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60TH CONGRESS . : 2D SESSION
BEGINNING DECEMBER 7. 1908
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, 1909
WASHINGTON
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
1909
eee
Yn
ad
nnd
a
maa
By
cr
a—
Gr
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ifr
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Sera
eee
NOTE,
Hon. Robert C. Davey, Representative from the Second district of Louisiana, died
December 26, 1908.
Hon. Charles N. Brumm, Representative from the Twelfth district of Pennsyl-
vania, having been elected judge of the Schuylkill county court, resigned his seat
in the Sixtieth Congress January 4, 1909.
Hon. George L. Lilley, Representative at Large from the State of Connecticut,
h has been elected governor of that State.
Hon. William W. Kitchin, Representative from the Fifth district of North Caro-
lina, having been elected governor of that State, has resigned his seat in the Sixtieth
Congress, to take effect January 11, 1909.
All Washington addresses in the Directory, unless otherwise indicated, are north-
west.
re
III
1909 CALENDAR. 1909
JANUARY. JULY.
Sun. | MM. | Tu. | W. | Th. EF. (Sat. Sun. M.of Tu. | WV. | Th, F. | Sat.
7a 3 if
8 v 4 5 6 7 8 9 | 10
Ti 12 13 14 15 16 17
Shad 5. 6. y
10 II 12 13 14 15
37 1% liao eo | 21 22 | 23 my Seen Bang 4 24 25 (06 27 | a8 [a0 [90 2 3 31 25 26 | 27 (28 | og lino. | 37
FEBRUARY. AUGUST.
TT
ay
I
a
Ser
7 8 9. | Ton wm 1h 8 o-t'zo |" 11 | 12.0 13 | 34
14 | i15 +f 16 “v7 | 18 | 70 [ 20 15.0 6 vr | aS ‘to 20 { a1
21 22 23 24 25 26. | 29 22 23 24 | 25 26 27 28
28 20 [F30 31
MARCH SEPTEMBER
rt 2 3 4 5 6 I. I 2 3 4 x 7 8 Oo |-10 | TI | 13 5 6 7 8 9 | 10 | TT
14 ( I5 6 | 17 18 Io | 20 12 13 I4: | 15 16: [17 18
2Y | 22°] 23 (24 | 25 | 264 ay 19.20 | 21 “22 f 23 | 24} 958
28 20 |. 30 | 37 26:27 | 23 1 29 | 30
L APRIL OCTOBER :
> 3 1 2
- 3 4 S 6 7 8 9 4 5 6 / 8 2 10 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
u ¥2 13 1 18 16 | 17 7 P18 fi -19 20 {=o} 22: 23 I 10 [20 | 21 [22 | 23 | 24
g5= 26 | 27 | 28 [i209 | 30 > 25 oe er Re Re
MAY NOVEMBER |
Ty oar 23 410 5 7 A 7 3 ol wlinli|n & O:fito fp Al. 12 LIS p10 13 14 | 156 713) 1020 6: 17 | 183 | 10 | 20 [25 | 22 at | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27
23 24 | 25 26. 27. ( 28 20 28 | 29 | 30
30: | 31
JUNE. DECEMBER.
I 2 3 4 S I 2 3 4 6 7 8 g | 10 | 11 | 12 6 ; 3 g | 0] 5 3:03 [35 | 16 37 | 18 i zl als 6 15138 20 | 21 [22 | 23 | 24 | 25 ; gil-20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25
27 [2820 [3 26. | 27 | a8 20 [25 | a7
IV
PRESSES
>
SSR
a he
Ee
CALENDAR.                                                                                                                                             1910
JANUARY. JULY
Sum. [-M. Tu. 0 W. J The | Fo | Sat. fi Sn M.{ Tu. W. | Th. | PF [Sit
I I 2
ge bas 607-8 34 41-351 6 71.849 ol -To Ir faz 15 14 | 15 10:4 IF paz | a3 14 | 75 (16
36. | 17 18 | 10. | 20 | 21 | 22 7. 18 10. | so: 27 | 22 | 23
23 Jioa | 25 26 | 27 | 28 | ag 24 25 1-26 | 27 | a8: | ag: | 10
30 1-31 31
FEBRUARY. AUGUST.
I 2 3 4 5 I 2 3 4 5 6 6 7 8 of yori 11 | 7 7 8 o {oro far [0 12 | 13
13 -lers 16 iy 18 19 14 | a5 16 | 17 I3 | 19 | 20
20 iat (22° | 23° | 24 | 25 | 26 ar 22. 2s Jian | 25 | 26 | 27
27 | 28 28:[ 20/30 [ia]
MARCH. SEPTEMBER
I 2 3 4 5 I 2 3 6 7 8 gio l Tl 72 4 5 6 5 8 9: {10
13 14 | 15 16 17 18 19 IT | 12 13 14 | ‘15 16 | 17
20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 23.1 10 [20 | 21] 22 | 03 |iiag
27. (28 | 29 | 30. MN 25 | 26. 27 | 28. | 29 |i 30
APRIL OCTOBER.
I 2 : 28 34S 6. 7% 8 Z, 4 S : 7 : 2 EAR fn EB me A GR oO | 11 12 13 14 | I5 16 16: 17 [38 | 79 | 20 | ov | 22 ¥. 1S | 19 [20 | 27 22 | 23 3 og tas 26 | 27 | 28 | 29
24 | 25: (26:1 27 [28 | 29 1 20 30 | a1
MAY NOVEMBER.
vb el sl als] ely sce foal oa fs
8 orl yo | 11 12 13 14 6 2 8 9 |I0:f IX 12
15 | 16 | 17 1S [10 | 20 | 23 3p vat asf 16 vr hase
22 fa93 94 | a5 260 | 27: | 28 20 | 21 2225 | 24 | ‘25 26
20:4 30: ("37 27 28 29 | 30
JUNE. DECEMBER
I 2 3 4 I 2 3
5 6 7 8 g eTeli-1y 4 5 6 7 8 g | 10
I2- [a3 | 74 (75 FL @6 | 77 | 98 IT 12 | 13 |-14 | 75 | 16 | 17
19. 20. ( 27 | 22.09 | ons 25 IS {70 | 20 |iar | 22 || 23 | vag
26 [27 28 | 20] 30 : 25: 26 {27 28 | 20 | 30. 31
|
|
CONTENTS.
Abyssinia, United States consularofficersiin:... o.oo aa cn LS a.
degatlon to to. ss Re aa SS SS
Addresses of Members ne a
AdjutantzGeneraliof the Army. ll ie Cdn ud Se de Se, i sa i Saab nivel
dmiral of ihe Navy. ore Ln ee ie i i i a
Agricultural Department ...... .... EE a Ee I Sa EO SE TE Re
Alphabetical index... , it re is a Nr EN CoE, a a A Se ER A a ar ate
American Bthnology, Bureaw of... cov di ni vane, Choe
National Red Cross rv a a I Ls a Cha re RI A
Republics, International Bureau of the I a en a en
Animal Indusiey, Bureau of... re a EE A a a Sa
Apartment houses, clubs, and hotels, Airectory Of... Lee sr ei sien anio sie selene sa its viaiaints
Appointment clerk, Department of Agriculture, duties of..
Justice, duties of . Sra )
Apportionment of Representatives, by States, under ech CENSUS LI io. ote ole dL LS,
Argentine Republic, consular officers inthe United States... i... re. vs os on
legatlon Of. i dR el EERE
United States consulariofficersin. ni s.b ii hs ae ls eae
Jeoallon 10: iss Tin is Sam an Sab am Ra ee
Army, General Stall... or i a NE mt ell a Sai a se eee
TS Ene i SAR he snl CR a ea pe a
Army Medical Museumand Library ... coi a Lim a eh a a
Artillery Office, Chief Of rn a a ed a i Se EN 5
Assignment of rooms on basement floor'and terrace... ......... Lada a aol a
gallery floorof the Capitol... iv an od ani es a i,
ground-floor ofthe Capitol... at nS i a
principal floor of the Capitol hi cara ed So Eos er
Assignments of Representatives and Delegates toicommiftees .............. coi .anaes
Senators to committees . Sete siete
Assistant Attorney-General for the Titestor Department, dies or. CR a ee
Post-Office Department; dutiesof i... 5. ctl
AttorneysGenemlidulles of... ln ts
Secretaries, Department of the Treasury, dutiesiof ......... Lo... 0... Aro
OF Bate AEC OL tii a oe Ed a a BE SR Es oa i oe Re ae
Secrefary of Agriculture, dutiesiof ...... ov... eee nae na CATS
the Interior duties of i Ld Tr SL a SR Ie Ei
Navy, dutles of i. i. odin Er SL Re i Fon J
War, dutiesof i. oo. ieiv vei la. RE SE
to the Attorney-General, duties of . Cr ERE ne be Sno ED I
EE A a EE ai
Attending Surgeon of the Army. oo. iL Co a i a
Attorney in charge of pardons; dutlesiof, co. brn a a i a
Attorney-General, biographyiof .. veo oh i ce a
dutlesiof a RL ES RR Ne aR BEER EN
AUER Of a eee he i is a
State and other Departments..........:....... a
rensury De DAT IONE oss sis Se a ON reat hi de a vate aise aT ey
War Department........... AR ES Ug CE LE le ie A Re
Page.
VIII Congressional Directory.
Austria-Hungary, consular officers inthe United States... ......... ...... . o.oo vant
EEE En Ce EE RR SS Ses a Sa
United States consulanofficers in. oul iii dasa es sare eatin:
SASSY EO a eee
|
Basement floor and terrace of Capitol, assignment of rooms On. ..........vei iia iiei vanes
Yh eh br Le RR I Sia ee SRS SIRI
| Belgium, consular officers in the United States. ................ hr SEE A
| Yegatlomiol rr a es
| United States consular officers I. na te se hanes ee te bin seins saneth
| Nn Uhr vt hE NC nt me ES lS fe EO
Biographies of Senators, Representatives, and Delegates. .......vueiuvrinnssernnssrenecnnsnass
the Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States.................. 0...
Biography of the Attorney-General... on... doa od a a eh aed
| Postmaster-Generals cr oe eS a Se
|
| Secretary Of Agr CUI UI, i i a heah viva asain nie sels ses sant ve oe
| Commerce and Labor ........... Se nA Sa Beda Ft ST AS I OS
| TY a re Te re EL ES ns Pe Se vs
tothe President. oii, a oh Sa i rica a ares vies
Sergeantal-Armsof the Senate J. oo in. oo os Si i aan
Vice:Presidentiof the United Slates... .... 0. cco sive sivas
Beoardiof. Engineers for Rivers and TTarborst cu. . hot cal acs sess ames in Sata tates
duties of is. vin a a reas i me re aay
Inspection and Survey of the Navy. h. iis chive deaitienionuiae von sels sinia she sic site lass
Medical Examinersiof the Navy... .L bos ih oo. ae ie lain an
Ordnance and Fortification. i... oval tania a rads al
Bolivia, consular officers’inithe United States... 0 or oor i vee es a
IEA ON: OF hin area ear tains sa on a dan yw aed af Ba a te on se,
Unifed Slates -Jeontlon 10: ror ra i a Ss a a i ts Sea ae ais Sa a a
Botanic Gatden, National oy. i a i hn os i a anaes
Brazil, consular officersin the United'States........... ...o on vn bh Li se,
EI DASEY IO. a a A Sra I
United: States consular officers IIE Loi iil cl ee a ea se ee
CMDASSY FO. in Siri ne ies Sona sain ai iat eta wa AR Hal Soa a Fee Eee we us
Bulgaria, United States diplomaticagentio i... .o ti. ci cn ii ahaa oe Re
Bureau of ‘Accounts, Department of State, duties of... 0. ns vr i sai
American Ethnology ........-.... en SR I aN SR
Republics i. rr al, Se rl aes sh a
LTE Re EI AT EGS pet se Se Ce ECS Ee ee a eR A Se
AEs Of a a EN a eR
Appointments, Department of State, duties of... o.oo oon LE
Biological SUEVEY oo: ve sre nin sae ies wis sean a EA
Citizenship (Passport Bureau) duties of... c.. ...... cco. na ean dus os
Construction and: Repales ll i a a an be a
COT POF ONS a Sear aden res a at ab aie es A a fale she Sh ee a eae
i i Brie Lema lp a SL a Ee
BR ACA OT ts a oh a bie Sa is Ae A ma aS ny or ne Se ae TL TLS
Engraving and Printing 0 SP re Le ve shir wt es nina a ele en
Page.
320
at
| Contents. IX
:
Page.
Bureau of Immigration'and Naturalization... ei iat seers sis se see wisn soniaviunioniisnis 271
dutiesof.......... .\ Se Re ee dts 309
Indexes and Archives, Departmentiof State, dutiesof .... v0 oa. 283
Insular Afalrs Lo. vo a a Sa a rn CE ew IS 254
International Catalogue of Scientific Literature... i it eas 272
1 GY Te ACRE Se Se REC Gh Se set Se SE eG a aE Se A TR Se TE Sl
Aor AUEIes Of vor tL ae pee BE RN a 308
THEE La Ph i CR hE TO Se en ad SE Se SE SI Se Ba 270
Ii Antles of, oh ih i Sh heii ide a ee mas at ale wl eee atic 307
y Medicine and Surgery. Department of the Navyi.........o viii... ood he, 259
; dutiesiof oi, noise a 299
Navigation, Department of Commerce and Labor ... .. i. ie tisisriss civ ve vaieniorioaiseissie 271
Autlesof sd. ih vom aT a de 309
LE Ee rl Se Sa Ma eR 258
duties of iis mii ra Ltr a rr sss aa ed 298
Ordnance; Department of the Navy... .......c.. i. conan, pea LE SR I SRE 258
: duties of. cans muna Sn Se Se ees 298
LY rT Lap i Sa ie SR a eC LAS i RNG Se IR 263
Pla In AUS EY Ce ee ve er A he sae ye 266
FN RBar ee de SE I 303
Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service............. ee re a A 251
Rolls and 1 ibrary, Department of State, dutiesiof ......v.. i hu vac destin oo vine 283
Eo eS EL Te Ee DE el a I 268
dutlesiol rE Ta a he el See ah ete Spt Sa se en seed 304
et Eh A I a SN ee re 271
dutlesiol ro i a eh eke vias seve ree ee 309
Statistics, Department of Agriculture ..... a ive st ats 268
duties ol ae EE AT ee 305
By Commerce and Labor. .... 0. oi vis h Shari i. 271
Woh ditiesol oan 308
ahr Ean hr 6 ee dole i EE SEL a A ee Br ea RR a 259
duties of. i rn a de es Se te ey elie eee el 299
Supplies and Accounis, Department of the Navy.............. Lo. ooo Oo. 259
duties of iad ait Sn 300
the American Republics... vd ee Senshi ed li icin iviiain ie wiaisioivia se iviataia lo oie 273
! Oa 111 EPR Er Deon Sse iS SN Ss Se I i Ll Re SRR RR 270
RB eh a NA a a a Ap i Se) ER Ee DER 308
Trade Relations, Department of State, duties of... 0. vvuico eosin sive sevens, 84
ards and DoCS i re Se Ssh Lm ine die a we ei ne es Ake 257
IN Ba BERT Se ee CL SR 298
RT EE Pr EE ee a Lo enti 1vand v
Capitol, basement floor and terrace of, assignment of roomson................ ......oiiiia... 231
dlagmmiol: a eh RR ee ea 230
gallery flooriof; assignment of TeOMS ON ..c. vv Lio oui LL 237
digoramol. ne ee A a En SU 236
ground floor, assignment of rooms on... cov. enn Se OA 233
diagram of............ NE RE AS Se I nT 232
: history and descriptionof ........ co ovis Re eT SR a ee ee a ee le ree 229
‘ Office of Superimtendent Of. i. in So si a him ee den dee Ta we late ie 228
r prinecipalifloor of, assignment of TOOMBS OM + veel cnisll seis se vrisnsninsmisies vais manned nenbls 235
diagram of ..... a ws ER Le er ee 234
Officeiof Congressional Record. oF i i re a Rn edt on i tere bx nase 228
LE FR OB EN i i Se OE EI ra I tl, 228
Census Bulan ro oe Ty ey ae Sse is wine er es leu iat taliaiabe aie atale etatiata et s ile ate wes ia oia tals uta e 270
dutiesof......... eo Em a Ne Hs a Te Bren a RR ea we eds 308
Chaplain of-the House of:Repregentatives..... ..l. Soria iia She. Jiu dd, Sosa sa ad, 224
rt LE mR a eR Bm AS RS Reed ee 220
Chief Clerk, Department of Agriculture, dutiesof ........ ..... LoL Coatabed aE a 302
Commerce and Tabor, duties of So ih vo Lia dn aa 306
Tusiice, dutles ofits ch ia ee he pe de 293
State, duties ofl or. 5 AR Tn a ee He see eee se 283
the Interior, dutles of, oii. do Snel si te us Sn sn sisi Se din ale din 301
Navy. Qutles of i. coc ver fie nls ine velait a die Tulvner ably Jute 297
Treasury, dutlesof............... AT ass ee a Ae ae as wr Sa 284
War duties of. ne a leslie wate ibe eter Th 289
Post-Office: Department, Autiesof ... coos forsvare cou deinen enh cannes sy aes 294
Examiner, Department of Justice, dutiesof............cocoiivi inline 204
‘
X - Congressional Directory.
3 Page.
Chick ol antler a it Sn iy Se i a 2 254
Engineers of the Army ........ SS Rh ere re Se a A a eA ne
Ordrance of the Army . ee Se a oe Be el EB TY
post-office inspector, duties of . is tly Sunt Loe a Breit ren CSL CIT A SRE et dR Hag
Signal Officer of the Army.. . Ca Ade tS 8 LORE rE CR J hE Sa
Chile, consular officers in the United States. EUR CEE eS SE
legationiol s.r re A RC Re 320
United Stntes consularofficers in... ooo. vst cr da 330
legatlonilos. anh dni Sa Nr RR NE Ee a 325
China, consular officersiin the United:States .......... "Lo ol ovis ent) ea a Ae Si
embassy (special). Siu ia a a a 320
legation of . “ es Sa BBR TB a TS Sey
United States consular officers i AE a eR Ce Se Ce dr ES SI SH
a FT a i ea a Sl Se a Re eT
Circuit countsiof the UnifediStates.. Hi. ou a a EE Soars
Clty: post-office... can llr ss AN nis at lett aia uy Ses rl BATO)
Clvil Service Commission wv. anid ot a LL Sh Se SAE a fe ne Se 273
classified service . on A i RE he or Tay
demand for certain eligibles et as ral che ea Be AI A LG I 313
dutlesofi lr ci i a fe SE 312
or Cras rE pen hs Re ee RE Te SS Sn a 312
Ey EL a EL md 312
Isthmian Canal Commission employees... ......... 0... ... 312
Philippine civil service. ou.) 0 0 a 313
unclassified laborers ohio La Ba sa ee Cha
veteran preference... cd a I 312
in Porto:Rico-and Iawail i SE Ee 313
Classification, political, of Congress... ov... Le Te RE vier 2 PH
Classified civil service 7 TE a nr TR a Se ey
Clerk of the House of Repbawntatives, NE I Be El 224
Clerk’s document room'........ A Ne EE Se BO HE
Clerks and messengers to Scnnte eonratiens SRI IIE ee Os, 221
of Weather Bureawal Caplio] si 0 ci ih ida s fos roma taa ars she sale ALE a 228
fo House committees ....... 0 con coal, rela Esa en ras NER es UE
Clubs, apartment houses, and hotels, directory of... Lv. a oot. aos
Coast and Geodetic Survey... ni Lund. oon sh Eh ne BS sey Ae SR Ce fed ah
Autles OF... i sn wh a ss es A AS se TR a ee 1108
Collector of the port . BTR SER LSE an le a SE US 251
Colombia, consular officers in 2 the United States . on Te re A 351
Temationol ys a ee Ue a TE 321
United States consmlarofficersini...... ino ann Ua a. a may
LTT rE a ER a a Bl NS 325
Columbia Institution forthe Deaf and Dumb. . oc. a ir i TS a ieee eas 276
Commandant of Marine Corps, duties of... volvo onsen i en LL RE a00
Commerce and Tabor, Department of. shy Salo dine: von hE ia eh ites dale eerie 269
dutiesiof 0... : SE ee . 306
Commissary-General of the ATHY .. coos veri sass hesitate Punto l Bis ry tii "253
Commission, €lvil Service. oo. i hoa aR Ae ee AS aah
Immigration co. .e.. Li seid ii i Ss han Ba act SAE A Se SACRE SRA aS SRT
naungnral:Ceremonies i.e. ou Ln od Se TAS SE Sa A ea 219
International Waterways. . ... iis. to  . Aloiuaavivninh vada seh tei anit abi, anh
Interstate CommMETOr io lik fan tai oo ah EL Si or SS tA Sa 273
Tethrmian Canal 5. nv tam or i a Saye
Toint:Congressionals. vu vrs i se et Sn 219
National: Conservation. uh. i... ennai or i ne ogy
National Monetary. cil. ves: oh aetna eh ailih eh ae oc 2 OT0
Printing Investigation ......... re a ate
Spanish Treaty Claims............. a 255,
tothe Philippine Islands: ti nied ri ee Sr Se 275
United States and Mexico Water Boundary ..... ES SC SE IE EN 248
Commissioner of Bducation, duties of... ...oclv livin sin dh rt sh el, 302
Indian Affairs, duties. of... ... oa fer ni i Le i a nL sl 301
Internal:Revenue ...........u..o.cn eri Ets, SE SE mR Ea EL 251
dutlesiof 0 is a ae 287
Patents, duties ol rt el Te 301
Pensions, duties of tr ee eR 301
the General Land Office, duties of .......... Aa ep ee 301
Committee assignments of Senators, i. ov... ie vou de some nissishd tis Jinhua iva ela’ id isle sul siete 180
Committees of the House, assignments 10. ...5. . onli co i ea a aL 202
Cle RE 0. a ER RS 226
membership of. i. i va Si et ea te are ae 91
official stenographersto...... cu. Ge ci Se ve ais eee 228
=m,
‘ \
Contents. XT
Page.
Committees of the Senate assignments 40, ol or i ss de Ca ol 180
clerks and messengersifo ...... 0. Laan a a aa 221
membership Of fie nL rei Shan Sen in Bae 171
Comptroller of the'Currency........-.........0 ar
Auties Of Sl i SS Te re Bh se de es lei a i le LAD Rey
LEEaSUEY oS en LS a a i, SE
dutlesiof 7s ios. MEA Oe a Ne Le ge ea 285 .
Congressional apportionment, iby States...» 2. dl. oo se LL 16
| delegations; by States. ©. 0 St Sa ne 155
$ brary. toi. radar en a es saa nL Su 244
Record, office of at Capitol... 0. on. a aa RE Re 228
Conservation Commission, National -..... 0... lS dein oe aaa chai hiany
Consular Assistants; listof.... ...... /..........0 0s. yee Ol LC I Ca EE eS Ey
officers ofthe United States. on ia oon ok in J ini ll a Loh sae B00
Buarean, duties of ou ona. wn a ET IS a
Consulg-general al Jarge ico. cid coin vibinivas. sh ds aris unin sais aire an Wiebe Sint sab ats 0s aha sas 329
Continuous terms of service of Senators, tableshowing............. ........... 0.0.5 LLL, 144
Corporations, Bureau of... scree. ede sie a a Sn 269
I a a Tl a i a I Re a ra SE a 307
Costa ‘Rica, consular officers in the United States. ..... .........oo coo LL 352
legation Of oo isin A Re a ee en: al 321
United States consular officers in. ..... SLRS Se HS RS ER ST a Ls
legation 10, oh dn ian de sa a LS 325
Court of Impeachment trinls hy Jo... oo iL Lan a Le La 169
Courts, cireniticonnts of the United States: ...... nl ol rahe te a Le 31
court of appeals; Distrelctof Columbia... Loi va a A a 319
Court.of Claims.......... ee a ES A NE ea ae Soa SS 318
justices of the peace ..... EE I a Ee Rr at 319
i policereonrt siti tae a a Ln LL PE SE eu EI IR SR Be ARE ET)
t supreme court, Districtof Columbia ....... 0. alin LL LL LST
of the United Staten. o. .coa 0 rn Ana Lal Ly de sit 315
Cuba, consulariofficers in the United States ................ LLL Lo 352
legationof...... ..... A ie a 321
United Statesiconsularofficers in... oh oa tiv a oo Lh Le 331
legation tos. cv. ie ove eb d vate, a A Te nt 326
Custom-house ................... PE a TR rE IE eR re SR SS a OT
Peat and Dumb TnStItulIon (i ae fe i i hh ly slate viatate fen wiatata faim a bi via ital 276
Debates, official feporters of 7 can. vie SL La a a ee se 227
Delegates, Senators, and Representatives, biographies of............c...oo iii 1-141
list of, with home post-office and Washington ad- .
dresses... NE a a ER Sel 384
Delegates’ service, table showing Congresses in which rendered. ........................ ECYAT
Delegations, Congressional, by States.......... co. Lbs conn LL ee 155
Denmark, consular officersiin the United States .......................... el LaLa 353
Teoation of oh cr er te en ws in he es ol vat at se Sh heb dO sr Ue 321
United States consularofficersin......... ii... a 331
legation to id hind le hh Sea Aa se a Se Le, 326
Department of Agriculture .......... Sat eth Ri ae as A wae A aes Sl ie dee A208
| dutlesiof oi nde aun Re Ee A SE 302
¢ COMIRCECC ANA TA DOL. i cvs tie nis sda a ne Pras ators 3 Grae als Whee haba tres 0 269
HIE AR Re RE EC ER Se TS a LR 306
Er Ty I ne ee i Ne
Aue or rn ve a re I I Ha Se 291
Chief: Examiner, duties of. 0c win niii as ban hs 294
State: oi inl ani abs ine AEE Se a SE Se RS ar 248
dutlesiof niet ne rR a Er SE ALN RE
the Interior. ......... Ame SR Re SO pe ARE en 262
Fy LL BF Tr A A a CAL Se SS Se 300
I Eh a Te I DS Se a SR i Re SB 257
Aue Of idan in ie ne ts SC GS ER Pe dt et 297
EE ae es EE re oe a a mL re To Da ft 249
TE i EA Se AS BR Se RR 284
a ea A Ll a RS 251
QUES of ii. SE ee i a ee te a Ni ae miei is ae Sais 288
Departmental telegraph, managers of, at the Capitol...........iiiiiiiiiiiiens tereeennen, 228
SOHCIORS: a a ee Se ti an eh SR 255
Description and history of the Capitol................. oh aL LL 229
library of Congress... ... oui iuu iio iil ons seh oon hl 244
XN Congressional Directory.
Diagram of the basement floor and terraceof the Capitol... 0c ior. os a a A,
floor of the House ..... eR Fees Se Se I nd Se Ld he AE Ba
gallery floor ol the Capitol io i i a oie nt seri ans dia
ground floorof the Capliol. of a oh ane ar ee
principal Aoor of the Capitol i. ia a i bn an iad
Senate loons rani tin th aan a A Le Ee
Diplomatic Bureau tduifes of sil chon mii tin can ras ap ar eae a ae
Director ofithe Geological Survey, duties ofc. i i i i ieee ronan
1 EE a EA See See Le eR ee ee Se Sea Te
duiics afl. anu Ci de
Reclamation Service ar es
dties or. x
Directory of apartment houses, clubs, and hotels named in the Directory ETE Ee
zoomsSiof Senators ra a RL Ae
El ee Dea ta
; A a SL SR Re ee en ee ST en
Disbursing clerk, Department of Commerce and Labor, dutiesof....................cciun.....
Justice duties of. nou
Dispatch agents ol Departmentol State. i oe esis tnt aii
District fire Jomitmen eR Se ee Se A Ta
government. . a a a
origin at ork: or ee i Ty a Sr ee EOE NTL a
health. department... 2 io sv 0 2, A er Ls Gea i)
juvenile court...... A ee Re eh Ne i RE SR a CC
officers.
police eontt
Division of Accounts, Depnriment of Tastes, duties of. a:
and Disbursements, Department of Reticle AR TE CR
duties-of 5... oar
Appointments, Department of Commerce and Labor dutiesof ....................
Far Eastern Affairs, State Department, duties’of.................... IRENE NR LK
Natnral a om fhe ae a Aa ene
Printing, Department of Commerce and Labor, duties i RE ee
Supplies, Department of Commerce and Labor, dutiesof .........................
Publications, Department of Agriculture. .
dutles or A
Dominican Republic, consular officersin the United States......... ......... co oo LS
legatlonof oii is Cr si a se in ah nasa CEA
United States consular officersiini 0 ih. at ae te vere
legabionto te, Sn ti ae ee ES
Document roomy, Clerkiol the TIonSe . . ri ee rs in rie alain Se srals da Sate edes Faia state 400
Houselof Representatives . —. o.oo od SR ee Rh eta sass
iDoorkeeperof the: House of Representatives. oi... 0. fe codini ti ad ie de ee,
Kicunador, consular officersiinthe United States. -.... cc: co Cs ties serra
deg aton Of a ro EE ST ER BE,
Unifed States constilar officers in ir. or ey siete elias
legation tor, a a ae sea Sg
BAucHtion, Bureau Of. 20 fe ah ere ath se aa ea ako aay rma Sele ee de The nee
Eoypl- United Statesagency fo. ove. tion ih sr ihe sonia vials fn y sepa is su na due lata ain aia
Embassies and’legations of the United States... Lc oo 0 a va
{othe United States........7......... en ai a Pane
Engraving and Printing, Bureau of ..o.h cn. tain a a
Examinations for civil service ....... Es a ND Sn ea
‘Examiner ofititles, Department of Justice, duties of... ...........c hero on nL
Examining Board of the Navy... on Lhd Lo es ede coat aa
Experiment Stations, Office of, Department of Agriculture RR a Er NS
dutiesof.. 0m aaa
Expiration of terms of Senators, by classes'.............. ........ oh ee
Filling of vacancies in civil service..............oo oi oon es
Eire department o.oo si tits Serres sineins su vn in i vale Se vieink Sr vies i sas se Fara eats
First Assistant PostmastersGeneral cui i fii Li oii oa arid ae vai ah eh vee
Secretary of the Interior, dutiesiof........................ RE LR
Fish Commission (Bureau of Pisheries)..................... ......0. aso SA aes
Floor of the House, diagram of.......c..ccuiviiiiiiiiiiiiiniiininne von rosin ee Terl be sivas
Bie
Sa
/
Contents. XIIT
Page
Folding room of the House ................ TB a RS SE SS ERT 225
YT rR Ge a eS Dl 223
Foreign consulsinthe United States io 40 ohh ort is ih st Sh seer ete isi ee 346
embassies and legations in the United States........ ........... co... lL See 320
Boreal Serv Oe ot i A ss a a dr a SA i ee A ST en ayaa Shee sas 267
es Of er ee a i i GL ee el SE 303
Feormiand origin of District government i... uni hin oo i ES re el ie is Bsn et ee 374
Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General. ii ui i sai ens shed be an a wis Sir ne 257
AUHIESIOf 5 Ls ER OR CS IE en 297
iy France, consular officers in the United States;.... ... ool... LLL dae hor othe cn re ain 354.
TLE A ee A Mh 322
United States consular officers Ii. oe eens ain oate 332
embassy tO a a a Ce he ns a er ve 326
Gallery floor of Capitol, assignment ofzooms on....o i vii os. se eve aL 237
: diagram of... ua en ot ee eas RSE Ee Se versal
f General Board of TRENT ii vis i te bo oi ed ra or BN SED Br Sl oh al i 260
ANA OO ACC. Ed aes a wh a rds i a a a Be pt A a deat ra as 262
Stal of he AI a eR ee A Na Ta 252
duties of. cu hm in a a ae RG eS Re 289
Superintendent I ife-Saving Service, duties of ................. ....................... 258
Geog raDHIC BORN Cui se it aah ahaa lk nti wie ald sbi ve wea SE El or 274
dates of ee Sl i Ts 314
Geological Survey, tw al Sal a a Ce CL nN 264
Germany, consular officers in the United States....... EA A I Re eR Se 356
embassy ofi..oh ini Son nan, Sli ee A Se an TI ly ie sr Sa 322
United States consulariofficersin... oc no. s odin REY vata, © 333
EE EEE ES i 326
| Government Hospitaldor the Tasane «ool ih ar iodine rd fa dive rs SO a 277
\ Rng Office ra Ta Rh tee Ere ees Hae Ra sl a EE 274
i dutiessof officials. oe. iv lesan ae SS RRR Ae Rh 313
Governors.of the States and Lerfitoriess. ir. ov iti. tos i, seis oui laine e A Er hr I eT
Great Britain, consular officers in‘the United States u..-vu. i. ve oi Ci reins 357
TELE NET he SS LO Sn SC ee Ee a ene 322
United States consularofficers in... tnt dian 334
’ eMDAREYL0L. foie el ET a a ys ese ee a 326
f Greece; consular officers’in'the United States coo vn a a, 359
Ye GATIOI OF: tet de se ohinn td Daieit oh Ss Wait mais tio da ements are to irae BL Le EL a 322
United States'consularofficers Inicio. ae SN eae 339
LER Be RE Bear bo LEE a Ee SARI Se SAS a 326
Cround-floor of the Capitol, assignment ol rooms on... .... a ol. rae 233
dimgram ofr coro a eh a el 232
Guatemala; consular officersiinthe United'States. . 0. i i 359
demon Of i er ee rr ee eA ee er de wk ea aR 322
United States consulav officers fn... oc dl 339
Yegation do. ol ci st hr ii res aE A ee a es 326
Haiti, consular officers inthe United States. lo ad an eae 359
legation A re Ae ER a ey 322
i United States consular officers i in... TE HT aE Care LC SE SO 339
{ IeTatlOn to rt a a i A Te a ian 326
Headquarters, MarineiCorps iran nos nase visa h as i SE A Se Rp ater aie a 261
Health depastment, District government. 0... «i 0 i i se sens ene 373
Heating and ventilating the House of Representatives: oi... ove iteeninncn sane, 227
a ER A a 223
History:and description of the Capitol... i. sir ee ith rarer aie als 229
Library of Congress A Ra 244
Home post-offices of Senators, Representatives, and Delegates, with Washington addresses... 382
Honduras, consular officers in the United States: oo... hui sc ia a oe 359
eA OT Of. es va een si a th a Ae ee Sd a es RE ee ah a 322
United States consulariofficersin.. i ...o.. oi 339
Tegatlon to, 0 oi rr ne ee 326
Hospital forthe Insane ss iio ni a a ee Sno, 277
Hotels iabartment houses, and clabs, directory of... .... onic oh a laa 393
House committees, assignmentsilo. Jao. a ne ol Si Sr aa Be 202
elevksion nay a a me aR a Sr 226
memberElprof. cl a 191
i officialistenographersifo ui, one Sh re re te es a he Se SaaS
XIV Congressional Directory.
Page
House of Representatives, Chaplainof............... iL ad sa on, ER a Se 224
Clerk’s' document FoOm .. .. «Siac iran toes Ab ee SI 224
disgramofifhe door ofl 7. coi mini kL Si bass as 240
AraC Ory iO re a i Ar TR SE a ee es 241
QOCUIMETL OOM. ok ol he a hh an gh NSC Cs TT i ge Lei
TOlAIN GS TOON: vivir vo: irin vias sia = sie Sn vs Sas iia Stein what set i CAEL ST 225
heating and ven{ilating ... 0... cs ail orate ram Sinn nae. 227
rary Of a a al ve a TR a RR 224
officelolthe Clark 5. oh vi ails Cllr SL giih C Spel SI Si i 224
I ho A Ea ES ES EO CR 225
Sergeant-at- ATS oo hid de des re a CRS re i ee 225
Speaker .. a I i a Da BP A LE a
official reporters ob denier ot Ey Pr CE oP SRR SSR 227
gtenegraphersio committeesiof....-c... i. 0X in Ln, 228
POSt-OICE OF 1 5 sais a ode wa serene tents wie she BE Ciao aan 8 plo la a a ie 226
Howard Universily to. nh on vai hn lal aL en ie da ES Oh 277
Hydrographic Officeof the Navy. ui... . oe a et essai a sins ooo 258
Ymmigration:and Naturalization, Bureaw of. lie. hoo ci fai eee coe eed wie ZT
COTTE SEI oa rele sini as ieee wiatats + aie ne 0 is Come EE CA SE Rh Sa mw Sl ni phate wrain sai was 219
Impeachment trials bythe Senate............... oo. oo. LL. A ets He ET a ea 169
Indian A aire i Oice Of. or a UR Ea RE Sime an es a wre wi mes 264
Commissioner duilesiols sn NR RL SUD 301
Individual index . : ST ON,
Insane Hospital, st. ‘Rlizabeth.. RTE RE Bn rh Ra a a 277
Inspector-General of the BTMY  .. o.oo ie sine oiiner ve sein dan sisias sivk sls s yu bacon Biataluaialnslulsts 252
Insular Alain, Bureawiof. i. 2 a a Sees an Sat Su vas ly nial al tah ihe ie RTI 254
Interior-Department... si... ooo ve oat, a RS i i ee SA TE 262
: dutiesiof tia ia ea SN a te a a a a 300
International Bureau of the American RepublICS, .- vi vec lie niuls isis sais sive soins sisiniviis + vis/a'sicniuictelvie 273
duties of io0 5 5 fin dos aS Se ey 310
Catalogue of Scientific Literature, Bureau for the United States......... ...... ry)
exchanges, Smithsonian Institution. ........... det Jus vn veh siavi si sali aie vig 272
Waterways Commission a ive. lis Le sa on en odes is sie 276
Interstate Commerce Commission’. lid... ee EN RI AL Ll ST 273
duties of NR A a RE
Introductory Bote ooh a nih sn ae wa a SS RR ie sas Sh a Ce ie HEY III
Tethmian Canal Commission. ha lu si nai id sv detelets Sa Rs A a I 275
employees, civil-service regulations... ....... .................. 0.0 37g
Italy, consular officers in the United States. oi ov. eon. fain SL, 360
CM DEY Or SL LG le Sal 322
United States consularofffcers In «fo 0 0 mdi se dermis Sy ais ee sete 339
embassy lo i. a Se te i a Saas 326
Japan, consular officers in the United Stafes .... i. a... ho... ih LL Lo oe EE S6Y
CI OE sy Ea de ie Are nn Sa me A RS 323
United States consularofficers in... ... oh lh id Le se RL 340
THEE AAAS ie A le Sle Fa Ree OR ee SOP RL a 327
Joint Congressional Commissions... ..... couch Loh a ee 219
Judge-Advocate-Generaliof the Army ............ 0... hi. aes lg Le 252
NavYies ede hand. Gah Sn ea SL te Ee ne 259
duties of i a est sw ie eh 300
Judiclarysthe io i a i oh en eR eT ce sa 315
Justices and officials of the Court of Claims, residences of.................. A eS
Supreme Court of the United States, residences of. har Ns 317
ofithe peace, District of Columbin. .......... ceo se a abn 319
Juvenile Court. veld ve ai sn alo sl a rr ead ee wae re ER a en ae a aE 319
Kongo, consular officers in the United States .....0................ Lol CL dL Lose se, 361
United States consular officers in... 0. turin i chi losis puis sivvisiol sis idles ialuis wie sins 340
Eabor, Butea of ct es ey ase alas te Boa 3 sain ies eeinis 270
AUEIES OF ry et a ss Ty al a ets a etait are bed 308
Tand Commigsioner, Quiles Of i... oe etlye las slo rats vile alums ois atalino Foal mateo salts 301
a A RE EE a Ce a a ee i262
Taw clerk, Department of State, duties of... ........ 0c. coi Sn Le, 284
Gepartment ri. ve oe a i eB ee le ie te sa Se ta 254
dutiesiol on han RD et, 297
ILegations and embassies of the United States. i i Te ves a nda els mira stata le 325
to the United States. .... $7 trie nit vine ivie viny vie neve yieiat viva le is lyie viaipleisie yi LED DO)
Contents. XV
3 Page.
Iiberia, consular officers in the United States........ 0... .0 00.0. SR TE TSR TI 361
United: States consular officers In... on Shes rm i vats aa as 340
Tegatlon BO. ir hs a A aR VE Sk ea he a 327
Tibrarian, Department of Agriculture ‘duties of 00 lo ou et a a 305
Library of Congress, history and description of.............. ... a hee BI Se RE 244
hE Mn 0 ERE en ge se LO Se a Sa Ra Se 246
staflof os vo Sani Ru a ST CL ep hl 246
the House'of Representatives. a 00 tas on man ain Shr er Pe 224
| Deparimentof Agrlenliure odo on al a a Re Sr a a 269
b Ife - SAVING SEEVIBE «ov bits a ins vs iis a baat a Bm A RR Std eda ods Arman
! General Superintendent of dutiesiof =. ii Sts a Rr ai iia ses 288
Ele ht-TIOUSE BOATA act ch tie me adi ais Soe ae os wana Bes a 270
EAT Ea et re ate eS EE at be LT a Le 308
List (unofficial) of Representatives-elect to Sixty- fret CONGFERE. ©. iy Ae i a aay 395
} Local addresses of Senators, Representatives, and Delegates, with home post- offices. Sha e300
Y I axemburg, United States legatlon 10. 5 ivoc ii cover ii cedaie sais RR es ee nal
Managers at the Capitol of the departmental telegraph... .... .. cc... rt cess vane 1225
Man uiachures, BUream Of. i i oh on dah vane ws mh ie as 4 wt Sa on Ca wir ie ts ES a Tare Sp re 270
Ales Ol eo Bh a a ar in A a a eae 307
Maine Barracks a io i ie a ean a ek ea Ry Ce SR ZEA ay
Corps, Commandant of dulles of oi... in Sai sre era SHINES 300
ITER rg I TR nN A RS SRE EL el eb SS A 261
Marine-Hospital Service ............. rp GAYE Sr RR Se on Td 25T
dutliesof cin. LER SU CE Be a LR AH SiR 287
Medical Examiners of the Navy, Board of ................ “..... SS ee RA SY 261
School, Naval oh. oe a Nae ay A RT Ae el SE Se 260
| Meeting daysiof committees... coi. i. on a a SRT Xr a re S210
! Membershipiof the House committees ......... oe. ra... ie SIR a GU Se 191
: Senate committees. i A TT
E Members? addresams. vn vans tr. hr bss Nee i a 384
Metropolitan polio ott oe A Bre Eastin 376
Mexican Water Boundary Commission. oo i io i i or Le i aaa Saas
Mexico, consular officers in the United Slates. t. .i.. cis clon ei tiie ninth sash 5 ba ineie 362
CASEY OF ey a Es a eA eh a a Sn a 323
f United: Statesiconsnlariofflcera in. oral a a a Sl a 340
embassy to . ate ES SS a TG SN
| Military bureaus of the Derartment ol Yor Jatt of a ra ami 389
Monaco, consular officers in the United States ............. coos al Rh a a me Ee a
Monetary. Commission, National i. oi... i i Sirians vdiis va pee a healers aa ete ula 219
Montenegro, United Series legation io. a Ee as a SN eR A SN SS Ra
Morocco, consular officers of, in the United States. PT I ORS a AN EI AS ERT TI 341
United States legation 10. F055 4 vue Dai vain nid oni dite Seana os Sy GON 328
National Botanic Garden: 0. ins idaho sans ss ears os ata sens a Bai oiaains fi Sd Sera
Home for Disabled Volunteer SOlAIers: ov. visi ils ines cs sus nine raids ime reas 274
Museum... bln ans a dar ae ie een 272
Zonlagical Rar RA TE 272
Nava nen gar yr Eve a ae ea 260
FETE TRE TR ERE fo Re RR Re ME SC ee Se ee ae on 261
{ General Board ....... ein a oa ea EE EB SE aS eR i
Hospital tos nn rb 2 DE a CEE RR SR Sy Cane R200
' Ire cones Ice Of i ah ah ins be te Seas hay a EI a fat] 258
Medien Calo rr i mito brass saa ia ats a 260
LT LE a er Oe re EE I i 260
BE RE Se Bl SRI Le UO rr a ae SE Si CR SET Se See 258
Retleing Boas. do rr oe oi a tray Beil) 261
Navy Department. bu i a a SS 257
eI rs hd Eee ln SS a ERE 297
Pay OCR  N E nS Le Ss a Se ae 260
{ a EINE a a ere ES ee 259
Netherlands, the, consular officers in the United States... ........uvuvuresioeauiransnnnnsanennean 364
legationiof...... i... ye te wats Bere Tee RR I a
United States consular officers? A a IL SS TE 341
Yegallon toi cond ee a rN Cr A EE RN Sse
Newspapersirepresentediinpress gallery. i io hn co ia ay
Nicaragua, consular oficersin the United States... 0 a Lvl ch sir 0a 365
legatiomol ns ol io 2 a Veter a SL eT ei SE 323
United States consnlarofficersin.. oii ei ee 2
legationito.......-% SR I Ce RE RC a
XVI Congressional Directory.
Page.
Norway, consular officers of, In the United States: oo a a iii vaie es 365
Yegation of ia pa 323
United States:consulariofficers lm. to a lo hit sie ov 3A
3 EEE Ye RE Se i Eh sl L300
Observatory Naval EE a a oh ha Ss tiv ae 258
Office of Experiment Stations, Department oftAgriculture......... 0. ve oi ids iia 269
Autles:of lr i Se 305
Indian Affairs. coo on A a Eo Be See a EA RS 264
PubRe Reads tov aie rt a aii ak be oe nsies a re SE rm ht 269
duties of on or Ea SI RR Se PETE a A Hh SR GT 305
the Geological Survey... .. vii. coc aii od aR a SS Se bl SI 264
Officers of the House of Representatives... i ie oe i ar ol va oe eat elas mires 224
Senate ooh es A A a Pe EAE Tn sr a SS Pe Us Rees ei 220
Official dutiesoliexecntivelofficers. .. i onto, ch Tie i Si wn Cl i dat aes 283
repontersiof debates i ol hs i a SE le Se a se Rp sea A 227
stenographersioionse committees. ....v.  oen at an Sime 228
Oman, United Statesiconsular officers ime. ....... oon. cond ER RS Ae 342
Ordnance and Fortification, Board of...... ......... a i SL RA 254
Origin and form of District government A ET es EAE ie Ci rR ba Sb Hr Sp 374
Panama Canal Commission... ... a a a Le EAE Sy 275
consular officers in the United States... ...............00.. Hee Ei Se er eh ees 367
leg ational. 2 ee na i 323
United States consularofficers in... on i Se ee sis, eats 342
ler ation £0, 5. se a a ee al i Va re Sy pe ra Seta as 327
Paraguay, consular officersin the United States ......... ............... ch ee. aL Go 367
United States consularefficersin.. i... isi et LL aL 342
Negation do Th on a Ba ty see ras ee a wien ees 327
Passport Bureau (Citizenship), dutiesiof ....... ch os ae ea aL 283
Patent Commissioner, duties of......... RE NE ane TB Nr LE In a pe SR aE 301
To LT Eo RR a ay Eel I en ASE Se SR a SS An 262
Paymaster-General of the Army. ......... ch tir coir iiiiiiiie tiie iii aaa 253
PENSION AG CIICY les sens sn icieslss sins oe v's vo wily sinus sts inaie vi six is Sl a aiioa nis alie sw isla itis nluin cielo win winless uiviniaivle 264
Commissioner dntieg oli sr i rr CS te eA alse ea R a RR 301
ICE i sr Sr nevis vias ea a Rt A a wa al ma RE Ra A ht a MBE RSL 263
Persia, consular officers in the United States.............ooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iin 368
legation Of. i ea sae a wae area ah ee ens le wes oe Hes alee ee 323
United States consular officersin............... A A as 342
4 legatlonEtoi uF vi st i a Pra Rate hy 327
Persons entitled to admission to the press gollers, EE ES a a SPREE 380
Peru, consular officers in the United States... cine ei ranlate 368
legato of ese en ye aula a rR 323
United States consular officers in ....... ........... Se a SR a) 342
legationto...........0 oon. ee I CE SBR DOE TT 327
Philippine civil-service regulations... ....... I DDR 313
COMMISSION vi ooh. ride sin ative avis ha ee ee he Ak 275
Police, Capitol... .. Sah CO a eR ATS Rl A De A 228
Metropolitan ........... En a Se a ay Ar A RS a i Risa 0 VE eras 374
NE I SE I EE IC SR Ee ee Sl, 319
Political classification of Congress......... a Te
Portugal, consular officers in the United States dee So RLS Se a th 368
legation of. o.oo in iol ra ae Rats rene hn nd rate ET ls 324
United States consular offICETS IH vi. - ich co aiunis mins vio sinislain sheiute's mais wiwsivieieidtslsiualinie i oatals 343
legationiton.....h. oes. I RE RE Se a a 327
Post-Office Department . ‘ er Re SR Se le See IR a SRR Da SRR 256
dties 4 LL Pe i 294
OF LC IOUS. a ats dis soins as a eA oe in ya a wi sSate Bie nd arava ois It hv aiaiui wins wialntuisdy Es wivisToiass 226
Senate. dr Dre er Sle LS SR RS AE 223
Postage rates ........ieeieeireiiinneiarieniaaa el Ee AR ON GE Be Fr Sr SE 281
Postmaster-General, biography of ..........ooiiiiiiiaiin... i Se ea ne a a ts 255
ARIES OF ci oe sinless Sue vita avin eats is a Re a i ev ee 204
President of the Senate’... oi... ove vein a i Lesh TS SS LAA80
United: States, DIography Of. io... sevice or oir seni sain 247
President pro tempore of the Senate .......oive runnin inertia itien tian 220
Presidents and Vice-Presidents and the Congresses coincident with their terms.............. 170
Press gallery, list of persons entitled to admission to.......... «o.oo... 380
newspapers represented if. o. oui ee 377
rules governing admission £0. ......ooeiiriiiiiiiiiriie es Ry Ea AES 383
Contents. XVII
Page
Principal:floor-of the Capitol, assignment of rooms on... vo. vie. ther on a ena as, 235
diagram of ..... SN OR Se SRR te 234
Printing Investigation Commission. x. Srl co eC Ee Se fs tale te 219
Prisons and prisoners, superintendent of, dutlesof. i... 0 i 294
‘Public Buildings and Grounds and Washington Monument ................. Ar 254
Public Healihiand Marine-HospifaliService iio i man i a ie Sa a Ae aaah 251
Quien Of I EA ee a a ay 287
Roads, Office of. a a A a SE a 269
dutlegiof oc iar Indi oar Ly Lan h S el 305
Publications, Division of, Department of Auricilture 268
duties ol. a RE SR AE RI 305
Purchasing agent, Post-Office Department, duties of - o.oo oie, i ers esos 295
Quartermaster-General of the Army ............... RE Te lee eS ee 252
allroad timetable. 0 a a BR A esa 282
Recorderofideeds Wn oo cr uns a aa el NR ER SS A Eh 319
Red Cross Society .. LN Pe Lh rm TD CR A RS ee La TR pS eR i
Register of the Treamy.. = eS TN RES re RR See ES Se
Lote or RR Ea A I et a I i a a i BR pe re oe ati 293
OE i ne i Be rr re er CR a A ST ee 319
Regular and special sessions of Corp ASof co LT Fe Sr SR anh 165
Reporters of debates, House. . ae a A SS a a Sa he
SENALC vic lait oo io eS Sey tir aia win RL ietale wae movie eis loin bets lerdal sia ft ANI 227
Representatives apportioned to the several States under each census ..... ES EY)
service of, table showing Congresses in which it has been Seneied ana 146
Senajorsiand Delegates, blographies of... ae. iuh -. vies veins ii seisv al veininin e's 1-141
list of, with home post-offices and Washington ad-
dresses oD ds Ten 384
Representatives-elect, to Sixty-first Congress. . he VR AR LE EL
Resident Commissioners from the Philippines is Porto Rico, Pl irapiies of. ear RE Sale
Retiring: Board of the Navy. cri dative ie onie sin ss aines ne snisiihisen serie ae SI 261
Revenue:Cutter Service ni i re a a en an 251
Rooms of Senators, directory oft......... i. ol id... os Tp Se pe Be pH 242
Roumania, United States consular officersin ....... BE Sa ae 343
legation to........ Ri ERT EG Se BT Sy SR SR RR SN 328
Rules'soverning.admisslonfopressigallery uv... C0. i Ge. 383
of the Whe Tons rr hh 247
Russia, consular officers in the United States, ...0. oo ol 0 0 a So 369
CDABEY OF uh ar rE eee se 324
United States consularofficersin... old nin nl ie SL a 343
EN DASE LO a nr i iy ae ae ees 326
Salvador, consularofficersinthe United States. .................o.. o.oo a0
dA OTL OT i i a a el er A Ee re Ee oe Be ee eaters 324
United Stateseconsnlarofiicersin.. ova a a SS ag
legationto.......... Bt SE Sa SE ne Es ER aE
Seats of Representatives and Delegates olan owing RS Se BR BG RL
Senators, lam SOWING co rr Se a a A Ee eR 238
Sccondi Assistant Postmaster-General lt a i ie a an 256
Autles Of is a Se Se an 296
Secret service division, Department of the Treasury... 0... oo... ave oo e., 249
Secretary of Avriculture, biography of. i ae rh aia 265
: duties oft vi so i lS eh ae ae ER RU Sr, 302
Commerce and Labor, blegvaphyiof.o. i... oa se an a. 960
es Of a RT a hr a ee 306
State, DIogrAPUY Of visi vivitar Shea tran ras ne aw sien Ah Set Te 248
I CO ri te ssi Heh ea aa A Mn a ee SE HLL SE Le 283
the Interior Dlography Of. a ss a Tr 7262
dutiesof. or are, ET A A A a ma aR 300
Navy, blography ol. i reese ra Ee SS ES LE 257
EEE Ee el De Ra 297
Senate; biography of .......c5-- ave oes Eh RE rR LE Rr TLL NE A 220
Treasury Dlography of a vf a ian Be real i 249
A LE Br Se ES ER a TR
War, biography of......... Sn BN Se Se AEE 251
Aublesol rt rr a a Sa a 288
tothe President, biography of x... rai sis isi vee ronan Tb I ee Te 247
66525—60-2—2D ED——2
XVIII Congressional Directory.
: Page
Senate commitimes assignments to... co. lL SRA SEE teste te see siete 180
clerks and mesSengers lo... =i... ds a a deals se ae Relay 221
meeting daysol sr RS Sa Ee de eh a i ee 218
membershipiol Lins. an a i ea i ae ve a ae ete 171
Senate Chaplain of. fb conn vino rit Smite. a oe Cr ES ae Fo des 220
diagram ol the floor of ia. uty dei CS ee EE 236
LTR He CE Ee eB Sn ET SL Ee NE Li elo BR Tr
NE Ee a CE i lr Cl al ee ms ae ee 223
heating and ventilatlon®of =u. ve cr A a La a 223
Office of Presidentiof.. 0 i. Ca nn ah dada nah Lar Sane, 220
BETTE ANY Of i bt it sm sans Alu Se a SA ws As fm mS OA a sed th Behe miele te 220
Sergeant-at-ArmSi «La ol a ST re re i a A Sal 223
official reporters ofdebates of... nl co i Sen Ca Sait len Se 227
DOSROI CE Of i i rh a es ee ee a Se let TBS 223
President pro tempore or SA ee RC BC DL eb SN eS SE 220
Senators, Representatives, and Delegates, biographies of... cl 0 ens I-41
list of, with home post-offices and Washington ad-
dresses i rs en a ee 384
Senators: rooms. Alvectory.of at th a ES ee I ale Se ete 242
Sergeant-at-Armsof the House of Representatives... .......c cc. ected sens sh ainvinns 225
Seantesblographyof. oui el i Le Rn i Biegas
Servia, United States consular officersin ... ..0 i. ce ih a ee ers in es as 243
legationito: ...... -... re ee a a8
Service of Delegates, table sWomiin Congresmest in wileh 1 has eens fendered ri 154
Representativesand Delegates, table showing Congresses in which it was rendered.. 146
continuous, of Senators, table showing............ 0... Loon. En hen 144
Segsionsiof Congress, Hat lof or 0 SL Se a 6
the Senate, special HSE of vn nh ee nih dat aise sh die be edie sh siviele oisininiaiety 169
Siam, consulariofficersinithe United States... tl. cc tL od aa J alla eke
legation of . ne LY Aa RE CR I SI Sa
United States nin: a ll 343
rn ER LE ll ee SA RE a 328
Sixty-first Congress, unofficial list of Represetitotives: PRTECE LO or re es et SE SE 395
Smithsonian InStIaION. 0. or sv i i es ase oe ata avis sien nibs sii hi il OY)
Soils, Bureamof ai i shah sedis hs rE eS Dr Re LS 268
dutlfes oft. treo oot, A i al se 304
VERT EUR rr Ln he SR SIE te CSE ah SR Ee SM A i I ee Ba
Solicitor for the Departmentof State, duties of. ..... i. aioe a ve cen, 292
of Internal Revenue, duties of ....... 00. oo no. ei aie es Shs Veins cna sp as 203
the Department of Commerce and Labor, dutiesof...... .............. 0. LL... a 003
Agriculture, dutiesof................ 00. Le en
Navy, duties of vr vir, vr. sls Sulla wasn pap be er bt oar) 300
ORE OL Ls vin ies ait on sd died a Sa ea ee Cer eS ee rohit ete hn os Ba as 259
Treasury, dulfesol 0. ot ia oni dn re Le CL al LR 292
Solicitor-General, duties of ........... I hy SS a ans
Spain, consular officers in the United Sines LC A eo De es a 369
legation of....... Eta ACR a Le FEC Se Me a OO RSE
United Statenconsalar officers in RS 343
legation to ...... EAR De Re DN SR i a A A RS a al ae 328
Spanish Treaty: Claims Commission i. fo. i Sh sd a Ta ss tie bl is on iy at oa S955
Speaker of the House jofflce of... 6 Lb ool id voirinniads i vss talents Coinls feu io ta si uaa Rainn intoge 224
Special sessionsiof: the Senate, dates of ............ Aol soins i a 169
Standards Ba OE eh Se a as he erent intel 271
dutles of rer re LO ee a Ls Sa 309
State delegations in CONMTIESS a. iin ci es Sidhe tic hiatuis ots vids suit TBE
Department ton. oir nn de ee a ay RIS i Ua te a Rae ass 248
duties of . Sheets re A a ee SR AE Eee
Statistics, Bureau of, Devariraent of Ationiture a I ES a SO re I SR 268
duiiesiof. (hi: ila nhs ne aay
Department of Commerce and Labor... i. whoa ul iL LL 271
AULIES OF 7 oe thro sa 0s a wena mai 308
Sten DOA-T NSP ECION SOLTICE. + son vs site sos nn soa in in iia A als wie A te sir aT eis SEE TRL a 271
duties ofl. nin niin vn RE EA Se a Ss 309
Stenographers to House Committees: ... 2 oho oi il oe a ha ee 228
Student interpreters in China and: Japan... ......... vo ves voir essen saa ls fi vaiviaies gies 346
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Contents. XIX
: Page
Superintendent of Caplol oot a sah er a Rae wh Er 228
prisons:and prisoners... i. ut na a nn A a saa 204
State, War, and Navy Department balding: of Losi ds Ln Er ie LEE aS
dutlegof in. lo ini eth 284
Supervising Architect duties of. or i a eae a eR A SS es 285
EER TREE en Se Se RE Re Rl Sl RRC 249
SupremecountyDistrict of Columbian mina a a ees 319
Supreme Courtiof the Umited States voir. tie oS eis ans 315
; biographiesef the justices... os oii ai ln nla aili. eS
CHRTL TL Re ae the SE re Be Ps Si ee 317
residences of the justices and officials..................... 317
Snrgeon-Generalof the Army Jot a evi ins 253
Sweden consular officers of, in the: Unifed States... .. voc ie, oo ee ee a 370
eat on OR a ras i a 324
United States legation fo... si a dn a oe a a 328
consular officesiin ......... i eS Se 344
Switzerland; consnlarofficers of, inthe Unlted'States. -....,....... 0, oo a 371
legation of ie] Turse oh a a nS aN a a SE Se 324
United States consularoffices Ini... oi. ol aa aa a 344
legationdo i seni a el Ee FL SEE 328
'Werms of Senators, expiration Of. oc i i iil be hd do vii a beets a be sah 142
‘Ehird Assistant Postmaster-General ci i sai vies 256
Ante ol es sae men ls 296
imvetable of vailroads or a a a ee 282
Areasurcrof the United States. i lo. cla ton tor ns as ol le i eae 250
dubtles of. oa EL i ehh Siig dene ie 286
Ereasury Department i i en i a Te ee 249
duties ol a, a re Cd a a 284
iEnials by ConrbofiImpenchment it oi Sen eli os is i 169
Turkey, consular officersof, inthe United States Li... cv iva ds 372
Yegatlom ofc. un fo Ee A IE rm eR ee ee) 324
United Statesiconsularofflcers in. oi. ci odes 344
Jem ato M0. ai hd, it to hd Rabe Hon a ae ae ra De 328
Unclassified:laborers in civil service. co 0 ite Tes. er ese a a SL3
United States attorneyig office oo conn oii vena nian Beas ne 319
congularoficere. ir nr na eR ae 329
embassiesandlepations om Sana Sine dn ea a aa 325
engineeroffice. i. rin ES Ns a Cae ey 254
Geographic. Beard... ls i or a a a 274
duties of 5 Bhs 0 in a a Ee 314
marshal’swfice Lunn talon he aC tsa Lo ale i tse 319
and Mexican Water Boundary Commission .......0........ 0... 8
Urntiguay, consilarofficers of, in the United States... 0) Sn a as, 372
Yegatiowol. oo ln a a Se a saa ee nee a 325
United:Statesiconsnlar officers in io, 0 a ei 345
Harr trn eee I S S ae n S S  oy 327
Venezuela, consularofficersof inthe United States... oa 373
United States consularofficersing. nil. onl mn a pe a 345
legation tos tule hel oS i a DT ee Ee 328
Veteran preferencedncivilgervice i. Na 312
Vice-President of the United States; blography of. ...oo.o i a an I
War Department 0... ..,... a Ee i wy Shs a Be pee) 251
A ee Ea 288
Washington addresses of Senators, Representatives, and Delegates, with home post-offices ... 382
Cltvipostoffiice. ar os Ln Ls aa RE 279
Navy-Vard.y on a 259
Weather Buren. Lon, ye eee Be Ee 265
duties ofl. Soba a ae ae he
mapetationsat Capitol: cio a) Sno a Ee ah a
White House rules
duties of oi. cr Re a aE eB
Zanzibar, United States consular offices in
Zoological Patley Nationale 2 00 0 lon Lo ohn i i Se 272
re
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DIRECTORY
OF THE
SIXTIETH CONGRESS.
First Edition. Second Session. December, 1908.
THE CONGRESS—BIOGRAPHICAL.
VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
CHARLES WARREN FAIRBANKS, Republican, of Indianapolis, Ind., Vice-
President of the United States, was born on a farm near Unionville Center, Union
County, Ohio, May 11, 1852; was educated in the common schools of the neighbor-
hood and at the Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio, graduating from that
institution in 1872 in the classical course; married Miss Cornelia Cole in 1874; was
admitted to the bar by the supreme court of Ohio in 1874; removed to Indianap-
olis in the same year, where he practiced his profession until his admission to the
United States Senate; never held public office prior to his election to the United
States Senate in 1897; was elected a trustee of the Ohio Wesleyan University 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
elected to the United States Senate January 20, 1897, to succeed Daniel W. Voorhees,
Democrat; took his seat March 4, 1897, and was reelected in 1903; 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 a delegate at large to the Republican
national convention at St. Louis in 1896, and was temporary chairman of the conven-
tion; was adelegate 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-President of the United States, and elected on the ticket with
Theodore Roosevelt, receiving 337 of the 476 electoral votes, to 139 for Henry Gas-
saway Davis, of West Virginia, the Democratic candidate. Resigned as United
States Senator from Indiana to take effect March 4, 1905, at noon, on which day
and hour he took the oath as Vice-President of the United States.
SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES.
AL AB ANA.
SENATORS.
JOHN HOLLIS BANKHEAD, Democrat, of Fayette, was born in Moscow, Marion
(now Lamar) County, Ala., September 13, 1842; was self-educated; isa farmer; served
four years in the Confederate army, being wounded three times; represented Marion
County in the general assembly, sessions of 1865, 1866, and 1867; was a member of
the State senate 1876-77, and of the house of representatives 1880-81; was warden
of the Alabama penitentiary from 1881 till 1885; was elected to the House of Rep-
resentatives in the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-
fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses; was
appointed a member of the Inland Waterways Commission March, 1907. In the
Democratic primaries, 1go6, Mr. Bankhead was nominated alternate Senator, receiv-
ing 48,362 votes, or a majority of all the votes cast in the election; in June, 1907, he
was appointed United States Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon.
John T. Morgan, and in July, 1907, was elected by the legislature. His term of
service will expire March 3, 1913.
I
2 ; Congressional Directory. [ALABAMA.
JOSEPH FORNEY JOHNSTON, Democrat, of Birmingham, was born in North
Carolina in 1843; quit school to join the Confederate army as a private in March,
1861; served during the war, was wounded four times, and rose to the rank of cap-
tain; practiced law seventeen years; was a banker ten years; was elected governcr
of Alabama in 1896 and reelected in 1898, serving four years; never sought or held
any office other than governor and Senator. He was unanimously elected to the
United States Senate by the legislature August 6, receiving the Republican as well
as Democratic vote, to fill out the unexpired portion of the term of Hon. E. W. Pet-
tus, deceased, ending March 3, 1909, also for the term ending March 3, 1915.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, and Washington (6 counties).
Population (1900), 181,781.
GEORGE WASHINGTON TAYLOR, Democrat, of Demopolis, Marengo County,
Ala., was born January 16, 1849, in Montgomery County, Ala.; was educated at the
South Carolina University, Columbia, S. C.; is a lawyer, and was admitted to practice
at Mobile, Ala., November, 1871; entered the army as a Confederate soldier at the age
of 15 years, in November, 1864, being then a student at the academy in Columbia,
S. C.; served a few weeks with the South Carolina State troops on the coast near
Savannah, and then enlisted as a private in Company D, First Regiment South Caro-
lina Cavalry, and served as a courier till the end of the war; left the South Carolina
University at 18, having graduated in Latin, Greek, history, and chemistry; taught
school for several years, and studied law at the same time; was elected to the lower
house of the general assembly of Alabama in 1878, and served one term as a member
from Choctaw County; in 1880 was elected State solicitor for the first judicial cir-
cuit of Alabama, and was reelected in 1886; declined a third term; was elected to the
Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses; was
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 3,592 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Baldwin, Butler, Conecuh, Covington, Crenshaw, Escambia, Montgomery, Pike, and
Wilcox (9 counties).
Population (1900), 239,653.
OLIVER CICERO WILEY, Democrat, of Troy, was born in Troy, Ala., January
30, 1851, and educated in the common schools of his home town ; was a member of
the town council for five years; was two years chairman of the Democratic Executive
Committee of Pike County; four years a member of the Democratic State Executive
Committee; alternate delegate to the Democratic National conventions at St. Louis
in 1888 and at Chicago in 1892; was president of the Alabama Midland Railway dur-
ing its construction from 1887 to 1892; is president of the board of directors of the
State Normal College at Troy, Ala.; director of the Farmers and Merchants’ National
Bank, Troy, Ala.; vice-president and general manager of the Standard Chemical and
Oil Company, Troy, Ala.; was married June 25, 1874, to Augusta Murphree, daughter
of J. K. Murphree and Adelaide (Henderson) Murphree ; was elected without oppo-
sition to the Sixtieth Congress for the unexpired term of his brother, the late Hon.
Ariosto Appling Wiley.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Barbour, Bullock, Coffee, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Houston, Iee,and Russell (9 counties).
Population (1900), 223,409.
HENRY D. CLAYTON, Democrat, of Eufaula, is a native of Barbour County,
Ala.; is a lawyer; served one term in the Alabama legislature; was chairman of the
judiciary committee; was United States district attorney from 1893 to 1896; was a
Democratic Presidential elector in 1888 and 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth,
Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress without opposition, having received every vote cast—6,922.
In the Sixtieth Congress Mr. Clayton was chosen chairman of the Democratic caucus.
Reelected to the Sixty- -first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Calhoun, Chilton, Cleburne, Dallas, Shelby, and Talladega (6 counties).
Population (1900), 178,716.
WILLIAM BENJAMIN CRAIG, Democrat, of Selma, son of George Henry and
Alvena White Craig, was born at Selma, Ala., November 2, 1877; was educated in
the public and high schools of Selma and in June, 1898, was graduated from the
ALABAMA.] Biographical. 3
law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., with the degree of
bachelor of laws; from 1893 to 1897 he served an apprenticeship as a machinist in
the shops of the Southern Railway, at Selma; since June, 1898, has been engaged in
the practice of the law as a member of the firm of Craig & Craig. From January 1,
1903, to January 1, 1907, he served a term as State senator in the legislature of Ala-
bama, representing the thirtieth district. He has served in the Alabama National
Guard as private and noncommissioned officer in Troop C, First Cavalry, and as cap-
tain of Company C, Second Infantry. December 2, 1903, he married Irene Kunst,
daughter of Albert Henry Kunst and Matilda Camden Kunst, of Weston, W. Va.
Was elected to the Sixtieth Congress without opposition, receiving 5,783 votes. Re-
elected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICEL.
CouNTIES.—Autauga, Chambers, Clay, Coosa, Elmore, I,owndes, Macon, Randolph, and T'allapoosa
(9 counties).
Population (1900), 219,910.
JAMES THOMAS HEFLIN, Democrat, of Lafayette, was born at I,ouina, Ran-
dolph County, Ala., April 9, 1869; was educated in the common schools of Randolph
County, at the Southern University, Greensboro, Ala., and at the A. and M. College,
Auburn, Ala.; studied law at Lafayette, Ala., under Judge N. D. Denson, and was
admitted to the bar January 12, 1893; was married to Minnie Kate Schuessler, of
Lafayette, Ala., December 18, 1895; and has one child living—]. Thomas Heflin, jr.;
was elected mayor of Lafayette March 16, 1893, and reelected, holding this office two
terms; was register in chancery two years, resigning in 1896 to accept the Demo-
cratic nomination from Chambers County to the legislature; was elected in 1896 and
reelected to the legislature in 1898; was a member of the Democratic State executive
committee from 1896 to 1902; was a delegate in the constitutional convention of
Alabama in 1901; was elected secretary of state in November, 1902, for a term of
four years; resigned that office May 1, 1904; was elected, without opposition, May
10, 1904, to fill the unexpired term of Hon. Charles W. Thompson, deceased, in the
Fifty-eighth Congress, and reelected to the Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth Congresses, to
the latter also without opposition, receiving 6,940 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CountieEs.—Fayette, Greene, Hale, I,amar, Marion, Pickens, Sumter, Tuscaloosa, and Walker
(9 counties).
Population (1900), 218,324.
RICHMOND PEARSON HOBSON, Democrat, of Greensboro, was born at Greens-
boro, Ala., August 17, 1870; was educated at the Southern University, the United States
Naval Academy, the French National School of Naval Design; is a naval architect
and lecturer; served in the United States Navy from 1885 to 1903; received the degree
of LL. D. from Southern University, June, 1906; was Democratic elector at large, Ala-
bama, in 1904; married Grizelda Houston Hull May 25, 1905; is tenth in descent
from Elder Brewster, of the Mayflower; was elected fo the Sixtieth Congress, receiv-
ing 8,308 votes, to 1 for Ignatius Green, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Cherokee, Cullman, Dekalb, Etowah, Franklin, Marshall, St. Clair, and Winston (8
counties).
Population (1900), 158,643.
JOHN LAWSON BURNETT, Democrat, of Gadsden, Etowah County, Ala., was
born at Cedar Bluff, Cherokee County, Ala., January 20, 1854; was educated in the common schools of the county, at the Wesleyan Institute, Cave Springs, Ga., and
Gaylesville High School, Gaylesville, Ala.; studied law at Vanderbilt University,
and was admitted to the bar in Cherokee County, Ala., in 1876; was maried to Miss
Bessie Reeder, of Cleveland, Tenn., December 13, 1896; was elected to the lower
house of the Alabama legislature in 1884, and to the State senate in 1886; was elected
to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and re-
elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 8,265 votes, to 4,913 for C. B. Kennamer,
Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIGHTH DISTRICT.
CounTiES.—Colbert, Jackson, I,auderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and Morgan (7 counties).
Population (1900), 194,441.
WILLIAM RICHARDSON, Democrat, of Huntsville, Ala., was in the Confed-
erate army; was severely wounded at battle of Chickamauga and paroled in April,
1865,in Marietta, Ga.; was a representative from the county of Iimestone in the general
4 Congressional Directory. |[ALABAMA.,
assembly of Alabama, 1865-6-7; was judge of the court of probate and county court
of Madison County, Ala., from 1875 to 1886; Democratic elector for the State at
large in 1888; was elected by the Alabama State Democratic convention as a dele-
gate from the State at large to the national Democratic convention that met at St.
Louis July 6, 1904; was elected to fill an unexpired term in the Fifty-sixth Con-
gress; elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, practically without opposition, receiving 5,873
votes, to 317 for J. T. Masterson, Republican. At the primary election, held May
18, to nominate a Democratic candidate Mr. Richardson received 9,653 votes, and
was reelected to the Sixty-first Congress, receiving 9,710 votes to 1,927 for Jeremiah
Murphy, Republican.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Bibb, Blount, Jefferson, and Perry (4 counties).
Population (1900), 213,820.
OSCAR W. UNDERWOOD, Democrat, of Birmingham, was born in Louisville,
Jefferson County, Ky., May 6, 1862; was educated at Rugby School, Louisville, Ky.,
and the University of Virginia; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth,
Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixti-
eth Congress without opposition, receiving 7,864 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
ARKANSAS.
SENATORS.
JAMES P. CLARKE, Democrat, of Little Rock, was born in Yazoo City, Yazoo
County, Miss., August 18, 1854, second child and eldest son of Walter and Ellen
(White) Clarke; was educated in the common schools of his native town, in several
academies in Mississippi, and studied law at the University of Virginia, graduat-
ing in 1878; began thc practice of his profession at Helena, Ark., in 1879. He
entered the political field in 1886, being then elected to the house of representatives of
the Arkansas legislature; in 1888 was elected to the State senate, serving until 1892
and being president of that body in 1891 and ex officio lieutenant-governor; was
elected attorney-general of Arkansas in 1892, but declined a renomination, and was
elected governor in 1894. At the close of his service as governor he removed to
Little Rock and resumed the practice of the law. He was elected to the United
States Senate to succeed James K. Jones, having been previously chosen as the
Democratic nominee by a primary election held on the 29th of March, 1902, receiv-
ing 61,228 votes to 53,828 cast for James K. Jones. He took his seat March 9, 1903.
His term of service will expire March 3, 19009.
JEFF DAVIS, Democrat, of Little Rock, was born in Little River County, Ark.,
May 6, 1862; was admitted to the bar in Pope County, Ark., at the age of 19 years;
was elected prosecuting attorney of the fifth judicial district in 1892, and reelected
in 1894; was elected attorney-general of the State in 1898; governor of Arkansas in
1901, reelected in 1903, and again in 1905, each for a period of two years; was delegate
at large to the national Democratic convention in 1904; was elected to the United
States Senate February 29, 1907, for the term beginning March 4, 1907. His term
of service will expire March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Greene, Lee, Mississippi, Phillips, Poinsett, St.
Francis, and Woodruff (11 counties).
Population (1900), 180,790.
ROBERT BRUCE MACON, Democrat, of Helena, is a lawyer; was elected to the
Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 5,715 votes, to 1,214 for D. F. Taylor, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Cleburne, Fulton, Independence, Izard, Jackson, Lawrence, Monroe, Prairie, Ran-
dolph, Sharp, Stone, and White (12 counties).
Population (1900), 184,492. :
STEPHEN BRUNDIDGE, Jr., Democrat, of Searcy, was born in White County,
Ark., January 1, 1857; was educated in the private schools of the county; studied law
at Searcy with the firm of Coody & McRae, and in 1878 was admitted to the bar, and
has since resided in Searcy, where he has been engaged in the practice of law; in
September, 1886, was elected prosecuting attorney for the first judicial district of
pes
: 1 ; ;
i
ARKANSAS] Biographical. 5
Arkansas, and reelected in 1888 without opposition; since 189o has served a term as
member of the Democratic State central committee of Arkansas; was elected to the
Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 5,137 votes, to 1,216 for E. J. Mason,
Republican.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Madison, Marion, Newton, Searcy, Van Buren, and
Washington (10 counties).
Population (1900), 177,396.
JOHN CHARLES FLOYD, Democrat, of Yellville, was born in Sparta, White
County, Tenn., April 14, 1858; moved with his parents to Benton County, Ark., in
1869, where he worked on a farm and attended the common and high schools until
he was 18 years old; in 1876 entered the State University, at Fayetteville, Ark.,
taking the classical course, from which institution he graduated in 1879; in 1880 and
1881 taught school; in 1882 read law and was admitted to the bar; the same year he
located at Yellville, where he has since been engaged in the practice of law; is mar-
ried; in 1888 was elected representative of Marion County in the State legislature; in
1890 and again in 1892 was elected prosecuting attorney of the fourteenth circuit,
each time without opposition; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 5,715 votes, to 3,246 for W. N. Ivey, Republican.
eelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CountieEs.—Crawford, Howard, Little River, Logan, Miller, Montgomery, pike, Polk, Scott,
Sebastian, and Sevier (11 counties).
Population (1900), 191,752.
WILLIAM BEN CRAVENS, Democrat, of Fort Smith, was born at Fort Smith,
Ark., January 17, 1872; graduated from the law school of Missouri University in
1893; 1s a practicing lawyer and married; was elected city attorney of Fort Smith for
two terms of two years each, and prosecuting attorney of the twelfth judicial district
of Arkansas for three terms of two years each; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 7,290 votes, to 3,845 for George Tilles, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Conway, Faulkner, Franklin, Johnson, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, and Yell (8 counties).
Population (1900), 190,333.
CHARLES CHESTER REID, Democrat, of Morrillton, Conway County, was born
at Clarksville, Johnson County, Ark., June 15, 1868; his father, Charles C. Reid, of
Morrillton, was born at Trenton, N. J., and came to Arkansas during the war and
married here; entered the State University at Fayetteville in 1883, at the age of 15
years, where he remained three years; in 1885 entered the law department “of Van.
derbilt University, at Nashville, Tenn., and received the degree of Bachelor of Laws
from that institution in 1887; he also worn the University’s medal for oratory; at the
age of 19 began the practice of law at Morrillton, and has remained there ever since;
in 189o was married to Miss Dine Crozier, daughter of a prominent merchant of Mor-
rillton; was elected prosecuting attorney of his judicial district in 1894, and reelected
without opposition in 1896; in 1898 voluntarily retired from office; elected to the
Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 5,967 votes, to 1,976 for Alonzo Hedges, Republican. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
. SIXTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Arkansas, Cleveland, Dallas, Desha, Drew, Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Jefferson,
Lincoln, Lonoke, and Saline (12 counties).
Population (1900), 196,292.
JOSEPH TAYLOR ROBINSON, Democrat, of Lonoke, was born August 26,
1872; educated in the common schools and the Univ ersity of Arkansas; began the
practice of law in 1895; was elected to the general assembly of the State of Arkansas
in 1894 and served in the session of 1895: was Presidential elector for the Sixth
Congressional district of Arkansas in 1900, and selected as electoral messenger;
was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Six-
tieth Congress, receiving 5,473 votes, to 1,010 for R. C. Thompson. At the primary
election for the nomination Mr. Robinson received 25,000 votes. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
6 Congressional Directory. [ARKANSAS.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Ashley; Bradley, Calhoun, Chicot, Clark, Columbia, Hempstead, I,afayette, Nevada,
Ouachita, and Union (11 counties).
Population (1900), 190,509.
ROBERT MINOR WALLACE, Democrat, of Magnolia, was born at New I,ondon,
Union County, Ark., August 6, 1857; entered Arizona College, Louisiana, 1872, and
graduated in 1876; was admitted to the bar in Little Rock, from the office of Judge
U. M. Rose in 1877; was a member of the legislature in 1881; post-office inspector
1887-1889; prosecuting attorney thirteenth circuit 1890-1892; assistant United States
attorney 1893, at Texarkana; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress without opposition, receiving 3,255
votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
CALIFORNIA.
SENATORS.
GEORGE CLEMENT PERKINS, Republican, of Oakland, was born at Kenne-
bunkport, Me., in 1839; was reared on a farm, and attended public school until
his thirteenth year, when he shipped on board a sailing ship for New Orleans, and
followed the calling of a sailor on ships engaged in the European trade. In 1855 he
shipped ‘“before the mast’ on the sailing ship Galatea bound for San Francisco,
where he arrived in the autumnof that year. Since that time hehas been engaged in
the business of merchandising, banking, farming, mining, whale fishery, and steamship
transportation. In 1868 he was elected to the State senate, serving eight years; has
been president of the Merchants’ Exchange in San Francisco; also of the San Fran-
cisco Art Association; is a director of the California Academy of Sciences and other
public institutions; in 1879 he was elected governor of California, serving until Jan-
uary, 1883; was appointed, July 24, 1893, United States Senator to fill, until the elec-
tion of his successor, the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Leland Stanford,
and took his seat August 8, 1893. In January, 1895, having made a thorough canvass
before the people of his State, he was elected by the legislature on the first ballot to
fill the unexpired term. In the fall election of 1896 he was a candidate before the
people of California for reelection, and received the indorsement of the Republican
county conventions that comprised a majority of the senatorial and assembly dis- :
tricts in the State. When the legislature convened in joint convention (January,
1897) for the purpose of electing a United States Senator, he was reelected on the
first ballot. In January, 1903, he was again reelected on the first ballot for the term
of six years, receiving every vote of the Republican members of the legislature.
His election was made unanimous on motion of a Democratic member of the legisla-
ture. At the time of his election in 1897 and in 1903 he was absent from the State
attending to his Congressional duties in Washington. His term of service will
expire March 3, 19009.
FRANK PUTNAM FLINT, Republican, of I,os Angeles, was born in North Read-
ing, Mass., July 15, 1862; in 1869 his parents moved to San Francisco, where he was
educated in the public schools; in 1888 he moved to Los Angeles; was admitted to
practice law and appointed assistant United States attorney in 1892; in 1897 was \
appointed United States district attorney for the southern district of California; was
married in Los Angeles, February 25, 1890, to Miss Katherine J. Bloss, and has two
children. He was elected to the United States Senate January 11, 1905, to succeed
Hon. Thomas R. Bard, for the term beginning March 4, 1905. His term of service
will expire March 3, I9IT.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Del Norte, Eldorado, Humboldt, Lassen, Mariposa, Modoc,
Mono, Placer, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Nevada, Siskiyou, Tehama, Trinity, and Tuolumne (19
counties).
Population (1900), 180,871.
WILLIAM F. ENGLEBRIGHT, Republican, of Nevada City, was born in New
Bedford, Mass., November 23, 1855. At an early age his parents moved to Vallejo,
Cal., where in the public schools he received his education; entered the service of
CALIFORNIA] Biographical. : 7
the United States at the navy-yard, Mare Island, as a house joiner’s apprentice;
entered the civil engineer’s office, and there completed his studies in engineering.
Later he established himself in Nevada City as a mining engineer, which profession
he was following at the time of his election to the Fifty-ninth Congress. During
the practice of his profession Mr. Englebright has been identified with many of the
most important mining enterprises and mining litigations of the State and the United
States as well; is a member of the executive committee of the California State Miners’
Association; is an authority upon mining and irrigating problems. In 1882 he mar-
ried Miss Kittie F. Holland, of Nevada City; they have a family of three sons. He
was elected November 6, 1906, to fill the unexpired term in the Fifty-ninth Congress
of James N. Gillett, resigned, and to the Sixtieth Congress as well, receiving 18,954
votes to 13,984 for F. W. Taft, Democrat, 1,736 for J. C. Weybright, Socialist, and
392 for R. I, Webb, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lake, Marin, Mendocino, Napa, Sacramento, Sonoma, Sutter,
Yolo, and Yuba (12 counties).
Population (1900), 200,785.
DUNCAN E. McKINLAY, Republican, of Santa Rosa, was born at Orillia, Onta-
‘rio, Canada, October 6, 1862; educated till 12 years of age in the common schools of
Orillia, and then learned the trade of carriage painting and worked in Flint, Mich.;
at 21 years of age he came to San Francisco and worked at his trade until 1884, when
he went to Sacramento, where he stayed for a year, then moved to Santa Rosa,
where he engaged in the painting business and studied law; was admitted to the
bar by the supreme court of California in 1892; in McKinley’s first Presidential cam-
paign in 1896 was nominated elector at large on the Republican ticket; in 1901 was
appointed by President McKinley as assistant United States attorney at San Fran-
cisco; he is married and has four children; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 23,411 votes, to 20,262 for W. A.
Beard, Democrat, and 1,524 for A. J. Goylord, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Alameda, Contra Costa, and Solano (3 counties).
Population (1900), 172,386.
JOSEPH RUSSELI KNOWILAND, Republican, of Alameda, was born in the city
of Alameda, Cal., August 5, 1873; was educated in public and private schools
and in the University of the Pacific; is associated with his father, Joseph Knowland,
in the wholesale lumber and shipping business; is a director of the Alameda Savings
Bank and National Bank of Alameda; in 1898, at the age of 25, was elected to the
lower house of the state legislature; was reelected in 1900; in 1902 was elected to
the state senate, resigning in 1904, after serving one session, having in the mean-
time received the Republican nomination to fill the unexpired term in the Fifty-
eighth Congress of Hon. Victor H. Metcalf, appointed Secretary of Commerce and
Labor, and also for the Fifty-ninth Congress; was elected for both terms; also to
the Sixtieth Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-first Congress by a plurality of
17,968, receiving 27,857 votes, to 9,889 for George W. Peckham, Democrat.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CITY OF SAN FrANCISco.—Twenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, Thirtieth, Thirty-first, Fortieth, Forty-
first, Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth assembly districts.
Population (1900), 178 858.
JULIUS KAHN, Republican, indorsed by the Labor Union Party, of San Francisco,
was born on the 28th day of February, 1861, at Kuppenheim, Grand Duchy of Baden,
Germany; came to California with his parents in 1866; was educated in the public
schools of San Francisco; after leaving school he followed the theatrical profession
for ten years, playing with Edwin Booth, Joseph Jefferson, Tomasso Salvini, Mr. and
Mrs. W. J. Florence, Clara Morris, and other well-known stars. He returned to
San Francisco in 1890 and began studying law; in 1892 was elected to the legislature
of the State of California; in January, 1894, was admitted to the bar by the supreme
court of California; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-ninth
8 Congressional Directory. [CALIFORNIA.
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress. In the great conflagration of
April 18-20, 1906, out of ten assembly districts comprising the Fourth Congressional
District seven were completely devastated and the other three were partially destroyed.
In 1904 there were 50,000 registered voters in the district. In 1906 there were about
10,000. Mr. Kahn received 5,678 votes, to 3,012 for D. S. Hirschberg, Democrat
and Independence League, and 399 for Oliver Everett, Socialist. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
COUNTIES.—San Mateo, Santa Clara, and the Thirty-second, Thirty-third, Thirty-fourth, Thirty-
fifth, Thirty-sixth, Thirty-seventh, Thirty-eighth, and Thirty-ninth assembly districts of
San Francisco. .
Population (1900), 236,234.
EVERIS ANSON HAYES, Republican, of San Jose, was born at Waterloo, Jefferson
County, Wis., March 10, 1855; was educated in the public schools of his native State;
graduated at the Waterloo High School and entered the University of Wisconsin at
Madison in 1873; graduated from both the literary and law departments of that insti-
tution, receiving the degrees of B. L.. and LL. B., the latter in 1879; began at once
the practice of his profession at Madison; in 1883 moved to Ashland, Wis.; while
engaged in the practice of law at Ashland he became interested in iron mines on the
Gogebic Range in northern Wisconsin and Michigan, and since 1885 much of his:
time has been devoted to the personal management of the business of these properties.
In 1887 he removed to Santa Clara County, Cal., and there has been engaged in fruit
raising and mining, and, with his brother, is publisher and proprietor of the San
Jose Daily Morning Mercury and Evening Herald. He was for two years an alder-
man of the city of Madison and for one year member of the board of supervisors of
Gogebic County, Mich.; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,530 votes, to 17,925 for H. G. Davis, Democrat,
and 2,343 for Joseph Lawrence, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Kresno, Kings, Madera, Merced, Monterey, San Benito, San Joaquin, Santa Cruz, and
Stanislaus (9 counties).
. Population (1900) 155,839.
