger, 247 North Capitol TORE a Se Sharpe, Col. Henry G., Assistant Commis- sary-General, 1713: Mistreet,............. Shatswell, Nathaniel, museum Agricul- tural Depar tment, 702 Thirteenth street. . Shaw, A. P. , principal patent examiner, 2574 University PIACE ir cvs sats minor vie Shaw, Alexander C., division chief, I,and Office, 1456 Buclid place................... Shaw, Leslie M.: Secretary of the Treasury (biography), 1750 Massachusetts avenue.......... Ex officio president of the Light-House Board, vrei te se sree Member Smithsonian Institution ..... Sheibley, Sinclair B., assistant attorney, 2501 Fourteenth Sireet. a Sheik, H. S., assistant clerk Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills, 508 A CE HE DS es Shelton, Arthur B., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Finance, 1712 R sireet............. Shepard, Charles U., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, Summerville, S. C Shepard, J. M., House Post-Office, 318 Third street...... LT TE 233 240 242 248 345 451 ‘Page. Shepard, Seth, chief justice, court of appeals, District of Columbia, 1447 Mas- sachuselis avenue... i... ohn. 0 Shepherd, James F., assistant clerk Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections, 201: Bast Capitol street... ... ..... 0.00. Sherrard, Thos. H., assistant forester, 815 VW IMIONL AVENE 1ov. «veers ier Shidy, Leland P., Coast and Geodetic Sur- vey, 1647 Marion street. oon ie Shelling, Lieut. Anthony, Metropolitan Police, District of Columbia ..... ....... Shipp, Thomas R., clerk Senate Committee on Territories, The Youdoun. ii. Shiras, George, jr., associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (retired), Stoneleigh Court. ............. Shoemaker, Capt. C. F., chief division, Treasury Department, 1303 Yale street. Shook, H. Jr. , postal- card agent, Rumford Falls, M rs ERIE eet Eee Te Short, Re E., House messenger, 222 New Jersey avenue. ................h...... LL. Shosuke Akatsuka, Mr., Japanese lega- tom, yaro Wistreel 0 To onli Shouse, James H., House messenger, 120 Fourth street NE TE a Shreve, John G., clerk House Committee on Labor, 8 B street N Bah ainishh Shuey, Theodore F., official reporter, Sen- ate, 2127 California avenue ......... ..... Shuster, William M., ‘board of trustees Boys) Reform School, District of Colum- EC ot, ev i ee a aE A i Shute, D. Kerfoot, physician, Kendall school BS a A ET I Ry RE EE EE ET TT Be er ete de sie ss ates Simmons, George, division chief, Treasury Department, 2549 Eleventn street. ....... Simpson, George R., principal patent ex- aminer, 112 Twelfth street SE........... Sims, Thetus W., Board of Directors, Co- lumbia Institution for Deaf and Dumb.. Sims, Lieut. Commander W. S., Bureau of Navigation, 921 Eighteenth street....... Sala, Count Antoine, French Embassy, 1034 CONNECHCUL AVENUE . cvvvver vrvrnmerrnnn Sinclair, A. Leftwich, assistant corporation counsel, The Victoria. cco iniess ov Sinnott, Joseph J., special messenger, House of Representatives, 1723 H rR A a Skinner, Frank C., principal patent ex- aminer, 3421 Holmead avenue ........... Skinner, Prof. A. N., Naval Observatory. . Slater, Samuel B. financial clerk, Indian Office, 1415 S PTY Na Slauson, Allan B., chief of periodical di- vision, Library of Congress, The Wood- dey SRR Sh Se I Shee. Maj. T. H., Assistant Quarter- master-General, 1722 Fifteenth street... . Sleman, John B., chief clerk Auditor for Post- Office Department, 314 Sixteenth YI EA ee i er Sloane, Charles H., Board on Geographic Names Fe RA ATA A Sloane, Charles S., division chief, Census Office, 1521 Tenth street. . Sloat, Frank D., financial ‘clerk, "Patent Office, 1214 I, gaeel os a Small, Reuel, official reporter, House of Representatives, The Hamillon ......... Smith, Amzi, superintendent Senate docu- ment room, 517 C street SH... ..........5 Smith, Addison T.,clerk Senate Committee on Manufactures, 122 Sixth street NE... Smith, C. B., Office of Experiment Stations, Takoma Parks. iio nh viinin w, Smith, E. G., assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on Post-Offices and Post-Roads, 213 Hstreet oo ee ae a Smith, Erwin F., Bureau of Plant Industry, 1460 Staughton street ........ i... ... Smith, Lieut. Col. Frederick A., General Staff, The Bancroft, vss ese. cine ciimanias 245 241 | | | 452 Alphabetical Index. Page. Smith, F. H., Howard University.......... 349 Smith, Goldwin, president American His- torical Association, Toronto, Canada .... 248 Smith, Henry G., clerk Senate Committee I'respassers on Indian Iands, 324 John Mashallplace...cv. oil ia iania. . 212 SUTCEt NE. ooo ve iene crisinivesnniniec sustains 212 Smith, Herbert K., Deputy Commissioner Bureau of Corporations, The Farragut . 