JAMES CARSON NEEDHAM, Republican, of Modesto, was born September 17,
1864, in Carson City, Nev., in an emigrant wagon, his parents being at the time en
route across the plains to California; educated in the public schools of California, the
San Jose High School, the University of the Pacific at San Jose, and the law depart-
ment of the University of Michigan; began the practice of law in November, 1889, at
Modesto, where he has ever since resided; in 1890 was nominated by the Republican
party for State senator, but the district being overwhelmingly Democratic, was
defeated; was married July 1, 1894, to Dora D, Parsons; has three children, two
girls and one boy; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and
Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,928
votes, to 12,868 for H. A. Greene, Democrat, 1,303 for Richard Kirk, Socialist, and
964 for H. E. Burbank, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CounTy.—Lo0s Angeles.
Population (1900), 170,298.
JAMES McLACHLAN, Republican, of Pasadena, was born August, 1852, in
Argyllshire, Scotland; at the age of 3 years removed with his parents to Tompkins
County, N. Y., where he was reared on a farm and educated in the public schools;
began teaching in the public schools at the age of 16 years, and while engaged in
that work prepared himself for college, and graduated from Hamilton College, New
York, in 1878; was admitted to practice in the supreme court of New York State in
1880, and commenced the practice of the law in 1881 at Ithaca, where he remained
until 1888, when he removed to Pasadena, Cal., and there continued the practice of
his profession; in 1877 was elected on the Republican ticket to the office of school
commissioner of Tompkins County, N. Y., and in 1890 was elected district attorney
of Los Angeles County, Cal.; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-
eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
22,338 votes, to 11,197 for R. G. Laucks, Democrat, 3,641 for Claude Riddle, Socialist,
and 2,189 for I. D. Johnson, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
a
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CALIFORNIA.] Biographical. 9
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
COUNTIES.—Inyo, Kern, Orange, Riverside San Bernardino, San “Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa
Barbara, Tulare, and Ventura (1o counties).
Population (1900), 189,782.
SYLVESTER CLARK SMITH, Republican, of Bakersfield, was born on a farm
near Mount Pleasant, Iowa, August 26, 1858; was educated in the district school
and at Howe’s Academy, Mount Pleasant; moved to California in the fall of 1879;
farmed and taught school in Colusa County, and in 1883 went to Kern County to
teach; while teaching he was studying law, and in 1885 was admitted to practice and
located at Bakersfield, Cal., where he still resides. In 1886 a number of farmers
bought a newspaper plant with which to establish a paper to represent their views
on a question of water right, which was then engrossing their attention, and Mr.
Smith was employed to edit the paper—the Kern County Echo; three years later he
bought the paper and continued to edit it till 1897, when he returned to his law
practice; is still the principal owner of the paper, now a morning daily, and does
occasional editorial writing for it. He was elected to the State senate in 1894 and
again in 1898, serving eight years; was nominated by acclamation for the Fifty-
ninth Congress in 1904 and elected, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
22,548 votes, to 13,992 for C. A. Barlow, Democrat, and 4,003 for N. A. Richardson,
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress. 2
COLORADO.
SENATORS.
HENRY MOORE TELLER, Democrat, of Central City, was born in the town
of Granger, Allegany County, N. Y., May 23, 1830; educated in the common
schools, Rushford Academy, and Alfred University; taught school several years;
studied law at Angelica, Allegany County ; was admitted to practice at Binghamton,
N.Y. In January, 1858, removed to Illinois and practiced law there until April, 1861,
when he removed to Colorado and resumed the practice of law; received the degree
of LL. D. from Alfred University in 1886 and from Colorado State University in 1903;
never held an office until he was elected to the United States Senate from Colorado
on the admittance of that State; took his seat in the United States Senate December
4, 1876, and drew the term ending March 3, 1877; was reelected December 11 for the
full term, and served until April 17, 1882, when he resigned to enter the Cabinet of
President Arthur as Secretary of the Interior, and served until March 3, 1885; was
reelected to the Senate in January, 1885, for the term beginning March 4, 1885; was
reelected in 1891, a Republican in politics, but withdrew from the national Republican
convention at St. Louis in June, 1896, because of dissatisfaction with the financial
plank of the platform; was reelected in January, 1897, as an Independent Silver Repub-
lican, receiving 94 votes out of a total of 100, for the term beginning March 4, 1897.
Reelected as a Democrat in 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909.
SIMON GUGGENHEIM, Republican, of Denver, was born at Philadelphia,
December 30, 1867, the son of Meyer and Barbara (Myers) Guggenheim ; graduated
from the public schools of Philadelphia, after which he studied languages in Europe
for two years; was married in New York City, November 24, 1898, to Olga H. Hirsh;
was engaged in the mining and smelting. business in the United States and Republic
of Mexico ; went to Pueblo, Colo., in 1888, later moving to Denver; was elected to
the United States Senate to succeed Thomas M. Patterson, Democrat. His term of
service will expire March 3, 1913. :
REPRESENTATIVES.
AT LARGE.
Population (1900), 539,700.
GEORGE WASHINGTON COOK, Republican, of Denver, was born at Bedford,
Ind., November 10, 1851; is the son of Lieut. Samuel Cook, Thirteenth Indiana Vol-
unteer Cavalry, Union Army, who died from disease contracted in meritorious service
of his country; his mother was Agnes Dodson Cook, daughter of Ensign and ILieut.
Lambert Dodson, who served from Stokes County, N. C., in the war of 1812; was the
IO Congressional Directory. © [COLORADO.
only brother of John A. Cook, bugler in his father’s company, Thirteenth Indi-
ana Cavalry, who died in the service of his country at Montgomery, Ala., at the
age of 15 years. He learned telegraphy at the age of 11 years; ran away from
home and enlisted as drummer boy at the age of 12 years, and served in Indiana regi-
ments in the Army of the Cumberland ; the last eight months served as chief regi-
mental clerk of the One hundred and forty-fifth Regiment Indiana Volunteers,
being then 14 years of age, the youngest, according to the records of the War Depart-
ment, in the history of the Army, filling that position; after the civil war attended
school and received an academic education ; began business life railroading in Chicago
from 1872 to 1880; was general agent Louisville, New Albany and Chicago Railway
(Monon System), 1880 to 1887; division superintendent Denver and Rio Grande Rail-
way and joint agent Denver and Rio Grande and Denver and South Park (Union
Pacific) roads at Leadville, Colo. ; the only political office he ever held prior to his elec-
tion to Congress was that of mayor of Leadville, 1885 to 1887 ; was twice elected and
nominated for a third term by acclamation, but declined ; since 1889 has been actively
engaged in mining ; was elected department commander Grand Army of the Republic
for Colorado and Wyoming, serving from 1891 to 1892; was president of the Colorado
Soldiers and Sailors’ Home in 1892; in 1905 was unanimously elected senior vice-
commander in chief Grand Army of the Republic; is a member of the military
order of the I,oyal Legion; married and has a wife and three children ; was elected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 102,426 votes, to 76,792 for S. W. Belford, Demo-
crat, 12,668 for G. E. Miller, Socialist, and 4,326 for J. W. Andrew, Prohibitionist.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Adams, Boulder, Denver, Jefferson, I,ake, Larimer, Logan, Morgan, Park, Phillips,
Sedgwick, Arapahoe, Washington, Weld, and Yuma (15 counties).
Population (1900), 245,979.
ROBERT W. BONYNGE, Republican, of Denver, was born in New York City
September 8, 1863; educated in the public schools of that city; was graduated from
the College of the City of New York in 1882 and from Columbia College Law School
in 1885; admitted to the bar of New York State the same year; removed to Denver,
Colo., in 1888, where he has since been actively engaged in the practice of the law;
is a member of the law firm of Bonynge & Ritter; served in the legislature of Colo-
rado in 1893-94; was a candidate for Representative in Congress in 19oo and 1902;
instituted contest for seat in House after election of 1902, based upon election frauds
in the city of Denver, and on February 16, 1903, was unanimously awarded the seat
as the duly elected Representative; elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress by a vote of 47,549, to 31,133 for C. F. Tew, Democrat and
Lindsey, 4,989 for Luella Twining, Socialist, and 2,039 for E. E. Evans, Prohibitionist.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Archuleta, Baca, Bent, Chaffee, Cheyenne, Clear Creek, Conejos, Costilla, Custer, Delta
Dolores, Douglas, Eagle, Elbert, El Paso, Fremont, Garfield, Gilpin, Grand, Gunnison, Hins-
dale, Huerfano, Kiowa, Kit Carson, I,a Plata, Las Animas, Lincoln, Mesa, Mineral, Monte-
zuma, Montrose, Otero, Ouray, Pitkin, Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Blanco, Rio Grande, Routt,
Saguache, San Juan, San Miguel, Summit, and Teller (44 counties).
Population (1900), 293,721.
WARREN ARMSTRONG HAGGOTT, Republican, of Idaho Springs, was born in
Franklin Township, Shelby County, Ohio, May 18, 1864, son of Benjamin Pearl and
Margaret Agnes (Gamble) Haggott; moved to Colorado in 1887, and is engaged
in the practice of law and mining; was lieutenant-governor of Colorado for the term
beginning in January, 1903, and ending in January, 1905; was chairman of the
Republican State convention, May 6, 1904, which elected delegates to the Repub-
lican national convention held in Chicago in June, 1904; he married Miss Lou Willie
Cecil at Columbia, Tenn., December 29, 1897; he ds a member of the American Bar
Association and of the American Institute of Mining Engineers. He was elected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 54,869 votes, to 46,783 for W. W. Rowan, Democrat,
7,666 for F, KE. Ashburn, Socialist, and 1,903 for H. B. King, Prohibitionist.
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CONNECTICUT] Biographical. 3
CONNECTICILI'T,
SENATORS.
MORGAN GARDNER BULKELEY, Republican, of Hartford, was born at East
Haddam, Conn., December 26, 1837; educated in the district schools of his native
town and Hartford, where his father removed in 1846, and at the Hartford Public
High School. In 1852 commenced a business life in Brooklyn, N. Y., and as clerk
and partner continued until 1872; during this period for a number of years was a mem-
ber of the Republican general committee of Kings County. In 1862 enlisted in the
Thirteenth Regiment, National Guard State of New York, and served at Baltimore
and Suffolk, Va., under the command of Brig. Gen. Max Weber; returned to Hart-
ford in 1872, and at once became actively interested in its business and politics;
organized and was the first president of the United States Bank, and in 1879 was
chosen president of the Ztna Life Insurance Company, organized by his father, the
Hon. Eliphalet A. Bulkeley, the first Republican speaker, in 1857, of the Connecticut
house of representatives; was ch sen councilman, alderman, and for four terms—
1880-1888—mayor of the city of _Jartford; in 1888 was unanimously nominated as
Republican candidate for governor, and occupied that office from 1889 until 1893;
in 1889 received from Yale University the honorary degree of M. A.; was a delegate
to Republican national conventions of 1888 and 1896; was nominated by the Repub-
lican caucus, January 11, 1905, as the candidate for United States Senator, to succeed
Hon. J. R. Hawley, receiving 154 votes to 91 for all other candidates; was elected
by a vote of 228 to 37 to the United States Senate, for the term beginning March 4,
1905. His term of service will expire March 3, 1911.
FRANK BOSWORTH BRANDEGEE, Republican, of New London, was born
in New London, Conn., July 8, 1864; graduated from Yale in 1885; was admitted to
the bar in 1888, is a member of the law firm of Brandegee, Kenealy & Brennan.
In 1888 he was a representative in the general assembly, and for ten years was cor-
poration counsel of the city of New London; was adelegate to the Republican national
conventions of 1888, 18g2, 1900, and 1904; was speaker of the Connecticut house of
representatives in 1899. In 1go2 he was elected a Representative to the second ses-
sion of the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill a vacancy, and was reelected to the Fifty-
eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses. May 9, 1905, he was elected United States
Senatcr for an unexpired term. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909.
REPRESENTATIVES.
AT LARGE.
Population (1900), 908,420.
GEORGE LEAVENS LILLEY, Republican, of Waterbury, was born in Oxford,
Mass., August 3, 1859; was educated in the common schools of Oxford, at the Worces-
ter High School, and had one year at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute; settled in
Waterbury in December, 1881, and has since resided there; is a director of the Tor-
rington National Bank, Torrington, Conn.; has served on the Republican State
committee since 19oI; served in the house of representatives of the Connecticut
legislature in 1901; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 88,115 votes, to 67,747 for W. J. Don-
ahue, Democrat, 1,689 for D. N. Griffin, Prohibitionist, 2,940 for B. Leavitt, Socialist,
and 280 for Alfred Johnson, Socialist Labor.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTies.—Hartford and Tolland, including the cities of Hartford, New Britain, and Rockville,
Population (1900), 220,003.
E. STEVENS HENRY, Republican, of Rockville, is of Scotch-Irish ancestry,
and was born in Gill, Mass., in 1836, removing when 12 years old with his parents
to Rockville, Conn.; was a representative in the lower house of the Connecticut
general assembly of 1883; State senator from the Twenty-third senatorial district
in 1837-88; delegate at large to the Chicago national Republican convention in 1888;
treasurer of the State of Connecticut from 1889 to 1893; was elected to the Fifty-fourth,
Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fiffy-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses,
12 Congressional Directory. [CONNECTICUT.
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,605 votes, to 15,039 for B. M.
Holden, Democrat, 561 for W. S. MaclIntire, Prohibitionist, 725 for August Beutter,
Socialist, and 92 for J. Kempitsch, - Socialist Labor. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Middlesex and. New Haven, including the cities of New Haven, Meriden, Waterbury,
Ansonia, Derby, and Middletown."
Population (1900), 310,923.
NEHEMIAH DAY SPERRY, Republican, of New Haven, was born in Woodbridge,
New Haven County, Conn., July 10, 1827; received hiseducation in the common schools
and at the private school of Prof. Amos Smith, at New Haven; worked on the farm and
in the mill; taught school for several years; learned the trade of a house builder; com-
menced business on his own account in 1847; was elected a member of the common
council in 1853; in 1854 was elected an alderman of the city; was elected selectman
of the town of New Haven in 1853; was elected secretary of state in 1855; was
reelected in 1856; was a member of the convention that renominated Abraham Iincoln
in 1864; was made a member of the Republican national committee, was elected a
member of the executive committee, and was chosen secretary both of the national
and executive committees; was chairman of the Republican State committee for a
series of years; was president of the State convention that nominated Grant electors;
was chairman of the recruiting committee of New Haven during the war; was nomi-
nated postmaster by Abraham Lincoln in 1861 and continued in office until the first
election of Grover Cleveland; was renominated by President Harrison for postmaster
and served until the reelection of President Cleveland, making in all twenty-eight
years and two months; was appointed a member of the commission to visit England,
Germany, and France to look into their system of post-offices, but declined service;
was nominated for Congress in 1886, but declined the same; was president of the
Chamber of Commerce of New Haven; was bondsman for building the Monitor,
was nominated for Congress again in 1894; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-
fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 29,058 votes, to 23,757 for G. M. Wallace,
Democrat, 350 for C. F. Wissert, Prohibitionist, 1,551 for A. E. Babin, Socialist, and
38 for C. B. Sundberg, Socialist Labor. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—New Iondon and Windham, including the cities of New London, Putnam, and Willi-
mantic, :
Population (1900), 129,619.
EDWIN WERTER HIGGINS, Republican, of Norwich, was born July 2, 1874, at
Clinton, Conn. ; was educated in the schools of Norwich and graduated from the Yale
law school in 1897, receiving the degree of bachelor of laws; has been engaged in the
active practice of the law since his admission to the bar in 1897. In 1899 he repre-
sented Norwich in the general assembly and served on the committee on judiciary;
has been corporation counsel of Norwich, a deputy judge of its city court, and health
officer for the county of New London; has served on the Republican State central
committee since 1900, and was a delegate to the last Republican national conven-
tion representing Connecticut on the committee on resolutions. On September 21,
1904, he married Miss Alice M. Neff, of Allegheny, Pa. At a special election held
October 2, 1905, he was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, to fill the unexpired *
term of Hon. Frank B. Brandegee, elected to the United States Senate, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 12,391 votes, to 8,833 for Omer LaRue, Demo-
crat, 246 for J. I. Bartholomew, Prohibitionist, 117 for C. E. Sheldon, Socialist, and
36 for Lafreniere, Socialist Labor. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Fairfield and Litchfield, including the cities of Bridgeport, Danbury, Norwalk, South
Norwalk, and Stamford.
Population (1900), 247,875.
EBENEZER J. HIT,]I,, Republican, of Norwalk, was born in Redding, Conn.,
August 4, 1845; prepared for college at the public school in Norwalk and entered Yale
in the class of 1865. In 1892 he received from Yale University the honorary degree of
master of arts, In 1863 he joined the Army as a civilian, and remained until the
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CONNECTICUT] Biographical. 13
close of the war. He was engaged in business from that time until elected to the
Fifty-fourth Congress. He has held the commercial positions of secretary and
treasurer of the Norwalk Iron Works, president of the Norwalk Street Railway Com-
pany, president of the Norwalk Gaslight Company, and is now vice-president of the
Norwalk Mills Company and vice-president of the National Bank of Norwalk. He is
a past grand master and past grand representative of the Independent Order of Odd
Fellows of Connecticut; has served twice as burgess of Norwalk, twice as chairman
of the board of school visitors; was the Fourth district delegate to the national
Republican convention of 1884; was a member of the Connecticut senate for 1886-87;
served one term on the Republican State central committee; was elected to the
Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 26,484 votes, against
18,969 for H. P. Beers, Democrat, 482 for H. G. Manchester, Prohibitionist, 481 for
C. F. Perch, Socialist, and 39 for Custee, Socialist Labor. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
DELAWARE.
SENATORS.
HENRY ALGERNON du PONT, Republican, of Winterthur, was born at the
Eleutherean Mills, Newcastle County, Del., July 30, 1838; was educated at private
schools; entered the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia in 1855, where he
spent a year in the sophomore and junior classes, leaving the university to enter the
United States Military Academy on July 1, 1856. He graduated at the head of his
class May 6, 1861; was commissioned second lieutenant, Corps of Engineers, May
6, 1861; first lieutenant, Fifth Regiment U. S. Artillery, May 14, 1861; served in the
defenses of Washington, D. C., on duty with Company D, Fifth Pennsylvania Vol-
unteers, May 8 to July 1, 1861, and with his own regiment at Harrisburg, Pa., July 2,
1861, to” April 18, 1862, and at Fort Hamilton, N. Y., April 19, 1862, to July 4,
1863; acting assistant adjutant-general April, 1862, to July, 1863, of troops in
New York Harbor; adjutant Fifth U. S. Artillery July 6, 1861, until his promotion as
captain, and in command of Light Battery B, Fifth U. S. Artillery, from its organization,
© in 1862; on detached service from regimental headquarters with battery from July 5,
1863, to March 24, 1864, in the field in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and West
Virginia; captain, Fifth U. S. Artillery, March 24, 1864, and in command of Light
Battery B of that regiment during Siegel’s campaign in the valley of Virginia, par-
ticipating in the battle of Newmarket, May 15, 1864; was chief of artillery, Depart-
ment of West Virginia, from May 24 to July 28, 1864, and commanded the artillery
during Hunter's Lynchburg campaign at the battle of Piedmont, June 5, engagement
at Lexington, June 11, affair near Lynchburg, June 17, battle of I,ynchburg, June 18,
and affairs at Liberty, June 19, and Masons Creek, June 21, 1864; chief of artillery,
Army of West Virginia, July 28, 1864, and served in Sheridan’s campaign in the valley
of Virginia, commanding artillery brigade of Crook’s corps, taking part in affairs with
the enemy at Cedar Creek, August 12, and Halltown, August 23, 25, and 27, action at
Berryville, September 3, battle of Winchester (Opequan), September 19, battle of
Fishers Hill, September 22, affair at Cedar Creek, October 13, and battle of Cedar
Creek, October 19, 1864; chief of artillery, Department of West Virginia, January 1,
1864, until the close of the war; in command of Light Battery B, Fifth U. S. Artil-
lery, Cumberland, Md., July 20 to October 20, 1865, of a battalion of Fifth U. S.
Artillery at camp near Hampton, Va., October 21 to 30, 1865, of the post of Fort
Monroe, Va., October 31 to December 15, 1865, and of Battery B, Fifth U. S. Artil-
lery, December 15, 1865, to October 27, 1866; transferred to Light Battery FE,
Fifth U. S. Artillery, and in command at Camp Williams, near Richmond, Va.,
October 28, 1866, until June 7, 1867, when he was ordered to the temporary com-
mand of Fort Monroe, Va., rejoining his battery July 17, 1867, and receiving the
thanks of Major-General Schofield, commanding the First Military District, for
‘his efficient services at Fortress Monroe; commanding the post of Camp
Williams and Light Battery F, Fifth U. S. Artillery, from July 15, 1867, to October I,
1868; in command of Sedgwick Barracks, Washington, D. C., and of Light Battery
F, Fifth U. S. Artillery, October 7, 1868, until July 3, 1870; served at Fort Adams,
Newport, R. I., in command of Light Battery F, Fifth U. S. Artillery, July 5, 1870, to
January 16, 1873, and of the post from July 28 to September 13, 1870, and July 15,
1871, to May 17, 1872. Was made brevet major, U. S. Army, September 19, 1864, for *‘ gallant and meritorious conduct at the battles of Opequan and Fishers Hill,
Va.;”’ brevet lieutenant-colonel, U. S. Army, October 19, 1864, for * distinguished
services at the battle of Cedar Creek,” and awarded a Congressional medal of
66525—60-2—2D ED——3
14 Congressional Directory. [DELAWARE.
honor for ‘‘most distinguished gallantry and voluntary exposure to the enemy’s
fire at a critical moment’’ during this battle. He resigned from the Army March 1,
1875, and was president and general manager of the Wilmington and North-
ern Railroad Company from 1879 to 1899; retired from active business a number of
years ago and has been chiefly occupied since then in agricultural pursuits. He was
elected United States Senator by the legislature June 13, 1906, to serve the unexpired
portion of the term beginning March 4, 1905, receiving 28 votes, to 1 for John
Edward Addicks, and 18 for ‘Blank,’ cast by Democrats. He took his seat Decem-
ber 3, 1906, and his term of service will expire March 3, 1911.
HARRY ALDEN RICHARDSON, Republican, of Dover, was born in Camden,
Del., January 1, 1853. At the age of 3 years his parents moved to Dover, where
in the early part of ais life he attended the schools of that town; later he attended
school at East Greenwich, R. I. At the age of 16 years he returned to Dover,
where he was given the choice by his father of preparing for a profession or of enter-
ing into business. He chose the latter, and at once proceeded to learn the trade of
canner and packer, going into his father’s establishment at Dover, and working his
way up from the lowest position. Upon the death of the junior member of the
firm, James W. Robbins, in 1876, he was taken into partnership by his father, the
name of the firm, however, remaining unchanged at the request of Mr. Robbins.
After the death of his father, in 1894, Mr. Richardson assumed entire control of the
canning establishment, which he, with his sons, Alden B. and William W., has since
managed. In 18go he was nominated by the Republicans for the office of governor,
but at that time the State was strongly Democratic and he was defeated. Since 1890
he has taken no active part in politics, though he has been voted for at each session
of the legislature since 1895 for United States Senator. He was elected to the United
States Senate in January, 1907, and his term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVE.
AT LARGE.
Population (1900), 184,735.
HIRAM RODNEY BURTON, Republican, of Lewes, was born in Lewes, Sussex
County, Del., November 13, 1841; was educated in the schools of his native town;
taught for two years in the schools of Sussex County; in 1862 went to Washington,
D. C., and was engaged in the dry goods business until 1865; entered the medical
department of the University of Pennsylvania in 1865, from which institution he
was graduated in 1868, and has since been engaged in the practice of his profession
in his native town and county; was married in 1877 to Margaret V. Rawlins, who
died in 1897; has one daughter grown; has, since 1870, taken an active interest in
the politics of his native State; has always been prominent in promoting public
utilities, and has ever taken an active part, looking to the advancement of public
interests; was appointed deputy collector of customs for the port of Lewes in 1877;
was acting assistant surgeon, United States Marine-Hospital Service, during the
years from 18go to 1893, stationed at Lewes; was delegate to the Republican national
conventions of 1896 and 1900; was nominated for State senator from the fifth dis-
trict, Sussex County, in 1898; has been a director in the Queen Anne’s Railroad
since its construction; is a director in the Lewes National Bank; was elected to the
Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,210 votes,
to 17,118 for D. T. Marvel, Democrat, 767 for Alfred Smith, Prohibitionist, and 149
for F. A. Houck, Socialist.
FLORIDA.
SENATORS.
JAMES PIPER TALIAFERRO, Democrat, of Jacksonville, was born at Orange,
Va., September 30, 1847. He was educated in Virginia, leaving the school of William
Dinwiddie, at Greenwood, in 1864, to volunteer in the Confederate army, in which he
served until the war ended; returned to his home after the war and resumed his
studies, removing later to Jacksonville, Fla., where he engaged in business; was
elected April 19, 1899, on tlie first joint ballot of the Florida legislature to the United
States Senate, and reelected in 1905. His term will expire March 3, 1911.
WILLIAM HALIL MILTON, Democrat, of Marianna, was born on a farm in
Jackson County, Fla., March 2, 1864, and educated in the public schools of Jackson
County and at Agricultural and Mechanical College, Auburn, Ala.; was city clerk of
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Marianna, 1885-1893; served in the legislature of Florida, 1889; was admitted to the
bar in 18go and to the bar of the United States court in 1897; was Presidential elector
in 1892; was appointed United States surveyor-general of Florida by President Cleve-
land 1894; was elected mayor of Marianna 1898-99; president of board of managers
State Reform School at Marianna, 1897-1908; vice-president of Society of the Cincin-
natus of the State of Georgia; is interested in farming, banking, real estate, fire and
life insurance; married Miss Sarah S. Baker, of Marianna (granddaughter of James
L. G. Baker, member of the Florida secession convention ), November, 1893, and they
have five children; was appointed United States Senator by Governor Broward,
March 27, 1908, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon, William James Bryan,
and took his seat April 6, 1908.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTIies.—Citrus, De Soto, Hernando, Hillsboro, Lafayette, Lake, Lee, Levy, Manatee, Marion,
Monroe, Pasco, Polk, Sumter, and Taylor (15 counties).
Population (1905), 193,415.
STEPHEN M. SPARKMAN, Democrat, of Tampa, lawyer by profession, was born
in Hernando County, Fla., July 29, 1849; raised on a farm, which he followed until
his eighteenth year; educated in the common schools of southern Florida; read law
under Governor Henry IL. Mitchell, and admitted to practice in 1872; was State’s
attorney for the sixth judicial circuit from 1878 to 1887; member of the Democratic
Congressional executive committee for the first district from 1890 to 1894, being
chairman for the first two years; member and chairman of the State Democratic
executive committee from 1892 to 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth,
Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 6,212 votes, to 967 for C. C. Allen, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Brevard, Clay, Columbia, Dade, Duval, Hamilton, Nassau,
Orange, Osceola, Putnam, St. Johns, St. Lucie, Suwanee, and Volusia (17 counties).
Population (1905), 231,818.
FRANK CLARK, Democrat, of Gainesville, was born at Eufaula, Ala., March 28,
1860; was educated in the common schools of Alabama and Georgia; raised on a
farm; studied law, and was admitted to the practice of that profession at Fairburn,
Ga., August 3, 1881, and has since continuously been in the practice. In January,
1884, Mr. Clark moved to Florida and located at Bartow; he has served three terms
in the legislature of Florida; was assistant United States attorney and United States
attorney for the southern judicial district of Florida; in 19oo was chosen as chair-
man of the Democratic State committee; married Miss Mary Ellen Mayo, of Polk
County, Fla., in October, 1884; has four children, two sons and two daughters;
is a member of the Baptist Church, a Knight of Pythias, and an Elk; was elected to
the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 8,792
votes, to 1,179 for J. F. McClellan, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
Countries. —Calhoun, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Ieon, Liberty,
Madison, Santa Rosa, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington (14 counties).
Population (1905), 187,308.
WILLIAM BAILEY LAMAR, Democrat, of Monticello, was born in Jefferson
County, Fla., June 12, 1853; his father was Thompson B. Lamar, colonel of the Fifth
Florida Regiment, who was killed at Petersburg, Va., in July, 1864, at the head of
his regiment; his mother’s maiden name was Sarah Bellamy Bailey, of Jefferson County, Fla., and she lives now in Monticello, Fla.; resided in Athens, Ga., from 1366 to 1873; was educated at the Jefferson Academy, Monticello, Fla., and at the
University of Georgia at Athens; removed to Florida in October, 1873; graduated in
law in 1875 from the Lebanon Law School, Lebanon, Tenn.; resided in Tupelo, Miss. , for a short time as junior partner in law of Hon. (Private) John M. Allen;
was admitted to practice law in the courts of Florida in 1876; is a member of the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States; was elected clerk of the circuit court of Jefferson County, Fla., January, 1877, and served four years; was county
16 Congressional Directory. [FLORIDA
judge of said county, 1883 to 1886; was elected, in 1886, a member of the house of
representatives of the Florida legislature and chosen speaker (after the election of
the Hon. Samuel Pasco, the then speaker, to the United States Senate), but declined
the honor; was elected attorney-general of Florida in 1888, and reelected in the
years 1892, 1896, 1900, for the period of four years each; was married June 28, 1904,
at Atlanta, Ga., to Mrs. Ethel Toy Healey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Boyté
Toy, of that city; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 5,415 votes, to 384 for T. B. Meeker,
Socialist.
GEORGIA.
SENATORS.
AUGUSTUS OCTAVIUS BACON, Democrat, of Macon, was born in Bryan County;
Ga., October 20, 1839; received a high school education in Liberty and Troup counties;
graduated at the University of Georgia, in the literary and classical department in
1859, and in the law department in 1860; entered the Confederate army at the
beginning of the war and served during the campaigns of 1861 and 1862 as adjutant
of the Ninth Georgia Regiment in the Army of Northern Virginia; subsequently
thereto was commissioned as captain in the Provisional army of the Confederate
States and assigned to general staff duty; at the close of the war resumed the study
of law, and began practice in 1866 at Macon, from which date until his election to
the Senate he actively continued the same both in the State and Federal courts,
was frequently a member of State Democratic conventions; was president of the
State Democratic convention in 1880, and was delegate from the State at large to
the national Democratic convention in Chicago in 1884; in 1868 he was elected
Presidential elector (Seymour and Blair) on the Democratic ticket; in 1871 was
elected to the Georgia house of representatives, of which body he served as a
member for fourteen years; in this time, during two years he was the speaker pro
tempore, and during eight years he was the speaker of the Georgia house of repre-
sentatives; was several times a candidate for the Democratic nomination for gov-
ernor of Georgia, and in the Democratic State convention of 1883 he came within
one vote of a nomination for governor, when the nomination was equivalent to an
election. He is and for many years has been a trustee of the University of Georgia;
is also one of the Regents of the Smithsonian Institution, appointed from the Sen-
ate. He was elected to the United States Senate in November, 1894; reelected in
1900, and again in 1907, having been, by a general State primary, unanimously renomi-
nated. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. :
ALEXANDER STEPHENS CLAY, Democrat, of Marietta, Cobb County, Ga., was
born September 25, 1853, ona farm in Cobb County; received his primary and prepara-
tory education in the country schools and the high school at Palmetto, Ga.; graduated
from Hiawassee College in 1875; taught school for two years; studied law under Judge
David Irwin, of Marietta, and was admitted to the bar in September, 1877, and has
been engaged actively in the practice of law since; was elected a member of the city
council in 1880 and reelected in 1881; in 1884-85 and 1886-87 represented Cobb County
in the general assembly of the-State; in the latter term was elected speaker pro tem-
pore; was reelected for 1889-go, and served as speaker for two years; in 1892 was
elected to the State senate, and served as president of that body for two years; in
1894 was elected chairman of the State Democratic executive committee, and con-
ducted the State campaign between the Democrats and Populists that year; was
reelected to the same position in 1896, and still occupies the place; was elected to the
United States Senate, to succeed John B. Gordon, in October, 1896, for the term
beginning March 4, 1897. Reelected in 1903. His term of service will expire March
3, 1909.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Bryan, Bulloch, Burke, Chatham, Bingham Emanuel, Jenkins, Liberty, McIntosh,
Screven, Tattnall, and Toombs (12 counties).
Population (1900), 217,817.
CHARLES GORDON EDWARDS, Democrat, of Savannah, was born in Tattnall
County, Ga., July 2, 1878, the son of Hon. and Mrs. Thomas J. Edwards, of Daisy, Ga.;
is the fifth of seven sons, all of whom are grown and prosperous in business; educated
in the county schools, Gordon Institute, Barnesville, Ga., Agricultural College, Lake
City, Fla., and the University of Georgia, graduating B. L. from the latter June,
pa ————
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GEORGIA] Biographical. 17
1898; has since practiced his profession at Reidsville and Savannah; is also engaged
in naval stores, farming, and banking; was a member of the Georgia State Militia
until compelled to retire because of ill health, serving as private, corporal, and ser-
geant of the Savannah Volunteer Guard, and lieutenant of the Oglethorpe Light
Infantry; married Miss Ora Beach, daughter of the late Hon. and Mrs. W. W. Beach,
of Way Cross, Ga., December 17, 1902. In 1900 Mr. Edwards was nominated for the
State legislature by the Democrats and indorsed by the Populists of Tattnall County,
Ga., but not desiring to engage in politics he declined the nomination and moved to
Savannah; October 11, 1906, was nominated by the Democrats, and November 6
elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 4,928 votes, to 337 for B. D. Riggdon,
Republican, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Baker, Berrien, Calhoun, Clay, Colquitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Early, Grady, Miller,
Mitchell, Quitman, Randolph, Terrell, Tift, Thomas, Turner, and Worth (18 counties).
Population (1900), 226,980.
JAMES MATHEWS GRIGGS, Democrat, of Dawson, was born at Lagrange, Ga.,
on March 29, 1861; was educated in the common schools of Georgia and at the Pea-
body Normal College, at Nashville, Tenn., from which institution he was graduated
in May, 1881; after graduation taught school and studied law; was admitted to the
bar in 1883, and commenced the practice of law in 1884 at Alapaha, Berrien County,
Ga.; was for a short while engaged in the newspaper business; removed to Dawson
in 1885; was elected solicitor-general (prosecuting attorney) of the Pataula judicial
circuit in 1888, and was reelected in 1892; in 1893 resigned; was appointed judge of
the same circuit, and was twice reelected without opposition; resigned this office in
1896 to make the race for Congress; was a delegate to the Democratic national
convention of 1892; was chairman of the Democratic Congressional campaign com-
mittee in 1904 and 1906; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving every vote cast in the district for the office of Representative. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress. j
THIRD DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Ben Hill, Crawford, Crisp, Dooly, Houston, I,ee, Macon, Pulaski, Schley, Stewart,
Sumter, Taylor, Twiggs, Webster, and Wilcox (15 counties).
Population (1900), 186,346.
ELIJAH BANKS LEWIS, Democrat, of Montezuma, was born in Dooly County,
Ga., March 27, 1854; removed to Montezuma, his present home, at the age of 17 years;
was educated in the common schools of Dooly and Macon counties; has had a busi
ness training, his father making him his partner in the banking and mercantile
business before his maturity, and is still in the banking and mercantile business;
always took an active interest in politics, working for his friends and political party,
but never accepted any office until 1894, when he was elected to the State senate for
the years 1894-95; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-
eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress without
opposition, receiving 2,386 votes.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTiES.—Carroll, Chattahoochee, Coweta, Harris, Heard, Marion, Meriwether, Muscogee, T'albot,
and Troup (10 counties). :
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 1885 to 1889,
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 2,705
votes. At the Democratic primary, in which the real contest occurs, and which
is, therefore, the only election in which the people take much interest, Mr. Adam-
son received about 15,000 votes, there being no opposition at either nomination or
election, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
18 Congressional Directory. [GEORGIA.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
Counties.—Campbell, Clayton, Dekalb, Douglas, Fulton, Newton, Rockdale, and Walton (8
counties).
Population (1909), 211,527.
LEONIDAS 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,
Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 3,030 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses; was unanimously renominated for the Sixtieth Congress August 23, 1906,
at the Democratic primary receiving 12,765 votes, being all that were cast; at the
election was elected unanimously, there being no opposing candidate and no votes
cast for any other person. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding,
Polk, Walker, and Whitfield (13 counties).
Population (1900), 197,612.
GORDON LEE, Democrat, of Chickamauga, was born May 29, 1859, on a farm
near Ringgold, Catoosa County, Ga.; received his primary education in the coun-
try schools; graduated from Emery College, Oxford, Ga., in 1880; is a farmer and
manufacturer; served as member of the house of representatives of the State legis-
lature in 1894 and 1895, and in the senate in 1902, 1903, and 1904; was appointed by
Governor Atkinson as member of the State memorial board; was elected to the Fifty-
ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress without opposition, receiving
3,132 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
Counrties.—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, and graduated from the
University of"Georgia; began practice of law February, 1830; elected solicitor-general
of the northern circuit of Georgia by the State legislature in 1884; reelected to that
CE
—
a
ANTS
EE
I
Si
GEORGIA.] Biographical. 19
office in 1888 and in 1892; is a member of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian
Institution; elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and
Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, without opposition
from any party, receiving 4,576 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CoUuNTIES.—Banks, Cherokee, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Gilmer, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Jack-
son, Lumpkin, Milton, Pickens, Rabun, Stephens, Towns, Union, and White (18 counties).
Population (1900), 196,435.
THOMAS MONTGOMERY BELI, Democrat, of Gainesville, was born in
Nachoochee Valley, White County, Ga., March 17, 1861; was educated in the com-
mon schools of the country and the Southern Business College, Atlanta, Ga.; was
connected for many years with some of the largest wholesale business houses in
Atlanta, Ga., and Baltimore, Md.; was elected clerk of the superior court of Hall
County in 1898, and reelected in 1900 and 1902 without opposition; was elected to
the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress without opposition,
receiving 3,159 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Columbia, Glascock, Jefferson, Hancock, Lincoln, McDuffie, Richmond, Taliaferro,
Warren, Washington, and Wilkinson (11 counties).
Population (1900), 181,395.
THOMAS WILLIAM HARDWICK, Democrat, of Sandersville; born December
9, 1872; served two terms in Georgia legislature; was elected to the Fifty-eighth
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 1,743
votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Appling, Brooks, Camden, Charlton, Clinch, Coffee, Dodge, Echols, Glynn, Irwin,
Jeff Davis, Johnson, Laurens, Lowndes, Montgomery, Pierce, Telfair, Ware, and Wayne (19
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,
Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Six-
tieth Congress, receiving 2,748 votes, being all the votes that were cast. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress,
IDAHO.
SENATORS.
WELDON BRINTON HEVYBURN, Republican, of Wallace, was born in Dela-
ware County, Pa., May 23, 1852; his parents were Quakers, of English descent;
received an academic education; was admitted to the bar in 1876, and has practiced
law continuously since that time. In the winter of 1883-84 he moved to Shoshone
County, Idaho, and has resided there ever since. He was a member of the conven-
tion which framed the constitution of the State of Idaho, and was chairman of the
judiciary committee in that body. 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 cam-
paign 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 January 13, 1903, receiving the entire Republican vote of
the legislature, to succeed Henry Heitfeld, Democrat, for the term beginning March
4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909.
20. Congressional Directory. [IDAHO.
WILLIAM EDGAR BORAH, Republican of Boise, born June 29, 1865, in Wayne
County, Ill.; was educated in the common schools of Wayne County, at the South-
ern Illinois Academy, Enfield, Ill., and at the Kansas State University, Lawrence;
was admitted to practice law September, 1890, at Lyons, Kans., and devoted his entire
time since exclusively to practice of the law until elected to the United States Senate
January 15, 1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
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 1901 with the degree of A. B., and was fellow in the Univer-
sity of Chicago in 19o1 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 elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 42,134 votes, to 23,818 for M. R. Hattabaugh,
Democrat, 4,834 for E. L,. Riggs, Socialist, and 1,129 for C. A. Montandon, Prohibi-
tionist,
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, 1900,
and again in 1906; 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, 1913.
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
Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-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,
for the term beginning 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 B. MADDEN, Republican, of Chicago, was born March 20, 1855; edu-
cated in the public schools and business colleges; was member of the Chicago city
council from 1889 to 1897; presiding officer of that body from 1891 to 1893, and chair-
ILLINOIS.] Biographical. 21
man of the finance committee from 1892 to 1897; was chairman of the Republican
State convention in 1896, and delegate to the national conventions of 1896 and 1900;
is president of the Western Stone Company of Chicago and a director of the Metro-
politan Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 17,015 votes, to 10,015 for Martin
Emerich, Democrat, 251 for Amasa Orelup, Prohibitionist, and 1,402 for J. H. Greer,
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
City oF CHICcAGO.—Seventh, Kighth, 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 chairman of the Republican county convention in Chicago
in 1895, and again in 1902; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 20,660 votes, to 8,565 for H. J. Friedman, Democrat, 3,032 for Bernard
Berlyn, Socialist, and 315 for P. J. Peterson, Independent. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
Cook CountTy.—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,
1868, at Ohio, Bureau County, Ill.; had a literary, commercial, and legal education,
receiving the degrees of LI. B. and L. B.; is a lawyer by profession, admitted to the
bar in 1893; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 14,130 votes, to 6,569 for P. A. Dratz, Democrat,
530 for I,. F. Regan, Prohibitionist, 2,457 for J. A. Prout, Socialist, and 4,775 for
W. C. Stone, Independence League. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
City or CHICcAGO.—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. >
JAMES THOMAS McDERMOTT, Democrat, of Chicago, was born at Grand
Rapids, Mich., February 13, 1872, and there attended St. Andrews Cathedral; in 1884
with his family moved to Detroit, Mich., where he learned telegraphy with the
Western Union Telegraph Company. He held this position until 1889, when he moved
to Chicago, and there, till 1893, followed his vocation without attaching himself per-
manently to any company; he then engaged with the firm of Nelson Morris & Co.,in
their telegraph department; in March, 1905, he also engaged in the cigar business,
in which he still continues, but remained in the employ of Nelson Morris & Co. until
March, 1906; married Nellie Fleming, a daughter of an ex-judge of the town of
Lake; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 9,597 votes, to 8,377 for C. S.
Wharton, Republican, 192 for J. R. Clegg, Prohibitionist, and 2,859 for J. McCarthy,
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
City oF CHICAGO.—Ninth and Tenth wards; part of the Eleventh and Twelfth wards north of
Twenty-second street.
Population (1900), 212,973.
ADOLPH J. SABATH, Democrat, of Chicago, was born April 4, 1866, in Bohemia;
there attended grammar and high school; emigrated to the United States in 1881,
locating at Chicago, Ill.; attended Bryant & Stratton’s Business College; studied
law at the Chicago College of Law, graduated in 1891, and admitted to practice in
22 Congressional Directory. [IL INOLS.
the same year; received the degree of LI. B. from Take Forest University in 1892;
was engaged in the practice of law until 1895; appointed by the governor of Illinois
justice of the peace for the city of Chicago; police magistrate from 1897 to 1907;
member of the central and executive committees of the Democratic party; delegate
to the Democratic national convention at St. Louis in 1904; was nominated for
municipal judge (six-year term), also for Congress; declined the former and accepted
the latter, and was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 9,545 votes, to 8,634
for A. M. Michalek, Republican, 2,373 for J. Kral, Socialist, and 177 for H. Graff,
Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
Cook Countvy.— Towns of Cicero, Lyons, 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, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,153 votes, to
10,734 for E. J. Stack, Democrat, 2,082 for W. F. Huggins, Socialist, and 1,794 for
E. E. Blake, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
Cook County.—Towns of Barrington, Elkgrove, Hanover, Leyden, Maine, Norwood Park, Pala-
tine, Schaumberg, and Wheeling.
City or CHICAGOo.—Fourteenth, Twenty-seventh, and T'wenty-eighth wards; and that part of the
Fifteenth Ward 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; 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; was married to
Miss Carrie Fehlman, of Lake County, I1l., December 23, 1880; was elected to the
Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 18,595 votes, to 11,383 for Frank Buchanan, Democrat, 5,587 for George
Koop, Socialist, and 714 for E. H. Parkinson, 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.
CHARLES McGAVIN, Republican, of Chicago, was born in Riverton, Sanga-
mon County, Ill., January 10, 1874; admitted to the bar in 1897; became assistant
city attorney of Chicago in 1903; elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 11,421 votes, to 11,336 for S. H. Kunz, Democrat,
3,128 for Abraham Priess, Independent Labor, and 2,664 for J. B. Smiley, Socialist.
NINTH DISTRICT.
City OF CHICAGO.—T'wenty-first and T'wenty-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. (A. B.),in 1874 (A. M., 1879), and from Harvard University
(A.B.) in 1876; received the degree of A. M. from Harvard (constitutional history
and international law) in 1877; is a trustee of the Northwestern University; was
ILIINOIS.] Biographical. 23
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 LI. D. from the Northwestern University, June, 1904; is a
director of the American Institute 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,
Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 15,316 votes, to 8,504 for A. J. Donoghue, Democrat, 3,607 for
J. M. Vail, Independent Labor, 2,592 for C. I,. Breckon, Socialist, and 247 for W. A.
Aldrich, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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 elected
to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,886 votes, to 7,598 for C. I.
Young, Democrat, 2,777 for IL. W. Hardy, Socialist, and 862 for M. C. Harper,
Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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 and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,569 votes, to
9,104 for B. P. Alschuler, Democrat, 2,201 for George McGinnis, Prohibitionist, and
730 for J. H. Brower, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Boone, Dekalb, Grundy, Kendall, Lasalle, and Winnebago (6 counties).
Population (1900), 218,771.
CHARLES E. FULLER, Republican, of Belvidere, was born near Belvidere, I11.:
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; 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;
was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Six-
tieth Congress, receiving 19,463 votes, to 1,712 for V. I. Clark, Prohibitionist, and
1,224 for A. A. Patterson, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.
Counrties.—Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, and Whiteside (6 counties).
FRANK ORREN LOWDEN, Republican, of Oregon, was born January 26, 1861,
at Sunrise City, Minn.; was educated in the public schools of Towa and at the Iowa
State University, graduating from that institution with the degree of A. B. in June,
24 Congressional Directory. ILLINOIS,
1885; in 1887, was graduated from the Union College of Law, Chicago, with the degree
of LL.B.; is a farmer; married Miss Florence Pullman, of Chicago, April 29, 1895;
became a member of the national Republican committee from Illinois in 1904, and
was a member of the Executive Committee during the campaign of that year,
assigned to western headquarters at Chicago; was elected November 6, 1906, to fill
the vacancy in the Fifty-ninth Congress caused by the death of Hon. R. R. Hitt, and
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,590 votes to 14,747 for J. P. Wilson, Democrat,
794 for C. I. Logan, Prohibitionist, and 271 for E. I. Rubendall, Socialist-I,abor.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, Rock Island, and Warren (6 counties).
Population (1900), 170,820.
JAMES McKINNEY, Republican, of Aledo, was born at Oquawka, Ill., April 14,
1852, the son of John McKinney, one of the earliest settlers of western Illinois; was
educated in the public schools and Monmouth College, graduating from the latter in’
1874, and receiving the degree of A. M. several years later. Upon leaving college
he joined his father in business, and upon the death of the latter was elected presi- .
dent of the Aledo bank; is married. In 1894 Mr. McKinney became a member of
the Republican State committee, serving twelve years, until 1906; in 1900 he was
chairman of the executive committee of that body, and in the campaign of 1904
was a member of the managing committee, having direct charge of the Presidential
campaign in Illinois; was appointed by Governor Yates in 1901 a member of the States
railroad and warehouse commission, but resigned in 1902; has been president of the
Aledo board of education; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress at a special elec-
tion held November 7, 1905, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. B. F.
Marsh, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress by a plurality of 5,605, receiving
18,583 votes, to 12,978 for D. W. Matthews, Democrat, 1,236 for J. M. Elam, Pro-
hibitionist, 1,056 for J. C. Gibson, Socialist, and 149 for A. H. Mertz, Independent
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—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 tae public schools and graduated from Knox College,
Galesburg, I11., 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,975 votes, to 14,191
for H. N. Wheeler, Democrat, 1,680 for P. V. Meigs, Prohibitionist, and 1,020 for
Sam Jessup, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Bureau, Marshall, Peoria, Putnam, Stark, and Tazewell (6 counties).
Population (1900), 194,243.
JOSEPH V. GRAFF, Republican, of Peoria, Peoria County, was born at Terre
Haute, Ind., July 1, 1854; graduated at the Terre Haute High School; also attended
Wabash College, at Crawfordsville, Ind., one year, but never completed a colle-
giate course; studied law and was admitted to the bar while living at Delavan, I11.,
in 1879; was a delegate to the Republican national convention at Minneapolis in
1892; had never before held a public office, except president of the board of educa-
tion, 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 tc the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth and
Fifty-ninch Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,983 votes,
to 13,876 for 1. F. Meek, Democrat, 1,966 for C. E. Stebbins, Prohibitionist, and 918
for Rudolf Pfeiffer, Socialist, Reelected to the Sixty.first Congress,
ILLINOIS. Biographical. 25
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Ford, Livingston, I,ogan, 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 and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress by a plurality of 5,427, receiving
16,804 votes, to 11,377 for I,. W. MacNeil, Democrat, and 1,927 for J. H. Burrows,
Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTties.—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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,804 votes, to 12,777 for C. G. Taylor,
Democrat, 1,897 for E. G. Shouse, Prohibitionist, and 1,551 for J. H. Walker, Socialist.
Mr. Cannon was elected Speaker in the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Con-
gresses, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NINETEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTies.—Champaign, Coles, Dewitt, Douglas, Macon, Moultrie, Piatt, and Shelby (8 counties).
Population (1900), 228,896.
WILLIAM BROWN McKINLEY, Republican, of Champaign, was born Septem-
ber 5, 1856, in Petersburg, I1l.; was educated in the common schools and spent two
years in the University of Illinois; is a farmer and banker; trustee of the University
of Illinois; is married; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 23,662 votes, to 19,247 for J. W. Yantis, Democrat, and
1,965 for J. I. Thompson, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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 August 20, 1860, at Car-
rollton, Ill., and has resided in the place of his birth all his life. He graduated from
Amherst College, Massachusetts, in 1883 with the degree of A. B.; three years later
this institution conferred upon him the degree of A. M. He graduated from Union
College of Law, Chicago, in 1885, receiving the degree of B. I,. Soon afterwards
he was admitted to the bar. Since that time he has practiced law at Carrollton,
Ill. He belongs to the Knights of Pythias, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows,
the Modern Woodmen, and the Flks. He was married on the 27th day of June,
1888, to Miss Ella McBride, of Harvard, Nebr. He was elected to the Fifty-eighth
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,578
votes, to 14,645 for J. G. Pope, Republican, 1,119 for J. J. Dugan, Prohibitionist, and
297 for T. A. Wakely, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
26 Congressional Directory. ULLINOIS.
TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Christian, Macoupin, Montgomery, and Sangamon (4 counties).
Population (1900), 177,475.
BEN FRANKLIN CALDWELI, Democrat, of Chatham, was born on a farm near
Carrollton, Greene County, Ill., August 2, 1848; moved with his parents in April,
1853, to near Chatham, in Sangamon County, Ill., where he now resides; had 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 g 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 Con-
gress, in 1898, he resigned the presidency of the Farmers’ National Bank of Spring-
field, which he had held since 1885; is president of the Caldwell State Bank of Chat-
ham and has been since its organization; was elected from the Seventeenth Illinois
district to the Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and reelected in 1902 from
the Twenty-first Illinois district to the Fifty-eighth Congress; was defeated for the
Fifty-ninth Congress, and elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,429 votes,
to 17,396 for Z. J. Rives, Republican, 1,346 for S. K. Wheatlake, Prohibitionist, and
~ 726 for John Popinghaus, Socialist.
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. Touis; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress; was appointed a
member of the United States Civil Service Commission by President McKinley,
March 25, 1901; resigned April 1, 1902, in order to again make the race for Congress,
was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 23,138 votes, to 15,371 for J. J. McInerney, Democrat,
1,228 for S. D. McKenny, Prohibitionist, and 1,448 for T. H. Arey, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Clinton, Crawford, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Jefferson, Lawrence, Marion, Rich-
land, and Wabash (10 counties).
Population (1900), 211,83¢.
MARTIN D. FOSTER, Democrat, of Olney, was born on a farm near West Salem,
Edwards County, Ill., September 3, 1861. He attended the public schools in the
winter and worked on the farm in the summer, and later attended Fureka College
at Eureka, Ill.; began the study of medicine in the Eclectic Medical Institute at
Cincinnati, Ohio, graduating in 1882, also graduating from the Hahnemann Medical
College at Chicago, Ill., in 1894, and began the practice of medicine in Olney, Ill. in
1882; was member of the Board of United States Examining Surgeons from 1885 to
1889, and from 1893 to 1897. He was elected mayor of Oluey in 1895 and again in
1902. He is married; is a member of the Knights Templar, Knights of Pythias,
Modern Woodmen, and the Elks. Mr. Foster was a member of Colonel Knoph’s
regiment, raised for service in the Spanish-American war, and was elected surgeon
of the regiment and commissioned by Governor Tanner, but the regiment was never
called into service. He was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,680 votes,
to 20,361 for F. S. Dickson, Republican, 1,384 for G. B. Murray, Prohibitionist, and
378 for F, M. Riley, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Clay, Fdwards, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Johnson, Massac, Pope, Saline, Wayne,
and White (11 counties).
Population (1900), 190,438.
PLEASANT THOMAS CHAPMAN, Republican, of Vienna, was born on a farm
in Johnson County, Ill., October 8, 1854; attended the public schools until 17
years of age, when he went to McKendree College at I.ebanon, Ill., graduating in
ILI, INOIS.] Biographical. 27
June, 1876, with the degree of bachelor of arts; is a lawyer, and also actively engaged
in the banking business and farming; was admitted to the bar at Mount Vernon, Ill.,
June, 1878; was elected superintendent of public schools in Johnson County in 1877,
and served five years; was elected county judge in 1882, and reelected in 1886; was
elected State senator from the fifty-first senatorial district in 1890, and reelected in
1894 and in 1898; is married, and has a wife and three children; was elected to the
Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,020 votes,
to 16,241 for J. R. Williams, Democrat, and 952 for G. R. Leach, Prohibitionist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.
CounTiESs.—Alexander, Franklin, Jackson, Perry, Pulaski, Randolph, Union, and Williamson
(8 counties).
Population (1900), 185,721.
NAPOLEON B. THISTLEWOOD, Republican, of Cairo, was born in Kent
County, Del., March 30, 1837; was raised on a farm and educated in the public
schools of that State; moved to Illinois in 1858; enlisted in the Union Army in
1862, and carried a musket for more than two years; was commissioned by Governor
Richard Yates September 24, 1864, as captain of Company C, Ninety-eighth Illinois
Infantry; served in the Army of the Cumberland, in Wilder’s brigade; was engaged
in the battles of Stone River, Tullahoma, Chickamauga, Farmington, Tenn., Mis-
sion Ridge, and the Atlanta campaign; served with Wilson’s cavalry corps and was
wounded at Selma, Ala., April 2, 1865; was mayor of Cairo from 1879 to 1883, and
again from 1897 to Igor; was married in 1866 at Mason, Ill.; was elected to the
Sixtieth Congress to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. George W.
Smith, receiving 12,263 votes, to 8,620 for William H. Warder, Democrat, 3,897 for
Samuel T. Brush, Independent-Republican-Prohibitionist, and 1,124 for Daniel
Boone, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
INDIANA.
SENATORS.
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 admitted to the bar in 1886, and continually devoted him-
self to his profession until his election to the United States Senate in 1899, when
he ceased practice; was reelected in 1go5 by the unanimous choice of his party.
His term of service will expire March 3, 1911.
JAMES ALEXANDER HEMENWAY, Republican, of Boonville, was born
March 8, 1860, at Boonville, Ind., and, with the exception of a few years, has con-
tinued 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 committee from the First district; was elected to the Fifty-fourth,
Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses,
resigning from the latter before taking his seat in the House of Representatives; was
elected to the United States Senate January 18, 1905, to succeed Hon. C. W. Fair-
banks, chosen Vice-President on the ticket with Theodore Roosevelt, and took his
seat March 6, 1905. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Gibson, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburg, and Warrick (6 counties).
Population (1900), 189,423.
JOHN HOPKINS FOSTER, Republican, of Evansville, was born January 31,
1862, at Evansville, and has always resided there; was educated in the common
schools; is a graduate of Indiana University, class of 1882, and of the law depart-
ment of Columbian, now George Washington, University, of Washington, D. C.,
class of 1884; began the practice of law in 1885; was elected to the house of repre-
sentatives of the general assembly of Indiana in 1893; elected judge of the superior
28 Congressional Directory. PNDIANS
court of Vanderburg County in 1894; reelected in 1898 and again in 1902. Was
elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiv-
ing 20,278 votes, to 18,959 for G. V. Menzies, Democrat, 604 for T. H. Riggs, Prohibi-
tionist, and 737 for P. D. Strong, Socialist.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Daviess, Greene, Knox, I,awrence, Martin, Monroe, Owen, and Sullivan (8 counties).
Population (1900), 193,657.
" JOHN CRAWFORD CHANEY, Republican, of Sullivan, is the eldest son of
James and Nancy (Crawford) Chaney; was born February 1, 1853, at the home of his
maternal grandfather near New Lisbon, Columbiana County, Ohio; was brought in
1854, by his parents, to Lafayette Township, Allen County, Ind., where he was reared
and where he received a common-school education; at 17 years of age entered Ascen-
sion Seminary, Sullivan County, Ind., from which he graduated in 1874 with the
honors of his class; later graduated from the Terre Haute Commercial College with the
degree of master of accounts; in 1875, engaged as teacher; he established and conducted
the Farmersburg graded school for three years and for two years thereafter conducted
as principal the Worthington, Ind., public schools, establishing the high school at
that place. In June, 1882, he graduated with the degree of bachelor of laws from
the law school of the Cincinnati University, of Cincinnati, Ohio; was admitted to
the bar in 1883 and practiced law at Sullivan up to July, 1889, when he was appointed
by President Harrison one of the Attorney-General’s assistants in the Department of
Justice, which he resigned in 1893, and then resumed the practice of law on his own
account. Prior to 1887 was the organizer for the Republican party in Sullivan
County; chairman of the Lincoln League for the Second Indiana district; member
of the State central committee from the Second district, and in 1888 was Presi-
dential elector on the Harrison ticket for the Eighth Congressional district, which
then included Sullivan County; was elected tothe Fifty-ninth Congress and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,229 votes, to 21,889 for C. E. Davis, Democrat,
839 for W, H. Hill, Prohibitionist, and 781 for J. E. Chinn, Socialist.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CounrtIiEs.—Clark, Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Orange, Perry, Scott, and Washington
(9 counties).
Population (1900), 180,836.
WILLIAM E. COX, Democrat, of Jasper, was born in Dubois County, Ind., Sep-
tember 6, 1865; is a graduate of the Lebanon University, of Lebanon, Tenn., and of
the law department of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; is an attorney at
law, admitted as such on the roth day of July, 1889; served as prosecuting attorney
of his judicial district from 1892 to 1898; is married and has one child; was elected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,606 votes, to 18,151 for G. H. Hester, Repub-
lican, 802 for T. J. Shrode, Prohibitionist, and 151 for F. L. Goodman, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Bartholomew, Brown, Dearborn, Jackson, Jefferson, Jennings, Johnson, Ohio, Ripley,
and Switzerland (10 counties).
Population (1900), 178,486.
LINCOLN DIXON, Democrat, of North Vernon, was born at Vernon, Jennings
County, Ind., February 9, 1860; was educated at the Vernon Academy and entered
the Indiana State University in 1876, from which institution he was graduated in
1880 with the degree of A. B.; began the practice of law at North Vernon, 1882;
was elected prosecuting attorney for the sixth judicial circuit in 1884; reelected in
1886, 1888, and 1890; married in 1884; was a member of the Democratic State com-
mittee from 1897 until nominated for Congress in 1904; was elected to the Fifty-
ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,049 votes, to
18,181 for John Kamman, Republican, 924 for B. N. Connelly, Prohibitionist, and
197 for A, F, Bumpes, Socialist, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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INDIANA] Biographical. 29
FIETH DISTRICT.
CounTtIieEs.—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, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,532 votes, to 21,579 for
C. G. Bowers, Democrat, 1,286 for Willis Bond, Prohibitionist, and 750 for P. K.
Reinbold, Socialist.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Decatur, Fayette, Franklin, Hancock, Henry, Rush, Shelby, Union, and Wayne (9
counties).
Population (1900), 186,035.
JAMES ELI WATSON, Republican, of Rushville, was born in Winchester, Ran
dolph County, Ind., November 2, 1864; graduated from the Winchester High Schoo
in 1881; entered De Pauw University the same year, and remained in that institution
until the year 1885, when he returned home and took up the study of law in the
office of Watson & Engle; was admitted to the bar in 1886, and has since been
engaged in the practice of his profession; is a member of the Knights of Pythias and
has been grand chancellor of the order; was elected president of the State Epworth
League of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1892 and reelected in 1893; in 1892
was a candidate on the Republican ticket for Presidential elector; he moved to
Rushville in 1893; contested for the nomination for secretary of state in 1894 and
was second in a list of strong candidates before the convention; was temporary and
permanent chairman of the Republican State convention in 1904; is a trustee of the
State University and also of Moore’s Hill College; was elected to the Fifty-fourth
Congress over the veteran William S. Holman, to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 22,135 votes, to 20,629 for T. H. Coon, Democrat, 1,432 for B. F. Dailey,
Prohibitionist, and 492 for J. M. Doddridge, Socialist.
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, 1902, and 1904; was elected to
the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 28,020 votes, to 23,234
for F. K. Gavin, Democrat, 1,054 for S. J. Wilson, Prohibitionist, and 733 for A. G.
Bert, Socialist,
CoUNTY.—Marion.
FIGHTH DISTRICT.
CounNTiES.—Adams, Delaware, Jay, Madison, Randolph, and Wells (6 counties).
Population (1900), 221,246.
JOHN A. M. ADAIR, Democrat, of Portland, was born on a farm in Jay County,
Ind.; December 22, 1863; moved to Portland in 1880; was educated in the Port-
land High School, and engaged in mercantile pursuits; was elected clerk of the city
of Portland in 1888, clerk of Jay County in 1890; married Grace R. Johnson in 1890,
and has one child, Herbert J. Adair, age 14 years; studied law and was admitted to
the bar in 1895; was elected representative to the gemeral assembly of Indiana in
1902; was made Democratic caucus chairman and took a prominent part in the ses-
sion of 1903; was elected president of the First National Bank of Portland in 1904,
since which time he has given his entire attention to the banking business; was
elected to the Sixtieth Congress by a plurality of 4,244 votes, in a district which gave
to his opponent a plurality of 7,386 in 1904, receiving 24,027 votes, to 19,783 for
G. W. Cromer, Republican, 2,021 for F. D. Muse, Prohibitionist, 866 for G. R. Gam-
ble, Socialist, and 60 for C. F. Bartling, Socialist Labor. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
66525—60—2—2D ED—/
30 Congressional Directory. [INDIANA.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Boone, Carroll, Clinton, Fountain, Hamilton, Howard, Montgomery, and Tipton (8
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
reelected in 1895 ; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 23,865
votes, to 21,633 for M. E. Clodfelter, Democrat; 2,310 for J.I,. Doan, Prohibitionist,
and 420 for G. W. Sharp, Socialist.
TENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Benton, Jasper, Take, Iaporte, Newton, Porter, ['ippecanoe, Warren, and White
(9 counties). :
Population (1900), 202,484.
EDGAR DEAN CRUMPACKER, Republican, of Valparaiso, was born in Laporte
County, Ind.; was educated in the common schools and at the Valparaiso Acad-
emy; was admitted to the bar in 1876, and has been in the practice of law at Valpa-
raiso, 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 24,695 votes, to 20,072
for William Darroch, Democrat, and 954 for J. R. Barr, Prohibitionist. Reclected to
the Sixty-first Congress.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Blackford, Cass, Grant, Huntington, Miami, and Wabash (6 counties).
Population (1900), 191,931.
GEORGE WASHINGTON RAUCH, Democrat, of Marion, son of Philip and
Martha Rauch, was born near Warren, Huntington County, Ind., February 22, 1876;
was educated in the common schools and at the Valparaiso Academy and Northern
Indiana Law School; was admitted to the bar in 1902, and began the practice of law
at Marion, Ind.; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,988 votes, to 19,833
for Frederick Iandis, Republican, 2,367 for I. F. Pennington, Prohibitionist, and 616
for J, W, Kelley, Socialist, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Allen, Dekalb, Lagrange, Noble, Steuben, and Whitley (6 counties).
Population (1900), 174,345.
CLARENCE C. GILHAMS, Republican, of La Grange, son of Aaron and Mary
Jane Gilhams, was born at Brighton, Lagrange County, Ind., April 11, 1860; received
his education in the common schools and in the State Normal School at Terre Haute,
Ind.; taught school in the common schools of Lagrange County; was twice elected
auditor of Lagrange County, serving eight years; was elected November 6, 1906, to
fill the unexpired term of Hon. N. W. Gilbert, resigned, in the Fifty-ninth Congress,
and also to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,695 votes, to 19,345 for J. W. Marr,
Democrat, 1,039 for G. C. Ulmer, Prohibitionist, and 451 for P. J. Keeley, Socialist.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.
CountIiES.—Elkhart, Fulton, Kosciusko, Marshall, Pulaski, St. Joseph, and Starke (7 counties).
Population (1900), 200,078.
HENRY A. BARNHART, Democrat, of Rochester, was born near Twelve Mile, a
village in Cass County, Ind., the son of a German Baptist (or Dunkard) minister.
He was educated in the common schools, Amboy Academy, and Wabash Normal
Training School; taught school in Cass County several terms and soon after
INDIANA] Biographical. : 31
moved to Fulton County. He was elected county surveyor, and a year later pur-
chased the Rochester Sentinel and has been its publisher and editor ever since.
Mr. Barnhart has been president and manager of the Rochester Telephone Company,
and president of the National Telephone Association, holding that position for two
years; was a director of the Northern Prison at Michigan City for three years, and
is at present serving his seventh year as trustee of the hospital for the insane at
Longcliff. Besides performing official duties, editing his newspaper, and looking
after his telephone interests, Mr. Barnhart keeps close watch of his live stock on a
good 100-acre farm in Fulton County. He is a member of two fraternal orders—
Knights of Pythias and Maccabees; is married and has two sons and a foster daughter.
He was elected to fill a vacancy in the Sixtieth Congress, caused by the death of
Hon. A. L. Brick. Republican and to the Sixty-first Congress.
I1O0OW A.
SENATORS.
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 United States Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the
death of ‘Hon. J. H. Gear, and was elected January 21, 1902, to succeed himself, over
John J. Seerley, Democrat, by a vote of 120 to 26. Reelected in 1907. His term
of service will expire March 3, 1913.
ALBERT BAIRD CUMMINS, Republican, of Des Moines, was born near Car-
michaels, Pa., February 15, 1850; was educated in the public schools, preparatory
academy, and was three years in Waynesburg (Pa.) College; the latter institution
conferred the degrees of M. A. and LI. D. upon him, and Cornell College, Iowa,
that of LI. D.; is a lawyer by profession, and married; was a member of the
house of representatives of the twenty-second general assembly of Iowa; a member
of the Republican National Committee from 1896 to 1900, and governor of Iowa from
January, 1902, until elected, November 24, 1908, to fill the vacancy in the United
States Senate caused bv the death of Hon. W. B. Allison.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Des Moines, Henry, Jefferson, Lee, Louisa, Van Buren, and Washington (7 counties).
Population (1905), 159,267.
CHARLES A. KENNEDY, Republican, of Montrose, was born at Montrose, Iowa,
March 24, 1869; his parents were both natives of Ireland; in 1890 he was elected
mayor of his native town, which office he filled for four years; in 1903 he was elected
a member of the Iowa legislature, serving in that position two terms; is an agricul-
turist, being a member of the firm of Kennedy Brothers, nurserymen; was elected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,145 votes, to 15,875 for G. S. Tracy, Democrat,
452 for W. N. Welton, Prohibitionist, and 427 for A. S. Buttrey, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
Counties. —Clinton, Iowa, Jackson, Johnson, Muscatine, and Scott (6 counties).
Population (1905), 192,745.
ALBERT FOSTER DAWSON, Republican, of Preston, was born at Spragueville,
Iowa, January 26, 1872; was educated in the common schools of Towa, supplemented
by one year at the University of Wisconsin; published the Preston (lowa) Advance,
and was afterwards city editor of the Clinton Daily Herald; served several years in
the organization of Congress; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,112 votes, to 18,520 for G. W. Ball, Demo-
crat, 1,246 for M. T. Kennedy, Socialist and 177 for C. C. Bacon, Prohibitionist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress. 2
32 : Congressional Directory. [IOWA.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Black Hawk, Bremer, Buchanan, Butler, Delaware, Dubuque, Franklin, Hardin, and
Wright (9 counties).
Population (1905), 223,672.
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, Towa City; by profession is a lawyer, admitted to practice in
March, 1878; served as district judge of eleventh judicial district of Iowa 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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 22,315 votes, to 15,113 for J. C. Murtagh, Democrat, 695 for Chris-
tian Sorenson, Socialist, and 586 for A. MacEachron, Prohibitionist.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Allamakee, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Clayton, Fayette, Floyd, Howard, Mitchell,
Winneshiek, and Worth (10 counties). ;
Population (1905), 189,194.
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 engaged in various enterprises, principally real estate and
banking; was treasurer of Worth County, Iowa, for six years; was elected to the .
Iowa legislature, serving in the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth general assemblies;
was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth; and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,731 votes, to 12,739 for
M. J. Carter, Democrat, 353 for C. J. Thorgrinison, Socialist, and 407 for S. B. Fin-
ney, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Benton, Cedar, Grundy, Jones, Linn, Marshall, and Tama (7 counties).
Population (1903), 185,667. :
ROBERT G. COUSINS, Republican, of Tipton, was born in Cedar County, Iowa,
in 1859; graduated at Cornell, Iowa, in 1881; was admitted to the bar in 1882, and has
been engaged in the practice of law since that time; in 1886 was elected to the Iowa
legislature, and was elected by the house of representatives as one of the managers
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, Fifty-
seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 19,076 votes, to 14,612 for R. C. Stirton, Democrat, 811 for Mal-
colm Smith, Prohibitionist. and 644 for O. IL. Crowell, Socialist.
SEX TH DISTRICT.
CounTiES.—Davis, Jasper, Keokuk, Mahaska, Monroe, Poweshiek, and Wapello (7 counties).
Population (1905), 175,880.
DANIEL, WEBSTER HAMILTON, Democrat, of Sigourney, was born in Ogle
County, Ill., December 20, 1861, son of Francis and Jane Hamilton, residing upon a
farm at that place. In the fall of 1868 they moved to Miami County, Kans.,
where they resided until the spring of 1874, from which place they moved to Keokuk
County, Iowa, locating upon a farm, where he resided with his parents until his
majority, attending the common schools in winter and laboring upon the farm in the
summer season. At the age of 18 years he began teaching school during the winter
months, and followed farming in the summer. In the fall of 1883 he entered the
law department of the State University at Iowa City, graduating in June, 1884.
Returning to the farm, he remained until the fall of 1885, when he opened an office
in Sigourney, Towa, where he still resides, and commenced the practice of law, and
has built up an extensive practice in southeastern Towa. He has never held any
office except that of postmaster from 1894 to 1898, under Cleveland’s second Adminis-
tration, and minor offices in his home town. In May, 1885, Mr. Hamilton married
Elvira Gibbons, a Quakeress and a resident of his home county, and they now have a
Rooseveltan family of ten children; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
18,987 votes, to 16,713 for J. F. Lacey, Republican, go7 for W. C. Minnick, Socialist,
and 36 for ¥. D. De Long, Prohibitionist.
SRS
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IOWA] Biographical. 33
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Dallas, Madison, Marion, Polk, Story, and Warren (6 counties).
Population (1905), 204,034.
JOHN ALBERT TIFFIN HULL, Republican, of Des Moines, was born at Sabina,
Clinton County, Ohio, May 1, 1841; moved with his parents to Iowa in 1849; was edu-
cated in public schools, Asbury (Ind. ) University, and IowaWesleyan College, at Mount
Pleasant; 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,617 votes, to 11,464
for J. N. Smith, Democrat, 1,058 for J. P. Gill, Prohibitionist, and 988 for J. W. Johns,
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
CounTiESs.—Adams, Appanoose, Clarke, Decatur, Fremont, Lucas, Page, Ringgold, Taylor, Union,
and Wayne (11 counties).
Population (1905), 191,091.
WILLIAM PETERS HEPBURN, Republican, of Clarinda, was born November 4,
1833, at Wellsville, Columbiana County, Ohio; was taken to Iowa (then a Territory)
in April, 1841; was educated in the schools of the Territory and in a printing office;
was admitted to practice law in 1854; served in the Second Iowa Cavalry as captain,
major, and lieutenant-colonel during the war of the rebellion; was a delegate from
Towa to the Republican national conventions of 1860, 1888, and 1896; was a Presiden-
tial elector at large from the State of Iowa 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,516 votes, to 16,074 for J. S. Estes, Democrat,
611 for S. D. Mercer, Socialist, and 605 for William Orr, Prohibitionist. Mr. Hep-
burn was chosen chairman of the Republican caucus in the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth,
and Sixtieth Congresses.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CountiES.—Adair, Audubon, Cass, Guthrie, Harrison, Mills, Montgomery, Pottawattamie, and
Shelby (9 counties).
Population (1905), 191,082.
WALTER I. SMITH, Republican, of Council Bluffs, Pottawattamie County, was
born at Council Bluffs, July 10, 1862; received a common school education, and
studied law in the office of Col. D. B. Daily; was admitted to practice December, 1882;
married Effie M. Moon in July, 1890; was elected judge of the fifteenth judicial dis-
trict of Towa 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; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,863
votes, to 13,250 for W. C. Campbell, Democrat, 457 for J. O. McElroy, Socialist,
and 44o for A. P. Macomber, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Boone, Calhoun, Carroll, Crawford, Emmet, Greene, Hamilton, Hancock, Humboldt,
Kossuth, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Webster, and Winnebago (14 counties).
Population (1905), 253,350.
JAMES PERRY CONNER, Republican, of Denison, was born in Delaware County,
Ind., January 27, 1851; attended college at the Upper Iowa University at Fayette,
Iowa, 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 cf Towa; 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
34 Congressional Directory. : [IOWA.
Tenth Congressional district of Iowa for the Fifty-sixth Congress, to fill the vacancy
caused by the resignation of Hon. J. P. Dolliver, and elected; also, elected to the
Fifty-seventh Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 26,017 votes, to 15,317 for J. B. Butler, Democrat, 629 for N. S.
Sheffield, Socialist, and 761 for William Beckett, Prohibitionist.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Ida, Lyon, Monona, O’Brien, Osceola, Plym-
outh, Sac, Sioux, and Woodbury (13 counties).
Population (1905), 245,011.
ELBERT HAMILTON HUBBARD, Republican, of Sioux City, was born at Rush-
ville, Ind., August 19, 1849, the son of Hon. Asahel W. Hubbard, who was a member
of Congress from the Fourth district of Iowa, 1862-1869; graduated from Yale College
in the class of 1872, and is a lawyer; married Eleanor Hermance Cobb June 6, 1882,
and has four children, FE. H., Charlotte, Lyle, and Eleanor; served as a member of
the house of representatives, nineteenth general assembly of Towa, and of the senate
in the twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth general assemblies; was elected to the
Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,236 votes,
to 16,893 for C. A. Dickson, Democrat, and 648 for A. W. Beach, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
KANSAS.
SENATORS.
CHESTER I. LONG, Republican, of Medicine Lodge, was born in Perry County,
a., October 12, 1860; moved with his parents to Daviess County, Mo., in 1865,
where he resided until 1879, when he moved to Paola, Kans. ; received an academic
education; was admitted to the bar at Topeka, Kans., in 1885, and located at Medi-
cine Lodge, where he has since resided; was elected to the State senate in 1889; was
elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses.
Before his term as Representative in the Fifty-eighth Congress began, he was elected
to the United States Senate to succeed William A. Harris, Democrat, for the term
beginning March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909.
CHARLES CURTIS, Republican, of Topeka, was born in Topeka, Shawnee
County, Kans., January 25, 1860; received his education in the common schools of the
city of Topeka, studied law with A. H. Case, 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 and to the Fifty- sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty- -eighth, and
Fifty-ninth Congresses. He was elected to the Sixtieth Congress from the First
district; in January, 1907, was elected to the United States Senate to fill out the
‘unexpired term of Hon. J. R. Burton, resigned, succeeding Hon. A. W. Benson,
appointed ad interim, and for the full term beginning March 4. He took his seat
January 29, 1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Atchison, Brown, Doniphan, Jackson, Jefferson, I,eavenworth, Nemaha, and Shaw-
nee (8 counties).
Population (1905), 216,706.
DANIEL READ ANTHONY, Jr., Republican, of Leavenworth, was born August
22, 1870, at Leavenworth, Kans., attended public schools and afterwards the Mich-
igan Military Academy and the University of Michigan; received a law degree and
was admitted to the bar, but has been engaged in practical newspaper work all his
life; was mayor of Leavenworth i in 1903-1905; succeeded to the management of the
Leav enworth Daily Times upon the death of his father, Col. D. R. Anthony, in
November, 1904; received the unanimous nomination by the Republicans of the First
district March 29, 1907, and was elected to the Sixtieth Congress at a special election
May 23, 1907, to fill the vacancy caused by the election of Hon. Charles Curtis to be
United States Senator, receiving 6,978 votes, to 1,323 for Albert Kingsley, Socialist.
The Democratic party of the district made no nomination. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
a
Hamu
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KANSAS.] Biographical. : 35
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Douglas, Franklin, Johnson, Linn, Miami, and Wyandotte
(9 counties).
Population (1905), 276,900.
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 in 1897 was converted into a
daily, and which he has ever since owned, published, 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 was twice reappointed; in 1892 was elected as a Republican
to the State senate of Kansas and served for four years; in 1896 represented his Con-
gressional district on the Republican electoral ticket; was elected to the Fifty-
seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses as Representative-at-Large. In
1906, the State having been redistricted, he was elected to the Sixtieth Congress
as Representative from the Second Congressional district, receiving 23,516 votes, to
19,653 for M. S. Peters, Democrat, 688 for J. W. Puckett, Socialist, and 389 for W. E.
Monbeck, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CountiEs.—Crawford, Cherokee, Neosho, Labette, Wilson, Elk, Chautauqua, Cowley, and Mont-
gomery (9 counties).
Population (1905), 284,537.
PHILIP PITT CAMPBELL, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in Nova Scotia;
when 4 years old moved 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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
25,669 votes, to 19,807 for ¥. M. Brady, Democrat, 2,908 for F. D. Warren, Socialist,
and 540 for J. R. Roberts, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Chase, Coffey, Greenwood, I,yon, Marion, Morris, Osage, Pottawatomie, Wabaunsee, and
Woodson (10 counties).
Population (1905), 157,842.
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; was a delegate to the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 17,393 votes, to 14,313
for J. W. Moore, Democrat, 405 for W. J. McMillen, Socialist, and 398 for G. F.
Bradford, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CounrtIies.—Clay, Cloud, Dickinson, Geary, Marshall, Ottawa, Republic, Riley, Saline, and Wash-
ington (10 counties).
Population (1905), 174,717.
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
|
36 : Congressional Directory. [KANSAS i
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,183
votes, to 14,561 for Hugh Alexander, Democrat, and 875 for G. ¥. Hibner, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Cheyenne, Decatur, Ellis, Ellsworth, Gove, Graham, Jewell, Lincoln, I,ogan, Mitchell,
Norton, Osborne, Phillips, Rawlins, Rooks, Russell, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Thomas, I'rego, )
and Wallace (22 counties). ]
Population (1905), 199,409. |
WILLIAM AUGUSTUS REEDER, Republican, of Logan, Phillips County, was
born August 28, 1849, in Cumberland County, Pa.; when 4 years of age emigrated with
his parents to Ipava, Fulton County, 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 eight
years of his work being in Kansas, where he was principal of the Beloit public schools
six years; 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, and is president of the First National Bank; in
1890, in partnership with others, he organized an irrigation company, which pur-
chased an extensive tract of land on the Solomon River and established the largest
irrigation farm in the State. He was designated as the president and general mana-
ger of the project; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and
Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,212
votes, to 17,116 for J. B. Rea, Democrat, 1,005 for R. S. Thomas, Socialist, g42 for
R. C. Smith, Prohibitionist, and 845 for Harry Gray, Populist. Reelected to the :
Sixty-first Congress. 1
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
YRC
ASR
CoUuNTIES.—Barber, Barton, Clark, Comanche, Edwards, Finney, Ford, Grant, Gray, Greeley,
Hamilton, Harper, Haskell, Hodgeman, Kearney, Kingman, Kiowa, Lane, Meade, Morton,
Ness, Pawnee, Pratt, Reno, Rice, Rush, Scott, Seward, Stafford, Stanton, Stevens, and Wichita
(32 counties).
Population (1905), 198,104.
EDMOND H. MADISON, Republican, of Dodge City, was born at Plymouth,
I11., December 18, 1865; was educated in the common schools of Illinois, and at the
age of 18 years began teaching school; in 1885 moved to Wichita, Kans., and began
study of law in the office of G. W. C. Jones, and was admitted to practice in 1888; in
the same year was elected county attorney of Ford County, Kans., and served two
terms; was appointed judge of the thirty-first judicial district of Kansas, January 1,
1900, which position he held until September 17, 1906, when he resigned to become
a candidate for Congress; was married December 12, 1900, to Miss Lou Vance, of
Oklahoma City; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,580 votes, to 15,623
for O. H. Truman, Democrat, 1,092 for R. C. Webster, Socialist, and 928 for W. C.
Johnston, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
COUNTIES.—Butler, Harvey, McPherson, Sedgwick, and Sumner (5 counties).
Population (1905), 143,116.
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 Io 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. - In 1894 he became managing editor of the Wichita Daily Eagle. He was
ses
0
KANSAS. | Biographical. 27
elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress from the new Eighth district, carrying every county, and receiving 14,862
votes, to 10,427 for Dr. F. B. Lawrance, Democrat, 548 for Frank Ayers, Socialist,
and 496 for J. J. Hill, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
KENTUCKY.
SENATORS.
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
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, for the term beginning March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March
3, 1909.
THOMAS H. PAYNTER, Democrat, of Greenup, was born in Lewis County, Ky.,
December 9, 1851; was educated in the common schools, Rand’s Academy, and at
Center College, Danville, Ky.; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1872 and
actively engaged in the practice of law; was appointed county attorney for Greenup
County, Ky., in 1876, and held the office until 1878, when he was elected to that
office and held it until 1882; was elected to the Fifty-first, Fifty-second, and Fifty-
third Congresses; was elected judge of the court of appeals of Kentucky in November,
1894, for an eight-year term and to accept which he resigned in January, 1895, as a
member of the Fifty-third Congress; was reelected judge of the court of appeals in
1902, which position he held until August 1, 1906, when he resigned; was elected to
the United States Senate for the term beginning March 4, 1907. His term of service
will expire March 3, 1913,
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—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 delegate from the State at large to the Democratic
national convention at St. Louis, 1904, and elected chairman of the Kentucky dele-
gation 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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 12,870 votes, to 2,118 for J. D. Smith, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
38 Congressional Directory. [KENTUCKY.
SECOND DISTRICT.
Counties.—Christian, Daviess, Hancock, Henderson, Hopkins, McLean, Union, and Webster (8
counties). 2
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 State Col-
lege, Lexington, Ky., and at Center College, Danville, Ky., graduating from the
latter institution in the class of 1889; entered the practice of the law in 1894, having
been employed between 1889 and 1894 as school-teacher; was Presidential elector in
1900, which is the only qffice or public position of any kind ever held by him prior to
his election to the Fifty-eighth Congress; was reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress
and to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 13,282 votes, to 7,406 for P. M. Moore, Repub-
lican, 551 for Alex. Hill, Prohibitionist, and 229for Robert Roll, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Allen, Barren, Butler, Edmonson, I,ogan, Metcalfe, Muhlenberg, Simpson, Todd, and
Warren (10 counties).
Population (1900), 179,518.
ADDISON DAVIS JAMES, Republican, of Penrod, was born near Morgantown,
Butler County, Ky., February 27, 1850; received a public school education and began
the study of medicine in 1870, graduating from the Old University of Louisville,
Ky., in 1873; was nominated and elected a member of the constitutional con-
vention from the county of Muhlenberg in 18go; nominated for the legislature and
elected in 1891, also in 1893; appointed World’s Fair Commissioner at Chicago by
Governor John Young Brown while a member of the legislature; elected to the State
senate from the eighth district in 1895; appointed United States marshal by Presi-
dent McKinley in July, 1897, and reappointed by President Roosevelt in 1901; was
elected to the Sixtieth Congress by a majority of 699, receiving 14,987 votes, to 14,288
for J. M. Richardson, Democrat, and 612 for W. H. Collins, Prohibitionist.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Breckinridge, Bullitt, Grayson, Green, Hardin, Hart, Larue, Marion, Meade, Nelson,
Ohio, Taylor, and Washington (13 counties).
Population (1900), 210,314.
BEN JOHNSON, Democrat, of Bardstown, was born near Bardstown, Nelson
County, Ky., May 20, 1858; graduated from St. Mary’s College, Marion County,
Ky., in June, 1878, with the degree of A. M.; graduated from the Louisville Law
University in 1882; was elected to the Kentucky house of representatives in August,
1885, and reelected in 1887; was elected speaker in December of that year; was
appointed collector of internal revenue for the fifth Kentucky district in July, 1893,
and served four years. On November 5, 1905, was elected a member of the Ken-
tucky State senate, but resigned November 5, 1906; was elected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress by a plurality of 5,309, receiving 15,128 votes, to 9,819 for M. I,. Heavrin,
Republican, and 631 for R. H. Roe, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
Population (1900), 232,549.
SWAGAR SHERLEY, Democrat, of Louisville, was born in Louisville, 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. L.; was admitted to the practice of law Sep-
tember, 1891, at the Louisville bar; has practiced continuously in State and Federal
courts since; ‘admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States, 1898;
never before held public office; was married to Miss Mignon Critten, of Staten Island,
New York, April 21, 1906; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress by 3,488 plurality over W. C. Owens,
Republican, receiving 15,698 votes, to 12,210 for Owens, 376 for C. A. Jenson, Pro-
hibitionist, 244 for Charles Dobbs, Socialist, and 139 for James Doyle, Socialist-
Labor. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
CountTy.— Jefferson.
KeNmocrvd Biographical. 39
SIXTH DISTRICH.
CouNTIES.—Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Pendleton,and Trimble (8 counties).
Population (1900), 179,430.
JOSEPH LAFAYETTE RHINOCK, Democrat, of Covington, has for years been
acknowleged one of the foremost business men and political leaders in Covington and
Kenton County, Ky.; his father, Joseph Rhinock, was born in Germany, while his
mother, who was Eliza A. Short, was born at Stanford, Lincoln County, Ky.; Con-
gressman Rhinock was born at Owenton, Owen County, Ky., January 4, 1863; he -
received his education in the Covington public schools, and at an early age entered
actively into public life; has served in the city council of Covington, and was twice
elected as chief executive of that city, serving as mayor from 1893 to 1900; was the
organizer and first president of the Jefferson Democratic Club, of Covington, now
the largest and most influential political club in the State of Kentucky, and he is at
present the executive head of this organization. When a Carnegie library was pro-
posed for the city, Mr. Rhinock took the matter in charge, and it was through his
efforts that the present handsome $roo,000 edifice was secured. Mr. Rhinock is the
present president of the public library board in Covington. In the business world
he is as well known as in political life, and, besides being a director in two national
banks, holds important business interests in the city of Covington. He is married
and has a wife and four children. Although the candidacy of Mr. Rhinock was
opposed by such prominent men as D. Linn Gooch, Judge John T. Hodge, Hon. E. C.
Smith, and Clifford E. Nadaud, who were working equally hard to land the Con-
gressional plum, Mr. Rhinock was nominated on the first ballot at the convention,
April 21, 1904, and elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 13,348 votes, to 12,973 for W. F. Schuerman, Republican, 371 for
C. I. Broshaer, Prohibitionist, and 933 for Claude Andrews, Socialist. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
COUNTIES.—Bourbon, Fayette, Franklin, Henry, Oldham, Owen, Scott, and Woodford (8 counties).
Population (1900), 151,453.
WILLIAM PRESTON KIMBALL, Democrat, of Lexington, was born on a farm
near the village of Fast Hickman, Fayette County, Ky., November 4, 1857; was
educated in the public schools of the county, in the private schools of Professor
Lyle and Professor Nesbit, and in Kentucky University, at Lexington; married Miss
Flora M. Price, of Nicholasville, Ky., in 1883; has pursued his profession as a lawyer
for many years; represented Fayette County in the Kentucky legislature in 1883-84;
was city attorney of Lexington from October, 1891, to January 1, 1898, and county
attorney of Fayette County from the latter date to March 4, 1907; was elected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,648 votes, to 5,066 for J. W. Calvert, Republican,
and 439 for J. W. Zachary, Prohibitionist—the largest majority ever given a candi-
date for Congress in the Ashland district.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Anderson, Boyle, Garrard, Jessamine, Lincoln, Madison, Mercer, Rockcastle, Shelby,
and Spencer (10 counties).
Population (1900), 143,089.
HARVEY HELM, Democrat, of Stanford, was born at Danville, Boyle County, Ky;
never married; attended school at the Stanford Male Academy, and graduated from
the Central University of Kentucky, with the degree of A. B.; was admitted to the
practice of law in April, 1900; elected a member of the house of representatives in 1893;
served as such in the general assembly of Kentucky, session of 1894; elected county
attorney of Lincoln County in 1897 for the term of four years, and reelected in 1900;
was delegate from the Kighth district to the Democratic national convention at
Kansas City in 1900; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 13,182 votes to
10,264 for 1,. W. Bethurum, Republican, and 601 for T. B. Demaree, Prohibitionist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
40 Congressional Directory. [KENTUCKY.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Bath, Boyd, Bracken, Carter, Fleming, Greenup, Harrison, Lawrence, Iewis, Mason,
Nicholas, Robertson, and Rowan (13 counties).
Population (1900), 200,064.
JOSEPH BENTLEY BENNETT, Republican, of Greenup, was born on a farm
in Greenup County, Ky., April 21, 1859, and has resided in Greenup County, Ky.,
all his life; was educated in the common schools of Greenup County, and at
the Greenup Academy; taught in the common schools of Greenup County a short
time; studied law and was admitted to the bar at Greenup, Ky., before Hon. W. H.
Wadsworth, special judge of the Greenup circuit court, on the 30th day of August,
1878; was nominated by the Republicans for county attorney of Greenup County in
1882 and was defeated by a small majority; was again nominated for the same
position in 1886 and again defeated by a small majority; in 1894 was nominated and
elected by the Republicans of Greenup County for county judge for the term of
three years; was renominated for the same position in 1897 and again elected; was
renominated for the same position in 1901 and again elected for the term of four
years; while holding the above position was nominated by the Republicans of the
Nineteenth Kentucky judicial district, composed of Mason, Greenup, Lewis, Fleming,
and Bracken counties, as their candidate for circuit judge against the Hon. James P.
Harbeson, and defeated by 88 majority; in 1900 was elected by the Republican con-
vention as a member of the Republican State central committee for the Ninth Ken-
tucky district, and reelected to the same position in 1904, which he now holds; was
elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
18,430 votes, to 17,314 for J. N. Kehoe, Democrat, and 145 for I,. H. Lanier, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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.
JOHN WESLEY LANGLEY, Republican, of Spurlock, was born in Floyd County,
Ky.; received his early education in the common schools, in which he was a teacher
for three years; attended the law departments of the National, Georgetown, and
Columbian (now George Washington) universities for an aggregate period of eight
years and was awarded the first prize in two of them; had conferred on him the
degrees of bachelor of laws, master of laws, doctor of the civil law, and master of
diplomacy; was a clerk in the Pension Office, a member of the board of pension
appeals, and disbursing and appointment clerk of the Census Office; served two
terms in the Kentucky legislature, receiving at his second term the caucus nomina-
tion of his party (the minority) for speaker of the house; was twice a delegate from
Kentucky to the Republican national convention; married in 1904 Katherine
Gudger, daughter of J. M. Gudger, jr., Member of Congress from North Carolina;
was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 17,254 votes, to 16,343 for F. A. Hop-
kins, Democrat, and 441 for Wayne Cooper, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
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.
DON CALVIN EDWARDS, Republican, of London, was born in Appanoose
County, Towa, July 13, 1861; educated in common schools of Towa and Kansas, and
. at the University of Holton, Kans., located in Laurel County, Ky., in 1892; is
engaged in manufacturing and the wholesale lumber business; was clerk and master
commissioner of the Laurel circuit court from 1898 to 1904; married, February 11,
1904, Miss Lida Hodges; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,635 votes, to 8,719 for Ancil Gotliff, Democrat,
636 for Tobias Huffaker, Prohibitionist, and 268 for Henry Parton, Socialist. Re-
elected to the Sixty-first Congress.
LOUISIANA] Biographical. 41
1.OUUISIT ANA,
SENATORS.
SAMUETI DOUGLAS McENERY, Democrat, of New Orleans,was born at Monroe,
La., May 28, 1837; was educated at Spring Hill College, near Mobile, Ala., the United
States Naval Academy, and the University of Virginia; graduated from State and
National Law School, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; served in the Confederate army, in the
war between the States, as lieutenant, inVirginia, under Magruder, and in the Trans-
Mississippi Department; is a lawyer by profession; was nominated by the Democratic
party and elected lieutenant-governor, with 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 for the term beginning
March 4, 1897, to succeed the Hon. N. C. Blanchard, May 28, 1896; Walter Denegre,
of New Orleans, was his opponent, supported by Republicans, Populists, and a fac-
tion from the Democratic party known as the Citizens’ League. The vote was as fol-
lows: S.D. 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 I vote changed from McEnery to Denegre and 2 votes from Denegre
to McEnery, making the vote stand, McEnery, 70; Denegre, 64. 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 to the fact that this government (Democratic) was
never recognized and that the Kellogg government (Reconstruction Republican)
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 consec-
utive 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 nomi-
nated by the antilottery convention as candidate for governor; was elected for four
years, and in 1896 was nominated to be his own successor 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, for the term beginning
March 4, 1901. When the Democratic party of Louisiana adopted the plan of select-
ing 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 votes, as against 26,122 cast for
ex-United States Senator B. F. Jonas, insuring his return to the Senate as his own
successor. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
City oF NEW ORLEANS.—Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Kighth, Ninth, and Fifteenth
wards.
PARISHES.—St. Bernard and Plaquemines.
Population (1900), 178,670.
ALBERT ESTOPINAL, Democrat, of St. Bernard, was born in the parish of St.
Bernard, La., January 30, 1845; was educated in the public schools of his native
parish and of New Orleans and by private teachers; was elected sheriff of St. Ber-
nard Parish in 1872 and again in 1874; was elected to the Louisiana house of repre-
sentatives in 1876 and again in 1878; was a member of the Louisiana constitutional
convention of 1879; was elected to the State senate in 1880 and served continuously
in that body until 19oo, when he was elected lieutenant-governor of the State and
served four years in that position; was also a member of the Louisiana constitutional
42 Congressional Directory. : [LOUISIANA.
convention of 1898. Mr. Estopinal left school in January, 1862, to enlist in the Con-
federate Army, in which he served first in the Twenty-eighth Louisiana Volunteer
Regiment (Col. Allen Thomas), and after the siege of® Vicksburg in the Twenty-
.second Louisiana Regiment (Col. I. W. Patton), surrendering to General Canby, at
Meridian, Miss., in March, 1865. Mr. Estopinal married Miss Eliska Legier, of New
Orleans, in February, 1868, from which marriage he has ten children—nine sons and
one daughter—all living. He was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, to fill the vacancy
caused by the death of Hon. Adolph Meyer, and to the Sixty-first Congress, receiv-
ing 14,029 votes, to 1,908 for H. C. Warmoth, Republican.
SECOND DISTRICT.
City oF NEw ORLEANS.—First, Second, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth,
Sixteenth, and Seventeenth wards.
PARrRISHES.— Jefferson, St. Charles, St. James, and St. John the Baptist.
: Population (1900), 183,424.
VACANCY.
’PHIRD. DISTRICT.
PARISHES.—Assumption, Iberia, ILafayette, ILafourche, 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 from the law school of the Tulane University of Louisiana, at New
Orleans, in 1889; practices law in New Iberia; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-
sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected. to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 4,267 votes, to 753 for S. P. Watts, Republican.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
PARISHES.—Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, De Soto, Natchitoches, Red Rivet, [Sabine, Webster, and
Winn (9 parishes).
Population (1900), 196,261.
JOHN THOMAS WATKINS, Democrat, of Minden, was born at Minden Janu-
ary 15, 1854; was educated in the public schools of his native town, and spent three
years at Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.; was compelled to leave six weeks
before graduation because of serious illness, failing to procure a diploma, but receiv-
ing a certificate for faithful attendance and proficiency in all his studies and hav-
ing been elected valedictorian of his society; studied law and was admitted to the bar
July, 1878; married January 15, 1879; was elected district judge in 1892 and reelected
in 1896 and 1900, his last term expiring December 8, 1904; was elected to the Fifty-
ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 3,210 votes, to 838
for E. P. Mills, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress. :
FIFTH DISTRICT.
PArISHES.—Caldwell, Catahoula, Claiborne, Concordia, Fast Carroll, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln,
Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, ‘I'ensas, Union, and West Carroll (15 parishes).
Population (1900), 207,430.
JOSEPH EUGENE RANSDELIL, Democrat, of Lake Providence, was born in
Alexandria, La., October 7, 1858, the eighth child of John H. and Amanda (Terrell)
Ransdell; obtained his early education in the private schools of Alexandria, and grad-
uated at Union College, Schenectady, N. Y., in June, 1882, which institution elected
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him honorary chancellor and conferred upon him the degree of LI. D. on the
twenty-fifth anniversary of his graduation, June, 1907; was admitted to the bar in
June, 1883, and engaged in the active practice of his profession from that time until
he entered Congress, December, 1899; was elected district attorney of the eighth
judicial district of Louisiana in April, 1884,.which office he held for twelve years;
was a member of the levee board of the Fifth Louisiana Levee District from May,
1896, until August, 1899; was a member of the State constitutional convention in the
spring of 1898, which framed a new constitution for the State of Louisiana; since
his election to Congress has given up the practice of law and devoted himself
entirely to his Congressional duties and to his cotton-planting interests in Fast Car-
roll Parish; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress to fill the unexpired term of
Hon. S. T. Baird, who died April 22, 1899, and to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses, receiving 3,177 votes. On November 15, 1885,
Mr. Ransdell was married to Miss Olive Irene Powell, of I.ake Providence, La.
They have no children. Since December, 1901, he has been a member of the Com-
mittee on Rivers and Harbors of the House of Representatives, and has devoted
himself to legislation in regard to waterways, especially to that part of the Missis-
sippi River between Cairo and the Gulf with its great levee system. In 1905 Mr.
Ransdell was one of the active leaders in reorganizing the National Rivers and Har-
bors Congress, and has been its president for the past two years. This congress
is a voluntary organization, composed of individuals, commercial bodies, boards of
trade, municipalities, and waterway associations from nearly every State in the
Union. Its purpose is to arouse such a strong public sentiment that Congress shall
be induced to adopt a broad, liberal, comprehensive policy toward all the nation’s
waterways. It stands for a policy, not a project, and its slogan is, ‘‘An annual
rivers and harbors bill carrying not less than fifty million dollars.”” Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
PARISHES.—Ascension, Iberville, Kast Baton Rouge, Kast Feliciana, Livingston, Pointe Coupee,
St. Helena, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Washington, West Baton Rouge, and West Feliciana
(12 parishes). >
. Population (1900), 211,967.
GEORGE KENT FAVROT, Democrat, of Baton Rouge, was born in Baton
Rouge, La., November 26, 1868; graduated from the I ouisiana State University in
1888, and from the law department of Tulane University, New Orleans, La., in 1890;
was elected district attorney of the twenty-second judicial district of Louisiana in
1892; defeated for reelection in 1896; elected a delegate from the State at large to
the constitutional convention of 1898; was reelected district attorney of his district
in 1900, and elected district judge in 1904; is married; was nominated by the Demo-
cratic party for the Sixtieth Congress from the Sixth Louisiana district and elected,
receiving 3,270 votes, to 269 for J. Deblieux, Republican.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
PARISHES.—Acadia, Avoyelles, Calcasieu, Cameron, Grant, Rapides, St. Landry, and Vernon (8
parishes).
Population (1900), 203,277.
ARSENE PAULIN 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 to the Fifty eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 3,761 votes, to 1,762 for C. C. Duson, Republican, and
165 for James Barnes, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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,
44 Congressional Divectory. [MAINE.
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 i
appointment, as Secretary of the Navy, by President Hayes, and declined; was chair- i
man of the Republican Congressional committee for the Forty-fifth Congress; received
the degree of LIL. 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), for the term beginning March
4, 1881; was reelected in 1887, 1893, 1899, and in 1905. His term of service will
expire March 3, 1971.
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 LL. D. from Bates College in July, 1881, and the
same degree from Bowdoin College in 1889; was a Presidential elector in 1864; was
a delegate to the national Republican conventions in 1872, 1876, and 1830; 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 March 15, 1881, to the United States Senate to fill the
vacancy occasioned by the resignation of James G. Blaine, appointed Secretary of
State, and took his seat March 18, 1881; was reelected in 1883, in 1888, in 1895, in 1901,
and again in 1907; was elected President pro tempore of the Senate February 7, 1896,
and reelected March 7, 1901, and December 5, 1907; was a member of the commisson
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, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CountieEs.—Cumberland and York (2 counties). 5
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 School in Washington, D. C.; was admitted to the bar of York County in 1866;
served as clerk in Treasury Department for about three years; was elected clerk of the
courts for York County in 1870 and reelected three times and served twelve years, until
January 1, 1883; was clerk of the judiciary Committee, House of Representatives, in
1883-84, and a special examiner under the Pension Bureau for a year in 1884-85; was
member of the Maine legislature in 1886-87; was private secretary to Speaker Reed
in the Fifty-first, Fifty-fourth, and Fifty-fifth Congresses; was a delegate at large
from Maine in the Republican national convention at St. Louis in 1896, and member
of the committee on resolutions; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress November
6, 1899, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Hon. T. B. Reed; elected
to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,903 votes, to 15,254 for J. C. Hamlin, Democrat, and |
416 for N. H. Lord. Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
i
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SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTies.—Androscoggin, Franklin, Knox, Lincoln, Oxford, and Sagadahoc (6 counties).
Population (1900), 175,329. |
JOHN PHILIP SWASEY, Republican, of Canton, was born September 4, 1839, |
in Canton, Me.; received his education in the Canton public schools, Dearborn
Academy, Hebron Academy, Maine State Seminary, and Tufts College, entering
the latter institution in the class of 1862. In his junior year he enlisted in the Union
Army, and was appointed first lieutenant in Company K, Seventeenth Maine
Regiment. He was admitted to the bar in 1863; was assessor of internal revenue
1869-70; was a member of the Maine house of representatives in 1874 and of the
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MAINE] Biographical. 45
senate the two following years; in 1883-4 was a member of Governor Robie’s coun-
cil; in the administration of President McKinley was appointed a member of the
board of visitors to the Naval Academy at Annapolis; received the honorary degree
of A. M. from Tufts University in 1902; was elected, unanimously; to fill a vacancy in
the Sixtieth Congress caused by the resignation of Hon. Charles E. Littlefield; and to
the Sixty-first Congress, receiving 18,479 votes to 17,115 for D. J. McGillicuddy,
Democrat, 492 for George A. England, Socialist, and 376 for Arthur J. Dunton, Pro-
hibitionist. :
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 1889—
1892; elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,727 votes, to
14,846 for E. J. Lawrence, Democrat, 222 for S. F. Emerson, Prohibitionist, and 426
for R. G. Henderson, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Aroostook, Penobscot, Piscataquis, and Washington (4 counties).
Population (1900), 199,171. :
FRANK EDWARD GUERNSEY, Republican, of Dover, was born October 15,
1866, in Dover, Piscataquis County, Me. He received a common school educa-
tion, attended Foxcroft Academy, Eastern Maine Conference Seminary at Bucks-
port, Maine Wesleyan Seminary, Kents Hill, Me., and Eastman’s Business College,
Poughkeepsie, N. Y., studied law, and was admitted to the bar at Dover in 18go.
Was elected treasurer of Piscataquis County in 189o, and reelected twice, serving six
years until December 31, 1896; was a member of the Maine house of representatives
in 1897 and 1899, and a member of the Maine senate in 1903; was chosen a delegate
to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1908. He is president of
Piscataquis Savings Bank, of Dover, and is married. He was elected to fill vacancy
in the Sixtieth Congress, caused by death of Hon. Llewellyn Powers, and to the
Sixty-first Congress, receiving 19,659 votes to 16,152 for George M. Hanson, Demo-
crat, 359 for William A; Rideout, Prohibitionist, and 189 for Donald W. Ross, Socialist.
MARYLAND.
SENATORS.
ISIDOR RAYNER, Demccrat, of Baltimore, was born in that city April 11, 1850;
- was educated at the University of Maryland and the University of Virginia; at the
University of Virginia he took the academic and law courses, and upon his return to
Baltimore was admitted to the bar in 1870, and has been practicing law in that city
since that time. He has held the following public offices: In 1878 he was elected to
the Maryland legislature for two years, and served on the judiciary committee and
was chairman of the Baltimore city delegation; in 1885 he was elected to the State
senate for four years, serving on the judiciary committee; he resigned his place in
the State senate in the middle of his term and became the Democratic candidate for
Congress, and in 1886 was elected to the Fiftieth Congress and served on the Com-
mittees on Foreign Affairs and Interstate and Foreign Commerce; he was again
elected to the Fifty-second Congress, serving on the Committees on Foreign Affairs
and Coinage, Weights, and Measures, and was reelected to the Fifty-third Congress
and served on the same committees; he declined a reelection for a fourth term, and °
was elected attorney-general of Maryland, serving from 1899 to 1903; in 1904 he was
elected to the United States Senate to succeed the Hon. Louis E. McComas, Repub-
lican, for the term beginning March 4, 1905. His term of service will expire March
3,“191T,
JOHN WALTER SMITH, Democrat, of Snow Hill, was born in that town Feb-
ruary 5, 1845. His ancestors were among the first settlers of that part of the State,
and his paternal grandfather, Judge William Whittington, was one of the early cir-
cuit judges of Maryland. His father, John Walter Smith, and his mother both died
before he was 5 years old. He was educated at private schools and at Union
66525—60-2—2D ED——§
46 Congressional Directory. MARYLAND,
Academy, and began his business career at the age of 18 years. He is engaged in
| the lumber business in Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina; is president of the
First National Bank of Snow Hill, and is director in many business and financial
institutions. He was elected to represent Worcester County in the senate of Mary-
land in 1889, and was successively reelected in 1893 and 1897; was president of the
State senate during the session of 1894; was nominated and elected to Congress from
the First Congressional district of Maryland in 1898; was elected governor of Mary-
land by over 12,000 plurality in 1899; served as governor from 19oo to 1904; was a
delegate at large to the Democratic national convention held at Kansas City in 1900
and also to the St. I,ouis convention in 1904; was nominated by direct vote of the
members of the Democratic party of Maryland on November 5, 1907, by a plurality
of 17,931, at the first primary election held in his State for United States Senator, to
serve the term beginning March 4, 1909, and was thereafter elected United States
Senator for that term by the general assembly of the State January 15, 1908S. He
was elected United States Senator at the same session of the Maryland legislature
on March 24 to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. William Pinkney
Whyte for the unexpired term ending March 3, 1909. His term of service will expire 3
March 3, 1915,
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 ia 1839, 6 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, ig
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 and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and again elected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,567 votes, to 16,124 for T. A. Smith, Democrat, and
1,338 for J, H. Dulany, Prohibitionist.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Baltimore, Carroll, and Harford; and Fifteenth and Sixteenth wards of Baltimore
City.
y Population (1900), 196,878.
JOSHUA FREDERICK C. TALBOTT, Democrat, of Towson, was porn 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 nominated 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 b
Democratic convention at St. T,ouis 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 and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 17,870 votes, to 16,618
for Robert Garrett, Republican, 637 for J. S. Green, Prohibitionist, and 439 for
George Bauer, Socialist. = Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CITY OF BALTIMORE.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, and T'wenty-
second wards, and the Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, and Thirteenth precincts of the Eighteenth
Ward.
Population (1900), 194,606.
HARRY B. WOLF, Democrat, of Baltimore, was born at 230 North High street,
Baltimore, Md., June 16, 1880; after attending the public schools of that city entered
the Maryland University School of Law, and from there was graduated as a lawyer
rm
MARYLAND.] Biographical. 47
June 3, 1901, receiving the degree of LL.B.; since that time has been practicing his
profession in Baltimore; was married in 1904; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 15,725 votes, to 14,841 for W. W. Johnson, Republican, and 617 for J. P.
Jarboe, Socialist.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CITY OF BALTIMORE.—Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Seventeenth,
Nineteenth. and Twentieth wards, and the First, Second, Third, and I'welfth precincts of the
Eighteenth Ward.
Population (1900), 201,882.
JOHN GILL, JRr., Democrat, of Baltimore, was born June g, 1850, in Baltimore
city; he received his academic training at Hampden-Sidney College, Va., and studied
law at the Maryland University; in 1871 Mr. Gill was admitted to the Baltimore bar,
and has for a number of years been senior member of the law firm of Gill & Preston.
Mr. Gill at one time served as one of the legal advisers of Baltimore city, and for
nine years was one of its police commissioners; in the years 1874, 1875, 1876, and
1877 he was a member of the Maryland house of delegates; in 1882 was elected to
the Maryland senate for a term of four years, and was reelected for a like term in
1904; it was while serving part of this second term that Mr. Gill was elected to Con-
gress. He was president, for a number of years, of one of tie largest manufacturing
establishments in Baltimore; in 1877-78 served as an officer in the Fifth Maryland
Regiment (State militia). Mr. Gill is married, and resides at 1007 North Charles
street. He was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 18,010 votes, to 16,306 for J. V. I. Findlay, jr., Republican, 613 for
W. M. Jett, Prohibitionist, and 584 for E. B. Steele, Socialist. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
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 Eighteenth 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,798 votes, to
13,405 for G. M. Smith, Democrat, 492 for W. H. Silk, Prohibitionist, and 613 for
J. S. Matthews, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first 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; is a Mason, an Odd Fellow, belongs to
the Order of Eagles, also the Elks, and Knights of Pythias; is a member of the
Maryland Society of the Sons of the American Revolution; in 1890 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. Poffenberger, a plurality of 4,506, carrying all the counties in the
district for the first time in its history); reelected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,136
votes, to 11,232 for H. R. Spessard, Democrat, 959 for R. I. Sappington, Prohibi-
tionist, and 853 for Ira Culp, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
48 Congressional Directory. [MASSACHUSETTS.
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 Knglish
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,
‘‘ 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;’”’ 1906, ‘‘A Frontier Town, and other essays;’’ is a member of the
Massachusetts Historical Society, of the Virginia Historical Society, of the American
Academy of Arts and Science, of the New England Historic and Genealogical Society,
and of the American Antiquarian Society, and has received the degree of doctor of
laws from Williams College, Clark University, Yale University, and Harvard Uni-
versity; was permanent chairman of the Republican national convention which met
in Philadelphia June 19, 1900; chairman of the committee on resolutions of the
Republican national convention of 1904 at Chicago; was a member of the Commis-
sion on Alaskan Boundary appointed by President Roosevelt; Regent of the Smith-
sonian Institution during service in the House of Representatives, and appointed
Regent again in 1905; served two terms as member of the house of representatives of
the Massachusetts legislature; was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second.
and Fifty-third Congresses; was elected to the Senate January 17, 1893, to succeed
Henry I,. Dawes; resigned his seat in the House and took his seat in the Senate
March 4, 1893. He was reelected in 1899 and 1905. His term of service will expire
March 3, 1911.
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, 1goo—-19o2; 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. He was elected by the legislature, in January, 1905, to
fill out the term and was reelected in 1907. His term of service will expire March.3,
1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
BERKSHIRE COUNTY.
FRANKLIN CounTY.— Towns of Ashfield, Bernardston, Buckland, Charlemont, Colrain, Conway,
Deerfield, Gill, Greenfield, Hawley, Heath, Leyden, Monroe, Rowe, Shelburne, and Whately.
HAMPDEN CouNTvy.—City of Holyoke and towns of Agawam, Blandford, Chester, Granville, Mont-
gomery, Russell, Southwick, Tolland, Westfield, and West Springfield. ;
HAMPSHIRE CouNTY.—T'owns of Chesterfield, Cummington, Goshen, Hatfield, Huntington, Mid-
dlefield, Plainfield, Southampton, Westhampton, Williamsburg, and Worthington.
Population (1905), 211,915.
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
MASSACHUSETTS.] Biographical. 49
elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,622 votes, to 9,528
for F. J. Lawlor, Democrat, and 1,012 for Benjamin Clow, Socialist. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
FRANKLIN CounTY.— Towns of Erving, Ieverett, Montague, New Salem, Northfield, Orange,
Shutesbury, Sunderland, Warwick, and Wendell. ;
HamMPDEN CountTy.—Cities of Chicopee and Springfield; towns of Brimfield, Fast I,ongmeadow,
Hampden, Holland, I,ongmeadow, I,udlow, Monson, Palmer, Wales, and Wilbraham.
HAMPSHIRE CoUuNTY.—City of Northampton; towns of Amherst, Belchertown, Easthampton,
Enfield, Granby, Greenwich, Hadley, Pelham, Prescott, South Hadley, and Ware.
WORCESTER CoUNTY.— Towns of Athol, Barre, Brookfield, Dana, Hardwick, New Braintree, North
Brookfield, Oakham, Petersham, Phillipston, Royalston, Warren, and West Brookfield.
Population (1905), 215,681.
FREDERICK HUNTINGTON GILLETT, Republican, of Springfield, was born at
Westfield, Mass., October 16, 1851; graduated at Amherst College in 1874 and Har-
vard Law School in 1877; was admitted to the bar in Springfield in 1877; was assistant
attorney-general of Massachusetts from 1879 to 1882; was elected to the Massachusetts
house of representatives in 1890 and 1891; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth,
Fifty-fiftth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected - to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,873 votes, to 8,412 for E. A. Hall,
Democrat, and 1,622 for G.H. Wrenn, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
WORCESTER CouNTv.—City of Worcester; towns of Auburn, Charlton, Douglass, Dudley, Grafton,
Holden, I eicester, Millbury, Northbridge, Oxford, Paxton, Rutland, Shrewsbury, Southbridge,
Spencer, Sturbridge, Sutton, Uxbridge, Webster, Westboro, and West Boylston.
Population (1905), 212,371.
CHARLES GRENFILI, WASHBURN, Republican, of Worcester, was born in
Worcester, Mass., January 28,.1857; was graduated from the Worcester Polytechnic
Institute in 1875 and from Harvard University in 1880; admitted to the Suffolk bar in
1887; was for several years an executive officer in the Washburn & Moen Manufac-
turing Company, of Worcester, and has been connected with various other manufac-
turing enterprises; was a member of the Massachusetts house of representatives in
1897-98, and of the Massachusetts senate in 1899-1qoo; in 19o2 was a member of a
committee to revise the corporation laws of Massachusetts; delegate to the Repub-
lican national convention at Chicago in 1904. He was elected to fill out the unex-
pired term of Hon. Rockwood Hoar, deceased, in the Fifty-ninth Congress, and to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,686 votes, to 10,415 for W. I. McLaughlin, Demo-
crat, and 658 for I. F, Weiss, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
MIDDLESEX CouNTyY.—Cities of Marlboro and Waltham; towns of Acton, Ashby, Ashland, Ayer
Bedford, Boxboro, Concord, Framingham, Groton, Hudson, I,exington, Lincoln, I ittleton,
Maynard, Natick, Pepperell, Shirley, Stow, Sudbury, Townsend, Wayland, Westford, and
Weston.
WORCESTER CouNnTY.—City of Fitchburg; towns of Ashburnham, Berlin, Bolton, Boylston,
Clinton, Gardner, Harvard, Hubbardston, Lancaster, Lunenburg, Leominster, Northboro,
Princeton, Southboro, Sterling, Templeton, Westminster, and Winchendon.
Population (1905), 211,944.
- CHARLES QUINCY TIRRELIL, 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, Fifty-
eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress by 15,229
majority, having no Democratic competitor, receiving 20,750 votes, to 5,501 for
Timothy Richardson, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
50 Congressional Directory. IMASSACHUSHITS:
FIFTH DISTRICT.
Essex CouNnTy.—City of Lawrence; towns of Andover, Lynnfield, Methuen, and North Andover.
MIDDLESEX CouNTv.—City of Lowell; towns of Billerica, Burlington, Carlisle, Chelmsford, Dracut,
Dunstable, North Reading, Reading, Tewksbury, Tyngsboro, and Wilmington.
Population (1905), 211,253.
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
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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 15,778 votes, to 12,881 for J. J. Flynn, Democrat, and 470 for F. P. Folsom,
“Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
Essex CountTvy.—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 (1905), 206,195.
AUGUSTUS PEABODY GARDNER, Republican, of Hamilton, was born Novem-
ber 5, 1865; graduated from Harvard College in 1886; was a member of the Massa-
chusetts State senate for two terms; served during the Spanish-American war; was
elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation
of Hon. W. H. Moody, to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,390 votes, to 14,055 for G. A. Schofield, Demo-
crat, and 1,102 for J. F. Putnam, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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 (1905), 232,208.
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,752 votes, to 9,816 for J. A. O'Keefe, Democrat, and
1,172 for B. W. Gidney, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
MIDDLESEX CouNTy.—Cities of Cambridge, Medford, Somerville, and Woburn; towns of Arling-
ton, Belmont, and Winchester.
Population (1905), 223,064.
SAMUEL WALKER McCALIL, Republican, of Winchester, was born in East Prov-
idence, Pa., February 28, 1851; graduated at New Hampton (N. H.) Academy in
a
————TL
—
oN
57 8 |
MASSACHUSETTS] Biographical. SI
1870, at Dartmouth College (A. B.) in 1874; admitted to the bar, practicing in Boston;
served as editor in chief of the Boston Daily Advertiser; member of the Massachusetts
house of representatives of 1888, 1889, and 1892; delegate to the Republican national
conventions of 1888 and 1900; author of biography of Thaddeus Stevens in American
Statesmen Series; elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth,
Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 17,952 votes, to 11,690 for F. S. Deitrick, Democrat, and 597 for
O. D. Field, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.
SUFFOLK CouNTY.—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 (3905), 204,943.
JOHN A. KELIHER, Democrat, of Boston, is in the real estate business; was a
member of the Massachusetts house of representatives, 1896-97, and of the Massachu-
setts senate, 1899-1900; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,997 votes, to 6,256 for E. C.
Webb, Republican, and 1,242 for G. W. Galvin, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.
NORFOLK CouNTy.—City of Quincy and the town of Milton.
SUFFOLK COUNTY.—Wards numbered Thirteen, Fourteen, Fifteen, Sixteen, Seventeen, Twenty,
and Twenty-four, in the city of Boston.
Population (1905), 218,913.
JOSEPH FRANCIS O'CONNELL, Democrat, of Boston, was born in Boston,
December 7, 1872, and now resides at 13 Bowdoin street, Dorchester, Boston, Mass.;
he received his early education in the Mather School of Boston and prepared for
college at St. Mary’s Parochial School; received the degree of A. B. from Boston
College in 1893 and the degree of LI.B. from Harvard University in 1896; was
admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1897 and has been engaged in the practice of law
since then; is unmarried; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,979
votes, to 14,621 for E. B. Callender, Republican, and 948 for 1. E. Worcester, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first 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 (1903), 213,688.
ANDREW JAMES PETERS, Democrat, of Jamaica Plain, Boston, was born at
that place April 3, 1872; is a graduate of Harvard College (A. B.), 1895; graduate of
Harvard Law School (LL. B.), 1898; is a lawyer by profession; was a member of the
Massachusetts legislature in 1902; member of the State senate of Massachusetts, r1g9o4
and 1905; served five years as member of the Massachusetts Militia; is unmarried;
was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,099 votes, to 14,670 for D. W. Lane,
Republican, and 785 for G. G. Cutting, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Con- gress.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.
BRISTOL COUNTY.—Town of North Attleboro.
MIDDLESEX CounTY.—City of Newton; towns of Holliston, Hopkinton, Sherborn, and Watertown.
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.
WORCESTER COUNTY.—Towns of Blackstone, Hopedale, Mendon, Milford, and Upton.
Population (1903), 215,155.
JOHN WINGATE WEEKS, Republican, of Newton, was born in Lancaster, N. H.,
April 11, 1860; graduated at the United States Naval Academy in 1881; served in
the United States Navy as a midshipman from graduation until 1883; served in the
52 Congressional Directory [MASSACHUSETTS.
Massachusetts Naval Brigade ten years, from 18go to 1900, the last six years of this
service as commanding officer of the organization; served as a lieutenant in the
Volunteer Navy during the Spanish-American war, commanding the second division
of the auxiliary navy; is married; is a member of the firm of Hornblower & Weeks,
bankers and brokers; is vice-president of the First National Bank of Boston, and
president of the Newtonville Trust Company, Newton; was for three years—
1900, 1901, 19o2—alderman, and two years—igo3 and 1go4—mayor of the city of
Newton; was the permanent chairman of the Massachusetts Republican State con-
vention in October, 1905; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,948 votes, to 10,591 for D. W. Murray, Democrat,
and 1,289 for C. C. Jordan, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.
BrisToL CounTy.—Cities of Fall River and New Bedford; towns of Acushnet, Berkley, Dartmouth,
Dighton, Fairhaven, Freetown, Rehoboth, Seekonk, Somerset, Swansea, and Westport.
DUKES AND NANTUCKET COUNTIES.
PLymMoUTH CouNTY.—Towns of Marion, Mattapoisett, and Rochester.
Population (1905), 215,686.
WILLIAM STEDMAN GREENE, Republican,of Fall River,was born in Tremont,
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 candidate 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-
eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
14,236 votes, to6,603 for F. M. Kennedy, Democrat. Reelected to the Sixty-first Con-
gress.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.
BARNSTABLE COUNTY.
BrIsTOoL CouNTv.—City of Taunton; towns of Attleboro, aston, Mansfield, Norton, and Raynham.
NORFOLK CouNTy.— Town of Cohasset.
PLymouTH CouUNTvy.—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.
Population (1905), 210,664.
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 1830;
was nominated by acclamation in the Congressional convention of the Twelfth
district September 22, 1896, and elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 18,002 votes, to 6,815 for T. F. Loorem, Democrat, and 4,301 for D. A. -
White, Socialist, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
er
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MICHIGAN.] Biographical. 33
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; received the degree of LI. D. from Kalamazoo
College; elected to the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth, and Fifty-first Congresses; twice elected
Speaker pro tempore of the House of Representatives during the Fifty-first Congress,
and was elected to the Fifty-second and Fifty-third Congresses, and reelected to the
Fifty-fourth Congress by over 13,000 plurality; resigned his seat in the House Jan-
unary 23, 1895, to assume the office of United States Senator 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 the vote of every Republican mem-
ber of the legislature, and again in 1905, when he received the vote of every member
of the legislature. His term of service will expire March 3, 1911.
WILLIAM ALDEN SMITH, Republican, of Grand Rapids, was born at Dowagiac,
Mich., May 12, 1859; received a common school education; moved 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 honored with
the degree of master of arts by Dartmouth College in June, 1901; is president and
principal owner of the Grand Rapids Herald, the leading morning newspaper of
western Michigan; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-
seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and was unopposed for a seventh
term and unanimously reelected to the Sixtieth Congress. In January, 1907, was
elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. R. A. Alger for the term begin-
ning March 4, and upon the death of Senator Alger he was elected to fill out the
unexpired term, taking his seat February 11. His term of service will expire March
3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
City oF DETROIT.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Fighth, Ninth, Tenth,
Eleventh, Thirteenth, Fifteenth, and Seventeenth wards. :
Population (1904), 259,775.
EDWIN DENBY, Republican, of Detroit, was born at Evansville, Ind., February
18, 1870; educated in the public schools of Evansville and the University of Mich-
igan, graduating from the latter institution with the degree of LI. B.; is an attorney
at law, and unmarried; was ten years in the customs service of China under Sir Rob-
ert Hart, while his father, Hon. Charles Denby, was United States minister to China;
was a representative from Detroit in the Michigan legislature of 1903; served as
gunner’s mate, third class, U. S. Navy, on the Yosemite, in the war with Spain; was
elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
23,741 votes, to 16,975 for F. F. Ingram, Democrat, 135 for M. G. Wylie, Prohibitionist,
373 for Charles Erb, Socialist, and 71 for Peter Friesema, Socialist Labor. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
54 Congressional Directory. (MICHIGAN:
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounNTIiES.—Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw.
WAYNE CountTvy.— Townships of Brownstone, Canton, Ecorse, Huron, Monguagon, Northville,
Plymouth, Romulus, Sumpter, Taylor, and Van Buren, and Wyandotte City.
Population (1904), 207,851.
CHARLES ELROY TOWNSEND, Republican, of Jackson, was born in Concord,
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
1895, and has practiced his profession in Jackson since; married; was elected to
the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 23,397 votes, to 924 for J. W. Gray, Prohibitionist. The Demo-
crats made no nomination. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress. :
THIRD DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Branch, Calhoun, Faton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties).
Population (1904), 189,665.
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 ir 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,821 votes, to 10,388 for J. D. Shipman, Democrat,
693 for J. M. Shackleton, Prohibitionist, and 881 for F. A. Kulp, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress. :
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren (6 counties).
Population (1904), 188,587.
EDWARD I. HAMILTON, Republican, of Niles, was born in Niles, Mich.,
December 9, 1857; had a common school education; was admitted to the bar in 1884;
was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,553 votes, to
11,561 for George R. Herkimer, Democrat, and 481 for H. S. McMaster, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFIrH DISTRICT,
CounTIES.—Ionia, Kent, and Ottawa (3 counties).
Population (1904), 215,314.
GERRIT JOHN DIEKEMA, Republican, of Holland, was born at Holland,
Mich., March 27, 1859; was educated at Hope College, graduating with honor, 1881,
and at the University of Michigan, graduating from the law department of that insti-
tution in 1883; began the practice of the law in his native city and has continued in
it there, a member of the firm of Diekema & Kollen. Entering political life early,
he has served as member of the board of education, mayor, city attorney, and mem-
ber of the legislature four consecutive terms, beginning in 1885; at the session of
1889 he was chosen speaker of the house of representatives. Mr. Diekema has
been chairman of the Michigan Republican State central committee in four cam-
paigns; was a delegate to the national convention in 1896, which nominated Major
McKinley for President, and by him was appointed a member of the Spanish Treaty
Claims Commission, which position he resigned to make the race for Congress. In
1884 Mr. Diekema was chosen to deliver the annual oration before the alumni associa-
MICHIGAN] : Biographical. 55
tion of the Michigan University and was the orator on Netherlands Day at the
Columbian Exposition and World’s Fair, Chicago, 1893. He was elected to the Six-
tieth Congress April 27, 1907, to fill the vacancy caused by the election of Hon.
William Alden Smith to the United States Senate, receiving 11,887 votes, to 10,505
for G. W, Hummer, Democrat. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Genesee, Ingham, Iivingston, Oakland; townships of Livonia, Redford, Greenfield,
Dearborn, Nankin, and Springwells, of the county of Wayne, and the Twelfth, Fourteenth,
Sixteenth, and Eighteenth wards of the city of Detroit.
Population (1904), 237,758.
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 34,001 votes, to 14,360
for P. B. De Lisle, Democrat, 407 for J. A. C. Merton, Socialist, and 973 for C. P.
Russell, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Huron, I,apeer, Macomb, Sanilac, and St. Clair, and Grosse Pointe, Gratiot, and Ham-
tranck townships of Wayne County.
Population (1904), 193,708.
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
business with him, and two daughters; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 17,100 votes, to
11,028 for William Springer, Democrat, 546 for I,. O. Boynton, Prohibitionist, and
33 for J. M. Lamb, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Clinton, Saginaw, Shiawassee, and Tuscola (4 counties).
Population (1904), 180,551.
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; was vice-president of the Saginaw Board of Trade; was elected alder-
man in 1895 and reelected in 1897; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 16,849 votes, to 851 for W. A. Heartt, Prohibitionist, and 527 for A. G.
Houghton, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIiES.—Benzie, Lake, I.eelanau, Manistee, Mason, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, and Wexford
(9 counties).
Population (1904), 166,124.
JAMES C. McLAUGHLIN, Republican, of Muskegon, was born in Illinois in
1864; moved to Muskegon, Mich., where he has since resided; was educated in
the public schools of Muskegon and in the literary and law departments of the Uni-
versity of Michigan, graduating from the latter in 1883; has been prosecuting attor-
ney of his county; in 19or he was appointed by the governor of the State a member
56 Congressional Directory. [MICHIGAN.
of the board of State tax commissioners and State board of assessors, in the latter
capacity taking part in the first assessment of railroad property of the State for tax-
ation; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress by 9,100 majority over C. G. Wing,
Democrat, receiving 14,374 votes, to 5,288 for Wing, 651 for W. H. Hurlbut, Prohi-
bitionist, and 258 for J. M. Smeijkel, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
3% |
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TENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Alcona, Alpena, Arenac, Bay, Cheboygan, Crawford, Emmet, Gladwin, Tosco, Midland,
Montmorency, Ogemaw, Oscoda, Otsego, and Presque Isle (15 counties).
Population (1904), 204,478.
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 and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,958 votes, to
536 for Joseph LaBarge, Socialist, a net majority of 18,422. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Antrim, Charlevoix, Clare, Grand Traverse, Gratiot, Isabella, Kalkaska, Mecosta,
Missaukee, Montcalm, Osceola, and Roscommon (12 counties).
Population (1904), 210,680.
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; has
been engaged in the business of banking since 1870; was elected tothe Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, i
receiving 18,111 votes, to 7,517 for A. J. Lasey, Democrat.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Alger, Baraga, Chippewa, Delta, Dickinson, Gogebic, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw,
Luce, Mackinac, Marquette, Menominee, Ontonagon, and Schoolcraft (15 counties).
Population (1904), 275,525.
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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 22,271 votes, to 6,315 for J. F. Ryan, Democrat, and 873 for Frank
Vivian, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first 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; reelected in 1901 and
1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
Sl
Ess
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MINNESOTA]  . Biographical. 57
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, 1901, and was reelected in 1905. His term of service will expire
March 3, 1911.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Dodge, Fillmore, Freeborn, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Steele, Wabasha, Waseca, and
Winona (10 counties).
Population (1905), 207,027.
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
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 ro, 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; served as vice-chairman of the Republican Congressional campaign com-
mittee in 1906. He was elected to the State senate of Minnesota in 1890; was elected
to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 17,052
votes, to 12,671 for Andrew French, Democrat. Reelected to the Sixty-first Con-
gress. :
SECOND DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Blue Earth, Brown, Cottonwood, Faribault, Jackson, Martin, Murray, Nobles, Pipe-
stone, Rock, and Watonwan (11 counties).
Population (1905), 174,856.
WINFIELD SCOTT HAMMOND, Democrat, of St. James, was born in South-
boro, Worcester County, Mass., November 17, 1863. He was educated in the public
schools and entered Dartmouth College in 1880, graduating therefrom in 1884.
From September, 1884, until June, 1890, he was a high school principal in the State
of Minnesota. In 1891 he was admitted to the bar and since that time has been a
practicing attorney at law. He served as county attorney of Watonwan County,
Minn., nearly six years and has been a member of the State board of normal school
directors for Minnesota for eight years. He was the Democratic candidate for Con-
gress from the Second Congressional district of Minnesota in 1892, but was defeated
by James Thompson McCleary, the Republican candidate, who since that time and
until March 4, 1907, represented the district; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 13,526 votes, to 12,466 for J. T. McCleary, Republican, and 811 for D. A.
Tucker, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Carver, Dakota, Goodhue, Iesueur, Mcleod, Nicollet, Rice, Scott, and Sibley (9 coun-
ties).
Population (1905), 185,041.
CHARLES RUSSELL DAVIS, Republican, of St. Peter, was born at Pittsfield,
I1l.; moved to Lesueur County, Minn., at an early age; was educated in the common
schools; for several years thereafter received private instructions in the higher
branches and graduated at a business college in St. Paul; was admitted to the bar
and practiced his profession for more than thirty years in Minnesota in all the State
and United States courts; aside from his extensive general practice of the law, he
achieved marked success as a criminal lawyer; was prosecuting attorney for ten
years, and city attorney and city clerk of St. Peter for eighteen years; was elected
58 Congressional Directory. ; [MINNESOTA.,
and served for two years in the house of representatives, and four years in the State
senate of Minnesota; for four years was captain in a regiment of the Minnesota
National Guard; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,641 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Chisago, Ramsey, and Washington (3 counties).
Population (1905), 249,555.
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 legislature of Minnesota in 1888 and 189o, and to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-
sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,300 votes, to 9,179 for Gustave Scholle, Democrat,
and 1,544 for Adolph Land, Municipal Ownership. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CounNTy.—Hennepin.
Population (1905), 292,806.
FRANK MELLEN NYE, Republican, of Minneapolis, was born in Shirley, Pis-
cataquis County, Me., March 7, 1852; was educated in the common schools and
the academy at River Falls, Wis.; is a lawyer; was district attorney of Polk
County, Wis. ; a member of the Wisconsin assembly 1884-85; when the Hon. John C.
Spooner was first elected to the United States Senate he made the nominating
speech in the legislative caucus in his behalf; held the office of county attorney of
Hennepin County 1893 to 1897, prosecuting many important cases, notably that of
The State z. Harry T. Hayward; is married and has four children; was elected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 23,742 votes, to 16,448 for F. D. Larrabee, Demo-
crat, 1,157 for F. E. Lindsay, Prohibitionist, and 1,386 for C. F. Dight, Municipal
Ownership. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Benton, Cass, Crow Wing, Douglas, Hubbard, Meeker, Morrison, Sherburne, Stearns,
Todd, Wadena, and Wright (12 counties).
Population (1905), 227,839.
CHARLES A. LINDBERGH, Republican, of Little Falls, was born in Sweden in
1859, and brought by his parents to the United States in 1860; lived at Melrose, Minn.,
on a farm from 1860 to 1881. School advantages at Melrose up to about 1876 were so
limited that Mr. Lindbergh’s early education was neglected, and much of his boy-
hood was spent in hunting and trapping. In 1881 he began a systematic education,
spent the most of the next five years at Grove Lake Academy, Stearns County, Minn.,
and the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, graduating from the law department
of the latter institution, and has practiced law in Minnesota for over twenty years.
He has written on political economy and social questions; paid no attention to the
details of politics until he became a candidate for the Sixtieth Congress, to which he
was elected, receiving 16,754 votes, to 13,135 for M. C. Tifft, Democrat. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Bigstone, Chippewa, Grant, Kandiyohi, Lac qui Parle, Lincoln, Iyon, Pope, Redwood,
Renville, Stevens, Swift, Traverse, and Yellow Medicine (14 counties).
Population (1905), 196,540.
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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress without opposition, receiving 21,291 votes. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
MINNESOTA.] Biographical. 59
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Aitkin, Anoka, Carlton, Cook, Isanti, Itasca, Kanabec, Koochichang, I,ake, Millelacs,
Pine, and St. Louis (12 counties).
Population (1905), 219,513.
J. ADAM BEDE, Republican, of Pine City, was born in Lorain County, Ohio, in
1856; learned the printer’s trade and engaged in newspaper work; served as United
States marshal for the district of Minnesota; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and
Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,640 votes,
to 6,025 for G. E. Peterson, Public Ownership.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Becker, Beltrami, Clay, Clearwater, Kittson, Mahnomen, Marshall, Norman, Ottertail,
Polk, Red Lake, Roseau, and Wilkin (13 counties).
Population (1905), 226,735.
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. In 1904, in recognition of his services to them, he was adopted as a member
of the Mississippi Band of Chippewa Indians in Minnesota. Was elected to the
Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress, receiving 18,057 votes, to 15,010 for Ole O. Sageng, Independent, and
3,055 for Braaten, Socialist.
MISSISSIPPI.
SENATORS.
HERNANDO DE SOTO MONEY, Democrat, of Mississippi City, 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 United States Senate October 8,1897,
to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. J. Z. George on August 14, 1897; in
January, 1898, elected by the legislature to fill out the unexpired term ending March
3, 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 MCcLAURIN, Democrat, of Brandon, son of ILauchlin and
Ellen Caroline (Tullus) McLaurin, 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 occasionally 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 legislature in 1879; Presidential elector
for the State at large in 1888; delegate to the constitutional convention in 18go;
United States Senator in February, 1894; governor of Mississippi in 1895, and served
four years; elected to the United States Senate in January, 1900, for the term begin-
ning March 4, 1901; reelected for the term beginning March 4, 1907. His term of
service will expire March 3, 1913.
60 Congressional Directory. : [MISSISSIPPI
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Alcorn, Itawamba, I,ee, I,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 Tuka 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, and having pre-
viously 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 Tuka 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 Presiden-
tial 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; was for ten years a member of the Democratic execu-
tive committee of Alcorn County; is a member of the Baptist Church, and was, from
1896 to 1905, the moderator of the Tishomingo Baptist Association, and several times
represented that association in the Southern Baptist Convention, which is the largest
religious organization in that 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 elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and
Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress without opposition for
nomination or election, receiving 2,563 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Benton, De Soto, Lafayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchie, Tate, Tippah, and Union
(9 counties).
Population (19co0), 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 officer 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, E. Johnston at Greensboro,
N. C.; returned home to find all the property of his father’s estate swept away as a
result of the war, and commenced teaching school and farming and at the same
time studying law; was admitted to the bar and has practiced his profession since at
Ripley; is a member of the Baptist Church; 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 was elected district attorney of the Third judicial district, composed
of seven counties, which position he held until 1892, when he voluntarily retired; he
A
MISSISSIPPL] Biographical. 61
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress without opposition, receiving 2,567
votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Bolivar, Coahoma, Holmes, Issaquena, Leflore, Quitman,'Sharkey, Sunflower, Tunica,
and Washington (10 counties).
Population (1900), 232,174.
BENJAMIN GRUBB HUMPHREYS, Democrat, of Greenville, 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 188s, 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 Iouise 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
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; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to
the Sixtieth Congress without opposition, receiving 1,540 votes. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Attala, Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Clay, Grenada, Montgomery, Pontotoc,
Webster, and Yalobusha (11 counties).
Population (1900), 199,650.
WILSON SHEDRIC HILI,, 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 Cumberlanid 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 189g; was elected to the
Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress with-
out opposition, receiving 2,536 votes.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CountTiEs.—Clarke, Jasper, Kemper, Lauderdale, 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
66525—60—2—2D ED——6
62 Congressional Directory. [MISSINSIFPL
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 Longino in 1901; resigned his
position as chancellor, and was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 2,782 votes. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CounTies.—Covington, Forrest, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Jeff Davis, Jones, Lawrence,
Marion, I,amar, Pearl River, Perry, Simpson, and Wayne (15 counties).
Population (1900), 162,440.
EATON JACKSON BOWERS, Democrat, of Bay St. Louis, was born at Canton,
Miss., June 17, 1865. Was admitted to the bar at Canton, Madison County, at the
age of 17 years. 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; and in 19oo to the house of repre-
sentatives from Hancock County; was a member of the State Democratic executive
committee from 1886 to 1900; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention
in 1900; was vice-chairman of the Democratic Congressional campaign committee in .
1906; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses. and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 4,077 votes, to 173 for J. A. Brash, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Jefferson, Lincoln, Pike, and Wilkinsou
(9 counties). *
Population (1900), 211,521.
FRANK ALEXANDER McLAIN, Democrat, of Gloster, was born in Amite
County, Miss., January 29, 1852; attended the common schools of the county and
graduated in the A.B. course at the University of Mississippi in June, 1874; com-
menced the practice of law in Liberty, Miss., 1880; was elected to the State legisla-
ture in 1881 for a term of two years; elected district attorney for his judicial dis-
trict in 1883, in which capacity he served for twelve consecutive years; 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 elected 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, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth-Congress
without opposition, receiving 1,933 votes.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—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, moved 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; served as temporary chairman of the National Democratic convention in 1904;
was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving all the votes cast. He had no opposition either for renomination or
‘election; was the candidate of his party for the office of Speaker in the Fifty-eighth,
RES
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MISSISSIPPL] Biographical. 63
Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses. On August 1, 1907, Mr. Williams was chosen
at a primary election to be the candidate of the Democratic party for the United
States Senate, and on January 23, 1908, elected by the legislature to succeed Hon.
H. D. Money, whose term expires March 3, 1911. ;
MISSOLIIR].
SENATORS.
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 TLouise Winston, April 2, 1874, and has three children; was elected to
the United States Senate, to succeed George Graham Vest, for the term beginning
March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909.
WILLIAM WARNER, Republican, of Kansas City, was born in Lafayette County,
Wis., June 11, 1840; educated in the common schools; enlisted in 1862 in the Thirty-
third Wisconsin; mustered out at the close of the war with the rank of major in the
Forty-fourth Wisconsin; located in Kansas City in 1865 and has been engaged there
ever since in the practice of the law; elected city attorney in 1867, circuit attorney
in 1868, to Congress in 1884, and reelected in 1886; elected commander in chief of
the Grand Army of the Republic in 1888; Republican candidate for governor in
1892; appointed United States district attorney for the western district of Missouri
in 1870, 1882, 1898, and in 1902; chairman of Republican State committee 1884-85;
delegate to the national Republican conventions of 1872, 1884, 1888, 1892, and 1896;
recipient of degree of LI,. D. from the University of Michigan in 1905; elected to
the United States Senate March 18, 1905, to succeed Francis Marion Cockrell.
His term of service will expire March 3, 1911.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
Counties.—Adair, Clark, Knox, Lewis, Macon, Marion, Putnam, Schuyler, Scotland, and Shelby
(10 counties).
Population (1900), 183,590.
JAMES TIGHLMAN LLOYD, Democrat, of Shelbyville,was born at Canton, Lewis
County, Mo., August 28, 1857; graduated from Christian University at Canton, Mo., in
1878; taught school for a few years thereafter ; was admitted to the bar, and then prac-
ticed his profession in Lewis County until 1885, when he located at his present home,
where he has since resided; 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,796 votes, to 16,655
for E. B. Clements, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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,
64 Congressional Directory. [MISSOURI
which position he held at the time he was nominated for Congress; was elected
to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,732 votes, to 15,814 for B. F. Blazell,
Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT,
CounTies.—Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, Daviess, Dekalb, Gentry, Harrison, Mercer, Ray, and Worth
(10 counties).
Population (1900), 182,960.
JOSHUA W. ALEXANDER, Democrat, of Gallatin, Daviess County, was born in
Cincinnati, Ohio, January 22, 1852; he attended the public schools there for three
years, and later the public schools at Canton, Lewis County, Mo., and having fin-
ished the public schools entered Christian University at Canton, Mo., in September,
1868, and graduated in June, 1872, receiving the degree of A. B. and the degree of
A. M., in June, 1907; he studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1875 at Gallatin,
Mo., where he has resided continuously since June, 1873; he was elected public ad-
ministrator of Daviess County in 1876, and reelected in 1880; in April, 1882, he was
elected a member of the board of education of Gallatin school district, and served,
first as president and later as secretary, for twenty-one years; in 1882 was elected
representative to the general assembly of Missouri from Daviess County, and re-
elected in 1884 and 1886, serving in the thirty-second, thirty-third, and thirty-fourth
general assemblies; was chairman of the committee on appropriations in the thirty-
third and speaker of the house in the thirty-fourth assembly; he has served two
terms as mayor of Gallatin; was a member of the board of managers of State Asylum
for the Insane at St. Joseph for a number of years, having been appointed by Gov-
ernor William J. Stone; was judge of the seventh judicial circuit of Missouri from
January, 1901, until February 1, 1907; he has always been a Democrat and active in
the politics of the State; he married the daughter of the late Judge Samuel A. Rich-
ardson in February, 1876; his wife and eight children, five sons and three daughters,
are living; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,679 votes, to 16,616 for
F. B. Klepper, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Holt, Nodaway, and Platte (6 counties).
Population (1900), 221,885.
CHARLES EF. BOOHER, Democrat, of Savannah, was born in East Groveland,
Livingston County, N. Y., January 31, 1848; was brought up on a farm and attended
the common schools; taught school and studied law, and went to Savannah in 1870;
was admitted to the bar in 1871, since which time has been engaged in the practice
of the law. Held the office of prosecuting attorney six years; was Presidential
elector on the Democratic ticket in 1880; mayor of Savannah six years; is married
and has four children; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,631 votes,
to 17,458 for F. B. Fulkerson, Republican, and 207 for F. B. Moser, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress. :
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CouNTY.—Jackson.
Population (1900), 195,193.
EDGAR CLARENCE ELLIS, Republican, of Kansas City, was born at Vermont-
ville, Mich., October 2, 1854; received his education at Olivet College, Michigan,
and later received the degree of A. B. from Carleton College, Minnesota, in which
latter institution he was an instructor in Latin for one year; was afterwards super-
intendent of public schools of the city of Fergus Falls, Minn., from 1881 to 1884.
In 1885 Mr. Ellis was admitted to the practice of law at Beloit, Kans.; he practiced
law in Kansas for a period of three years, and then moved to Kansas City and formed
a partnership with Hale H. Cook under the firm name of Ellis & Cook; the firm still
continues. Mr. Ellis was married in 1882 to Emily H., daughter of Joseph E. Roy,
D. D., of Chicago, I11., and three children have been born of the marriage, Joseph
R. Ellis, Ralph E. Ellis, and Frank H. Ellis; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Con-
gress, and reelected to Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,496 votes, to 19,710 for W. H.
Wallace, Democrat, and 616 for William Scott, Socialist. :
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MISSOURL] Biographical. 65
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CouNnTIES.—Bates, Cass, Cedar, Dade, Henry, Johnson, and St. Clair (7 counties).
Population (1900), 162,629.
DAVID ALBAUGH 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 17,574 votes, to 15,579 for
W. O. Atkeson, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
OUNTIES.—Benton, Greene, Hickory, Howard, Lafayette, Pettis, Polk, and Saline (8 counties).
Population (1900), 218,666.
COURTNEY WALKER HAMLIN, Democrat, of Springfield, was born at Bre-
vard, N. C., October 27, 1858; is a lawyer and married; was elected to the Fifty-
eightli Congress and to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,248 votes, to 20,497 for
John Welborn, Republican, and 525 for K. B. Martin, Socialist. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
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; elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,245 votes, to 14,186
for W. F. Quigley, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CounTiES.—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
College, and Cincinnati Law School; 1873-74 was president of Marshall College,
West Virginia, and for twenty-two years held the record for being the youngest col-
lege president in the United States; worked as a hired farm hand, clerked in a
country store, edited a country newspaper, and practiced law; moved to Missouri in
1875; was city attorney of Louisiana and Bowling Green; deputy prosecuting attor-
ney 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 committee notifying Judge Parker of
his nomination; married Miss Genevieve Bennett; has had four children born to him:
Little Champ, Ann Hamilton, Bennett, and Genevieve, the two latter still living;
was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and
Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,364
votes, to 17,972 for J. B, Garber, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.
ST. Louis County, and the First, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, T'welfth, Nineteenth,
Twenty-fourth, Twenty-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. Loouis,was born in Germany, Noveni-
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
66 : Congressional Directory. [MISSOURL
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 31,639 votes, to 16,336 for R. W. Coats, Democrat, and
3,102 for G. A. Haehn, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.
City OF ST. I,ouis.—Second, Third, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first,
and Twenty-sixth wards, and precincts one to ten, inclusive, of the Twenty-seventh Ward.
Population (1900), 207,414.
HENRY STEWART CAULFIELD, Republican, of St. Louis, was born in that
city December 9, 1873, son of Jno. and Virilda (Milburn) Caulfield; received a com-
mon school education, and graduated from the law department of Washington
University with the degree of LL. B.; is an attorney and counselor at law, and
had no public service prior to his election to the Sixtieth Congress; is a member
of the Committee on the Judiciary of the House and of the Mercantile Club of St.
Louis. He married Fannie Delano, daughter of W. Jay Delano and Maud E.
(Kroeger) Delano, October 27, 1902, and has two daughters, Elizabeth and Frances.
Mr. Caulfield received 13,171 votes, to 13,133 for George Neville, . Democrat, and
1,265 for P. A. Hofher, Socialist.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.
City OF ST. Toouls.—Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Twenty-second,
Twenty-third, and Twenty-fifth wards.
Population (1900), 152,424.
HARRY MARCY COUDREY, Republican, of St. Louis, was born at Brunswick,
Mo., February 28, 1867, son of John N. and Lucy H. Coudrey; moved to St. Louis when
he was 11 years of age, where he attended the public schools and the Manual Train-
ing School, and graduated from the latter in 1886; he then entered the insurance
business and is now the president of the Harry M. Coudrey Agency Company, with:
offices in the Pierce Building, St. Louis. Mr. Coudrey is a member of the Merchants’
Exchange, the Business Men’s League, the Loyal Legion, and the St. Louis, Racquet,
Noonday, Athletic, and Glen Echo clubs and a director in the Washington National
Bank. From 1897 to 1899 Mr. Coudrey was a member of the municipal assembly of
St. Louis, where he won the commendation of the public by his vigorous opposition
to all boodle measures. He was almost alone in his fight, however, and declined
reelection when his term expired. He has always taken an active interest in poli-
tics, and was at one time president of the Twenty-eighth Ward Republican League
Club. He married Mrs. Iida Bevis Roth, and has one son, Jerome Nicholson Cou-
drey. Mr. Coudrey was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress from the Twelfth Con-
gressional District of Missouri on the Republican ticket, but owing to gross election
frauds he was not seated until near the end of the first session, after successfully
contesting the seat of E. KE. Wood, Democrat; he was elected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress and reelected to the Sixty-first Congress, receiving 16,471 votes, to 15,930 for
C. M. Selph, Democrat, and 750 for Crouch, Socialist.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Bollinger, Carter, Iron, Jefferson, Madison, Perry, Reynolds, St. Francois, Ste. Gene-
vieve, Washington, and Wayne (11 counties).
Population (1900), 153,036.
MADISON R. SMITH, Democrat, of Farmington, was born and raised on a farm
in Bollinger County, Mo., and lived on it until 1854; was educated in the public
schools and Central College at Fayette, Mo.; read law with Hon. Louis Houck at
Cape Girardeau, Mo., and was admitted to the bar in 1874; thereafter spent three
years in general reading and teaching school, living on the homestead with his wid-
owed mother; began the active practice of the law in 1877, since when his entire
time has been devoted to the profession. In 1886 he was elected to the State senate
and served one term, declining to run again; served four years as reporter of the St.
Louis court of appeals and resigned; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
16,056 votes, to 15,628 for M. E. Rhodes, Republican, whom he succeeded.
|
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MISSOURI] Biographical. 67
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—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.
JOSEPH JAMES RUSSELL, Democrat, of Charleston, was born in Mississippi
County, Mo., on a farm near Charleston, August 23, 1854, and was educated in the
public schools in said county and in the Charleston Academy; after reading law
and obtaining a license to practice that profession attended the law school in the
Missouri State University and graduated with the degree of LI. B.; was county
school commissioner for Mississippi County, Mo., in the years of 1878-79; elected
prosecuting attorney of the same county in 18So and reelected in 1882; in 1884 was
a Cleveland elector for his Congressional district; in 1886 was elected to the State
legislature and reelected in 1888; in the first term of the legislature was elected
speaker pro tempore and in the second term speaker of the house; in 1892 was a
delegate to the Democratic national convention that nominated Grover Cleveland;
during the four years of Governor A, M. Dockery’s administration was the judge-
advocate-general on his staff; is still engaged in the practice of his profession; is
president of the Charleston Bank; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 24,288 votes, to 22,799 for W. T. Tyndall, Republican.
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Barry, Barton, Jasper, I,awrence, McDonald, Newton, and Vernon (7 counties).
Population (1900), 231,659.
THOMAS HACKNEY, Democrat, of Carthage, was born December 11, 1861, in
Giles County, Tenn.; was educated in the common schools of Jackson County, Ill.,
Southern Illinois Normal University, at Carbondale, and Missouri State University,
at Colurhbia; admitted tothe bar September 18, 1886, and has practiced law ever since
at Carthage in copartnership with A. I. Thomas; is also interested in zinc and lead
mines in the Joplin district; was chairman of the house judiciary committee in the
State legislature, session 19or; married May 8, 1888, to Addie K. Newell, of Car-
thage, and has one child, Earl N.; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
20,677 votes, to 20,402 for W. R. Caulkins, Republican, and 1,766 for Phil, Callery,
Socialist.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Crawford, Dallas, Dent, Taclede, Maries, Phelps, Pulaski, Shannon, Texas, Webster,
and Wright (11 counties).
Population (1900), 158,173.
ROBERT ILLAMAR, Democrat, of Houston, was born at Edgar Springs, Phelps
County, Mo., March 28, 1866, the son of Charles T. Lamar, 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 pros-
ecuting 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,
Mo.; was married October 10, 1889, to Jennie Rice, at Licking, and has three chil=
dren, two boys and a girl; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, receiving 14,102
votes to 12,906 for B. F. Russell, Republican; was defeated in the landslide of
1904 by 36 votes by Hon. A. P. Murphy; was again nominated in 1906, and was
elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,366 votes, to 14,939 for A. P. Murphy,
Republican,
68 ; Congressional Directory. [MONTANA,
MONTANA.
SENATORS.
THOMAS HENRY CARTER, Republican, of Helena, was born in Scioto County,
Ohio, October 30, 1854; received a common school education in Illinois; was engaged
in farming, railroading, and school-teaching for a number of years; studied law and
was admitted to the bar; in 1882 moved from Burlington, Iowa, to Helena, Mont.,
was elected Delegate from the Territory of Montana to the Fifty-first Congress, and
upon the admission of the State was elected its first Representative in Congress; was
Commissioner of the General Land Office from March, 1891, to July, 1892, when he
was elected chairman of the Republican national committee; was a delegate from
Montana to the National Republican conventions of 1896, 1900, and 1904; in Janu-
ary, 1895, was elected to the United States Senate by the legislature of Montana for
the term beginning March 4, 1895, and ending March 3, 1901; was appointed by
President McKinley a member of the board of commissioners of the I,ouisiana Pur-
chase Exposition, and at the first meeting of that body was chosen president; was
again elected to the United States Senate, January 16, 1905, to succeed Hon. Paris
Gibson, Democrat, for the term beginning March 4, following. His term of service
will expire March 3, 1917.
JOSEPH M. 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 December,
1892; moved to Montana and served as assistant prosecuting attorney of Missoula
County from 1893 to 1895; was elected prosecuting attorney in 1894 and served until
* 1897; was elected a member of the Montana legislature in 1900; was a delegate at
large from Montana to the National Republican Convention at Chicago in 1904; was
elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and elected to the United
States Senate to succeed Hon. W. A. Clark, Democrat, for the term beginning
March 4, 1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. :
REPRESENTATIVE.
AT LARGE.
Population (1900), 243,329.
CHARLES N. PRAY, Republican, of Fort Benton, was born at Potsdam, St.
Lawrence County, N. Y.; was educated at Middlebury College, Vermont, and
Chicago College of Law; served as assistant prosecuting attorney of Chouteau
County, twelfth judicial district of Montana, 1897-98; was elected prosecuting
attorney in 1898, and reelected in 1goo, 1902, and 1904; was married in 1901 to Edith
C. Wackerlin; while serving his fourth term as prosecuting attorney was elected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 28,268 votes, to 22,894 for T. J. Walsh, Democrat,
4,638 for John Hudson, Socialist, and 261 for J. H. Calderhead, Populist.
NEBRASKA.
SENATORS.
ELMER JACOB BURKETT, Republican, of Lincoln, was born in Mills County,
Iowa, on a farm, December 1, 1867; attended public school and afterwards Tabor Col-
lege, at Tabor, 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 LI. B. in 1893 and LL. 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 a Repr esentative to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-
seventh, Fifty- eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, resigning after the latter election
to succeed Hon. C. H. Dietrich in the United States Senate, taking his seat March
6, 1905. His term of service will expire March 3, 1911.
NORRIS BROWN, Republican, of Kearney, was born May 2, 1863, at Monten
Jackson County, Iowa; graduated from Iowa State University, June, 1883, receiving
the degree of A. B., and two years later received the degree of M. A.; admitted to
- practice law in Towa October, 1883; moved to Kearney, Nebr., April, 1888; served as
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NEBRASKA. | Biographical. : 69
county attorney of Buffalo County from 1892 to 1896; served as deputy attorney-general
1900 to 1904, and as attorney-general 1904 to 1906; was elected to the United States
Senate January, 1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Cass, Johnson, Lancaster, Nemaha, Otoe, Pawnee, and Richardson (7 counties).
Population (1900), 165,986.
ERNEST M. POLLARD, Republican, of Nehawka, was born at Nehawka, Cass
County, Nebr., his present home, April 15, 1869. His father, a native of Vermont,
was one of the early pioneers of Nebraska, who settled at Nehawka in 1856. He was
educated in the country district school at Nehawka, from which he entered the
Nebraska State University, at Lincoln, in 1889, graduating therefrom in 1893 with
the degree of B. A. Has been engaged in business with his father in general farming
and fruit raising, making a specialty of apple growing, having a 200-acre orchard
of apples. Is a married man. While a student at the State University was a
member of the cadet battalion, and in his senior year was the senior captain of the
battalion. Was a member of the State legislature in 1896-97 and 1898-99, and pres-
ident of the Nebraska Republican League in 1900. Was elected to the Fifty-ninth
Congress July 18, 1905, at a special election to fill the vacancy caused by the election
of Hon. E. J. Burkett to the United States Senate, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 14,771 votes, to 11,870 for T. J. Doyle, Democrat-Fusion, 1,043 for
F. C. Taylor, Prohibitionist, and 269 for E. J. Root, Socialist.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Douglas, Sarpy, and Washington (3 counties).
; Population (1900), 162,756.
GILBERT M. HITCHCOCK, Democrat, of Omaha, was born in that city Sep-
tember 18, 1859; educated in the Omaha public schools, supplemented by two years’
study in Germany and a law course at Michigan University, from the law department
of which he graduated in 1881; married in 1883; established the Omaha Evening
World in 1885, and is now publisher and editor of the Omaha Morning, Evening,
and Sunday World-Herald; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, defeated for
reelection to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiv-
ing 11,644 votes, to 11,136 for J. I. Kennedy, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress. :
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 FRANK BOYD, Republican, of Neligh, Antelope County, was born at
Connellsville, Fayette County, Pa., August 8, 1853; moved with his parents to Henry
County, I1l., in 1857, and lived with them on a farm until 22 years old; attended the
public schools, with two years at Abington College, Abington, Ill.; taught district
school one year; studied law with T. E. Milchrist, at Galva, I11., and was admitted to
practice by the supreme court of that State, after examination in open court; entered
into partnership with his preceptor, which continued for five years, when he moved
to Oakdale, Antelope County, Nebr., and engaged in the practice of law; was
married in 1881 to Mabel Ayres, of Galva, Ill., and has one daughter, Helen A. Boyd;
was elected county attorney in 1888, and reelected in 1892; was elected judge of the
district court for the ninth judicial district of Nebraska in 1900, and reelected in
1903; moved to Neligh, Nebr., in 1901; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiv-
ing 18,837 votes, to 18,546 for G. T. Graves, Democrat and Populist, 773 for E. J.
Flood, Prohibitionist, and 297 for Dr. I,. De Vore, Socialist.
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
70 Congressional Directory. INEUERASES.
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 19o1 was a candidate for United States Senator; was again
nominated for Congress after a spirited contest, and elected to the Fifty-eighth
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,032
votes, to 15,211 for J. J. Thomas, Democrat and People’s Independent, and 350 for
J. C. Palmerton, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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, Ohio, 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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,450 votes, to 14,031 for R. T.
Sutherland, Democrat and Populist, and 482 for J. J. Laskey, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Banner, Blaine, Boxbutte, Boyd, Brown, Buffalo, Cherry, Cheyenne, Custer, Dawes,
Dawson, Deuel, Garfield, Grant, Greeley, Holt, Hooker, Howard, Keith, Keyapaha, Kimball,
Lincoln, Logan, Loup, McPherson, Rock, Scotts Bluffs, Sheridan, Sherman, Sioux, I'homas,
Valley, and Wheeler (33 counties).
Population (1900), 172,164.
MOSES P. KINKAID, Republican, of O’Niell, was born on a farm in Monon-
galia County, W. Va.; is a lawyer by profession, graduate of the law school, Uni-
versity of Michigan, where he was president of the class of 1876; a Republican since
attaining his majority; was a member of the Nebraska State senate, session 1883,
and chairman of the committee on the judiciary; was district judge for three terms;
candidate for supreme judge in 1896, when the whole Nebraska Republican ticket
was defeated; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and re-
elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,677 votes to 13,147 for G. I,. Shum-
way, Democrat and People’s Independent, and 898 for W. N. Parsel, Socialist. = Re-
elected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NEVADA.
SENATORS.
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 I.aw 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 and continued in the active practice of his profession until 1888,
when he became a citizen of the State of Nevada; was elected to the Fifty-third,
Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses, and served on
the committees on Irrigation, Foreign Affairs, Banking and Currency, and Ways
and Means; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed John P. Jones,
Republican, for the term beginning March 4, 1903. His term of service will expire
March 3, 1909. :
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NEVADA] Biographical. 72
GEORGE S. NIXON, Republican, of Reno, was born April 2, 1860, in Placer
County, Cal.; educated in the public schools of that State; worked on his father’s
farm until 19 years of age, when he entered the employ of a railroad company
and studied telegraphy. In 1881 he was transferred to Nevada, where he served
three years as a telegraph operator, and in 1884 accepted a clerical position in a
bank at Reno. He is now largely interested in banking, mining, stock raising, and
farming; served as a member of the Nevada legislature as a Republican in 1891;
was elected to the United States Senate, January 25, 1905, to succeed Hon. William
M. Stewart for the term beginning March 4, 1905. His term of service will expire
March 3, 1911.
REPRESENTATIVE.
AT LARGE.
Population (1900), 42,335.
GEORGE A. BARTLETT, Democrat, of Tonopah, was born at San Francisco, Cal.,
November 30, 1869; educated in the common schools of Nevada, where he has
resided since birth; lawyer by profession; graduate of law department, Georgetown
University, Washington, D. C., in 1894; was elected and served two years as district
attorney of Eureka County; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 7,320
votes, to 5,665 for O. J. Smith, Republican, and 1,251 for H. T. Jardine, Socialist.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
SENATORS.
JACOB H. GALLINGER, Republican, of Concord, is of Dutch ancestry on his
father’s side, his paternal great-grandfather having emigrated from Holland
previous to the Revolutionary war, first settling in New York, where his grand-
father 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 pres-
ent 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; is on the board of
trustees of Columbia Hospital for Women, and a member of the board of visitors to
Providence Hospital; was a member of the house of representatives of New Hamp-
shire in 1872-73 and 1891; was a member of the constitutional convention in 1876;
was a member of the State senate in 1878, 1879, and 1880, being president of that
body the last two years; was surgeon-general of New Hampshire with the rank of
brigadier-general in 1879-80; received the honorary degree of A. M. from Dartmouth
College in 1885; was chairman of the Republican State committee from 1882 to 1890,
when he resigned the place, but was again elected to the position in 1898, reelected
in 1900, 1902, 1904, and 1906; was chairman of the delegation from his State to the
Republican national convention of 1888, and made a speech seconding the nomination
- of Benjamin 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 chairman of the Merchant Marine Commission of 1904-5,
composed of five Senators and five Representatives in Congress; 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, for the term
beginning 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 inthe 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 service will expire
March 3, 19009.
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, Manchester;
was admitted to the bar in April, 1868, and since that time has practiced in
"a Congressional Directory. [NEW HAMPSHIRE.
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 188g, and has served as ballot
law commissioner; in 1888 was chairman of the Republican State convention to
nominate delegates to the national convention; is president of the Mechanics
Savings Bank, and member of the board of directors of the Second National Bank,
and of the New Hampshire Fire Insurance Company, Manchester; on October 22,
1874, married Elizabeth H. Patterson, of Manchester, and has 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, for the term
beginning March 4, 1901, and reelected in 1907. His term of service will expire
March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Belknap, Carroll, Rockingham, and Strafford.
HiLLsBoro CounNtTy.—City of Manchester; towns of Bedford, Goffstown, Merrimack, Hudson,
Litchfield, and Pelham.
MERRIMACK CouNTY.— Towns of Allenstown, Canterbury, Chichester, Epsom, Hooksett, Loudon,
Northfield, Pembroke, and Pittsfield. /
Population (1900), 204,002.
CYRUS ADAMS SULILOWAY, 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty- eighth, and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reclected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,701 votes, to
15,601 for CA. Morse, Democrat, 566 for A. H. Morrill, Prohibitionist, and 390 for
Louis Arnstein, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan.
HiLLsBORO CouNTy.—City of Nashua; towns of Amherst, Antrim, Bennington, Brookline, Deer-
ing, Francestown, Greenfield, Greenville, Hancock, Hillsboro, Hollis, I,yndeboro, Mason,
Milford, Mount Vernon, New Boston, New Ipswich, Peterboro, Sharon, Temple, Weare, Wil-
ton, and Windsor.
MERRIMACK CouNnTy.—Clities of Concord and Franklin; towns of Andover, Boscawen, Bow, Brad-
ford, Danbury, Dunbarton, Henniker, Hill, Hopkinton, Newbury, New Iondon, Salisbury,
Sutton, Warner, Webster, and Wilmot.
Population (1900), 207,586.
FRANK DUNKLEE 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; received the honorary
degree of A. M. from Dartmouth College in 1901; was elected to the Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 23,073 votes, to 15,689 for H. T., Ledoux, Democrat, 518 for S. T. Noyes,
Prohibitionist, and 506 for W. B. Wellman, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
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
NEW JERSEY] To Bloovaplical. 73
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; reelected in 1905. His term of
service will expire March 3, 1911.
FRANK OBADIAH BRIGGS, Republican, of Trenton, was born at Concord,
N. H., in the year 1851, and was a student at Phillip’s Exeter Academy in 1866, 1867,
and 1868, and at West Point, graduating from the latter institution with the class of
1872. He served in the Second U. S. Infantry as second lieutenant until 1877,
when he moved to Trenton, N. J., and became associated with John A. Roebling’s
Sons Company, of which company he is assistant treasurer. He was elected mayor
of Trenton April 11, 1899, by a majority of 816 over Joseph A. Corey, Democrat, and
served as such until January 1, 1902; was appointed a member of the State board of
education by Governor Voorhees in 1901 for a term of three years, but resigned
that office January 3, 1902, when he was appointed State treasurer by Governor
Voorhees to fill the vacancy caused by the death of George B. Swain, of Newark,
which occurred on December 25, 1901. The appointment of Mr. Briggs was ad
interim, and on February 11, 1902, he was elected by a joint meeting of the legisla-
ture for a full term of three years, and reelected in 1905. In 1904 he was elected
chairman of the State Republican committee and displayed great ability and industry
in the management of the successful campaign of that year. Mz. Briggs was elected
United States Senator on February 5, 1907, to succeed Hon. J. F. Dryden. His term
of service will expire. March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Camden, Gloucester, and Salem (3 counties).
Population (1905), 182,319.
HENRY CLAY LOUDENSL AGER, Republican, of Paulsboro, Gloucester County;
was born May 22, 1852; leaving the home farm he engaged in business in Phila-
delphia, Pa., in 1872; continued it ten years; was elected county clerk in 1882;
reelected in 1887; secretary of the Republican Congressional campaign committee
in 1906; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-
seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 20,674 votes, to 9,308 for D. V. Summerill, jr., Democrat, 913 for
G. E. Day, Prohibitionist, 476 for R. C. Thurston, Socialist, and 73 for F. W. Ball,
Socialist Labor. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Atlantic, Burlington, Cumberland, and Cape May (4 counties).
Population (1903), 191,404.
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, Fifty-
seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 19,637 votes, to 8,921 for S. E. Perry, Democrat, goo for W. F. Tower,
Prohibitionist, 380 for Morris Korshet, Socialist, 105 for Marion Owen, Home Rule,
and 1,249 for William Riddle, Labor and Lincoln Party. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Middlesex, Monmouth, and Ocean (3 counties).
Population (1905), 205,835.
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HOWELL, Republican, of New Brunswick, was born in
Cumberland County, N. J., January, 1844; in 1862 enlisted in the Twelfth New Jersey
Volunteers and served until the close of the war; was elected surrogate of Middlesex
74 Congressional Directory. [NEW JERSUY.
County in 1882, and reelected for a second term in 1887; was elected to the Fifty-
fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,472 votes, to 16,638 for
David Harvey, jr., Democrat, 464 for R. B. Crowell, Prohibitionist, and 124 for
Frank Rapp, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiESs.—Hunterdon, Mercer, and Somerset (3 counties).
Population (1905), 180,044.
IRA W. WOOD, Republican, of Trenton, was born in Wilkes-Barre, 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,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 17,497 votes, to 13,989 for 1. A.
Southwick, Democrat; 489 for William Iunger, Prohibitionist; 992 for Upton Sin-
clair, Socialist, and 142 for C. J. Wolff, Socialist I,abor. Plurality, 3,508. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Morris, Union, and Warren (3 counties).
Population (1905), 225,548.
CHARLES NEWELI, FOWLER, Republican, of Elizabeth, was born at Lena,
I11., November 2, 1852; graduated from Yale University in 1876 and from the Chi-
cago Law School in 1878; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth,
- Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Six-
tieth Congress, receiving 19,760 votes, to 19,208 for J. E. Martine, Democrat; 486 for
Harry Vaughn, Prohibitionist, and 1,004 for G. B. Whitesell, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT,
CoUNTIES.—Bergen, Passaic, and Sussex (3 counties).
Population (1905), 299,186.
WILLIAM HUGHES, Democrat, of Paterson, was born in 1872; is counselor at
law; served in the Second New Jersey Volunteers, Spanish-American War; married
Margaret Hughes, July 16, 1898; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, and to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 25,438 votes, to 23,335 for G. H. Burke, Republican;
558 for H. B. Collingswood, Prohibitionist; 962 for C. P. De Yoe, Socialist, and 377
for U. Frueh, Socialist Labor. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
Essex CouNnty.—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, Iivingston, Nutley, and Verona.
Population. (1905), 203,229.
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty- -eighth,- rand Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,493 votes, to 15,983 for C. F. Kraemer, Democrat; 547
for P. B. Ball, Socialist; 124 forS. D. Riddle, Pohibitionist, and 173 for G. A. Johnston,
Socialist Labor, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
AEE
Fil
HEA
a
NEW JERSEY] Biographical. : 75
FIGHTH DISTRICT.
Essex CouNTy.—Second, Third, Fifth, Ninth, Tenth, Twelfth, Thirteenth, and Fourteenth wards
of the city of Newark; city of Kast Orange; town of Irvington; the borough of Vailsburgh; the
village and township of South Orange, and the townships of Clinton and Millburn.
Population (1905), 206,699.
LE. GAGE PRATT, Democrat, of East Orange, was born at Siti Mass., Decem-
ber 14, 1853, and was vice-president of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company,
of Newark, N. J. He was educated in the schools of his native State, whereupon,
in 1869, he entered activ ely upon a commercial career, first in Bostor, and after-
wards in Chicago. In 1884 he joined the ranks of journalism, and contintied therein
until 1886, when he became interested in life insurance, and as a special agent did
effective service for several years in Texas, and later in Illinois. In 1895 he received
the appointment of State agent for the Life Insurance Clearing Company, of St. Paul,
and in the following year ‘was called to the home office and appointed general super-
intendent of agencies. In the meantime he had established a well-earned reputation
for himself as an agency manager, and as a result, in August, 1897, he was offered and
accepted the position of superintendent of agencies for the Mutual Benefit; three
years later he was elected to the second vice-presidency, and within a few years he
was elected vice-president, from which position he resigned when he took his seat in
Congress. Mr. Pratt married, in San Antonio, Tex., a lady connected with many lead-
ing families in the Southland, and known to every member of the Southern Society
of the Oranges. He was elected to the Sixtieth Congress by a plurality of 5,874 in
a district which gave a Republican plurality of 12,541 in 1904, receiving 18,334 votes,
‘to 12,460 for H. J. Gottlob, Republican, 83 for R. Burnet, Prohibitionist, 1,102 for
E. C. Wind, Socialist, and 249 for H. Hartung, Socialist Labor.
NINTH DISTRICT.
HupsoN CountTy.—City of . Bayonne; Seventh, Kighth, Ninth, Tenth, Kleventh, and Twelfth
wards and part of the Sixth Ward of Jersey City; the towns of Harrison and Kearny, and the
borough of East Newark. :
Population (1905), 204,696.
- EUGENE WALTER LEAKE, Democrat, of Jersey City, was born there July 13,
1877; educated at Andover and New York Law School, receiving the degree of IL. B.
from the University of the State of New York in 1896; is a member of the law firm
of Hartshorne, Insley & Leake; admitted to practice in New York and New Jersey;
married Marion B. Paige, of Paterson; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiv-
ing 18,367 votes, to 12,628 for C. E. Pickett, Republican, 154 for N. H Raymond,
Prohibitionist, 1,041 for M. F. Fackert, Socialist, 270 for N. H. Hernberg, Socialist
Labor, and 688 for K. M. Forbes, Independent Labor.
TENTH DISTRICT.
HubpsoN 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 (1905), 245,183.
JAMES A. HAMILL, Democrat, of Jersey City, was born in Jersey City, N. J.,
March 30, 1877; received his education at St. Peter’s College, Jersey City, from which
institution he was graduated in 1897, receiving the degree of A. B., and in the sub-
sequent year that of A. M.; ; completed the regular course of lectures in the New York
Taw School, and in 1899 obtained the degree of I L.. B.; was admitted to the bar of New
Jersey in June, 1900; was elected in 1902 a member of the New Jersey house of assem-
bly, where he served four consecutive one-year terms, during the last two of which
he was leader in that body of the Democratic minority; was elected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 22,882 votes, to 9,305 for Howard Cruse, Republican, 1,354 for
J. P. O’Lone, Independent Labor, 1,138 for Charles Ufert, Socialist, 316 for Walter
Gilpin, Socialist Labor, and 93 for D. H. Garrison, Prohibitionist. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress.
NEW YORK.
SENATORS.
THOMAS COLLIER PLATT, Republican, of Owego, was born in Owego, N.Y.,
July 15,1833; was prepared for college atthe Owego Academy; wasamember of the class
of 1853 of Yale College, but was compelled to give up the course in that institution
76 : Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK.
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 for the term beginning March
4, 1897, and 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 LI. D. from his alma mater; read law with Hon. William Nelson, of
Peekskill, and was admitted to the bar in 1858, beginning the practice of his pro-
fession the next year; in 1861 was elected to the assembly, and reelected in 1862,
serving as chairman of the committee on ways and means in the latter term; in 1863
led the Republican campaign in New York as candidate for secretary of state, and
reversed the Democratic success of 1862, being elected by 30,000 majority; refused a
renomination; was appointed minister to Japan, and was confirmed by the Senate,
but declined to accept the office; in 1866 was appointed attorney for the New York
& Harlem Railroad Company; was made general counsel of the New York Central
& Hudson River Railroad Company in 1875, and has since continuously been identi-
fied with that company and with the various other railroads comprising and allied
to the Vanderbilt system; became president of the New York Central & Hudson
River Railroad in 1885; resigned in 1899 to become chairman of the boards of
directors of the New York Central, the I,ake Shore, the Michigan Central, and
the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad companies; in 1867 was appointed
county clerk of Westchester County by Governor Fenton and resigned; in 1870 was
made immigration 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; in 1885 the Senatorship was tendered
him, but his business and professional engagements at that time prevented accept-
ance; was a candidate for the Presidential nomination at the Republican national
convention at Chicago in 1888, and received 99 votes; was delegate at large to the
conventions in 1888, 1892, 1896, 1900, and 1904, presenting the name of Presi-
dent Harrison for renomination in 1892 and that of Governor Morton in 1896;
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 g, 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, in 1899, and reelected in
1905. His term of service will expire March 3, 1911,
NEW YORK.] Biographical. 4
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Nassau and Suffolk.
BOROUGH OF QUEENS (COUNTY OF QUEENS).— Third, Fourth, and Fifth wards.
Population (1905), 211,806.
WILLIAM WILLETS COCKS, Republican, of Westbury, son of Isaac H. and the
late Mary W. Cocks, was born at Westbury, Long Island, N. Y., July 24, 1861, and
is a descendant of old colonial families, his ancestors having settled on Long Island
in the year 1642; educated at Swarthmore College, Pa.; was married to Caroline R.