251 Smith, Hugh M., Deputy Fish Commis- sioner, 1209 M BEEECE nes 252 Smith, T G., Hawaii experiment station, Homo... 250 Smith, J. W., captain, fire department.. 345 Smith, james F., Philippine Commissioner, Manila er SE SO Sa AE agen 236 Smith, J. I., clerk House Committee on Education, 417 Fourth street NE......... 215 Smith, Lincoln B., assistant attorney, 1758 Oregon AVENUE... oh reve ve 8s bo veiealse vers 237 Smith, Luther R., division chief, Interior Department, Thelows..... 244 Smith, Paul F., messenger House post- office, 140 Massachusetts avenue NE.... 215 Smith, Sydney E., disbursing clerk War Department, 30370 street...........-.... 234 Smith, Sydney Y., Chief of Diplomatic Bu- reau, State Department, 1731 U.: street". 229 Smith, W. A., clerk in charge of Congres- sional Record at the Capitol, 1302 Roa- Noke Street. Suivwrinss nusinmns nin sores 216 Smith, Gunner W. G., in charge Bellevue Magazine RT I BT rE rR 242 Smith, William M., chief clerk Bureau of Yards and Docks, 3105 Eleventh street . 241 Smith, W. H. H., ‘chief clerk Bureau of Steam Kngineering, 2122 Hstreet ...... 241 Smith, W. Scott, private secretary to Sec- retary of the Interior, 525 I street......: 244 Smith, William R., superintendent Na- tional Botanic Garden ................... 216 Smith, W. W., clerk Senate Committee on Forest Reservations, 33 B street.......... 211 Sniffen, Col. C. C., assistant to Paymaster- General U. S. Army, The Cairo.......... 236 Solar, Col. Vicente del, Chilean Legation. . 298 Soleau, William TI,. , disbur singand appoint ment clerk Department of Commerce and Tabor, Garrett Park, Md ............ 251 Solberg, Thorvald, register of copyrights, Library of Congress, 198 F street SE. 227 Sonneck, Oscar G., chief of music divi sion, Library of Congress, 1235 New York AVENE Selvin rafts sin sion agiaieies nates 227 Spear, Surgeon Raymond, Naval Hospital. = 242 Spear, W. E., clerk Spanish Treaty Claims Commission, 1104 Thirteenth street ..... 238 Sperry, Capt. & S., member Naval general board i. se. te ss rr ee a ves 242 Spilman, William R., superintendent rural : free delivery, Post-Office Department, 224 Biftlvstreet SB... .o vr oes 239 Spillman, William J., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, 74:8 street... il. vo vari ce nivaa tn 248 Spofford, A. R.: Chief Assistant Iibrarian, Library of Congress, 1621 Massachusetts avenue. 227 Second vice-president Washington Na- tional Monument Association........ 255 Trustee publiclibrary. ....... ........ 344 Spousler, C. F., Bureau of Standards, 1450 Binney Sireel 253 Stack, Maurice J., physician, Hospital for TOSINE.. re en 348 Stadden, Mr. Corry M., counselor, legation of Nicaragua, 1507. G street. ............5 300 Stafford, Wendell P., Associate Justice, Supreme Court, District of Columbia, 1603 Kennesaw avenue, coo. in. vie. 296 Stallings, B. D., first ‘assistant editor, Agricultural Department, 048 S street.. 250 Stanley, Elmer, elevator conductor, House of Representatives, 314 Fifth Street SE. . 273 Statter, A. F., clerk Senate Committee on Coast and Insular Survey, The Gordon.. 211 Statter, M. I.., Senate messenger.......... 211 Stauffer, Charles C., principal patent ex- 245 aminer, 3238 N Siteet vicar. Page. Stearns, S. S., board of homeopathic med- ical examiners, District of Columbia.... Steele, A. A., clerk House Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, 128 A street NI oe yan Steele, John I., clerk Senate Committee on Mines and Mining, 1742 P street . Stejneger, I,., curator, National Museum. Stephenson, S. es division chief, Bureau of Internal Revenue, 1727 Riggs place etree Sterling, E. D;, lieutenant, Capitol police, 1016 Thirteenth Street. ....o...oveensennes Stern, Rev. Louis, Board of Children’s CUArdIaNsS:. res ta se aa Sternberg, Freiherr Speck von, German AMDASSAAON:. ror vsnrs i sansa ries Steuart, William M., division chief, Census Office, The Kensington «..x..... 5... Stevens, Wilfred, translator, State Depart- ment, 20 New York avenue NE.......... Steward, Thomas G., examiner in chief, Patent Office, 143g Q street... ..... ..... Stewart, Alonzo H., Assistant Dooriespos Senate, 204. Fourth street SH... Stewart, A. P., Assistant Teller, Treasury oF the United States, Garrett Park, Md orn ns sea es be a tea Stewart, Charles W., in charge Naval War Records Office, 1211 Kenyon street...... Stewart, John C., clerk in charge Weather Bureau, House of Representatives, The POL CT hs tae dvi aivn ary wien rae ave Stewart, Joseph, assistant superintendent railway mail adjustment, 1640 Howard AVENE, rl hin aaa seats Stickney, Col. Amos, Light-House Board, New York, N.Y Stickney, F. H., disbursing clerk Navy Department, 607 M street, conc: ----- Stidham, Harrison, superintendent street CLEANING. ass tina ae era es Stiles, Ch. Wardell, Marine-Hospital Serv- ice, 1412 Hopkins place... asa Stitt, Surg. BE. R., U. S. N., Museum of Hy- giene, 1806 R Sirect. cs Stocking, Solon W., examiner in chiet, Pat- ent Office, 1013 H Street Stockman, William B., district forecaster, S23 Ninth street i/o... ir iersts vrsnieres Stokes, Surgeon C. F., Museum of Hygiene, zi Nineteenth street uve iin Stone, George F., chief clerk Second Assist- ant Postmaster-General, 3124 Q street ... Storey,Brig.Gen.John P.,Chief of Artillery, 1737 Nstreet ................ core 0 ns, Straight, John P., clerk in House folding room, 336 Eleventh treet NI... 8 00s Stratton, S. W., Director Bureau of Stand- ards, The Farragut. cs. css rsnnvs Strickland, R. T., special assistant attor- ney, 309 BE Breet. oe Strider, Luke C., justice of the peace, Fen- dall Building A BS NT hh Br Strobeck, C. H LY AD DR ee aS Se Street io eR Ce ce Se eee Stone, Silas W., stamped-envelope agent, Hartford, Conn... vv svete rs ies Strong, Maj. ¥. S., Assistant Inspector- General, 929 Seventeenth street.......... Stuart, A. T., superintendent of public 5choOlS .euuen..... Stuart, James, physician to the poor, Dis- trict of Columbia, 937 R street........... Stubbs, HE. C., chief engineer Senate, Lin- den, Md Stutler, Warner, superintendent street cleaning, 1225 New Jersey avenue....... Sudworth, George B., assistant forester, 2949 Newark street, ‘Cleveland park... Sullivan, Andrew J., battalion chief, fire engineer, 3208 R FSET Ee an Sullivan, M. R., principal patent exami- ner, The Normandie ...........c.ooeee.n- Sullivan, Thomas , Assistant Director Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 1823 Vernon avenue... cceeeeescasse REET RE RRR 344 214 yg Alphabetical Index. Summers, Alexander, office of education, 021 BE streetiin.. ii ar nein ee Sumner, Adelbert D., assistant messenger, Senate, 'Ihe Colonial 23. lw... oan Sumner, C. J., superintendent House doc- INCHEON cvs eis niviseie avis tin sista cinisio nln oie Sutherland, J. A., division chief, Supervis- ing Architect’s Office, The Portner...... Suter, W. G. , physician’ to the poor, District of Columbia, 3 Xstreet. ino as Suthe, K. E., Bureau of Standards, Ienox street, Chevy Chase, Md Sutton, J. R., harbor master, 1519 Eighth reel en ae Swan, Henry C., disbursing clerk, Auditor for the War Department, 1129 Dartmouth LL le eee SR SE eR Swan, W. D., bond clerk, Sompirolisy of the Currency, 222 First street SE .... Swartwout, F. A., physician to poor, ‘12 XOWACIIOIE iviris ss atin irenies Swift, Capt. William, U. S. N., general board, 1407 Fifteenth street... ........... Swinburne, Capt. William T., general board, Navy Department, The High- EE STN a ee Swindells, J. A., captain of police, 3313 R FL RS Te nS ERE Swinderen, Jorkheer R. de M. van, min- ister from The Netherlands ............. Swingle, Walter T., Laboratory of Plant Life History, Department of Agriculture, 3315: Seventeenth sfreet, oo... ..coeo cus Sylvester, Richard, superintendent of po- lice, 1223 ROANOKE STEEL... eurrenenanrns Sze-yee, Mr. Sun, Chinese legation........ Taft, William Howard, 1603 K street: Secretary of War (biography) res Ex-officio Member Smithsonian Insti- te. St a Saas Takahira, Mr. Kogoro, minister from Japan, 1310 Nestreet ooo nem cn il ov Takeshita, Lieut. Commander Isam, I. J. N., Japanese legation, 1464 Rhode Island AVENUE oy. os cus erosions ion suns ois Savane Taliaferro, Clara C., instructor, Kendall a ERR eS IR RC a Te Tanner, Charles B., division chief, War Department, 3105 Sixteenth street ....... ‘Tanner, James, register of wills ........... Tanner, James A., assistant attorney, 1416 EE x ER a a RE Tavera, Trinidad H. Pardo de, Philippine Commissioner, Manila............. coven Taylor, Naval Constructor David W., Bu- reau of Construction and Repair, navy- STTh EC Ria i Sl CU EL Da TA Taylor, George M., Senate messenger, 218 AStEect SB. iii aes va sede oe Taylor, H. A.,-Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 2007 Massachusetts avenue... . Taylor, H. W., chief engineer House of Representatives, 100 Fifth street NE.... Taylor, Hannis, special counsel Spanish Treaty Claims Commission, 1700 Nine- teenth street on. cv lo. naive res Taylor, Hawkins, assistant clerk Senate Committee on Manufactures, 1311 K SETCel, coe cc iitian ss emint sh esle eben bie Taylor, James K., Supervising Architect, The Highlands, 2. io hee con coneien Taylor, Capt. John R. M., Bureau of Insu- lar Affairs, Army and Navy Club........ Taylor, Stark B., bailiff, Court of Claims, 435 EE Street SW oom ides abies Taylor, W. A., Bureau of Plant Industry, 55 Q street NE EA AA aah Taylor, W. C., deputy register of wills, 1400 Twenty-first I i ET Cs Teffe, Mr. Oscar D. , Brazilian legation .. Teh Moo Sin, Mr. , Kor ean legation........ Tellier, Julius A, ' Senate epionges 1408 Sheridan BEING «is eis oes arenes 1 street a a Temple, Mrs. Amanda W., matron Kendall Hr Be ee SE Terrell, Robert H., justice of the peace, FOF KL BERR sess yuie cites se vrrness eves Page. 453 Page. Terrill, J. D., chief law clerk Comptroller of the Treasury, 1334 Vermont avenue... Thayer, R. H., trustee, public library ..... Theriault, W. N., Senate messenger...... Thomas, Charles N., assistant in disburs- ing office, House of Representatives... .. Thomas, D. P., messenger to ehief clerk House of Representatives, 810 North Car- olina avenue SH Cl sai Thomas, Edw. H., assistant corporation counsel:oi6: Petreet: . 0 oo oa... Thompson, A. H., division chief, Bureau of Prpmons 904 Massachusetts ‘avenue EER E. J., assistant clerk Senate Committee on Military Affairs, 2026 H Shree cd i re i se sees Thompson, George F., editor, Bureau of Animal Industry, 319 B street ST. vas Thompson, Howard E., normal student, Gallaudet College... .. a oii. Thompson, Capt. James K., office of chief of staff, U.S. Army, The Portner......... Thompson, John G., Assistant Attorney- General, The Cio. Thompson, John Q., assistant attorney, RigeS EINISE cai hers ran ienine an ones Thompson, Joseph M., House manager de- partmental telegraph, House Post-Office Thompson, Royal W., clerk Senate Com- mittee on Military Affairs, 2026 H street. Thornton, H. R., assistant clerk House Committee on War Claims, The National Thoron, Mrs. Ward, board of trustees Re- form School for Girls, District of Colum- Thorp, Ervin H. , superintendent city postal delivery service, 138 B street NE, ...-.... Thorp, Martin R., division chief, War De- partment, 316 S Street NE... or. Thoty, Mr. Perceval, Haitian I egation.... Thorton, M. Eugenia, normal fellow, Gal- landet College. cov rivssvinsivnsrinsissionninee nein Thurston, John M., Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission Sirisien siv oie De sete Tillman, Benjamin R., jr., clerk Senate Committee on Revolutionary Claims, The Colonia): ic. or ree esse cine oa Timme, Ernst G., Auditor for the State and other Departments, 13431 street. : Tindall, William, secretary to Board of District Commissioners, 2103 California AVENE © cas oF sesh oho nies siilain iawn sinnia sie os Titcomb, John W., Fish Commission, 1605 KR CHesaW AVENE. vse vse sssicainee nics ees Titcomb, W. P., disbursing agent Fish Commission, 2237 Q street ........ verve 3 Titlow, Charles B., chief engineer Libra of Congress, 639 Columbia avenue, Balti- more; Ma oh re LS aa Tittmann, Otto IH., , Superintendent Coast and Geodetic Survey, en Riggs place . Tobey, Paymaster HE. C N., Depart- ment chief, Isthmian TRL Commission, Cristobal, Panama o.oo ot Toner, J. rE physician, Hospital for Insane Topping, William H., clerk House Com- mittee on Invalid Pensions, 236 North Capitolistreel.. io. iii sree Townsend, I. U., principal patent exam- iner; 1221 Kenesaw avenue .............. Townsend, W. W., principal patent exam- iner, 1447 Kenesaw avenue .............. Tracewell, Robert J., Comptroller of the Treasury, 1817 Sixteenth street .......... Tracy, T. F., House messenger, Chicago EH ee A EE a Trainer, John W., assistant attorney, 1830 bE RE In Travers, Arthur M., chief clerk ‘Third As- sistant Postmaster-General, The Mendota Travis, John A., House messenger, 1008 East Capitol Sheet. «a Triana, Sefior Don Eduardo Perez, Colom- bian legation EE i ER TAT Trimble, Mathew, assistant assessor, I 320 Rhode Island avenue ...... ous... True, A. C., Director of Experiment Sta- tions, 1604 Seventeenth street.eee.ove... ‘231 344 212 213 213 344 246 211 234 236 348 454 Page. True, E. R., cashier, Treasurer of the United States, 1331 Kenyon street........ True, FB. W.: Head curator, National Museum...... Government Board Louisiana Purchase BRpOSItION vv secs seueiesriaioins T'rue, Rodney H., Bureau of Plant Indus- try 3413 Thirteenth street NE........... Truesdell, George, board of trustees Boys’ Reform ’School, District of Columbia. . Tryon, F. M., principal patent examiner, 913 Fighth RE ats T'szchi, M. Chow, Chinese legation........ a I R., physician to poor, 1222 Eleventh street rE ER Fa SEE Tunnell, Rev. William V., Howard Univer- TS eC A A EL NI Tupper, J. B.T. Board of Children’ s Guardians........ Board of trustees of Industrial Home SEOOL a rs i Sain a Division chief, Bureau of Internal Rev- enue, 1333 Twenty-first street........ Turner, Charles H., assistant United States district attorney, 3038 U street........... Turner, John P., veterinary, Hospital for Insane ie is einieie a Rela in un lele x niein ee ea sey Turner, William B., clerk, Secretary’s Of- fice, Senate, 811 Quincy street............ Turpin, Lieut. W. S., ordnance duty, navy- Tr a CE Rr PR es ol EAA le) hy Alonzo, deputy auditor, District of Columbia, 2714 BR street. i ............ ‘I'weedale, Lieut. Col. John, Assistant Mili- tary Secretary, U.S. Army, 1725 P street. Twining, Lieut, Commander N. C., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy Department, 1739 Nineteenth street. Tyler, Cadwell C., division chief, Auditor for the ‘I'reasury Department, 1712 Oregon AVENUE .. J... vis eivs is snisisisainmasienis Tyson, A. H., superintendent municipal lodging house, 312 Twelfth street... ... Udata, Senior Don F. N., Cuban legation.. Uhler, George, Supervising Inspector General Steamboat- Inspection Service, 1453 Buclid place... ls iviiriess caus venins Unthank, Pleasant, mail clerk, House post-office, 318 Fhirdsireel.... ler. or: Usher, Lieut. Commander Nathaniel Rr, assistant, Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department, i908 I street ...............% Vail, Benjamin, department messenger, House of Representatives, 11170 East Cap- lfol street... . vor. decries cules saisin sn erin sinais Vail, Kennon, clerk, House post-office, 220 Cstreel.. .... ois. Joveesisvisnsssnstnrinson oe: Vale, Dr. EF. P., police surgeon . Vale, Henry Ambler, clerk, Senate ‘Com- mittee on Library, 1925 ‘Thirteenth Ey a EA EE a So EA A A Van Dyne, Frederick, assistant solicitor, State Department Chevy Chase, Md. Van Leuven, Henry C., clerk, House Comi- mittee on Judiciary, 918 Hiphtesiil Street... oe Ci viii fee save Van Orden, Iieut. G., U.S. M. C., VATA WE sai ovine Tye olen ton ne trices vie Van Vliet, Frank, clerk House Committee on Pacific Railroads... ver rvorcione cs caves Vaughan, George T., Assistant Surgeon- General, Marine-Hospital Service, 1718 T rR rr Ty Vere Sefior Don Manuel Jose, Chilean le- RR a Tr TC TR I Veitch, F. P., Bureau of Chemistry, De- partment of Agriculture, College Park, IYER ree rn Sy er eR Bhs Veloz, Sefior Don Nicolés, legation of Nica- ragua, 1825 Nineteenth street bie siuisle/sioonins Veloz-Goibicoa, N., secretary, Bureau of American Republics, 1743 P street... Verdy du Vernois, Herr von Friederich, German embassy, 2020: R street....... oe Vermillion, B. F., inspector of boilers, 123 Thirteenth street NE .......c.eenssesens Vickery, William J., division of post-office inspectors and mail depredations, 1209 K £11 7 | ER SSR RX 232 245 298 345 299 Alphabeticac Index. Page. Vilenkine, M. Gregory, Russian embassy, 1501 Eighteenth SEFEEL. vs vos sn ors 301 Vinson, Maj. W., paymaster, U. 8. ‘Army, Fort Myer, Vax aaa 236 Vogelgesang, Lieut. Chas. T., assistant, Bu- reau of Navigation, 20238 Columbia road. 240 Von Haake, A.: Topographer, Post-Office Department, Hammond Coust.................... 238 Board on Geographic Names .......... 253 Von Schrenck, Hermann: Bureau of Plant Industry, St. Louis, 3 RE E.R 248 Assistant forester, St. Louis ........... 249 Vrooman, Charles K., chief clerk Solicitor of the Treasury, Hyattsville, Md ........ 231 Wagner, A. K., National Bank Redemption Agency, 436 New Jersey avenue SE. ..... 233 Wagner, Col. A. I,., General Staff, U. S. A., 1747. Qistreet. >... LL 234 Wagner, Frank J., deputy chief, fire de- partment, 301s Eighth gtreet... a. on. on 345 Waidner, C. W , Bureau of Standards, 1429 BRE. i srt res seis LAOS Wainwright, Capt. Richard, General Board, Navy Department, 1264 New Hampshire AVENUE oS in dren ter snsvnss Srnsat tu sins 242 Waite, Merton B., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, 1353 COTCOTAN STEEL... uvunns renner. 248 Wakefield, F. H., docket clerk, House of Representatives, The Vendome......... 213 Walcott, Charles D.: Director Geological Survey, 1743 Twen- ty-second Street... cove secre cons 246 Honorary curator, National Museum. 255 Wales, Leonard E., clerk Senate Commit- tee on Ventilation and Acoustics ........ 212 Walker, F. V., chief clerk Navy Pay Office, 1526 Corcoran ool RY SO A IR Ie Ll 242 Walker, George H., assistant attorney, Cleveland PATE rises virion oe ron 237 Walker, Rear-Admiral John G., chairman Isthmian Canal Commission. ............ 236 Walker, John H., clerk Senate Committee on District of Columbia, The Savoy...... 211 Walker, Ralph, elevator conductor, House of Representatives, 631 D street SE. 215 Walker-Martinez, Sefior Don Joaquin, minister from Chile............. crise ean 298 Wall, Dr. J. S., police surgeoni............ 345 Wall, Jos. S., board of medical examiners, District of COIUMDIA wenn vnnrnernn.nnens 343 Wallace, J. F., chief engineer, Isthmian Canal Commission, Ancon, Panama..... 236 Wallace, Paymaster W. 4 assistant Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, 3129 Ustreet..: 241 Walls y Merino, Sefior Don Manuel, Span- jsh legallon i. cc. cece avons ons aronny 301 Walsh, J. E., medical Sariary inspector, 202 Fast Capitol street. 