Hicks July 24, 1901, who died in December of the same year; he is one of the man-
agers of Swarthmore College, a trustee of Friends’ Academy, Locust Valley, Loong
Island, and a trustee of the Roslyn Savings Bank, Roslyn, Loong Island; his public
service has been rendered in the capacity of commissioner of highways in the town
of North Hempstead, Nassau County, N. Y., State senator, second New York district,
member of assembly; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,569 votes, to 14,418 for Monson Morris, Democrat,
and 443 for G. R. Scott, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF KINGS).—The Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seven-
teenth, and Eighteenth wards, and also that portion of the Twenty-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 (1905), 189,852.
GEORGE HENRY LINDSAY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in New York
City and removed to Brooklyn with his parents in 1843; was 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 1586 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, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 11,420 votes, to
9,069 for J. J. McManus, Independence League, 7,591 for E. C. Wagner, Republican,
976 for C. Weber, Socialist, and 53 for A. Vail, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the.
Sixty-first Congress. ;
THIRD DISTRICT.
BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF KinGgs).—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
Iafayette 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 (1905), 247,051.
OTTO GODFREY FOELKER, Republican, of Brooklyn, was born in Germany,
1875; he moved to America with his parents when 13 years of age, and made Troy,
N. Y., his home; moved to Brooklyn in December, 1895, where he has resided
ever since; attended public school, but was soon compelled to leave to earn his
own livelihood and studied evenings to complete his preliminary education; he then
took up the study of law; was subsequently admitted to the bar, and has been prac-
ticing his profession ever since. Mr. Foelker was elected a member of the New
York State assembly in 1904, and again in 1905; in 1906 he-was unanimously nom-
inated for State senator, to which office he was elected, and served as such until
November, 1908, when he resigned. While in the senate he was chairman of the
committee on canals, and also a member of the committees of affairs on cities, tax-
66525—60—-2—2D ED—7
78 Congressional Divectory. [NEW YORK.
ation, and retrenchment, and State prisons. Mr. Foelker was elected to fill a va-
cancy in the Sixtieth Congress, caused by the death of Hon. Charles I. Dunwell;
and to the Sixty-first Congress, receiving 18,621 votes, to 15,270 for James P. Maher,
Democrat.
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 Twenty-fifth Ward bounded on the north
by Broadway, from Howard avenue to boundary line of the ‘I'wenty-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 (1903), 212,973.
CHARLES BLAKESLEE LAW, Republican, borough of Brooklyn, city of New
York, was born in the village of Hannibal, N. Y., February 5, 1872; was grad-
uated from Colgate Academy at Hamilton, N. Y., in 1891, and from Amherst
College at Amherst, Mass., in 1895. Upon graduating from college he immedi-
ately began the study of law at Rome, N. Y., and later continued his studies at the
Cornell Law School; was admitted to the bar in November, 1897, at Rochester, N. Y.,
and immediately moved to Brooklyn, where he has since been engaged in the prac-
tice of the law; was married in the fall of 1901 to Miss Ilma Best, of Jordan, N. Y.;
was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 17,079 votes, to 12,114 for H. H. Farborg, Democrat, 10,590 for Edson
TLawrence, Independence League, 1,502 for G. L. Giefer, Socialist, and 65 for A. L.
Martin, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT,
BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF KiINGs).—The Kighth, Twenty-fourth, Twenty-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 Twenty-fifth Ward bounded on the north by Lafayette avenue, from Reid avenue east to
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 (1905), 233,195.
GEORGE E. WALDO, Republican, of Flatbush, son of George Waldo, of Scot-
land, Conn., and his wife, Sarah Ellen Jagger, of Westhampton, Long Island, N. Y.,
was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., January 11, 1851, and resides at 220 East Eighteenth
street, Flatbush, Brooklyn, New York City; was educated in the public schools and
Cornell University, class of 1872; studied law in New York City; was admitted to the
bar and has been in active practice there ever since, except from 1883 to 1889, when
in practice in Ulysses, Nebr.; was a member of the New York assembly 1896; commis-
sioner of records of Kings County, N. Y., from 1899 to 1904; delegate to the Repub-
lican national convention of 19oo; married Flora A. Henderson, eldest daughter of
the late Col. John A. Henderson, of Tallahassee, Fla., May 11, 1896, and has three
little boys, aged 10, 9, and 4 years; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,832 votes, to 11,995 for J. J. Roach,
Democrat, 465 for Alexander Fraser; Socialist Labor, 115 for G. H. MacEathron,
Prohibitionist, and 10,575 for M. A. Fitzgerald, Independence League.
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 (1905), 190,024.
WILLIAM M. CALDER, Republican, of Brooklyn, was born in Brooklyn, N. Y.,
in the district which he represents, on March 3, 1869, and has resided there all of
his life, He received his education in the public schools of Brooklyn and Cooper
RAE
ay
#
NEW YORK.] Biographical. 79
Institute of the city of New York. He is a builder; was appointed building com-
missioner of the borough of Brooklyn January 1, 1902, and filled that office during
the years of 1902 and 1903; is married; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress;
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, defeating Robert Baker, former Representative,
the Democratic-Independence ILeague-Prohibition candidate, by 4,000 plurality,
receiving 21,195 votes, to 17,102 for Robert Baker, and 280 for Ieighton Baker,
Socialist; reelected to the Sixty-first Congress, defeating John E. Eastmond, Demo-
crat, by a plurality of 6,134.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (CoUNTY OF KiNas).—The First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth,
Tenth, and Twelfth wards, and also that portion of the Kleventh 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 (1905), 208,888.
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, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,055 votes, to 8,433
for C. R. Banks, Republican, 236 for W. A. Schmidt, Socialist, 43 for James Stanley,
Prohibitionist, and 8,220 for J. T. Moran, Independence League, Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
Ri¢cEMOND COUNTY.
NEw York CountTy.—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 Fast 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 (1905), 284,699.
DANIEL J. RIORDAN, Democrat, of New York City, was born in Hester street,
New York City, in the Eighth Congressional district, in 1870, and has lived all his
life within the district. He attended the public schools of the district until 1886,
when he entered Manhattan College, and was graduated in 189o, receiving the degree
of A. B. He then became a partner in the real estate business conducted by his
father. In 1902 he was elected to the State senate, and was appointed by Iieutenant-
Governor Higgins a member of the committees on insurance and military affairs.
He was renominated for State senator in 1904 and on his election was appointed by
Lieutenant-Governor Bruce a member of the committees on insurance, forest, fish
and game, and military affairs. In the latter part of 1905 he was appointed a mem-
ber of the special insurance investigating committee. Mr. Riordan was elected a
member of the Fifty-sixth Congress from the Eighth Congressional district in 1898,
receiving 10,716 votes to 7,347 for John Murray Mitchell, Republican; was nomi-
nated to serve out the unexpired term of Timothy D. Sullivan, resigned, in the Fifty-
ninth Congress, and elected November 6, 1906, receiving 21,424.votes to 10,631 for
F. I. Frugone, Republican. At the same time Mr. Riordan was elected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,340 votes, to 10,632 for F. I. Frugone, Republican, 385
for E. F. Cassidy, Socialist, 1:5 for P. J. Gates, Prohibitionist, and 75 for Charles
Sullivan, Independence League. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
80 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK.
NINTH DISTRICT.
NEW YOorRK County.—That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at the East River and Market
slip, north to Cherry street, east to Mechanic alley, north to Monroe street, west to Catherine
street, north to Division 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 Division 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 streetand Clinton street, south to South street at East River, thence along the Hast
River to the point or place of beginning.
Population (1905), 214,566.
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;
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, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 7,276 votes, to
3,586 for Morris Hillquit, Socialist, 2,734 for C. S. Adler, Republican, and 53 for
T. N. Holden, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.
NEW YORK CouNnTy.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at Fast Fourteenth street and the
Kast 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 Kast River, thence along the East River tothe point or place of beginning.
Population (190s), 258,632. 2
WILLIAM SULZER, Democrat, of New York City, was born in Elizabeth, N. J.,
March 18, 1863; admitted to practice law 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, the Kansas City convention, 1900, and
the St. Louis convention, 1904; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth,
Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 15,962 votes, to 4,843 for F. J. Etzel, Republican, 1,560 for Alex-
ander Jonas, Socialist, and 25 for B. T. Rogers, jr., Prohibitionist. - Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress. ;
en
TA
TE
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NEW YORK] Biographical. 81
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.
NEw York CouNnTy.—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 Fast 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.
Zopulation (1905), 253,712.
CHARLES VINCENT FORNES, Democrat, of New York City, was born, 1848,
in Erie County, N. Y.; graduated from Union ‘Academy, Lockport, N. Y., and was
principal of a Buffalo public school for three years; he then became bookkeeper and
cashier of a wholesale woolen house in Buffalo, and in 1877 formed the firm of C. V.
Fornes & Co., importers and jobbers of woolens, New York City. For two terms,
from January, 1902, to January, 1906, Mr. Fornes was president of the board of alder-
men of New York City. Since 1889 he has been a trustee of the Immigrants’ Indus-
trial Savings Bank; since 1890 trustee of the New York Catholic Protectory, and
since 1903 vice-president of the Columbian National Life Insurance Company of
Boston; was president of the Catholic Club from 1889 to 1894, and an incorporator
of the City Trust Company of New York; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 26,511 votes, to 10,640 for C. W. Lefler, Republican, 524 for E. M. Martin,
Socialist, and 53 for Viggo Rugaard, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress. :
TWELFTH DISTRICT.
NEW YORK CouNnTyY.— That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the Fast 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 Kast Twen .y-ninth
street, east to Second avenue, north to East Thirty-seventh street, west to Third avenue, north
to Fast 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 Fast Sixty-fourth street, west to Lexington
avenue, north to Hast Seventy-second street, to the East River to point of beginning at the Fast
River and East Fourteenth street, including Blackwells Island.
Population (1905), 177,514.
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
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
82 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORE.
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, and to the
Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,481 votes,
to 7,410 for Henry Carey, Republican, 769 for P. H. Donahue, Socialist, and 22 for
A. W. Pfluger, Prohibitionist.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.
NEW YORK CouNtTv.—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 East Fourteenth street, east to Second avenue, north to East
Kighteenth street, west to Third avenue, north to Kast Twenty-third street, west to Iexing-
ton avenue, north to East Twenty-ninth street, east to Second avenue, north to East Thirty-
seventh street, west to Third avenue, north to Fast Thirty-ninth street, west to Lexington
avenue, north to East Forty-second street, east to Third avenue, north to Fast Fifty-third
street, west to I,exington avenue, north to East Fifty-ninth street, east to Third avenue, north
to Sixty-fourth street, west to Lexington avenue, north to Fast Kighty-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 T'wenty-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,
n Population (1905), 169,378.
HERBERT PARSONS, Republican, of New York City, was born October 28,
1869; educated at private schools in New York, at St. Paul’s School, Concord, N. H.,
at Yale University, at the University of Berlin, Germany, and at the Harvard Taw
School; graduated at Yale 1890, A. B.; is a lawyer; was twice elected alderman of
the city of New York, and served as such for four years, part of, the time as chair-
man of the finance committee; is married; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,381 votes, to 9,881 for W. H.
Jackson, Democrat, 245 for C. G. Feche, Socialist, 95 for Carl Grinskald, Prohibi-
tionist, and 3,172 for Frank Hendrick, Independence League. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.
NEw YORK CounNTy.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the East Riverand East Sev-
enty-second street, west to Lexington avenue, north to East Eighty-ninth street, east to ‘I'hird
avenue, south to East Eighty-eighth street, east to the Hast River, to point of beginning at the
Fast River and Hast 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 Fast River.
Population (1905), 232,252.
WILLIAM WILLETT, Jr., Democrat, of Far Rockaway, Borough of Queens, city
of New York, was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., November 27, 1869; was educated in the
public schools of Brooklyn and in the University of the city of New York, graduating
from the university with the degree of LL. B. in 1896, since which time he has been
constantly engaged in the practice of law; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 17,675 votes, to 10,006 for F. E. Losee, Republican, 8,110 for
C. E. Shober, Independence League, 2,328 for Richard Morton, Prohibitionist, and
4o for Albert Wadhams, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
—
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Ew.
NEW YORK.] Biographical. 83
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.
NEW YORK COUNTY.—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 Fighty-sixth street, east across Central Park to
Eighty-sixth street and Fifth avenue, north along Fifth avenue to Ninety-third street, east to
Park avenue, south to East Eighty-ninth street, east to Lexington avenue, north to Fast
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 (1905), 165,701.
JACOB VAN VECHTEN OLCOTT, Republican, of New York City, was born May
17, 1856, in New York City; was educated in the public schools, College of the City
of New York, and Columbia College Law School, graduating from the latter May,
1877, LI. B.; married Laura I. Hoffman; was member of the board of civil-service
commissioners in New York City, 1895, 1896, and 1897, when William IL. Strong was
mayor; received the degree of LL. D. from Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio, in June,
1905; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 16,210 votes, to 13,123 for J. J. Halligan, Democrat, 203 for L. D.
Abbott, Socialist, and 32 for I,. D. Wright, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty.
first Congress.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.
NEW YORK CouNTy.—That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the East River and East Kighty-
eighth street, west to Third avenue, north to East Eighty-ninth street, west to Lexington
avenue, north to East Ninety-sixth street, west to Fifth avenue, north to Fast One hundred
and twentieth street, east to Park avenue, south to East One hundred and nineteenth street,
east to the Kast River to point of beginning at the Fast River and East Kighty-eighth street,
including Randalls and Wards islands.
Population (1905), 230,440.
FRANCIS BURTON HARRISON, Democrat, of New York City, was born Decem-
ber 18, 1873, in the city of New York; graduated A. B. from Yale, 1895, and LI. B.
from New York Law School, 1897; was instructor at New York Law School,
1897-1899; during the war with Spain was a private, Troop A, New York Volunteer
Cavalry, and captain and assistant adjutant-general, United States Volunteers; is a
lawyer; is married; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress from the Thirteenth
New York district; was Democratic candidate for lieutenant-governor of New York,
1go4; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,954 votes, to 7,062 for J. R.
Schiff, Republican, 1,124 for J. G. Kanely, Socialist, and 424 for S. F. Hyman,
Independent. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.
NEW YORK CouNTY.— 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 (1905), 208,962.
WILLIAM S. BENNET, Republican, borough of Manhattan, New York City, was
born at Port Jervis, county of Orange, N. Y., November 9, 1870, but has lived in New
York City since March, 1893; graduated from the Port Jervis Academy in 1889 and
from the Albany Law School in 1892, receiving the degree of LL. B.; was admitted
to the bar of the State of New York on May 12, 1892, and has also been admitted to
practice in the district, circuit, and Supreme courts of the United States. Mr. Bennet
had a brief experience in the newspaper business on the staff of the Port Jervis
Gazette, but has practiced law continuously since his admission to the bar; he was
married June 30, 1896, to Gertrude Witschief; is an elder in the Fourth Presby-
84 Congressional Directory. : [NEW YORK.
terian Church, New York City; has been official reporter of the Orange County
board of supervisors, 1892 and 1893; member of assembly, New York State, 1901 and
1902; justice of the municipal court of the city of New York, 1903; was appointed
Congressional member of the Immigration Commission by Speaker Cannon March 2,
1907; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 27,159 votes, to 23,284 for F. E. Shober, Democrat and Inde-
pendence League, 619 for Warren Atkinson, Socialist, and 86 for George Munroe,
Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.
NEw YORK Countv.—The thirty-first, thirty-second, thirty-third, thirty-fourth, and thirty-fifth
assembly districts bounded as follows: Beginning at the East River and Fast One hundred
and nineteenth street, Manhattan, west to Park avenue, north to Fast 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
Fast River and Fast One hundred and nineteenth street, including islands in Long Island
Sound and Harlem River attached to the said assembly districts.
Population (estimated), 450,000.
JOSEPH A. GOULDEN, Democrat, of Fordham, Borough of the Bronx, New
York City, born in Pennsylvania; was a 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, at
a cost of $300,000; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 28,339 votes, to 17,943 for J. IL. Wells,
Republican, 1,824 for Richard Bock, Socialist, 161 for David Lyle, Prohibitionist,
and 12,109 for J.T. Farrelly, Independence League. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
NINETEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTvy.— Westchester.
Population (1905), 229,328.
JOHN EMORY ANDRUS, Republican, of Yonkers, retired manufacturer and
banker, was born at Pleasantville, Westchester County, N. Y., February 16, 1841;
fitted for college at Charlotteville Seminary, Schoharie County, N. Y.; was graduated
from Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn., with the degree of A. B. in the class
of 1862; taught school in New Jersey for four years; engaged in the manufacture of
medicinal preparations; is president of the New York Pharmaceutical Association
and of the Palisade Manufacturing Company; treasurer of the Arlington Chemical
Company; trustee of Wesleyan University and other institutions; was elected mayor
of Yonkers in 1903; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 23,356 votes, to 19,218 for Timothy Healy, Democrat,
554 for H. W. Wessling, Socialist, and 275for C. F. Jewell, Prohibitionist. - Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWENTIETH DISTRICT.
CounTIiESs.—Orange, Rockland, and Sullivan (3 counties).
Population (1905), 188,488.
THOMAS W. BRADLEY, Republican, of Walden, was born April 6, 1844; entered
the Union Army as a private soldier; was awarded the Congressional medal of honor
for gallantry; was brevetted major United States Volunteers for meritorious service;
was wounded at Gettysburg, at the Wilderness, and before Petersburg; is a mem-
ber of the New York Chattanooga-Gettysburg Battlefields Commission; was a
member of the New York legislature; was a delegate to the national Republican
conventions of 1892, 1896, and 1900; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,191 votes, to 16,111
for V. A. Wilder, Democrat and Independence League, 221 for T. J. Lloyd, Socialist,
and 407 for T. G. Sayre, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
aE
EE
EN
NEW YORK] Biographical. 85
TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Columbia, Dutchess, Greene, and Putnam (4 counties).
Population (1905), 171,987.
SAMUEL, McMILLAN, Republican, of Lake Mahopac, Putnam County, was fond
in the north of Ireland, in the county of Down, town of Drumore, August 16, 1850;
his father was of Scotch and English origin; his father’s mother was a Watson, a
descendant of Commodore Watson, of the English Navy; his mother was Jane Gregg,
daughter of James Gregg, of Drumore, County Down, Ireland. He came to this
country at the age of 3 years, lived in New York City to the age of 9, when he went
to Niles, Ohio; there he attended school, worked on a farm and in the coal mines
until he reached the age of 16, then returned to New York City and took up the
trade of carpenter, also attending night school as a student of architecture; went
into business at the age of 20 years; was elected director of the West Side Bank at
_24, and is now vice-president of the Bronx Borough Bank and of the Washington Sav-
ings Bank, director and member of the executive committee of the Mutual Bank of
New York City; is also vice-president of the Ryan-Parker Construction Company,
who are the contractors for the new Manhattan Bridge over the Fast River from New
York City to Brooklyn. Mr. McMillan was a member of the board of examiners of
the building department and member of the street opening commission, city of New
York, for twelve years, and park commissioner, and president of the board for three
years under Mayor Strong’s administration; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 20,717 votes, to 19,745 for P. W. Decker, Democrat and Independence
League, and 145 for A. C. Fancher, Socialist.
3 TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Rensselaer and Washington (2 counties).
Population (1905), 169,005.
WILLIAM H. DRAPER, Republican, of Troy, born in Worcester County, Mass.,
June 24, 1841; moved to Troy i 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,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 22,344 votes, to 17,188 for T. A. Paterson, Democrat and Independence
League, 321 for C. HH Caspar, Socialist, and 565 for G. M. Foster, Prohibitionist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.
CounTiESs.—Albany and Schenectady (2 counties).
Population (1905), 241,732.
GEORGE N. SOUTHWICK, Republican, of Albany, was born at 55 Ten 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 Sompelled
him to seek active business life, and early in 1885 he entered the service of the
Albany Morning Express, in both an editorial and areportorial capacity; alsorepre-
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 carly in 1889 of the Albany Evening
Journal; Mr. Southwick’s literary activity has extended beyond the field of the daily
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,
86 Congressional Directory. [NEW YORK.
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
elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, in the new district consisting of Albany and
Schenectady counties, and to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 29,099 votes, to 27,344 for G. C. Hisgen, Democrat and Inde-
pendence League, and 925 for H. V. Jackson, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress. :
TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Delaware, Otsego, Schoharie, and Ulster (4 counties).
Population (1905), 206,455.
GEORGE WINTHROP FAIRCHILD, Republican, of Oneonta, was born in One-
onta, Otsego County, N.Y., May6, 1854. He was the son of thelate Jesse Fairchild, who
came from Connecticut, being a direct descendant of Thomas Fairchild, who settled
in Stratford, Conn., in 1639; his mother is a granddaughter of Thomas Morenus, a
Revolutionary soldier, and daughter of Jeremiah Morenus, a veteran of the war of
1812. He is president and a director of several manufacturing and financial institu-
tions; never before held public office; was married in 1891 to Miss Josephine Mills
Sherman, a niece of the late Joseph G. Mills, of New York City. Mr. Fairchild was
elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 24,474 votes, to 23,215 for Walter Scott,
Democrat, Independence League, and Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, Saratoga, and Warren (5 counties).
Population (1905), 190,896.
CYRUS DUREY, Republican, of Johnstown, was born in Caroga, Fulton County,
N. Y., May 16, 1864; educated in common schools and Johnstown Academy; is presi-
dent and acting manager of Caroga Lumber Company, engaged in lumbering; has
been supervisor’s clerk, supervisor, postmaster at Johnstown (1898-1906), and was a
member of the Republican State committee in 1904-1906; was elected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 25,041 votes, to 18,385 for Frank Beebe, Democrat, 573 for James
O’Neil, Socialist, and 1,172 for C. A. Stupplebeen, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress. :
TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.
Counties.—Clinton, Essex, Franklin, and St. Lawrence (4 counties).
Population (1905), 219,186.
GEORGE R. MALBY, Republican, of Ogdensburg, St. Lawrence County, was
born at Canton, St. Lawrence County, N. Y., September 16, 1857; educated in
Canton Union School and St. Lawrence University, from which he received the
degree of M. S.;.is an attorney and counselor at law, doing business under the firm
name of Malby & Lucey; was elected to the New York State assembly in 18go and
served in that body continuously for five years; was elected leader of his party in
1893 in that body, and speakerin 1894; was elected to the New York State senate in
1895 and served continuously in that body until January, 1907, being a member of
committees on military affairs, insurance, miscellaneous corporations, chairman of
codes, and for eleven years member of the finance committee, and the last four years
its chairman; married in 1883; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 26,209
votes, to 10,931 for A. B. Cooney, Democrat, and 191 for E. C. Beers, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Herkimer and Oneida (2 counties).
Population (1905), 194,105.
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
NEW YORK.] Biographical. 87
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
chairman of the National Republican Congressional committee in 1906; was elected
to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-
seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 24,027 votes, to 19,757 for the Democratic-United Labor Party-
Independence League candidate, 614 for A. L. Byron-Curtis, Socialist, and 692 for
N. A. Dowling, Prohibitionist.
TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.
Counrties.—Jefferson, Lewis, and Oswego (3 counties).
Population (1905), 176,459.
CHARLES LUMAN KNAPP, Republican, of Loowville, 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
to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 23,451 votes, to 12,573 for J. C. Bardo, Democrat, 423 for R. K. Bull,
Socialist, and 2,197 for F. H. Lewis, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Omnondaga and Madison (2 counties).
Population (1905), 217,671.
MICHAEL EDWARD DRISCOLL, Republican, of Syracuse, was bora in that city
February 9, 1851. When about 1 year old his parents moved to a small farm in the
town of Camillus, Onondaga County. He was educated in the district schools,
Monroe Collegiate Institute, at Elbridge, and graduated from Williams College in
1877. Immediately after graduation he commenced the study of law in Syracuse;
was admitted to the bar in 1879, and followed the practice of his profession continu-
ously until he entered Congress, and built up a large and lucrative trial practice.
In the year 1895 he was appointed by Governor Morton, of New York, one of five
commissioners to draft a uniform charter for cities of the second class in that State;
the work of that commission was afterwards enacted into law, practically without
change, and is the charter for those cities. Aside from that appointment he never
held public office until he was elected to Congress in 1898. In 1905 he was appointed
by the superintendent of insurance of the State of New York as counsel in the
examination of the Equitable Life Assurance Society, of New York, which was the
beginning of the investigation of the great insurance companies of that city. He
has always been a Republican and has been active in politics, especially as a speaker
during cameaigns. He has attended many conventions of his party, and in 1906
was temporary chairman of the New York State convention at Saratoga. He was
elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses,
and was reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 30,350 votes, to 17,385 for
W. W. Brocklin, Democrat, 6gofor C. J. Baker, Socialist, and 1,035 for George Cochran,
Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRTIETH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Broome, Chenango, Cortland, Tioga, and Tompkins (5 counties).
Population (1905), 200,224.
JOHN WILBUR DWIGHT, Republican, of Dryden, was born May 24, 1859, in
that place; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 27,069 votes, to 16,269 for
A. G. Genung, Democrat, 173 for W. J. C. Wismar, Socialist, and 1,673 for B. A.
Scott, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
88 Congressional Divectory. [NEW YORK.
THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT,
CouNTIES.—Cayuga, Ontario, Wayne, and Yates (4 counties).
Population (1905), 186,962.
SERENO ELISHA PAYNE, Republican, of Auburn, was born at Hamilton, N. Y.,
June 26, 1843; graduated from the University of 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, Payne & Clark; 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; has received the degree of LL. D.
from Colgate University, also from the University of Rochester; has been twice
chairman of the Republican State convention of New York; was a delegate to the
national Republican conventions in 1892, 1896, 1900, and 1904, serving as chairman
of the committee on credentials at the convention in 1900; 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, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and re-
elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 25,475 votes, to 14,150 for D. M. Warner,
Democrat, 341 for P. A. Perrin, Socialist, and 721 for N. A. Jackson, Prohibitionist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.
CouNTY.—Monroe.
- Population (1905), 239,521.
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 18go 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 LL. 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, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 25,343 votes, to 21,393 for W. I,. Manning, Democrat, 1,006 for
H. D. Henderson, Socialist, and 671 for J. H. Durkee, Prohibitionist. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress. : :
THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Chemung, Schuyler, Seneca, and Steuben (4 counties).
Population (1905), 177,933.
JACOB SLOAT FASSETT, Republican, of Elmira, was born in Elmira, N. Y.,
November 13, 1853, and has always lived in Elmira; was graduated from the Uni-
versity of Rochester in June, 1875; was admitted to the bar as attorney in 1878, and
as counselor in 1879. Immediately thereafter he was appointed by Governor Lucius
Robinson to the office of district attorney for the county of Chemung, which position
he held for one year. He then became a student at Heidelberg University, at Hei-
delberg, Germany. He was elected tothe New York State senate in 1883, and served
eight years as senator; was elected temporary president of the senate in 1839; was
secretary of the Republican national committee for the campaign of 1888; Septem-
ber 9, 1891, he was nominated for governor of New York by the Republicans in State
convention held at Rochester, but was defeated by Roswell P. Flower; was tempo-
rary chairman of the Republican national convention in Minneapolis in 1892; was
temporary chairman of the Republican State convention held at Saratoga in 1904; was
elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
21,235 votes, to 15,883 for F. P. Frost, Democrat, 574 for H. S. Pettibone, Socialist,
and 948 for F. E. Baldwin, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NEW YORK.] Biographical. 89
; THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Genesee, Livingston, Niagara, Orleans, and Wyoming (5 counties).
Population (1905), 220,208.
PETER AUGUSTUS PORTER, Republican, of Niagara Falls, was born at Niagara
Falls, N Y., in 1853; was educated at St. Paul’s School, Concord, N. H., 1865-1871,
and at Yale University, graduating 1874; was a member of the New York State
assembly, 1886 and 1887, from the second district of Niagara County, introducing
and passing the first bill for great power development at Niagara Falls; married
Miss A. A. Taylor, of Niagara Falls; was nominated by Independent Republicans,
indorsed by Democrats and Independence League, and elected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 25,837 votes, to 19,935 for J. W. Wadsworth, Republican, and 737 for
W. V. R. Blighton, Prohibitionist.
THIRTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.
City OF BUFFALO.—The First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth
Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Sixteenth wards.
Population (1905), 238,667.
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;
is a member of the firm of James Ryan’s Sons Co., general bonding, liability, and
fire insurance; was elected to represent the Second Ward of Buffalo in the board of
supervisors of Erie County in 1894, and was reelected in 1897; on the organization
of the board of supervisors in 1898 was elected chairman; delegate to Democratic
national convention at St. Louis, 1904; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 22,140 votes, to 16,494 for F. X. Bernhardt, Republican, 419 for Samuel
Leary, Socialist, and 103 for KE. J. Cook, Prohibitionist.
THIRTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.
ERIE CouNnTY.—Seventh and Eighth assembly districts.
CITY oF BUFFALO.—The Fifteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first,
Twenty-second, Twenty-third, Twenty-fourth, and Twenty-fifth wards.
Population (1905), 235,033.
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 in 1870 took his bachelor’s
degree from Bowdoin College, of which he is now an overseer and which has con-
ferred upon him the degree of LL. D.; in 1874 located at Indianapolis, Ind., where
he practiced law in partnership with Hon. Stanton J. Peelle, now chief justice of
the Court of Claims in Washington; was a delegate to the national Republican
convention in 1872; was secretary of the Indiana Republican State committee
from 1874 to 1878; in 1881 was appointed Fifth Auditor of the Treasury Department,
and during his residence in Washington was elected and served one term as com-
mander of the Department of the Potomac, Grand Army of the Republic; moved
to Buffalo in 1885, 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; in 1906 his ‘Political History of the State of New York” (two
vols.) was published by Henry Holt & Co., of New York; elected to the Fifty-fifth,
Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses, receiv-
ing 24,457 votes, to 16,209 for J. W. Williams, Democrat, 411 for Henry Moses, Social-
ist, 302 for A. E. Whitmer, Prohibitionist, and 781 for C. B. Mathews, Independence
League. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress. :
THIRTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautaugua (3 counties).
Population (1905), 205,558.
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
90 Congressional Directory. Ew YORK
the practice of law in 1881; since 1891 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 November 7, 1899, and to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 25,468
votes, to 11,562 for Mark Graves, Democrat, 827 for E. R. Esler, Socialist, and 1,181
for Edwin Williams, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NORTH CAROLINA,
SENATORS.
F. M. SIMMONS, Democrat, of Trenton (R. F. D. ), Jones County, was born Janu-
ary 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
practiced 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
campaigns of 1892, 1898, 1900, 1902, 1904, and 19go6 was chairman of the Democratic
executive committee of the State; received the degree of LIL. D. from Trinity
College, North Carolina, June, 1901; was elected to the United States Senate to suc-
ceed Marion Butler, Populist, for the term beginning March 4, 1901, and reelected in
1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
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 1899; was the
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
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 1goo; has been for ten
years a member of the board of trustees of the State University; is also trustee of
Trinity College; was chosen Presidential elector for the State at large in 1900; mar-
ried 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, Republican, for the term beginning 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 SMALIL, Democrat, of Washington, was born in Wash-
ington, N. C.; was educated in the schools of Washington, and at Trinity Col-
lege, 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
NORTH CAROLINA] Biographical. 91
now chairman of the public school committee of Washington; was elected to the
Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 11,401 votes, to 3,610 for John Q. A. Wood,
Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Bertie, Edgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Lenoir, 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; elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 10,057 votes, to 1,816 for J. R. Gaskill, Republican.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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 1881;
studied law, first with his father, and then at the law school of Judges R. P. Dick
and John H. Dillard, at Greensboro, N. C.; was admitted to the bar in October, 1882,
and since that time has continuously practiced his profession; was a member of the
house of representatives of the North Carolina legislature in 1887; served six years
as attorney for the county of Craven, from 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; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 10,382 votes, to 5,280
for W. R. Dixon, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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, was elected to
the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 12,161 votes, to 5,270 for Berry Godwin, Republican. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and
Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,503
votes, to 11,089 for C. A. Reynolds, Republican.
92 Congressional Directory. [NORTH CAROLINA.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus, Cumberland, Harnett, New Hanover, and Robeson,
(7 counties). :
Population (1900), 163,001.
HANNIBAL, LAFAYETTE GODWIN, Democrat, of Dunn, was born November
3, 1873, on a farm near Dunn, in Harnett County, N. C.; was educated in the schools
of Dunn and at Trinity College, Durham, N. C.; read law at the University of North
Carolina and was admitted to the bar in September, 1896; married Miss Mattie
Barnes December 23, 1896; was a member of the State senate of the North Carolina
legislature in 1903; was elected in 1904 Democratic Presidential elector for the Sixth
Congressional district of North Carolina; was a member of the State Democratic
executive committee from 1904 to 1906; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiv-
ing 9,729 votes, to 4,645 for J. B. Schulken, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Anson, Davidson, Davie, I,ee, Montgomery, Moore, Randolph, Richmond, Scotland,
Union, and Yadkin (11 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
& Asheboro Railroad Company since 1890; moved to Montgomery County in 1897;
elected from this county to ‘the legislature of 1901; married in 1888 to Miss Flora
Shaw, of Moore County, and has four children; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and
Fifty-ninth Congresses and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 11,780 votes,
to 9,008 for G. D. B. Reynolds, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Cabarrus, Caldwell, Iredell, Rowan, Stanly, Surry,
Watauga, and Wilkes (11 counties).
Population (1900), 217,604.
RICHARD NATHANIEL, HACKETT, Democrat, of Wilkesboro, was born in
Wilkesboro, N. C., December 4, 1866, where he has resided ever since; was educated
at the Wilkesboro High School and the University of North Carolina, graduating
from the last-named institution in 1887; studied law under Col. Geo. N. Folk and
received license to practice in September, 1888; was immediately thereafter chosen
chairman of the Wilkes County Democratic executive committee and has served in
that capacity a number of times; has taken an active interest in politics since he
reached years of maturity; has been a member of the Democratic State executive
committee for fifteen years, and is now a member of the central advisory committee;
was mayor of Wilkesboro two terms, having been unanimously elected the last time;
was commissioner of State representing North Carolina at the centennial of Wash-
ington’s inauguration in New York in 1889; was the nominee of his party for State
house of representatives in 1896; was tendered the nomination for Presidential elector
in 1900 and 1904, but declined; has canvassed his district and State for his party in
several campaigns; was assistant to the secretary of state from 1901 to 1906; has been
an officer of the Grand Lodge of Masons of North Carolina for ten years, and is now
deputy grand master; married Miss Lois Long, daughter of Judge B. F. Long, of
Statesville, N. C., January 31, 1907; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress over
E. Spencer Blackburn, the only Republican Representative from the State, receiv-
ing 16,907 votes, to 15,841 for Blackburn.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Burke, Catawba, Cleveland, Gaston, I,incoin, 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; attended Shelby Military Institute, graduated at Wake
Forest College 1893; studied law at University of North Carolina; received license
from Supreme Court to practice in February, 1894; took postgraduate course in law
at University of Virginia, 1896; began practice of law February, 1894, forming part-
nership with his brother, J, I, Webb, then solicitor of twelfth judicial district, which
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NORTH CAROLINA] Biographical. 93
partnership existed until December, 1904, when it was dissolved by the appointment
of his brother to the superior court judgeship; elected State senator in 1900; was
temporary chairman of the State Democratic convention in 19oo, chairman of the
senatorial district in 1896; was chairman of the county Democratic executive com-
mittee 1898-1902; married Miss Willie Simmons, daughter of Dr. W. G. Simmons,
of Wake Forest, N. C., November 15, 1894; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 12,727 votes, to
8,988 for Frank Roberts, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.
CounTies.—Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, McDowell,
Macon, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, and Transylvania (13 counties).
Population (1900), 178,999.
WILLIAM THOMAS CRAWFORD, Democrat, of Waynesville, was born June 1,
1856, in Haywood County, N. C.; was educated in the public schools and at the
Waynesville Academy; was elected to the legislature in 1884 and reelected in 1886;
was elector on the Cleveland and Thurman ticket in 1888; graduated from the law
department of the State University in 189o and obtained license to practice in 1891,
and has since been in the active practice of the law; was married to Miss Inez
~ Coman in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-second and Fifty-third Congresses; was
defeated for a seat in the Fifty-fourth Congress; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Con-
gress, and on a contest by Richmond Pearson was unseated by a majority of one
vote in the House of Representatives; was defeated for reelection by James M.
Moody in 1900; was elector on the Parker and Davis ticket in 1904; was elected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 13,069 votes to 12,160 for J. J. Britt, Republican,
and 4o for E. R. Israel, Socialist.
NORTH DAKXOTA.
SENATORS.
HENRY CLAY HANSBROUGH, Republican, of Devils Lake, was born in Ran-
dolph County, I1l., 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 reelected in 1897 and in 1903. His
term of service will expire March 3, 19009. :
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
school 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; was elected to the United States Senate January 20, 1899, and reelected in
1905. His term of service will expire March 3, 1911.
REPRESENTATIVES.
AT LARGE.
Population (1905), 439,678.
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
66525—60-2—2D ED—8
94 Congressional Directory. INORTH DAROTA.
candidates for United States Senator from North Dakota in 1899; was elected to the
Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 38,923 votes, to 21,050 for J. D. Benton, Democrat, and 1,151 for
K. Halvorson, Socialist.
ASLE J. GRONNA, Republican, of Lakota, was born at Elkader, Clayton county,
Towa, December 10, 1858; at the age of 2 years his parents moved to Houston
County, Minn., where he was brought up on a farm and educated at the public
schools, finishing at the Caledonia Academy; taught school for two years at Wil-
mington, Minn.; moved to South Dakota in 1879 where he was engaged in farming
and teaching; in 1880 moved to Buxton, Traill County, Dakota Territory, engaging
in the mercantile business; moved to Iakota, Nelson County, in the winter of
1887; is a merchant and banker, and also extensively engaged in farming; was a
member of the Territorial legislature of 1889; has served as president of the village
board of trustees and president of the board of education several terms; in 1902
. became chairman of the county central committee of Nelson county, and was
reelected to the position in 1904; in 1902 was appointed a member of the board of
regents of the University of North Dakota by Governor Frank White; married
August 31, 1884, to Bertha M. Ostby, of Spring Grove, Minn; has two sons and
three daughters; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, although a Democratic governor was chosen, receiving 36,772
votes, to 21,350 for A. G. Burr, Democrat, and 1,192 for W. J. Bailey, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
OH10.
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 1883,
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,
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, for the term beginning
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 COUNTY.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth wards,
Precincts A, B, C, D, E, F, G, and H of the Tenth ward, the I'hirteenth ward, except part of
Precinct B, Precincts A, B, C, D, E, and F of the Eighteenth Ward of the city of Cincinnati; the
0HIO. ] Biographical. 95
townships of Anderson, Columbia, Millcreek (including Millcreek Fast, Carthage Fast,
Carthage West, part of Chester Park, Norwood, St. Bernard North, St. Bernard South, Spencer,
Sycamore, Symmes, Columbia and Sycamore, including Madeira and Silverton precincts, and
Springfield and Sycamore, including part of Arlington Heights precinct.
Population (1900), 184,164.
NICHOLAS I,ONGWORTH, 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 1gor. On February
17, 1906, married Miss Alice Roosevelt, daughter of President Roosevelt. Was elected
to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 25,161 votes, to 18,004 for T. H. Bentham, Democrat, 979 for A. S.
Matter, Socialist, and 104 for G. S. Hawke, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
HAMILTON CoUNTY.—Precincts I and XK of the Tenth ward, part of Precinct B of the Thirteenth
ward, Precincts G, H, I, K, I, and M of the Eighteenth ward, and the Eleventh, Twelfth,
Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Nineteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, Twenty-
second, T'wenty-third, and Twenty-fourth wards of the city of Cincinnati; the townships of
Colerain, Crosby, Delhi, Green, Harrison, Miami, Millcreek (including part of Chester Park,
Elmwood Place East," Elmwood Place West, West precinct, and Winton Place North), Spring-
field, Whitewater (including North and South precincts), Springfield and Sycamore, including
part of Arlington Heights precinct, Delhi and Miami, including Fernbank, Millcreek and
Green, including Mount Airy, Millcreek and Springfield, including College Hill,
Population (1900), 225,315.
HERMAN PHILIP GOEBEL, Republican, of Cincinnati, was born in Cincinnati,
Ohio, April 5, 1853; is engaged in active practice of the law; 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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 23,219 votes, to 21,258 for J. H. Meyer, Democrat, 1,437 for Nicholas Klein,
Socialist, ror for S. A. Sherman, Prohibitionist, and 2,259 for H. R. Probosco,
Independent. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Butler, Montgomery, and Preble (3 counties).
Population (1900), 210,729.
JOHN EUGENE HARDING, Republican, of KExcello, was born in Excello,
Ohio, June 27, 1877; was educated in the Amanda public schools, the Pennsylvania
Military Academy, Chester, Pa., and the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, from
which latter institution he graduated in 1900 with the degree of LI. B.; is engaged
in general business in Middletown and is interested in several different industrial
enterprises; has always been a Republican in politics and in 1903 was elected to the
State senate; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 24,567 votes, to 22,837
for J. E. Campbell, Democrat, 1,896 for D. P. Farrell, Socialist, and 383 for Martin
Shively, Prohibitionist.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, and Shelby (5 counties).
Population (1900), 174,346.
WILLIAM E. TOU VELLE, Democrat, of Celina, was born in Celina, Ohio,
November 23, 1861; educated in the public schools, graduating from the Celina High
School in 1879, and from the Cincinnati Law School in 1889; is engaged in the
practice of law; was appointed postmaster at Celina in 1885, but resigned to enter
law school; was married to Elizabeth S. Day; was nominated for the Sixtieth
Congress at the Democratic primary, receiving 4,218 majority over Charles H.
Adkins, and elected by a plurality of 4,648, receiving 17,582 votes, to 12,934 for J. C.
Rosser, Republican, 29o for E. W. Cowls, Socialist, 4o5 for J. C. Roberts, Prohibi-
tionist, and 403 for C, H. Adkins, Independent, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
96 Congressional Directory. [OHIO.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Defiance, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, and Williams (6 counties).
Population (1900), 169,069.
TIMOTHY T. ANSBERRY, Democrat, of Defiance, was born December 24, 1871,
at Defiance, Ohio; is a lawyer; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress and
reelected to the Sixty-first Congress, receiving 23,712 votes, to 16,745 for W. W.
Campbell, Republican, 346 for Owen Donaldson, Socialist.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CounTiES.—Brown, Clermont, Clinton, Greene, Highland, and Warren (6 counties).
Population (1900), 172,228.
MATTHEW ROMBACH DENVER, Democrat, of Wilmington, son of the late
Gen. James W, Denver, was born December 21, 1870, at Wilmington, Ohio; educated
in public schools and Georgetown (D. C.) University, receiving the degree of B. A.
in 1892; is a farmer and banker, and married; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 17,471 votes, to 16,291 for C. Q. Hildebrant, Republican, 445 for E. J.
Meacham, Prohibitionist, and 310 for J. H. Sims, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiEs.—Clark, Fayette, Madison, Miami, and Pickaway (5 counties).
Population (1900), 171,375.
JOSEPH WARREN KEIFER, Republican, of Springfield, was born January 30,
1836, on a farm in Bethel Township, Clark County, Ohio, where he resided until
1856; educated in common schools and at Antioch College; commenced the study
of law on the farm and later pursued it in Springfield, Ohio; was admitted to practice
in Ohio January 12, 1858, and has since practiced his profession when not engaged
on some public duty; married Eliza Stout March 22, 1860, who died March 12, 1899;
has three sons; enlisted as a soldier in the Union Army April 19, 1861; was com-
missioned major of the Third Ohio Volunteer Infantry April 27, 1861, and promoted
to be lieutenant-colonel of that regiment February 12, 1862; was commissioned
-colonel of the One hundred and tenth Ohio Volunteer Infantry September 30, 1862;
was appointed brigadier-general by brevet November 30, 1864, ‘‘for gallant and meri-
torious services in the battles of Opequon, Fishers Hill, and Cedar Creek, Virginia,’’
and was assigned to duty by President Lincoln as brigadier-general December 29,
1864; was appointed, July 1, 1865, major-general by brevet ‘‘ for gallant and dis-
tinguished services during the campaign ending in the surrender of the insurgent
army under Gen. R. E. Lee;”’ was mustered out of service June 27, 1865, having
been in the Volunteer Army four years and two months; was appointed, without
solicitation, lieutenant-colonel of the Twenty-sixth Infantry, U. S. Army, November
30, 1866, but declined the appointment; participated in the battles of Rich Moun-
tain (July 11, 1861) and Sailors Creek, Va. (April 6, 1865), about the first and the
last battles of the civil war, and fought in twenty-eight battles, great and small,
including the assaults (March and April, 1865) and the capture (April 2, 1865) of
Petersburg, Va., commanding in the last two years of the war a brigade or a divi-
sion (as at Cedar Creek, Va., October 19, 1864, under Sheridan), and was present at
the surrender of Tee at Appomattox, Va.(Aprilg, 1865); and saw Gen. Joe Johnston’s
surrendered (April 26, 1865) Confedrate Army near Greensboro, N. C.; was severely
wounded in the battle of the Wilderness (May 5, 1864) and three times slightly wounded,
having served in western Virginia and Kentucky in 1861, in Kentucky, Tennessee, Ala-
bama, and West Virginia in 1862, in Maryland and Virginia in 1863-1865; was in New
York City and Brooklyn (Augustand September, 1863) to enforce the draft; was a mem-
ber-of the Ohio State senate 1868-69; was three years commander of the Department of
Ohio, Grand Army of the Republic, 1868, 1869, and 1870, and vice-commander in chief °
of that organization 1872-73; was trustee of the Ohio Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Orphans’
Home from April 16, 1870, to March 5, 1878, and again in 1903-4; has been a trustee of
Antioch College since June 30, 1873; has been president of the Lagonda National Bank,
Springfield, Ohio, from its organization (April, 1873), save a short time when he
served as its vice-president; was a delegate at large from Ohio to the Republican
national convention at Cincinnati, June, 1876; was admitted to practice in the
Supreme Court of the United States January 14, 1878; was a Representative from
Ohio in the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses
(1877-1885), and Speaker of the Forty-seventh Congress (1881-1883; elected Decem-
0
OHIO] Biographical. | 97
ber 5, 1881); delivered the oration in Washington, D. C., May 12, 18387, at the
unveiling of the Garfield statue at the footof Capitol Hill, erected by the Society of the
Army of the Cumberland; was major-general of volunteers in the Spanish-American
war, June 9, 1898, to May 11, 1899, and commanded the First Division, Seventh Army
Corps (sometimes the corps) in Florida (Miamiand Jacksonville), Georgia (Savan-
nah), and Cuba (Havanaand Buena Vista); commanded the United States forces which
took possession of Havana, January 1, 1899; was instrumental in organizing and was
the first commander in chief of the Spanish War Veterans, 1900-1901; was a mem-
ber of the commission appointed by the governor and chairman of the joint commis-
sion composed of the State commissioners and the executive committee of the Ohio
State Archaeological and Historical Society (of which he is a life member) to con-
duct the Ohio Centennial Celebration (Chillicothe, May 18-20, 1903), and was one of
the orators on that occasion; was one year commander of the Ohio Commandery of the
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, 1903-4; is author of ‘‘ Slavery
and Four Years of War” (Putnam’s, 1900); has been a member of the Literary
Club, Springfield, Ohio, since its organization, October 3, 1893; was elected to the
Fifty-ninth Congress (November 8, 1904), and to the Sixtieth Congress (November
6, 1906), receiving 15,975 votes, to 12,387 for W. B. Rogers, Democrat, 663 for J. EF.
Bradbury, Socialist, and 648 for W. H. Leist, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-
first Congress.
FIGHTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Champaign, Delaware, Hancock, Hardin, I,ogan, and Unicn (6 counties).
Population (1900), 178,985.
RALPH D. COLE, Republican, of Findlay, was born in Biglick Township, Han-
cock County, Ohio, November 30, 1873; attended the common schools in the country
until 18 years of age; entered Findlay College and graduated with the degree of
bachelor of philosophy in 1896; in 1898 graduated from the classical course in the
Northwestern Ohio Normal University at Ada; is engaged in the practice of law;
served for two years as deputy clerk of Hancock County; in 1899 was elected to rep-
resent Hancock County in the State legislature, and reelected in 1901; is unmarried;
was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 21,524 votes, to 16,396 for Homer Southard, Democrat, 664 for J. W. Pegg,
Prohibitionist, and 595 for W. A. Linard, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CounTties.—Fulton, Lucas, Ottawa, and Wood (4 counties).
Population (1900), 250,128.
ISAAC R. SHERWOOD, Democrat, of Toledo, was born in Stanford, Dutchess
County, N. Y., August 13, 1835. His father, Aaron Sherwood, was a descendant of Dr.
Thomas Sherwood, who sailed from Ipswich, England, in 1634, and settled at Fair-
field, Conn. His mother, Maria Yeomans, was of Scottish descent, born in New York
City. His grandfathers, Isaac Sherwood and Peter Yeomans, and his great-grand-
father, Samuel Sherwood, were revolutionary soldiers. General Sherwood began his
education at a country school, and in 1852 entered the Hudson River Institute, Clav-
erick, N. VY. In 1854 he entered Antioch College, Ohio (Horace Mann, president),
and in 1856 the Ohio Law College, Poland, Ohio. In 1857 he bought the Williams
County Gazette, Bryan, Ohio, and was elected probate judge of Williams County Octo-
ber, 1860. April 16, 1861, the day following Lincoln’s call for volunteers, he enlisted
as a private in the Fourteenth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Col. James B. Stedman com-
manding. He served with the advanced guard in the West Virginia mountains and
was in the first battles of the war—Phillipi, Laurel Mountain, and Carricks Ford.
He recruited for the One hundred and eleventh Ohio Volunteer Infantry and was
mustered in with his regiment at Toledo and made adjutant September 11, 1862.
He was promoted to major upon recommendation of all the officers of his regiment
February 14, 1863. February 2, 1864, he was promoted to lieutenant-colonel and
September 8, 1864, to colonel. Owing to detail or sickness of ranking officers he
commanded the One hundred and eleventh Ohio throughout its entire field service,
beginning with the John Morgan campaign in Kentucky in 1863 to the muster out
July, 1865, embracing over thirty battles and engagements. In the East Tennessee
campaign, at the battle of Campbells Station, he lost the hearing of his right ear
from the concussion of a shell. He commanded his regiment in all the battles of
the Atlanta campaign; and after the battles of Franklin and Nashville, Tenn., upon
98 Congressional Directory. [OHIO.
recommendation of the officers of his brigade and division he was made brevet briga-
dier-general for long and faithful service and conspicuous gallantry at the battles of
Resaca, Franklin, and Nashville. After the war he located in Toledo and for a year
was editor of the Toledo Commercial; later he was political editorial writer on the
Cleveland Leader. In 1868 he was elected secretary of state of Ohio and reelected
in 1870, serving four years. He organized the bureau of statistics of Ohio. In 1872
he was elected to the Forty-third Congress from the Sixth Congressional District of
Ohio. In 1875 he bought the Toledo Journal and edited it for nine years. In 1878
he was elected probate judge of Lucas County on the National ticket as an Inde-
pendent, and was reelected in 1881 as a Democrat and Independent, serving six
years. General Sherwood is a member of the G. A. R. and of the Loyal Legion and
of the Army of the Ohio and Army of the Cumberland societies. He has been a
‘continuous contributor of political and historic articles to newspapers and magazines,
his “Army Gray Back’’ (illustrated poem) was published in book form and ran
through two editions. He was elected to the Sixtieth Congress as an Independent-
Democrat, receiving 18,411 votes, to 18,370 for E. G. McClelland, Republican,
1,350 for W. C. Gunthrop, Socialist, and 394 for E. H. Barton, Prohibitionist. The
Republican majority in the district in the preceding election was 18,640. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT,
CounTiEs.—Adams, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, and Scioto (6 counties).
Population (1900), 187,181.
HENRY TOWNE BANNON, Republican, of Portsmouth, was born near that
city on June 5, 1867; attended the Portsmouth schools, and during the year 1885-86
attended the Ohio State University; entered the University of Michigan in 1886 and
graduated therefrom in 1889; was admitted to the bar of Ohio in 1891, and served as
prosecuting attorney of Scioto County from 1897 to 1902; was elected to the Fifty-
ninth Congress and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 17,979 votes, to
14,686 for T'. H. B. Jones, Democrat, 560 for Samuel I,lewellyn, Prohibitionist, and
523 for Albert Hales, Socialist,
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Athens, Fairfield, Hocking, Meigs, Perry, Ross, and Vinton (7 counties).
Population (1900), 214,118.
ALBERT DOUGLAS, Republican, of Chillicothe, was born in Chillicothe, Ohio,
April 25, 1852; was educated in the public schools of Chillicothe, a preparatory
school, and Kenyon College, graduating with the class of 1872; went to the Harvard
Law School, where he received the degree of LIL. B. in 1874; returning to Chilli-
cothe, began the practice of law; was elected prosecuting attorney of the county in
1876 on the Republican ticket when the county was very largely Democratic, and
reelected in 1878; held no other office until he was put upon the State ticket in 1896
as one of the electors at large, and when the Electoral College met was made the
chairman of that body; in 1905 received the honorary degree of LI,. D. from the
Ohio University, and the same degree from Kenyon College in 1906; was married in
1880 to Lucia C. Taylor, of Brooklyn, N.Y.; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 21,247 votes, to 19,914 for G. W. H. Wright, Democrat, 602 for A. C. Purvis,
Prohibitionist, and 411 for J. A. Siemer, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress. :
TWELFTH DISTRICT.
CouNTy.—Franklin.
Population (1900), 164,460.
EDWARD LIVINGSTON TAYLOR, Jr., Republican, of 1260 East Broad street,
Columbus, was born August 10, 1869; educated in the public schools of Columbus,
Ohio, and graduated from the high school; is married; was admitted to practice
law in 1891, and was elected prosecuting attorney of Franklin County, November 4,
1899, and reelected November 6, 1902; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,629 votes, to 13,351 for W. A.
Taylor, Democrat, 913 for Oscar Ameringer, Socialist, 452 for F. M. Mecartney,
Prohibitionist, and 173 for KE. J. Bracken, Independent. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
a
a
OHIO.] Biographical. 99
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTies.—Crawford, Erie, Marion, Sandusky, Seneca, and Wyandot (6 counties).
Population (1900), 196,842.
GRANT EARL MOUSER, Republican, of Marion, was born at Larue, Marion
County, Ohio, September 11, 1868; received his education at I,arue Union schools,
Ada University, and the Cincinnati Law School, where he graduated in June, 1890;
was elected prosecuting attorney, 1893, and has practiced law continuously since his
admission to the bar at Marion; was married November 30, 1892, to Dell E. Ridgway,
and has a family consisting of himself, wife, and three children; was elected to the
Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,736 votes,
to 20,463 for D. R. Crissinger, Democrat, 605 for M. H. Darrow, Socialist, and 362
for H. IL. Peeke, Prohibitionist.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Ashland, Huron, Knox, Lorain, Morrow, and Richland (6 counties).
Population (1900), 198,307.
JAY FORD LANING, Republican, of Norwalk, Huron County, was born at New
London, Ohio, May 15, 1853; received his education at Savannah Academy and
Baldwin University, Berea, Ohio, alternating his time between teaching and attend-
ing school. He was admitted to the bar in May, 1875; held several minor elective
offices in his native town; moved to Norwalk in January, 1882, and was elected a
member of the city council in 1884 and 1886; was elected to the Ohio State senate
in 1893 and reelected in 1895. He practiced law until 1885, and then gradually
changed his calling to that of author and publisher. He has written and edited a
number of historical books and works used by the law profession. June 11, 1901,
he had conferred upon him by Baldwin University the degree of A. M., and in 1902
was chosen and still serves as one of its trustees. In 1904 he was a delegate to the
Republican national convention at Chicago. In June, 1875, he married Caroline E.
Sheldon, and has six children. He was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
20,962 votes, to 18,443 for W. H. Budd, Democrat, 614 for F. C. Ross, Socialist,
and 506 for Ralph Davey, Prohibitionist.
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Guernsey, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, and Washington (5 counties).
Population (1900), 173,226.
BEMAN GATES DAWES, Republican, of Marietta, was born at Marietta, Ohio,
January 14, 1870, a son of Gen. Rufus R. Dawes, formerly a member of Congress;
was educated at Marietta Academy and College; is engaged in business; was elected
to the Fifty-ninth Congress and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,364
votes, to 16,945 for George White, Democrat, 1,133 for IL. E. Kieth, Prohibitionist,
and 588 for F. B. Martin, Socialist.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Belmont, Carroll, Harrison, Jefferson, and Monroe (5 counties).
Population (1900), 169,560.
CAPELL IL. 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 waselected 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 Congress to fill the
vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. J. J. Gill, and to the Fifty-ninth Congress,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 14,712 votes, to 11,347 for F. A. Sum-
mers, Democrat, 537 for Lewis Hayes, Socialist, and 687 for T. A. Rodifer, Prohibi-
tionist,
100 Congressional Directory. [oHIO.
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTties.—Coshocton, Holmes, Licking, Tuscarawas, and Wayne (5 counties).
Population (1900), 187,539.
WILLIAM A. ASHBROOK, Democrat, of Johnstown, was born on a farm near
Johnstown, Licking County, Ohio, July 1, 1867, and has always resided in that
village; he attended the public schools in his native town, and afterwards
attended a business college for one year. He began the publication of the
Johnstown Independent before he was 18 years old and has ever since published it.
Ten years ago he became interested in banking. He was for three years the secretary
of the National Editorial Association of the United States. He was married to Jennie
B. Willison December 24, 1889; has no children. He was postmaster of his town
during the Cleveland Administration, but never entered politics until 1905, when he
was nominated for Representative of Licking County and was elected, leading the
ticket. After a three days’ convention he was nominated for the Sixtieth Congress
at New Philadelphia, June 8, 1906, on the two hundred and seventy-seventh ballot
and elected, receiving 19,892 votes, to 19,497 for M. I. Smyser, Republican, 6oo for
Harris Whitcomb, Socialist, and 484 for W. B. King, Prohibitionist. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress.
FIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—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 Congress; was
elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 19,684 votes, to 17,840 for J. C. Welty, Democrat, 932 for John
Evans, Socialist, and 1,299 for Leslie Hawke, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
NINETEENTH DISTRICT.
CounNTIiES.—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. Y.,
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; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,341 votes, to
10,926 for T. E. Hoyt, Democrat, 1,217 for Everett St. John, Socialist, and 697 for
J. H. Ford, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWENTIETH DISTRICT.
CounTtIES.—Lake, Medina, and the townships of Bedford, Brecksville, Brooklyn, Chagrin Falls,
Collinwood, Dover, East Cleveland, Euclid, Glenville, Independence, Mayfield, Middleburg,
Newburg, Olmstead, Orange, Parma, Rockport, Royalton, Solon, Strongsville, Warrensville,
and West Park, of Cuyahoga County, and the Twenty-sixth, T'wenty-eighth, Twenty-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.
PAUL HOWLAND, Republican, of Cleveland, was born at Jefférson, Ashtabula
County, Ohio, December 5, 1865; was liberally educated, holding the degrees of A. B.
and M. A. from Oberlin College, and of LL. B, from Harvard University; is a lawyer;
OHIO] Biographical. 101
was second lieutenant First Ohio Volunteer Cavalry during the Spanish-American
war; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,439 votes, to 16,966 for C. W.
Lapp, Democrat, 823 for J. G. Willert, Socialist, and 267 for A. A. Bostwick,
Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.
City oF CLEVELAND.—Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth,
Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, Twenty-second,
Twenty-third, Twenty-fourth, T'wenty-fifth, and Twenty-sixth 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 Iowa College, Grinnell, Iowa, and at Oberlin College, from which last insti-
tution he graduated in 1872; began the practice of law at Cleveland in 1875; is author
of a work on Financial Crises and Periods of Commercial Depression, published in
1902, and a biography of John Sherman, published in 1906; 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-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,826 votes, to 1,376
for Robert Bandlow, Socialist, and 220 for J. W. Malone, Prohibitionist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
OKLAHOMA.
SENATORS.
THOMAS PRYOR GORE, Democrat, of Lawton, was born in Webster County,
Miss., December 10, 1870; attended a local school at Walthall, Miss., and graduated
from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., 1892; moved
to Texas in 1896 and to Oklahoma in 1901; married Nina Kay, December 27,
1900; served one term in the Territorial senate; was nominated for the United States
Senate in State primary, June 8, 1907, by a plurality of 3,750; was appointed Senator
by the governor, November 16, elected by the legislature December 11, receiving
127 votes, against 22 for C. G. Jones, Republican, and took his seat December 16.
His term of service will expire March 3, 1909.
ROBERT LATHAM OWEN, Democrat, of Muskogee, was born February 2, 1856,
at Lynchburg, Va.; son of Robert I. Owen, of Lynchburg, Va., formerly president of
the Virginia & Tennessee Railroad, and of Narcissa Chisholm, of the Cherokee
Nation; was educated in private schools in Lynchburg, Va., and Baltimore, Md.,
and received the degree of master of arts from Washington and Lee University,
Lexington, Va., 1877; has served in various capacities as teacher, editor, lawyer,
banker, and business man engaged in many enterprises; is a conservative constructive
Democrat; was a member of the Democratic national committee from 1892 to 1896;
was member of subcommittee that drew the Democratic platform in 1896, etc., and
vice-chairman of the Democratic campaign committee in Oklahoma in 1906; is an
Episcopalian, a thirty-second degree Mason, and a life-member Elk. Mr. Owen was
nominated June 8, 1907, as the choice of the Democracy of Oklahoma for the United
States Senate in a state-wide primary by the largest vote of any candidate for the Sena-
torship by about 10,000; was appointed United States Senator by Hon. Charles N.
Haskell, governor of Oklahoma, November 16, 1907; was elected United States
Senator by the legislature of Oklahoma, December 11, 1907, and took his seat
December 16. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTies.—Garfield, Grant, Kay, Kingfisher, Lincoln, Logan, Noble, Osage, Pawnee, and Payne
(10 counties).
Population (1907), 225,373.
BIRD 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
102 Congressional Directory. [orRT.AHOMA.
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 as Delegate from the Territory of Oklahoma; served as such in the Fifty-eighth
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and was elected to the Sixtieth Congress September
: 17, 1907, his term of service beginning upon the admission of Oklahoma as a State.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Alfalfa, Beaver, Blaine, Caddo, Canadian, Cimarron, Custer, Dewey, Ellis, part of
Grady, Harper, Major, Oklahoma, part of Roger Mills, Texas, Woods, and Woodward (17
counties).
| Population (1907), 230,224.
| ELMER LINCOLN FULTON, Democrat, of Oklahoma City, was born in Mag-
| nolia, Harrison County, Iowa, April 22, 1865; moved with his parents to Pawnee
City, Nebr., in 1870, residing there until 19oo, when he moved to Oklahoma; obtained
his education in the public schools at Pawnee City, and took a partial course at
Tabor College, Tabor, Iowa; is a lawyer by profession; was married March 7, 1906,
to Miss Mabel Rinehart, of Guthrie, Okla.; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 26,006 votes, to 25,028 for T. B. Ferguson, Republican.
THIRD DISTRICT. \
CoUNTIES.—Adair, Cherokee, Craig, Creek, Delaware, part of Hughes, part of McIntosh, Mayes,
part of Muskogee, Nowata, part of Okfuskee, Okmulgee, Ottawa, Rogers, Seminole, Sequoyah,
Tulsa, Wagoner, and Washington (19 counties).
Population (1907), 290,075.
JAMES SANFORD DAVENPORT, Democrat, of Vinita, was born on a farm near
Gaylesville, Cherokee County, Ala., September 21, 1864, and at the age of 15 years
moved with his father’s family to Conway, Faulkner County, Ark., where he
worked on a farm for several years; was educated in the public schools and the
academy at Greenbrier, Ark., working his way through high school and teaching in
the summer months while attending the academy; read law with Col. G. W.
Bruce, Conway, Ark., and was admitted to the bar of Faulkner County, Feb-
ruary 14, 1890; in October of that year he moved to Indian Territory, locating
at Muskogee, and in 1893 moved to Vinita, where he has since resided and con-
tinued the practice of his profession. Mr. Davenport has been twice married—
in 1892 to Gulielma Ross, who died in 1898, and on June 15, 1907, to Miss Byrd Iron-
side, both citizens by blood of the Cherokee Nation. He served two terms in the
lower house of the Cherokee legislature, from 1897 to 1901, being elected speaker in
the latter term, the only intermarried white man who ever held that position; in
November, 1899, was selected one of the attorneys for the Cherokee Nation and held |
that position until March 4, 1907; was twice elected mayor of Vinita—1903 and 1904—
voluntarily retiring at the end of his second term. Mr. Davenport has always taken
an active part in the organization of the Democratic party in the Indian Territory,
and was one of its first executive committeemen of the Territory. He was elected to
the Sixtieth Congress September 17, 1907, receiving 26,370 votes, to 23,623 for F. C.
Hubbard, Republican.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
COUNTIES. —Atoka, Bryan, part of Carter, Choctaw, Coal, Haskell, part of Hughes, Johnston,
Latimer, Le Flore, part of Iove, McCurtain, part of McIntosh, Marshall, part of Murray,
part of Muskogee, part of Okfuskee, Pittsburg, Pontotoc, and Pushmataha (20 counties).
Population (1907), 303,399.
CHARLES D.CARTER, Democrat, of Ardmore (adescendant of Nathan Carter, sr.,
who was captured when a small boy by Shawnee Indians at the Wyoming Valley
massacre, when all of the other members of the family, except a sister, were killed;
afterwards traded to the Cherokees and married a full-blood Cherokee woman), is the
son of Benjamin Wisnor Carter, a captain in the Confederate army, who married
OKILAHOMA.] Biographical. 103
Serena J. Guy, one-fourth blood Chickasaw woman, sister of Governor William M. Guy,
chief of the Chickasaws, and was born in a little log cabin near Boggy Depot, an
old fort in the Choctaw Nation, August 16, 1869. His nationality is seven-sixteenths
Chickasaw and Cherokee Indian and nine-sixteenths Scotch-Irish. He moved with
his father to Mill Creek post-office and stage stand on the western frontier of the Chick-
asaw Nation in April, 1876. Beginning in October, 1880, he attended subscription
school at a log schoolhouse near Mill Creek for two terms, and entered the Chick-
asaw Manual Labor Academy, Tishomingo, October, 1882; missed two terms while
employed on his father’s ranch as cowboy, and finished June 18, 1887. As a boy he
worked on his father’s ranch and farm as farmhand, cowboy, and bronco buster, and
began life for himself as cow puncher and broncho buster at Diamond Z ranch,
where the beautiful city of Sulphur now stands, in June, 1887; continued ranch work
until September 1, 1889, when he accepted a position in the store of Munzesheimer
& Daube, Ardmore; married Gertrude Wilson, December 29, 1891, who died January
30, 1901; continued as clerk, bookkeeper, cotton buyer, and cotton weigher until
September, 1892, when he was appointed auditor of public accounts of the Chickasaw
Nation and served two years; was a member of the Chickasaw council for the term
of 1895; superintendent of schools, Chickasaw Nation, 1897; appointed mining trus-
tee of Indian Territory by President McKinley in November, 1900, served four years,
and was not an applicant for reappointment; began writing fire insurance in January,
1905; was secretary of the first Democratic executive committee of the proposed State
of Oklahoma, June to December, 1906; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress Septem-
ber 17, 1907, receiving 29,856 votes, to 15,925 for I,. G. Disney, Republican, and 2,065
for Mr. Cumbie, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Beckham, part of Carter, Cleveland, Comanche, Garvin, part of Grady, Greer, Jack-
son, Jefferson, Kiowa, part of I,ove, McLain, part of Murray, Pottawatomie, part of Roger
Mills, Stephens, Tillman, and Washita (18 counties).
Population (1907), 315,106.
SCOTT FERRIS, Democrat, of Lawton, was born November 7, 1877, at Neosho,
Newton County, Mo.; graduated from the Newton County High School, 1897, and
from the Kansas City School of I.aw, 1901; has practiced law continuously since
1901 in Lawton; was married in June, 1906, to Miss Grace Hubbert, of Neosho, Mo.;
was elected to the legislature of Oklahoma in 1904, representing the twenty-second
district; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress September 17, 1907, with 18,052
majority. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
ORE GON.
SENATORS.
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
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 1901. Mr. Fulton married Miss Ada Hob-
son, September 5, 1878, and has one son; was elected to the United States Senate,
February 28, 1903, to succeed Joseph Simon, for the term beginning March 4, 1903.
His term of service will expire March 3, 1909.
JONATHAN BOURNE, JRr., Republican, of Portland, was born in New Bedford,
Mass., February 23, 1855; attended the private schools of that city; entered Harvard
College in 1873 and remained until the end of his junior year. After traveling
around the world he settled in Portland, Oreg., May 16, 1878, where he read law
and was admitted to the Oregon bar in 1881. Becoming largely interested in the
104 Congressional Directory. [OREGON.
mining interests of the Northwest, he practiced law for only about a year, thereafter
devoting his attention to his mining and other business interests. He is president
of a number of Oregon corporations and of the Bourne Cotton Mills at Fall River,
Mass. He was a Republican member of the Oregon legislature during the sessions
of 1885, 1886, and 1897; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions in
1888 and 1892 and was Oregon’s member of the Republican national committee from
1888 to 1892; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. Fred. W.
Mulkey for the term beginning March 4, 1907. His term of service will expire
March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Benton, Clackamas, Coos, Curry, Douglas, Jackson, Josephine, Klamath, Lake, Lane,
Lincoln, Linn, Marion, Polk, Tillamook, Washington, and Yamhill (17 counties).
\ Population (1905), 249,756.
WILLIS CHATMAN HAWLEY, Republican, of Salem, was born 4 miles west of
Monroe, in Benton County, Oreg., May 5, 1864, of pioneer parentage; his father,
Sewell Ransom Hawley, crossed the plains to Oregon in 1848, and his mother, Emma
A. (Noble) Hawley, in 1847. He was educated in the country schools of Oregon
and at the Willamette University, located at Salem, Oreg., with degrees as follows:
1884, B. S.; 1888, A. B. and LL. B., and 1891, A. M.; was regularly admitted to the
bar in Oregon in 1893 and to the United States district and United States circuit
courts in 1906; was principal of the Umpqua Academy, located at Wilbur, Oreg.,
1884-1886; president of the Oregon State Normal School at Drain, 1888-1891. The
remainder of his educational work has been in connection with the Willamette Uni-
versity; as follows: Professor of history and mathematics, 1891-1893; professor of
history; economics, and public law from 1893 until elected to Congress; was president
of the“institution for eight years. Since 189g has been president of the Willamette
Valley Chautauqua, of Oregon City, the largest Chautauqua west of the Rocky Moun-
tains; has been head manager P. J. W. W. since 1896 and is chairman of the board;
is a public speaker and campaigner, but never was a candidate for public office prior
to his eandidacy for Congress in 1906. On August 19, 1885, he married Miss Anna
Martha Geisendorfer, of Albany, Oreg., and they have two boys and one girl. He
was nominated by the Republican voters for Representative in Congress at the
direct primary April 20, 1906, over two competitors, and was elected to the Sixtieth
Congress on June 6, 1906, receiving 23,120 votes, to 19,340 for C. V. Galloway, Demo-
crat, 2,794 for W. W. Myers, Socialist, and 1,801 for E. F. Green, Prohibitionist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
COUNTIES.—Baker, Clatsop, Columbia, Crook, Gilliam, Grant, Harney, Malheur, Morrow, Mult-
nomah, Sherman, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, Wasco, and Wheeler (16 counties).
Population (1905), 230,326.
WILLIAM RUSSELI, ELLIS, Republican, of Pendleton, was born near Wave-
land, Montgomery County, Ind., April 23, 1850; moved to Guthrie County, Iowa, in
1855; worked on a farm and attended district school during the winter months until
18 years of age; after that divided his time between teaching country school and
working on a farm until after reaching his majority; attended school until the
middle of the sophomore year at the Towa State Agricultural College at Ames; gradu-
ated with the degree of LL. B. from the law department of the Iowa State Univer-
sity at Iowa City in June, 1874; the first year after graduation practiced law as
a partner of Col. S. D. Nichols, at Panora, Iowa, during which time he was elected
and served as mayor; then moved to Hamburg, Iowa, and engaged in the practice
of law and newspaper work; served that city two years as city attorney and one term
as mayor; moved west in 1883, settling in Heppner, Oreg., in 1884; served one term as
county superintendent of schools of Morrow County; three terms as district attorney
of the Seventh judicial district of Oregon. Was elected to Congress from the Second
district of Oregon and served from March 4, 1893, to March 3, 1899; in June, 1900,
was elected circuit judge of the Sixth judicial district of Oregon for a term of six
years which ended July 1, 1906; moved to Pendleton in July, 1901; is married. Before
the expiration of his term as judge, was elected at the direct primary election in
April, 1906, as the Republican nominee for the Sixtieth Congress from the Second
Congressional district of Oregon, and in June following was elected, receiving 28,315
votes, to 12,151 for J. H. Graham, Democrat, 3,532 for A. M. Paul, Socialist, and 2,408
for H, W, Stone, Prohibitionist, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress. :
EE
PENNSYLVANIA | Biographical. 105
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 Eighth 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 conventions of 1900
and 1904; was chairman of the Republican State committee in 1903-1905; was elected
a member of the national Republican committee from Pennsylvania in 1904; was
elected to the United States Senate to succeed J. Donald Cameron, for the term begin-
ning 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 service
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; was elected by the legislature in January,
1905. His term of service will expire March 3, 1911.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CITY OF PHILADELPHIA. —First, Seventh, Twenty-sixth, Thirtieth, Thirty-sixth, and Thirty-ninth
wan 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,
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, 1900, and 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,594 votes, to 6,311
for E. S. Miller, Lincoln Party, 3,628 for J. IL. Galen, Democrat, 298 for E. J.
Higgins, Socialist, and 39 for Edward Hazlehurst, Constitutional Party. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress,
106 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—FEighth, Ninth, Tenth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Twentieth,
and Thirty-seventh wards.
Population (1900), 195,609.
JOEL COOK, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., March
20, 1842; educated in the public schools he was graduated at the Central High School
of Philadelphia, B. A., 1859; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1863; later
adopted journalism as a profession, and served various newspapers during a period of
forty-five years; was a correspondent with the Army of the Potomac and a Washing-
ton correspondent during the war of the rebellion; was upon the editorial staff of
the Philadelphia Public Ledger from 1865 and its financial editor from 1883 until
retiring from active work in 1907; was for thirty years, beginning in 1865, American
correspondent of the London Times; was president of the board of wardens for the
port of Philadelphia from 1891 until 1907; member of the board of public education of
Philadelphia from 1897 until 1907; director, vice-president, and president of the City
National Bank of Philadelphia, until its merger with the Philadelphia National Bank;
is vice-president and treasurer of the United Security Life Insurance and Trust Com-
pany of Philadelphia; president of the Philadelphia Board of Trade. Mr. Cook has
traveled extensively and is author of several volumes on American and foreign
travel; is a member of the Union League of Philadelphia, the American Philosoph-
ical Society, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, and numerous other prominent
Pennsylvania associations; married Mary J. Edmunds, of Philadelphia, in 1865, and
has a son and a daughter; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress November 5, 1907,
to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. J. E. Reyburn, receiving 25,727
votes, to 528 for J. W. Barr, Prohibitionist, the only other candidate. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eleventh, T'welfth, Sixteenth, Seven-
teenth, Fighteenth, and Nineteenth wards.
Population (1900), 251,649.
JOSEPH HAMPTON MOORE, Republican, of Philadelphia, born at Woodbury,
N. J., March 8, 1864; was educated in common schools; office boy and law student in
Philadelphia, 1877 to 1880; a reporter in the courts and on the Public Ledger in Phil-
adelphia, 1881 to 1894; chief clerk to city treasurer, Philadelphia, 1894 to 1897; edi-
tor and publisher, 1898-99; secretary to the mayor, 1900; city treasurer, 1901-1903;
appointed by President Roosevelt first Chief of the Bureau of Manufactures, Depart-
ment of Commerce and Labor, January, 1905; resigned June I, 1905, to accept the
presidency of the City Trust, Safe Deposit and Surety Company of Philadelphia, but
voted June 21, 1905, to discontinue the business; appointed by the court June 24,
1905, receiver of the company; president of the Allied Republican Clubs of Phila-
delphia, 1900-1906; president of the Pennsylvania State League in 1900, and reelected
in 1901; elected president of the National Republican Ieague, at Chicago, in 1902,
and reelected at Indianapolis in 1904; married Adelaide Stone in 1889; elected to
the Fifty-ninth Congress for the unexpired term of the late Hon. George A. Castor
and to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,337 votes, to 11,240 for W. J. O’Brien,
Democrat and Lincoln Republican, and 407 for Charles Sehl, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—T'wenty-eighth, T'wenty-ninth, Thirty-second, and Thirty-eighth wards.
Population (1900), 177,020.
REUBEN OSBORNE 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 1684, 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 Phila-
delphia; 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 Union League, Penn
Club, the Lawyers’ Club, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, and other promi-
PENNSYLYANIA] Biographical. 107
nent 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, and
to the Rifty-ninth Congiess, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 26,289
votes, to 3,993 for H. S. Fogel, Democrat, and 414 for H. I,, Kumme, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CITY OF PHILADELPHIA.—T'wenty-third, Twenty-fifth, Thirty-first, Thirty-third, Thirty-fifth, and
Forty-first wards.
Population (1900), 196,315.
WILLIAM WALKER FOULKROD, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in
Frankford, Philadelphia, Pa.; received his education in the public and private
schools of that city; began his business career in the wholesale dry goods and
notion house of Mustin & Bennet; upon a change in that firm became a member of
the firm of T. J. Mustin & Co.; later, a member of the wholesale dry goods firm of
Hood, Foulkrod & Co.; after the retirement of that firm from business he became
interested in manufacturing; is also president of the Frankford Mutual Fire Insur-
ance Company. Outside of his business interests, Mr. Foulkrod has devoted a
large part of his time to the promotion of the commercial organizations of Phila-
delphia, and with those organizations has worked for liberal appropriations for
the improvement of the waterways of the country; was a member of the canal com-
mission appointed by the mayor of Philadelphia to investigate and repott upon a
plan for a canal connecting Philadelphia with the ocean; is chairman of the harbor
and navigation committee of the Trades League of Philadelphia, which organization
he helped to organize and of which he was for twelve years president; is a trustee
of the Philadelphia Commercial Museum, also of the T. W. Evans Museum and Insti-
tute Society; a member of the Pennsylvania Historical Society, the Art Club of Phil-
adelphia, and other organizations; was the acting president of the National Export
Exposition. He married Mary C. Buckius, and has two children, one boy and one
girl; was nominated by the Republican party, and elected to the Sixtieth Congress
to represent the Fifth Congressional District of Pennsylvania, which is the largest
manufacturing district in the State; received 29,390 votes, to 3,987 for T. B. Dolan,
Democrat, and 739 for R. E. Nicholson, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CITY oF PHILADELPHIA.— Twenty-first, Twenty-second, Twenty-fourth, Twenty-seventh, Thirty-
fourth, Fortieth, and Forty-second wards.
Population (1900), 245,371.
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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 38,269 votes, to 6,425 for F. X. Ward,
Democrat, and 518 for H. W. Potter, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
108 Congressional Directory. " [PENNSYLVANIA
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Chester and Delaware (2 counties).
Population (1900), 190,457.
THOMAS S. BUTLER, Republican, of West Chester, was born in Uwchlan, 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, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 19,778 votes, to 8,249 for J. J. Buckley, Democrat, and 203 for W. N. Lodge,
Socialist, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—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
elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-
eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiv-
ing 22,416 votes, to 18,231 for W. F. Leedom, Lincoln party and Democrat, and
386 for Hugh Ayres, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CounTy.—Iancaster.
Population (1900), 159,241.
HENRY BURD CASSE], Republican, of Marietta, was bornin Marietta, I,ancaster
County, Pa., October 19, 1855; has been a stanch Republican all his life. 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; in 1898 was elected to the lower house of the
State legislature, and was reelected in 19oo. Asa business man Mr. Cassel is the
senior member of the firm of A. N. Cassel & Son, wholesale and retail lumber dealers;
is also associated as director or stockholder in a number of other companies; was
elected November 3, 1901, to the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill the vacancy caused by
the death of Hon. Marriott Brosius, and to the Fifty-eighth’ and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,903 votes, to 9,007
for J. H. Wickersham, Iincoln Republican.
TENTH DISTRICT.
CouNnty.—Lackawanna.
Population (1900), 193,831.
THOMAS DAVID NICHOLLS, Democrat, of Scranton, was born in Wilkes-
barre, Luzerne County, Pa., September 16, 1870; attended public day schools until
g years of age and two winters of night school in the two years following; later on
studied mining by correspondence in the International Correspondence Schools of
Scranton; in 1897 passed a State examination and received a mine foreman’s certifi-
cate of competency; began work as a breaker boy and worked from the age of 9
until 12 as a slate picker; at 12 years of age, secured employment inside the mines
and continued to work at the various occupations therein until May, 1900, when he
was placed on salary for the purpose of having him devote his whole time to the
duties of district president of District No. 1, United Mine Workers of America, to
which position he had been elected in May, 1899. Mr. Nicholls is married and has a
family of four children—three girls and one boy; has never before served in any
political office ; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,037 votes, to
11,786 for T. H. Dale, Republican, and 77 for C. J. Rechsteiner, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNnTy.—Luzerne.
Population (1900), 257,121.
JOHN T. LENAHAN, Democrat, of Wilkesbarre, was born in the township of
Jenkins, Luzerne County, Pa., November 15, 1852; after graduating at Villanova
College, in 1870, he began reading law at Wilkesbarre, the county seat of Luzerne
PENNSYLVANIA. ] Biographical. 109
County; since his admission to the bar, in 1873, he has always taken an active part
in Democratic politics of his native State; was a delegate to the Democratic
national convention in 1892 at Chicago, and delegate-at-large from his State in 1896.
His alma mater conferred on him the degree LL. D. in 1893. He was elected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,176 votes, to 9,627 for B. J. Cobleigh, Roosevelt
Square-Deal Patty, 5,197 for W. H. Dettry, Socialist, and 985 for Thomas Kerr,
Prohibitionist.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.
CounNTY.—Schuylkill.
Population (1900), 172,927.
VACANCY.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Berks and Lehigh (2 counties).
Population (1900), 253,508.
JOHN H. ROTHERME]IL, Democrat, of Reading, was born March 7, 1856, in
Richmond Township, Berks County, Pa.; received a common school and academic
education; was admitted to the bar August 20, 1881; has been engaged in active
practice of his profession in the State and Federal courts ever since; was elected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 21,885 votes, to 16,488 for J. W. Fisher, Republican,
and 2,044 for M. E. Gibson, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Bradford, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming (4 counties).
Population (1900), 146,769.
GEORGE WASHINGTON KIPP, Democrat, of Towanda, was born in Green
Township, Pike County, Pa., March 28, 1847; was educated in the public schools of his
native township; was engaged in the lumber business for thirty-five years, but retired
from active participation therein several years ago; served one term as county com-
missioner of Wayne County, Pa., in 1880; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 12,091 votes, to 11,288 for M. E. Lilley, Republican, and 1,184
for G. P. Little, Prohibitionist. :
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounrtIES.—Clinton, Lycoming, Potter, and Tioga (4 counties).
Population (1900), 184,567.
WILLIAM BAUCHOP WIIASON, Democrat, of Blossburg, was born at Blantyre,
Scotland, April 2, 1862; came to this country with his parents in 1870 and settled at
Arnot, Tioga County, Pa. In March, 1871, he began working in the coal mines;
in November, 1873, became half member of the Mine Workers’ Union; has taken
an active part in trade-union affairs from early manhood; was international secretary-
treasurer of the United Mine Workers of America from rgoo until 1907, having been
elected each year without opposition. Mr. Wilson is engaged in farming at Blossburg;
is married and has ten children—six boys and four girls; was elected to the Six-
tieth Congress, receiving 14,582 votes, to 14,201 for Elias Deemer, Republican, 1,136
for C. F. Heilman, Prohibitionist, and 317 for F. H. Sharar, Socialist. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress. :
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.
Counties.—Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, and Sullivan (4 counties).
Population (1900), 158,467.
JOHN GEISER McHENRY, Democrat, of Benton, was born in Benton Township,
Columbia County, Pa., April 26, 1868; was educated in rural public schools and
Orangeville Academy; is a banker, manufacturer, and farmer; president of the
Columbia County National Bank and State superintendent of the Grange National
banks throughout Pennsylvania; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving .
14,707 votes, to 12,131 for E. W. Samuel, Republican, and 522 for Patrick Smith,
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
66525—60-2—2D ED—9
110 Congressional Directory. [PENNSVIVANIA,
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Snyder, and Union (8 counties).
Population (1900), 199,849.
BENJAMIN K. FOCHT, Republican, of Lewisburg, was born at New Bloomfield,
Pa., March 12, 1863; the son of a I,utheran minister who was an orator and author
of note; was educated at Bucknell University, Pennsylvania State College, and Sus-
quehanna University; has been editor and proprietor of the Saturday News, published
at Lewisburg, since 18 years of age; served as an officer of the National Guard
of Pennsylvania; is married and has three children—two daughters and a son; has
been active in Pennsylvania politics for nearly twenty-five years; served three terms
in the Pennsylvania assembly and four years in the Pennsylvania State senate; is
author of the present ballot law in Pennsylvania and other important legislation;
continues to retain ownership of his newspaper and resides in Lewisburg, but is
engaged in railroad and industrial operations, with headquarters in Philadelphia and
New York; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 17,130 votes, to 14,036 for
William Alexander, Democrat, and 1,623 for X. M. Hummel, Lincoln Party.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.
CountIies.—Cumberland, Dauphin, and I,ebanon (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,
and from Dickinson College in 1905; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and
Fifty-seventh Congresses, from the Fourteenth, and elected to the Fifty-eighth and
Fifty-ninth Congresses from the Fighteenth district, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 22,447 votes, to 14,457 for John Lindner, Democrat, 865 for
Wesley Ellenberger, Prohibitionist, and 351 for H. J. Rohe, Socialist. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress.
NINETEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Bedford, Blair, and Cambria (3 counties).
: Population (1900), 229,404.
JOHN MERRIMAN REYNOLDS, Republican, of Bedford, was born in Lancas-
ter County, Pa.; graduated from the First Pennsylvania State Normal School, and
received the degree of A. M. from Columbian University. Mr. Reynolds is married
and has three children; he is engaged in the practice of law and in banking, and is
associated with the Colonial Iron Company in the mining of coal and manufacture
of pig iron at Riddlesburg, Pa. He represented the district of Bedford and Fulton
counties in the legislature of Pennsylvania in the sessions of 1873-74, and was elected
prosecuting attorney of his county in 1875. In 1892 he was appointed by Governor
Pattison one of the five commissioners authorized by an act of legislature to select
a site and build an asylum for the chronic insane at Wernersville, Pa.; was a delegate
to the conventions that nominated Mr. Cleveland at St. Louis in 1888 and at Chicago
in 1892; in 1893 he was tendered by President Cleveland the office of Assistant Secre-
tary of the Interior, and entered upon its duties April 15, 1893; tendered his resigna-
tion March 5, 1897, which was accepted June 1 following; in 1896 he supported
Mr. McKinley for the Presidency, and has since been identified with the Republican
party; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress with a plurality of 3,872 votes, receiving 17,521 votes, to 10,019 for J. E.
Thropp, Democrat-Prohibition-Commonwealth-Referendum and Lincoln candidate,
2,140 for W. W. Bailey, Bryan party, and 1,351 for J. W. Blake, Pennsylvania Black-
smith party. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress,
PENNSYLVANIA] Biographical. III
TWENTIETH DISTRICT.
CounTIiEs.—Adams and York (2 counties).
Population (1900), 150,909.
DANIEL FRANKLIN LAFEAN, Republican, of York, was born at York, Feb-
ruary 7, 1861; was educated in the public schools of his native city; has been actively
engaged in the manufacturing business upward of twenty years, being connected
with a number of the larger manufacturing concerns, as well as president of the
Security Title and Trust Company, a leading financial institution of his city; isa
director of the Pennsylvania College, and trustee of the Iutheran Seminary, both of
Gettysburg; was married in 1882 to Miss Emma B. Krone, and has three children;
was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses, and reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress with a plurality of 2,248, receiving 19,176 votes, to 16,928 for
Edward D. Zeigler, Democrat, 434 for Charles E. Newcomb, Prohibitionist, and 339
for Harry R. Pfeiffer, Socialist.
TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.
CounTieEs.—Cameron, Center, Clearfield, and McKean (4 counties).
Population (1900), 181,899.
CHARLES FREDERICK BARCLAY, Republican, of Sinnamahoning, was born
May 9, 1844, at Owego, N. Y., and brought by his parents to Pennsylvania the year
following. His early schooling was obtained at the Painted Post High School and
the Coudersport Academy. Became a teacher, but relinquished that occupation to
become a soldier in the Union Army; enlisted as a private in Company K, One hun-
dred and forty-ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers (‘‘ Second Bucktails’’), and served
three years, being mustered out in 1865, having reached the grade of captain by suc-
cessive promotions. After the war, entered Belfast Seminary, New York, and sub-
sequently took up the study of law at the University of Michigan. Did not become
a practitioner, but with an elder brother formed the firm Barclay Brothers at Sinna-
mahoning, and carried on extensively the lumber business. Married August 22,
1872, Margaret A. I,., daughter of John Brooks, of Sinnamahoning, Pa. He was a
Presidential elector in 1892; alternate delegate at large, and as such voted in the
Republican national convention in 19oo; was nominated on the Republican ticket
for the Sixtieth Congress, indorsed by the Prohibitionists, and elected, receiving
13,701 Republican and 1,509 Prohibition votes, to 10,572 for H. S. Taylor, Democrat,
and 669 for J. D. Blair, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
15,924 votes, to 10,460 for S. A. Kline, Democrat and Lincoln Republican, 35 for
J. C. Kerr, Prohibitionist, and 523 for Daniel Stull, Socialist. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress.
I12 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA
TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—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; graduated from the State
Normal School at California, Pa., in 1882, and attended Mount Union College, Ohio,
in 1883; taught in the public schools for six years; graduated from the law depart-
ment of the University of Michigan in the class of 1888. He was admitted to the
Fayette County bar December 4, 1888, and has been engaged in the practice of law
ever since; is a member of the supreme court of Pennsylvania, the district and cir-
cuit 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 Fifty-eighth and Fifty-
ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,008 votes, to
10,309 for E. O. Kooser, Democrat and Lincoln party, 1,789 for J. O. Stoner, Pro-
hibitionist, and 319 for Washington Herd, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
ITWENTY-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-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-
seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 15,490 votes, to 14,163 for R. K. Aiken, Democrat and Lincoln
party, r,0oo4 for J. W. Slayton, Socialist, and 837 for Louis Van Orden, Prohi-
bitionist.
TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.
CounTtiES.—Crawford and Erie (2 counties).
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; is a trustee of Allegheny College;
was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifth-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and re-
elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 13,562 votes, to 8,109 for A. J. Palm,
Democrat and Prohibitionist, 700 for Joshua Wauchope, Socialist and People’s Party.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress. :
TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Carbon, Monroe, Northampton, and Pike (4 counties).
Population (1900), 174,124.
J. DAVIS BRODHEAD, Democrat, of South Bethlehem, was born in Faston,
Northampton County, Pa., January 12, 1859, son of Richard Brodhead, late
United States Senator from Pennsylvania, and Mary Bradford, his wife, of Missis-
sippi; received a collegiate education; was admitted to the bar in 1881 and has prac-
ticed law continuously since; married Cecile Harvier, of New York, in 1883; elected
district attorney of Northampton County, Pa., in 1889; delegate to the Democratic
national conventions of 1892 and 1904; elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
15,371 votes, to 12,427 for G. A. Schneebeli, Republican, and 496 for John Wilhelm,
Prohibitionist.
TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Armstrong, Clarion, Indiana, and Jefferson (4 counties).
Population (1900), 188,503.
JOSEPH GRANT BEALE, Republican, of ILeechburg, was born in Allegheny
County, Pa., March 26, 1839; was raised on his father’s farm in said county, receiv-
ing a liberal common school education; later graduated at the Caton Academy at
rr
PENNSYLVANIA] Biographical. 113
Turtle Creek, Pa., and afterwards at the Iron City Commercial College, Pittsburg,
Pa. At the breaking out of the civil war enlisted in the Friend Rifles for three
months and afterwards in Company C, Ninth Pennsylvania Reserves, for three
years; was wounded at Charles City Cross Roads June 30, 1862, and left on the
battlefield for seven days and nights, where he was taken prisoner and confined in
Libby Prison; was released on parole, and while an invalid from wounds studied
law under the instruction of Samuel M. Purviance and Nathaniel Nelsen, of Pitts-
burg, Pa.; in 1864 married Miss Margaret J. Harrison; leaving the practice of law,
he went into the coal business on what at that time was known as Squirrel Hill, living
at Hazlewood and mining and removing the coal underneath what is now known as
some of the most aristocratic portions of Pittsburg; moving to ILeechburg in the
spring of 1868, where he has since made his home, he drilled at that place the first
gas well that was ever used for metallurgical purposes; he was actively engaged in
the iron and steel business until the absorption of his works by the United States
Steel Corporation, since which time he has given his entire attention to the coal
and banking business; is and has been since 1873 president of the Leechburg Bank-
ing Company, one of the oldest private banks in the State. Mr. Beale’s forefathers
came to this country with William Penn, so he claims that he is a thoroughbred
Pennsylvanian, as his forefathers, as well as himself, have been born in Pennsyl-
vania until the memory of man does not remember to the contrary. He was elected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 14,646 votes, to 9,101 for S. C. Hepler, Democrat,
and 1,392 for Enoch McGary, Prohibitionist.
TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—EIlK, Forest, Mercer, Venango, and Warren (5 counties).
Population (1900), 189,923.
NELSON P. WHEELER, Republican, of Endeavor, was born in Portville, N. Y.,
November 4, 1841; was educated in the public schools, and later attended academies
in Olean and Deposit, N. Y. He is engaged in the lumber business and farming,
and has been interested in tanning, and holds positions of trust in several com-
panies and banks. He was elected county commissioner at the age of 25; has held
various township offices, and served one term, 1878-79, in the Pennsylvania State
legislature, declining a renomination on account of his business. He was married
June 12, 1877, to Miss Rachel A. Smith, of Cincinnati, Ohio, and has one daughter
and three sons. He was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,550 votes, to
10,433 for Farl Beshlin, Democrat, 3,712 for H. E. Horne, Prohibitionist, and 683
for Edward Hayden, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty first Congress.
TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.
ALLEGHENY CouNTYy.—City of Allegheny and the townships and boroughs north of the Ohio River.
Population (1900), 204,477.
WILLIAM HARRISON GRAHAM, Republican, of Allegheny, was born in Alle-
gheny, Pa., August 3, 1844, and received his education in the public schools of that
city. At the outbreak of the civil war he enlisted, at the age of 17, in a Pittsburg
company, but Pennsylvania’s quota being full they chartered a steamer, went down
the Ohio River to Wheeling, and were accepted there, becoming Company A, Sec-
ond Virginia Infantry; after a service of two years they were mounted and became
the Fifth West Virginia Cavalry; saw very active service under Generals Averill,
Crook, and Sheridan; was in service until .the close of the war, witnessing the sur-
render of General Lee at Appomattox; was wounded in the battle of White Sulphur
Springs, W. Va. After the war he engaged actively in business and has been very
successful; was elected three terms successively as recorder of deeds of Allegheny
County; represented his city during four sessions of the Pennsylvania legislature;
was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses; was
defeated by 18 votes for the Fifty-eighth Congress through a Citizens-Democratic
fusion movement; was reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress and to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 17,688 votes, to 8go for J. S. Hastings, Prohibitionist, and 700
for G. T. McConnell, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
114 Congressional Directory. [PENNSYLVANIA
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; moved to Pittsburg in 1847; received a common school and collegiate educa-
tion, 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress on the Republi-
can and Citizens ticket, receiving 13,984 votes, to 6,452 for R. A. Black, Democrat
and Union Labor, 554 for Warren Douglas, Prohibitionist, and 497 for W. J. Wright,
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.
City OF PITTSBURG.—First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth,
Eleventh, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Highteenth,
Nineteenth, and Twenty-third wards.
Population (1900), 188,099.
JAMES FRANCIS BURKE, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in Petroleum
Center, Venango County, Pa., October 21, 1867; educated in public schools, and in
1892 graduated from the law department of the University of Michigan with the
degree of LL. B.; has practiced law at Pittsburg since 1893; admitted to the prac-
tice of law in the supreme court of Michigan, in the superior and supreme courts of
Pennsylvania, and the United States courts; was for a time secretary of the Repub-
lican national committee, the youngest man ever holding that office; is a member of
the leading clubs and commercial organizations of Pittsburg; on April 15, 1895, mar-
ried Josephine Birch Scott, of Detroit; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 13,364 votes, to 5,740 for Frank Lackner,
Democrat, 356 for D. S. Connors, Socialist, and 333 for W. A. Stewart, Prohibitionist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.
ALLEGHENY CouNTv.—Twenty-second, Twenty-fourth, Twenty-fifth, Twenty-sixth, Twenty=
seventh, Twenty-eighth, T'wenty-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,
I,owes, Mifflin, Moon, North Fayette, Neville; Robinson, St. Clair, Scott, Snowden, South
Fayette, Stowe, Union, and Upper St. Clair. .
Population (1900), 209,066.
DR. ANDREW JACKSON BARCHFELD, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in
Pittsburg, Pa., May 18, 1863; was educated in the public schools and Pittsburg Cen-
tral High School; graduated from Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, in the
class of 1884; has been a life-long Republican, and became interested in politics upon
obtaining his majority; was elected a school director in 1885; a member of the com-
mon council of Pittsburg in 1886 and 1887; was a delegate to the Republican State
conventions of 1886, 1894, and 1901; was for many years a member of the Republican
State committee; was the nominee of his party in 1g9o2 for Congress, but, after a
hard-fought battle between a combination of Democrats and dissatisfied Republicans,
was defeated by a narrow margin; has been active in all Presidential and guberna-
torial campaigns on the stump throughout western Pennsylvania; is prominent in
his profession, being a member of the Pittsburg South Side Medical Society, Alle-
gheny County Medical Society, Pennsylvania State Medical Society, and National
Medical Association; is president of the Board of Directors, South Side Hospital,
Pittsburg, and a member of the staff; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,228 votes, to 4,811 for M. C. O’Dono-
van, Democrat, 678 for TI. P. Hershberger, Prohibitionist, and 606 for J. H. Haney,
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
Wes
-—
RHODE ISLAND] Biographical. : I15
RHODE ISLAND
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; wasa member of the Rhode Island general
assembly in 1875-76, serving the latter year as speaker of the house of representatives;
was elected to the House of Representatives of the Forty-sixth Congress and reelected
to the Forty-seventh Congress; was elected October 5, 1881, to the United States
Senate to succeed Ambrose E. Burnside, Republican, took his seat October 11, 1881,
and was reelected in 1886, in 1892, in 1898, and in 1905. His term of service will
expire March 3, 1911. ;
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 de-
gree of LI,. B.; was admitted to the bar of Rhode Island and of New York in 1869; isa
trustee of the Peabody Museum of Natural History in Yale University, and was nom-
inated a fellow of the university in 1888, but declined; is a trustee of the Peabody
education 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;
was a member of the commission to build the new statehouse; was governor of Rhode
Island in 1885-86, 1886-87, and was defeated for a third term in 1887, receiving, how-
ever, 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, re-
ceiving the unanimous vote of the general assembly in the senate, house, and joint
assembly; was reelected in 1900, and again for the term ending March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Bristol and Newport, the city of Providence, and the town of Fast Providence.
Population (1905), 249,756.
DANIEL, LARNED DAVIS GRANGER, Democrat, of Providence, was born in
Providence, R. I., May 30, 1852; graduated from Brown University 1874; admitted to
the Rhode Island bar 1877; practiced law in Providence; twice elected reading clerk
of the house of representatives; in 18go was elected city treasurer of Providence on the
Democratic ticket, and for eleven years served in that capacity. Was elected mayor
of Providence as a Democrat in November, 1900, by a plurality of 1,992. Was re-
elected by a plurality of 6,306. Was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,846 votes, to 16,030
for Elisha Dyer, Republican, 310 for W. H. White, Prohibitionist, and 247 for J. E.
Arnold, Socialist.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Kent and Washington, and all of Providence outside the city of Providence and the
town of Fast Providence.
Population (1905), 230,326.
ADIN BALI OU CAPRON, Republican, of Stillwater, Providence County, son of
Carlile W. and Abby (Bates) Capron, was born in Mendon, Mass., January 9, 1841;
educated at Woonsocket High School and Westbrook Seminary, 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
representative 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
116 Congressional Directory. [RHODE ISLAND:
Republican candidate for Congress in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth,
Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 16,979 votes, to 14,593 for L. F. C. Garvin, Democrat, 333 for
B. M. Briggs, Prohibitionist, and 162 for Stanley Curtis, Socialist. Reelected to the
Sixty-first Congress. :
SOUTH CAROLINA,
SENATORS.
BENJAMIN RYAN TILLMAN, Democrat, of Trenton, was born in Edgefield
County, S. C., August 11, 1847; received an academic education under the instruction of
George Galphin, at Bethany, in the same county; quit school in July, 1864, to join the
Confederate Army, but was stricken with a severe illness, which caused the loss of his
left eye and kept him an invalid for two years; followed farming as a pursuit and
took no active part in politics till he began the agitation in 1886 for industrial and
technical education which culminated in the establishment of the Clemson Agricul-
tural and Mechanical College, at Calhoun’s old home, Fort Hill; the demand for
educational reform broadened into a demand for other changes in State affairs, and
he was put forward by the farmers as a candidate for governor in 189o; after an excit-
ing and heated canvass he received the nomination in the Democratic convention by
a vote of 270 to 50 for his opponent, and was elected in November following; this
was his first political office, and he was reelected in 1892 by an overwhelming vote;
his term as governor was signalized by the passage of the dispensary law for the con-
trol of the liquor traffic by the State and by the establishment of another college,
the Winthrop Normal and Industrial College for Women, at Rock Hill, an institution
which bids fair to lead all similar schools in the South; entered the race for the Sen-
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 1901 and in 1907. His term of service will expire March 3,
1913.
FRANK BOYD GARY, Democrat, of Abbeville, was born March g, 1860, at
Cokesbury, Abbeville County, S. C. His father was Dr. Franklin F. Gary, a
physician of eminence of Abbeville County, and his mother, who is still living, was
Miss Mary Caroline Blackburn, of Newberry County. He married Miss Maria Lee
Evans, daughter of Dr. James Evans, of Florence, S. C. They have one son 7 years
old. Mr. Gary obtained his primary education at the Cokesbury Conference School;
entered Union College, Schenectady, N. Y., in the class of 1881, but was compelled
to return home in his senior year on account of impaired health and consequently
did not graduate with his class. He read law in the office of his brother, now
associate justice, Eugene B. Gary; was admitted to the bar and has ever since prac-
ticed law at Abbeville, S. C. In 1890 he was elected a member of the legislature
and was continuously reelected until 1goo, when he did not offer for reelection; he
was a member of the constitutional convention of 1895; was three times elected
speaker of the house of representatives, serving as speaker from 1895 to 1900,
when he was a candidate for governor. On numerous occasions he has been
appointed by the governor, upon the recommendation of the chief justice, to preside
over the courts of South Carolina, and so presided at the trial of James H. Tillman
for the killing of Editor Gonzales, a trial which lasted twenty-two days. He is
now and has been for a number of years Democratic chairman of Abbeville County.
He was again elected a member of the legislature in 1906. Upon the death of
Hon. A. C. Latimer, which occurred while the legislature was in session, he was
chosen a member of the United States Senate March 6, 1908, to fill out the unex-
pired term over many of South Carolina’s most distinguished citizens and took his
seat March 17, 1908. 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 County, in 1870; in 1889 he was graduated from the Porter Academy, of
Charleston, after which he attended the University of South Carolina for two years;
—r
SOUTH CAROLINA.J Biographical. 117
from there he went to the Georgetown University Law School, Washington, D. C.,
from which institution, in 1893, he graduated with the degree of LL. 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, holding the same for the period of five con-
secutive years, and resigning after his election to Congress; has always been a
Democrat; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 3,965 votes, to 28 for A. P. Prioleau, Republican.
Reealected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Aiken, Bamberg, Barnwell, Beaufort, Edgefield, Hampton, and Saluda (7 counties).
Population (1900), 195,509.
JAMES O'HANLON PATTERSON, Democrat, of Barnwell, was born in Barn-
well, S. C., June 25, 1857; educated in private schools in Barnwell and in Augusta,
Ga.; admitted to the bar in May, 1886; was twice elected probate judge of Barnwell
County, and was a member of the South Carolina legislature in 1898, 1899, 1900,
1901, 1902, 1903, and 19o4; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 4,588 votes, to 226 for Isaac Myers, Republican.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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,
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; during the war with Spain was a
soldier in Company A (Abbeville Volunteers), First South Carolina Regiment of
Infantry; has never held a political office before, but has been a delegate to several
State conventions; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress without opposition, receiving 2,938 votes.
Reelected to the Sixty-first 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 yall the courts of South Carolina
May 30, 1883; never held office until elected to Congress; elected to the Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 5,124 votes, to 49 for D. C. Gist, Republican, and 19 for W. T. Cobb,
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—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,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 3,585 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
118 Congressional Directory. [SOFT CAROLINA:
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Darlington, Florence, Georgetown, Horry, Marion, Marlboro, and Williamsburg
(7 counties).
Population (1900), 201,577.
JAMES EDWIN ELLERBE, of Marion, was born near where he now lives
January 12, 1867; has been a farmer all his life; his early education was received
at Old Pine Hill Academy; in October, 1882, entered the South Carolina College,
where he spent one year; entered Wofford College, at Spartanburg, S. C., in October,
1884, spending three years; there he graduated in June, 1887, taking the degree of A. B.;
married Miss Nellie Converse Elford, of Spartanburg, S. C., November 23, 1887; to
them five children have been born, and three of them are now living; in 1894 he
was elected to the State legislature, and in 1895 represented, in part, Marion County
in the State constitutional convention; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress without opposition, receiving 3,483 votes.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—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 1895;
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 19oo 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; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 5,391 votes, to 133 for A. D.
Dantzler, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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, 1901,
and reelected in 1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
ALFRED BEARD KITTREDGE, Republican, of Sioux Falls, was born in 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 (1905), 455,185.
PHILO HALL, Republican, of Brookings, was born at Wilton, Waseca County,
Minn., December 31, 1865; is a lawyer and married; was State’s attorney for Brook-
ings County, 1892-1898; a member of the State senate, South Dakota, 1901; attorney-
general for South Dakota two terms—Igo2-19o6.° Was elected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 48,096 votes, to 19,976 for W. S. Elder, Democrat; 19,791 for
SOUTH DAKOTA.] Biographical. : 119
S. A. Ramsey, Democrat; 2,439 for James Kirwan, Socialist; 2,349 for H. A. Berge,
Socialist; 3,392 for C. V. Templeton, Prohibitionist, and 3,313 for R. J. Day,
Prohibitionist. /
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, Iowa, 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
1385; 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, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-
ninth and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death
of Hon. William H. Parker, and to the Sixty-first Congress, receiving 63,187 votes to
35,681 for Robert E. Dowdell, Democrat; 3,347 for E. S. Chappell, Prohibitionist;
2,519 for Thomas J. Deffenbach, Socialist.
TENNESSEL.
SENATORS.
JAMES B. FRAZIER, Democrat, of Chattanooga, was born at Pikeville, Bledsoe
County, Tenn., October 18, 1858; graduated at the University of Tennessee in June,
1878; read law with his father, Judge Thomas N. Frazier, at Nashville, Tenn.; was
admitted to the bar and removed to Chattanooga in 1881, and practiced law there
continuously until 1902; was married in 1883 to Miss Louis Douglas Keith at
Athens, Tenn.; was elector for the State at large on the Democratic ticket in 1900;
was elected governor of Tennessee in 19o2, and again in 1904; was elected to the
United States Senate March 21, 1905, to fill out the unexpired term of Hon. William
B. Bate, who died during the session of the general assembly, and resigned the
office of governor of Tennessee on March 27, 1905. His term of service will expire
March 3, 1911.
ROBERT LOVE TAYLOR, Democrat, of Nashville, was born July 31, 1850, at
Happy Valley, Carter County, East Tennessee, at the place on the Watauga River
where the first fort was established by John Sevier, son of Nathaniel G. Taylor,
Member of Congress and Commissioner of Indian Affairs under President Johnson,
and Emily Haynes Taylor, sister of Landon C. Haynes, Confederate Senator from
Tennessee; was elected to the Forty-sixth Congress from the First district in 1878;
Cleveland elector State at large 1884; pension agent at Knoxville 1885; elected gov-
ernor of Tennessee 1886 and reelected 1888; Cleveland elector at large again 1892;
elected governor for a third term 1896; is a lawyer; represented the district in Con-
gress represented before him by his father, Nathaniel G. Taylor, and after him by
his brother, Alfred A. Taylor, the latter of whom he defeated for governor in 1886;
was nominated for the United States Senate in the Democratic primary election
May, 1906, and elected in January, 1907, by the almost unanimous vote of the legis-
lature. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
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., where he attended common school for three years; because of the
death of his father he earned his support from the age of 10, serving an apprentice-
ship at the tinner’s trade and as a locomotive engineer, at which trades he worked
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 Tri-
120 . Congressional Directory. [TENNESSEE
bune, a Republican 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, 1896, and 1900, and a delegate at large to the national conven-
tions of 1884 and 1904; in 1880 was chairman of the campaign committee of his dis-
trict; 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, 1900,
and 1904 he was elected by the delegations from his State to the national conven-
tions as Tennessee's member of the Republican national committee, and was
unanimously elected chairman of the Republican State executive committee by the
members of that body for 1898-99; was elected by Congress as a member of the
Board of Managers for the National Soldiers’ Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers;
was twice the Republican nominee for United States Senator; was elected to the
Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, as a Protectionist Republican, in a district repre-
sented from 1843 to 1853 by the late President Andrew Johnson as a Free-Trade
Democrat, receiving 17,249 votes, to 9,145 for J. H. Caldwell, Democrat, and 6,700
for A. A. Taylor, bolting Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTIiEs.—Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Hamblen, Jefferson, Knox, I,oudon, Roane, Scott, and
Union (ro counties).
Population (1900), 217,324.
NATHAN WESLEY HALE, Republican, of Knoxville, was born in Scott County,
Va., February 11, 1860. His father, Drayton S. Hale, is an old soldier and staunch
Republican. Mr. Hale's education was secured at Nicholasville, Va., and Kingsley
Academy, Tenn. He has been in the nursery business since 1878; is pres-
ident of the Knoxville Nursery Company; also president of the Southern
Nursery Company, Winchester, Tenn.; was president two years of the Southern
Nurserymen’s Association, and one year of the American Association of Nurserymen;
helped organize and is a partner in the wholesale dry goods and notion firm of
Brown, Payne, Deaver & Co., of Knoxville; a director in ‘the Fast Tennessee
- National Bank, of Knoxville; president of Frank’s Medicine Company, Knoxville.
He also owns a large farm and supposes he is called a farmer. His political career
began in 18go, when he was elected to the lower house of the general assembly of
Tennessee; in the succeeding election in 1892 he was elected to the upper house of
the general assembly; in 1894 many counties instructed their delegates to vote for
Mr. Hale for governor, but he did not attend the convention; was an unsuccessful
competitor of Hon. H. R. Gibson for the Congressional nomination in 19o2; was
elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
13,822 votes, to 5,125 for E. L. Foster, Democrat, and 386 for S. F. Broughton,
Socialist.
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and
Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 15,388 votes,
to 11,389 for T. W. Peace, Republican, and 273 for A. Ellyson, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Clay, Cumberland, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Morgan, Overton, Pickett, Putnam,
Rhea, Smith, Sumner, Trousdale, and Wilson (14 counties).
Popuiation (1900), 188,452.
CORDELL HULL, Democrat, of Carthage, was born October 2, 1871, in Over-
ton (now Pickett) County, Tenn.; was graduated from the law department of Cum-
berland University, Lebanon, Tenn., and is a lawyer by profession; was a member
of the lower house of the Tennessee legislature two terms; served in the Fourth
Regiment, Tennessee Volunteer Infantry, during the Spanish-American war, with
the rank of captain; later was first appointed by the governor, and afterwards
elected, judge of the Fifth judicial circuit of Tennessee, which position was resigned
during his race for Congress; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 11,961
votes, to 10,312 for J. E. Oliver, Republican, and 28 for J. T. McColgan, Socialist.
Is and has been for a number of years a citizen of Jackson County, but present resi-
dent address is Carthage, Tenn, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
| ' | | i
i 1] i
|
TENNESSEE] Biographical. 121
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CounTtiEs.—Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, Dekalb, Iincoln, Marshall, Moore, and Rutherford (8 counties).
Population (1900), 152,316. ;
WILLIAM CANNON HOUSTON, Democrat, of Woodbury, was born in Bedford
County, Tenn., March 17, 1852; was educated at Woodbury, Tenn., chiefly; was
reared a farmer, and had a year or two’s experience running a country newspaper;
was elected to the legislature in 1876; admitted to the bar in 1878; again elected to
the legislature in 1880, and reelected in 1882; was a member of the State Democratic
executive committee for four years; Democratic elector in 1888; elected circuit
judge in 1894 and reelected in 1898; has a wife and five sons; is a member of the
Christian Church, and lives on a farm; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 11,448 votes, to 4,451 for Tim Wade,
Republican, and 110 for J. H. Baxter, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Con-
gress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CounTiES.—Cheatham, Davidson, Montgomery, Robertson, and Stewart (5 counties.)
Population (1900), 209,197.
JOHN WESLEY GAINES, Democrat, of Nashville, lawyer by profession, native
of his district, was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 12,546
votes, to 3,011 for J. W. Johnson, Republican, and 191 for H. G. Sneed, Socialist.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CounTieEs.—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, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 12,750
votes, to 5,818 for J. P. Kidd, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTH 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 I.ebanon,
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 11,209 votes, to 10,874 for J. C. R. McCall, Repub-
lican, and 36 for Clarence Roark, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CouNnTIES.—Crockett, Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion, and Weakley (8 counties).
Population (1900), 194,411.
FINIS JAMES GARRETT, Democrat, of Dresden, was born August 26, 1875,
near Ore Springs, in Weakley County, Tenn., of Noah J. and Virginia Garrett; edu-
cated at the common schools, and at Bethel College, McKenzie, Tenn., graduating
from that institution in June, 1897, taking the degree of A. B.; was for a time engaged
in teaching in the city schools of Milan, Tenn.; studied law under the instruction
and in the office of the late Charles M. Ewing, at Dresden, and was admitted to the
122 Congressional Directory. I ENNEIREE,
bar in 1899; married in 1901 to Miss Elizabeth Harris Burns, of McKenzie, Tenn. ;
was appointed master in chancery September 14, 1900, and served until January 24,
1905; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 11,538 votes, to 3,437 for Yandrell Haun, Republican, and 20 for
W. P. Outlaw, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Fayette, Hardeman, Shelby, and Tipton (4 counties).
Population (1900), 235,507.
GEORGE WASHINGTON GORDON, Democrat, of Memphis, was born in Giles
County, Tenn., and reared chiefly in Mississippi and Texas; received a collegiate edu-
cation and was graduated at the Western Military Institute, Nashville, Tenn., in the
class of 1859, receiving there about the same military education and training as were
then givenat the National Military Academy at West Point; practiced civil engineering
till the outbreak of the civil war; enlisted in the military service of the State of Ten-
nessee in June, 1861, inthe capacity of drillmaster of the Eleventh Tennessee Infantry
Regiment and was soon thereafter transferred, with the other Tennessee troops, to
the military service of the Confederate States of America; was successively a captain,
lieutenant-colonel, and colonel of this regiment, and in 1864 was made a brigadier-
general and served with that rank till the close of the war. Though captured three
times and once dangerously wounded he participated in every engagement fought
by his command except those at Nashville, Tenn., and Bentonville, N. C., at which
times he was a prisoner at Fort Warren, Mass., where he was held till August,
1865, several months after the close of the war. Upon his release from prison he
studied law and practiced that profession until 1883, when he was appointed one of
the railroad commissioners of the State; in 1885 received an appointment in the
Interior Department of the United States Government, and served during Cleve-
land’s first term, four years in the Indian country; then resumed the practice of
law till 1892, when he was elected superintendent of the Memphis city schools,
which position he held until March, 1907, when he resigned to take his seat in
Congress. He is now major-general commanding the Tennessee Division of the
Federation of United Confederate Veterans, having been annually elected to this
position for the last eight years. He was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
10,378 votes, to 601 for T. Haines, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TEXAS.
SENATORS.
CHARLES A. CULBERSON, Democrat, of Dallas, was born in Dadeville, Talla-
poosa County, Ala., June 10, 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 moved 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; waselected 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 O.
Mills, and was unanimously reelected in 1905. His term of office will expire March
3, 10171,
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; reelected in 1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
TEXAS] Biographical. 123
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, and LL. B., 1897; was commencement speaker, aca-
demic department, University of Texas, 1895; entered Yale University in 1897, tak-
ing the degree of LI. M., 1898, winning the Wayland prize debate, Yale law school,
1898, and delivering the master’s oration, commencement Yale law school, 1898;
became a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha of Texas, in 1905; was elected sovereign
banker, or national treasurer, Woodmen of the World, the second largest fraternal
insurance order in the United States, at Memphis, March, 1899, reelected at Milwaukee
in May, 1903, and at Norfolk in May, 1907; began the practice of law at Pittsburg,
Tex., in 1898, and moved to Texarkana in 1899, where he continued to follow his
profession; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill out the unexpired term
of his father, the Hon. John IL. Sheppard, deceased; also elected to the Fifty-eighth
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 9,342
votes, to 1,036 for Phil Baer, Republican, and 54 for J. C. Thompson, Socialist.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
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; moved 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 schools of Tyler County; at 16 years of
age began clerking in a general store; in 1871 read law in the office of Nicks &
Hobby; in January, 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 and 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 eighteenth 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 permanent chairman of the Democratic State convention
in 1904; was chairman of the Texas delegation to the Democratic national convention
at Kansas City; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth,
Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and again elected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 9,322 votes.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Gregg, Henderson, Kaufman, Rusk, Smith, Upshur, Van Zandt,and Wood (8 counties).
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
=
124 Congressional Directory. [TEXAS.
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 and to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 8,491 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—~Collin, Fannin, Grayson, Hunt, and Rains (5 counties).
Population (1900), 218,963.
CHOICE BOSWELL RANDELL, Democrat, of Sherman, a native Georgian,
removed to Texas in 1879; is a lawyer by profession; married Miss Anna Marschalk,
of Natchez, Miss.; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 11,508 votes, to 1,678
for W. G. Meginnis, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—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
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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 9,060 votes, to 528 for A. M. Coch-
ran, Republican, 206 for M. T. Connor, Reorganized Republican, and 63 for Virgil
Pittman, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
COUNTIES.—Brazos, Freestone, Limestone, Milam, Navarro, and Robertson (6 counties).
Population (1900), 184,862.
RUFUS HARDY, Democrat, of Corsicana, was born December 16, 1855, in Monroe
County, Miss.; educated in common schools (not public), and Somerville Insti-
tute, Mississippi, and through the junior year literary course, University of Georgia;
admitted to the bar in 1875, and has practiced law from that date; was elected
county attorney of Navarro County, Tex., in 1880 and 1882; district attorney,
thirteenth judicial district, 1884 and 1886; district judge of the same district, 1888
and 1892; retired from the bench, December, 1896; was chairman of the Texas
Sound Money Democracy in 1896, married in 1881; was elected to the Sixtieth Con-
gress, receiving 5,536 votes, to 188 for T. S. Henderson, 116 for Richard Mays, and
170 for J.T. Adkinson. The total vote cast at the general election was but a
little over one-third of that given at the primary when the nomination was made.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth °
Congress without opposition. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIGHTH DISTRICT.
COUNTIES.—Austin, Fort Bend, Grimes, Harris, I,eon, Madison, Montgomery, Walker, and Waller
(9 counties).
Population (1900), 202,736.
JOHN MATTHEW MOORE, Democrat, of Richmond, was born November 18, :
1862, at Richmond, Fort Bend County, Tex., where he now resides; his parents,
Dr. Matthew A. Moore and Henrietta Huddleston Moore, moved from Greensboro,
TEXAS.] Biographical. 125
Ala., to Texas, in 1852; was educated in the common schools of Richmond, and
attended two sessions of the Agricultural and Mechanical College at Bryan, Tex.,
obtained his business training in the mercantile, banking, stock raising, and farming
businesses, and at present is a cattle raiser and planter; Mr. Moore was elected to
the State legislature from the Forty-first district in 1896; served on the finance and
other committees; declined a renomination; was Democratic chairman of the Tenth
Congressional district in 1898, and a delegate to the Democratic national convention
at Kansas City in 1900. Married to Miss Lottie Dyer in 1883. Was elected to the
Fifty-ninth Congress June 6, 1905, to fill the unexpired term of the Hon. John M.
Pinckney, deceased; was nominated without opposition, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 'S ,536 votes, to 1,593 for W. A. Matthai, Republican. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.
COUNTIES.—Aransas, Bee, Brazoria, Calhoun, Colorado, DeWitt, Fayette, Goliad, Gonzales, Jackson,
Karnes, Lavaca, Matagorda, Refugio, Victoria, and Wharton (16 counties).
Population (xgoo), 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 Lagrange, 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 Louise Sims; was elected
to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 8,103 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICL.
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,
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,
Fifty- seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to Sixtieth
Congress without opposition. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress,
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.; at 14 years of age moved to Bowie County, and there resided
until January, 1893, when he moved to Waco; graduated with the degree of M. A.
from the Southwestern University of Texas in 1885, valedictorian of his class; was
licensed to practice law in 1886; practiced for a brief period, and then taking a law
course at the University of Texas, graduated in 1887; was elected mayor of Texarkana
in 1890; resigned the mayoralty to become first office assistant attorney-general, and
before the two-year term expired was promoted to the position of assistant attorney-
general, holding the latter office for nearly three years; was elected to the Fifty-fifth,
Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to
the Sixtieth Congress without opposition, receiving 8,150 votes. At the beginning
of the Fifty- ninth Congress Mr. Henry was elected chairman of the Democratic
caucus by a unanimous vote, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—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
66525—60-2—2D ED——IO
126 Congressional Directory. [TEXAS.
Tarrant County from 1890 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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 9,770 votes, to 456 for I. B. Payne, Socialist. Reelected to the
Sixty-first 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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 12,473 votes, to 1,166
for E. E. Diggs, Republican, and 229 for Joseph Schmidt. Socialist. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTies.—Bandera, Bexar, Blanco, Brown, Burnet, Coleman, Comal, Gillespie, Kendall, Kerr,
Lampasas, ILlano, McCulloch, Mason, Mills, and San Saba (16 counties).
Population (1900), 181,280.
JAMES IL. 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; now engaged in mining
in Mexico; was a member of the twenty-third legislature of Texas in 1892 and
declined reelection; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-
eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
12,369 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Atascosa,Cameron, Dimmit, Duval, Frio, Guadalupe, Hidalgo, Kinney, Lasalle, Iive
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; served as judge of Uvalde County for four years; was a
member of the Texas house of representatives for four years; was a delegate to the
national Democratic convention at Kansas City, 1900, and to the national Democratic
convention at St. Louis, 1904; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 9,284 votes, to 5,281 for Dr.
T. W. Moore, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.
CounTies.—Andrews, Borden, Brewster, Callahan, Cochran, Coke, Concho, Crane, Crockett, Crosby,
Dawson, Eastland, Ector, Edwards, El Paso, Fisher, Gaines, Garza, Glasscock, Haskell,
Hockley, Howard, Irion, Jeff Davis, Jones, Kent, Kimble, King, Loving, Lubbock, Lynn, Mar-
tin, Menard, Midland, Mitchell, Nolan, Palo Pinto, Pecos, Presidio, Reagan, Reeves, Runnels,
Schleicher, Scurry, Shackelford, Stephens, Sterling, Stonewall, Sutton, Taylor, Tirrell, Terry,
Tom Green, Upton, Ward, Winkler, and Yoakum (57 counties).
* Population (1900), 161,084.
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-
TEXAS.] Biographical. 127
nedy; was reelected to the same office in 1898 and 1900 without opposition. He
was married November 6, 1890, to Miss Frances Lipscomb Breedlove, of Brenham,
Tex. Was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 12,497 votes, to 702 for Ben Van Tuyl, Republican,
and 374 for J. M. Ellis, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixtv-first Congress.
ITT AH.
SENATORS.
REED SMOOT, Republican, -of Provo City, was born January Io, 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 I. Rawlins, Democrat, and took his seat March 5, 1903.
His term of service will expire March 3, 1909. j
GEORGE SUTHERLAND, Republican, of Salt Lake City, was born March 25, 1862,
in Buckinghamshire, England; received a common school and academic education;
studied law at the University of Michigan, being admitted to practice in the supreme
court of that State in March, 1883, and has followed the practice of law continuously
since that date; was State senator from the sixth (Utah) senatorial district in the first
State legislature; was. delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1goo and
1904; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress; declined renomination to the Fifty-
eighth; was elected to the United States Senate by the Utah-legislature for the term
beginning March 4, 1905. His term of service will expire March 3, 1911.
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
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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 42,560 votes, to 27,921 for O. W.
Powers, Democrat, 11,411 for Thomas Weir, American, and 3,010 for A. P. Burt,
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
VERMONT.
SENATORS.
WILLIAM PAUL DILLINGHAM, Republican, of Waterbury, 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 1890. 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.
CARROLL SMALLEY PAGE, Republican, of Hyde Park, was born at Westfield,
Vt., January 10, 1843. He received an academic education. His principal business
has been that of dealer in raw calfskins; is president of the Lamoille County Savings
Bank and Trust Co. and of the I.amoille County National Bank, both of Hyde Park;
is a director of the Swanton Savings Bank and Trust Co., of Swanton, Vt., and of
several lumber and other corporations; is LL. D. of Norwich University. He repre-
sented Hyde Park in the house of representatives 1869 to 1872, and Lamoille County
in the State senate 1874 to 1876; was a member of the Vermont Republican State Com-
mittee for eighteen years—from 1872 to 18go—and during the last four years was its
chairman; was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1880; savings
bank examiner 1884 to 1888; governor of the State, 1890 to 1892; was elected to the
United States Senate October 21, 1908, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of
Hon. Redfield Proctor. ‘His term of service will expire March 3; 1911.
TTY
128 Congressional Directory. [VERMONT
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CounrtiEs.—Addison, Bennington, Chittenden, Franklin, Grand Isle, Lamoille, 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 i
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, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected |
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,660 votes, to 8,957 for KE. B. Clift, Democrat,
and 327 for William Scofield, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTIEs.—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 T. 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
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, Fifty-eighth, |
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 20,738
votes, to 8,157 for J. H. Senter, Democrat, 316 for C. B. Wilson, Prohibitionist, 364
for J. W. Dunbar, Socialist, and 9 scattering.
VIRGINIA.
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 5
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 LI. 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, for the term beginning 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 term of service will expire March
3, 1011. |
THOMAS STAPLES MARTIN, Democrat, of Albemarle County (post-office,
Charlottesville), was born in Scottsville, Albemarle County, July 29, 1847, and since
EE
Al
VIRGINIA. ] Biographical. 129
1853, at which time his parents moved to. the country, has lived in the county;
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; a 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 Albe-
marle County, and has been 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; December 19, 1893, he was elected a Senator
from Virginia for the term commencing March 4, 1895, and was reelected in 189g,
and again in 1905. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
COoUNTIES.—Accomac, Caroline, Elizabeth City, Hssex, Gloucester, King and Queen, Iancaster,
Mathews, Middlesex, Northampton, Northumberland, Richmond, Spottsylvania, Warwick,
Westmoreland, and York, and the cities of Fredericksburg and Newport News.
Population (estimated), 205,000.
WILLIAM ATKINSON JONES, Democrat, of Warsaw, was born in Warsaw, Va.,
March 21, 1849; was elected to the Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth,
Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 5,773 votes, to 1,294 for R. S. Bristow, Republican.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Charles City, Isle of Wight, James City, Nansemond, Norfolk, Princess Anne, and
Southampton, and the cities of Norfolk, Portsmouth, and Williamsburg.
Population (estimated), 210,000.
HARRY LEE MAYNARD, Democrat, of Portsmouth, was born in Portsmouth,
Va., June 8, 1861; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth
Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 4,358 votes, to 1,489
for Floyd Hughes. Reelected to the Sixty-first 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 LAMB, 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, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 3,908 votes, to 639 for. G. A. Hanson, Republican, and 196 for Johnson,
Independent Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress. ~
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Amelia, Brunswick, Dinwiddie, Greenesville, I,unenburg, Mecklenburg, Nottoway,
Powhatan, Prinee Edward, Prince George, Surrey, and Sussex, and the city of Petersburg.
Population (estimated), 175,000.
FRANCIS RIVES LASSITER, Democrat, of Petersburg, was born at Petersburg,
Va., February 18, 1866; graduated in several academic schools, University of Vir-
ginia, 1883-84, and received the degree of LL. B. from the University of Virginia,
1886; was admitted to the Suffolk bar, Boston, Mass., 1887, and to the Virginia bar
in 1888. and has continued to practice law since; has been a member of the Virginia
Democratic State central committee; was elected city attorney of Petersburg in 1888
rN
130 Congressional Directory. [YIRGINEA.
and reelected in 1890 and 1892; was a Presidential elector in 1892; was appointed
United States attorney for the Eastern district of Virginia in 1893 and resigned in
1896; was appointed supervisor for the Twelfth Census for the Fourth district of
Virginia in 1899; was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress to fill a vacancy, and
reelected to the Fifty-seventh Congress; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress with-
out opposition, receiving 2,615 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT,
CounTIES.—Carroll, Franklin, Grayson, Henry, Patrick, and Pittsylvania, and the city of Danville,
Population (estimated), 165,579.
EDWARD WATTS SAUNDERS, Democrat, of Bleak Hill, was born in Franklin
County, Va., October 25, 1860, and has always resided in that county; was edu-
cated at home, at the Bellevue High School of Bedford County, and at the University !
of Virginia, where he graduated in the session of 1881-82, as bachelor of laws; |
was associated with Prof. F. P. Brent in the conduct of a high school at Onancock,
Accomac County. He began the practice of law at Rocky Mount in 1882, and in
1887 was elected to the State legislature and reelected successively for seven terms;
served as chairman of the committees on privileges and elections and courts of
justice; in 1899 was elected speaker of the house and retained that position until
elected judge of the fourth circuit court in 19or. Under the operation of the new
constitution he became judge of the seventh circuit, and while serving in that posi-
tion was elected to fill the vacancy in the Fifty-ninth Congress caused by the resigna-
tion of Hon. C. A. Swanson, and to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 6,194 votes, to
5,972 for J. W. Simmons, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIX'IH DISTRICT.
CounTtiES.—Bedford, Campbell, Charlotte, Floyd, Halifax, Montgomery, and Roanoke, and the
cities of Lynchburg, Radford, and Roanoke.
Population (estimated}, 191,571.
CARTER GLASS, Democrat, of Lynchburg, was born in that city January 4, 1858,
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 afternoon
paper; member of Virginia State senate 1899-1903, and Virginia constitutional con-
vention in 1901-2; eight years member of board of visitors University of Virginia;
resigned from Virginia State senate to contest for seat in the Fifty-seventh Congress
vacated by death of Hon. P. J. Otey; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 4,060
votes to 1,336 for C. A. Hermans, Republican, and 31 for Harvey, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—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 prefession; 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,
Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 5,573 votes, to 2,372 for F. E. Beecher, Republican. Was
elected chairman of the Democratic caucus of the House of Representatives in the
Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress,
-—g
TT
RR
i
“war
VIRGINTA.] Biographical. I31
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Alexandria, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, King George, Loudoun, Iouisa, Orange,
Prince William, and Stafford, and the city of Alexandria.
Population (1900), 154,198.
CHARLES CREIGHTON CARLIN, Democrat, of Alexandria, was born in Alex-
andria, Va., April 8, 1866; was educated in the public schools and at the National Law
University, of which latter institution he is a graduate; served four years as post-
master; was Presidential elector on the Democratic ticket in 1904; was elected to
the Sixtieth Congress November 5, 1907, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of
Hon. John F. Rixey, receiving 8,738 votes, to 1,751 for E. I,. Howard, Republican,
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.
CounTIES.—Bland, Buchanan, Dickenson, Giles, I,ee, Pulaski, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell,
Washington, Wise, and Wythe, and the city of Bristol.
Population (1900), 227,381.
CAMPBELL BASCOM SLEMP, Republican, of Big Stone Gap, was born in Lee
County, Va., September 4, 1870; was raised on a farm; was a page in the house of
representatives of Virginia, 1881-82; entered Virginia Military Institute at the age
of 16 and graduated at the age of 20; was commandant of cadets, Marion Military
Institute, for one year; afterwards adjunct professor of mathematics, Virginia Mili-
tary Institute; resigned in 19or to enter professional and business life; has been
actively engaged since then in legal work connected with real estate, principally
coal lands; was elected chairman of the Republican State committee in the spring of
1905; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress December 17, 1907, to fill the vacancy
caused by the death of his father, Hon. Campbell Slemp, by 6,752 votes, the largest
majority ever recorded in the district, over David F. Bailey, of Bristol, Independent
Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.
CountTiEs.—Alleghany, Amherst, Appomattox, Augusta, Bath, Botetourt, Buckingham, Craig,
Cumberland, Fluvanna, Highland, Nelson, and Rockbridge, and the cities of Buena Vista,
Staunton, and Clifton Forge.
Population (1900), 185,492.
HENRY DELAWARE FLOOD, Democrat, of Appomattox, was educated at
Washington and Lee University and the University of Virginia; is a lawyer; served
in both branches of the general assembly of Virginia, was attorney for the Common-
wealth for Appomattox County, and was in the Virginia constitutional convention
of 1901-2; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 5,962 votes, to 2,696 for KE. D.
Gregory, Republican. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
WASHINGTON,
SENATORS.
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 Lewiston, 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 I9oo; 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 1895,
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. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909.
132 Congressional Directory. [WASHINGTON.
SAMUEL HENRY PILES, Republican, of Seattle, was born on a farm in ILiv-
ingston County, Ky., December 28, 1858, and was educated at private schools at
Smithland, in his native State. After being admitted to the bar he started for the
West, and in 1882 located in the Territory of Washington; opened a law office in
Snohomish, Wash., in 1883; in 1886 moved for a short time to Spokane, Wash., and
later in the same year to Seattle, where he has ever since resided and practiced
law; in 1887-1889 was assistant prosecuting attorney for the district composed of
King, Kitsap, and Snohomish counties; in 1888-89 was city attorney of Seattle.
These are the only offices that Mr. Piles ever filled or sought until his election to
the United States Senate. In 1895 he was appointed general counsel of the Oregon
Improvement Company, and when that company was reorganized by the formation
of The Pacific Coast Company he was made general counsel of the latter company,
holding this position until his election to the Senate. He has taken an active inter-
est in Republican politics in the Territory and State of Washington for the past
twenty years; was elected January 28, 1905, to the United States Senate, to succeed
Hon. A. G. Foster. His term of office will expire March 3, 1911.
REPRESENTATIVES.
AT LARGE.
Population (1900), 518,103.
WESLEY L. JONES, Republican, of North Yakima, was born near Bethany, I11.;
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, Fifty-
seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 71,656 votes to 31,811 for William Blackman, 30,689 for Patrick
S. Byrne, 30,369 for Dudley Eshelman, Democrats; 8,367 for A. Wagenknecht, 8,420
for J. W. Barkley, 8,431 for Emil Herman, Socialists, and 2,582 for A. S. Calose,
2,584 for J. M. Wilkin, and 2,571 for William Kverett, Prohibitionists. At the pri-
maries held September 8, 1908, Mr. Jones was selected by the Republican party to
succeed Hon. Levi Ankeny in the United States Senate and will no doubt be elected
to that office when the legislature meets.
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 lie 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, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 71,921 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
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
moved 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 elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 71,353 votes. Reelected to the Sixty-
first 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,
WEST VIRGINIA] Biographical. 133
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 moved
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. Again
unanimously reelected in 1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913.
NATHAN BAY SCOTT, Republican, of Wheeling, was born 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 in the manufacture of glass at Wheel-
ing, W. Va., where he has resided ever since; is president of the Central Glass Works
and vice-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 continu-
ously since; has been a member of the executive committee a greater portion of
the time; was appointed Commissioner of Internal Revenue by President McKin-
ley, and entered that office the 1st of January, 1898; was elected to the United
States Senate on January 25, 1899, and reelected in 1905. His term of service will
expire March 3, 1911.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT,
CouNTIES.—Brooke, Hancock, Harrison, Iewis, Marion, Marshall, Ohio, and Wetzel (8 counties).
Population (1900), 188,360.
WILLIAM PALLISTER HUBBARD, Republican, of Wheeling, was born in that
city December 24, 1843; was educated in public schools and at Linsly Institute, of
Wheeling, and Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn., where he graduated in
1863; was admitted to the bar in 1864, and has since practiced law in Wheeling;
served in the Union Army in 1865; was clerk of the West Virginia house of delegates,
1866 to 1870; member of the house of delegates and of its committee to revise the
general statutes, 1881 and 1882; delegate to the Republican national convention in
1888; was the Republican candidate for attorney-general of West Virginia in 1888,
and defeated; Republican candidate for Congress in 18go, and defeated; chairman
of the commission to revise the tax laws of West Virginia, 1901 to 1903; was elected
to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,362 votes, to 15,315 for TI. S. Riley, Democrat,
1,484 for W. E. Pierce, Prohibitionist, and 739 for E. B. Hibbs, Socialist. Reelected
to the Sixty-first 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.
GEORGE COOKMAN STURGISS, Republican, of Morgantown; was born in
Poland, Mahoning County, Ohio, August 16, 1842, and in November, 1859, moved to
Morgantown, Virginia, now West Virginia; was a student at Monongalia Academy and
taught in that school for a short time. He read law in the office of Hon. Waitman T.
Willey, a United States Senator under the restored government of Virginia, and later
from West Virginia, and was admitted to the practice of law in 1863; in the fall of that
year was married to Sabra J. Vance, daughter of Col. A. S. Vance, of Morgantown.
For a time he was paymaster’s clerk under Maj. James V. Boughner, paymaster of
United States Volunteers; served two terms of two years each (1865-1869) as county
superintendent of free schools; was elected three times a member of the house of
delegates of West Virginia, serving in sessions of 1870, 1871, and 1872; was twice
elected and served as prosecuting attorney of the county for eight years; in 1880 was
the Republican nominee for governor of the State, at which election Hon. Jacob B.
. Jackson was elected by a small plurality over the Republican and the ‘‘ Greenback ”’
candidates; in 1889 he was appointed United States attorney for the district of West
Virginia by President Harrison; was not a candidate for any public office after
the end of his term as district attorney until elected to the Sixtieth Congress; for
.
134 Congressional Directory. [WEST VIRGINIA.
many years he was associated in the practice of law with Hon. Ralph I,. Berkshire,
at one time a judge of the supreme court of appeals of West Virginia, but retired
from the active practice of his profession in 1897, and has since devoted himself to
promoting various industrial enterprises in Morgantown and its vicinity. He organ-
ized the Morgantown & Kingwood Railroad Company, and built the first 18 miles;
was secretary and director of the Union Utility Company, which built the first street
car line in Morgantown; and in 19o6 built and owns the Sabraton (electric) Rail-
way, extending from Morgantown to Sabraton, an industrial suburb created by him
and situated about 3 miles from Morgantown. Was secretary of the board of regents
of the West Virginia University for thirteen years, and president of that board for
four years; was the first president of the State Board of Trade and of the State Asso-
ciation for the Promotion of Good Roads; Mr. Sturgiss was elected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 20,384 votes, to 16,752 for M. H. Dent, Democrat, 173 for W. T.
Dadisman, Socialist, and 732 for J. B. Ward, Prohibitionist. His majority was the
largest ever given for any candidate in the district. He succeeds Col. Thomas B.
Davis, Democrat, who was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress by a majority of 915.
Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.
CounNTIES.—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
Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 19,888 votes, to 15,482 for George Byrne, Democrat, 1,339 for F. H.
Montgomery, Prohibitionist, and 974 for Thomas Swinburn, Socialist. Reelected to
the Sixty-first Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Braxton, Calhoun, Doddridge, Gilmer, Jackson, Pleasants, Ritchie, Roane, Tyler, Wirt,
and Wood (11 counties).
; Population (1900), 188,694.
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
candidate for nomination for Congress in 1900, but was defeated in convention by
Hon. James A. Hughes; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses,
and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,310 votes, to 13,637 for G. W.
Hardman, Democrat, 712 for D. D. Johnson, Prohibitionist, and 512 for C. W.
Kirkendall, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
’
FIFTH DISTRICT.
CoUNTIES.—Boomne, 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, moved 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 1888;
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 to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 22,395 votes, to 15,971 for
J. S. Miller, Democrat, 197 for Asa Banenger, Socialist, and 337 for B. F. Morris,
Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
WISCONSIN. Biographical. 135
WISCONSIN.
SENATORS.
ROBERT MARION LA FOLLETTE, Republican, of Madison, was born at Prim-
rose, Dane County, Wis., June 14, 1855; was graduated from the State University of
Wisconsin, June, 1879, and admitted to the bar in February, 1880; was elected district
attorney of Dane County in November, 1880; reelected in 1882; was elected a mem-
ber of the Forty-ninth Congress in 1884; reelected to the Fiftieth Congress in 1886,
and to the Fifty-first Congress in 1888; defeated for reelection in 1890; was elected
delegate from the Second Congressional district of Wisconsin to the National Repub-
lican convention held at St. Louis in June, 1896, and elected by the Wisconsin Repub-
lican State convention as delegate-at-large to the Republican National convention
held at Chicago in June, 1904. Mr. La Follette was elected governor of Wisconsin
in 1900; reelected in 1902, and again in November, 1904; was elected to the United
States Senate January 25, 1905, to succeed Joseph Very Quarles, and took his seat
January 4, 1906. His term of service will expire March 3, 19II.
ISAAC STEPHENSON, Republican, of Marinette, was born near Fredericton,
York County, New Brunswick, June 18, 1829; received a common-school education;
is a lumberman, farmer, and banker; moved to Wisconsin, with headquarters at Mil-
waukee, in 1845, and for twelve years engaged in the lumber trade at Escanaba,
Mich. ; in the spring of 1858, moved to Marinette and has ever since resided there;
has held various local offices and in 1866 and 1868 was a member of the Wisconsin
legislature; was a Representative from the Ninth district of Wisconsin in the Forty-
eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses; was elected to the United States
Senate, May 17, 1907, to fill out the unexpired term of Hon. J. C. Spooner, who
resigned March 30. His term of service will expire March 3, 1909.
REPRESENTATIVES.
FIRST DISTRICT.
CouNnTIES.—Green, Kenosha, Lafayette, Racine, Rock, and Walworth (6 counties). -
Population (1905), 204,469.
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and
Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 16,226
votes, to 8,808 for J. J. Cunningham, Democrat, and 1,504 for Moses Hull, Pro-
hibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Adams, Columbia, Dane, Green Take, Jefferson, and Marquette (6 counties).
: Population (1905), 176,816.
JOHN MANDT NELSON, Republican, of Madison, was born in the town of
Burke, Dane County, Wis., October 10, 1870; received a collegiate education, grad-
uating from the University of Wisconsin in June, 1892; was elected superintendent
of schools in Dane County in 1892 and reelected in 1894; resigned to accept the posi-
tion of bookkeeper in the office of the secretary of state 1894-1897; edited The
State 1897-1898; correspondent in State treasury 1898-1902; was graduated from the
law department of the State University 1896; pursued post-graduate studies at the
University of Wisconsin 19o1-1go3; was secretary of the Alumni Association of
the University of Wisconsin 1904-1905; was a member of the Republican State
central committee 1902-1906; was married in 1891 to Thea Johanna Stondall; they
have six children; is by profession a lawyer; was elected to Fifty-ninth Congress
September 4, 1906, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. H. C. Adams, and
reelected November 6, 1906, to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 14,808 votes, to 12,881
for G. W. Levis, Democrat, 724 for W. I,. Dibble, Prohibitionist, and 354 for W. A.
Hall, sr., Socialist Democrat. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
136 Congressional Directory. [cons
FHIRD DISTRICT.
CounTiES.—Crawford, Grant, Iowa, Juneau, Richland, Sauk, and Vernon (7 counties).
Population (1905), 181,616.
JAMES WILLIAM MURPHY, Democrat, of Platteville, was born at Platteville,
Wis., April 17, 1858; was graduated from the State normal school at Platteville in
1873; taught school for five years; was graduated from the law department of the
University of Michigan in 1880; has practiced law at Platteville twenty-six years;
served four years as district attorney of Grant County; was elected mayor of Platte-
ville in 1904 and 1906; has for many years been interested in lead and zinc mining
in Wisconsin; was married in 1881 and has four children; was elected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 14,701 votes, to 13,690 for J. W. Babcock, Republican, and 934
for H. J. Noyes, Prohibitionist.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
MILWAUKEE COUNTY.—Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Eighth, Eleventh, I'‘welfth, 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; villages of Cudahy and West Allis.
Population (1905), 202,175.
WILLIAM JOSEPH CARY, Republican, of Milwaukee, was born in that city
March 22, 1865; received a primary education in the public schools, and at the age
of 13 was left an orphan with five younger children; began work as messenger
boy, the younger children being placed in an orphan asylum; at 18 he was a tele-
graph operator, and at 19 took the younger children from the asylum and gave
them a home; was married in 189o; elected alderman in 19oo and reelected in 1902;
elected sheriff of Milwaukee County in 1904 with a plurality of 11,000, leading his
ticket by 3,000; was nominated for Congress against Congressman Theobald Otjen,
Republican, at the first trial of the Wisconsin primary election law, and elected to
the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 12,231 votes, to 8,759 for E. I. Melms, Socialist
Democrat, and 8,656 for T. J. Fleming, Democrat. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
7 FIFTH DISTRICT.
MILWAUKEE CouNTy.—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 (1905), 197,368.
WILLIAM H. STAFFORD, Republican, of Milwaukee, was in the active prac-
tice of the law when elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress; was elected to the
Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 13,948 votes,
to 8,870 for A. J. Welch, Socialist Democrat; 8,192 for J. G. Donnelly, Democrat,
and 506 for C. T. Everett, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiES.—Dodge, Fond du Lac, Ozaukee, Sheboygan, and Washington (5 counties).
Population (1905), 189,620.
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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
19,444 votes, to 10,572 for Alvin Dreges, Republican, and 764 for G. C. Damrow,
Socialist, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
CounTiEs.—Buffalo, Clark, Eau Claire, Jackson, La Crosse, Monroe, Pepin, and T'rempealeau
(8 counties).
Population (1905), 200,504.
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
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
WISCONSIN. ] Biographical. 137
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, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Con-
gresses and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 18,042 votes, to 6,779 for
C. F. Hille, Democrat, Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
CounTIiESs.—Calumet, Manitowoc, Portage, Waupaca, Waushara, and Winnebago (6 counties).
Population (1903), 203,596.
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 moved 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 Congressional com-
mittee from 18go to 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 16,986 votes, to 9,594 for J. I. McMullen, Democrat; 1,103 for J. J. Pitz,
Socialist; 700 for C. H. Forward, Prohibitionist, and 54 for W. B. Minahan, Inde-
pendent Republican for Immediate Tariff Revision. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress. :
NINTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Brown, Door, Kewaunee, Marinette, Oconto, and Outagamie (6 counties).
Population (1905), 195,985.
GUSTAV KUSTERMANN, Republican, of Green Bay, was born in Detmold,
Germany, May 24, 1850; received his education at the academy of his native city
(Gymnasium Leopoldinum ), from where he graduated in 1864. After being employed
for several years in a wholesale dry goods establishment in Hamburg, Germany, in
1868, he emigrated to the United States, settling in Green Bay, Wis., where he and
his family still reside and where for over thirty years he was engaged in mercantile
business. He held various public positions, and from 1892 to 1896 served as post-
master in Green Bay; in 19oI he received the appointment as member of the State
board of control, whose president he was from 1904 to 1907. He was elected to the
Sixtieth Congress, receiving 14,080 votes, to 8,689 for P. A. Badour, Democrat, and
551 for J. E. Harris, Socialist Democrat. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.
CouNTIES.—Ashland, Florence, Forest, Iron, I,anglade, I,incoln, Marathon, Oneida, Price, Sha-
wano, Taylor, Vilas, and Wood (13 counties).
Population (1505), 228,017.
ELMER ADDISON MORSE, Republican, of Antigo, was born at Franksville,
Racine County, Wis., May 11, 1870; was educated in the district schools of Racine
County; then entered the preparatory school of Ripon College, and in 1893 graduated
from the college proper, receiving the degree of B. A.; that year was elected county
superintendent of schools of Racine County and reelected in 1893, serving four years;
then entered the law school at the University of Wisconsin and was admitted to the
bar in 1900; has practiced law in Antigo from 1900 until the present time; served as
city attorney of Antigo for three terms; was married in Racine in 1896 to Myra
Elizabeth Tradewell; was nominated for the office of Representative in Congress,
September 6, 1906, by popular vote, and elected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving
20,228 votes, to 10,658, for D. D. Conway, Democrat, and go3 for J. I. Coxe, Socialist
Democrat. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
138 Congressional Directory. [WISCONSIN
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.
COUNTIES. —Barron, Bayfield, Burnett, Chippewa, Douglas, Dunn, Pierce, Polk, Rusk, St. Croix,
Sawyer, and Washburn (12 counties).
Population (1905), 248,243.
JOHN J. JENKINS, Republican, of Chippewa Falls, was born in Weymouth,
England, August 20, 1843; settled in Baraboo, June, 1852; attended the common
schools for a few terms; served during the civil war in Company A, Sixth Wisconsin
Infantry; was a member of the State assembly from Chippewa County, and county
judge of Chippewa County; appointed United States attorney for the Territory of
Wyoming by President Grant in March, 1876; was elected to the Fifty-fourth,
Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 19,002 votes, to 5,146 for F, J, McGuire,
Democrat, and 1,213 for C, W. Swanson, Socialist Democrat.
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 out of 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 in farming
and stock raising in Massachusetts until early in 1868, when he moved to Wyoming
(then a part of the Territory of Dakota); is at present interested in live stock
and real estate; 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
Chicago in 1888 and chairman of the Wyoming delegation to the national Repub-
lican conventions at Philadelphia in 1gooand at Chicago in 1904 and 1908; was chair-
man of the Republican Territorial central committee, and chairman of Republican
State central committee of Wyoming in 1896; was appointed governor of Wyoming by
President Arthur in February, 1885, and removed by President Cleveland in Novem-
ber, 1886; was again appointed governor of Wyoming by President Harrison in
March, 1889, and served until the Territory was admitted as a State, when he was
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 in 1895, 1901, and 1907. His term of service
will expire March 3, 1913.
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 moved to Evanston, Wyo.,
where he has since resided; was prosecuting attorney for Uinta County four years; wasa
delegate to the national Republican conventions of 1888, 1900, and 1904; was appointed
associate justice of the Territory of Wyoming in 18go, but declined the office; upon
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
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 was reelected in 1899 and 1905. His term of
service will expire March 3, 1911.
REPRESENTATIVE.
AT LARGE.
Population (1905), 101,816.
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
WYOMING.] Biographical. 139
tutor; engaged in mercantile pursuits, stock raising, mining, and railway construc-
tion 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 Newcastle 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 Republican national convention in Minneapolis in 1892; was appointed
Assistant Commissioner of the General Land Office, November 15, 1897, and served
until March 3, 1899; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 16,881 votes, to 9,017 for J. C. Hamm, Democrat, 1,310 for William Brown,
Socialist, and go for C. H. Nicodemus, Prohibitionist. Reelected to the Sixty-first
Congress.
TERRITORIAL DELEGATES.
ALASKA.
Population (1900), 63,592.
THOMAS CALE, of Fairbanks, was born’ September 17, 1848, in Underhill,
Chittenden County, Vt.; is of Irish descent, his parents having emigrated in 1828;
he attended the district schools of his native town, and for two terms the academy of
Underhill; wasraised on a farm and taught district school for two terms in Vermont;
moved to Fond du Lac County, Wis., in 1869; worked on a farm summers and taught
district schools in the winter for several years; was elected clerk of his town several
terms, and represented his town on the county board for three years; was elected
sheriff of Fond du Lac County in 1888 and served two years; is married, his wife and
seven children living at Fond du Lac. Mr. Cale went to Alaska and was elected on
a nonpartisan platform, August 14, 1906, as Delegate to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 5,459 votes, to 2,324 for C. D. Murane, Republican, and 1,083 for H. W.
Mellen, Democrat.
ARIZONA.
; Population (1900), 122,931.
MARCUS AURELIUS SMITH, Democrat, of Tucson, was born near Cynthiana,
* Ky., January 24, 1852; was educated at the Transylvania University, Lexington, Ky.;
is a lawyer by profession; moved to Arizona in 1881, and the following year was
elected prosecuting attorney of his district; was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first,
Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and
reelected to the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 11,501 votes, to 8,909 for W. F. Cooper,
Republiosn, 1,995 for J. D. Cannon, Socialist, and 508 for C. F. Ainsworth, Joint
Statehood.
HAWAII.
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 and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixtieth
Congress, receiving 7,364 votes to 2,884 for E. B. McClanahan, Democrat, and 2,183
for Charles Notley, Home Ruler. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
140 Congressional Directory. [TERRITORIES.
NEW MEXICO,
Population (1900), 195,310.
WILLIAM H. ANDREWS, Republican, of Albuquerque, was born January 14,
1842, at Youngsville, Warren County, Pa.; was educated in the public schools; is
engaged in farming, mercantile business, and railroading, being president of the Santa
Fe Central Railway Company; is married; was chairman of the Republican State
committee of Pennsylvania in 1889 and 1890; member of the Senate of Pennsylvania,
1895 to 1898; member of the house of representatives of Pennsylvania, 1889, 1890,
1901, and 1902; member of the Territorial council, New Mexico, 1903 and 1904; was
elected Delegate to the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected to the Sixtieth Congress,
receiving 22,915 votes, to 22,649 for C. A. Larrazolo, Democrat, and 211 for W. P,
Metcalf, Socialist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress.
RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS.
BENITO LEGARDA, of Manila, was born in Manila, September 27, 1853; was
educated in the Jesuits’ College and St. Thomas University of Manila, from the latter
of which he received the degree of LL. B. He held some honorific positions during
the Spanish régime; joined Aguinaldo when he landed in Cavite shortly after
Admiral Dewey had destroyed the Spanish fleet, 1898; was a member of Aguinaldo’s
cabinet at Malolos and vice-president of the Filipino congress; resigned these posi-
tions to return to Manila in December of the same year (1898); cooperated with live
interest in the establishment of peace during and after the war between the Filipinos
and Americans. On February 1, 1901, was appointed by President McKinley a mem-
ber of the Philippine Commission, an office that he held until he was elected by the
Philippine legislature one of the Resident Commissioners of the Philippine Islands
in the United States in November, 1907.
PABLO OCAMPO DE LEON, of Manila, was born in Manila in 1853; studied in
St. Thomas University, from which he graduated with the degree of LI. B. in Feb-
ruary, 1882, since which time he has practiced his profession. Under the Spanish
régime he was secretary of the royal court of Manila, prosecuting attorney of the
district of Tondo, and secretary of the Bar Association of Manila, to which post he
was twice reelected. In the Filipino government at Malolos he was a representative
of the provinces of Principe, Infanta, Lepanto, and Bontoc, and was elected secre-
tary of the Filipino parliament. He was also appointed professor of law of the
University of Malolos. During the revolution, and after the Malolos cause became
hopeless, a meeting was called in Manila by those who were willing to submit to the
American Government, and at this meeting he was the only one who stood firmly
against giving up the struggle. He was offered a place on the supreme court in the
early days, but would not accept, and the position of Resident Commissioner in the
United States is the first he has ever held under the American Government. At one
time he was editor of Ia Patria, in Manila, publication of which was suspended by
order of General Otis. He is also a counsel to the Economic Association of the
Philippines. Shortly after the outbreak of hostilities between the Americans and
Filipinos he was appointed by the government of the Filipino republic its repre-
sentative in Manila, with unlimited powers, and was known to the Americans as an
‘“‘irreconcilable’’ and deported to Guam, where he remained two years; he was par-
doned and returned to Manila, after taking the oath of allegiance to the American
Government.
PORTO RICO.
Population (1899), 953,243.
TULIO LARRINAGA, Unionist, of San Juan, was born in the town of Trujillo
Alto, January 15, 1847; was educated in the Seminario Consiliar of San Ildefonso, at
San Juan, where he received the degree of bachelor of arts, with the highest honors;
studied the profession of civil engineer at the Polytechnic Institute of Troy and at
the University of Pennsylvania, where he graduated in 1871; practiced the pro-
TERRITORIES. | Biographical. 141
fession for some time in the United States, taking part in the preparation of the
topographical map of Kings County (Brooklyn) and in the technical department of
Badger & Co., of New York, in the construction of the Grand Central Depot in that
city; returned to Porto Ricoin 1872 and was appointed architect for the city of San
Juan; built the first railroad in Porto Rico in 1880, and introduced for the first time
American rolling stock in the island; was for ten years chief engineer of the
provincial works, and built most of the important structures (especially bridges)
in the island; was one of the founders of the Atheneum of San Juan in 1876, and
of the society for the education of intelligent young men of the poor classes, and
took a prominent part in the intellectual uprising that marked that period in Porto
Rico; established and taught a class for the teaching of the English language in
the Atheneum, in which all of the best classes of society of San Juan assisted; is an
honorary member of the Club de Engenharia (Engineers Club) of Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil; in 1898 he was appointed assistant secretary of the interior under the autonomic
government, serving in that capacity until some time after the American occupation
of the island; he resigned the office to resume his position as chief engineer of the
harbor works of San Juan; he is an ardent advocate of home rule for his country,
and in 1900 was sent by the Federal party of Porto Rico to Washington as a delegate
at the time the organic act for Porto Rico was being framed by Congress; in 1902
was elected member of the house of delegates of Porto Rico from the district of
Arecibo. Mr. Larrinaga is the president of the Society of Civil Engineers of Porto
Rico; is married and has four children living; was appointed by the President one
of the delegates to represent the United States at the Third Pan-American Congress
held at Rio de Janeiro, July, 1906; he speaks several languages fluently, and is con-
versant with South American problems; was elected commissioner for the term of
the Fifty-ninth Congress, and reelected for the Sixtieth Congress, receiving 102,978
votes to 54,985 for Francico Parra, Republican, and 1,44c for Santiago Iglesias,
American Federalist. Reelected to the Sixty-first Congress,
66525—60—-2—2D ED——II °
142 Congressional Directory.
THE CONGRESS—STATISTICAL.
EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF SENATORS.
Crass III. SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1909.
(Thirty-one Senators in this class.)
Name. Residence.
Anlmeny. Levi: 0 cio on oa al | R | Walla Walla, Wash.
Brandegee Franke Bi Lo lan nin oh aio | R | New London, Conn,
Clarke, James C0 il ns slain suru ioniss | D | Little Rock, Ark.
Clay, Alexander S ...... A CE Se | D | Marietta, Ga.
Cumming, Albert B. .0.. ov. ooo a ' R | Des Moines, Iowa.
Dillingham, Willlam PB... co ovr anivio | R | Montpelier, Vt.
Foraker; Joseph B ....... oo ua savin 'R Cincinnati, Ohio.
Bualion, Charles W.,... ...o on o Se Ea | R | Astoria, Oreg.
Gallinger, Tacob FL ............. SESE nd R | Concord, N. H.
Gary. Frank. Bis. oi ee an D | Abbeville, S. C.
Gore, Thomas Po... oo ii adie canis on aed D | Lawton, Okla.
Hansbrough, HenrviCoo os von cn to R | Devils Lake, N. Dak.
Hemenway, James A. ................ Co 0 R | Booneville, Ind.
Heyburn; Weldon Be... 2. 50 oi 0 0 con R | Wallace, Idaho.
Hopkins, Albert... coos one inn R | Aurora, 111.
Jolmnston; Joseph B22 re se D | Birmingham, Ala.
Rittredee, Alfred’ B. 50... 0 0 coals R | Sioux Falls, S. Dak.
Tong, Chester] 0. io 0000 ce ior Lana, R | Medicine Lodge, Kans.
McCreary, Tames Bit. 0.00.00. 0 AEE D | Richmond, Ky.
MecEnery, Samuel D0. ni. ad Sa D | New Orleans, La.
Nilton, Willing BL, oo 0 coda os en D | Marianna, Fla.
Newlands, BEranecis Go aca iv didi, D | Reno, Nev.
@verman, TeeS 0. lain baa Sb aan D | Salisbury, N. C.
Penrose, Boles. il aii sb ios nonin ite R | Philadelphia, Pa.
Perkins, George C..- 0. .h vo visa Vie R | Oakland, Cal.
Platt, Thomas €....... rn rete Gs R | Owego, N. VY.
Smeot, Reed si... 0 oo 0 rn R | Provo City, Utah.
Smith slohnt Waller: v0 a Coin a on D | Snow Hill, Md.
Stephenson, sane... 0... ie nin a R | Marinette, Wis.
Stone, William Jo. 00 ia vhs rae D | Jefferson City, Mo.
Teller, Hlenvy: Mo ooh bes onan D | Central City, Colo.
|
Crass I.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1911.
(Thirty Senators in this class. )
Name. | Residence.
| |
Aldrich, Nelson W..... coi. vi, mar i iia | R Providence, R. I.
Beveridee Albert J... on HE | R | Indianapolis, Ind.
Bulkeley, Morgan G ..o.Co0 lise cl iio | R | Hartford, Conn.
Burkett Wher | 0 0. 0 as sor R | Lincoln, Nebr.
Burrows, Jullne C,... oo. hia ai aed Re Kalamazoo, Mich.
Carter Thomas. iii eh sans R | Helena, Mont.
Clapp, Moses I... hii wails vids adios | R | St. Paul, Minn.
Clark, Clarence I. t.ho innvs Srdvan nics | R | Evanston, Wyo.
BE
Service of Senators.   143
Crass I.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3,
1911—Continued.
Name.   Residence.
Culberson, Charles A... coi ie i
Damiel John Woo as co on
Depew, ChanncevM.. = 0. or oo ain
Bick, Chavlesd i 20 clon. oi Ea
duPont, Henry A... oui so ii es a
Bint Franla PB. 0 oo ta i ae a
Frazier, James B........ ... SOLE nE ae tel aS ;
Haley ugene oe is in ms oh aes
ean Joli wo md Ss ra ee |
Kaox, Philander:Cii lin io lon ri edn
IaFollette: Robert Ml... ol. oa e,
Lodge, Henry Cabot 5: oi. sic. vi i ra.
McCumber: Porter fio i cavii voi Savi
Money, Hermando: DD; toni. Liao, an dao
Nixon George S. i. hi he nia a
Page, Carroll Scour aii SR |
Biles: Sammel dl =. i ne a ee a aaa
Raynerslsidorn. oo lo orn ns dan
Scott, Nathan B.......... ... nena Ca
Sutherland, George: .......a 0 i cv has a0,
‘Paliaferro, James P.......... AEC Arai
Warner, William: cis isan a,   FORRUORRARORRRAERERREORRAR
RATT
|
Dallas, Tex.
Lynchburg, Va.
New York City.
Akron, Ohio.
Winterthur, Del.
Los Angeles, Cal.
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Ellsworth, Me.
Elizabeth, N. J.
Pittsburg, Pa.
Madison, Wis.
Nahant, Mass.
Wahpeton, N. Dak.
Carrollton, Miss.
Reno, Nev.
Hyde Park, Vt.
Seattle, Wash.
Baltimore, Md.
Wheeling, W. Va.
Salt Lake City, Utah.
Jacksonville, Fla.
Kansas City, Mo.
Crass IL. —SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1913.
(Thirty-one Senators in this class.)
Bacon:AugustusO....oc0iat is ann io aa
Bailey, Joseph Wii. bo coin ie vs Sanity
Bankhead JohnTl on voila ira leaa
Borah, William EB. . o.oo ies ote ans
Bourne, Jonathan, jr... coo 0 rn dis |
Briges, Baan OV. 1 o.  0h a hos aii
Brown, NOTES, ve i a re ar
Burnham; Henry Br ov ooo an
Crane, W. Murray. Lon tine hava aden
Collom, Shelby Mo 0 i
Cuells. Charles: o.oo in ciaid to veh
Davis el i ea as
Dizon, Joseph M0... oc. ooo. a a
Dolliverlomathan P.:. 0 f on le
Elling, Stephen B.... 1 0 coi ia in viens
Foster, Murphy J. i. hai a on i
Frye, William Po. 0. av i ak,
Gamble, Robert]... i luu. hn tina sis
BGuegenheimaSimon.. —. 5, iain is credo:
McLaurin, Anselm J ..... a Re ARE
Martin Thomas S.C... ht. ni on
Nelson, nme... 00 cams a ii
Owen, Robert iL, oc ci sities avs
Paynter, Thomas BL... 0 0 Cis soni i hy
Richardson, Harty A... 0... viieoi niin.
Simmons: Burnifold M.: © 0. 0 a
Smith, Willlam Alden ....0..... 0... 0 0...
Tayler, Robert Yo. 0 a arr aie lL
Pillmon, Benjamin BR... oo ohn Saas,
Warren, Francis B.. =. i aa iio aoas
Wetmore, George P... 1 ©. coos on a
Macon, Ga.
Gainesville, Tex.
Fayette, Ala.
Boise, Idaho.
Portland, Oreg.
Trenton, N. J.
Kearney, Nebr.
Manchester, N. H.
Dalton, Mass.
Springfield, Ill.
Topeka, Kans.
Little Rock, Ark.
Missoula, Mont.
Fort Dodge, Iowa.
Elkins, W. Va.
Franklin, La.
ILewiston, Me.
Yankton, S. Dak.
Denver, Colo.
Brandon, Miss.
Charlottesville, Va.
Alexandria, Minn.
Muskogee, Okla.
Greenup, Ky.
Dover, Del.
Raleigh, N. C.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Nashville, Tenn.
Trenton, S. C.
Cheyenne, Wyo.
Newport, R. I.
144 Congressional Directory.
CONTINUOUS TERMS OF SERVICE OF SENATORS.
M Beginning
8 Name. State. of present
~ service, —
I (Hale, Buvene:’. >on nel ed ony | hy Le Le Cl Mar. 4, 1881
2 Bryer; William Po, ooo ns eis Maines. via Mar. 15, 1881
31 Aldrich, Nelson Wor, 0 0 0h Rhode Island .......... Oct. 5, 1387
40 Cullom, Shelby MM... .....: Himols ila, Mar. 4, i883
5i eller, Henry M ........... Sara Colorado. «........ Mar. 4, 1885
6 DamelTohn W...... 0. i vv in Nirginla. io... ol Mar. 4, 1887
Gallinger, Jacob Bln... Juin as New Hampshire ....... Mar. 4, 1891
7 fone Heney Cina vo ooo North Dakota ......-... Mar. 4, 1891
S| Lodge, Henry: Cabot ..............0... Massachusetts ......... Mar. 4, 1893
oii Perking, George © . 1. Joi. L. California. 00. on June 22, 1893
6 os Tolime Cr rr i Michigan... oe 5 Jan. 23, 1895
Clark, Clarence D...... Hedin do ied Wyoming .... ::..; Jan. 23, 1895
Bacon, Angustns QO... ........ Georgia... ua i Mar. 4, 1895
Elkins, Stephen B.... 00. 000 West Virginia... ... Mar. 4, 1895
Martin, Thomas'S 0. oo va Virginia. isn Mar. 4, 1895
IT Nelson, Knute. os cvcn ii, Minnesota... oo ava Mar. 4, 1895
THlman, Benjamin Ro... rl... South Carolina ...... ... Mar. 4, 1895
Warren, Francis B.....o 0 0) Wyoming .... Mar. 4, 1895
Wetmore, George Po... 0000 Rhode Island... ....... Mar. 4, 1895
Clay. Alexander S.-00 2 wn... Georgia oo 0 Lor Mar. 4, 1897
Foraker, Joseph B.... niles Ohios iis ads Mar. 4, 1897
12 (McEnery,Sanmmel D........ ......... Louisiana... oo. ola Mar. 4, 1897
Penrose, Boles, nl vo Pennsylvania... ........ Mar. 4, 1897
Blatt, Fhomas € 000 00 0 is os New Vor: i. 0 ni Mar. 4, 1897
13 Money, Hernando D....... ncn ins Mississippl. aa Oct. = 8, 1807
Beveridge, Albert]. a... 0. 0. oy Indiana .......00 0.00 Mar. 4, 1899
Culberson, Charles A... ........ ..... Wexag: oo. nial Mar. 4, 1899
1a Depew, Channcey MM... ....... New York... ois. Mar. 4, 1899
4 Reon, Jom obo sn ar New Jersey ............. Mar. 4, 1899
McCumber, Porter J... 0... ook. North Dakota. ....... Mar. 4, 1899
Scott, Nathan B.. ..c. 0... o.oo West Virginia. =... .... Mar. 4, 1899
15 ( Taliaferro, JamesP. 0. io.n 0 Worida, fo as. 0 Apr. 19, 1899
16: | Dolliver, Jonathan P=... io , Towa. ws ais Aug. 23, 1900
17 | Dillingham, Willlam P........ ...... Vermont ov ue Oct. 18, 1900
13 Clapp, Moses EB... o.oo. ve, Minnesota... ....  ... Jan. 23, 1901
Bailey, Joseph W ............. ....¢ tL Tlewag ne rs Mar. 4, 1901
Burnham, Hensy B ...c.. ..... New Hampshire ....... Mar. 4, 1901
Wester; Murphy]... oc 0 Toniglann oi riie is, Mar. 4, 1001
19 NGamble Robeit 7... o............ South Dakota.......... Mar. 4, 1901
Mclanrin; Anselm J... cui Mississipplicoo <0. | Mar. 4, 1901
[{ Simmons, Furnifold Mcl............ North Carolina... ..... Mar. 4, 1901
20 Kittredge, Alfred’ B ... 00... South Dakota... .... =. July 11,1901
| Ankeny, Heyl oly ts io Washington ......& . 2: Mar. 4, 1903
Clarke, Tames Pride lg id Arkansas... .0. 0.0 Mar. 4, 1903
HPulton, Charles W os. 0 ona... Oregon. fic a Bunk Mar. 4, 1903
lH evburn, Weldon B.:...... 2.... ... Tdaho oii vo ioara in Mar. 4, 1903
1 | Hopking, Albert Jo... oo... Olinolg. cv aol Mar. 4, 1903
| Long, Chester Titov io os Tangag oo eta Mar. 4, 1903
tM cCreary, James Bi... oo. oi... 0 Kentucky ©. nS Mar. 4, 1903
Newlands, PrancisiG .... . v0 a0 Nevada, 00s vin iw Mar. 4, 1903
[iOverman, Tee S$... o.oo... NorthiCarolina ......... Mar. 4, 1903
Smoot, Reed 50-00 comin v0 Thali ais ana a Mar. 4, 1903
Stone, Willlam J... ov 0. 0 Missonriso.......... = Mar. 4, 1903
aati Dick, Clatles. . oi. ves roi sis Ohio. iia or Se Mar. 2, 1904
CR
—
eS
a
Sk
ey
El
a
= =e
ms
—
AA
A
Continuous Terms of Service of Senators. 145
CONTINUOUS TERMS OF SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued.
iy! Beginning
g Name. State. of present
4 service.
23 i Rnox, Philander €..............v... Penngylvania'.. ....... July 1, 1904
24 Crane, W. Mugray ..... «=... 0a Massachusetts ......... Oct. 12,1904
Bulkeley, Morgan G........... ....... Connecticut... ..... Mar. 4, 1905
Burkett, Blmer Y... 0c uni Nebraska... Mar. 4, 1905
Carter, Thomas Tl... .. 5 Montana... i.e. Mar. 4, 1905
Bling, Frank Pasa, California... 0.0. Mar. 4, 1905
. Hemenway, James A 1... 0... Todinna fc toa Mar. 4, 1005
5 (La Pollette, Robert Mi... ....0 0... Wiscongin =... .. nn Mar. 4, 1905
Nixon: Georges “roo. an cn nos 0 Nevada. oi, Mar. 4, 1905
Piles, Samel BH. coe tn Washington... ... Mar. 4, 1905
Raynerilsidor........ coi... Rann Maryland i, hoi Mar. 4, 1905
Sutherland, George .............0 {I ECR RS i oa Mar. 4, 1903
26 Warner, William. 00.0. ce oo. Miagsenrtio. io Mar. 18, 1905
ool Pearter James Bn. 0 oe doe Tennessee... .........= Mar. 21, 1905
28 Brandegee, Frank BL... a... Connecticut. =... May 9, 1905
20 duPont, Henyy A... oF oo... Delaware. oy veo June 13, 1906
30. Curtis Charles. ii coe 0. Waneas. coi. os Jan. 29, 1907
27 | Smith, William Aldew. .............. Michigan... ...:.. .... Feb. 11, 1907
Bomh, William B.... 0... ...... Idohe. ............0 0; Mar. 4, 1907
Bourne, Jonathan gr... Lo... Qregon.. vw... el Mar. 4, 1907
Briggs, Frank OG... oo oui 0 NewlJersey . .... ...... Mar. 4, 1907
Brown; NOs iis eras orn its Nebraska. ....:........ Mar. 4, 1907
Davis fell oon toa ae Arkansas... inn Mar. 4, 1907
32 \ Dixon, Joseph Mo... oom Montana. ....L ns Mar. 4, 1907
Guggenheim, Simon... 2... ..i...... Colorado. ....-... «| Mar. 4, 1007
Paynter, Thomas Fl... =. 0... ov. Kentucky... Mar. 4, 1907
Richardson, Hamy A... ......-. Delaware... ian. Mar. 4, 1907
: Laylor, Roper le. oo 0 00 on a Tennessee... ... 1... .. Mar. 4,1907
33 (Stephenson, Isaac. ............, Lal Wisconsin... CL May 17, 1907
a4 Bankhead, Jom H...............0... Alabama... Soa an June 18; 1607
35] Johnston, Joseph B......... coon nis Alama oa. na Aug. 6, 1907
6 Gore, Thomas P...... obs iow 00s Oklahoma ........ 0. - Dec. 11, 1007
3 ii RobettY, «0.00 Oklahoma... Dec. 17,1007
ayliGary, Bramk B...v 0. ae Soutli Carolina. ........ Mar. 6, 1908
33 Smithy, John Walter... .... .... ., Maryland... ........... Mar. 25, 1908
ao Milion, William H....0. 0... 0000 0. Blorda. ve ote Mar. 27, 1908
dott Page Carroll S70. ov. 0 Vermont. 0 fia Oct. 21,1908
47 Commins, Albert Bi: coo. Ls Towa. os ana wis Nov. 24, 1908
146 Congressional Directory.
CONGRESSES IN WHICH REPRESENTATIVES HAVE SERVED
WITH THE BEGINNING OF THEIR PRESENT SERVICE.
: : Beginning y
Name. State. | Congresses. | of present
a ' service.
17 terms—INot con-
tinuous. :
® Cannon; |. G..... R | Ill ...| 18 | 43d, 44th, 45th, 46th,47th,48th, i
49th, 50th, 51st,53d,54th, 55th,
56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 6oth...| Mar. 4, 1893
15 terms—Continu- :
ous.
Bingham H. H..... R | Pa...[ 1 [46th 47th ASth, 40th, 50th, 5188, E
52d,53d,54th,55th, 56th, mh,
58th, 50th, 60th... ........ Mar. 4, 1879
12 terms— Not con-
tinuous.
Bayne, S. E....:....( R | N.V.| a1 | 48th, 4oth, 51st, 52d, 53d, 54th,
ssth, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,
both. os Mar. 4, 1889 8
11 tevms—Continu- |
ous. |
Dalzell, John... ... | R | Pa ...| 30 | 50th, 51st, 52d, 53d, 54th, 55th,
56th, 57th, 58tk, 59th, 6oth ..| Mar. 4, 1887
11 teyimms— Not con-
tinuous. |
Hepburn, W.P..... R | Towa .| 8 | 47th,48th, 49th, 53d,54th, 55th,
56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 6oth..| Mar. 4, 1893
70 terms—Not con-
tinuous.
Sherman, JS ...... R | N.Y..| 27 | 50th, 51st, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th,
; 57th, 53th, soth, 60th... ... Mar. 4, 1893
9 terms— Continu-
ous.
De Armond, D.A...| D | Mo...| 6 | 52d, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 53th, soth;6eth ............ Mar. 4, 1891
Hull, AT... R | Towa .| 7 | 52d,53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th,
s3th, soth, 6oth...  ......... Mar. 4, 1891 >
Jones, W. A.......; D | Va... .| 1 | 52d,53d,54th, 55th, 56th, 57th,
| 53th, 50th, 60th. ........... Mar. 4, 1891
Livingston, I. F....| D | Ga. ..| 5 | 52d,53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th,
58th. sothy6otly oo... Mar. 4, 1891
8 terms— Continu-
ous. \
Bartholdt, Richard .| R | Mo...| 10 | 53d,54th,55th,56th, 57th, 58th,
sgt, 60th 00 0 Mar. 4, 1893
Cooper, H-A..::... R | Wis..| 1 | 53d,54th,55th,56th, 57th, 58th,
softh.6oth. 0. va 0 ra Mar. 4, 1893 {
Cousing, R. G ..... .. R | Towa .| 5 | 53d,54th,55th,56th, 57th, 58th, i
soth,6oth. .. 0... os Mar. 4, 1893 FE
Gardner, I. J... ... R | N.J..| 2 | 53d,54th,55th,56th, 57th, 58th, |
| Sot, 6oth. ic... on Mar. 4, 1893
* Speaker of the Fifty-eighth, Fifty- ninth, and Sixtieth ed
Service of Representatives. 149
SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC. —Continued.
: | Beginning
Name. State. | 3 Congresses. of present
a service.
8 terms—Continu-
ous—Continued.
| Gillett, B.H -.... R | Mass.! 2 | 53d, 54th, 55th,56th,57th,58th,
| sothiGoth. oor. a0 a. Mar. 4, 1893
Loudenslager, H.C.| R | N. J..| 1 | 53d, 54th, 55th,56th,57th,58th,
sotlyi6oth.. ul snail Mar. 4, 1893
McCall, S. W. R | Mass .| 8 | 53d, 54th,55th, 56th,57th,58th,
gothyGoth, =... .... ha Mar. 4, 1893
Tawney, J. A....... R | Minn.| 1 | 53d, 54th, 55th,56th,57th,58th,
; goth, Goth... io. cn Mar. 4, 1893
Wanger, LP....... Ri Pa: 8 | 53d, 54th, 55th,56th,57th,58th,
sothyGoth,. via. oe.0 Mar. 4, 1893
Williams, J. S ....... D | Miss 8 | 53d, 54th,55th,56th,57th, 58th,
3 Goth j6oth.... ..a Mar. 4, 1893
8 terms—Not con-
tinuous.
Burton, I" E........ R | Ohio .| 21 | 51st,54th,55th,56th, 57th,58th,.
. soth, Goth... oh 000 Fo Mar. 4, 1895
7 tevms—Continu- :
. ous.
Acheson, BF. F...... R | Pa. . [24 s4th, 35th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,
EE EE RS RR SE Re a i eee eG Mar. 4, 1895
Bartlett, C. T,.., Dil-Ga...[' 6 sa Bn 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,
Re StL rt le Mar. 4, 1895
Foss, CG. E....... Rol... 10 sith, ht 57th, 58th, 59th,
ee Mar. 4, 1895
Fowler; C. N..... RIN. J..5 on a 56th, 57th,58th, 59th,
5 | Both es I hes Mar. 4, 1895
[ Graff]. VV... R | Ill ...! 16 | 54th,55th,56th,57th, 58th, 59th,
| Goble = he, Mar. 4, 1895
Henry, B.S... ..... R { Com. 11 s4th, 35th, 56th, 57th,58th 59th,
| aa nate anes AT Son
Hl, BT... R | Conn. 4 sath ih 56th,57th,58th, 59th, |
ee Een a Mar. 4, 1895
Howell, B.F....... BiNTL 3 sah, ssf, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, |
res rn Rathi Cs ea a Tar. 4, 1895
Jenking, J.) . E Wis. | 1: | sa, ath 56th, 57th,58th,59th,
. Both! Sonido, lar. 4, 1895
Overstreet, Jesse ...['R [Ind ..\ 7 CL ha
ol A Te a Mar. 4, 1895
Parker, BR. W.... .. Re NT s4th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, ;
»- : A ee Ee Mar. 4, 1895
| Prince, G.W...,.. .. Hl. long a 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, ;
| | sothuGoth.s on chart Apr. 2, 1305
Sparkman, S. M....| D | Fla ..{ 1 s4th, 35th, 56th, 57th 58th, 59th,
| ea Goth, a ae Mar. 4,1895
| Sperry, N.D....... R [Conn.[ 2 a Ay 56th, 57th, 58th, 50th,
\ Goth ee a | Mar. 4, 1895
0 Sulloway, C. A ..... RINT a s4th, 5th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, ;
| [roth oo soon ead Mar. 4, 18a5
Sulzer, William... ..{ D IN. ¥ 1 10 ey 57th,58th, 50th, |
At See SH SIR Mar. 4, 1895
Underwood, O. W ..| D | Ala 9 | 54th,55th,56th, 57th, 58th, sath,
: | Goth, a a | Mar. 4, 1895
4
* Vacancy.
148 Congressional Directory.
SERVICE, OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued.
Name.
7 terms—Nol con-
tinuous.
Clark, Champ. ......
Cooper, 8. B.....
Madd, 8. 8...
albeit, J.T. € .-...
6 terms—Contin-
UOUS.
Adamson, W.C ....
Alexander, D.S....
Boutell, HH. S.......
Brantley, W. G.. ...
Broussard, R. FF. ...]
Brownlow, W. P....
Brundidge, Stephen,
z
Piteleh, Bil
Butler,’ 1.S:.......
Capron, A. B.......
Clayton, H.D.. ....
Crumpacker, E. D..
Davidson, J. EL.....
Gaines, J. W.......
Greene, W. S_......
Griges, J. M ........
Hamilton, BE. T. ....
Hay, James. .......
Heney, RI, 0... ..
Howard, W.M .....
Kitchin, W. W.....
Yamb, john... .... |
Landis, C.B.......
Lawrence,G. P. ....
Tewis, BE.B-. 2...
Teoyd, J.T ..o...5
TLovering, W.C ....
Mclain, B.A .......
Moon, J. A .... .-..
Olmsted, M. E .....
Sims, TW...
Slayden, TL
Smith, S. W........
Spight, Thomas. ...
Stephens, J. H .....
Stevens, F.C. ......
Paylor,G.W.......
6 terms—Not con-
tinuous.
Calderhead, W. A .
Cockran. W.B .         o=
Wis...
a...
Tenn.
Tex
Mich.
Miss .
Tex.
Minn
Ala...
Kans.
NX.
Congresses.
Beginning
of present
service.
9 53d, ssh, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,
60t
4 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 50th, 60th.
.|-36 | 55th, 56th,57th,58th, 59th,60th.
9 | *55th,56th,57th,58th,59th,60th
11 | 55th, 56th, 57th,58th,59th,60th.
3 | 55th, 56th, 57th,58th,59th,60th.
1 | 55th, 56th; 57th,58th,59th,60th.
2 | 55th, 56th, 57th,58th,59th,60th.
*55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th,
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th,50th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th .
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 509th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th.
*55th,56th,57th, 58th, 59th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th,59th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th,59th,60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th,59th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th .
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 6oth.
“55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th 60th.
*55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th.
*55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th,59th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th.
55th, 56th,57th, 58th, 59th,60th.
“55th, 56th,57th,58th, 59th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th,58th, 59th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th.
55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th .
—
—
—
[=
HAG
NN
OVE
COW
NNTP
HW
HOWUL
OH
DG
OVO
WL
IW
—
—
—
5 | 54th, 56th,57th,58th,59th, 60th.
12 | 50th, 52d, 53d, *58th, 59th, 60th.
* Vacancy.
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1907
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1903
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Nov. 23,1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
June 21,1807
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
May 31,1898
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Nov. 29,1897
Mar. 4, 1897
June 1, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Sept. 18, 1898
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1397
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
July 5, 1898
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1897
Mar. 4, 1899
Feb. 23,1904
A
Sp
Service of Representatives. 149
SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued.
; | Beginning
Name. State. | Congresses. of present
a) | service,
6 terms—INot con-
tinuwous—Cont’d.
tReifer, J. W...... R | Ohio .| 7 | 45th,46th,47th,48th,59th,60th.| Mar. 4, 1905
Lorimer, William ..| R | IIl ...| 6 | 54th, 55th, 56th,58th, 59th ,60th.| Mar. 4, 1903
Mondell, F. W ..... R | Wyo .|(@)| 54th, 56th 57th,58th,59th,60th.| Mar. 4, 1899
Southwick, G. N...| R | N. Y .| 23 | 54th, 55th,57th,58th,59th,60th.| Mar. 4, 1901
Watson: J. B=... R | ind ..| 6 | 54th, 56th, 57th ,58th,59th,60th.| Mar. 4, 1899
5 terms—Continu-
OS.
Allen; A. Vz. ....... R | Me I | *56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th. ...| Nov. 6, 1899
Burleson, A. S...... D | Tex 10 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th... .. Mar. 4, 1899
Burnett, 1.1L... D | Ala 7 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th. .... Mar. 4, 1899
Conner, J.P... R | Towa .| 10 | *56th,57th, 58th, 59th, 60th....| Nov. 35, 1900
Cushman, F. W ....! R | Wash.| (¢) | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60oth..... | Mar. 4, 1899
Driscoll, M. E...... RN. V.[ 29 56th s7th, 58th 50th, 60th..... | Mar. 4, 1899
Bech, TT so oon R Wis. 7 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th. . ... | Mar. 4, 1899
Finley, D. EB. ...... DSC, 5 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th... .. | Mar. 4, 1899
Fitzgerald, J.J. .... DN. V 7 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th..... Mar. 4, 1899
Fordney, J. W...... R | Mich.| 8 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th..... Mar. 4, 1899
Gardner, Washing- | R | Mich.| 3.| 56th, 57th, 58th, 50th,60th.....| Mar. 4, 1899
ton.
Haugen, G. N...... R | Iowa 4 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th.. ... Mar. 4, 1899
Jones, W..1,... ..... R | Wash.| (2) 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 6oth ....| Mar. 4, 1899
Miller; ML. 0. R | Kans.| 4 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 509th, 60th ....| Mar. 4, 1899
Needham, J.C ..... RB Cal, 6 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th ....| Mar. 4, 1899
Pearre, GC. A........| Ri | Md 6 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th .... Mar. 4, 1899
Ronsdell J. E........ D | Ia. 5° | *s56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th ...| Aug. 2, 1899
Reeder, W. A ...... R | Kans.| 6 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th ....| Mar. 4, 1899
Richardson, William| D | Ala . 8 | ¥*56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th ...| Aug. 6, 1900
Roberts, B.W....... R | Mass 7 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th .... Mar. 4, 1899
Rucker, W. W. ..... D | Mo 2 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th ....| Mar. 4, 1899
Ryan, W. HH... .... D | N.Y..| 35 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 509th, 6oth ... | Mar. 4, 1899
Shackleford, D. W..| D | Mo 8 | *56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th ...| Aug. 29,1899
Small]. Eo... D EN.C. I | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th ....| Mar. 4, 1899
Smith, W. I........ R | Iowa 9 | *56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 6oth ...| Nov. 5, 1900
Thomas, CR... DN. C. 3 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th ....| Mar. 4, 1899
Vreeland, FE. B ..... R | N.Y..| 37 | *56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th ...| Nov. 6, 1899
5 tevms—Not con-
tinuous.
Graham, W. HH ...... R | Pa 29 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 59th, 60th ....| Mar. 4, 1905
Hull, G. Bra, 0... R | Pa 22 | 52d, 54th, 58th, 59th, 60th ..... Mar. 4, 1903
McILachlan, James .| R | Cal 7 | 54th, 57th, 58th, 509th, 60th... .. Mar. 4, 1901
4 terms—Continu-
ous.
Bates, A. Too... R | Pa. | 25 (57th, 58th, 'soth 6oth.......... Mar. 4, 1901
Burgess, 6G. %... D | Tex. .] o| 57th; s8th, 50th, 6oth ......... Mar. 4, 1901
Candler, E.S.)jr...['D Miss .| 17 57th, 58th, 50th. 6oth ......... Mar. 4, 1901
Cassel, FL.B....... R Pa. .| of #*s7th 58th, soth 'G6oth:........ Nov. 5, 1901
Currier; B.D... R | N. HT. 2 [57h 55th 50th 60th ......... Mar. 4, 1901
Darragh, A.B...... BR [Mich./ 11 | 57th, 55th 50th. 6oth ......... Mar. 4, 1901
Draper, WH ....... BI N.V. lias sytly, 58th sath 60th ......... Mar. 4, 1901
Dwight, I. W....... R (N.Y. . [30 (%syth, 58th sooth 6oth ........ Nov. 4, 1902
Flood, 1.1... ..... D-|-Va.. [10 57th, 58th 50th, 60th ......... Mar. 4, 1901
Foster, DD. J........ | LESIEAVE EE I | 57th 58th soth Goth. .......7. Mar. 4, 1901
Gaines, J..FE....... RB EW.Val| 3 57th; 58th. soth6oth ......... | Mar. 4, 1901
Gardner, A. P...... BJ Mass. 61 %suth 58th, 50th 60th... ........ ! Nov. 4, 1902
* Vacancy. 1 Speaker of the Forty-seventh Congress. a At large.
150 Congressional Directory.
SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued.
; Beginning
Name. State. Congresses. of present
service.
4 terms—Continu-
ous—Continued.
Glass, Carter. ...... D. | Va. ..[ 6: #sotly 58th soth, 60th... ..... Nov. 4, 1902
Goldiogle, H.M.....| D | N.¥Y..|  o | 57th, 58th, 50th, 60th. ......... Mar. 4, 1901
Haskins, Kittredge. R | Vt ...|0 2 | 57th 58th soth,60th.......... Mar. 4, 1901
Holliday, B.S. ..... R | Ind ..| 5i| 57th 58th soth,6oth. .2..... Mar. 4, 1901
Hughes, J. 4. ..... Ral W.Va | 5 syth sSth, soth, 60th. ......... Mar. 4, 1901
Johnson, J. I... .. DiS. C..(ia | 57th, 58thysoth 6oth 0 2. Mar. 4, 1901
Kitchin, Clande....|' D [| N.C..| 2 | 57th, 55th, 50th 6oth.......... Mar. 4, 1901
Knapp, C. LL... = RINYV. | *s7th, 55th, seth, 60th... ..... Nov. 35,1901
Lever, Av ........ DIS. C..[. 7 57th, 53th, soth 60th... .. Nov. 5, 1901
Lindsay, G. H ....{D: | N.V..| 2 | 57th, 55th s0th,;60th.......... Mar. 4, 1901
Marshall, BC. F ...... R | N.Dak|(e)| 57th; 55th, 50th,60th......:... Mar. 4, 1901
Maynard ;H.T,..:.. D | Va 2 | 57th, 58th soth.60th.......... Mar. 4, 1901
Padgett, 1. P...... D |"Tenw.| 7 | 57th, 53th, soth60th........ Mar. 4, 1901
Perkins, J.B... ... BN. Vi.| 32 57th 58th. soth/6oth.. ........ Mar. 4, 1901
Pou, EB. W... ....... DD N.C 4:0 57th, 58th soth 60th ....... ... Mar. 4, 1901
Randell, C. B...... D | Tex 4: 57th, 58th seth, 60th. ....... .. Mar. 4, 1901
Reid, C.C.....i.. D | Ark sil 57th, 585th, soth,6oth.. i... Mar. 4, 1901
Russell, Gordon....| D | Tex 3 | ®57th, 58th, soth,6oth......... Nov. 4, 1902
Scott, C. Bo... R (Kans. |(2)| 57th, 55th, soth, 60th. ......... Mar. 4, 1901
Sheppard, Morris. ..| D | Tex I | “57th, 58th, soth, 60th... ....... Nov. 4, 1902
PirrellL CQ. Mass. | 41 57th, 55th, soth 60th... ...... Mar. 4, 1901
4 terms—Not con-
tinuous.
Caldwell, B. FE. ..... 111 56th, 57th, 53th, 60th. ....... 4 Mar. 4,1007
Crawford, W.T .... N.C 52d, 53d, 56th, Goth... ... Mar. 4, 1907
Bliss W. R ......... Oreg 53d 54th, 55th, 60th... . ... Mar. 4, 1907
Rahn, Julius... Cal 56th, 57th, 50th, Goth... ...... Mar. 4, 1905
Martin, E.W..... a S. Dak 57th, 55th 50th, 6oth. ... i. June 27,1908
Rodenberg, W. A... Ft... 56th, sSth soth Goth... ...... Mar. 4, 1903
3 terms—Continu-
ous.
Aiken, Wyatt... ... S.C. 55th seth. 6oth ww... Mar. 4, 1903
Ames Butler... ... Mass . 58th. sath 60th. 1... Mar. 4, 1903
Beall Jack: ...:.... Tex .. 53th, sothyooithe.. ona. a 0 Mar. 4, 1903
Bede, J. 4:5. vi. .v. Minn. sthisoth. 60th... ....... =... Mar. 4, 1903
Birdsall, B. P.. . | Towa . 58th; soth Goth... ....0. ui... Mar. 4, 1903
Bonynge, R.W. ..... | Colo . 758th sath Goth. ............:. Feb. 15,1903
Bowers, EH. J... ..... | D | Miss . 53th soth,6otly..... i... ee. Mar. 4.7003
Bradley, IT, W... N.Y... 58th, 5othysoth.. ......... .. Mar. 4, 1903
Byrd, A. M......... D | Miss . 58thysothsGoths aon ose, Mar. 4, 1903
Campbell, P.P.... .. Re Kans. | 58th, soth, Goth... oi. Mar. 4, 1903
Cooper, A. F....... Bo Pa. 58th 50th Goth... ov Mar. 4, 1903
Davis, C. R=... R | Minn. 55th sot, Gath... J... Mar. 4, 1903
French, B. 1....... R | Idaho 55th seth 6oth.... 0... 72. Mar. 4, 1903
Buller, C.E.: .....] Rapul. = sSthosoth Goth. =... =~... Mar. 4, 1903
Garner, |. Ni. =. I'D (lex. 58th seth. 6oth.. ..=......0.. .| Mar. 4, 1903
Gillespie, O.W.....| D | Tex .. sth, softly othe. vi iy Mar. 4, 1903
Goebel, H. P....... | R | Ohio. 8th, soth, Goth. Du... wi iy Mar. 4, 1903
Goulden, J. A ...... DENY 53th, 50th, Goth... 2. 0... Mar. 4, 1903
Granger, D. 1. D...ID R. 1.. 53th, soth, 60th... 0. a... Mar. 4, 1903
Gregg, A.W. ...... Dl Tex. 53th sooth, 60th... J. oon Mar. 4, 1903
Hardwick, T.W....| D | Ga .. Sth soth. Goth... 0.0L Mar. 4, 1903
Heflin, J. T........ | D [Ala .. #s8th, soth, 6oth...... ... eh May 19,1904
HIALW.S ..i.-..... | D | Miss . g3th sottvi6oth, ic Lo. Mar. 4, 1903
Hinshaw, E. H..... R | Nebr .! 58th, soth6oth......... =... Mar. 4, 1903
* Vacancy. + Seated on a contest. a At large,
or
* Vacancy.       a At large.
Service of Representatives. 151
SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued.
; Beginning
Name. State. | © Congresses. of present
A service.
3 lerms—Continu-
ous— Continued.
Howell, Joseph... BR Ulsh .[(2) 58th, 50th Goth... ............ Mar. 4, 1903
Humphrey, W. BE... R- | Wash | (2) 58th, 50th,60th............... Mar. 4, 1903
Humphreys, B.G ..| D | Miss 3 asSthysothyGoth. = io Mar. 4, 1903
James, OM... ... DD: Ky. I 53th sothyboth. 0... Mar. 4, 1903
Kehber, . A... .... D | Mass 9: s8thisoth, Goth... i... ...... Mar. 4, 1903
Kennedy, James... BR { Ohio..| 18 | 58th; seth, 60th... ......... .. Mar. 4, 1903
Kinkaid, M.P ..... R | Nebr 6 sth seth Goth... ~ ol Mar. 4, 1903
Knopf, Philip...... Rj... 7 | 58h sothiGoth................ Mar. 4, 1903
Rnowland, J.R -. ..{ R [ Cal, ...| 3 *sSth sath Goth. ............. Nov. 8, 1904
Tafean, DB... ... Ro Pa. | 20 58th soth 6othi... .. =% Mar. 4, 1903
Tamar, W. B........ DiEFls =. 3 (esBthisoth Goth... 0h Mar. 4, 1903
Tegare,G.S ......" DSC. ri 58th, seth both: ........0.... Mar. 4, 1903
Lilley. CG. T,.......... R | Conn. [{2)| 558th, seth, Goeth. .............. Mar. 4, 1903
Longworth, Nicholas] R | Ohio 158th oth 6oth.............. Mar. 4, 1903
Toud, GC. A... R= Mich. 10 55th soth6oth.... =... .... Mar. 4, 1903
McCreary, G.D... | RB’ | Pa... 6 | 53th soth,60th........ Say Mar. 4, 1903
McMeorranw, Henry... | R | Mich.] 7 {i 58th, soth,6oth............... Mar. 4, 1903
Macon, R.B ...... D | Ark 53th sot, 6othr. 5. 0 0 Mar. 4, 1903
Moon, B.. O00 Ret: Pa el sSthysothyi6oth in Nov. 2, 1903
Murdock, Victor... R | Kans. 7 | *58th soth6oth..:......... .. May 26, 1903
Norris, G.W....... R | Nebr sel sRth, soth, Goth, 00. 0 Mar. 4, 1903
Page, DN. ....... DN. C TlinSth goth Goth. =... 0 Mar. 4, 1903
Pujo. a. 0 Dla. gneSthisath ooth os La Mar. 4, 1903
Rainey, FL... Df TL 20: 58th seth bath... .. Mar. 4, 1903
Robinson, J. T..... D | Ark 6:58 hsoth Goth... Mar. 4, 1903
Sherley, Swagar ...| D | Ky. sd sSthsoth, Goth 70... ....... Mar. 4, 1903
Smithy W.R ....... D | Tex 658th sothy6eth. oo... oo 0 Mar. 4, 1903
Swapp, H. M ... =... Rion, ie sSthisoth, Goth... 0 Mar. 4, 1903
Stafford, W. H ...... R | Wis si sBthisethi6ethe:.. 0... Mar. 4, 1903
Stanley, A. 0 ....... D | Ky. 258th, soth Goth. o..'. — 7... :| Mar. 4, 1903
Steenerson, Halvor .| R | Minn.| 9 | 58th, 59th, 6oth........ aT Mar. 4, 1903
Sterling, I: A... ... Roy ivy 55thoseth Goth... o.oo. Mar. 4, 1903
Thomas, W. A ..... R | Ohio. to | %58th,soth,60th......... .. Nov. 8, 1904
Townsend, C.B ....| R | Mich.l 2 [55th soth'6oth............... Mar. 4, 1903
Volstead, A. J....... RB [Minn.| 7 sSthisath Goth... ... Mar. 4, 1903
Wallace, RB. M...... Do Ark mel s8th sothi6eth. : .... ...... Mar. 4, 1903
Webb, FB; V......... D | N.C 9 (58th, sothiGoth.. oo... Mar. 4, 1903
Weems, C1... RB | Ohio .{ 16 "53th, 50th, Goth. 0... ....... Nov. 3, 1903
Weisee, C. 1... D | Wis 6: 58th sothGoth.. = 0... Mar. 4, 1903
Wilson, W. W...... R {11 358th seth, 6oth 1. oie. Mar. 4, 1903
Wood: 1. W...... R[N.J 4 | 58th soth Goth... ..,..... Nov. 8, 1904
Wooedyard, H..C....| BR | W.Va 4 (58th soth 6oth............... Mar. 4, 1903
Young, H.O...-.., R | Mich. 12 58th soth.6oth-.............. Mar. 4, 1903
3 terms—Not con-
tinuous.
Jackson, W. H..... R | Md. Tl srth 58h Goth. on. no Mar. 4, 1907
Lassiter, B.R...... D {Va 4 5s6th sath 6oth. =... -.| Mar. 4, 1907
Riordan, D..] ...... Di N.Y Sili56thysoth, 60th... Nov. 6, 1906
2terms— Continu-
ous.
Andrus, I.E... RI N.Y. ITol soth,6othl. o.oo 0 Mar. 4, 1905
Bannon, H.T ... RR. {Ohio . tofsoliGeth,......c-.... oi: Mar. 4, 1905
Barchield, A.J ...).. R Pa... {32 50thGoth. 00. = 100 Mar. 4, 1905
Bell’. Mo... PD IGa  .[olsothboth 0.0.00. Mar. 4, 1905
Bennet, W. S... .... BEN Fr sothiGoeth... oa na 0 Mar. 4, 1905
Bennett, J.B... ... RI Ky.. oi sathiGeth. oi hi too Mar. 4, 1905
Burke : J. B.....0.. R | Pa. 37 Fxothe Goths 0 Su eo og Mar. 4, 1905
152
Name.
2 tevms—Continu-
ous—Continued.
Burton, H. R
Calder, W. M-......
Chaney, J. C
Chapman, P.-L... ..
Clark, Frank
Cocks, W. W
Cole, B.D. ........
Coudrey, H.
Dawes, B. G...
Nawsen, ALF... ....
Denby, Edwin
Dixon, Lincoln
Edwards, D. C
Bllerbe J. B.......
Bilis, B.C...
Englebright, W. F .
Fassett, J. S
Floyd, J. C
Foster, |. H
Garrett, B.V........
Gilhams, C. C
Gill, John, jr
Gronna, A. J
Hale N,W..o.
Hayes B.A. ......
Higgins, BE. W
Houston, W. C
Hubbard, FE. H
Law, C.B
Lee, Gordon .......|
Lowden, F. O
McGavin, Charles . .
McKinlay, D.E....
McKinley, W.B....
McKinney, James . .|
Madden, M.B... ...
Moore, J. Hampton |
Moore, J. M |
Mouser, CG. EB... ..
Murphy, A. P
Nelson, J. M
Olcott, J. Van V.... |
Parsons, Herbert . . .
Patterson, J. O
Pollard, BE. M -...... |
Reynolds, J.M .....|
Rhinoek, JL, ....... |
Saunders, E.
Smith, S.C ........
Taylor, B.L., Jr... i
Waldo, G. E
Washburn, C. G...
Watkins, J. T
Weeks, J. W
Harrison, BE. B.. .....
Hitchcock, G. M . ..
Hamlin, C. W
Hughes, William. . .
* Vacancy.
COCURORR
RRS
RRE
SR
RR
| R
Congressional Directory.
SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued.
State.
Cal: t
Conn.
Tenn.
Iowa .
= DTN
COOH
NHS
NO
—-
—
Ww
SA
NO
HWW
HUT
ONHDS
HN
~~ 1S ~—
—
—
—
ed
=
—
=
AND
OANA
LUIDN
OUT
ONO
H
NWULND
OO
COW
HPO
NN
COPD
A
Hit
N
—-
1 Seated on a contest.
Congresses.
soitvibethe. nn.
goth, Goth. anise ch
Soh Bothy: Sv ln ns
goth Goth. aann Jo
sothBothic aoa c sng
Sotly Goth. connie if a is
sotheboily a orale ni 0
Tso Boll ei ean io
sothueaihy is norte ons
soflieothve af oniatam nn
soph, Gothen oo Sel
sabheGamli. oat sb aan
59th, 6oth
sohbet, 0 oes na
sofhis6oth sn stan, li on
FT IT I Be ee a Hi
Sothdolilne. ule niu a,
soil Goble on nL ey
Fsoth Golly. ns uunt a
sothgeatln one a
Zeoth, Gols, ras hr
Soth Goth. xa oa
sothnGoth. ood
Sotho ones
sothGath vo contin on
Roby, Gothia ian via
sottiGotly 35 ne
sotin oobi Cane oh a
Soil Both ae eae
goth, Gol... iia. nis iia
Toa Goll sn he a
soth i6othe. .- 0 oo ton
Sotho van sen
59th, 60th
FoothubBelhe Bond toon oh
goth Goth. urls so,
Fron Goth cial tna
Frobly, Gott nani
sab, Gatly. uso
seth Goth oi an en
Footha Goth ona oan ue
Sot Goth. wr Cod tne es
soil 6othe. codes coum
CE
qo Gotly heen
gothyiGoth sual nvr oo
59th, 6oth
*59th, 60th
59th, 6oth
59th, 60th
59th, 60th
*59th, 60th
sot Goth yo cng aii ou
Sth, 60th. 0 nh
58th, 60th
Beginning
of present
service.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
June
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Nov.
Mar.
Mar.
May
Mar.
Nov.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Oct.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Nov.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Nov.
Mar.
Nov.
June
Mar.
Mar.
Sept.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
July
Mar.
Mar.
Nov.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Dec.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
a At large.
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
23, 1906
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
6, 1906
4, 1905
4, 1905
16, 1905
4, 1905
6, 1906
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905 2, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
6, 1906
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
7, 1905
4, 1905
6, 1906
6, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905 4, 1906
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
18, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905
6, 1906
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1905 18,1906
4, 1905
4, 1905
4, 1907
4, 1907
4, 1907
4, 1907
SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued.
Service of Representatives. 153
* Vacancy.
Name. State. | 7
@)
2 terms—INot con- |
tinuous.
Tamar, Robert... ... | D | Mo. 16
Sherwood, T.R..... D | Ohio 9
z term.
Adair, [.A-M...... D | Ind 8
Alexander, J. W... | BD | Mo...i: 3
Ansbury;’L.T...... | D | Ohio 5
Ashbrook, W. A....| D | Ohio .| 17
Bavelay, CB... [RB | Pa: 21
Barnhart, HH. A ....|' D | Ind 13
Bartlett, G.A .....% D | Nev..[(2)
Beale! T. Giron R | Pa. 27
Booher, C.E....... Dl Mo.. 4
Boyd, 1.E..~...... R | Nebr 3
Brodhead, J.D... ... D | Pa 26
Carlin, CC... D |: Va.. 8
Carter, C.D... .... D | Okla 4
Cary Wolo. R | Wis 4
Caulfield, FI. S..... R | Mo. IT
Cool, GW... ........ R | Colo .|(@)
Cook, Joel:.n.... ... Ri Pa, 2
Cox, W.E ......... JD [Ind 3
Craig, W. RB. .:... D. | Ala 4
Cravens, W.B.......| D | Ark. 4
Davenport, ].S..... D | Okla 3
Denver, MUR... D | Ohio 6
Diekema, G.J...... RB Mich. | 4
Douglas, Albert ....| R | Ohio .| 12
Durey, Cyrus... ... RIN. Y.| 25
Bdwords C.GC D | Ga I
Estopinal, Albert...| D | 1a ...| 1
Fairchild, G.W....|R | N.Y.| 24
Paviot, 6. KX... .... | Lae. fo 6
Ferris, Scott....... | D | Okla 5
Roch, B.I5........ BR Pa 1
Foelker, 0.G.:.:... RON. YV{ 3
Pornes, CV ...~.... DN, YET
Foster, M.D... ... DfT 23
Foulkrod, W. W ...| R:| Pa ,. 5
Pulton, 1B. 0. ....% D | Okla 2
Godwin, H.1,.... .. D (N.C 6
Gordon, GC. W. ..... D | Tenn.| 10
Guernsey, FE. E... | R | Me. 4
Hackett, R. N...... D N.C 8
Hackney, Thomas. .| D | Mo. 15
Haggott, W. A ..... R.| Colo: 2
Hall, Phile ....... R | S.Dak| (2)
Hamill TA ....... | D | N.J.:{10
Hamilton, D.W....| D | Iowa 6
Hammond, W.S ...i D | Minn.| 2
Harding, 1. E...... R | Ohio 3
Hardy, Rufus ...... D | Tex 6
Hawley, W.C... ... R | Oreg.l 1
Helm, Harvey ..... PD. [Ky 8
Hobson, R.P ...... D | Ala 6
Howland, Paul. .... D | Ohjo.| 20 |
Hubbard, W.P..... Rol: W.Var 1
Hull, Cordell ...... D | Tenn 4
James; A. Doan RB | RKy. 3
Congresses.
sBthi6othh. oa dh
dadatoth salina
a At large.
| Beginning
of present
Apr.
Apr.
Apr.
July
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Nov.
| Nov.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Nov.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Nov.
Mar.
June 13, 1908
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Nov.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
service.
154 Congressional Directory.
SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued.
| |
| nian Beginning
Name. | State. | 5 Congresses. of present
a) service.
7 term—Continued. |
Johnson, Ben . ..... Fy Wye Al Goth ois 00s ore Mar. 4, 1907
Kennedy, C.A ..... LR Towa. ZT |6oth. i. i... ...0. sis. 0. Mar. 4, 1907
Kimball, W.P . .... PD Ryo 6othe nas Mar. 4, 1907
Kipp, G-W ........: Dp Pa. diag bbeth.e coo. naan Mar. 4, 1907
Xistermann, Gustav!’ BR Wis. J og 6oth 0. ial. li Mar. 4, 1907
Langley, J. W..... FRY. bre l6eth, i. hn i Mar. 4, 1907
Laning, Jo F .... 0 R {Ohio .f ag (6otlva., oo on ain Mar. 4, 1907
Leake BB. W.......... LD ENT oeGotiel i eis se as Mar. 4, 1907
Tenghan, J.C... a] Diba. Lardeothin. dois ho oi. ok Mar. 4, 1907
LindberghyC. A... RF Minnb- 64 60 o ooo ho ou. Mar. 4, 1907
McDermott, J. 7. | Dif aeolian Le a ae i Mar. 4, 1907
McGuire, B. S. de B-DOkRIa Lor 6oth i Nov. 16, 1907
McHenry, J. a. | pat ne CE Te es Be Re lr Mar. 4, 1907
McMillan, Samuel. FR NN. V [ar 60th. ....n.. ocean Mar. 4, 1907
Madison, E. le FR Clans dey f6oth ous coud dis ae Mar. 4, 1907
Malby, George seas] Re oNG deal Goble ss ara Mar. 4, 1907
Morse. B.A... ... IR Wis dio l6atlss 0. Mar. 4, 1907
Murphy, J. W...... ... [oD Wist of ea Baty eile sone ann Mar. 4, 1907
Nicholls, 'F. D........ (Df Pac. ro Goth nn da ae Mar. 4, 1907
Nye, F. Me | Bi Minn. si6oth:. oad a ia. n Mar. 4, 1907
© eannell EH ea Df Mass. lio | Goth, ot i. 000m Mar. 4, 1907
Peters, A. T ae CD Mass oar Goth a a ae a Mar. 4, 1907
Porter, P.A. 0... PRN Volkan b Gath code raid ie Mar. 4, 1907
Piatt, 1.G......... ID INT Seothy, i: ont a men Mar. 4, 1907
Pray, CN... LB Ment l(a) Goth... ............. 0. ously oi Mar.' 4, 1007
Rauch, G.W....... FD: nd ier fF Gothen a0 ase Mar. 4, 1907
Rothiermel, LL. HW ..4{D Pa. faglOoth.oh.ic oi... 00 cA Mar, 4, 7007
Russell Jo... Dt Mo. [ga l0othe 0.0.00 ss Mar. 4, 1907
Sabbath, A.J... DL sf eoth a a ime SEL Mar. 4, 1907
Sherwood, I.R ..... DE One. oi iBothy nnn i a, Mar. 4, 1907
Slemp, C. Bascom. .t BR Va ...| gf %6eth.. ... civ us ay Oct. 14, 1907
Smith, M.R ....... EE Be ER Ee a Seen Mar. 4, 1907
Sturgiss, G.C. ...... Biel W. Val 2 60th oii oie ue Mar. 4, 1907
Swasey, J.P... .. Ba Me ugbi6oth vo io i a on Oct. 1, 1908
Thistlewood, NM. B...| RI... a5 | #6oth oh. ii iain Dec. 1, 1907
Tou Velle, W. W Br Ohlon lai f6othy oo re a Mar. 4, 1907
Wheeler, N.P. + ....0.R | Pa, . [28 6oth........c...0.... ivan Mar. 4, 1907
Wiley, oc. Dil Ala 260th. .u. ao aka an June 18, 1908
Willett, William, jr | DIN Yimieeth 0. a Mar. 4, 1907
Wan, wv, Bo. on | DPa asi Gethin na vis laa Mar. 4, 1907
Woll EH, Bian ED IMA og p6oth. a oe Mar. 4, 1907
DELEGATES. | TER.
Andrews, W. HH ... RB | NM. fisoth Goth... ............ 0. Mar. 4, 1905
Cale, Thomas Me... AP Alaskali c.f doth 0. 0 ol cron, Mar. 4, 1907
Kalanianaole, Jonaht RH. 1..|. . .[ 55th 50th, 60th... ....... .. 5 Mar. 4, 1903
Smith, MCA. ..... D | Ariz. .|....| 50th, 51st,.52d, 53d, 55th, 57th, | Mar. 4, 1905
RESIDENT COMMIS- 59th, Goth,
SIONER FROM
PORTO RICO. |
Larrinaga, Tulio ...| R | ean goth Both. bon in ol Mar. 4, 1905
CLASSIFICATION.
Senate: House of Representatives:
Republicans... 0... .... 05 61 | Eepublicanss coun iui 222
Demoerats’, o.oo vel Dad GEER Democrats... ive. ao 167
Bo on Sy em ot
Total ov. oo a i: 391
* Vacancy.   a At large.
mr
iE
State Delegations. 155
STATE DELEGATIONS.
ALABAMA.
SENATORS.
John H. Bankhead, D. ; Joseph F. Johnston, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 9.]
1. George W. Taylor, D. 4. William B. Craig, D. 7. John IL. Burnett, D.
2. Oliver C. Wiley, D. 5. J. Thomas Heflin, D. 8. William Richardson, D.
3. Henry D. Clayton, D. 6. Richmond P. Hobson, D.| 9. O. W. Underwood, D.
ARKANSAS.
SENATORS.
- James P. Clarke, D. Jeff Davis, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 7.]
1. Robert B. Macon, D. 3. John C. Floyd, D. | 6. Joseph T. Robinson, D.
2. S. Brundidge, jr., D. | 4. William B. Cravens, D. | 7." R. Minor Wallace, D.
| 5. Charles C. Reid, D.
CALIFORNIA.
SENATORS.
George C. Perkins, R. Frank P. Flint, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, 8.]
1. W. F. Englebright, R. 4. Julius Kahn, R. | 7. James McLachlan, R.
ol 3 N . Duncan E. McKinlay, R . Everis A. Hayes, R. 8. Sylvester C. Smith, R.
3. Joseph R. Knowland, R. | 6. James C. Needham, R.
COLORADO.
SENATORS.
“Henry M. Teller, 1), Simon Guggenheim, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, 3.]
At large—George W. Cook, R.
I. Robert W. Bonynge, R. 2. Warren A. Haggott, R.
CONNECTICUT.
SENATORS.
Morgan G. Bulkeley, R. Frank B. Brandegee, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, s5.]
At large—George L. Lilley, R.
I. E. Stevens Henry, R. | 2. Nehemiah D. Sperry, R. | 3. Edwin W. Higgins, R.
4- ‘Ebenezer J. Hill, BR,
DELAWARE.
SENATORS.
Henry A. du Pont, R. Harry A. Richardson, R.
REPRESENTATIVE.
At large—Hiram R. Burton, R.
156 Congressional Directory.
FLORIDA.
: SENATORS.
James P. Taliaferro, D. William H. Milton, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats 3.]
1. Stephen M. Sparkman, D. 2. Frank Clark, D. 3. William B. Lamar, D.
GEORGIA.
SENATORS.
Augustus O. Bacon, D. Alexander S. Clay, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 11.]
I. Charles G. Edwards, D. | 5. Leonidas F. Livingston, 8. Wm. M. Howard, D.
2. James M. Griggs, D. D. 9. Thomas M. Bell, D.
3. Elijah B. Lewis, D. 6. Charles I,. Bartlett, D. 10. Thos. W. Hardwick, D.
4. William C. Adamson, D. | 7. Gordon Lee, D. 11. Wm. G. Brantley, D.
IDAHO.
SENATORS.
Weldon B. Heyburn, R. William E. Borah, R.
REPRESENTATIVE.
At large—Burton I,. French, R.
ILLINOIS. ’
SENATORS. |
Shelby M. Cullom, R. Albert J. Hopkins, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 5; Republicans, 20.]
1. Martin B. Madden, R. | 11. Howard M. Snapp, R. | 20. Henry T. Rainey, D.
2. James R. Mann, R. 12. Charles FE. Fuller, R. 21. Ben F. Caldwell, D.
3. William W. Wilson, R. | 13. Frank O. Lowden, R. 22, William A. Roden-
4. JamesT. McDermott, D.| 14. James McKinney, R. berg, R.
5. Adolph J. Sabath, D. 15. George W. Prince, R. 23. Martin D. Foster, D.
6. William Lorimer, R. 16. Joseph V. Graff, R. 24. Pleasant T. Chapman,
7. Philip Knopf, R. 17. John A. Sterling, R. R.
8. Charles McGavin, R. 18. Joseph G. Cannon, R. 25. Napoleon B. Thistle-
9. Henry S. Boutell, R. 19. William B. McKinley, wood, R.
10. George E. Foss, R. R.
INDIANA.
SENATORS.
Albert J. Beveridge, R. . James A. Hemenway, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
-[Democrats, 5; Republicans, 8.] :
1. John H. Foster, R. 7, Jesse Oversireet R. 12. Clarence C. Gilhams,
2. John C. Chaney, R. 8. John A. M. Adair, D. R.
3. William E. Cox, D. 9. Charles B. Landis, R. 13. Henry A. Barnhart, D.
4. Lincoln Dixon, D. 10. Edgar D. Crumpacker,
5. Elias S. Holliday, R. R.
6. James E. Watson, R. 11. George W. Rauch, D.
IOWA.
SENATORS.
Jonathan P. Dolliver, R. Albert B. Cummins, R,
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrat, 1; Republicans, 10.] :
1. Charles A. Kennedy, R. | 5. Robert G. Cousins, R. 9. Walter I. Smith, R.
2. Albert F. Dawson, R. 6. Daniel W. Hamilton, D. | 10. James P. Conner, R.
3. Benjamin P. Birdsall, R. | 7. John A.T. Hull, R. 11. ElbertH. Hubbard, R.
4. Gilbert N. Haugen, R. | 8. William P. Hepburn, R.
AA
N
—
S00
NH
—
NN
State Delegations. 157
KANSAS.
SENATORS. Har
Chester I. Long, R. Charles Curtis, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, 8.]
. Daniel R. Anthony, jr.,R.| 4. James M. Miller, R. | 6. William A. Reeder, R.
. Charles F. Scott, R. 5. William A. Calder- | 7. Edmond H.Madison, R.
. Philip P. Campbell, R. head, R. 8. Victor Murdock, R.
KENTUCKY.
SENATORS.
James B. McCreary, D. Thomas H. Paynter, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 7; Republicans, 4.]
. Ollie M. James, D. . | 5. Swagar Sherley, D. I 9. Joseph B. Bennett, R.
. Augustus O. Stanley, D. | 6. Joseph L. Rhinock, D. | 10. John W. Langley, R.
-:Addison'D. James, R. | 7. W. P. Kimball, D. 11. Don C. Edwards, R.
. Ben Johnson, D. | 8. Harvey Helm, D.
LOUISIANA.
SENATORS.
Samuel D. McEnery, D. Murphy J. Foster, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 6; vacancy, 1.]
. Albert Estopinal, D. 4. John T. Watkins, D. 6. George K. Favrot, D.
| 5. Joseph B. Ransdell, D. [7 Arséne P. Pujo, D.
. Robert F. Broussard, D. | |
MAINE.
: SENATORS.
Eugene Hale, R. William P. Frye, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, 4.]
. Amos L. Allen, R. 3. Edwin C. Burleigh, R. | 4. Frank E. Guernsey, R.
. John P. Swasey, R.
MARYLAND.
SENATORS.
Isidor Rayner, D. John Walter Smith, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 3; Republicans, 3.]
. William H. Jackson, R. | 3. Harry B. Wolf, D. | 5. Sydney E. Mudd, R.
+ J. Fred’k C. Talbott, D, | 4. John Gill, jr., D. | 6. George A. Pearre, R.
MASSACHUSETTS.
SENATORS.
Henry Cabot Lodge, R. W. Murray Crane, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
; [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 11.]
. George P. Lawrence, R. | 6. Augustus P.Gardner, R.| 11. Andrew J. Peters, D.
. Frederick H. Gillett, R. | 7. Ernest W. Roberts, R. | 12. John W. Weeks, R.
. Charles G. Washburn, R. | 8. Samuel W. McCall, R. | 13. William S. Greene, R.
. Charles Q. Tirrell, R. 9. John A. Keliher, D. 14. Wm. C. Lovering, R.
. Butler Ames, R. | 10. Joseph F. O’Connell, D.
66525—60—2—2D ED——12
158 Congressional Directory.
MICHIGAN.
SENATORS.
Julius C. Burrows, R. William Alden Smith, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, 12.]
1. Edwin Denby, R. 5. Gerrit J. Diekema, R. 9. Jas.C. McLaughlin, 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. by
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. |
[Democrat, 1; Republicans, 8.]
1. James A. Tawney, R. 4. Fred’k C. Stevens, R. 8. J. Adam Bede, R.
2. Winfield S. Ham- | 5. Frank M. Nye, R. 9. Halvor Steenerson, R.
mond, D. 6. Charles A. Lindbergh, R.
3. Charles R. Davis, R. 7. Andrew J.Volstead, R.
MISSISSIPPI.
SENATORS.
Hernando D. Money, D. Anselm J. McLaurin, D.
REPRESENTATIVES. iL
[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 8. Williams, D. |
3. Benj. G. Humphreys, D. | 6. Eaton J. Bowers, D. |
MISSOURL. \
SENATORS. ]
William J. Stone, D. William Warner, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 12; Republicans, 4.]
1. James T. Lloyd, D. 7. Courtney W.Hamlin, D. | 12. Harry M. Coudrey, R. :
2. William W. Rucker, D. 8. Dorsey W. Shackle- | 13. Madison R. Smith, D. ]
3. Joshua W. Alexander, D. ford, D. 14. Joseph J. Russell, D. !
4. Charles F. Booher, D. 9. Champ Clark, D. 15. Thomas Hackney, D. 3
5. Bdgar C. Ellis, R. 10. Richard Bartholdt, R. 16. Robert Lamar, D, §
6. David A. De Armond, D. | 11. Henry S. Caulfield, R. :
| MONTANA. :
: SENATORS.
| | Thomas H. Carter, R. Joseph M. Dixon, R.
: REPRESENTATIVE.
| At large—Charles N. Pray, R. ;
| NEBRASKA,
| SENATORS. ; 3
Elmer J. Burkett, R. Norris Brown, R. |
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrat, 1; Republicans, 5.] |
1. Ernest M. Pollard, R. | 3. John F. Boyd, R. 5. George W. Norris, R.
2. GilbertM.Hitchcock,D. | 4. Edmund H. Hinshaw,R. | 6. Moses P. Kinkaid,R.
;
Nair
OF
State Delegations.
NEVADA.
SENATORS.
Francis G. Newlands, D.
REPRESENTATIVE.
159
George S. Nixon, R.
At large—George A. Bartlett, D.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
SENATORS.
Jacob H. Gallinger, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, 2.]
1. Cyrus A. Sulloway, R. |
NEW JERSEY.
SENATORS.
John Kean, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 4; Republicans, 6.]
1. Henry C. Loudenslager, | 5. Charles N. Fowler, R.
R. | 6. William Hughes, D. |
2. John J. Gardner, R. 7. Richard Wayne Parker, |
. Benjamin F. Howell, R. | R
. Ira W. Wood, R. | | Ee]
NEW YORK.
SENATORS.
Thomas C. Platt, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 11; Republicans, 26.]
. William W. Cocks, R. | 14. William Willett, jr., D. |
. George H. Lindsay, D. | 15. J. Van Vechten Olcott, |
Otto G. Foelker, R. R:
. Charles B. Law, R. 16. Francis B. Harrison, D.
George E. Waldo, R. 17. William S. Bennet, R.
William M. Calder, R. | 18. Joseph A. Goulden, D.
. John J. Fitzgerald, D. | 19. John E. Andrus, R.
. Daniel J. Riordan, D. | 20. Thomas W. Bradley, R.
. Henry M. Goldfogle, | 21. Samuel McMillan, R. O
ON
NBD
NH
D. | 22. William H. Draper, R.
10. William Sulzer, D. | 23. George N. Southwick, |
11. Charles V. Fornes, D. R
12. W. Bourke Cockran, D. | 24. George W. Fairchild, R. |
13. Herbert Parsons, R. | 25. Cyrus Durey, R. |
NORTH CAROLINA.
: SENATORS.
F. M. Simmons, D. Lee
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 10.]
William W. Kitchin, D.
Hannibal I. Godwin, D. |
Robert N. Page, D.
Richard N. Hackett, D. |
. John H. Small, D.
. Claude Kitchin, D.
. Charles R. Thomas, D.
. Edward W. Pou, D. SON he
Bon
Henry E. Burnham, R.
2. Frank D. Currier, R.
Frank O. Briggs, R.
8. Le. Gage Pratt, D.
9. Eugene W. leake,
D
S70, James A. Hamill, D.
Chauncey M. Depew, R.
26. George R. Malby, R.
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. J. Sloat Fassett, R.
34. Peter A. Porter, R.
35. William H. Ryan, D.
36. De Alva S. Alexander,
RR:
37. Edward B. Vreeland,
B.
S. Overman, D.
9. Edwin Y. Webb, D.
10. William T. Crawford,
D.
160 Congressional Directory.
NORTH DAKOTA.
SENATORS.
Henry C. Hansbrough, R. Porter J. McCumber, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, 2:]
At large—Thomas F. Marshall, R.; Asle J. Gronna, R.
OHIO.
SENATORS.
Joseph B. Foraker, R. Charles Dick, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 5; Republicans, 16.]
1. Nicholas Longworth, R.| 9. Isaac R. Sherwood, D. | 16. Capell IL. Weems, R.
2. Herman P. Goebel, R. 10. Henry T. Bannon, R. 17. William A. Ashbrook,
3. J. Eugene Harding, R. | 11. Albert Douglas, R. D.
4. William E. TouVelle, D.| 12. Edward L. Taylor, jr., | 18. James Kennedy, R.
5. Timothy T. Ansberry, D. R. 19. W. Aubrey Thomas, R.
6. Matthew R. Denver, D. | 13. Grant E. Mouser, R. 20. Paul Howland, R.
7. J. Warren Keifer, R. 14. J. Ford Laning, R. 21. Theodore E. Burton, R.
8. Ralph D. Cole, R. 15. Beman G. Dawes, R. :
OKLAHOMA.
SENATORS.
Thomas P. Gore, D. “Robert I. Owen, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 4; Republican, 1.]
I. Bird S. McGuire, R. | 3. James S. Davenport, D.| 5. Scott Ferris, D.
2. Elmer 1. Fulton, D. { 4. Charles D. Carter, D.
OREGON.
SENATORS. ;
Charles W. Fulton, R. Jonathan Bourne, jr., R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, 2.]
1. Willis C. Hawley, R. 2. William R. Ellis, R.
PENNSYLVANIA.
SENATORS.
Boies Penrose, R. Philander C. Knox, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 7; Republicans, 24; vacancy, I.] ,
1. Henry H. Bingham, R. | 12. | 24. Ernest F. Acheson, R.
2. Joel Cook, R. 13. John H. Rothermel, D.| 25. Arthur I. Bates, R.
3. J. Hampton Moore, R. | 14. George W. Kipp, D. 26. J. Davis Brodhead, D.
4. Reuben O. Moon, R. 15. William B. Wilson, D. | 27. Joseph G. Beale, R.
5. William W. Foulkrod, | 16. John G. McHenry, D. | 28. Nelson P. Wheeler, R.
R. 17. Benjamin K. Focht, R.| 29. William H. Graham, R.
6. George D. McCreary,R.| 18. Marlin E. Olmsted, R. | 30. John Dalzell, R.
7. Thomas S. Butler, R. 19. John M. Reynolds, R. | 31. James Francis Burke,
8. Irving P. Wanger, R. 20. Daniel F. Lafean, R. R.
9. H. Burd Cassel, R. 21. Charles F. Barclay, R. | 32. Andrew J.Barchfeld,R.
ro. Thomas D. Nicholls, D.| 22. George F. Huff, R.
11. John T. Lenahan, D. 23. Allen’ FP. Cooper, R.
State Delegations. 161
RHODE ISLAND.
SENATORS.
Nelson W. Aldrich, R. George P. Wetmore, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrat, 1; Republican, 1.]
1. Daniel L. D. Granger, D. 2. Adin B. Capron, R.
SOUTH CAROLINA.
SENATORS.
Benjamin R. Tillman, D. Frank B. Gary, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 7.]
I. George S. Legare, D. | 4. Joseph T. Johnson, D. ‘| 7. Asbury F. Lever, D.
2. James O. Patterson, D. | 5. David E. Finley, D. |
3. Wyatt Aiken, D. 6. J. Edwin Ellerbe, D. |
SOUTH DAKOTA.
SENATORS.
Robert J. Gamble, R. Alfred B. Kittredge, R.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, 2.]
_ At large—Philo Hall, R.; Eben W. Martin, R.
TENNESSEE.
SENATORS.
James B. Frazier, D. Robert 1.. Taylor, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 8 ; Republicans, 2. |
Sey
-
e's
am
rs
BN
H . Walter P. Brownlow, R. | 5. William C. Houston, D. 9. Finis J. Garrett, D.
. Nathan W. Hale, R. | 6. John W. Gaines, D. 10. George W. Gordon, D.
. John A. Moon, D. | 7. Lemuel P. Padgett, D.
. Cordell Hull, D. 8. Thetus W. Sims, D.
TEXAS.
SENATORS.
Charles A. Culberson, D. Joseph W. Bailey, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats 16.]
I. Morris Sheppard, D. 7.°A. W. Gregg, D. | 13. John H. Stephens, D.
2. Sam B. Cooper, D. 8. John M. Moore, D. | 14. James 1. Slayden, D.
3. Gordon Russell, D. 9. George F. Burgess, D. 15. John N. Garner, D.
4. Choice B. Randell, D. 10. Albert S. Burleson, D. | 16. William R. Smith, D.
5. Jack Beall, D. 11. Robert L. Henry, D.
6. Rufus Hardy, D. 12. Oscar W. Gillespie, D.
UTAH.
SENATORS.
Reed Smoot, R. yeorge Sutherland, R.
REPRESENTATIVE.
At large—Joseph Howell, R.
g
162 Congressional Directory.
VERMONT.
| SENATORS.
William P. Dillingham, R. Carroll S. Page, R.
REPRESENTATIVES. 3
!
[Republicans, 2.]
1. David J. Foster, R. 2. Kittredge Haskins, R. :
VIRGINIA.
SENATORS. : |
John W. Daniel, D. Thomas S. Martin, D.
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Democrats, 9; Republican, 1.]
1. William A. Jones, D. | 5. Edward W.Saunders,D.| 9. C. Bascom Slemp, R.
2. ‘Harry 1. Maynard, D. 6. Carter Glass, D. 10. Henry D. Flood, D.
3. John Lamb, D. [ 7. James Hay, D,
4. Francis R. Lassiter, D. | 8. Charles C. Carlin, D.
WASHINGTON,
SENATORS. ¥
Levi Ankeny, R. Samuel H. Piles, R.
REPRESENTATIVES. Re
[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. |
1. William P. Hubbard, R.| 3. Joseph Holt Gaines, R.| 5. James A. Hughes, R.
2. George C. Sturgiss, R. 4. Harry C. Woodyard, R. |
WISCONSIN.
SENATORS. ;
Robert M. La Follette, R. Isaac Stephenson, R. %
REPRESENTATIVES.
[Republicans, 9; Democrats, 2.]
1. Henry A. Cooper, R. [ 5. William H. Stafford, R.| 9. Gustav Kiistermann, R.
2. John M. Nelson, R. 6. Charles H. Weisse, D. 10. Elmer A. Morse, R.
3. James W. Murphy, D. | 7. John J. Esch, R. 11. John J. Jenkins. R. ;
4. William J. Cary, R. | 8 James H. Davidson, R.
WYOMING.
SENATORS. !
Francis E. Warren, R. Clarence D. Clark, R.
REPRESENTATIVE. |
At large—Frank W. Mondell, R. }
Territorial Delegations.
DELEGATES FROM TERRITORIES.
ALASKA.
Thomas Cale, Ind.
ARIZONA.
Marcus A. Smith, D.
HAWAII.
Jonah K. Kalanianaole, R.
NEW MEXICO.
William H. Andrews, R.
RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS.
Benito Legarda. Pablo Ocampo de Leon.
PORTO RICO.
Tulio Larrinaga, R.
164 Congressional Directory.
REPRESENTATIVES UNDER EACH APPORTIONMENT.
Te | ui 23 2) ul of be ul oo ih 3
eBL EE 2 1B (BIE |B (8 12 FB |Z AF AE Sx id = t=] a = p= = a o Ll = TERE uv, qs u , 19) CTE 3 ers ©. 13) | | © A . Si BEE BU pe BER Vig I YoriVe | Ug [Od Red
States. 8 R32 3) 2 | F882 | Bl" |=8 Sirs | TTR = = |g = [=] =| 2H 5 Bl Bla” so | BA
22ly IE (2 I%Y 1% [218 IE (2 1% [£218
° fe 2 = ji H = 8 13 ERIE 2 IEE 5 2 HEE BE
Alabama... oo denoante anh ny I 3 7 7 6 8 8 9 9
Arlcansas inion re Ra SN a I I 2 3 4 5 6 =
California. oon go leanne sia eae 2 3 3 4 6 z 8
Colorado + oui omaha baer La By a ai wl eV hae I I 2 3
Connecticut........ 5 7 il! 7 6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 5
Delaware... 4... 1 I 2 I 1 I I I 1 I 1 I
Rlonida’,. =i nlecab anal an a fais wn bE I I 1 2 2 2 3
Georgia a 3 2 4 | 6 7 9 8 8 7 9 10 II 11
Mdahe cy nat ro ss seni ag sr es ie in Bao ol 1 1 I
rr ER ER OR Te Le Be MR | I I 3 7 9 14 19: | "20 22 25
Indiana =. oon bla esate (ity 3 7 10 IT Tr 10 13 13
OWA ll Fhdah ss prns efon sn fut ens TSN re 2 27] 6 9 II II 11
RANGAS, we nha Se re EEA IL CRT PR Be cy eo nin 1 3 7 8 8
Kentucky........ ES 2 6 10 I 10 10 9 10 11 IY 11
Touisiana oo cs.cil. maison I 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 7
Maine: on as Spr Ee 7 7 8 7 6 | 5 5 4 4 4
Maryland .......... 6 8 9 9 9 8 6 6 | 5 6 | 6 6 6
Massachusetts .... 8 14 17 13 13 12 10 II | 10 IT 12 13 14
Michigan ... >. ..... EL el Sl he FR I SB 1 3 4 | 6 9 II 12 12
Minnesota... oil. ni na es aT a eae i 2 | 2 | 3 5 mal 9
Mississippl. ooo la ee asl 1 1 2 4 5 | 51 6 7 74 8
Missouri wna median sae 1 2 5 7 9 394 15 | 16
Montana... ..... 0.0 ae ne es. be [aan ERASE I I I
Nebraska... Orson niin sate nollie nan va le, | I | 3 6 6
Nevada............. field ie pet ie ecata frraninios RSs wc Bra tne BAREIS Cl RR : 1 | 1 | I I 3
New Hampshire... 3 4 5 6 6 5 | 4 3 3 5 2 2 2
New Jersey......... 4 5 | 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 7 7 8 10
New York... ..... 6 10. = 17 27 34 40 34 33 3I 33 34 34 37
North Carolina..... 5 10 12 13 13 13 9 8 7 8 9 9 10
North Dakota oc. .b be nlf widen caf rhea earns delovi Gear fain I 1 2
Ohlone oa dnnaiiong I 6 14 19 21 21 19 20 21 21 21
Oklahoma... ols Berd Sis er CB Dr inal IN Sto eee Se La eR lle Be 5
Oregon... 0 i aT eR a eae a re TRE I I I I 2 2
Pennsylvania ...... 8 3] 18 23 26 28 |= aq 25 24 27 28 30 32
RhodeIsland.......| I 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
South Carolina.....| 5 6 8 9 9 9 4] 6 4 5 7 7 7
South Dakota. ..... A Le I Cl Se te CR ona a fons 2 2 2
Fennessee....’..... TL I 3 6 9 13 1I 10 8: no 10 10 10
Mewas ~. on ans aah Naan as 2 2 46 II 13 16
Utaly oon Sn YSN EE ST en We HARE nS Re a ES ee ea I I
Vermont .-......... (arenas 2 4 6 5 5 | 4 3 3 | 3 2 2 2
Virginia. io... 0s |: 70 19 22 23 22 21-015 13 11 | of 10 10 10
Washington. ....... fe Lis rn Se ER ee Err ee bs I 2 3
. West Virginia...:.. LLSe See Wen ena ae bene en Teon abe re) 3 4 4 | 5
Wisconsin. ......... a lor read Paiste A ree EE he 2 3 6 | 8 9 10 II
Wyoming -......... FRR Eee SE el ee EEE] EEE ER ia I I I
; |
Total... | 65 | 106 142 | 136: erg i 2aah 932 (F237 | “243 | 203: 232.0" 357 291
1
The following representation was added after the several census apportionments indicated
aud is included in the above table: First—Tennessee, 1. Second—Ohio, 1. Third—Alabama, 1;
Illinois, 1; Indiana, 1; I,ouisiana, 1; Maine, 7; Mississippi, I. Fifth—Arkansas, 1; Michigan, 1.
Sixth—California, 2; Florida, 1; Iowa, 2; Texas, 2; Wisconsin, 2. Seventh—Massachusetts, 1; Minne-
sota, 2; Oregon, I. Fighth— —Tllinois, 1; Towa, I; Kentucky, 1 ; Minnesota, 1; Nebraska, 1; "Nevada, 1;
Ohio, I; Pennsylvania, 1; Rhode Island, 3 Vermont, 1. Ninth—Alabama, I; Colorado, I; Florida, I;
Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; New Hampshire, 1; New York, 1; Pennsylvania, I; Tennessee, 1; Ver-
mont, I. Tenth—Idaho, 1; Montana, 1; North Dakota, 1; South Dakota, 2; Washington, I; Wyom-
ing, I. Eleventh—Utah, 1. Twelfth—Oklahoma, 5.
“ Lge o ed = goss -
SESSIONS OF CONGRESS.
Ses- Re i Length : 3 i Congress. Sion. Date of beginning. Date of adjournment. lin days. a President pro tempore of the Senate. Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Rivet omonba vin 1 bMarch 4, 1789 ......| September 29, 1789. ..| 210 |¢ John Langdon, of New Hampshire ........ | Frederick A. Muhlenburg, of Pennsylvania,
2 | January 4, 1700". ...} "August 12, 1790. .... .. DDT [ras mioiath ai Wises) slatuie eruie Lp xlo su ie 6 bl asety lela are oc 0 dare be |
December 6, 1790. ..| March 3, 1791........ al oS RR i CS am La adie tema flee]
Second ..L lo. 1 |iOctoberia4, 170... .[ May:8, 1702... ..... 197.| Richard Henry Lee, of Virginia............ | Jonathan Trumbull, of Connecticut.
2 | November 5,'1792...{ March 2, 1793 ........ yo MRE GA De SER a a SS SAO
Third oc ns 1. Decemberia 1703. ..[ June 9, 1704 loi. 0 190 | Ralph Izard, of South Carolina............. | Frederick A. Muhlenburg, of Pennsylvania.
2 | November 3,1794...1 March 3, 17095.... .... 121 | Samuel Livermore, of New Hampshire... .
Fourth oa. a 1: 1"Decemberi7, 1705 ...\ June 1,.1766 .......... 177 | Henry Tazewell, of Virginia .............. Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey.
2. "December 5, 1796... .|i March 3, 1797......... BO ove i Finis aise maloflus wider ue 0s Lidl ielurn ime nie ala a ee os wiv
Piffh iso on, A May 15,3797 .-- «2. July 10,1797... on Loui 57 | William Bingham, of Pennsylvania........ Do.
2 | November 18,1797... July 16, 1798.......... [ 246 | William Bradford, of Rhode Island ........ |
31 December 3, 1793... .|iMarch 3, 1799... ... .\.. ot :|. John Fawrence, of New York .............. | George Dent, of Maryland, pro tempore.
. Jacob Read, of South Carolina.............. | George Dent, of Maryland.
Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts....|
Sixth. lvl 1 {'December2, 1799... May 14,1800 .......".. 164 | Samuel Livermore, of New Hampshire... . Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts.
2 | November 17,180c..| March 3,1801......... 107: | Uriah Tracy, of Connecticut. ...............
James Hillhouse, of Connecticut............ |
John E. Howard, of Maryland ............. |
Seventh... ....... 1: December 7, 1801... May 3, 1802........... 148 | Abraham Baldwin, of Georgia ............. | Nathaniel Macon, of North Carolina.
2 | December 6, 1802... March 3, 1803. ........| 88 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont........... | ?
RBighth i. oo. 0 1 | October 17.1803... March 27, 1804........ 163 | John Brown, of Bentucky..................] Do.
2 | November is, 1804... March 3, 1805... ....... 119 | Jesse Franklin, of North Carolina .........
Joseph Anderson, of Tennessee............. |
Ninth .o0 0a. 1} December 2, 1805... .|' April 21, 1806... ..... . 141 | Samuel Smith, of Maryland ................ Do.
2 | December 1, 1806...) March 3, 1807....... ; OZ aR i a a I Re ae
Tenth .............| 1 /cOctober 16, 1807 ....] Aprilias, 1808.....L... | 182 '| Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont ........... Joseph B. Varnum, of Massachusetts.
2 | November 7, 1808...| March 3, 1809.........| 117 | John Milledge, of Georgia................... |
Rleventhi.....:.... 1] May 221809... .....] June 28, 1809. ........% | 38 | Andrew Gregg, of Pennsylvania ........... Do.
? | November 27, 1809. | Mayr, 1810, hs 156 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina...........
3 | December 3, 1810...| March 3, 181I........ or | John Pope, of Kentucky. iu tl. Dib ceen |
Twelfth........... 1 [November a, 1811.. | July 6.1812... .......... 245 | William H. Crawford, of Georgia .......... Henry Clay, of Kentucky.
2 | November 2, 1812... March 3, 1813......... Ta a er Shae de Se ERR Lr
Thirteenth........ LE May 24,3813... .. LL lAngust 2, 1813... 71 | Joseph B. Varnum, of Massachusetts. .......| Do.
2 (“December 6, 1813...{ April 18,1814........ | 134 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina........... | dT,angdon Cheeves, of South Carolina.
V8 | September 19, 1814". March 3, 1815... ...... | a HR SE RRR
a Until within recent years the appointment or election of a President pro tempore was held by the Senate to be for the occasion only, so that more than one
appears in several sessions and in others none were chosen. ' Since March 12, 1890, they have served until ‘‘ the Senate otherwise ordered.”
bThe Constitution (Art. I, sec. 4) provided that the Congress should assemble March 4, 1789, and thereafter ‘in every year * * * on the first Monday in
December, unless they shall by law appoint a different day.” Up to, and including, May 20, 1820, eighteen acts were passed providing for the meeting of Congress on
other days in the year. Since that year Congress has met regularly on the first Monday in December. The first and second sessions of the First Congress were held in
New York; subsequently, until the second session of the Sixth Congress, Philadelphia was the meeting place; since then Congress has convened in Washington.
¢ Elected to count the vote for President and Vice-President, which was done April 6, 1789, a quorum of the Senate then appearing for the first time.
Vice-President, appeared April 21, 1789, and took his seat as President of the Senate.
d Elected Speaker, vice Henry Clay, who resigned January 19, 1814.
John Adams,
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SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued.
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| Ses- Congress. : » sion.
Fourteenth.......: |
Fifteenth... .......
Sixteenth... 0. |
Seventeenth... ....
Bighteenth........
Nineteenth .......
Twentieth .......
Twenty-first .. ....
Twenty-second ...
Twenty-third .....
Twenty-fourth. ...
Twenty-fifth......
Twenty-sixth . ...
Twenty-seventh ..
Twenty-eighth ...
Twenty-ninth.....
Thirtieth........
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Thirty-fourth'. ...
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Date of beginning. | Date of adjournment. oi iy President pro tempore of the Senate. Speaker of the House of Representatives.
|
December 4, 1815... April 29, 1816.... .... 148 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina........... Henry Clay, of Kentucky.
December 2, 1816... Marchi3, 1817... .... gaunt TAs A er SRE
December 1, 1817....| April 20,1818... io. 141 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina........... Do.
November 16, 1818. .| March 3, 1819......... 108 | James Barbour, of Virginia. ................
December 6, 1819... May 15,1820. ..... i" 162 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina..... ..... Do.
November 18, 1820..| March 3, 1821......... 7577) pel va Ame EAR a ee ais A a TR A aJohn W. Taylor, of New York.
December 3,:182r...] May 38,1822... ......%. 157 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina........... Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia.
December 2, 1822... March 3, 1823 G2 EA re a a Ds
December 1, 1823... May 27, 1824. ......... 178 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina........... Henry Clay, of Kentucky.
December 6, 1824... March 3, 1825.......... Re BN Ee Er SL GL SE I el
December 5, 1823... May 22,1826... ....... 169 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina... ........ John W. Taylor, of New York.
December 4.1826... March 3,1827........ LH Bh ee eS i RR SH Re
December 3, 1827... May 26, 1828.......... 175 |. Samuel Smith, of Maryland................ Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia.
December 1, 1828... March 3,1829......... OR i SA a He a be em SR SS,
December 7, 1829... Maya, 1830.........+ Fo ER LR IR A DS EL RL ER Do.
December 6, 1830... .[ March 3, I183T......... 88 | Littleton Waller Tazewell, of Virginia.....
December 5,1831 I Julyi16, 1832. ........ - BO ee A a et i Do.
December 2,1832 ....[" March 2, 1833... ........ 91 | Hugh Lawson White, of Tennessee ........
December 2,1835 ..-| June 30,3834... ..... ... 211 | George Poindexter, of Mississippi ......... Do.
December 1, 1834 ...|: March 3, 1835......... 93. 1xJohn Tyler, of Virginia... .... ..... cov. bJohn Bell, of Tennessee.
December 7, 18350... [July 4,.1836 .... no 0. i A po a OS STR LI Ee Se James K. Polk, of Tennessee.
December 5,1836...| March 3, 1837.... -..-- 89 | William R. King, of:Alabama:........0.....
September 4, 1837 ..| October 16, 1837 ...... 23 lions doa ee Do.
December 4,1837 -..{ July 0, 1838 ............ 218 foe AO SL SE SS
December 3, 1338... [iMarch 3, 1839. ..-. .... CR a SL RE SE Gi,
December 2, 1839. July 31, 1840 i 235 an, RNR SSSR a BS SSE a Robert M. T. Hunter, of Virginia.
December 7, 1840... “March 3, 1841... ..7..% TR CE Cl I a i aay BL pe SCLC Wr Mate
May 31,7 3841. .. . ee September 13, 1841 ... 106 | Samuel I,. Southard, of New Jersey ........ John White, of Kentucky.
December 6, 1841...| August 31,1842 ....... 269 | Willie P. Mangum, of North Carolina......
December 5, 1842... "March 3, 1843 ...."...... Boy [ss a RR AA a
December4, 1843... [i June 7, 1844... ....... 196 John W. Jones, of Virginia.
December 2, 1844... "March 3, 1845. ....... RR eR I en DE SG a
December 1, 1845.. | August 10, 1846....... 253 | David R. Atchison, of Missouri............. John W. Davis, of Indiana.
December 7, 1846. March 3, 1847... =. .- pd Wr CEE A Eade Se or Par eal SR Fe Bn SP
December 6, 1847. August sg, 1848... .. 254 [ahi do Eat So at TR Be se Sea Robert C. Winthrop, of Massachusetts.
December 4, 1848. March 3, 18407... AE SL TR PN |
December 3, 1849. September 30, 1850... OZ Ve a Sy SN RE a RS re | Howell Cobb, of Georgia.
William R. King, of Alabama. .............
December 2, 1850 March 3, 185%... Ge a i i
December 1, 1851...| August ar, 1852 ...... PPE Ce Re Ce A inn Boyd efi Renthicky.
December 6, 1852.. .| March 3, 1853 ........ 88 Davig R. Atchison, of Missouri ............
December 5, 1853... August 7, 1854......... 246 Rd Yr a Rt Ser re i eR | Do.
December 4, 1854...| March 3; 1855........% 90 Jesse D. Bright, of Indiana... oasis, |
December 3, 1855... August 18, 1856 ....... 260 de a bela Ce TR | Nathaniel P. Banks, of Massachusetts.
August 21, 1856-..... ‘August 30, 1856 ....... 10 | Shins E. Stuart, of Michigan..............|
December 1, 1856....] March 3,1857......... 93 | James M. Mason, of Virginia ERAT Ld J
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Thirty-ffth ....-.. December 7, 1857 ..
December 6, 1858...
December 5, 1859... Thirty-sixth ......
December 3, 1860... Wk
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Thirty-seventh.... July 4, 1861... -
. December 2, 1861...
December 1, A
Thirty-eighth...... December 7, 1863 ...
December 5,1864 ...
December 4, 1865 .. .
December 3, 1866 ...
¢March 4, 1867.......
dDecember 2, 1867 ...
December 7, 1868 ...
March 4, 1869.......
December 6, 1869 .. .
December 5, 1870...
March 4, 1871...0....
December 4, 1871 ..
December 2, 1872. .
December 1, 1873...
December 7, 1874..
Thirty-ninth......|
Fortjeth wi... 0.0
Forty-first.........
Forty-second...... !
Forty-third .......!
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Forty-fourth ...... ! December 6, 1875 ...
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Forty-Afth ........ 1: | October is, 1877"...
2 | December 3, 1877...
: 3 | December 2, 1878...
Forty-sixth........ 1 | March 18, 1879......
? | December 1,1879...
3 | December 6, 1880...
Forty-seventh..... 1 | December 35,1881...
2 | December 4,1382....
Forty-eighth......| 1 | December 3,1883...
2 | December, 1884...
December 4, 1876... |
J‘ June 14, 1858........
March 3,1859 ......:
June 25,1360... 2
March 3, 1361.......
August 6, 1361........
July x7, 1862. 5.
March 3, 1563-.....-..
Inly 4,.3564 ....
A805 ek
July 28, 1866+... ...
March
March 2, 1867.
December 2 1867 . ee :
November 10, 1868. .
March 3, 1900. 5]
Aprilzz, 1869... .
July’ 15, 38705... vies
March 3, 187%... .-...
May 27, 1371... .....
June 10,1872. ......,
March 3,1873......0..
June 23,1874... ......
March 3, 1875
August 15, 1876 .....
March 3, 3877. =...
December 3, 1877...
Juneizo 1878...
SOIR Ll
July:1, 1879... .«.. =
June 16,1880... ...%.
March 3, 1881... ....
August 8,1882 ...... |
March
Marchz, 1383. ......
July 71834... 0...
March 3, 1885......."
189
93
Thomas J. Buck, of Texas... ...iiiivien ess
Benjamin Fitzpatrick, of Alabama ......... |
Jesse D.: Bright, ‘of Indiana... .....o0.. 0
Solomon Foot, of Vermont... ...............
Lafayette S. Foster, of Connecticut...
Benjamin F. Wade, of Ohio ..................
Honey B. Anthony, of Rhode Island ..,....
Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan ............
ass nH futinan, of Oo. 111 LL
“Thomas F. Bayard, of Delaware ...........
David Davister IIHnols.. ih. hn
George F. Edmunds, of Vermont .........
do
a Elected Speaker November 15, 1820, vice Henry Clay, who resigned October 28, 1820.
b Elected Speaker June 2, 1834, vice Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, resigned.
¢ There were recesses in this session from Saturday, March 30, to W ednesday, July 1, and from Saturday, July 20, to Thursday, November 21.
d’There were recesses in this session from Monday, July 27, to Monday, September 21, to Friday, October 6, and to Tuesday November ro.
acted subsequent to July 27.
e Hlected Speaker March 3, 1869, and served one day.
f Died August 19, 1876.
g Appointed Speaker pro tempore February 17, May 12, June Iq.
h Appointed Speaker pro tempore June 4.
William Pennington, of New Jersey.
Galusha A. Grow, of Pennsylvania.
Schuyler Colfax, of Indiana.
Do.
Do.
e¢ Theodore M. Pomeroy, of New York.
James G. Blaine, of Maine.
Do.
Do.
7 Michael C. Kerr, of Indiana.
g Samuel S. Cox, of New York, pro tempore.
h Milton Sayler, of Ohio, pro tempore.
Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania.
Do. /
Do.
J. Warren Keifer, of Ohio.
John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky.
No business was trans-
SUO0ISSIS' :
'$S245107)
Jo
Lot
SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued. =
% oo
|
Congress. hin Date of beginning. Date of adjournment. JE President pro tempore of the Senate. Speaker of the House of Representatives.
i
Forty-ninth........ 1 | December 7, 1885...| August 5, 1886........ | 242: | John Sherman;of Ohio.s i in... | John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky.
2. { December 6, 1386... March 3,1887......... 88 | John J. Ingalls, of Kansas ..................
Fiftlethi..qo..- os, 1 | December 5, 1887... October 20, 1888 ...... BE i GR ER EW | Do.
; & | December 3, 3833....["March 2, 1389...5... Ea i Ls lr A A
Fifty-first.......... 1. December 2,'18%9...l October 1,/1500 ....... 304. John J. Ingalls; of Kansas..............0. | Thomas B. Reed, of Maine.
2 | December 1, 1890."..| March 3, 18Sor......... 93 | Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska .......!
Fifty-second ...... 2 | December 7, 1801...| Augusts, 1892 ........ 25L ia AO SE ea Charles F. Crisp, of Georgia.
1 | December 5, 1892... March 3, 1893..... Ree 89.1‘ Isham' G. Harris, of Tennessee, ...... ......,
Fifty-third'........ 1 | August 7, 1893......| November 3, 1893..... 8g. dori ie ai el Se a Sd Do.
2 | December 4, 1893...] August 28, 1894 ....... | 208: 00 rin Ce CR I ISCO UE ee Rl ed
3°! December 3, 1894... | Marchi 2,'1805........" | go | Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina .... .. .|
| | Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee ........ .... oN
Fifty-fourth.......| 1 | December 2, 1895... June 11,1806. ......... | 193 Willinm P. Frye, of Maine... ..............., Thomas B. Reed, of Maine. S
| 2 | December 7, 18¢6...| March 3, 1897......... EA Es See Sa Re ER ee a RI 0x
Fifey-fifth........ | 1. | March 15,1807..." Fully 24. 1807000 LL 131 | William P. Prye, of Maine............:.... Do. ~
y 2 | December 651807...) July 871808... i... a La CR eI ine : 3
3 | December 5, 1898...| March 3, 1899......... Sol i ne ET SE a Cl A NS es e
Fifty-sixth 0... LY | December 4,1809.. .[ June 7, 1900" ......t oy. 136 | William P. Frye, of Maine. ................. | David B. Henderson, of Iowa. NS
2 | December 3, 1900...| March 2, 1901......... | rn EOE Re SG I ee Pe I
Fifty-seventh ..... [<1] December 2, 1901 ...] July 1,1902 . .. 0a. 212 | Willlam''P, Frye, of Maine... ............... Do. tN
: [2 | December 7902 ...| March 33903... ..... Oa Re A CS a Oh hs
Fifty-eighth.......| 1 | November 9, 1903...| December 7, 1903 .... . 29: | WilllamP. Frye, of Maine... to... 0.00 | Joseph G. Cannon, of Illinois. N
| 2/| December 7,1903 ...] April 28,1904 ......... RE Si eR rl SD Cal | No
| 3 | December 5,1904 ...| March 3, 1905. ....... Bou A a A eR 5;
Fifty-ninth........ i |" December 4, 1905... June 30, 1000... ..... 200| William P. Frye, of Maine................. Do. S
2.1 December 3, 1906...{ March 2, 1007-.......- 90 eH a arch a Sa IN
Sixtieth wi io 1 December 2, 1007. ..[iMay 30, 1005. ......... | 137. William P. Prye, of Maine.....v........0... Do. Q
| 2 | December 7, 1908. . i March's, 1909... i 87a Aoi a SL i Do. =
Sessions of Congress. 169
SPECIAL, SESSIONS OF THE SENATE.
Year. Date of beginning. Date of adjournment.
SEERA : 50 8 to
01. a an | Friday, Mareh 4. o.oo | Friday, March 4.
X70%8 corse dn ees | Monday, March 4 ............ | Monday, March 4.
BJO5 hn I Monday, June 8S... ............ | Friday, June 26.
707 ent | Saturday, March 4... 0.0... Saturday, March 4.
TOR sa Tuesday, July ay... sonia Thursday, July 19.
ISO en Shee | Wednesday, March 4 ......... Thursday, March 5.
1800. ve | Saturday, March 4. .... 5... .. .. Tuesday, March 7.
Ee Sa li Briday, Marchiq........ Say Wednesday, March g,
a se | Wednesday, March 4 ......... Tuesday, March 17.
Re a (Saturday, Marcha. .......... Friday, March 10.
84. Een | Thursday, Marchgq =... Monday, March 15.
134% ne | Tuesday, Marchi4............ Thursday, March 20.
BATA Monday, March's... 5... 00. Friday, March 23.
ESSE Lr een | “Puesday, Mareli 4 ............ Thursday, March 13.
IS | Yriday, March 4... 2.0. 0. Monday, April 11.
ISS vs ai | Wednesday, March 4... 70. Saturday, March 14.
1858 “Tuesday, Tune 15.7... 05 0. Wednesday, June 16.
¥850 a | Briday, Marchq. ... =... Thursday, March 10.
1860. an Tuesday, June 26... ..... ....| Thursday, June 28.
IGT: a Monday, Marchq .......... 5 Thursday, March 28.
¥SBy. ha Wednesday, March 4 ......... Saturday, March 14.
E305. en Saturday, March 4..0......... Saturday, March 11.
13670 Monday; Apriliz. oo. Saturday, April 20.
1360. oa Monday, Aprilaz... 2... Thursday, April 22.
EST nea Wednesday, May 10 :......... Saturday, May 27.
a ee Tuesday, March 4 .... 0... Wednesday, March 26.
IST vi a, Buiday;Marchs: i. 00.0. Wednesday, March 24.
1877 mea Monday, March 5 oo... Saturday, March 17.
ISBT. us Priday, March 4s... ..... 0... Friday, May 20.
Monday, October 1o........... Saturday, October 29.
1885. aa Wednesday, March 4 .......... Thursday, April 2.
188g. vans imran Monday, March 4 ............ Tuesday, April 2.
S08 ang. Saturday, March a4... ..... Friday, April 14.
rete SO EE Thursday, March 4........... Wednesday, March 10.
LOOT ans Monday, March 4... .......... Saturday, March 9.
T0038 re Thursday, Marchs....;.. .. Thursday, March 19.
BOOS rn sry I Saturday, March 4..%......... Saturday, March 18.
COURT OF IMPEACHMENT.
The Senate has sat as a Court of Impeachment in the cases of the following accused
officials, with the result stated and for the periods named:
WILLIAM BLOUNT, a Senator of the United States from Tennessee; charges
dismissed for want of jurisdiction, he having previously resigned; Monday, Decem-
ber 17, 1798, to Monday, January 14, 1799.
JOHN PICKERING, judge of the United States district court for the district of
New Hampshire; removed from office; Thursday, March 3, 1803, to Monday, March
12, 1304.
SAMUEL CHASE, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States;
acquitted; Friday, November 30, 1804, to March 1, 1805.
JAMES H. PECK, judge of the United States district court for the district of
Missouri; acquitted; Monday, April 26, 1830, to Monday, January 31, 1831.
WEST H. HUMPHREYS, judge of the United States district court for the middle,
eastern, and western districts of Tennessee; removed from office; Wednesday, May
7, 1862, to Thursday, June 26, 1862.
ANDREW JOHNSON, President of the United States; acquitted; Tuesday, Feb-
ruary 25, 1868, to Tuesday, May 26, 1868.
WILLIAM W. BELKNAP, Secretary of War; acquitted; Friday, March 3, 1876,
to Tuesday, August 1, 1876.
CHARLES SWAYNE, judge of the United States district court for the northern
district of Florida; acquitted; Wednesday, December 14, 1904, to Monday, February
27, 1905.
170 Congressional Directory.
PRESIDENTS AND VICE-PRESIDENTS AND THE. CON-
GRESSES COINCIDENT WITH THEIR TERMS.
Presidents.
George Washington ..... ..|
ohn Adams... cian.
homas Jefferson...........
Thomas Jefferson..... .....
James Madison:.............
James Madison .............
James MonBTOE:. . enh caval,
John Quincy Adams
Andrew Jackson ............|
Andrew Jackson............
Marxtin Van Buren... .....:
William Henry Harrison .. .|
John i lyler. rr hee ee ae ses
James I. ‘Polk’... ne.
Zacha
Millard
Franklin Plerce.: .... ...s
James Buchanan............
Abraham Lincoln... ...&
Abraham Lincoln...........
Andrew Johnson............
Ulysses S: Grant.:..........
Ulysses'S. Grant............
Rutherford B. Hayes .......
James A, Garfield. .... 0.
Chester A. Arthurs: 0.0
Grover Cleveland.........5.
Benjamin Harrison.........
Grover Cleveland... ......
William McKinley .........
William McKinley
Theodore Roosevelt ........
‘Theodore Roosevelt ........
Taylor. ii. i. |
Fillmore... L000, EA on ATE SR NIE ae
Vice-Presidents.
John Adame. oils man
Thomas Jefferson... .. cos
Aaron Burr.. Siokioate
George Clinton. :
Seorge Clinton (died Apr il
20, 1812).
Elbridge Gerry
Daniel D. Tompkins.......
John C. Calhoun:...........
John €. Calhoun...........
Martin Van Buren.........
Richard M. Johnson.......
JohntByler.. we,
George M. Dallas..........
Millard Fillmore ..........
William B. King
Apr. 18, 1853).
John C. Breckenridge PE
Hannibal Hamlin..........
Andrew Johnson. .........
Schuyler Colfax oo.
Henry Wilson (died Nov.
22, 1875).
William A. Wheeler.......
Chester A, Arthur... oo.
Thomas A. Hendricks
(died Nov. 25, 1885).
TeviP, Morion.............
Adlai E. Stevenson . A
Garret A. Hobart (died
Nov. 21, 1899).
Theodore Roosevelt... .....
(died
Service. | Congresses.
30, 178g-Mar.
4, 1797-Mar.
4, 1801-Mar.
4, 1805-Mar.
4, 180g-Mar.
4,1813-Mar.
4, 1817-Mar.
4, 1825-Mar.
4, 1829-Mar.
4, 1833-Mar.
4, 1837-Mar.
4, I841-Apr.
6, 1841-Mar.
4, 1845-Mar.
5, 1849-July
10, 1850-Mar.
4, 1853-Mar.
4, 1857-Mar.
4, 1861-Mar.
3, I1865-Apr.
. 15, 1865-Mar.
4, 1869-Mar.
4, 1873-Mar.
4, 1877-Mar.
4, 1881-Sept.
. 20, 1881-Mar.
4, 1885-Mar.
4, 1889-Mar.
4, 1893—-Mar.
4, 1897-Mar.
4, 1901-Sept.
. 14, 1goI-Mar.
4, 1905~
I4, IQOT
3, 1905
CE
——.
Senate Commeltees. I71
COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE.
STANDING COMMITTEES.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. | Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi.
Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. | F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina.
Jonathan ‘P. Dolliver, of Iowa. | Jolin H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. | Tom. P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
George C. Perkins, of California.
Chester I. Long, of Kansas.
Elmer J. Burkett, of Nebraska. |
Appropriations.
J Henry M. Teller, of Colorado.
Eugene Hale, of Maine. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina.
Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. John W. Daniel, of Virginia.
George C. Perkins, of California. Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia.
Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana.
Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire.
Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia
James A. Hemenway, of Indiana.
Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate.
John Kean, of New Jersey. | Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi.
Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas.
Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado.
Canadian Relations.
W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina,
Eugene Hale, of Maine. ; Murphy J. Foster, of Iouisiana.