345 Walsh, Chief Gunner J. 3 ‘ordnance duty, navy-yard Hor saa Crakate ss Ce Salthill 242 Walters, Don C., House messenger, 515 A street oy EE aE ee Ee a 214 Ward, I. F., honorary curator, National Museum, 1464 Rhode Island avenue..... 255 Warfield, Frank A., division chief, Bureau of Pensions, 1535 MSErCOt eras 246 Warman, Philip C., division chief, Geo- logical ‘Survey, 3345 Seventeenth street. . 246 Warner, B. H., trustee, public library ..... 343 Warner, HA. ‘assistant index clerk House of Representatives Tn tra ed 213 Warner, Willard F., chief clerk Treas- urer of the United States, The Concord... 232 Warren, F. E., assistant clerk, Senate Comi- mittee on Claims, Senate post- office ..... 210 Warren, George A, ‘chief clerk Office Chief Signal Officer, Ts Army, Takoma 15h NE en a Car a 236 Warwick, W. W., deputy auditor Isthmian Canal Commission... cere: reoisrioemenicores 236 Washburn, Henry J., Bureau of Animal In- dustry, 704 B SLECCL BW +. oevvrisrsonrres 248 Washington, Iieut. Thomas, assistant, Bu- reau of Navigation, 1831 Corcoran street. 240 Wasson, W. H. H., assistant journal clerk, House of Representatives, 200 A street SI, sovisusvessrrsssesseseeseveresseveioses 213 - Alphabetical Index. Page. Watson, David K., Commission to Revise the I aws, RiggsHouse..........c...-...5 Watson, J. A., physician to poor, 201 Mon- roe street, Anacostia ER I TE Watson, John W., division chief, Bureau of Pensions, Langdon a Watson, William A., special messenger, House of Representatives, The Metro- POHIAN rr a Seis a ea Watt, Tieul. C. A. HB. fire department..... Wauters, Charles, Belgian legation, 729 Eighteenth Street... .. o.oo ven. Weakley, A. D., dentist, Hospital for In- A i sa hs re hr ed Weaver, Maj. E. M., Board of Ordnance San Fortifications, Governors Island, i Pl Cn NE dy walt H. B., House messenger, 200 EK BIEERt rte es a Webb, H. Randall, justice of the peace, Central Bank building................... Webber, Herbert J., Bureau of Plant Indus- toy, Pakoma Park... cous cna rae n os Webster, Daniel B., driver, House post- office. 1327 Cistrect ST. ui ioc vine ivis cae Webster, F. M., Bureau of Hntomology, Department of Agriculture, Urbana, Ill. . Webster, R. M., assistant attorney, Post- Office Department, 1336 Yale street. ..... Weiler, Ferd, division chief, Treasurer of the United States, 1316 V. street ..........,.. Weiler, G. L., clerk, Office Secretary of the Senate, 118 "Maryland avenue NE. Weis, Iouis 4 Commissioner of Immigra- tion, Manufacturers’ Record building, Baltimore, Md eae Welch, A. c. official reporter, House of Representatives, 413 Fourth street ...... Welch, David E., cashier, House of Repre- gentatives, 338 street. ............0... ... Welch, John, clerk Superintendent of the Capitol, 310 North Carolina avenue SE Weldon, Lawrence, judge, Court of Claims, ‘The Hamilton......:..................c.. Ce atneel SI a. vies he ee Wells, Edmund J., clerk, Senate Committee on Railroads, 1238 New York avenue.... West, Henry I,., District Commissioner, 364 Harvardstireel on a ve a West, Mrs. Henry 1,., board of education. Weston, Brig. Gen. John F.: Commissary- General, 1810 Cincinnati Fr En ei Commissioner, Soldiers’ Home.........: Wetmore, J. A., division chief, Supervising Architect's Office, I3II Columbia road.. Wetmore, Maude K., board of trustees Re- form School for Girls, District of Colum- Weyerbacher, Kenneth H. assistant clerk House Committee on Appropriations, rs Bstreet SI. lo a Lee, Wheaton, Francis B., division chief, Super- vising Architect’s Office, 2406 Eighteenth EE er Rr I rp sa Wheeler, Capt. Charles B., Assistant Chief of Ordnance, U. S. Army, 2106 R street.. Wheeler, J. C., Deputy Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 1912 H street ......... Whipple, Col. C. H., post paymaster, U. S. Army, The Porner Whitcomb, Fred C., director industrial de- partment, Howard University........... White, Albert B., division chief, Land Of- fice, "The Leamington ia ae a Ree White, Andrew D., Regent, Smithsonian Institution, Ithaca, N.Y ‘White, Edward Douglass, associate justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biog- raphy), 1717 Rhode Island avenue..... 292, White, James E., General Superintendent Railway Mail Service, The Stratford . White, Lieut. Col. Harry K., Marine Bar- racks. White, William A. ‘Superintendent Govern- : ment Hospital for Insane, St. Elizabeth . White, Lieut. Commander W. W., Bureau of Steam Engineering, The Concord... 