Morgan G. Bulkeley, of Connecticut. Tom. P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
Samuel H. Piles, of Washington. | John Walter Smith, of Maryland.
Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. |
Census.
Chester I. Long, of Kansas. Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana.
Eugene Hale, of Maine. | James P. Taliaferro, of Florida.
Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. | Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas.
Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois. | Frank B. Gary, of South Carolina.
Thomas H. Carter, of Montana.
Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin.
Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado.
Civil Service and Retvenchment.
George C. Perkins, of California. | Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi.
Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas.
Thomas C. Platt, of New York. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland.
Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma.
Norris Brown, of Nebraska. |
172 Congressional Directory.
Claims.
Charles W. Fulton, of Oregon.
John Kean, of New Jersey.
Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota.
Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire.
Reed Smoot, of Utah.
James A. Hemenway, of Indiana.
Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin.
William E. Borah, of Idaho.
Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado.
Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia.
Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina.
James B. Frazier, of Tennessee.
Jeff Davis, of Arkansas.
Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky.
Coast and Insular Survey.
Samuel H. Piles, of Washington.
Frank P. Flint, of California.
George Sutherland, of Utah.
Morgan G. Bulkeley, of Connecticut.
Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware.
Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia.
Charles A. Culberson, of Texas.
Jeff Davis, of Arkansas.
| John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
Coast Defenses.
George S. Nixon, of Nevada.
Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania.
Levi Ankeny, of Washington.
Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho.
Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware.
Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon.
| James P. Taliaferro, of Florida.
Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia.
. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina.
Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana.
John Walter Smith, of Maryland.
Commerce.
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.
Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois.
Samuel H. Piles, of Washington.
W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts.
William Alden Smith, of Michigan.
| Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia.
| William J. Stone, of Missouri.
F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina.
Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi.
James P. Clarke, of Arkansas.
Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada.
Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia.
Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi.
Frank B. Gary, of South Carolina.
| Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island.
' Norris Brown, of Nebraska.
| Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware.
Cuban Relations.
Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire.
Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island.
Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota.
Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota.
Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana.
Morgan G. Bulkeley, of Connecticut.
Charles Curtis, of Kansas.
James P. Taliaferro, of Florida.
- F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina.
| Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada.
j | William J. Stone, of Missouri.
|
| I
District of Columbia.
Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire.
Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota.
William P. Dillingham, of Vermont.
Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia.
Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota.
Chester I. Loong, of Kansas.
Elmer J. Burkett, of Nebraska.
Thomas H. Carter, of Montana.
| Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia.
| Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky.
Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama.
William H. Milton, of Florida.
John Walter Smith, of Maryland.
Senate Committees. Is
Education
Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa.
Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania.
Frank P. Flint, of California.
Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut.
William FE. Borah, of Idaho.
and Labor.
| John W. Daniel, of Virginia.
Isidor Rayner, of Maryland.
| Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky.
| John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
Engrossed Bills.
Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota.
| Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts.
Enrolled Bills.
Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois.
Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin.
| Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana.
Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.
Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana.
W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts.
George S. Nixon, of Nevada.
Samuel H. Piles, of Washington.
Charles A. Culberson, of Texas.
F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina.
James B. McCreary, of Kentucky.
Expenditures in the Department of State.
Thomas H. Carter, of Montana.
Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania.
Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois.
Francie E. Warren, of Wyoming.
Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi.
William J. Stone, of Missouri.
James B. Frazier, of Tennessee.
Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia.
Finance.
Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island.
Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan.
Thomas C. Platt, of New York.
Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota.
Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania.
Fugene Hale, of Maine.
Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois.
John W. Daniel, of Virginia.
Henry M. Teller, of Colorado.
Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi.
Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas.
James P. Taliaferro, of Florida.
Fisheries.
Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon.
George C. Perkins, of California.
Morgan G. Bulkeley, of Connecticut.
Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey.
| Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana.
Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas.
Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina.
William H. Milton, of Florida.
I
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 Kean, of New Jersey.
Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana.
Thomas H. Carter, of Montana.
Forest Reservations and
Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut.
Chauncey M. Depew, of New York.
George C. Perkins, of California.
Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota.
Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire.
Levi Ankeny, of Washington.
Reed Smoot, of Utah.
66525—60-2—2D ED——I3
Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia.
Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi.
James B. McCreary, of Kentucky.
James B. Frazier, of Tennessee.
William J. Stone, of Missouri .
the Protection of Game.
Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina,
Tee S. Overman, of North Carolina.
Robert I,. Taylor, of Tennessee.
4 Congressional Directory.
Geological Survey.
Frank P. Flint, of California.
Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia.
Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho.
Elmer J. Burkett, of Nebraska.
Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi.
Isidor Rayner, of Maryland.
Henry M. Teller, of Colorado.
Immigration.
William P. Dillingham, of Vermont.
Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts.
Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania.
Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho.
Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin.
Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey.
| Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi.
Jeff Davis, of Arkansas.
Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky.
Tom. P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
Frank B. Gary, of South Carolina.
Indian Affairs.
Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota.
Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota.
Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota.
George Sutherland, of Utah. :
Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut.
Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin.
Charles Curtis, of Kansas.
Norris Brown, of Nebraska.
Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana.
William J. Stone, of Missouri.
Jeff Davis, of Arkansas.
Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky.
Robert I,. Taylor, of Tennessee.
Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma.
John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
Indian Depredations.
Charles Curtis, of Kansas.
Charles Dick, of Ohio.
William P. Dillingham, of Vermont.
Thomas C. Platt, of New York.
James A. Hemenway, of Indiana.
Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana.
Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia.
Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi.
Jeff Davis, of Arkansas.
Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama.
Robert I.. Owen, of Oklahoma.
Interoceanic Canals.
Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota.
Thomas C. Platt, of New York.
Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois.
Levi Ankeny, of Washington.
Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota.
Frank P. Flint, of California.
Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut.
James P. Taliaferro, of Florida.
F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina.
Charles A. Culberson, of Texas.
Robert I. Taylor, of Tennessee.
Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama.
|
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.
W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts.
Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi.
Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana.
Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada.
Robert I,. Taylor, of Tennessee.
Irrigation.
Levi Ankeny, of Washington.
Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming.
Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. | Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina.
Thomas H. Carter, of Montana.
Frank P. Flint, of California.
George S. Nixon, of Nevada.
George Sutherland, of Utah.
William E. Borah, of Idaho.
| Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas.
| Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada.
| Tom. P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
| John Walter Smith, of Maryland.
| |
| Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina.
\
|
Senate Committees.
Judiciary.
Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming.
Knute Nelson, of Minnesota.
Chauncey M. Depew, of New York.
Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio.
William P. Dillingham, of Vermont.
Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota.
Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania.
Charles W. Fulton, of Oregon.
Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia.
Charles A. Culberson, of Texas.
James P. Clarke, of Arkansas.
Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina.
Isidor Rayner, of Maryland
Library.
George Peabody Wetmore, of Rhode | John W. Daniel, of Virginia.
Island.
Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota.
Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey.
-| Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada.
Manufactures.
Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho.
Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire.
Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware.
Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado.
Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia.
James B. Frazier, of Tennessee.
Frank B. Gary, of South Carolina.
Military Affairs.
Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming.
Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia.
Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio.
Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts.
James A. Hemenway, of Indiana.
Morgan G. Bulkeley, of Connecticut.
William Warner, of Missouri.
Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware.
James P. Taliaferro, of Florida.
Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana.
Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina.
James B. Frazier, of Tennessee.
James B. McCreary, of Kentucky.
Mines and Mining.
Charles Dick, of Ohio.
Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia.
Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho.
George S. Nixon, of Nevada.
George Sutherland, of Utah.
Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina.
Henry M. Teller, of Colorado.
Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama.
Tom. P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
Mississippi River and its Tributaries.
William Warner, of Missouri.
Knute Nelson, of Minnesota.
Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa.
Norris Brown, of Nebraska.
Samuel D. McEnery, of Iouisiana.
Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi.
Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma.
Naval Affairs.
Eugene Hale, of Maine.
George C. Perkins, of California.
Thomas C. Platt, of New York.
Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania.
Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire.
Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan.
Charles Dick, of Ohio.
Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina.
Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia.
Samuel D. McEunery, of Iouisiana.
John Walter Smith, of Maryland.
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.
Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio.
Chauncey M. Depew, of New York.
Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota.
Frank P. Flint, of California.
Samuel H. Piles, of Washington.
William Warner, of Missouri.
Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware.
Isidor Rayner, of Maryland.
James P. Clarke, of Arkansas.
Robert I.. Owen, of Oklahoma.
William H, Milton, of Florida.
I75
176 Congressional Directory.
Pacific Railroads.
Elmer J. Burkett, of Nebraska.
William P. Frye, of Maine.
William Alden Smith, of Michigan.
Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin.
Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado.
James P. Taliaferro, of Florida.
James B. McCreary, of Kentucky.
Tom. P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
Frank B. Gary, of South Carolina.
Patents.
Reed Smoot, of Utah.
Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota.
Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota.
Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut.
| Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana.
| Frank B. Gary, of South Carolina.
| William H. Milton, of Florida.
Pensions.
Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota.
Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia.
Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire.
Reed Smoot, of Utah.
Samuel H. Piles, of Washington.
Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin.
Charles Curtis, of Kansas.
William Alden Smith, of Michigan.
James P. Taliaferro, of Florida.
Henry M. Teller, of Colorado.
James B. McCreary, of Kentucky.
Robert I,. Taylor, of Tennessee.
Tom. P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
Philippines.
Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts.
Eugene Hale, of Maine.
Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana.
Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan.
Chester I. Long, of Kansas.
Charles Dick, of Ohio.
George S. Nixon, of Nevada.
Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut.
Charles A. Culberson, of Texas.
Henry M. Teller, of Colorado.
Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada.
Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama.
Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania.
Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa.
Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan.
Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia.
W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts.
Thomas H. Carter, of Montana.
Charles Dick, of Ohio.
Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon.
Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado.
Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia.
James P. Taliaferro, of Florida.
F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina,
Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma.
John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
Printing.
Thomas C. Platt, of New York.
- Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia
| William H. Milton, of Florida.
Private Land Claims.
_ Henry M. Teller, of Colorado.
Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana.
Jeff Davis, of Arkansas.
Eugene Hale, of Maine.
| John Kean, of New Jersey.
Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota.
Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania.
Privileges and Elections.
Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan.
Joseph B. Foraker, of Ohio.
Chauncey M. Depew, of New York.
Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana.
William P. Dillingham, of Vermont.
Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania.
Jonathan P. Dolliver, of Iowa.
Chester I. Loong, of Kansas.
Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas.
James B. Frazier, of Tennessee.
Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky.
Frank B. Gary, of South Carolina.
Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama.
Senate Committees.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Nathan B. Scott, of West Virginia.
Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming.
Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota.
Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho.
Elmer J. Burkett, of Nebraska.
William Warner, of Missouri.
George Peabody Wetmore, of Rhode
Island.
Charles A. Culberson, of Texas.
Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia.
William J. Stone, of Missouri.
Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina.
Frank B. Gary, of South Carolina.
Public Health and National Quarantine.
John W. Daniel, of Virginia.
Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana.
Charles A. Culberson, of Texas.
William H. Milton, of Florida. |
Chauncey M. Depew, of New York.
Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware.
Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon.
Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware.
Public Lands.
Knute Nelson, of Minnesota.
Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota.
Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming.
Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota.
Charles W. Fulton, of Oregon.
Reed Smoot, of Utah.
Frank P. Flint, of California.
Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho.
Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana.
Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana.
Anselm J. McLaurin, of Mississippi.
Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada.
Jeff Davis, of Arkansas.
Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma.
John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
Railroads.
Morgan G. Bulkeley, of Connecticut.
Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming.
Knute Nelson, of Minnesota.
Levi Ankeny, of Weshington.
Reed Smoot, of Utah.
James A. Hemenway, of Todions,
Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon.
Revision of the Laws
Chauncey M. Depew, ot New York.
Charles W. Fulton, of Oregon.
William E. Borah, of Idaho.
George Sutherland, of Utah.
|
Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia.
Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi.
Robert I. Taylor, of Tennessee.
John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
of the United Stales.
| John W. Daniel, of Virginia.
Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas.
Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky.
William H. Milton, of Florida.
Revolutionary Claims.
James P. Taliaferro, of Florida.
James B. Frazier, of Tennessee.
Ru
Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania.
Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island.
Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia.
Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts.
William Alden Smith, of Michigan.
Norris Brown, of Nebraska.
Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin.
les.
Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia.
Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas.
James P. Clarke, of Arkansas.
Territories.
Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana.
William P. Dillingham, of Vermont.
Knute Nelson, of Minnesota.
Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire.
John Kean, of New Jersey.
Charles Dick, of Ohio.
Samuel H. Piles, of Washington.
James P. Clarke, of Arkansas.
Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada.
James B. Frazier, of Tennessee.
Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma,
177
178 Congressional Directory.
Transportation Routes lo the Seaboard.
Robert 1 Gamble, of South Dakota. | John W. Daniel, of Virginia.
Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. | Isidor Rayner, of Maryland.
George Sutherland, of Utah. | Tom. P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
William Warner, of Missouri. | John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. |
University of the United States.
James A. Hemenway, of Indiana. Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia.
William P. Frye, of Maine. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana.
William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina.
: Robert IL. Taylor, of Tennessee.
Charles Curtis, of Kansas.
Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado.
George Peabody Wetmore, of Rhode
Island.
SELECT COMMITTEES.
Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress.
William J. Stone, of Missouri.
Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois.
| Knute Nelson, of Minnesota.
Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Departments.
Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. | Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire.
James B. Frazier, of Tennessee.
Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture.
Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. | F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina.
Chester I. Long, of Kansas. | Tom. P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. :
Expenditures in the Interior Department.
Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware. | James B. McCreary, of Kentucky.
Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan. | Jeff Davis, of Arkansas.
Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana.
Expenditures in the Department of Justice.
Norris Brown, of Nebraska. | Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas.
William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland.
Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon.
Expenditures in the Navy Department.
Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia.
Charles Curtis, of Kansas. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina.
William E. Borah, of Idaho.
Expenditures in the Treasury Department.
Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas.
Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana. John Walter Smith, of Maryland.
Charles W. Fulton, of Oregon.
Expenditures in the War Department.
Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Hernando D. Money, of Mississippi.
Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. | Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana.
Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois.
Senate Committees. 179
Five Civilized Tribes of Indians.
Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. | Alfred B. Kittredge, of South Dakota.
Henry M. Teller, of Colorado. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin.
Industrial Expositions.
, chairman, | John W. Daniel, of Virginia.
W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. James B. McCreary, of Kentucky.
Henry C. Hansbrough, of North Dakota. | Isidor Rayner, of Maryland.
Charles W. Fulton, of Oregon. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina.
Nelson W. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. Robert I,. Taylor, of Tennessee.
George Sutherland, of Utah. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut.
Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at Washington.
Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. | Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia.
William P. Frye, of Maine. | Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia.
Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. | John Walter Smith, of Maryland.
Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware.
Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands.
George Sutherland, of Utah. | Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky.
Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware.
National Banks.
William Alden Smith, of Michigan.
Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania.
Levi Ankeny, of Washington.
Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana.
Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama.
Standards, Weights, and Measures.
William E. Borah, of Idaho. | James B. McCreary, of Kentucky.
Reed Smoot, of Utah. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia.
Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. |
Transportation and Sale of Meat Products.
Samuel D. McEnery, of Louisiana. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming.
William J. Stone, of Missouri. George S. Nixon, of Nevada.
Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware.
Woman Suffrage.
Alexander S. Clay, of Georgia. | Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana.
Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama. Flmer J. Burkett, of Nebraska.
George Peabody Wetmore, of Rhode
Island.
180 Congressional Directory.
ASSIGNMENTS OF SENATORS TO COMMITTEES.
ATDRICH:, . . 0 ne, Finance, chairman.
Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia.
Cuban Relations.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Interstate Commerce.
Rules.
ANEENY ... va. aniens Irrigation, chairman.
Coast Defenses.
Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game.
Interoceanic Canals.
National Banks (Select).
Railroads.
BACON i iicanisainies inaio Engrossed Bills, chairman.
: Expenditures in the Department of State.
Foreign Relations.
Inaugural Ceremonies (Select).
Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at
Washington (Select).
Judiciary.
Railroads.
Rules.
Standards, Weights, and Measures (Select).
BATEEY: tov eli oihin Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart-
ments (Select), chairman.
Census.
Expenditures in the Department of Justice (Select)
Finance.
Fisheries.
Irrigation.
Privileges and Elections.
Revision of the Laws of the United States.
Rules.
BANKHEAD... o.oo. Agriculture and Forestry.
Coast and Insular Survey.
Education and Labor.
Indian Affairs.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
Public Lands.
Railroads.
Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.
BEVERIDGE: «iio Territories, chairman.
Cuban Relations.
Expenditures in the Treasury Department (Select).
Foreign Relations.
Philippines.
Privileges and Elections.
Woman Suffrage (Select).
BORA... ior Standards, Weights, and Measures (Select), chairman.
Claims.
Education and Labor.
Irrigation.
Expenditures in the Navy Department (Select).
Revision of the Laws of the United States.
Sw
Cw
Senate Committee Assignments. 181
BOURNE... iad nn Fisheries, chairman.
Coast Defenses.
Expenditures in the Department of Justice (Select).
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
Public Health and National Quarantine.
Railroads.
BRANDEGEE. .......... .... Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game, chairman,
Fducation and Labor.
Indian Affairs.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Interoceanic Canals.
Patents.
Philippines.
BRIGGS: vo Expenditures in the Treasury Department (Select), chair-
man.
Canadian Relations.
Fisheries.
Immigration.
Library.
Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.
BROWN. i... oe dow, Expenditures in the Department of Justice (Select), chair-
man.
Civil Service and Retrenchment.
Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia.
Indian Affairs.
Mississippi River and its Tributaries.
Revolutionary Claims.
BULREBLEY ...... ... 5% Railroads, chairman.
Canadian Relations.
Coast and Insular Survey. ~
Cuban Relations.
Fisheries.
Military Affairs.
BURKE... eas as Pacific Railroads, chairman.
Agriculture and Forestry.
District of Columbia.
Geological Survey.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Woman Suffrage (Select).
BUBNHAM ........ i es Cuban Relations, chairman.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Claims.
Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game.
Pensions.
Territories.
BURROWS... .... .-.. Privileges and Elections, chairman.
Expenditures in the Interior Department (Select).
Finance.
Naval Affairs.
Philippines.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
CARTER. aa Expenditures in the Department of State, chairman.
Census.
District of Columbia.
Foreign Relations.
Irrigation.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
CLARK, of Wyoming ....
CLARKE, of Arkansas. ...
ees cess ee ase
Congressional Directory.
Indian Affairs, chairman.
Claims.
Cuban Relations. -
Interstate Commerce.
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.
Patents.
Judiciary, chairman.
Foreign Relations.
Public Lands.
Railroads.
Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select).
Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.
Audit and Control the Contingent Kxpenses of the
Senate.
Civil Service and Retrenchment.
Commerce.
Expenditures in the Treasury Department (Select).
Judiciary.
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.
Rules.
Territories.
Woman Suffrage (Select), chairman.
Appropriations.
Coast and Insular Survey.
Coast Defenses.
Manufactures.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
University of the United States.
Canadian Relations, chairman.
Commerce.
Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Interstate Commerce.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
Coast and Insular Survey.
Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.
Interoceanic Canals.
Judiciary.
Philippines.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Public Health and National Quarantine.
Foreign Relations, chairman.
Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress
(Select).
Appropriations.
Expenditures in the War Department (Select).
Interstate Commerce.
Indian Depredations, chairman.
Cuban Relations.
Expenditures in the Navy Department (Select).
Indian Affairs.
Pensions.
University of the United States,
Senate Committee Assignments. 183
DANIEL... os Public Health and National Quarantine, chairman.
Appropriations.
Fducation and Labor.
Finance.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Library.
Revision of the Laws of the United States.
Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.
DAVIS. oo. vei a Indian Affairs.
Claims.
Coast and Insular Survey.
Expenditures in the Interior Department (Select).
Immigration.
Indian Depredations.
Private Land Claims.
Public Lands.
DEPEW. in hess 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.
DICE. ns Mines and Mining, chairman.
Indian Depredations.
Naval Affairs.
Philippines.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
Territories.
DILLINGHAM. .......... Immigration, chairman,
District of Columbia.
Judiciary.
Privileges and Elections.
Territories.
University of the United States.
EXON nn as Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service,
chairman.
Expenditures in the Interior Department (Select).
Indian Affairs.
Indian Depredations.
Public Lands.
Standards, Weights, and Measures (Select).
DOLLIVER...... vo. ns Education and Labor, chairman.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Interstate Commerce.
Mississippi River and its Tributaries.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
Privileges and Elections.
du PoNT............... Expenditures in the War Department (Select), chairman.
Coast Defenses.
Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands.
Manufactures.
Military Affairs.
Public Health and National Quarantine.
Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select).
BERINS en aeons Interstate Commerce, chairman.
Appropriations.
Civil Service and Retrenchment.
Commerce.
Geological Survey.
Printing.
Rules,
184
PEIN Ls erro E edei
BOOSTER ©. 0 a iis.
BOLTON: ohana
GATLINGER (i. on os
GAMBLE. oon san,
Congressional Directory.
Geological Survey, chairman.
Coast and Insular Survey.
Education and Tabor.
Interoceanic Canals.
Irrigation.
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.
Public Lands.
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico, chairman.
Foreign Relations.
Interstate Commerce.
Judiciary. !
Military Affairs.
Privileges and Elections.
Appropriations.
Canadian Relations.
Coast Defenses.
Enrolled Bills.
Expenditures in the War Department (Select).
Interstate Commerce.
Military Affairs.
Patents.
University of the United States.
Claims.
Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart-
ments (Select).
Expenditures in the Department of State.
Foreign Relations.
Manufactures.
Military Affairs.
Privileges and Klections.
Revolutionary Claims.
Territories.
Commerce, chairman.
Foreign Relations.
Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at
Washington (Select).
Pacific Railroads.
University of the United States.
Claims, chairman.
Expenditures in the Treasury Department (Select).
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Judiciary.
Public Lands.
Revision of the Laws of the United States.
District of Columbia, chairman.
Appropriations.
Commerce.
Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart-
ments (Select). :
Expenditures in the War Department (Select).
Manufactures.
Naval Affairs.
Transportation Routes to the Seaboard, chairman.
Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate.
District of Columbia.
Indian Affairs.
Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at
Washington (Select).
Private Land Claims.
Public Lands.
Senate Committee Assignments. 185
GARY viii ees Census.
Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia.
Immigration.
Manufactures.
Pacific Railroads.
Patents.
Privileges and Elections.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
GORE a aS sa Agriculture and Forestry.
Canadian Relations.
Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture (Select).
Immigration.
Irrigation.
Mines and Mining.
Pacific Railroads.
Pensions.
Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.
GUGGENHEIM. ..... ..-: Expenditures in the Navy Department (Select), chairman.
Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate.
Census.
Claims.
Manufactures.
Pacific Railroads.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
University of the United States.
HALE di nid Naval Affairs, chairman.
Appropriations.
Canadian Relations.
Census.
Finance.
Philippines.
Private Land Claims.
HANSBROUGH....... .... Agriculture and Forestry, chairman.
District of Columbia.
Finance.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Irrigation.
Library.
Public Lands.
HEMENWAY............ University of the United States, chairman.
Appropriations.
Claims.
Indian Depredations.
Military Affairs.
Railroads.
HEVEURN ..... Manufactures, chairman.
Coast Defenses.
Geological Survey.
Immigration.
Mines and Mining.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Public Lands.
HOPRING nay, Enrolled Bills, chairman.
Census.
Commerce.
Expenditures in the Department of State,
Finance.
Interoceanic Canals.
186 Congressional Divectory.
JoENSTON ... . =... District of Columbia.
Indian Depredations.
Interoceanic Canals.
Mines and Mining.
National Banks (Select).
Philippines.
Privileges and Elections.
Woman Suffrage (Select).
BuAN. orn dig Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate,
chairman.
Claims.
Foreign Relations.
Interstate Commerce.
Private Land Claims.
Territories.
BYVIREDGE oa, Interoceanic Canals, chairman.
Cuban Relations.
Fngrossed Bills.
Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select).
Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game,
Judiciary.
Patents.
NOX inh ini eras Rules, chairman.
Inaugural Ceremonies (Select), chairman.
Coast Defenses.
Expenditures in the Department of State.
Judiciary.
Private Land Claims.
Privileges and Elections.
IA ROoILBIIE. Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front
] at Washington (Select), chairman.
Census.
Civil Service and Retrenchment.
Immigration.
Indian Affairs.
Pensions.
LODGE ....... Philippines, chairman.
’ Engrossed Bills.
Foreign Relations.
Immigration.
Inaugural Ceremonies.
Military Affairs.
Rules.
TONG ioe fini Census, chairman.
Agriculture and Forestry.
District of Columbia.
Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture (Select).
Philippines.
Privileges and Elections.
MCcCREARY............. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.
Expenditures in the Interior Department (Select).
Foreign Relations.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Military Affairs.
Pacific Railroads.
Pensions.
Standards, Weights, and Measures (Select).
McCUOMBER...... vison Pensions, chairman.
Census.
Indian Affairs.
Interoceanic Canals.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
IMCENBRY..... oi
IMCL AURIN o. «nines
MARTIN oo acai cnn
MIT TON svt adn,
NEWILANDS «..... oo
CRC RE I SCRE SR SPS Sr
Senate Committee Assignments. 187
Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select),
chairman.
Census.
Fisheries.
Mississippi River and its Tributaries.
National Banks (Select).
Naval Affairs.
Private Land Claims.
Public Health and National Quarantine,
Public Lands.
Civil Service and Retrenchment.
Commerce.
Expenditures in the State Department.
Immigration.
Indian Depredations.
Interstate Commerce.
Mississippi River and its Tributaries.
Public Lands.
Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress
(Select), chairman.
Claims.
Commerce.
District of Columbia.
Expenditures in the Navy Department (Select).
Indian Depredations.
Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at
Washington (Select).
Naval Affairs.
District of Columbia.
Fisheries.
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.
Patents.
Printing.
Public Health and National Quarantine,
Revision of the Laws of the United States
Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia, chair-
man.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate.
Expenditures in the War Department (Select).
Finance.
Foreign Relations.
Geological Survey.
Railroads.
Public Lands, chairman.
Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress
(Select).
Commerce.
Judiciary.
Railroads.
Territories.
Commerce.
Cuban Relations.
Interstate Commerce.
Irrigation.
Library.
Philippines.
Public Lands.
Territories.
Coast Defenses, chairman.
Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.
Irrigation.
Mines and Mining.
National Banks (Select).
Philippines.
Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select).
188 Congressional Directory.
OVERMAN ......c0 coy ons Claims.
Fisheries.
Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Judiciary.
Military Affairs.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
University of the United States.
OWEN. eas Civil Service and Retrenchment.
Indian Affairs.
Indian Depredations.
Mississippi River and its Tributaries.
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
Public T,ands.
Territories.
PAGE ra
PAYNTER... ooo io Claims.
District or Columbia.
Education and Labor.
Immigration.
Indian Affairs.
Investigate Trespasses upon Indian Lands.
Phillippines.
Privileges and Elections.
Revision of the Laws of the United States.
PENROSE... a Post-Offices and Post-Roads, chairman.
Commerce.
Education and Labor.
Finance.
Immigration.
National Banks (Select).
Naval Affairs.
PEERING. aes, Civil Service and Retrenchment, chairman,
Agriculture and Forestry.
Appropriations.
Commerce.
Fisheries.
Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game.
Naval Affairs.
BITES nd naa. Coast and Insular Survey, chairman.
Canadian Relations.
Commerce.
Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service,
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.
Pensions.
Territories.
PLANT. era Printing, chairman.
Civil Service and Retrenchment.
Finance.
Indian Depredations.
Interoceanic Canals.
Naval Affairs.
RAVNER... .. 0.0 ln, Civil Service and Retrenchment.
Education and Labor.
Expenditures in the Department of Justice (Select).
Geological Survey.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Judiciary.
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. :
Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.
Senate Committee Assignments. 189
RICHARDSON ..... ....-.. Expenditures in the Interior Department (Select),
chairman.
Coast and Insular Survey.
Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia.
Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at
Washington (Select).
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.
Public Health and National Quarantine.
SCOTT. 5s Sass Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman,
District of Columbia.
Military Affairs.
Mines and Mining.
Pensions.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
SIMMONS. 5: .v ic. iis Agriculture and Forestry.
Coast Defenses.
Commerce.
Cuban Relations.
Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.
Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture (Select).
Interoceanic Canals.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
SMITH, of Maryland..... Canadian Relations.
Coast Defenses.
District of Columbia.
Expenditures in the Treasury Department (Select).
Investigate the Condition of the Potomac River Front at
Washington (Select).
Irrigation.
Naval Affairs.
SMITH, of Michigan..... National Banks (Select), chairman.
Commerce.
Expenditures in the Department of Justice (Select).
Pacific Railroads.
Pensions.
Revolutionary Claims.
BMOOL a vs ves Patents, chairman.
Claims.
Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game.
Pensions.
Public Lands.
Railroads.
Standards, Weights, and Measures (Select).
STEPHENSON ....5 000, Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture (Select),
chairman.
Claims.
Enrolled Bills.
Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select).
Pacific Railroads.
Revolutionary Claims.
SION... ceili. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress
(Select).
Commerce.
Cuban Relations.
Expenditures in the Department of State.
Foreign Relations.
Indian Affairs.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select).
66525—60-2—2D ED——14
190
SUTHERLAND: ©
TATJAPERRO ...... i.
TELLER . .
TILLMAN .
WARNER .
WARREN .
WETMORE
Congressional Dirvectory.
Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands (Select), chair-
man.
Coast and Insular Survey.
Indian Affairs.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Irrigation.
Mines and Mining.
Revision of the Laws of the United States.
Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.
Revolutionary Claims, chairman.
Census.
Coast Defenses.
Cuban Relations.
Finance.
Interoceanic Canals.
Military Affairs.
Pacific Railroads.
Pensions.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
Forest Reservations and Protection of Game.
Indian Affairs.
Industrial Expositions (Select).
Interoceanic Canals.
Interstate Commerce.
Pensions.
Railroads.
University of the United States.
Private I,and Claims, chairman.
Appropriations.
Geological Survey.
Finance. :
Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select).
Mines and Mining.
Pensions.
Philippines.
Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select), chairman.
Appropriations.
Canadian Relations.
Expenditures in the Navy Department (Select).
Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game.
Interstate Commerce.
Irrigation.
Mines and Mining.
Naval Affairs.
Mississippi River and its Tributaries, chairman.
Military Affairs.
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.
Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Military Affairs, chairman.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Appropriations.
Expenditures in the Department of State.
Irrigation.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Library, chairman.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
University of the United States.
Woman Suffrage (Select).
House Committees. 191
COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE.
Accounts.
James A. Hughes, of West Virginia.
Frank D. Currier, of New Hampshire.
William H. Draper, of New York.
William H. Jackson, of Maryland.
C. Bascom Slemp, of Virginia.
H. Burd Cassel, of Pennsylvania.
Charles L. Bartlett, of Georgia.
Joseph A. Goulden, of New York.
| Joseph F. O'Connell, of Massachusetts.
Agriculture.
Charles F. Scott, of Kansas.
Gilbert N. Haugen, of Iowa.
Kittredge Haskins, of Vermont.
William Lorimer, of Illinois.
William W. Cocks, of New York.
Ralph D. Cole, of Ohio.
Frnest M. Pollard, of Nebraska.
Clarence C. Gilhams, of Indiana.
James C. McLaughlin, of Michigan.
Willis C. Hawley, of Oregon.
George W. Cook, of Colorado.
John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts.
William H. Andrews, of New Mexico.
John Lamb, of Virginia.
Asbury F. Lever, of South Carolina.
Jack Beall, of Texas.
William W. Rucker, of Missouri.
Augustus O. Stanley, of Kentucky.
J. Thomas Heflin, of Alabama.
Alcoholic Liquor Trafic.
Nehemiah D. Sperry, of Connecticut.
Amos I,. Allen, of Maine.
Andrew J. Barchfeld,of Pennsylvania.
J. Eugene Harding, of Ohio.
Gustav Kiistermann, of Wisconsin.
Charles N. Pray, of Montana.
J. Van Vechten Olcott, of New York.
| Ezekiel S. Candler, jr., of Mississippi.
John G. McHenry, of Pennsylvania.
| Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois.
| William B. Craig, of Alabama.
|
|
Appropriations.
James A. Tawney, of Minnesota.
Henry H. Bingham, of Pennsylvania.
Walter P. Brownlow, of Tennessee.
Washington Gardner, of Michigan.
Frederick H. Gillett, of Massachusetts.
Walter I. Smith, of Towa.
Joseph V. Graff, of Illinois.
J. Warren Keifer, of Ohio.
Martin B. Madden, of Illinois.
Edward B. Vreeland, of New York.
| Leonidas I. Livingston, of Georgia.
| Stephen Brundidge, jr., of Arkansas.
| John J. Fitzgerald, of New York.
| Albert S. Burleson, of Texas.
| Swagar Sherley, of Kentucky.
| Faton J. Bowers, of Mississippi.
Banking and Currency.
Charles N. Fowler, of New Jersey.
George W. Prince, of Illinois.
Henry McMorran, of Michigan.
Capell L,. Weems, of Ohio.
George D. McCreary, of Pennsylvania.
George E. Waldo, of New York.
Everis A. Hayes, of California.
John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts.
Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio.
James McKinney, of Illinois.
Cyrus Durey, of New York.
Frank E. Guernsey, of Maine.
Elijah B. Lewis, of Georgia.
Arsene P. Pujo, of Louisiana.
Carter Glass, of Virginia.
Oscar W. Gillespie, of Texas.
Ollie M. James, of Kentucky.
William T. Crawford, of North Carolina.
‘John G. McHenry, of Pennsylvania.
192 Congressional Divectory.
Census.
Edgar D. Crumpacker, of Indiana.
Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine.
James A. Hughes, of West Virginia.
Hiram R. Burton, of Delaware.
Nathan W. Hale, of Tennessee.
William M. Calder, of New York.
Howard M. Snapp, of Illinois.
John W. Langley, of Kentucky.
Charles F. Barclay, of Pennsylvania.
Otto G. Foelker, of New York.
James Hay, of Virginia.
Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas.
William B. Wilson, of Pennsylvania.
Hannibal I, Godwin, of North Carolina.
William E. Cox, of Indiana.
Courtney W. Hamlin, of Missouri.
Charges against Membership of the House (Select).
Henry S. Boutell, of Illinois.
Frederick C. Stevens, of Minnesota.
Marlin E. Olmsted, of Pennsylvania.
William M. Howard, of Georgia.
Robert F. Broussard, of Iouisiana,
Claims.
James M. Miller, of Kansas.
Charles Q. Tirrell, of Massachusetts.
Joseph Howell, of Utah.
William H. Graham, of Pennsylvania.
George FE. Waldo, of New York.
Grant FE. Mouser, of Ohio.
George I,. Lilley, of Connecticut.
Charles A. Lindbergh, of Minnesota.
Willis C. Hawley, of Oregon.
Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York.
Claude Kitchin, of North Carolina.
Ezekiel S. Candler, jr., of Mississippi.
Dorsey W. Shackleford, of Missouri.
James O. Patterson, of South Carolina.
John A. M. Adair, of Indiana.
Elmer I,. Fulton, of Oklahoma,
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
William B. McKinley, of Illinois.
Ira W. Wood, of New Jersey.
Joseph R. Knowland, of California.
William C. Lovering, of Massachusetts.
George A. Pearre, of Maryland.
Charles A. Kennedy, of Iowa.
Joel Cook, of Pennsylvania.
Samuel McMillan, of New York.
Joseph G. Beale, of Pennsylvania.
Addison D. James, of Kentucky.
Peter A. Porter, of New York.
Jonah K. Kalanianaole, of Hawaii.
John W. Gaines, of Tennessee.
Thomas W. Hardwick, of Georgia.
Robert M. Wallace, of Arkansas.
Daniel J. Riordan, of New York.
Charles F. Booher, of Missouri.
William A. Ashbrook, of Ohio.
Charles C. Carlin, of Virginia.
Disposition of Useless Executive Papers (Select, Joint).
Arthur 1,. Bates, of Pennsylvania. | Joshua F. C. Talbott, of Maryland.
Distribution of House Rooms (Select). t
James R. Mann, of Illinois.
Joseph H. Gaines, of West Virginia.
H. Olin Young, of Michigan.
James T. Lloyd, of Missouri.
William C. Adamson, of Georgia.
District of Columbia.
Samuel W. Smith, of Michigan.
Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas.
Edward L. Taylor, jr., of Ohio.
J. Van Vechten Olcott, of New York.
Charles McGavin, of Illinois.
Julius Kahn, of California.
J. Hampton Moore, of Pennsylvania.
John H. Foster, of Indiana.
Harry M. Coudrey, of Missouri.
Frank M. Nye, of Minnesota.
William J. Cary, of Wisconsin.
Samuel McMillan, of New York.
Thetus W. Sims, of Tennessee.
Dorsey W. Shackleford, of Missouri.
Wyatt Aiken, of South Carolina.
J. Davis Brodhead, of Pennsylvania.
Ben Johnson, of Kentucky.
James W. Murphy, of Wisconsin.
John A. Keliher, of Massachusetts.
2
f
House Committees. 193
Fducation.
George N. Southwick, of New York.
William E. Humphrey, of Washington.
Andrew J. Volstead, of Minnesota.
Sylvester C. Smith, of California.
Joseph V. Graff, of Illinois.
Herman P. Goebel, of Ohio.
Moses P. Kinkaid, of Nebraska.
George A. Loud, of Michigan.
| Asbury F. Lever, of South Carolina.
Finis J. Garrett, of Tennessee.
Timothy "T. Ansberry, of Ohio.
George K. Favrot, of Louisiana.
William FE. Tou Velle, of Ohio.
Election of President, Vice-President, and Representatives in Congress.
Joseph H. Gaines, of West Virginia.
Cyrus A. Sulloway, of New Hampshire.
George W. Norris, of Nebraska.
James F. Burke, of Pennsylvania.
William H. Jackson, of Maryland.
Gerrit J. Diekema, of Michigan.
Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania.
Otto G. Foelker, of New York.
William W. Rucker, of Missouri.
Oscar W. Gillespie, of Texas.
Thomas W. Hardwick, of Georgia.
Francis R. Lassiter, of Virginia.
Richard N. Hackett, of North Carolina.
Elections No. 1.
James R. Mann, of Illinois.
Charles I. Knapp, of New York.
Grant E. Mouser, of Ohio.
George A. Pearre, of Maryland.
George C. Sturgiss, of West Virginia.
Ollie M. James, of Kentucky.
Edward W. Saunders, of Virginia.
William Willett, jr., of New York.
Elections No. 2.
Marlin E. Olmsted, of Pennsylvania.
James M. Miller, of Kansas.
Capell L. Weems, of Ohio.
James F. Burke, of Pennsylvania.
Duncan E. McKinlay, of California.
John M. Nelson, of Wisconsin.
Adam M. Byrd, of Mississippi.
William E. Tou Velle, of Ohio.
James A. Hamill, of New Jersey.
Elections No. 3.
Michael E. Driscoll, of New York.
William FE. Humphrey, of Washington.
Henry T. Bannon, of Ohio.
John F. Boyd, of Nebraska.
Jay Ford Laning, of Ohio.
| Harry B. Wolf, of Maryland.
Charles C. Carlin, of Virginia.
Enrolled Bills.
William W. Wilson, of Illinois.
J. Hampton Moore, of Pennsylvania.
Daniel R. Anthony, jr., of Kansas.
Nathan W. Hale, of Tennessee.
Henry T. Rainey, of Illinois.
I.incoln Dixon, of Indiana. :
William Willett, jr., of New York.
Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture.
Edwin W. Higgins, of Connecticut.
J. Sloat Fassett, of New York.
Charles G. Washburn, of Massachusetts.
| Henry D. Flood, of Virginia.
~ Charles F. Booher, of Missouri.
Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor.
David J. Foster, of Vermont.
William M. Calder, of New York.
Washington Gardner, of Michigan.
Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota.
| Arséne P. Pujo, of Louisiana.
Morris Sheppard, of Texas.
Daniel J. Riordan, of New York.
194 Congressional Directory.
Expenditures in the Interior Department.
Gilbert N. Haugen, of Iowa.
James Kennedy, of Ohio.
Daniel F. Lafean, of Pennsylvania.
George R. Malby, of New York.
Robert N. Page, of North Carolina.
Wilson S. Hill, of Mississippi.
Rufus Hardy, of Texas.
Expenditures in the Department of Justice.
Sydney E. Mudd, of Maryland.
William H. Stafford, of Wisconsin.
Elbert H. Hubbard, of Iowa.
Paul Howland, of Ohio.
Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York.
John H. Stephens, of Texas.
Adam M. Byrd, of Mississippi.
Expenditures in the Navy Department.
Henry S. Boutell, of Illinois.
Ernest F. Acheson, of Pennsylvania.
John W. Langley, of Kentucky.
Frank O. Lowden, of Illinois.
Lemuel P. Padgett, of Tennessee.
William C. Adamson, of Georgia.
Harry B. Wolf, of Maryland.
Expenditures in the Post-Office Department.
Irving P. Wanger, of Pennsylvania.
Martin B. Madden, of Illinois.
William H. Jackson, of Maryland.’
George W. Fairchild, of New York.
Carter Glass, of Virginia.
John M. Moore, of Texas.
Frank Clark, of Florida.
Expenditures in the State Department.
John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts.
Henry T. Bannon, of Ohio.
William W. Cocks, of New York.
Charles R. Davis, of Minnesota.
Sam Bronson Cooper, of Texas.
Courtney W. Hamlin, of Missouri.
John T. Lenahan, of Pennsylvania,
Expenditures in the Treasury Department.
Philip Knopf, of Illinois.
Ebenezer J. Hill, of Connecticut.
Arthur I,. Bates, of Pennsylvania.
Warren A. Haggott, of Colorado.
Expenditures in th
George P. Lawrence, of Massachusetts.
J. Adam Bede, of Minnesota.
John M. Reynolds, of Pennsylvania.
John E. Harding, of Ohio.
John Lamb, of Virginia.
John M. Garner, of Texas.
George W. Kipp, of Pennsylvania.
e War Department.
Joseph I. Rhinock, of Kentucky.
J. Davis Brodhead, of Pennsylvania.
James S. Davenport, of Oklahoma.
Expenditures on Public Buildings.
E. Stevens Henry, of Connecticut.
James McLachlan, of California. |
John J. Esch, of Wisconsin.
James C. McLaughlin, of Michigan. |
Foreign
Robert G. Cousins, of Towa.
Charles B. Landis, of Indiana.
James Breck Perkins, of New York.
David J. Foster, of Vermont.
Adin B. Capron, of Rhode Island.
J. Sloat Fassett, of New York.
Edwin Denby, of Michigan.
William B. McKinley, of Illinois.
Allen F. Cooper, of Pennsylvania.
Frank O. Lowden, of Illinois.
Edward I. Taylor, jr., of Ohio.
Butler Ames, of Massachusetts.
John H. Small, of North Carolina.
Harvey Helm, of Kentucky.
Charles G. Edwards, of Georgia.
Affairs.
William M. Howard, of Georgia.
Henry D. Flood, of Virginia. °
William B. Lamar, of Florida.
John N. Garner, of Texas.
John A. Keliher, of Massachusetts.
John Gill, jr., of Maryland.
Francis Burton Harrison, of New York.
House Coniinititees. 195
Immigration and Naturalization.
_ Benjamin F. Howell, of New Jersey.
Augustus P. Gardner, of Massachusetts.
Burton L. French, of Idaho.
Ira W. Wood, of New Jersey.
William S. Bennet, of New York.
Everis A. Hayes, of California.
J. Hampton Moore, of Pennsylvania.
Don C. Edwards, of Kentucky.
Gustav Kustermann, of Wisconsin.
John I,. Burnett, of Alabama.
John M. Moore, of Texas.
John A. M. Adair, of Indiana.
Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois.
Joseph F. O’Connell, of Massachusetts.
George K. Favrot, of Louisiana.
Indian Affairs.
James S. Sherman, of New York.
Thomas F. Marshall, of North Dakota.
Charles IL. Knapp, of New York.
. Edmund H. Hinshaw, of Nebraska.
Amos I,. Allen, of Maine.
Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas.
Joseph Howell, of Utah.
Bird S. McGuire, of Oklahoma.
Charles A. Lindbergh, of Minnesota.
E. A. Morse, of Wisconsin.
Eben W. Martin, of South Dakota.
William H, Andrews, of New Mexico.
John H. Stephens, of Texas.
Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska.
Edward W. Saunders, of Virginia.
Charles D. Carter, of Oklahoma.
Ben Cravens, of Arkansas.
Thomas Hackney, of Missouri,
Industrial Avis and Expositions.
Augustus P. Gardner, of Massachusetts.
William A. Rodenberg, of Illinois.
Joseph Howell, of Utah.
James M. Miller, of Kansas.
Cyrus Durey, of New York.
John M. Nelson, of Wisconsin.
Joel Cook, of Pennsylvania.
John W. Langley, of Kentucky.
Eben W. Martin, of South Dakota.
Harry I,. Maynard, of Virginia.
George S. Legare, of South Carolina.
Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York.
Joseph I. Rhinock, of Kentucky.
Courtney W. Hamlin, of Missouri.
Le. Gage Pratt, of New Jersey.
Insular Affairs.
Henry A. Cooper, of Wisconsin.
Edgar D. Crumpacker, of Indiana.
Edward L. Hamilton, of Michigan.
Marlin E. Olmsted, of Pennsylvania.
Charles E. Fuller, of Illinois.
William H. Graham, of Pennsylvania.
Elbert H. Hubbard, of Iowa.
Herbert Parsons, of New York.
Duncan E. McKinlay, of California.
Charles R. Davis, of Minnesota.
Edmond H. Madison, of Kansas.
Charles G. Washburn, of Massachusetts.
Tulio Larrinaga, of Porto Rico.
William A. Jones, of Virginia.
Robert N. Page, of North Carolina.
Finis J. Garrett, of Tennessee.
Matthew R. Denver, of Ohio.
Andrew J. Peters, of Massachusetts.
Charles V. Fornes, of New York.
Harvey Helm, of Kentucky.
i
RE
196 Congressional Directory.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
William P. Hepburn, of Iowa. William C. Adamson, of Georgia.
James S. Sherman, of New York. William H. Ryan, of New York.
Irving P. Wanger, of Pennsylvania. William Richardson, of Alabama.
James R. Mann, of Illinois. Charles I,. Bartlett, of Georgia.
William C. Lovering, of Massachusetts. Gordon Russell, of Texas.
Frederick C. Stevens, of Minnesota.
John J. Esch, of Wisconsin.
Francis W. Cushman, of Washington.
Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan.
James Kennedy, of Ohio.
Joseph R. Knowland, of California.
William P. Hubbard, of West Virginia.
Invalid Pensions.
Cyrus A. Sulloway, of New Hampshire. | George H. Lindsay, of New York.
Samuel W. Smith, of Michigan. Charles H. \Weisse, of Wisconsin.
William A. Calderhead, of Kansas. Lincoln Dixon, of Indiana.
Elias S. Holliday, of Indiana. Timothy T. Ansberry, of Ohio.
Thomas W. Bradley, of New York. George W. Kipp, of Pennsylvania.
Charles E. Fuller, of Illinois. Richard N. Hackett, of North Carolina.
Pleasant T. Chapman, of Illinois.
John C. Chaney, of Indiana.
Don C. Edwards, of Kentucky.
John F. Boyd, of Nebraska.
Irrigation of Avid Lands.
William A. Reeder, of Kansas. William R. Smith, of Texas.
John W. Dwight, of New York. Henry T. Rainey, of Illinois.
Thomas F. Marshall, of North Dakota. James O. Patterson, of South Carolina.
Allen F. Cooper, of Pennsylvania. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska.
Ralph D. Cole, of Ohio. George A. Bartlett, of Nevada.
Moses P. Kinkaid, of Nebraska.
William F. Englebright, of California.
William R. Ellis, of Oregon.
Judiciary.
John J. Jenkins, of Wisconsin. | David A. De Armond, of Missouri.
Richard Wayne Parker, of New Jersey. | Henry D. Clayton, of Alabama.
De Alva S. Alexander, of New York. Robert I. Henry, of Texas.
Charles Q. Tirrell, of Massachusetts. William G. Brantley, of Georgia.
John A. Sterling, of Illinois. Charles C. Reid, of Arkansas.
John H. Foster, of Indiana. Edwin Y. Webb, of North Carolina.
Henry IT. Bannon, of Ohio.
Reuben O. Moon, of Pennsylvania.
Gerrit J. Diekema, of Michigan.
George R. Malby, of New York.
Henry S. Caulfield, of Missouri.
Edwin W. Higgins, of Connecticut.
Labor.
John J. Gardner, of New Jersey. | Henry T. Rainey, of Illinois.
Richard Bartholdt, of Missouri. | William J. Hughes, of New Jersey.
Edward B. Vreeland, of New York. Madison R. Smith, of Missouri.
James P. Conner, of Iowa. | Thomas D. Nicholls, of Pennsylvania.
Herman P. Goebel, of Ohio. George W. Rauch, of Indiana.
Kittredge Haskins, of Vermont.
George W. Norris, of Nebraska.
Edmond H. Madison, of Kansas.
le
eo
House Committees. I 97
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
George W. Prince, of Illinois.
William A. Rodenberg, of Illinois.
Allen F. Cooper, of Pennsylvania.
Harry M. Coudrey, of Missouri.
William A. Reeder, of Kansas.
Charles A. Kennedy, of Iowa.
Napoleon B. Thistlewood, of Illinois.
Robert F. Broussard, of Louisiana.
Robert B. Macon, of Arkansas.
John C. Floyd, of Arkansas.
James W. Murphy, of Wisconsin.
Madison R. Smith of Missouri.
Library.
Samuel W. McCall, of Massachusetts.
Jantes P. Conner, of Iowa.
Edward I. Hamilton, of Michigan.
William M. Howard, of Georgia.
Charles R. Thomas, of North Carolina.
Manufactures.
Henry McMorran, of Michigan.
Nathan W. Hale, of Tennessee.
Pleasant T. Chapman, of Illinois.
George A. Pearre, of Maryland.
Don C. Edwards, of Kentucky.
Andrew J. Barchfeld, of Pennsylvania.
William W. Foulkrod, of Pennsylvania.
Napoleon B. Thistlewood, of Illinois.
Charles H. Weisse, of Wisconsin.
Joseph T. Johnson, of South Carolina.
William W. Kitchin, of North Carolina.
James T. McDermott, of Illinois.
James A. Hamill, of New Jersey.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
William S. Greene, of Massachusetts.
William E. Humphrey, of Washington.
William W. Wilson, of Illinois.
Edmund H. Hinshaw, of Nebraska.
HE. Stevens Henry, of Connecticut.
William M. Calder, of New York.
Grant E. Mouser, of Ohio.
George W. Fairchild, of New York.
William W. Foulkrod, of Pennsylvania.
George C. Sturgiss, of West Virginia.
Albert Douglas, of Ohio.
John P. Swasey, of Maine.
Thomas Spight, of Mississippi.
Joseph A. Goulden, of New York.
Harry I,. Maynard, of Virginia.
Frank Clark, of Florida.
William E. Cox, of Indiana.
Joshua W. Alexander, of Missouri.
John H. Rothermel, of Pennsylvania.
Mileage.
Charles A. Kennedy, of Towa.
Addison D. James, of Kentucky.
Elijah B. Lewis, of Georgia.
Matthew R. Denver, of Ohio.
Military Affairs.
John A. T. Hull, of Iowa.
Richard Wayne Parker, of New Jersey.
Adin B. Capron, of Rhode Island.
George W. Prince, of Illinois.
Elias S. Holliday, of Indiana.
H. Olin Young, of Michigan.
Julius Kahn, of California.
Beman G. Dawes, of Ohio.
James F. Burke, of Pennsylvania.
Thomas W. Bradley, of New York.
Frederick C. Stevens, of Minnesota.
Daniel R. Anthony, jr., of Kansas.
William Sulzer, of New York.
James Hay, of Virginia.
James I. Slayden, of Texas.
Robert F. Broussard, of Louisiana.
Isaac R. Sherwood, of Ohio.
George W. Gordon, of Tennessee.
Oliver C. Wiley, of Alabama.
Thomas Cale, of Alaska.
198 Congressional Directory.
Militia.
Halvor Steenerson, of Minnesota.
John A. T. Hull, of Iowa.
Butler Ames, of Massachusetts.
Charles E. Fuller, of Illinois.
Edwin Denby, of Michigan.
Frank O. Lowden, of Illinois.
Clarence C. Gilhams, of Indiana.
Addison D. James, of Kentucky.
H. Burd Cassel, of Pennsylvania.
John A. Keliher, of Massachusetts.
John Gill, jr., of Maryland.
John C. Floyd, of Arkansas.
William A. Ashbrook, of Ohio.
George K. Favrot, of Louisiana.
Oliver C. Wiley, of Alabama.
Mines and Mining.
George F. Huff, of Pennsylvania.
Joseph Howell, of Utah.
William F. Englebright, of California.
Joseph W. Fordney, of Michigan.
Burton I.. French, of Idaho.
Joseph G. Beale, of Pennsylvania.
Albert Douglas, of Ohio.
Philo Hall, of South Dakota.
Charles N. Pray, of Montana.
Gordon Lee, of Georgia.
George A. Bartlett, of Nevada.
Martin D. Foster, of Illinois.
Thomas D. Nicholls, of Pennsylvania.
Daniel W. Hamilton, of Iowa.
Winfield S. Hammond, of Minnesota.
Thomas Cale, of Alaska.
Naval Affairs.
George Edmund Foss, of Illinois.
Henry C. Loudenslager, of New Jersey.
Thomas S. Butler, of Pennsylvania.
Sydney E. Mudd, of Maryland.
Ernest W. Roberts, of Massachusetts.
George Alvin Loud, of Michigan.
Arthur I,. Bates, of Pennsylvania.
George L. Lilley, of Connecticut.
W. Aubrey Thomas, of Ohio.
Albert F. Dawson, of Iowa.
.J. Van Vechten Olcott, of New York.
William R. Ellis, of Oregon.
Lemuel P. Padgett, of Tennessee.
Alexander W. Gregg, of Texas.
Joshua EF. C. Talbott, of Maryland.
Robert Lamar, of Missouri.
Richmond P. Hobson, of Alabama.
John T. Watkins, of Iouisiana.
Claude Kitchin, of North Carolina.
Pacific Railroads.
Thomas S. Butler, of Pennsylvania.
Michael E. Driscoll, of New York.
Moses P. Kinkaid, of Nebraska.
Sydney E. Mudd, of Maryland.
Albert I. Dawson, of Iowa.
John M. Nelson, of Wisconsin.
Beman G. Dawes, of Ohio.
Edgar C. Ellis, of Missouri.
Sylvester C. Smith, of California.
James IL. Slayden, of Texas.
Henry T. Rainey, of Illinois.
William B. Lamar, of Florida.
Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska.
George A. Bartlett, of Nevada.
Elmer I,. Fulton, of Oklahoma.
Patents.
Frank D. Currier, of New Hampshire.
Edward H. Hinshaw, of Nebraska.
Andrew J. Barchfeld, of Pennsylvania.
John C. Chaney, of Indiana.
Charles McGavin, of Illinois.
E. Stevens Henry, of Connecticut.
Charles G. Washburn, of Massachusetts.
Charles B. Law, of New York.
Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania.
William Sulzer, of New York.
George S. Legare, of South Carolina.
Le. Gage Pratt, of New Jersey.
William B. Wilson, of Pennsylvania.
Eugene W. Leake, of New Jersey.
®
House Committees. 199
Pensions.
Henry C. Loudenslager, of New Jersey.
William H. Draper, of New York.
Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas.
Butler Ames, of Massachusetts.
Joseph B. Bennett, of Kentucky.
Charles F. Barclay, of Pennsylvania.
Jay F. Laning, of Ohio.
Nelson P. Wheeler, of Pennsylvania.
Charles A. Kennedy, of Iowa.
William Richardson, of Alabama.
Frank A. McLain, of Mississippi.
Wyatt Aiken, of South Carolina.
Robert B. Macon, of Arkansas.
Martin D. Foster, of Illinois.
Cordell Hull, of Tennessee.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Jesse Overstreet, of Indiana.
John J. Gardner, of New Jersey.
Nehemiah D. Sperry, of Connecticut.
. 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.
John W. Dwight, of New York.
George KF. Huff, of Pennsylvania.
Warren A. Haggott, of Colorado.
President's Message on
James B. Perkins, of New York.
Edwin Denby, of Michigan.
John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts.
John A. Moon, of Tennessee.
David E. Finley, of South Carolina.
James T. Lloyd, of Missouri.
John H. Small, of North Carolina.
Wilson S. Hill, of Mississippi.
Thomas M. Bell, of Georgia.
Marcus A. Smith. of Arizona.
Secret Service (Select).
John S. Williams, of Mississippi.
James T. Lloyd, of Missouri.
|
Printing.
Charles B. Landis, of Indiana.
James B. Perkins, of New York.
| David E. Finley, of South Carolina.
|
Private Land Claims.
Thomas F. Marshall, of North Dakota.
Francis W. Cushman, of Washington.
William S. Bennet, of New York.
John FE. Boyd, of Nebraska.
C. Bascom Slemp, of Virginia.
Jonah K. Kalanianaole, of Hawaii.
| William A. Jones, of Virginia.
| William R. Smith, of Texas.
Robert M. Wallace, of Arkansas.
Charles H. Weisse, of Wisconsin.
Fugene W. Leake, of New Jersey.
Joseph J. Russell, of Missouri.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
. Richard Bartholdt, of Missouri.
Hdwin C. Burleigh, of Maine.
Benjamin F. Howell, of New Jersey.
James P. Conner, of Iowa.
William A. Rodenberg, of Illinois.
George W. Norris, of Nebraska.
John E. Andrus, of New York.
Daniel F. Lafean, of Pennsylvania.
J. Eugene Harding, of Ohio.
Frank M. Nye, of Minnesota.
| William G. Brantley, of Georgia.
| Charles R. Thomas, of North Carolina.
Morris Sheppard, of Texas.
| Joseph T. Johnson, of South Carolina.
| Frank A. McLain, of Mississippi.
. John I,. Burnett, of Alabama.
| Ben F. Caldwell, of Illinois.
|
|
200 Congressional Directory.
Public Lands.
Frank W. Mondell, of Wyoming.
Andrew J. Volstead, of Minnesota.
Philip Knopf, of Illinois.
Burton I,. French, of Idaho.
Sylvester C. Smith, of California.
Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota.
Bird S. McGuire, of Oklahoma.
Herbert Parsons, of New York.
Charles N. Pray, of Montana.
Paul Howland, of Ohio.
John M. Reynolds, of Pennsylvania.
Philo Hall, of South Dakota.
John W. Gaines, of Tennessee.
Adam M. Byrd, of Mississippi.
Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas.
Daniel W. Hamilton, of Iowa.
Scott Ferris, of Oklahoma.
William B. Craig, of Alabama.
Winfield S. Hammond, of Minnesota
Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona.
Pulp and Paper Investigation (Select).
James R. Mann, of Illinois.
James M. Miller, of Kansas.
William H. Stafford, of Wisconsin.
Henry I". Bannon, of Ohio.
| Thetus W. Sims, of Tennessee.
| William H. Ryan, of New York.
Railways and Canals.
James H. Davidson, of Wisconsin.
Ernest W. Roberts, of Massachusetts.
Charles I. Knapp, of New York.
Hiram R. Burton, of Delaware.
Benjamin P. Birdsall, of Iowa.
Beman G. Dawes, of Ohio.
John C. Chaney, of Indiana.
Nelson P. Wheeler, of Pennsylvania.
Daniel R. Anthony, jr., of Kansas.
| James O. Patterson, of South Carolina.
| William J. Hughes, of New Jersey.
Rufus Hardy, of Texas.
James T. McDermott, of Illinois.
John H. Rothermel, of Pennsylvania.
Reform in the Civil Service.
Frederick H. Gillett, of Massachusetts.
Charles N. Fowler, of New Jersey.
James R. Mann, of Illinois.
Amos I,. Allen, of Maine.
David J. Foster, of Vermont.
William W. Cocks, of New York.
Albert F. Dawson, of Iowa. >
Albert Douglas, of Ohio.
William P. Kimball, of Kentucky.
Hannibal I,. Godwin, of North Carolina.
Rufus Hardy, of Texas.
Cordell Hull, of Tennessee.
Charles G. Edwards, of Georgia.
Revision of the Laws.
Reuben O. Moon, of Pennsylvania.
Charles B. Law, of New York.
Joseph B. Bennett, of Kentucky.
Herbert Parsons, of New York.
Edwin Denby, of Michigan.
Elbert H. Hubbard, of Towa.
George C. Sturgiss, of West Virginia.
John P. Swasey, of Maine.
Robert B. Macon, of Arkansas.
John T. Watkins, of Louisiana.
William C. Houston, of Tennessee.
Francis R. Lassiter, of Virginia.
| Joseph J. Russell. of Missouri.
Rivers and Harbors.
Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio.
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 I,orimer, of Illinois.
Wesley I. Jones, of Washington.
J. Adam Bede, of Minnesota.
Edgar C. Ellis, of Missouri.
Benjamin P. Birdsall, of Towa.
H. Olin Young, of Michigan.
Harry C. Woodyard, of West Virginia.
Stephen M. Sparkman, of Florida.
Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana.
George F. Burgess, of Texas.
Benjamin G. Humphreys, of Mississippi.
John A. Moon, of Tennessee.
George W. Taylor, of Alabama.
J. Edwin Ellerbe, of South Carolina.
House Committees. 201
The Speaker.
John Dalzell, of Pennsylvania.
James S. Sherman, of New York.
Rules.
John S. Williams, of Mississippi.
David A. De Armond, of Missouri.
Territories.
Edward I. Hamilton, of Michigan.
Adin B. Capron, of Rhode Island.
George N. Southwick, of New York.
James McKinney, of Illinois.
Ralph D. Cole, of Ohio.
Edwin W. Higgins, of Connecticut.
John M. Reynolds, of Pennsylvania.
William H. Draper, of New York.
Frank E. Guernsey, of Maine.
James E. Watson, of Indiana.
William H. Andrews, of New Mexico.
Jonah Kalanianaole, of Hawaii.
James T. Lloyd, of Missouri.
Ezekiel S. Candler, jr., of Mississippi.
William C. Houston, of Tennessee.
William P. Kimball, of Kentucky.
James S. Davenport, of Oklahoma.
John T. I.enahan, of Pennsylvania.
Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona.
Ventilation and Acoustics.
William H. Graham, of Pennsylvania.
William J. Cary, of Wisconsin.
Peter A. Porter, of New York.
George W. Rauch, of Indiana.
Joshua W. Alexander, of Missouri.
War Claims.
Kittredge Haskins, of Vermont.
Gilbert N. Haugen, of Towa.
Elias S. Holliday, of Indiana.
Charles B. Law, of New York.
George E. Waldo, of New York.
Edwin W. Higgins, of Connecticut.
Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania.
Jay F. Laning, of Ohio.
Elmer A. Morse, of Wisconsin.
Thomas Spight, of Mississippi.
Henry D. Clayton, of Alabama.
Gordon Lee, of Georgia.
| S. Bronson Cooper, of Texas.
| John C. Floyd, of Arkansas.
| Thetus W. Sims, of Tennessee.
|
| |
Ways and Means.
Sereno E. Payne, of New York.
John Dalzell, of Pennsylvania.
Samuel W. McCall, of Massachusetts.
Ebenezer J. Hill, of Connecticut.
Henry S. Boutell, of Illinois.
James C. Needham, of California.
William A. Calderhead, of Kansas.
Joseph W. Fordney, of Michigan.
Joseph H. Gaines, of West Virginia.
Robert W. Bonynge, of Colorado.
Nicholas Longworth, of Ohio.
Edgar D. Crumpacker, of Indiana.
Champ Clark, of Missouri.
W. Bourke Cockran, of New York.
Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama.
Daniel I. D. Granger, of Rhode Island.
James M. Griggs, of Georgia.
Edward W. Pou, of North Carolina.
Choice B. Randell, of Texas.
202
JOSEPH
ACHESON. oruivs svihaanaie ns
ADAIR. vrai
ATREN ai a as
i ALEXANDER, of Missouri
ELEN nh
ANDRUS. © oat dn
ANSBERRY. i sins so
ANTHONY nas naaihy
ASHBROOK. oe
BANNON: oc as
BARCHERBYLD . i divas
| BARCIAY. -.. 5... oh
BARNEARE
BARTHOLDE. vii; or ie vs
BARTLETT, of Georgia. . .
BARTLET, of Nevada ...
Congressional Directory.
ASSIGNMENTS OF REPRESENTATIVES AND DELEGATES
TO COMMITTEES.
G. CANNON, Speaker; Rules, chairman.
Expenditures in the Navy Department.
Rivers and Harbors.
Claims.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Expenditures in the Navy Department.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
District of Columbia.
Pensions.
ALEXANDER, of New York Judiciary.
Rivers and Harbors.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Ventilation and Accoustics.
Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.
Indian Affairs.
Reform in the Civil Service.
Foreign Affairs.
Militia.
Pensions.
Agriculture.
Indian Affairs.
Territories.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Education.
Invalid Pensions.
Enrolled Bills.
Military Affairs.
Railways and Canals.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Militia.
Elections No. 3.
Expenditures in the State Department.
Judiciary.
Pulp and Paper Investigation (Select).
Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.
Manufactures.
Patents.
Census.
Pensions.
Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman.
Labor.
Accounts.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
Mines and Mining.
Pacific Railroads.
Expenditures in the Treasury Department.
Disposition of Useless Executive Papers.
Naval Affairs.
ol
0
House Committee Assignments. 203
BEALE, of Pennsylvania. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Mines and Mining.
BEALL, of Texas... ... Agriculture.
BEDE... iain, Expenditures in the War Department.
Rivers and Harbors.
BEIT, an Post-Office and Post-Roads.
BENNET, of New York .. Immigration and Naturalization.
Private Land Claims.
BENNETT, of Kentucky... Pensions.
Revision of the Laws.
BINGHAM. ... oon Appropriations.
BIRDSALL =... io Railways and Canals
Rivers and Harbors.
BONYNGE. ..:. n. -..- Ways and Means.
BOOHER... =a ons Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture.
BOUDELT, ovis tun "+ Expenditures in the Navy Department, chairman.
Ways and Means.
BOWERS, wh ovoid Appropriations.
BOYD ia Elections No. 3.
Invalid Pensions.
Private Land Claims.
BRADIEY. o.oo Invalid Pensions.
Military Affairs.
BRANTLEY... ciao Judiciary.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
BRODHEAD. «=... ns District of Columbia. |
! Expenditures in the War Department.
BROUSSARD... .. Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
Military Affairs.
| BROWNIOW. ........... Appropriations.
BRUNDIDGE ............ Appropriations.
BURGESS: vcs ron Rivers and Harbors. |
BURER:..... io. Inaugural Ceremonies, chairman.
Elections No. 2.
Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
tives in Congress.
Military Affairs.
BURLRIGH. oo. Census.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
BURLESON... satis: Appropriations.
BURNBIY. ie Immigration and Naturalization.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
BURTON, of Delaware. ... Census.
Railways and Canals.
BURTON, of Ohio. ......... Rivers and Harbors, chairman.
Banking and Currency.
BUrERE Le ia Pacific Railroads, chairman.
Naval Affairs.
CAIDEREEAD.
CALDWELL, «ho
CALE a a
CAMPBELL... oon
CANDILER ia
CAPRON, oo
CAULRIELD or oi
CHANEY. i a
CHAPMAN. bia
CLARK, of Missouri... ..
CLARK, of Florida......
CUAVION as) Las
COCERAN oc.
Cocws.. aa
Lr A We
CONNER onary
Cook, of Colorado......
Cook, of Pennsylvania. .
COOPER, of Pennsylvania
CooPER, of Wisconsin ..
Congressional Directory. 24
Elections No. 2.
Expenditures in the Department of Justice.
Public Lands.
Census.
Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor.
‘Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Invalid Pensions.
Ways and Means.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Military Affairs.
Mines and Mining.
District of Columbia.
Indian Affairs.
Pensions.
Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.
Claims.
Territories.
Foreign Affairs.
Military Affairs.
Territories.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Flections No. 3.
Indian Affairs.
District of Columbia.
Ventilation and Acoustics.
Militia.
Accounts.
Judiciary.
Invalid Pensions.
Patents.
Railways and Canals.
Invalid Pensions.
Manufactures.
Ways and Means.
Expenditures in the Post-Office Department.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Judiciary.
War Claims.
Ways and Means,
Agriculture.
Expenditures in the State Department.
Reform in the Civil Service.
Agriculture.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
Territories.
Labor.
Library.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Agriculture.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Foreign Affairs.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
Insular Affairs, chairman.
emi
wm
rT
=
tr
chev
House Committee Assignments. 205
COOPER, of Texas. ...... Expenditures in the State Department.
War Claims.
CoupRmy. = ie. 00s District of Columbia.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
CousING:...v. si... Foreign Affairs, chairman.
Como ono aaa Census.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
CRATG ae a Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.
: Public Lands.
CRAVENS i. oon Indian Affairs.
CRAWFORD...» oo Banking and Currency.
CRUMPACKEER.:.~ Census, chairman.
Insular Affairs.
Ways and Means.
CURRIER bv in Patents, chairman.
Accounts.
COSEMAN. ©. 05 Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Private Land Claims. '
DATZELY, Rules.
Ways and Means.
DARRAGH oe, Post-Office and Post-Roads.
DAVENPORT... Expenditures in the War Department.
Territories.
DAVIDSON... ir Railways and Canals, chairman.
Rivers and Harbors.
Pavis............ 000 Expenditures in the State Department.
Insular Affairs.
DAWES... es Military Affairs.
Pacific Railroads.
Railways and Canals.
DAWSON... 00 .~.. Naval Affairs.
Pacific Railroads.
Reform in the Civil Service.
DEARMOND. .... 0. Judiciary. 3
Rules.
DENBY oy Foreign Affairs.
Militia.
President’s Message on Secret Service.
Revision of the Laws.
DENVER... nibs Insular Affairs.
Mileage.
DEBREMA Lain Election of President, Vice-President, and Representatives
in Congress.
Judiciary.
Dixon... 0... Enrolled Bills.
Invalid Pensions.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
DOUGLAS... viii vine Mines and Mining.
Reform in the Civil Service.
DrAPER..... Accounts.
Pensions.
Territories.
DRISCOLL, ioe Elections No. 3, chairman.
Pacific Railroads.
66525—60-2—2D ED 15
(DARREN RS a
EDWARDS, of Georgia . ..
EDWARDS, of Kentucky. .
BLULERBE.. oo...
Err.18,0f Missouri’... ..
Er118,0fl Oregon... .....
ENGLEBRIGHT..... ... 4
BSTOPUNAY. i Ua oa
PAIRCHILD ia a
PAGS ov a a
PAVROT: of aaa
EERBIS i
PINLEY.. oe
BORILKER. ....... 0,
PORDNEN v0 tes
BORNES a von
FOSTER, of lllinois......
FOSTER, of Indiana .....
FOSTER, of Vermont. . ...
Congressional Directory.
Banking and Currency.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Expenditures on Public Buildings.
Reform in the Civil Service.
Immigration and Natualization.
Invalid Pensions.
Manufactures.
Rivers and Harbors.
Pacific Railroads.
Rivers and Harbors.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
Naval Affairs.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
Mines and Mining.
Expenditures on Public Buildings.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Expenditures in the Post-Office Department.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture,
Foreign Affairs.
Education.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Militia.
Public Lands.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Printing.
Appropriations.
Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture.
Foreign Affairs.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
Militia.
War Claims.
Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
. tives in Congress.
Patents.
War Claims.
Census. :
Flection of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
tives in Congress.
Mines and Mining.
Ways and Means.
Insular Affairs.
Naval Affairs, chairman.
Mines and Mining.
Pensions.
District of Columbia.
Judiciary.
Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor,
chairman.
Foreign Affairs.
Reform in the Civil Service.
ay
_—
House Committee Assignments. 207
BOULEROD © iii. an.
BOWLER... dain.
FRENCH. ...
BULLER... 5s io
BULLION: hai
GAINES, of Tennessee . ..
GAINES, of West Virginia.
GARDNER, of Mass .....
SARDNER, of Michigan. .
GARDNER, of New Jersey.
GARNER +. 0s
GARRII & i isiu
GOLDFOGLE ........ x
Manufactures. ¢
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Banking and Currency, chairman.
Reform in the Civil Service.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Mines and Mining.
Public Lands.
Insular Affairs.
Invalid Pensions.
Militia.
Claims.
Pacific Railroads.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Inaugural Ceremonies.
Public Lands.
Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
tives in Congress, chairman.
Ways and Means.
Industrial Arts and Expositions, chairman.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Appropriations. ;
Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Tabor.
Labor, chairman.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Expenditures in the Treasury Department.
Foreign Affairs.
Education.
Insular Affairs.
Agriculture.
Militia.
Foreign Affairs.
Militia.
Banking and Currency.
Flection of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
tives in Congress.
Reform in the Civil Service, chairman.
Appropriations.
Banking and Currency.
Expenditures in the Post-Office Department.
Census.
Reform in the Civil Service
Education.
Labor.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Claims.
Expenditures in the Department of Justice.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Military Affairs.
Accounts.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Appropriations,
~ Education.
Ventilation and Acoustics, chairman,
Claims.
Insular Affairs.
208 Congressional Directory.
GRANGER .... 0. Ways and Means.
GREENE .....i. vas Merchant Marine and Fisheries, chairman.
GREGG ..... ae Naval Affairs.
BRIGGS 1 Ways and Means.
CRONNA. Loo 0 Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor.
Public Lands.
CUBRNSEY -... 0. ho Banking and Currency.
Territories.
BACHE. Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
tives in Congress.
Invalid Pensions.
HACKNEY: Indian Affairs.
HAGGOTY...... .». .... Expenditures in the Treasury Department.
: Post-Office and Post-Roads.
HATE vias, Census.
Enrolled Bills.
Manufactures.
BATT, ae is Mines and Mining.
Public Lands.
HAMILL,. nn Elections No. 2.
Manufactures.
HAMILTON, of Iowa..... Mines and Mining.
Public Lands.
HAMILTON, of Michigan. Territories, chairman.
Insular Affairs.
Library.
EIAMY IN... ai Census.
Expenditures in the State Department.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
HAMMOND. ....... oe. Mines and Mining.
Public Lands.
HARDING... 00 Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.
Expenditures in the War Department.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
HARDWICK... hoa, Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
tives in Congress.
HARDY: fo ota Expenditures in: the Interior Department.
Railways and Canals.
Reform in the Civil Service.
HARRISON ............. Foreign Affairs.
HIASRING 0 oa a War Claims, chairman.
Agriculture.
Labor.
HAUGEN... wir dva ian, Expenditures in Interior Department, chairman.
Agriculture.
War Claims.
HAWIRY ooo eon Agriculture.
Claims.
HAY oi aa Census.
Military Affairs.
BAYES os ln Banking and Currency.
Immigration and Naturalization.
HEETIN. 0. oss Agriculture,
a
p—
~
House Committee Assignments.
Hera: Expenditures on Public Buildings.
Insular Affairs.
HENRY, of Connecticut. . Expenditures on Public Buildings, chairman.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Patents.
HENRY, of Texas ....... Judiciary.
BEPBURN = ci Interstate and Foreign Commerce, chairman.
HIGGINS... vine Expenditures in Department of Agriculture.
Judiciary.
Territories.
War Claims.
HiLy, of Connecticut. ... Expenditures in the Treasury Department.
Ways and Means.
HiLL, of Mississippi. .... Expenditures in the Interior Department.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
BIINSHAW: 00s Indian Affairs.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Patents.
HYICHCOoCK =i. Indian Affairs.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
Pacific Railroads.
HonsoN v.05 be Naval Affairs.
HOLLIDAY =... Invalid Pensions.
Military Affairs.
War Claims.
HOUSTON... cis x Revision of the Laws.
Territories.
HowarD.. © i 0. Foreign Affairs.
Library.
HowELL, of New Jersey. Immigration and Naturalization, chairman.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Howrry, of Utah, ...... Claims.
Indian Affairs.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Mines and Mining.
HOWIAND......7 woe Expenditures in the Department of Justice.
Public Lands.
HUBBARD, of Iowa. ..... Expenditures in the Department of Justice.
! Insular Affairs.
Revision of the Laws.
HuBBARD, of West Vir- Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
ginia ginia.
Hope. vi 0 are Mines and Mining, chairman.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
HuGHES, of New Jersey. Labor.
Railways and Canals.
HUGHES, of West Virginia Accounts, chairman.
: Census.
Hurt, of Towa. .. 0 Military Affairs, chairman.
Militia.
Hull, of Tennessee ..... Pensions.
Reform in the Civil Service.
HuMPHREY, of Washing- Education.
ton. Elections No. 3.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
HuMPHREVS, of Missis- Rivers and Harbors.
sippi.
209
210
Jackson wcll
JAMES, ADDISON D.....
JAMES, OT1IEM......
Jemmaws a
JoHNSON, of Kentucky .
JouNSON, of South Car-
olina.
JONES, of Virginia. .....
JonEs, of Washington . . .
ICAL ANIANAOLE .......
BEIBER .. ves mais
BEEIHER i otaara
KENNEDY, of Iowa... ..
KENNEDY, of Ohio... ..
IEIMEBALL, ov esis
RINTAID.. ao
KITCHIN, CLAUDE =...
KrrcHIN, WILLIAM W ..
NOPE... ai
IENOWIAND-. =. =...
KUSTERMANN .........
BAREAN. vai
T,AMAR, of Missouri .....
L,AMAR, of Florida ......
Congressional Directory.
Accounts.
Flection of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
tives in Congress.
Expenditures in the Post-Office Department.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Mileage. .
Militia.
Banking and Currency.
Flections, No. I.
Judiciary, chairman.
District of Columbia.
Manufactures.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Insular Affairs.
Private Land Claims.
Rivers and Harbors.
District of Columbia.
Military Affairs.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Private Land Claims.
Appropriations.
District of Columbia.
Foreign Affairs.
Militia.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
Mileage.
Pensions.
Expenditures in the Interior Department.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Reform in the Civil Service.
Territories.
Education.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
>acific Railroads.
Expenditures in the Treasury Department.
Invalid Pensions.
Claims.
Naval Affairs.
Manufactures.
Elections No. I.
Indian Affairs.
Railways and Canals.
Expenditures in the Treasury Department, chairman.
Public Lands.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Expenditures in the Interior Department.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Naval Affairs.
Foreign Affairs.
Pacific Railroads.
<Q.
SL
—ry—,
SSE
——
“a
House Committee Assignments. 211
TAME ol Agriculture.
Expenditures in the Treasury Department.
I ANDIS. . is. hi aries Foreign Affairs.
Printing, chairman.
LANGLEY bo. ov. Census.
Expenditures in the Navy Department.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
TANNING... iio Elections No. 3.
Pensions.
War Claims.
TLARRINAGA ..... .... Insular Affairs.
TASSIVER: ic Lng oa Election of President, Vice-President, and Representatives
in Congress.
Revision of the Laws.
LAW ro rat Patents.
Revision of the Laws.
War Claims.
LAWRENCE... i... Expenditures in the War Department, chairman
Rivers and Harbors.
LEAR. ns oe Patents.
Private Land Claims.
TER ho shar Mines and Mining.
War Claims.
TEGARE.: oie ls, Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Patents.
Yemaman 0 Expenditures in the State Department.
Territories.
TRBYEBR io Agriculture.
Education.
LEWIS: soo a Banking and Currency.
Mileage.
LILLE vin sin, Claims.
Naval Affairs.
LINDBERGH ..« on... Claims.
Indian Affairs.
LINDSAY. aaa Invalid Pensions.
IaviNestoN... 0. Appropriations.
LEOYD «iin Post-Office and Post-Roads.
President’s Message on Secret Service.
Territories.
IONGWORTH -.........I Ways and Means.
LORIMER. .......... 0. Agriculture.
Rivers and Harbors.
LOUD. is Ss, Education.
Naval Affairs.
LLOUDENSLAGER ........ Pensions, chairman.
Naval Affairs.
TOVERING. -... on Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
LOWDEN:.... oi Expenditures in the Navy Department.
Foreign Affairs.
Militia.
McCann Library, chairman.
Ways and Means.
McCREARY. .-.......... Banking and Currency.
212
MCDERMONT ... 0...
McGAVIN SE ee
MOGUIRE: iain
McHENRY on
McKINTAY, of California.
McKINLEY, of Illinois. . .
MERINNEV.. i.
MCLACHLAN ........ : hn
MCIAIN ed a
MCLAUGHIIN.. .........
MCMILLAN
MCMORRAN.......0o wn
AVFACON oo 0a stasis
MADDEN a ra
MADISON. oes
MARSHATTL, vs
VARPING al Sera.
MAYNARD. i. iineics
Murr ER .... ee
MONRDELL, .... oo sea.
MOON, of Tennessee. . ...
MOON, of Pennsylvania. .
MOORE, of Pennsylvania.
Congressional Directory.
Manufactures.
Railways and Canals.
District of Columbia.
Patents.
Indian Affairs.
Public Lands.
Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.
Banking and Currency.
Elections No. 2.
Insular Affairs.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman.
Foreign Affairs.
Banking and Currency.
Territories.
Expenditures on Public Buildings.
Rivers and Harbors.
Pensions.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Agriculture.
Expenditures on Public Buildings.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
District of Columbia.
Banking and Currency.
Manufactures, chairman.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
Pensions.
Revision of the Laws.
Appropriations.
Expenditures in the Post-Office Department.
Insular Affairs.
Labor,
Expenditures in the Interior Department.
Judiciary.
Elections No. 1, chairman.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Pulp and Paper Investigation (Select), chairman.
Reform in the Civil Service.
Private Land Claims, chairman.
Indian Affairs.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
Indian Affairs.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Claims, chairman.
Elections No. 2.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Pulp and Paper Investigation (Select).
Public Lands, chairman.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Rivers and Harbors.
Judiciary.
Revision of the Laws, chairman.
District of Columbia.
Enrolled Bills.
Immigration and Naturalization.
House Committee Assignments, 213
Moore, of Texas ....... Expenditures in the Post-Office Department.
Immigration and Naturalization.
MORSE. i iE Indian Affairs.
War Claims.
MOUSER. =... c.. Claims.
Elections No. I.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
MUBD :.. Expenditures in the Department of Justice, chairman.
Naval Affairs.
Pacific Railroads.
MURDOCK Post-Office and Post-Roads.
MURPHEY. .= oon District of Columbia.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
NEEDHAM... ...... Ways and Means.
NELSON... 3 Elections No. 2.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Pacific Railroads.
NICHOLLS... 0... Labor.
Mines and Mining.
NORRIS... a Flection of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
tives in Congress.
Labor.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
NYE... nr District of Columbia.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
O'CONREILY, ..... 0000 Accounts.
Immigration and Naturalization.
OLCOTL oi Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.
District of Columbia.
Naval Affairs.
OLMSTED... oo sia, Elections No. 2, chairman.
Insular Affairs.
OVERSIRERT ..... oii. Post-Office and Post-Roads, chairman.
PADGEID. 0 Expenditures in the Navy Department.
Naval Affairs.
PAGE... vhs Expenditures in the Interior Department.
Insular Affairs.
BAREER., Judiciary.
Military Affairs.
PARSONS... vb, .. Insular Affairs.
Public Lands.
Revision of the Laws.
PATERSON: =o oo, Claims.
Irrigation of Arid Iands.
Railways and Canals.
PAYNE... 0 Ways and Means, chairman.
PEARRE...........0.. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Elections No. 1.
Manufactures.
PREREING... i... President’s Message on Secret Service, chairman.
Foreign Affairs.
Printing.
PRUERS oo a Insular Affairs.
POLLARD... ae Agriculture,
214
RANDEIL, of Texas .....
RANSDELT,, of T,ouisiana .
RIHINOCK . i ie adinainis
RICHARDSON v.iiievviv
BIORDAN. vo oan,
ROBBRASE na
ROBINSON. i...
RODENBERG . oc vs
ROraERMEr,
RUCKER: oa
RUSSELL, of Missouri. ...
RUSSELL, of Texas ......
Congressional Directory.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Ventilation and Acoustics.
Ways and Means.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Patents.
Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.
Mines and Mining.
Public Lands.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River, chair-
man.
Banking and Currency.
Military Affairs.
Banking and Currency.
Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor.
Enrolled Bills.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
Labor.
Pacific Railroads.
Ways and Means.
Rivers and Harbors.
Labor.
Ventilation and Acoustics.
Irrigation of Arid Lands, chairman.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
Judiciary.
Expenditures in the War Department.
Public Lands.
Territories.
Expenditures in the War Department.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Pensions.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Tabor.
Naval Affairs.
Railways and Canals.
Census.
Public Lands.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Railways and Canals.
Agriculture.
Flection of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
tives in Congress.
Private Land Claims.
Revision of the Laws.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Pulp and Paper Investigation (Select).
Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.
Immigration and Naturalization.
House Commitlee Assignments.
SAUNDERS... .... Sr
SCOTT.
SHACKLEFORD .. .......
SHEPPARD... oo,
SHERLEY = aay
SHERMAN .......
SLAYDEN.. © o..
SI, EMP
SMALT,
SMITH,
SMITH,
SMITH,
SMITH,
SMITH,
SMITH,
SNAPP
of Michigan.....
of California...
of Towa. i...
ofilfexas: i:
SOUTHEWICE +...
SPAREMAN =. ox
SPURRY uae
SPIGHT
STAFFORD
STANLEY ©. a aaa
SIFENERSON......
STEPHENS aa
STERIING i is
STRVENS ..
21s
Elections No. 1.
Indian Affairs.
Agriculture, chairman.
Claims.
District of Columbia.
Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Appropriations.
Indian Affairs, chairman,
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Rules.
Military Affairs.
District of Columbia.
Pulp and Paper Investigation (Select).
War Claims.
Military Affairs.
Pacific Railroads.
Accounts.
Private Land Claims.
Expenditures on Public Buildings.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Labor.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Public Lands.
Territories.
District of Columbia, chairman.
Invalid Pensions.
Education.
Pacific Railroads.
Public Lands.
Appropriations.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.
Private Land Claims.
Census.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Fducation, chairman.
Territories.
Rivers and Harbors.
Alcoholic Liquor Traffic, chairman.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
War Claims.
Expenditures in the Department of Justice,
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Pulp and Paper Investigation (Select).
Agriculture.
Militia, chairman.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.
Expenditures in the Department of Justice.
Indian Affairs.
Judiciary.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Military Affairs.
216
STURGISS..
SUIT OWAY . coins So
SUNZER: ih ea
SWASEY 0 Lion a oo
BATIBO ov
TAWNEY 0 tay
TAVIOR, of Ohio... [
TAVIOR, of Alabama ....
THISTLEWOOD ........ aii
THOMAS, of North Caro-
lina.
THOMAS, of Ohio... .....
BIRBRELIZ = ov oi
TOU NBLULE:. ©.
TOWNSEND 0.
UNDERWOOD ... .......
VOISTEAD. ........
NVREBLAND bitin
WALDO: aes
WALLACE Ln
WANGER . ... ia
WASHBURN. .... an
WARKINS: irs
WATSON: a aia
WERMS
WEISSE oii
Congressional Directory.
Elections No. I.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Revision of the Laws.
Invalid Pensions, chairman.
Election of President, Vice-President, and Representa-
tives in Congress.
Military Affairs.
Patents.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
Revision of the Laws.
Disposition of Useless Executive Papers.
Naval Affairs.
Appropriations, chairman.
District of Columbia.
Foreign Affairs.
Rivers and Harbors.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.
Manufactures.
Library.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Naval Affairs.
Claims.
Judiciary.
Education.
Elections No. 2.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Ways and Means.
Education.
Public Lands.
Appropriations.
Labor.
Banking and Currency.
War Claims.
Claims.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Private Land Claims.
Expenditures in the Post-Office Department, chairman.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture.
Patents. :
Insular Affairs.
Naval Affairs.
Revision of the Laws.
Territories.
Judiciary.
Expenditures in the State Department, chairman.
Agriculture.
Banking and Currency.
President’s Message on Secret Service.
Banking and Currency.
Elections No. 2.
Invalid Pensions.
Manufactures.
Private Land Claims.
hs.
am
—
House Committee Assignments. 217
WHEBILER: -... Railways and Canals.
Pensions.
WILEY: ay Military Affairs.
Militia.
WILLER a a Elections No. I.
Enrolled Bills.
WILLIAMS. sic President’s Message on Secret Service.
Rules.
WILSON, of Illinois. ..... Enrolled Bills, chairman.