238 455 Page. Whitney, Charles F., assistant pension medical referee, Woodside, Md... ay Whitney, J. N., chief clerk Bureau of Sta- tistics, Department of Commerce and Labor, 1619 Seventeenth street.........5% Whitney, Milton, Chief Bureau of Soils, PakomaiParle corey n cnet t8 de tin gc absinte Whittleton, R. J., Bureauof Plant Industry, 131 A street NE Wickham, W. D., Clerk’s office, House of Representatives, 16-Distreet. oro Wight, John B., director, Columbia Insti- tution for Deaf and Dumb, 1767 Q street. Wilcox, E. V., Office of Experiment Sta- tions, Takoma Bark aaa Wiley, Harvey W., Chief Bureau of Chem- istry, LEAL Tenth slrcet.... eirr rie ins Wiley, I. H., House messenger, 728 Tenth BEC eile se nie soils dis Sens SIE sae Wilkie, John E., chief secret service divi- sion, 3500 Morgan avenue ............... Wilkinson, A. G., principal patent exam- ner, 1526 RK streel... o.oo oh La Willard, Henry A., Washington National Monument Association ......c......c.e... Williams, Abbie I,. instructor, Howard UNIversily i lc eer cats eee Williams, E. I., clerk House Committee on Post-Offices and Post-Roads, 717 Tenth HR I eS Se UE Williams, E. S., Stree NAT ee eee Williams, Edgar, clerk House Committee on Banking and Curreney...... vo ces Williams, EK. IL., assistant clerk, House Post-Office Committee, 207 A street SE.. Williams, George H., chief clerk Superin- tendent of the Capitol, 210 E street...... Williams, Henry E., Assistant Chief Weather Bureau, The Windsor .......... Williams, J. R., resolution and petition clerk, House of Representatives, Ioan and Trust Brllding.. es Williams, L.L,., Assistant Surgeon-General, Marine-Hospital Service, 1309 Columbia Uh LR Ea a A SR SR a Williams, Robert, jr., Deputy Commis- sioner of Internal Revenue, 1912 H street. . Williams, Roger, chief clerk excise board, 13 Third street NE ........... Williamson, L. C., board of medical super- visors, District of Columbia... ........ Williston, Brig. Gen. Edward B. (retired), deputy g ‘governor, Soldiers’ Home... ...... Wilbnarby, Chester, Clerk’s Office, House of Representatives, 227 New Jersey ave- TE BE niin os ils ait fa sine Ses Wilson, E. W., teller, National Bank Re- demption Agency, 1406 Twenty-first street Wilson, George $S., secretary. Board of Charities, Oak Clove. oo Wilson, Iieut. Commander Henry B., assistant, Bureau of Navigation, 1417 Twenty-first street........... oc... Wilson, H. M., Geological Survey, 1706 Twenty-first street... . 0.0 ota. a. Wilson, James: Secretary of Agriculture (biography), 1022 Vermont : avenue .... Member Smithsonian Institution. Sine Wilson, Jasper, private secretary to Secre- tary of Agriculture, ro22 Vermont avenue. Wilson, John M.: Corcoran Art Gallery, 1773 Massachu- AR hn eS I Te SR Member the Washington National Monument Society... oo... Wilson, J. Ormond, president board of trustees of Industrial Home School, Dis- irict of Columbia... ceo oric ss aie ea Wilson, Louis C., private secretary to District Commissioner, 1324 S street..... ‘Wilson, Peter M., assistant financial clerk of the Senate, Toor OQ street... ........0.-- Wing, Willis H., assistant enrolling clerk, House of Representatives, 61 I street. ... Winslow, Commander Cameron McR., Bureau of Navigation, 1229 Nineteenth SEECCE Sev. celle Paine oc rsisisisinaietr isa eis vein oie 246 252 249 249 213 347 250 249 214 247 254 213 240 Alphabetical Index. Page. Winston, Isaac, editor, Coast and Geodetic Survey, The DOTNET oe. ee vies Winters, George W., elevator conductor, House of Representatives, 132 C street SE Wise, Medical Director John C Naval retiring board, Warrenton, Va . Board of medical examiners... . Wither, Sefior Dr. Serafin S. , legation of Ecuador ae A a a Witherspoon, T. A., chief, Patent Office, 26 TOWRA CITClE. ces rane se sr rays ns Witten, James W., law clerk, I.and Office, 1901 Plthstrect sor er Wold, Ansel, clerk, Secretary’s Office, Sen- ate, 201 North Capitol street uote. Wolf, Simon, Board of Charities. .......... Wolff, F. A., Bureau of Standards, 1429 R SITERL. ans sires Wood, J. P., Spanish Treaty Claims Com- mission, The DEWEY ovat visit. ‘Wood, Iieut. Commander Spencer 5 ‘aide to Admiral of Navy, 1819 M street..... Wood, Maj. W. L., Assistant Quartermas- ter-General, The Woodley... ov. ..onniie Woods, A. E., assistant clerk Senate Com- mittee on Appropriations, 1018 Seventh Shree NE. re eee Woods, Albert F., Bureau of Plant Industry, PAkOMA Path... cv ceiver sa san vove ns Woods, Elliott, Superintendent of the Capi- tol, Stoneleigh Coutts a ra Woods, John F., Senate messenger........ Woods, Lieut. Commander S. S., duty with General Board, Navy Department, 1819 ME StrEel. . cu ce vets cinnion sinmien vn snilisis binant Woodward, H. M., permit clerk, Brookland ‘Woodward, Naval Constructor 1.3: Board of inspection and survey, 1527 Corcoran street.....>.......0.....0, Bureau of Construction and Repair. ... Woodward, S. W.: President Board of Charities .......... Trustee, public library................. Woodward, William C.: Health officer, 503 I'street ............. Secretary board of medical supervisors, Districtof Columbia... ....... --.... Woog, Lieut. B. B., U.S. M.C., Marine Bar- TACKS ove: +o =v ons sisi Te vtisvivtie viene yinnlonive Wooley, W. R., messenger, House post- office, 125 C street NE Wooten, Lieut. W. P., assistant in charge Washington Aqueduct, ‘the Portner..... Worcester, Dean C., Philippine Commis- sioner, Matilla Worcester, William P., chief clerk Marine- Hospital Service, 1008 Spring road....... Worsley, A. S., assistant engineer, Senate, 123 North Carolina avenue SE Wotherspoon, Lieut. Col.,, N. W., office of Chief of Staff, U.S. Army, 2007 O street . Wrenn, A.C, chief clerk Bureau of Equip- ment, 234 Tenth street NE.vveeeerevsese- 243 243 234 240 Page. Wright, Chas. C., clerk House Committee on Patents, Phe DISCOll cones srirs nn Wright, D. "Thew, associate justice, su- preme court District of Columbia, 1832 Sixteenth streets. J rat aii naan k. Wright, Francis M., judge, Court of Claims, Stoneleigh Court... ............ Wright, George E., Senate messenger..... Wright, H. W., captain, fire department.. Wright, J. M., "marshal Supreme Court of the United States, Metropolitan Club. . Wright, John V., law examiner, Land Office, 2015 ‘Hillyer BlACC So ise. fae, Wright, I,uke E., Philippine Commissioner, Manila i ira an a Wurdemann, J. V., captain of the watch, Library of Congress, 124 Massachusetts avenue NB. oi. i cuits coer ss aries Wylie, Andrew, retired justice, supreme court of the District of Columbia, 1205 Fourteenth street oii vito tuvives vin Wyman, Walter: Surgeon-General Marine-Hospital Service, Stoneleigh Court............ Board of visitors, Hospital for Insane. Wyndham, Mr. Percy, British embassy .. Wynne, I. B., principal patent examiner, 1424 Chapin AR A el ee Wynne, Capt. R. F., U.S. M. C., Marine Bar- TACKS ia rene soinanninssesint oun viene lois Wynne, Robert J.: Postmaster-General (biography), 915 Rhode Island avenue ................ Member Smithsonian Institution...... Yeomans, James D., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, The Cumberland ........ Yerkes, John WW. Commissioner of In- ternal Revenue, "The Highlands... ... : Yun Chung Kim, Korean legation, 1500 PHITtEenth SEIEEt «env ennrensreannrannss Young, J. T., captain, fire department. . Young, J. R., ‘division superintendent, Post- Office Department, 1001 New Hampshire GVETHE 7 sn rear ah res ties Young, John R., clerk supreme court, Dis- trict of Columbia, 1522 R street .......... Young, Warren S., executive clerk, White House, 2023 I street... coon. ions vasiivons Yung Chung Kim, normal fellow, Gallau- det College....... ......0 .......0..... Yung Kwai, Mr., Chinese legation Tr Yu- tchu, Mr. Su, "Chinese legation.. ........ Zahm, F. B., naval constructor, Bureau of Construction and Repair, The Farra- gut a Si ee veer erat see Zalles,Sefior Don Jorge E. ,Bolivianlegation Zappone, A., assistant division “chief, Department of Agriculture, 2222 First SEreel res tava ere ZaTalia, Sefior Carlos E., Argentine lega- tion, 1032 Connecticut AVENE... rs Zinkhan, Louis F., superintendent of Washington Asylum a a O 215 299 294 212 345 233 299 -~ — 5 Q ie < WN \ EA ca 8/= =I iy a | ch we on ahha gi Hol od 1 I fen {oad Hl SE) = THE CITY OF i 3 . o WASHINGTON | AND a ENVIRONS. v 1904 | REFERENCES | | 1 The Capitol. 25 Washington Monument. | 2 White House. 25 Naval Menument. | 3 State, War, Navy Depts. 27 Statue of Washington. | 4 Treasury Department. 28 Statue of Washington. | 5 Interior Department. 29 Statue of Jackson. | 6 General Land Office. 29 Statue of Lafayette. | 7 Department of Justice. 30 Statue of Greene. | 8 Dept. of Agriculture. 31 Statue of Scott. | 9 Congressional Library. 32 Statue of Thomas. | 10 Smithsonian Institution. 33 Statue of Farragut. | 11 National Museum. 34 Statue of Du Pont. | 12 Army Medical Museum. 35 Statue of McPherson. 7 | 13 Pension Office. 36 Statue of Rawlins. < / a 14 Bu. Engraving & Printing. 37 Statue of Hancock. RE vil 15 Gov't Printing Office. 38 Statue of Emancipation. N wh 16 Naval Observatory. 39 Deaf and Dumb Institution. % Year 17 Corcoran Art Gallery. 40 Botanic Garden. \ Py 18 Census Office. 41 Congressional Cemetery. N 5) 19 Post-Office Departuient. 42 Judiciary Park. X \ 20 U. 8. Court-House. 43 Mpunt Vernon Square. N A | 21 Washington Barracks. 44 Baltimore and Potomac Depot. ww | 22 Navy-Yard. 45 Baltimore and Ohio Depot. Nr > \ | 23 Marine Barracks. 46 United States Jail. . Ik ) ; i 24 Naval Hospital, 47 City Asylum. Br i : 48 Dept. of Commerce and Labor. “ : = THE NORRIS PETERS CO. PHOTO-LITHO.. 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