\ Merchant Marine and Fisheries.
WirLsoN,of Pennsylvania. Census.
Patents.
WOE. man, Elections No. 3.
Expenditures in the Navy Department.
Woohoo, Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Immigration and Naturalization.
WOODYARD.. oa. Rivers and Harbors.
NOUNG i... i ates Inaugural Ceremonies.
Rivers and Harbors.
Military Affairs,
218 Congressional Directory.
| |
. MEETING DAYS OF COMMITTEES.
(Committees not given below have no regular meeting days, but meet upon the call of the
chairmen.)
SENATE.
| Agriculture and Forestry... 0s ie ved Tuesday.
| Clams ns a ES Tuesday.
Cemmerce, 5. hr Se Es ane i Thursday.
District ol Colimbia, soni oni nd arab linni, Friday.
Expenditures in Department of Justice... ............... Saturday.
Bianca oa ns a EY Tuesday.
Porelgn Relallone: ro oe ean Wednesday.
Tndian Affadew. Lo ita tad i Thursday.
Interoceanic Canals. iio 0 nti ss ih ns is Saturday.
Interstate Commerce. ................ a ae Friday.
Irrigation’... ...... Fieri Eh RS dem a ela Saturday.
Indichary on ov a aC Monday.
Mannlactaress oo od boa sin a a Thursday.
Milltarys&fialys: 0. oi nn a Thursday.
Bates 2. oo a a re a, Friday.
Renglong: oo. 0 hein a Se ei hy Monday.
Privilegesand Blections .. a. co niin vivid ols Saturday.
Pablic Lands. 0 nr oi. enna oe Wednesday.
Nerritonies', 0 oo Tl ee a Friday.
HOUSE.
Accomnis. nL he Sa Tuesday.
Aorienlture =... 0 ol Gh esc an a Wednesday.
Banking and Carreney.. oi. ob. 0 ana a Wednesday.
Climier 0 i eg ea te Monday.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures... .. on. voc on . Thursday.
Disposition of useless executive papers... .......... ... 1st Tuesday of the month.
District of Columbin:,. oii Gin Sra win slain Thursday.
Poreign Aaies cc... iil oon ona a Thursday.
Immigration and Naturalization... 0... Tuesday.
India Alas. odin ae Thursday .
Intersiate and Poreign Commerce ....:...... 0... Tuesday and Friday.
Invalid Pensions ......... 4.0. oi. bw See RS Monday and Friday.
Jadiclary: 0s alsa ah nS Wednesday and Friday.
Labor a sera eae fs eh eR a La ... Thursday. ’
Library 0. co ee A Monday.
Manufactire oi Pails nr i a a Thursday.
Merchant Marineand Fisherfes.. ........... =... .. Thursday.
Military Allaire... 0. ondiad assy emer Tuesday and Thursday.
Ere Se ee a ase Monday.
Mines and Mining... voor iin, Dian sdovidr. das, Monday.
Naval Afialers 0 or or Ln Tuesday and Friday.
Patents . .... eS SE SE Bh TT Wednesday.
Pouslons. sos niin mi en aa sa Wednesday.
Post-Office and Post-Roads.. lon mh oat 0 Tuesday and Friday.
Private Land Clatms. ...00 00 vs elo cies 0 . Wednesday.
Public Bulldingsand Grounds. . 1... ....... oo a0. Friday.
Pabllcihands. cv. oii a ae a pitas Wednesday.
Reform intheCivil Service... o.oo. Friday.
War iChat vr i a a aa Tuesday.
Joint Congressional Commissions. 219
JOINT CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS.
IMMIGRATION.
(Rooms 154 and 155, House Office Building. Phone, Main 3120.)
Chairman.—Wm, P. Dillingham, Senator from Vermont, The Cochran.
Henry Cabot Lodge, Senator from Massachusetts, 1765 Massachusetts avenue.
Anselm J. McLaurin, Senator from Mississippi, Congress Hall.
Benj. F. Howell, Representative from New Jersey, The Cochran.
William S. Bennet, Representative from New York, 1909 S street.
John I,. Burnett, Representative from Alabama, Congress Hall.
Jeremiah W. Jenks, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
Charles P. Neill, Commissioner of Labor, 3556 Macomb street.
William R. Wheeler, Assistant Secretary, Commerce and Labor, The Highlands.
Secretaries.— Morton E. Crane, Century Club; W. W. Husband, 2924 Newark street;
C. S. Atkinson, 1226 Massachusetts avenue.
INAUGURAL CEREMONIES.
Philander C. Knox, Senator from Pennsylvania, 1527 K street.
Henry Cabot Lodge, Senator from Massachusetts, 1765 Massachusetts avenue.
Augustus O. Bacon, Senator from Georgia, Eighteenth street and Oregon avenue.
James F. Burke, Representative from Pennsylvania, The Shoreham.
H. Olin Young, Representative from Michigan, The Portland.
John W. Gaines, Representative from Tennessee, New Occidental.
NATIONAL MONETARY.
Chairman.—Nelson W. Aldrich, Senator from Rhode Island, 1727 Massachusetts
avenue.
Vice-chairman.—Edward B. Vreeland, Representative from New York, The Dewey.
Julius C. Burrows, Senator from Michigan, 1406 Massachusetts avenue.
Eugene Hale, Senator from Maine, 1001 Sixteenth street.
Philander C. Knox, Senator from Pennsylvania, 1527 K street.
Albert J. Hopkins, Senator from Illinois, New Willard.
John W. Daniel, Senator from Virginia, The Dewey.
Henry M. Teller, Senator from Colorado, The Cairo.
Hernando D. Money, Senator from Mississippi, The Portner.
Joseph W. Bailey, Senator from Texas, Stoneleigh Court.
Jesse Overstreet, Representative from Indiana, New Willard.
Theodore FE. Burton, Representative from Ohio, The Rochambeau.
John W. Weeks, Representative from Massachusetts, 1526 New Hampshire avenue.
Robert W. Bonynge, Representative from Colorado, The Cairo.
Sylvester C. Smith, Representative from California, The Rochambeau.
Lemuel P. Padgett, Representative from Tennessee, The Dewey.
George F. Burgess, Representative from Texas, The Normandie.
Arsené P. Pujo, Representative from Louisiana, The Arlington.
Secretary.—Arthur B. Shelton, 1712 R street.
Disbursing officer.—Richard B. Nixon, 1336 Fairmont street.
Assistant to the Commission.—A. Piatt Andrew.
PRINTING INVESTIGATION.
Chairman.—Thomas C. Platt, Senator from New York, The Arlington:
Stephen B. Elkins, Senator from West Virginia, 1626 K street.
William H. Milton, Senator from Florida, Congress Hall.
Charles B. Landis, Representative from Indiana, The Farragut.
James B. Perkins, Representative from New York, 1613 New Hampshire avenue.
David E. Finley, Representative from South Carolina, The National.
Secretary.—Victor L. Ricketts, The Portner.
220 Congressional Directory.
OFFICERS OF THE SENATE.
(Phone, Main 3120.)
PRESIDENT.
President of the Senate. —CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS, 1701 K street.
Secretary to the President of the Senate.—George B. Lockwood.
Messenger to the President of the Senate.— Russell King, The Calumet.
PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE.
President pro tempore of the Senate.—William P. Frye, I'he Hamilton.
CHAPLAIN.
Chaplain of the Senate.—Rev. Edward Everett Hale, 1748 N street.
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY.
CHARLES GOODWIN BENNETT, Secretary of the Senate, was born and has
always resided in the old Bennett homestead in Brooklyn, N. Y.; admitted to the
bar; LL. B., University of New York; chairman, Broadway branch, Mechanics Bank;
trustee of the Kings County Savings Institution; unsuccessful candidate in the Fifth
New York Congressional district for the Fifty-third Congress; elected to the Fifty-
fourth and Fifty-fifth Congresses, serving on the Committee on Interstate and
Foreign Commerce; unsuccessful candidate for the Fifty-sixth Congress, and elected
Secretary of the Senate of the United States January 29; 1900.
Assistant Secretary.—Henry M. Rose, The Burlington.
Chief Clerk.—Henry H. Gilfry, 229 New Jersey avenue SE.
Financial Clerk.—Richard B. Nixon, 1336 Fairmont street.
Minute and Journal Clerk.—Alfred C. Parkinson, 33 B street.
Enrolling Clerk.—Benjamin S. Platt, The Roanoke.
Superintendent of Document Room.—George H. Boyd, Lotos Club.
Executive Clerk.—Clarence Johnson, The Driscoll.
Principal Clerk.—Claude M. Curtiss, 49 D street SE.
Reading Clerk.—John C. Crockett, The Kenesaw.
Assistant Financial Clerk.—Peter M. Wilson, 1901 Q street.
Keeper of Slationery.—Charles N. Richards, ror Massachusetts avenue.
Librarian.—Edward C. Goodwin, 1865 Kalorama road.
First Assistant in Document Room.—Bryant E. Avery, 213 North Capitol street.
Assistant in Document Room.—W. Grant Lieuallen, 3008 Seventeenth street NE.
Assistant Librarians.—James M. Baker, 1863 Mintwood place; Jacob C. Donaldson,
219 Third street NE.
Assistant Keeper of Stat onery.—T. W. B. Duckwall, 2134 F street.
Clerks.—E. 1,. Givens, 1812 Nineteenth street; William B. Turner, The Nansemond;
Bayard C. Ryder, 110 Maryland avenue NE.; Eugene Colwell, 609 Eighth street
NE.; W. W. Horne, The Iowa; Charles R. Nixon, 1102 Fourteenth street; G. L.
Weiler, 504 Third street; Rodney Sacket, 41 B street; Abraham G. McClintock,
1725 H street; Ansel Wold, 147 North Carolina avenue SE.; Leonard J. Garver,
Y. M. C. A. Building; H. T. Coggeshall; William M. Stuart, 1o12 Twelfth street;
A.W. Church; J. W. Beller, 1726 Lamont street; Frank H. Briggs, The Hamilton.
Messengers.—R. R. Dutton, 657 C street SE.; J. C. Jorgensen, Mt, Rainier, Md.; W.
E. Burns, 707 Seventh street NE.; T. J. Enright, 143 C street NE.; W. J. Lyle, 204
New York avenue,
Officers of the Senate. 221
CLERKS AND MESSENGERS TO COMMITTEES.
Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress.—Clerk, Leslie H. Mar-
tin, Century Club; messenger, Frank J. Merkling, 221 M street.
Agriculture and Forestry.—Clerk, Theo. B. Elton, Y. M. C. A. Building; assistant
clerks, C. D. Hamel, The Burlington; messenger, Geo. B. Prindle, The Burlington.
Appropriations.—Clerk, Thomas P. Cleaves, 1819 Tenth street; assistant clerks,
L. J. McNeely, The Alabama; Kennedy F. Rea, go6 East Capitol street; Adelaide
KE. Woods, 527 Twelfth street NE. ; messenger, J. B. McClure, 115 East Capitol street.
Audit and Control Contingent Expenses.—Clerk, Donald H. McLean, The Cairo;
messenger, Errol O. Horner, 1700 Fifteenth street.
Canadian Relations.—Clerk, Fred. L. Fishback, go7 S street; messenger, Ralph B.
Marean, Pinehurst, Chevy Chase, Md.
Census.—Clerk, Ralph H. Faxon, 33 B street; messenger, Carl H. Osborn.
Civil Service and Retrenchment.—Clerk, Frank H. Sawyer, 1702 P street; messen-
ger, A. W. Nyce, 1827 Kalorama road.
Claims.—Clerk, Charles W. Halderman, The National; assistant clerks, Dennis C.
Pillsbury, 912 S street, Mary A. Berry, 1401 Massachusetts avenue; messenger,
H. Bloomer Straight, 1200 C street NE.
Coast and Insular Survey.—Clerk, Edgar I,. Crider, 1443 Massachusetts avenue;
messenger, Verona Whitson, 236 North Capitol street.
Coast Defenses.—Clerk, Dwight V. Jones, The Sherman.
Commerce.—Clerk, Woodbury Pulsifer, The Brunswick; assistant clerk, Frederick
B. Sands, 1466 Rhode Island avenue; messenger, Benj. F. Briggs, 1306 Thirteenth
street.
Conference of Minority.—Clerk, Chesley W. Jurney, 23 First street NE.; assistant
clerk, A. J. Clopton, 1529 Q street; messenger, James Spiller, 506 Fast Capitol
street. :
Corporations Organized in District of Columbia.—Clerk, Hernando D. Money, jr.,
The Windsor; messenger, Lucretia E. Money, The Windsor.
Cuban KRelations.—Clerk, Reed Paige Clark, The Ventosa; assistant clerk, Edward
Irving Littlefield, The Congressional.
Disposition of Useless Papers in Executive Departments.—Clerk, W. B. Jaynes,
23 First street NE.; messenger, 1. S. Jaynes, 23 First street NE.
District of Columbia.—Clerk, John H. Walker, 1334 Girard street; assistant clerk,
Lucille A. Hughes, 1708 R street; messenger, Charles S. Gordon, 3319 Holmead
place.
Education and Labor.—Clerk, Clarence E. Dawson, Irving street, Chevy Chase,
Md.; assistant clerk, John H. Pearsons, New Varnum.
Engrossed Bills.—Clerk, John T. Boifeuillet, The Ethelhurst; messenger, John Cor-
rigan, jr.
Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, John M. Peffers, 933 H street; assistant clerk, Will R. Ersfeld,
933 H street.
Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.—Clerk, Miles Taylor, 1007
Otis place; messenger, Charles H. Croy.
Expenditures in Departments—
Agriculture. —Clerk, Lewis S. Patrick, The La Fetra; messenger, Arthur H.
Lambeck, 813 Twenty-first street.
Interior.—Clerk, Wm. D. Denney, messenger, J. O. Jones, 1213 N street.
Justice.—Clerk, Anna I. Howland, The Dewey, messenger, Frank Edgerton.
Nayy.—Clerk, Wm. F. McClelland, 1302 I, street; messenger, J. Ray Adams,
1009 Fifth street SE.
State.—Clerk, Edward T. Crawford, 1837 V street; messenger, Rudolph Ebel,
The Champlain.
Zveasury.—Clerk, Frank E. Evans, Metropolitan Club; messenger, Hervey S.
Moore, 1700 Fifteenth street.
War .—Clerk, E. B. Shurter, Metropolitan Hotel; messenger, B. G. Lockerman.
Finance. —Clerk, Arthur B. Shelton, 1712 R street; statistical clerk, Benjamin Durfee; messenger, George M. Taylor, 218 A street SE.
Fisheries.—Clerk, John C. Young, 1302 Irving street; messenger, Emma F. Ramsay, The Ethelhurst.
Five Civilized Tribes of Indians.—Clerk, B. R. Tillman, jr., The Toronto; messen- ger, J. Broadus Knight..
Foreign Relations. —Clerk, William M. Malloy, Y. M. C. A. Building; assistant clerk, Garfield Charles, 1314 Fourteenth street; messenger, Charles J. Pickett, 606 U street. Forest Reservations and Protection of Game.—Clerk, John B. Kelley; messenger, William Gardiner.
Geological Survey.—Clerk, Frank Buren, Y. M. C. A. Building; messenger, Carl V., King, 1813 Riggs place.
66525—60-2—2D ED——1I6
522 Congressional Directory.
Immigration.—Clerk, Paul S. Dillingham, The Cochran; assistant clerk, Ferdinand
H. Pease, 1404 Fifteenth street; messenger, John P. Atkinson, 324 Second street SE.
Indian Affairs. —Clerk, Lee F. Warner, 1700 Fifteenth street; assistant clerks,
Gertrude B. Spaulding, 309 Maryland avenue NE.
Indian Depredations.—Clerk, Theresa P. Curtis, The Raleigh; messenger, W. W.
Smith, Y. M. C. A. Building; stenographer, W. R. Dorsey.
Industrial Expositions.—Clerk, William S. Bean, 1312 I, street; messenger,
Charles F. Black, 1404 Fifteenth street.
Intevoceanic Canals. —Clerk, Thomas B. Roberts, 232 New Jersey avenue; assistant
clerk, Geo. F. Jones, 222 New Jersey avenue.
Interstate Commerce.—Clerk, George Fletcher Snyder; assistant clerk, Jno. W.
Fenton, jr., 1013 Florida avenue NE.; messenger, Fugene H. McDermot, The
Rockingham,
Irrigation.—Clerk, Mary I. Shriner, The Ventosa; messenger, Everett W. Foster.
Judiciary.—Clerk, Edmund J. Wells, 1 C street SE.; assistant clerk, Fugene Davis,
The Portner; messenger, John F. Bethure, 322 A street SE.
Library.—Clerk, Henry Ambler Vale, The Van Cortlandt; messenger, James A.
Abbott, Burton Hotel.
Manufactures.—Clerk, Addison T. Smith, 519 Stanton place NE; assistant clerk,
Ellen C. Talbot, The Derbyshire.
Military Affairs.—Clerk, Joseph A. Breckons, 1814 G street; assistant clerks, Leona
M. Wells, 1338 New York avenue; E. O. Leech, 2011 Thirteenth street; messenger,
Ray Colwell, 609 Eighth street, NE.
Mines and Mining.—Clerk, William FE. Marsh, 1701 First street NE.; messenger,
J. H. Weirick, 1902 H street.
Mississippi River and Tributarvies.—Clerk, William B. C. Brown, The Cairo; mes-
senger, R. P. Ritter.
National Banks.—Clerk, Martin C. Huggett, The Farragut; messenger, Frank E.
Doesburg, Y. M. C. A. Building.
Naval Affarrs.—Clerk, Pitman Pulsifer, 1457 Girard street; assistant clerk, Edward
J. Hickey, 600 Twenty-second street.
Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.—Clerk, Charles Edwin Alden, 34 Rhode Island
avenue; assistant clerk, Joseph Sagmeister; messenger, J. B. Wheatley, Burton Hotel.
Pacific Railroads.—Clerk, Raymond B. Morgan, 41 B street; messenger, Howard
B. Smith, 118 Third street, NE.
Patents.—Clerk, Charles M. Morris, 504 Third street; messenger, Harlow FE. Smoot,
Y. M. C. A. Building.
Pensions.—Clerk, Robert W. Farrar, 2029 Thirteenth street; assistant clerks, W. I.
Van Horn, 216 Maryland avenve NE.; Theo. Schlenker, 226 North Capitol street;
Margaret Patterson; messenger, O. M. Jones; principal examiner, detailed from
Pension Office, D. Kerr.
Philippines. — Clerk, Edward T. Clark; assistant clerk, Geo. Cabot Lodge, 2346
Massachusetts avenue; messenger, Phillips B. Robinson, 1219 Connecticut avenue.
Post-Offices and Post-Roads.—Clerk, Wesley R. Andrews, The Portland; assistant
clerks, Edward Garrett Smith, The Vendome; Leighton Croft Taylor, 207 East
Capitol street; additional clerk, Wm. B. Stewart, 533 Randolph street; messenger,
John H. O’Brien, The Calumet.
Potomac River Front.—Clerk, Walter Drew, The Ventosa; messenger, Nellie H.
Dunn, 1864 Wyoming avenue.
Printing.—Clerk, E. Remington Merry, jr.; assistant clerks, M. Eugene Rickert,
The Laclede; Harry E. Shroyer.
Private Land Claims.—Clerk, Thomas F. Dawson, 2572 University place; assistant
clerk, Clarence G. Northup, 1755 Columbia road.
Privileges and Elections.—Clerk, Geo. M. Buck, 116 Maryland avenue NE.; assist-
ant clerk, Mary A. Gage, 1310 North Carolina avenue NE.; messenger, M. H. Bum-
phrey, 217 Fourth street.
Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, John 1,. Steele, 1742 P street; assistant clerk,
Mary G. Kearney, 1125 Fourteenth street; messenger, Louis H. Landsittel, 419
Massachusetts avenue.
Public Health and National Quarantine.—Clerk, John W. Daniel, jr.; assistant clerk,
John W. D. Halsey.
Public Lands.—Clerk, Cleveland H. Hicks, The Ventosa; assistant clerk, J. A. O.
Preus, 309 Maryland avenue NE.
Railroads.—Clerk, Royal W. Thompson, 21 Sixth street NE.; messenger, Olin B.
Kilbourn, 328 B street NE.
Revision of the Laws of the United States.—Clerk, Mortimer Thorn Cowperthwaite,
1775 N street; messenger, George KE. Wright.
Revolutionary Claims ~—Clerk, William T, Sens 912 S street; messenger, Willie
Lawton Stockton,
Officers of the Senate. 223
Rules.—Clerk, Charles Frederic Wilson, 2004 G street; assistant clerk, Frances M.
Marsh, 133 North Carolina avenue SE.; messenger, Reed Knox, 1527 K street.
Standards, Weights, and Measures.—Clerk, Earl Venable, 113 First street NE.;
messenger, Cora M. Rubin, 113 First street, NK.
Terrvitories.—Clerk, John F. Hayes, The Cairo; assistant clerk, Edward P. Goetz,
The Cairo; messenger, Charles E. Felton, The Champlain.
To Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands.—Clerk, Geo. M. Hanson, 1437
Rhode Island avenue; messenger, Horace H. Smith, The Ethelhurst.
Transportation and Sale of Meat Products.—Clerk, Douglas W. McEnery, 1366 Ken-
yon street; messenger, Charles P. McEnery.
Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.—Clerk, ILeonard Underwood, The Ventosa;
messenger, Ralph H. Case, 1016 Thirteenth street.
University of the United States.—Clerk, Thos. P. Littlepage; messenger, Isaiah P.
Watts; stenographer, Union B. White.
Woman Suffrage.—Clerk, William J. Harris; messenger, William Henry Bellah.
OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS.
DANIEL MOORE RANSDELIL, 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; was a member of the Repub-
lican State committee eight consecutive years; was appointed by President Har-
rison 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 to Sergeant-at-Arms.—E. Livingstone Cornelius, Glen Echo Heights, Md.
Assistant Doorkeeper.—Alonzo H. Stewart, 204 Fourth street SE.
Acting Assistant Doorkeeper.—B. W. Layton, 12 B street NE.
Messenger on floor of Senate.—C. A. Loeffler, 1444 Newton street.
Messenger on floor of Senate.—A. D. Sumner, New Varnum.
Storekeeper.—John J. McGrain, 122 V street.
Clerk.—H. H. Riddleberger, 1833 V street.
POST-OFFICE.
Postmaster of the Senale.—James A. Crystal, 108 Fifth street NE.
Assistant.—Warren E. Pressey, 149 A street NE.
Clerk.—F. A. Eckstein, 3361 Eighteenth street.
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 F. Goldenbogen, 1700 1, street.
Assistant.—Walter F. Collins, 223 Ninth street SE,
Foreman.—H. H. Brewer, 21 B street.
HEATING AND VENTILATING.
Chief Engineer.—E. C. Stubbs, Linden, Md.
Assistants.—F. E. Dodson, 1654 Monroe street; A. S. Worsley, 1243 New Jersey
avenue SE.; R. H. Gay, 1725 Newton street; John Edwards, 106 E street,
224 Congressional Directory.
OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE.
(Phone, Main 3120.)
SPEAKER.
The Speaker.—JosEPH G. CANNON, 1014 Vermont avenue.
Secretary to the Speaker.—1,. White Busbey, 2336 Massachusetts avenue.
Clerk at the Speaker's Table.—Asher C. Hinds, 2504 Cliffbourne place.
Speaker's Clerk.—]. W. Murphy.
Messenger. —Henry Neal, 1229 T street.
CHAPLAIN.
Rev. Henry N. Couden, D. D., 1310 Columbia road.
OFFICE OF THE CLERK.
Clerk of the House.—Alexander McDowell, The Dewey.
Chief Clerk.—William J. Browning, 146 East Capitol street.
Assistant.—H. 1,. Overstreet, 156 Thirteenth street SE.
Journal Clevk.—Herman A. Phillips, 3327 Eighteenth street.
Assistant.—Frank J. Chester, 18 Third street SE.
Reading Clerks.—Dennis E. Alward, The Dewey; E. L. Lampson, 313 East Capitol
street.
Tally Clerk.—Winthrop C. Jones, 18 Third street SE.
Printing and Bill Clerk.—M. E. Matlack, 230 A street SE.
Assistant.—H. P. Andrews, 13 First street NE.
Disbursing Clerk.—C. S. Hoyt, The Loudoun.
Assistant.—Harry Pottenburgh, The Ralston.
File Clerk.—]. R. Williams, Pennsylvania Club.
Assistant.—]. G. Rodgers, The Gainsboro.
Enrolling Clerk.—C. R. McKenney, The Congressional.
First Assistant. —Willis H. Wing, 118 Maryland avenue NE.
Additional Envolling Clerk. —W. T. Irelan, 234 New Jersey avenue.
- Resolution and Petition Clerk.—C. N. Thomas, 1410 M street.
Printing and Document Clervk.—]. W. H. Reisinger, 120 C street.
Distributing Clerk.—David Moore, The Driscoll.
Document and Bill Clerk.—Grant Jarvis, 140 C street SE.
Index Clerk.—D. C. Dinger, The Lambert.
Assistant. —Sydney E. Mudd, jr., Congress Hall.
Stationery Clerk.—John 1,. Morrison, The New Berne,
Assistant.—R. E. Fleharty, 318 Fast Capitol street.
Notification Clerk.—F. H. Wakefield, New Varnum.
Bookkeeper. —Emmons R. Blake, 507 A street SE.
Locksmith.—Ed. A. King, 1333 R street.
Clerks.—Thomas M. Hyde, The National; Hector C. McRae, 33 B street; B. W.
Haggard, 115 B street NE.; Charles B. Brockway, New Varnum; J. Louis Sowers.
Assistant in Disbursing Office.—Israel D. Johnson, The Luxor.
Assistant in Stationery Room.—]James A. Gibson, Takoma Park.
Assistant in Clerk's Office.— Aaron Russell, 1217 S street.
Stenographer to Clerk.—John Iredale, 1002 K street.
Messenger to Chief Clerk.—D. P. Thomas, 1012 East Capitol street.
CLERK’S DOCUMENT" ROOM.
Superintendent.—J. B. Best, 138 D street SE.
Document Clerk.—Harry V. Roe, 634 D street SE.
Assistant. —Dio W. Dunham, 1717 Euclid street.
Special Employee. —W. P. Scott, 207 A street NE.
LIBRARY.
Librarian.—John J. Boobar, 1105 Park road.
Assistants. —George W. Sabine, The Royalton; R. F. Bishop, East Falls Church, Va,
Assistant in Library.—]. F, Brownlow, 323 East Capitol street.
5
Officers of the House. 225
OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS.
Sergeant-at-Arms.—Henry Casson, 33 B street.
Deputy.—FEdwin S. Pierce, 1412 Chapin street.
Cashier.—W. H. Estey, 3013 Eleventh street.
Financial Clerk.—FEdward Reichard, 306 North Carolina avenue SE.
Bookkeeper.—Charles G. Stranahan, 327 A street SE.
Assistant Bookkeeper.—C. E. Morley, 214 North Capitol street.
Deputy Sergeants-at-Arms in Charge of Pairs.—George F. Evers, 508 A street NE. ;
Paul D. Porter, Congress Hall.
Pair Clerk.—J. H. Hollingsworth, Riverdale, Md.
Stenographer.—William H. Flack, 12 T street.
Messenger.—Horace D. Norton, 231 North Capitol street.
Laborer.—James F., Payne, 1521 Pierce street.
OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER.
Doorkeeper of the House.—Frank B. I,yon, The Van Dyke.
Clerk to Doorkeeper.—ILena M. Lyon, The Van Dyke.
Assistant Doorkeeper.—Bert W. Kennedy, 1753 Columbia road.
Department Messenger.—Benjamin Vail, 1110 East Capitol street.
Assistant.—C. W. Coombs, 216 Maryland avenue NE.
Special Employees.—John T. Chancey, 465 M street; Robert E. Cowart, jr.; William
A. Forbis.
Special Messengers.—Felton B. Knight, Metropolitan Hotel; Jos. J. Sinnott, The
Glendower; George Jennison, New Varnum; William A. Watson, The Regent.
Chief Pages.—1. H. McMichael, 2223 F street; C. B. Melby, 26 Iowa Circle.
Superintendent of the Press Gallery.—Charles H. Mann, 627 A street NE.
Messengers.—Herman Boucher, 227 A street; John W. Castor, 208 Indiana avenue;
Samuel D. Deane, jr., The Luxor; Milton Eby; William I. Hemenway, 216 North
Capitol street; Henry B. Herbert, 220 C street; J. J. Hronisk, John W. Hub-
bard, 212 New Jersey avenue; A. A. Irvine, Thomas J. Kelly, 228 M street; F. E.
Lamson, S. R. Ogden, 1905 1 street; Emil Rebell, 10 B street NE.; J. OQ. A.
Remine, Charles W. Rogan, 108 I street; W. H. Sault, 219 Fast Capitol street;
H. J. Schropp, S8o7 Sixth street; Levi KE. Short, 222 Indiana avenue; George M.
Swezey, 221 New Jersey avenue; M. O. Taylor, 916 I street; Thomas F. Tracy,
Chicago Hotel; John Walsh, Don C. Walters, Burton Hotel; H. B. Warren, I. H.
Wiley, 18 Grant Place.
Messenger at Speaker's table.—William 1,. Nash, 39 I street.
Messengers on the Soldiers’ Roll.—F,. 1, Currier, 126 Tenth street SE.; John E.
Cushman, 214 A street SE.; William Irving, 321 A street NE.; Elijah Lewis, 213
New Jersey avenue; Hugh Lewis, 815 Fifteenth street; James I. McConnell, gos
Fast Capitol street; George H. Morisey, The Roland; Lauritz Olsen, 227 New
Jersey avenue; Fernando Page, 51 D street SE.; William H. Rich, The Ventosa;
John Rome, James H. Shouse, 227 New Jersey avenue; John A. Travis, 1008 East
Capitol street; E. S. Williams, 16 Fourth street SE.
FOLDING ROOM.
Superintendent.—J. R. Halvorsen, 448 Park road.
Chief Clerk.—W. F. Scott, 215 A street NF.
Clerks.—]. W. Herndon, Alexandria, Va.; George C. Randall, 812 D street NE.; John
P. Straight, 336 Eleventh street NE. James P. Quinn, 1014 Fifteenth street.
Foreman.—J. M. McKee, 2123 K street. ;
DOCUMENT ROOM.
Superintendent.—Charles J. Sumner, 229 New Jersey avenue SE.
Assistant Superintendent.—W. R. Rodenberger, 132 Third street SE.
Special Employee.—]Joel Grayson, Vienna, Va. :
Indexer.—F. G. Hunsicker, The Loudoun.
Assistant Clevk.—M. J. Hanley, 1207 G street.
Attendants. —C. O. Houk, 322 C street; G. G. Jewell, 308 G street NE.
Assistant Attendant. —P. 1. Hemler.
Clerk (detailed from Government Printing Office).—F. V. DeCoster, 120 Third street
SE.
Assistants. —J. O. Cowan, 132 Third street SE.; A. F. Dahlgren, 316 C street; R. F.
_ Higginbotham, 404 East Capitol; F. D. Mackey, 210 C street; W. S. Pangburn,
323 East Capitol; W. A. Schlobohm, 227 New Jersey avenue SE.: C. A. Sullo-
way, 309 Maryland avenue NE.
226 Congressional Directory.
CLERKS TO COMMITTEES.
Accounts. —William Tyler Page, Friendship Heights, Md.
Agriculture.—B. Franklin Culley, The Tennessee; assistant clerk, Chas. A. Gibson.
Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.—Pere G. Wallmo.
Appropriations.—James C. Courts, 1837 Kalorama road; assistants, Fred P. Fellows,
146 Tetinessee avenue NE.; Marcellus C. Sheild, The Champlain.
Banking and Currency.—Charles S. Greenwood. :
Census.—Nelson R. Jacobson. :
Claims.—Albert P. Myers, The Royalton; John W. Gardner, assistant clerk, go2 M
street.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—John C. Eversman, 1776 Columbia road.
Conference of Minority.—Wallace D. Bassford, 212 North Capitol street; assistant
clerk, Robert Bowman, jr., Metropolitan Hotel.
Disposition of Useless Executive Papers.—Miss J. M. Welsh, 1722 Pennsylvania
avenue.
District of Columbia.—1.ewis M. Miller, 118 Third street NE.; assistant, Katherine
B. Dickie, 1604 K street.
Education.—J. 1. Smith.
Elections No. r.—Florence A. Donnelley, 310 Seventh street NE.
Elections No. 2.—Harry C. Houtz, The Arlington.
Elections No. 3.—Margaret V. Geagan, 212 A street SE.
Expenditures in Departments: —
Agriculture.—
Commerce and Labor.—M. Foster.
Interior.—M. E. Comstock, The Brunswick.
Justice. —W. Griffin Mudd.
Navy.—M. Thornton Hynson.
Post-Office.—Edwin J. Ogden. :
State.—1.ewis Henry Warner, The Richmond.
Treasury.—A. A. Erly, The Massachusetts.
War.—John S. Mabbett, 1105 K street.
Expenditures on Public Buildings.—E. B. Spencer, 1326 A street NE.
Foreign Affaivs.—Frederic Laurence Davis, The Highlands; assistant, Ward W.
Fleharty, 653 Maryland avenue NE.
Immigration and Naturalization.—C. S. Atkinson, 1226 Massachusetts avenue.
Indian Affairs.—H. E. Devendorf, 229 B street NE.; assistant, Chas. C. Fitzpatrick,
812 Ninth street NE.
Industrial Arts and Expositions.—W. W. Lufkin, 2102 O street.
Insular Affairs. —Ralph B. Horton, 1401 Decatur street.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Jas. F. Bryan, 326 Maryland avenue NE.;
assistant clerks, Thos. O. Bell, 330 Maryland avenue NE.; William T. Stipe, 330
Maryland avenue NE. :
Invalid Pensions.—William H. Topping, Congress Hall; assistant, Arthur W. Phin-
ney, 236 North Capitol street; principal examiner, detailed from Pension Office,
Herman Gauss, 221 Fifth street SE.
Irrigation of Arid Lands.—1,. P. Reeder, 13 First street NE.
Judiciary.—George P. Jenkins, 128 A street NE.; assistant, Martin G. Gilbertson,
227 P street.
Labor.—John G. Shreve, 219 East Capitol street.
Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River.—M. B. Woolsey.
Library.—Malcolm E. Rideout, jr., Bethesda, Md.
Merchant Marine and Fisheries.—John IT. Swift, 26 Iowa Circle.
Military Affairs.—Herman D. Reeve, 77 Seaton place.
Militia.—Fred Dennis.
Mines and Mining. —¥E. T. Philbin.
Naval Affairs.—FElisha S. Theall, Union Trust Building; assistant clerk, L. C.
Yocum, 920 Nineteenth street.
Pacific Railrvoads.—R. Darlington.
Patents.—FEdward A. Barney, 714 Eighteenth street.
Pensions.—Frank H. Barto, The Hawarden; assistant, May Carroll, 107 Maryland
avenue NE.; principal examiner, detailed from Pension Office, L. Seward Terry,
1625 Newton street.
Post-Offfice and Post-Roads.—Edwin 1. Williams, The Driscoll; assistant, Arthur M.
Jennings, 702 Tenth street.
Printing. —George D. Sutton, 1414 N street.
Private Land Claims.—A. N, Truedson,
Miscellaneous Officials. 227
Public Buildings and Grounds.—Fdward E. Miller, The Germania; assistant, E.
Niedner, 1603 Euclid street.
Public Lands.—Robert W. Dyer, 1423 Fifth street; assistant, Florence love, 1412
Fifteenth street.
Railways and Canals.—Jennie T. Lovell.
Reform in the Civil Service.—W. H. Dearden.
Revision of the Laws.—Benjamin H. Schwartz, Pennsylvania Club.
Rivers and Harbors.—James H. Cassidy, The Dewey; assistant, Joseph H. McGann,
1345 Park road.
Territories.— Thomas C. Hance, The Dewey.
War Claims.—William Hertzler, The National; assistant, Frederick W. Childs,
The Champlain; clerk to continue digest of claims, J. B. Holloway, 20 Third
street SE.
Ways and Means.—William K. Payne, The Burlington; assistants, Arthur E. Blauvelt;
William W. Evans, 1340 Newton street.
POST-OFFICE. ~
Postmaster.—Samuel A. Tangum, The Luxor.
Assistant.—John D. Griffith, The McKinley.
Mail Contractor.—Fred. S. Young, 204 E street.
OFFICE AT CAPITOL.
Register Clerk.—P. J. Goode, 717 A street SE.
Mail Clerks.—Matthew Davison, 534 Fourteenth street SE.; F. C. Riedesel, The
Wicomico; David J. Berger, 50 Seaton place.
OFFICE AT CITY POST-OFFICE.
Clerk in Charge.—Robert J. Duncan, 518% Second street SE.
Assistants.—E. J. Hunter, 236 New Jersey avenue; William F. Sawn, 927 O street.
DELIVERY MESSENGERS.
Archibald G. Moll, 209 C street; John J. Sullivan, 1206 E street; Edgar Ellis, 220 C
street; W. D. Ryan, jr., 9og Thirteenth street; C. W. Neal, 209 C street; Gath P.
Freeman, 1016 Thirteenth street; Thomas M. Holt, 153 E street SE.; W. M. Ste-
vens, 111 B street SE.; John B. Nesbit, 238 North Capitol street; Thos. W. Smith,
Y. M. C. A. Building; J. F. Sergent, 200 Second street; Henry D. Fruit, 209 C
street; F. W. Collier, 230 North Capitol street; W. D. Feeley, 220 C street; R. L.
Mackenzie, 1011 H street; Ernest Mills, 220 C street; Glen McCambridge, 3413
Holmead place.
Heavy Mail Wagon.—David J. Evans, 1354 Pennsylvania avenue SE.; Dan Chris-
tian, 603 Seventh street NE.; G. F. Sample, 209 C street.
Janitor.—Daniel Webster, 1127 C street SE.
ARRIVAI, AND DEPARTURE OF MAILS AT CAPITOL.
Arrive: 9-9.30-10.30 a. m. and 12.30-2.30—4.15 p. m.
Depart: 9.30-11.30 a. m. and 1.30-3.30 p. m. and upon adjournment.
HEATING AND VENTILATING.
Chief Engineer.—H. W. Taylor, 100 Fifth street NE.
Assistant Engineers.—B. H. Morse, 2138 G street; E. B. Burke, 514 E street; John
S. Logan, 633 Massachusetts avenue NE.
Elevator Conductors.—Ieonard B. Cook, 485 Maryland avenue SW.; George W.
Winters, 3337 Seventeenth street; Elmer Stanley, 332 E street NE.; Ralph Walker,
332 E street NE.; J. K. Duncan, 320 Massachusetts avenue NE,
OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES.
SENATE.
Theodore F. Shuey, 2127 California avenue.
Edward V. Murphy, 2511 Pennsylvania avenue.
Milton W. Blumenberg, The Arlington.
228 Congressional Directory.
Henry J. Gensler, 1713 Q street.
Daniel B. Lloyd, 1400 K street.
James W. Murphy, 116 B street NE.
Assistant. —FEugene C. Moxley, 1150 Seventeenth street.
HOUSE.
A. C. Welch, The Kenesaw.
Fred Irland, 1845 Ontario place.
Reuel Small, The Hamilton.
Allister Cochrane, The Kenesaw.
George C. Lafferty, Metropolitan Club.
Samuel H. Gray, The Logan.
Assistant,—John J, Cameron, 223 B street.
OFFICIAL, STENOGRAPHERS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES.
W. J. Kehoe, Stoneleigh Court.
M. R. Blumenberg, 21 First street NE.
John D. Cremer, 112 C street SE.
Harry F. Dodge, 11 Fifth street SE.
Assistant.—]. E. Johnson, 2009 Fourteenth street.
CONGRESSIONAI, RECORD.
(Office in Statuary Hall.)
Clerk in charge at the Capitol. —W. A. Smith, 1302 Euclid street.
Indexer.— William T'. Bingham, 927 Farragut square.
SUPERINTENDENT OF THE CAPITOL.
(Office in basement of Capitol.)
Superintendent.—E]liott Woods, Stoneleigh Court.
Chief Clevk.—George H. Williams, 1723 P street.
Chief Electrical Engineer.—Christian P. Gliem, 642 East Capitol street.
Clerk.—John Welch, 116 Eleventh street SE.
Foveman.—David Lynn, Hyattsville, Md.
CAPITOL, POLICE,
Captain.—]. P. Megrew, The Roland.
Lieutenants.—John Hammond, 413 B street NE ; E. D. Sterling, The Wicomico;
M. V. Hanlon, 225 B street NE.
Special Officers.—F. N. Webber, sr., 526 Third street; J. L. Barnard, 439 New
Jersey avenue SE.
Clerk.—]. K. White, 1330 Pennsylvania avenue SE.
DEPARTMENTAL TELEGRAPH.
Senate Manager.—Charles F. Newsom, The Milburn,
House Managers.—Joseph M. Thompson, The Milburn; J. J. Constantine, The
Milburn.
WEATHER BUREAU MAP STATIONS.
Clerks in charge at the Capitol:
Senate.—John H. Jones, 1217 New Jersey avenue.
House.—]John C. Stewart, 2812 Thirteenth street.
The Capitol. 229
THE CAPITOL. :
The Capitol is Situated in latitude 38° 537 20.47 north and longitude 77° oo’ 35.77
west from Greenwich. It fronts east, and stands on a plateau 88 feet above the level
of the Potomac.
ORIGINAI, 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.
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 columns from the
quarries at Cockeysville, Md. These extensions were first eccupied for legislative
purposes January 4, 1859.
DIMENSIONS OF THE BUILDING.
The entire length of the building i om 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.
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.
HOUSE - ; SENATE 421018 ferolre ve ep)
iy oF — 20°
Dim dea al sen ki -
BASEMENT AND TERRACE
ote
AA0)224Y(T
JOUO0ISSIATUO)
HOUSE WING.
Terrace.
Room.
1. Dynamo rooms.
2. Index clerk.
3. Dynamo rooms.
5. Dynamo rooms.
4,6. Committee on Industrial Artsand Expositions.
7,9, 11, 13, 15, I7. Dynamo rooms.
8, 10. Storerooms for paintings.
12. Janitor’s storeroom.
14. Tile room.
16. Women’s toilet.
18. Map room.
19, 21. Dynamo room.
20. Men’s toilet.
22, 24, 26, 28. Machine shop.
23. Committee on Printing.
30,32, 34, 36. Carpenter shop.
Basement.
33. Engineer’s Office.
35, 39. Elevators.
37. Kitchen.
41.
43.
BASEMENT AND TERRACE OF CAPITOL.
Room.
27.
25.
27.
29.
MAIN BUILDING.
Basement.
House Committee on Levees and Improvements |
of the Mississippi River.
House Committee on Printing.
Senate Committee on Expenditures in the De-
partmeut of Agriculture.
House Committee on Expenditures in the De-
partment of Commerce and Labor.
. House Committee on Manufactures.
. Superintendent's Office.
. Senator Overman’s room.
. Superintendent’s storeroom.
. Senator Newlands’s room.
Room.
[o3)
SENATE WING.
Terrace.
. Senator McCreary’s room.
. Committee on Expenditures of the State De-
partment.
. Committee on Expenditures in the Navy De-
partment.
. Committee on Potomac River Front.
. Committee on Indian Depredations.
. Committee on Fisheries.
. Plumber’s shop.
. Senator Raymner’s room.
. Committee on Trespassers upon Indian I,ands.
. Janitor’s storeroom.
. Committee on Expenditures in the Interior De-
partment.
. Blueprint room.
. Senator John Walter Smith’s room.
. Waste-paper room.
. Senator Clarke's (Ark.) room."
. Dynamo room.
. Men’s toilet.
. Secretary’s file rooms.
. Men'’s toilet.
Basement.
. Elevators.
. Engineers’ room.
. Kitchen.
. Carpenter shop.
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Room.
1. Committee on Invalid Pensions
2.
4. Stationery room.
5. Committee on War Claims,
6.
7. 30fficial Reporters of Debates.
8.
¥|committec on Judiciary. o. I
11. Annex office, Post-Office.
12, : Jofee of Sergeant-at-Arms. 3:
14. : Jconterence of Minority.
15, 16, 17, 26, 29. Clerk’s document rooms.
18. Box room.
19. Closets.
20, 21, 30, 32, 34. Restaurant.
22. Committee on Indian Affairs.
23.
i: [committee on Accounts,
24. Committee on War Claims.
25.28. Elevators.
27. Janitor’s office.
31. Barber shop.
3 Jcommittee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads.
a ——
GROUND FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL.
MAIN BUILDING.
Room.
68. Senate Committee on the Library.
69. Senate Committee on Education and Labor.
70. House Committee on Tabor.
71. House Joint Committee on Revision of Laws.
72. House Committee on Civil Service.
74. House Committee on Expenditures in the Agri-
cultural Department.
75. Chairman Joint Committee on Revision of Iaws.
77,79. Senate Committee on Pacific Railroads.
78. Senate Committee on Standards, Weights, and
Measures.
80. Senate Committee on Transportation and Sale
of Meat Products.
81. Electricians’ storeroom.
82. Storeroom Supreme Court.
83. Senate bathroom.
84,85. The Supreme Court—consultation room.
87. Congressional I,aw Library.
88. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Su-
preme Court room. :
| 89,90, 91, [Office of Doorkeeper of the House.
92, 97, 101. or of superintendent of folding room.
| 93. Employees’ barber shop.
94. House Committee on Indian Affairs.
95. House Disbursing Office.
96, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106. Offices of the Chief Clerk of
the House.
99. House Committee on Education.
100. Guard room.
107. Senate Committee on Census.
SENATE WING.
Room.
35-
36.
37.
38.
39,
41.
42,
43,
44,
49.
50.
ST,
52,
53-
55.
56,
59
61,
63.
66.
67.
68.
Committee on Rules.
Committee on Cuban Relations.
Committee on Military Affairs.
Committee on the Philippines.
40. Committee on the Judiciary.
Committee on Territories.
46. Committee on Indian Affairs.
58. Stationery room.
45, 47, 48. Restaurant.
Police Headquarters.
Committee on Immigration.
60. Elevators.
Committee on Agriculture and Forestry.
Post-Office.
Committee on Coast Defenses.
57. Committee on Post-Offices and Post-Roads.
65. Janitor’s room.
62. Committee on Public Lands.
Committee on Printing.
Men’s toilet. :
Committee on the Revision of the Laws.
107240)
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Women’s toilet.
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Room.
1.
2. Committee on Appropriations.
J Hile clerk.
. Committee on Pensions.
oO
tn
pt
. Closets.
8.;Members’ retiring rooms.
10. Committee on Ways and Means.
II.
: Cloakrooms.
13;
i
15. Committee on Ways and Means.
16. Library.
17, 18. Elevators.
19.
Speaker.
20.
PRINCIPAL, FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL,
MAIN BUILDING.
Room.
41. House document room.
42. Engrossing and enrolling clerks of the House.
43. House Committee on Enrolled Bills.
44. Office of the Clerk of the House of Representa-
tives.
| 45,46. Office of the Clerk of the Supreme Court.
| 47. Robing room of the Judges of the Supreme Court.
| 48. Withdrawing room of the Supreme Court.
49. Office of the Marshal of the Supreme Court.
50, 5I. Senate Committee on Pensions.
52,53. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.
54. Senate Committee on Pacific Islands and Porto
Rico.
55. Senate Committee on Woman Suffrage.
56,57. Senate Committee on Public Health and National
Quarantine.
58,59. House Committee on Naval Affairs.
60,66. House Committee on Military Affairs.
61. House Committee on Reform in the Civil Service.
62. House Committee on Immigration and Naturali-
zation.
63. The Supreme Court, formerly the Senate Cham-
ber.
64. House Committee on Mines and Mining.
65. House Committee on Expenditures in the Treas-
ury Department.
SENATE WING.
Room.
21. Office of the Secretary.
22. Fxecutive clerk.
23. Financial clerk.
24. Chief Clerk:
25. Engrossing and enrolling clerks.
26, 27. Committee on Appropriations.
28. Closets.
29, 30. Cloakrooms.
40. Room of the President.
37. The Senators’ reception room.
32. Room of the Vice-President.
33, 34. Committee on Finance.
100240)
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33%, 35. Elevators.
36. Official Reporters of Debates.
37. Public reception room.
38. Committee on the District of Columbia.
39. Office of the Sergeant-at-Arms.
CC
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. Hall of
Representatives.
mmm A A
GALLERY FLOOR.
, .
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HOUSE WING. MAIN BUILDING. | SENATE WING.
SR Room. Room. : | Room.
A 1. Committee on Elections No.2. 27. Senate Library. | 14. Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds.
oa : Lp :
2. Committee on Elections No. 1. 23. Senate ibrary Librarian's Tom, 15. 29. Senate Committee on Five Civilized Tribes of In- Committee on Interstate Commerce.
3. Journal Clerk. dians. I
5 : a
| 4. Press typewriters. Seuats Committe on Bagrosted Bills: 17. Committee on Privileges and Elections.
N ) 2 :
5. Committee on Railways and Canals. 32.\Senate document room. 18. d
Ho Committee on Commerce.
g 6 33. i 19.
| 7 34. Superintendent of the Senate documents. y : | 20.
A Press gallery. 35. House Library. |
58 6. | 21 tpress gall g Jiouse document room. | Toa gnary
9: . | 28. N
vir : 8. Clerk’s office. 10. Women’s retiring room. 30 3 Kk x
40. Senate document room. [2% Women's retiring room. a
Ir. - : : 3 Jeommitee on Foreign Affairs. 41. SL Commiise on Transportation Routes to 23. Committee on Naval Affairs. S
13. 3 sabi
42. Joos Committee on the Mississippi River and | 24 Conference room of the Minority. & ; ; : : SE 12. Committee on Commerce. 423.) its Tributaries. : ; 25. Committee on Claims. N
43. Senate Committee on Private Land Claims.
14. Elevator. 44. Senate Committee on Contingent Expenses. | 26. Committee on Interoceanic Canals,
. Senate C itt Railroads. 15. Elevator. 45 nate Committee on Railroa 27. Elevator.
46. Senate Committee on Mines and Mining.
{7-1senate Committee on Canadian Relations.
48. Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills.
so. House Committee on Pacific Railroads.
52. House Minority Conference room.
Sg Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Meas-
54.f ures.
56. House Committee on Expenditures in the State
Department.
57. House Committee on Expenditures in the War De-
partment.
LCC
238
Congressional
Directory.
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Sec., Secretary.
C. C., Chief Clerk.
L. C., Legislative Clerk.
DIRECTORY OF THF SENATE.
R.
v
C., Reading Clerk.
D., Doorkeeper and Assistants.
J. C., Journal Clerk.
R.,
P.,
8.,
Official Reporters, 4
Press Reporters.
Sergeant-at-Arms.
CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS, Vice-President of the United States and President of the Senate.
. Aldrich, Nelson W., Rhode Island.
. Ankeny, Levi, Washington.
. Bacon, Augustus O., Georgia.
. Bailey, Joseph W., Texas.
. Bankhead, John H., Alabama.
. Beveridge, Albert J., Indiana.
. Borah, William E., Idaho.
. Bourne, jonathan, jr., Oregon.
. Brandegee, Frank B., Connecticut.
. Briggs, Frank O., New Jersey.
. Brown, Norris, Nebraska.
. Bulkeley, Morgan G., Connecticut.
. Burkett, Elmer J., Nebraska.
. Burnham, Henry E., New Hampshire,
. Burrows, Julius C., Michigan.
. Carter, Thomas H., Montana.
. Clapp, Moses E., Minnesota.
. Clark, Clarence D., Wyoming.
. Clarke, James P., Arkansas.
. Clay, Alexander S., Georgia.
. Crane, W. Murray, Massachusetts.
. Culberson, Charles A., Texas.
. Cummins, Albert B., Iowa.
. Cullom, Shelby M., Illinois.
. Curtis, Charles, Kansas.
. Daniel, John W., Virginia.
. Davis, Jeff., Arkansas.
. Depew, Chauncey M., New York,
. Dick, Charles, Ohio.
. Dillingham, William P., Vermont.
. Dixon, Joseph M., Montana.
(Democrats in Roman. . Republicans in Jfalics.)
. Dolliver, Jonathan P., Towa.
. du Pont, Henry A., Delaware.
. Elkins, Stephen B., West Virginia.
. Flint, Frank P., California.
. Foraker, Joseph B., Ohio.
. Foster, Murphy J., Louisiana.
. Frazier, James B., Tennessee.
. Frye, William P., Maine.
. Fulton, Charles W., Oregon. ;
. Gallinger, Jacob H., New Hampshire,
. Gamble, Robert J., South Dakota.
. Gary, Frank B., South Carolina.
. Gore, Thomas P., Oklahoma.
. Guggenheim, Simon, Colorado.
. Hale, Eugene, Maine.
. Hansbrough, Henry Clay, North Dakota.
. Hemenway, James A., Indiana.
. Heyburn, Weldon B., Idaho.
. Hopkins, Albert J., Illinois.
. Johnston, Joseph F., Alabama.
. Kean, John, New Jersey.
. Kittredge, A. B., South Dakota.
. Knox, Philander C., Pennsylvania.
. La Follelte, Robert M., Wisconsin.
. Lodge, Henry Cabot, Massachusetts.
. Long, Chester I., Kansas.
. McCreary, James B., Kentucky.
. McCumber, Porter J., North Dakota.
. McEnery, Samuel D., I,ouisiana.
. McLaurin, A. J., Mississippi.
. Martin, Thomas S., Virginia.
. Milton, William Hall, Florida.
. Money, H. D., Mississippi.
. Nelson, Knute, Minnesota.
. Newlands, Francis G., Nevada.
. Nixon, George S., Nevada.
. Overman, Lee S., North Carolina.
. Owen, Robert I,., Oklahoma.
. Page, Carroll S., Vermont.
. Paynter, Thomas H., Kentucky.
. Penrose, Boies, Pennsylvania.
. Perkins, George C., California.
. Piles, Samuel H., Washington.
. Platt, Thomas C., New York.
. Rayner, Isidor, Maryland.
. Richardson, Harry A., Delaware.
. Scott, Nathan B., West Virginia.
. Simmons, F. McL., North Carolina.
. Smith, William Alden, Michigan.
. Smith, John Walter, Maryland.
. Smoot, Reed, Utah.
. Stephenson, Isaac, Wisconsin.
. Stone, William J., Missouri.
. Sutherland, George, Utah.
. Taliaferro, James P., Florida.
. Taylor, Robert I,., Tennessee.
. Teller, Henry M., Colorado.
. Tillman, Benjamin R., South Carolina.
. Warner, William, Missouri.
. Warren, Francis E., Wyoming.
. Wetmore, George Peabody, Rhode Island.
*SLOOUIS'
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24
NORTHERN Door
Congressional
Directory.
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JosErH G. CANNON, Speaker.
DIRECTORY OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
Republicans in Roman; Democrats in ZZalics; miscellaneous i in SMALL CAPS.
352 Acheson, E. F.
284 Alexander, D. S.
257 Allen, A. 1.
338 Ames, B.
266 Andrus, J. E.
307 Anthony, D. R.,jr.
325 Bannon, H. T.
360 Barchfeld, A. J.
354 Barclay, C. F.
249 Bartholdt. R
213 Bates, A. L,.
353 Beale, J. G
364 Bede, J. A
235 Bennet, W. S.
218 Bennett, J. B.
215 Bingham, H. H.
383 Birdsall, B. P
248 Bonynge, R. W.
214 Boutell, H. S.
398 Boyd, J. F.
286 Bradley, T. W.
226 Brownlow, W. P.
234 Burke, J. F.
387 Burleigh, E. C.
349 Burton, H. R.
296 Burton, T. E.
253 Butler, T. S.
368 Calder, W. M.
288 Calderhead, W. A.
365 CALE, THOMAS.
331 Campbell, P. P.
207 Capron, A. B.
328 Cary, W. J.
294 Cassel, H. B.
206 Chaney, J. C.
384 Chapman, P. T.
301 Cocks, W. W.
238 Cole, R. D.
230 Conner, J. P.
223 Cook, G. W.
260 Cooper, A. F.
314 Cooper, H. A.
209 Coudrey, H. M.
378 Cousins, R. G.
224 Crumpacker, B.D.
362 Cushman, F. W.
275 Dalzell, J.
341 Darragh, A. B.
298 Davidson, J. H.
358 Dawes, B. G.
229 Dawson, A. F.
~~
WEST SIDE.
241 Denby, E.
232 Diekema, G. J.
291 Douglas, A.
245 Draper, W. H.
252 Driscoll, M. E.
339 Durey, C.
302 Dwight, J. W.
395 Edwards, D. C.
382 Ellis, E. C.
306 Ellis, W. R.
319 Englebright, W.F.
272 Hsch, J.J.
336 Fairchild, G. W.
242 Fassett, J. S.
392 Focht, B. K.
316 Foelker, O. G.
374 Fordney, J. W.
326 Foster, D. J.
205 Foster, J. H.
345 Foulkrod, W. W.
372 Fowler, C. N.
388 French, B. L.
293 Fuller, C. E.
263 Gaines, J. H.
351 Gardner, A. P.
350 Gardner, J. J.
390 Gardner, W.
299 Gillett, F. H.
3295 Goebel, H. P.
313 Graff, J. V.
393 Graham, W. H.
222 Greene, W. S.
276 Gronna, A. J.
379 Guernsey, F. E.
343 Haggott, W. A.
340 Hale, N. W.
330 Hall, P.
334 Hamilton, E. L,.
357 Harding, J. E.
221 Haskins, K.
278 Hawley, W. C.
321 Hayes, E. A.
237 Hepburn, W. P.
256 Higgins, KE. W.
337 Hil, KE. J.
366 Hinshaw, E. H.
216 Holliday, E. S.
261 Howell, B. F.
292 Howland, P.
342 Hubbard, E. H.
262 Hubbard, W. P.
(220 Huff, G. F
356 Hughes, J. A.
303 Humphrey, W.E.
309 Jackson, W. H.
385 James, A. D.
380 Jones, W. I.
305 Kahn, J
397 Kalanianaole, J.
274 Keifer, J. W.
228 Kennedy, C. A.
310 Kennedy, J.
324 Kinkaid, M. P.
376 Knapp, C I.
281 Knopf, P.
290 Knowland, J. R.
399 Kuestermann, G.
315 Lafean, D. F.
322 Landis, C. B.
239 Laning, J. F.
282 Law, C. B.
244 Lawrence, G. P.
300 Lindbergh, C. A.
219 Longworth, N.
277 Lorimer, W.
210 Loud, G. A.
203 Lovering, W. C.
377 Lowden, F. O.
346 McCall, S. W.
236 McCreary, G. D.
279 McGavin, C.
386 McGuire, B. S.
311 McKinley, W. B.
375 McKinney, J.
323 McLachlan, J.
247 McLaughlin, J. C.
285 McMillan, S.
240 McMorran, H.
26g Madden, M. B.
318 Madison, E. H.
335 Malby, G. R.
227 Mann, J. R.
333 Marshall, T.
400 Martin, E. J
308 Miller, J. M.
304 Mondell, F.'W
344 Moon, R.O.
312 Moore, J. H.
371 Morse, KE. A.
287 Mouser, G. E.
394 Mudd, S. E.
211 Loudenslager, H.C.
332 Murdock, V.
320 Needham, J.C.
273 Norris, G. W
268 Nye, F. M.
283 Olcott, J. Van V.
255 Overstreet, J.
363 Parker, R. W.
265 Parsons, H.
251 Payne, S. E.
212 >Pearre, G.A.
271 Perkins, J-B.
254 Pollard, E.M
267 Porter, P. A.
391 Pray, C. N.
348 Prince, G. W.
389 Reynolds, J. M.
280 Rodenberg, W. A.
250 Scott, C. F.
201 Sherman, J. S.
289 Smith, S. C.
204 Smith, S. W.
208 Southwick, CN.
217 Sperry, N. D.
381 Stafford, W. H.
396 Steenerson, H.
205 Sterling, J. A.
264 Sturgiss, G. C.
355 Sulloway, C. A.
317 Swasey, J. P
231 Tawney, J. A.
359 Taylor, HB. I,., i*.
369 Thomas, W. A.
270 Tirrell, C. Q.
246 Townsend, C. E.
297 Volstead, A. J.
347 Vreeland, E. B.
258 Waldo, G. E.
233 Wanger, I. P.
243 Washburne, C.G.
370 Watson, J. KE.
367 Weeks, J. W.
259 Wheeler, N. P.
202 Wilson, W. W,
225 Wood, I. W.
361 Woodyard, H. C. |
373 Young, H. O.
107 Adair, J. A. M.
117 Adamson, W. C.
109 Aiken, W.
176 Alexander, J. W.
124 Andrews, W. H.
12 Ansberry, 1. T.
170 Ashbrook, W. A.
197 Barnhart, H. A.
111 Bartlett, C. L.
77 Bartlett, G. A.
52.Beall, J.
62 Bell, T. M.
134 Booher, C. F.
104 Bowers, E. J.
64 Brantley, W. G.
89 Brodhead, J. D.
118 Broussard, R. F.
60 Brundidge, \S., jr.
98 Burgess, G.F
46 Burleson, A. S.
163 Burnett, J. L.
135 Byrd, A.M.
182 Caldwell, B. F.
97 Candler, E. S., 77.
102 Carlin, C. C.
28 Carter, C. D.
25 Caulfield, H. S.
32 Clark, C.
7 Clark, F.
144 Clayton, H. D.
5 Cockran,W. B.
90 Cox, WW. E.
156 Cook, J.
184 Cooper, S.B.
91 Craig, W. B.
148 Cravens, B.
165 Crawford, w. T.
159 Currier, F. D.
71 Davenport, J. .S.
94 Davis, C. R.
115 De Armond, D. A.
192 DE LEON, P. O.
|142 Denver, M. R.
1167 Dixon, 'Z
195 Edwards, C. G.
102 Ellerbe, J. E.
117 Estopinal, A.
35 Favrot, G. K.
155 Ferris, S.
83 Finley, D. E.
3 Fitzgerald, J. J.
EAST SIDE.
174 Flood, H. D.
86 Floyd, J. C.
23 Fornes, C. V.
157 Foss, G. E.
58 Foster, M. D.
178 Fulton, FE. L.
30 Gaines, J. W.
127 Garner, J. IN.
166 Garrell, F. J.
93 Gilhams, C. C.
21 Gill, [..77.
72 Gillespie, O. W.
132 Glass, C.
84 Godwin, H. L.
17 Goldfogle, H. M.
74 Gordon, G. W.
41 Goulden, J. A.
57 Granger, D. L. D.
164 Gregg, A. W.
63 Griggs, J. M.
175 Hackett, R. IV.
147 Hackney, 7.
18 Hamill, J. A.
133 Hamillon, D. W.
100 Hamlin, C. W.
168 Hammond, W. .S.
6 Hardwick, 7. W.
53 Hardy, R.
130 Harrison, F. B.
126 Haugen, G. IV.
141 Hay, J.
oz Heflin, J. 7.
187 Helm, H.
9 Henry, E. S.
50 Henry, R. L.
137 Hill, W. S.
108 Hitchcock, G. M.
59 Hobson, R. P.
85 Houston, W. C.
76 Howard, W. MM.
125 Howell J.
I3T Hughes, Ww.
101 Hull, C.
44 Hull, J. A. T.
138 Humphreys, B. G.
M. 103 James, O.
68 Jenkins, J. J.
169 Johnson, B.
4 Johnson, J. 7.
171 Jones, W. A.
82 Keliher, J. A.
143 Kimball, W. P.
37 Kipp, G. W.
96 Kitchin, C.
191 Kitchin, W. W.
73 Lamar, R.
149 Lamar, W. B.
42 Lamb, J.
67 Langley. J. W.
189 Larrinaga, 7.
140 Lassiter, F. R.
47 Leake, E. W.
106 Lee, G.
193 LEGARDA, B.
(152 Legare, G. \S.
38 Lenahan, J. 7.
188 Lever, A. F.
139 Lewis, E. B.
39 Lindsay, GCG. H.
27 Livingston, L. F.
{116 Lloyd, J. 7.
(181 McDermott, J. T.
20 McHenry, J. CG.
[16x McKinlay, D E.
136 McLain. F. A.
1 Macon, R.B.
i172 Maynard, H. L.
|186 Moon, J. A.
145 Moore, J. M.
13 Murphy, J. W.
24 Nelson, J. M.
180 Nicholls, T. D.
88 O'Connell, J. F.
45 Olmsted, M. KE,
49 Padgett, L. P.
190 Page, R. IV.
54 Patterson, J. O.
112 Peters, A. J.
36 Pou, E. WW.
158 Pratt, L. G.
120 Pujo, A. P.
56 Rainey, H. T.
78 Randell, C. B.
121 Ransdell, J. E.
55 Rauch, G. W.
11 Reeder, W. A.
61. Reid, C..C.
196 Rhinock, J. L.
79 Richardson, w.
87 Riordan, D. oI
66 Roberts, RE. W.
154 Robinson, J. T.
|
40 Rothevmel, J. H.
33 Rucker, wow.
2 Russell, G.
114 Russell, VETER
81 Ryan, W. H.
34 Sabbath, A. J.
31 Saunders, E.W.
128 Shackleford, D. W.
48 Sheppard, M.
173 Sherley, \S.
14 Sherwood, I. R.
123 Sims, 7. W.
185 Slayden, J. L.
122 Slemp, C. Basco
105 Small, J. H.
113 Smith, MR.
75 Smith, M. A.
10 Smith, Ww. I.
146 Smith, W. R.
43 Snapp, H. M.
16 Sparkman, S. M.
99 Spight, 7.
29 Stanley, A. O:
70 Stephens, J. H.
95 Stevens, F. C.
150 Sulzer, W.
151 Zalbott, J. F. C.
194 Zaylor, G. W.
26 Thistlewood, N. B.
8 Thomas, C. R.
179 Tou Velle, W. E.
129 Underwood, O. W'.
110 Wallace, R. M.
19 Watkins, J. 7.
80 Webb, E. Y.
177 Weems, C. L,.
15 Willett, Ww. VIO
69 Williams, J SS.
51 Wilson, W. B.
22 Wolf, H. B.
SVS
PUD
SIRYVIUISIAFIN
[0
SIDS
ive
Na
242 Congressional Directory.
DIRECTORY OF ROOMS, UNITED STATES SENATORS.
Senator. Committee. Location.
AIDRICH ..... Pinance hari hee Senate floor, southeast corner.
ANEENY .-0.. 0: Treigation .o, Soiee uae iid Annex, room 63.
BacoN.. 0. Eugrossed Bills... 0... Gallery floor, back of document
room. -
BAYLEY oh Disposition of Useless Papers | Annex, room 39.
in Departments.
BANKHBAD oo. 1 ie a ah Annex, room 59.
BEVERIDGE. . ... BerEiliorIes. x i. esis es Ground floor, north side.
BORA... Standards, Weights, and Meas- | Old building, basement.
ures.
BOURNE......... Wigheries 0. 0 oo Terrace, room 7.
BRANDEGEE. ...| Forest Reservations .......... Annex, room 41.
BRIGGS .... 0 Expenditures, Treasury De- | House Office Building, room 157.
partment.
Brown Ln Expenditures, Department of | Annex, room 37.
Justice.
BULKELEY ..... Railroads: ia niin. | Old Library space, gallery floor,
west side.
BURERIL. ... Pacific Railroads... 0... Old building, basement.
BURNHAM...... Cubamn:Relations’... ............ Ground floor, west side.
BURROWS -..... Privileges and Elections... ... Gallery floor, west side.
CARTER... Expenditures, Department of | Terrace, room 2.
State.
CLAPYL he IndiagAfiairs.. 0. on Ground floor, south side.
Crarr (Wyo) | Indiclary 5. 00 Ground floor, northwest corner.
CTARER (Ask poll phar anlar fanny Terrace, room 17.
Craven. Woman Suffrage ......... .».. Old Library space, Senate floor,
west side.
CRANE... ... = Canadian Relations ............ Old Library space, gallery floor.
CULBERSON Minority Conference ......... Gallery floor, east side,and annex,
room 27.
Currom.:.. Foreign Relations. ........... Old Library space, Senate floor,
northwest corner. .
CUNIMINS, an Tn ra a House Office Building, room 144.
CURTIS iy ni § Indian Depredations ......... Terrace, room 35.
DANIER = vo | Public Health... ovis, Old Library space, Senate floor.
DAVIS 00 [asa dein, TE Su eae Annéx, room 3.
PepEwW......0.., Revisionof Taws ......... .. Ground floor, southwest corner.
eR n Minesand Mining ........... Old Library space, gallery floor.
DrriiNcEAM... i Immigration. .... 0. 0. ooo. Ground floor, east side.
DIXON... Examine Several Branches | Annex, room 35.
Civil Service.
DOLIAVER:. Fducation and Iabor..... .... Old building, basement, westside.
duiPoNr 7 2 Expenditures, War Depart- { House Office Building, room 172.
ment.
BILRINS: Interstate Commerce ........: Gallery floor, west side.
HE EE Geological Survey... ..... Annex, room 44,
FPorampr to Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.| Old Library space, Senate floor,
west side.
Bosmmw i na a es Annex, room 53.
BRAZZERS a as he a en Annex, room 7.
BRYE — “ovr COIMMMEICE vv oii eats Gallery floor, northwest corner.
BUTTON... 4 Cladme o.oo Gallery floor, east side.
GCAITINGER ... .[ District of Columbiat......... Senate floor, east side.
GAMBLE .:c.. Transportation Routes to the | Old Library space, Selny floor,
Seaboard. | north side.
CARN... hr en es Se ee | Annex, room 5.
BORE ss EE ae Annex, room 28.
GUGGENHEIM ..| Expenditures, Navy Depart- | Terrace, room 3.
ment. .
Ne
a oi
Directory of Rooms, Unifted States Senators. 243
DIRECTORY OF ROOMS —Continued.
Senator. Committee. Location.
ane nes Naval Affairs... ........ a Gallery floor, southeast corner.
HANSBROUGH:. .| Agriculture. ....... ... ....... Ground floor, north side.
HEMENWAY ....| University of United States ...| Annex, room 76.
HEVBURN ...... Manufactures... on i.. Annex, room 58,
HOPKINS... .... Enrolled Bills oro Old Library space, gallery floor.
JONSON a aes Annex, room 32.
Bean. ....«. Contingent Expenses... ....".. Old Library space, gallery floor,
west side.
KITTREDGE ....| Interoceanic Canals’.......... Gallery floor, northeast corner.
BNO... iain Rudess ou. ony ice pea Ground floor, west side.
I,A FOLLETTE .. Potomac River Front......... Terrace, room 6.
LODGE... .. ... Philippines. i. ru visas Ground floor, west side.
ToNG .. oh Census’... nil oi ao aa Old building, basement, north-
west corner.
MCCREARY vis pind ate Terrace, room 1. :
McCUMBER..... Pensions... ... AE Old Library space, Senate floor,
north side.
MCENERY... ... Transportation Meat Products.| Old building, basement, north
side.
MELAUREN =o lies cn Se SS Annex, room 29.
MARTIN... Additional Accommodations | Annex, room 55.
for the Library of Congress.
MIL BON vai Lar ir a a a va Annex, room 16.
MONEY ....... Corporations Organized in the | Annex, room 69.
District of Columbia.
NELSON... ...... Public Lands oi vai on 0 Ground floor, southeast corner.
NEWLANDS..... SR Tee A Old building, subbasement, north
side.
NIXON... Const: Defenses: .. a n.oervs Ground floor, north side.
OVERMAN i rt i advan tein Old building,subbasement,north-
west corner.
ON I a RR a ee Annex, room 45.
PAGE: lire a i eae Se a ea a, Annex, room 8.
PAV Ren fei ies La i Sl Se Annex, room I.
PENROSE. ...... Post-Offices and Post-Roads... Ground floor, north side.
PEREINS ..... .. Civil Service and Retrench- | Annex, room 47.
ment. :
Props. a0. Coast and Insular Survey. .... Annex, room 22.
PrLAry aif Printing. Ground floor, northeast corner.
RAYNER i. . ire ar il Ti Terrace, room 9.
RICHARDSON ...! Expenditures, Interior Depart- | Terrace, room 13.
ment.
SCOTT: ~~ Public Buildings and Grounds | Gallery floor, southwest corner.
SIMMONS. . cob fe i a a ar i Annex, room:73.
SMmItE (Md.)...!
SMITH (Mich. )..
SMOOT.. + =i.
STEPHENSON . . .
STONE =~ hia
SUTHERLAND...
TALIAFERRO ...
PAVIOR =
TELE...
TILT MAN...
WARREN... ....
WETMORE. .....
National Banks... i... ero]
Patents. aids oa raha
Expenditures, Department of |
Agriculture.
Trespassers upon Indian Lands
Revolutionary Claims ........
Five Civilized Tribes of In-
dians.
Mississippi River and its Trib-
utaries. :
Military Affairs... ............
IAbraeys. «on a,
Teprace, room 15.
Annex, room 24.
Annex, room 75.
Old building, subbasement,
House side.
Annex, room 15.
Terrace, room II.
Annex, room 61.
Annex, room 56.
| Old Library space, gallery floor,
northwest corner.
Gallery floor, back of document
room.
Old Library space, gallery floor,
north side.
Ground floor, west side.
Old building, basement, west side.
|
244 Congressional Directory.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.
(Capitol Hill. Phone, Main 2727.)
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 (I) 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.
Since the removal to the new building the Library has been enriched by a num-
ber of special collections. The Prints Division has received the Hubbard collection
of engravings, gift in 1898 of Mrs. Gardiner G. Hubbard; and the Noyes collection
of original drawings, prints, and books of Japanese artists, gift in 1905 of Mr. Crosby
S. Noyes. The Prints Division also has the custody of the Garrett collection of
19,113 prints; and the George Lothrop Bradley collection of 1,980 engravings, etc.,
which, in accordance with his will, is to come into the permanent possession of
the Library, subject to the life interest of Mrs. Bradley. The accessions to the
Manuscripts Division give it superiority over any other like depository in this coun-
try. It now possesses the papers of nine Presidents, namely, Washington, Jefferson,
Madison, Monroe, Jackson, Van Buren, Polk, Pierce, and Johnson. Of the papers
of American statesmen and politicians there are those of Franklin, R. Morris, Hamil-
ton, Van Buren, Duff Green, Washburne, Clayton, Chase, Breckinridge, Crittenden,
McArthur, Allen, Lyman Trumbull; of naval officers, Preble, Perry, Porter, John
Paul Jones; of state papers, the papers of the Continental Congress; and in Colonial
documentary history, the records of the Virginia Company, Spanish papers from
New Mexico and Florida; Philippine and Guam documents. The papers of Chan-
cellor Kent represent the judiciary. In commercial history there are the Ellis
papers, 1805-1853; Bourne papers, 1776-1816; Galloway papers (early part of
eighteenth century), letters of William Taylor (the latter part of the eighteenth
century); of John White, cashier of the Bank of the United States at Baltimore.
Here also are the papers of William Thornton and George Watterston, illustrating
the history of the District of Columbia. The Stevens Index of MSS. in European
archives relating to America, 1763-1783, comprising 180 volumes, giving titles of
161,000 documents, and the Transcripts of 10,000 papers relating to the peace of
1783, in 37 large folio volumes, were bought in 1906. The Map Division has
acquired the Kohl collection, the manuscript maps of Lord Howe, and many other
manuscript maps, which make the collection extremely rich in original maps. The
Weber library of Sanskrit literature (3.018 volumes, I,002 pamphlets), and the
Hattala library of Slavic literature (about 1,500 volumes) were bought in 1904.
In 1907 the Yudin collection of Russian works (80,000 volumes) and a Japanese
collection (9,000 volumes) were added; and in 1908 the Huitfeldt-Kaas collection of
Scandinavian literature containing about 5,000 volumes.
The collection is now the largest on the Western Hemisphere and the third in
the world. It comprised at the end of the fiscal year (June 30, 1908) about 1,535,008
printed books and pamphlets (including the law library of 126,816 volumes, which,
while a division of the Library of Congress, still remains at the Capitol), 105,118 maps
and charts, 483,411 pieces of music, and 279,567 photographs, prints, engravings,
and lithographs. Of the printed books, probably one-sixth are duplicates not in use.
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 IL. Casey, Chief of Engineers of the Army, was placed in charge of the
Library of Congress. 245
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 334 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 56 miles of
shelving, affording space for 2,600,000 octavo volumes. Plans have been submitted
to Congress for covering in one of the interior courts to provide for needed increase
of book space.
The Library is maintained by annual appropriations by Congress for various pur-
poses,“including the purchase of books. For the year 1908-9 these amounted to
$719,365.74 (not including allotment for printing and binding, $202,000), as follows:
$438,865.74 for services and contingent expenses (including the Copyright Office,
and including also the care of the building); $roo,000 toward a new book stack;
$109,500 for books and periodicals; $32,500 for fuel, supplies, and miscellaneous
purposes; $40,000 for furniture, shelving, etc.
The Librarian of Congress and the Superintendent of the Library 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). The employees of the Library are
appointed by the Librarian under the act of 1897, which provides that they shall be
appointed ‘‘ solely with reference to their fitness for their particular duties.”’
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.
Inter-library loans.— While not a lending library, but a reference library prima-
rily and essentially, the Library of Congress maintains an inter-library loan system,
by which special service is rendered to scholarship by the lending of books to other
libraries for the use of investigators engaged in serious research which it is not
with the power or duty of the library in question to supply, and which, at the time,
are not needed in Washington.
Library service.—Library proper, 242 employees; Copyright Office, 70; distribu-
tion of catalogue cards, 15; law indexing, 9; disbursement service and care of build-
ing and grounds, 127. Total, 463.
The publications issued by the Library are numerous and include:
Annual reports, showing the progress of the Library.
Bibliographies, exhaustive statements of the literature of certain subjects, e. g.,
Philippine Islands.
Reference lists, containing principal references to questions of current interest,
e. g., trusts, subsidies, railroads.
Catalogues, lists of special collections in the Libraryof Congress, e. g., Washington
MSS., John Paul Jones MSS., maps of America, newspapers.
Special publications on library methods, e. g., catalogue rules, classification, etc.
There is but a limited free distribution of publications. The reports and other
administrative documents are sent to a large number of institutions, and, on request,
to such inquirers as can not reach or be adequately served by them. Publications
which are costly and permanent contributions to knowledge are priced and placed
on sale with the superintendent of documents.
Copyright Office. —The Copyright Office is a distinct division of the Library of
Congress and is located on the ground floor, south side; open gto 4.30. It is under the
immediate charge of the Register of Copy rights, who, by the act of February 19, 1897,
is authorized, ‘‘ under the direction and supervision of the Librarian of Congress,”
to perform all the duties relating to copyrights. Copyright registration was trans-
ferred to the Librarian of Congress by the act of July 8, 1870. 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 1907-8, 221,722 articles. Copyright fees applied and
paid into the Treasury for the fiscal year 1907-8 amounted to $82,387.50.
Hours. —On week days (except legal holidays) the Library building, Main Reading
Room, Periodical Reading Room, and Law Library are open from g a. m. to 10 p. m.;
other parts of the Library, from g a. m. to 4.30 p. m. On Sundays and certain legal
holidays the Building, Main Reading Room, Periodical Reading Room, Division of
Prints, and Music Division are open from 2 to 10 p. m., the Librarian’s Office and
the office of the Chief Clerk from 2 to 6 p. m.
246 Congressional Directory.
LIBRARIANS SINCE THE INCEPTION OF "I'HE 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. N RUSSELI, YOUNG.
1899 (April 5).—HERBERT PUTNAM.
LIBRARY STAFF.
GENERAI, ADMINISTRATION.
Librarian of Congress.—Herbert Putnam, Cosmos Club.
Chief Assistant Librarian.— Appleton P. C. Griffin, 3 Kirke street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Chief Clerk.—Allen R. Boyd, 1515 Twentieth street.
Secretary. —Jessica I. Farnum, 3415 Brown place.
DIVISIONS.
Superintendent of Reading Room.—W. W. Bishop, 1015 East Capitol street.
Chief Assistants in Reading Room .—John G. Morrison, 2811 Fourteenth street;
Hugh A. Morrison, jr., 2302 First street. [7 Charge of Reading Room for the
Blind. —Esther J. Giffin, The Mendota.
Chiefs of Division:
Bibliography.—H. H. B. Meyer, 2602 Wisconsin avenue.
Binding. —Arthur R. Kimball, 1827 Kalorama road.
Card Section.—Charles H. Hastings, 225 Eleventh street SE.
Catalogue.—J. C. M. Hanson, 1244 Monroe street, Brookland.
Documents.—James David Thompson, The Kenesaw.
Mail and Delivery.—S. M. Croft, 316 Tenth street NE.
Manuscripts.—Gaillard Hunt, 1711 De Sales street.
Maps and Charts.—P. Lee Phillips, 1707 H street.
Music.—Oscar G.I. Sonneck, 3030 Macomb street, Clevelitd Park.
Order.—Margaret D. McGuffey, 926 Seventeenth street.
Periodical.—Claude B. Guittard, The Roland.
Prints. — Arthur J. Parsons, 1818 N street.
Law Librarian.—Middleton G. Beaman, The Cordova.
COPYRIGHT OFFICE.
Register.—Thorvald Solberg, 198 F street SE.
BUILDING AND GROUNDS.
Superintendent.— Bernard R. Green, 1738 N street.
Chief Clerk.—George N. French, 1834 I street.
Chief Engineer. — William C. Boulden, 1612 North Broadway, Baltimore, Md.
Electrician. —Henry Whitehead, Laurel, Md.
Captain of the Waitch.—]. V. Wiirdemann, 124 Massachusetts avenue NE.
rT _ —.—_ er; ———_a_—rr——Tr Ty hie
The White House. 247
THE EXECUTIVE.
THE WHITE HOUSE.
(Pennsylvania dvenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets. Phone, Main 6.)
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 18g8 resigned this post and became lieutenant-colonel of the First United
States Volunteer Cavalry; was promoted to the coloneley of the regiment; was in
the fights at Las Guasimas and San Juan; was mustered out with his regiment at
Montauk, Long 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, Jr., of Albany, N. Y., Secretary to the President (1454 Rhode
Island avenue), 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 sec-
retary to various public officials, among them the president pro tempore of New
York State senate, speaker of the assembly, and lieutenant-governor; in 1894, mem-
ber of the stenographic 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 secretary to the Vice-President of the United States; September 25, 1907,
appointed assistant secretary to the President; February 18, 1903, appointed secre-
tary to the President.
Assistant Secretaries lo the President.—Rudolph Forster, 1120 Lamont street;
Maurice C. Latta, 52 U street.
Executive Clerks.— Warren S. Young, 2023 I street; William H. Crook, 1473 Park
road. :
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 o’clock
daily, excepting Cabinet days, so far as public business will permit.
The East Room will be open daily, Sundays excepted, for the inspection of visitors,
between the hours of 10 a. m. and 2 p. m. !
By direction of the President: :
WiLriam LOEB, Jr.,
Secretary to the President.
.
248 Congressional Directory.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE.
(Seventeenth street, south of Pennsylvania avenue. Phone, Main 4510.)
ELIHU ROOT, of New York, N. V., Secretary of State ( 1500 Rhode Island avenue),
was born in Clinton, Oneida County, N. Y., February 15, 1845; was graduated in
1864 from Hamilton College, where his father, Oren Root, was for many years pro-
fessor of mathematics; taught school at the Rome Academy in 1865; graduated in
law from the University Law School of the city of New York in 1867, when he was
admitted to the bar; since that time has been in active practice in the city of New
York; was appointed by President Arthur in March, 1883, as United States attorney
for the southern district of New York, and served until July, 1885; was delegate at
large to the state constitutional convention of 1894 and chairman of the judiciary
committee; was a member of the Commission on Alaskan Boundary, appointed by
President Roosevelt; was appointed Secretary of War August 1, 1899; retired Jan-
uary 31, 1904; was appointed Secretary of State July 7, 1905.
Assistant Secretary.—Robert Bacon, 1201 Sixteenth street.
Second Assistant Secretary.—Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth street.
Third Assistant Secretary.—William Phillips (appointed), 1612 K street.
Assistant Solicitors.—Joshua Reuben Clark, jr., 1803 Belmont road; William C.
Dennis, The Mendota.
Chief Clerk.—Wilbur J. Carr, The Ontario.
Chiefs of Bureau:
Accounts.— Thomas Morrison, 1443 S street.
Appointments.—Miles M. Shand, 3114 Sixteenth street.
Citizenship.—Richard W. Flournoy, jr., 1129 Fourteenth street.
Consular.—Herbert C. Hengstler, 38 Florida avenue.
Diplomatic.—Sydney Y. Smith, 3107 Mount Pleasant street.
Indexes and Archives.—John R. Buck, 1646 Irving street.
Rolls and Library.— William McNeir, 3413 Brown street.
Trade Relations.—John Ball Osborne, 2116 Connecticut avenue.
Translators.—John S. Martin, jr., 1731 F street; Wilfred Stevens, 823 Allison street.
Private Secretary to the Secretary of Stale.—FE. J. Babcock, 1334 Thirteenth street.
Clerk to the Seeretary of State.—H. Fletcher Neighbors, 1760 Church street.
Law Clerk.—James T. Dubois, 1421 Chapin street.
Assistant.—Henry 1,. Bryan, 604 East Capitol street.
DISPATCH AGENTS.
I. P. Roosa, 2 Rector street, New York.
W. A. Cooper, Post-Office Building, San Francisco.
R. Newton Crane, No. 4 Trafalgar Square, London, England.
UNITED STATES AND MEXICAN WATER BOUNDARY COMMISSION.
Commissioner on the part of the United States. —Brig. Gen. Anson Mills, 2 Dupont
circle.
Consulting Engineer on the part of the United States.—W. W. Follett.
Commissioner on the part of Mexico.—Sefior Don Fernando Beltran y Puga.
Consulting Engineer on the part of Mexico.—Sefior Don E. Zayas.
Secretary to the United States Commissioner.—W. W. Keblinger, 715 Fourteenth
street.
Secretary to the Mexican Commissioner. —Sefior Don César Canseco.
STATE, WAR, AND NAVY DEPARTMENT BUILDING.
(Superintendent's room, No. 148, first floor, north wing.)
Superintendent.—Capt. John Hudson Poole, U. S. A., 2119 S street.
Clerk.—R. A. Dellett, 1228 Columbia road. :
Executive. Departments. 249
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY.
(Fifteenth street and Pennsylvania avenue. Phone, Main 6400.)
GEORGE BRUCE CORTELYOU, of Hempstead, N. Y., Secretary of the Treasury
(2111 Bancroft place), was born in the city of New York July 26, 1862; was educated
at public and private schools; graduated at Hempstead (L. I.) Institute and State
Normal School, Westfield, Mass. ; is a graduate of the law schools of the Georgetown
and Columbian (George Washington) universities; in 1883 was a general law and
verbatim reporter in New York; was principal of preparatory schools in New York
from 1885 to 1889; in the latter year entered the public service, and has been private
secretary to various public officials, among them the post-office inspector in charge
at New York, the surveyor of the port of New York, and the Fourth Assistant
Postmaster-General; November, 1895, was appointed stenographer to President
Cleveland; February, 1896, executive clerk; July 1, 1898, Assistant Secretary to Presi-
dent McKinley; April 13, 1900, Secretary to the President; reappointed March 15,
1901, and on September 16, 1901, reappointed by President Roosevelt; was appointed
Secretary of the newly established Department of Commerce and Labor February 16,
1903, and was confirmed the same day; on June 23, 1904, was elected chairman of
the Republican National Committee, and conducted the campaign which resulted in
the election of President Roosevelt. He entered the new Cabinet on March 7, 1905,
as Postmaster-General, and on March 4, 1907, was appointed Secretary of the
Treasury, succeeding Hon. Leslie M. Shaw.
Assistant Secvetary.—James B. Reynolds, 1712 H street.
Assistant Secvetary.—Beekman Winthrop, 1780 Massachusetts avenue.
Assistant Secvetary.—Iouis A. Coolidge, 2419 Massachusetts avenue.
Chief Clerk.—Walter W. Ludlow, 712 Twentieth street.
Private Secretary to the Secretary of the Treasury.—H. O. Weaver, 1928 First street.
Chiefs of Division:
Appointments.—Charles Lyman, The Ontario.
Bookkeeping and Warrvants.—W. F. MacLennan, The Toronto.
Customs.—Charles P. Montgomery, 2825 Thirteenth street.
Loans and Currency.—A. IT. Huntington, Vienna, Va.
Mail and Files.—S. M. Gaines, 1257 Hamlin street, Brookland.
Printing and Stationery.—George Simmons, The Natchez.
Public Moneys.—E. B. Daskam, 1433 R street.
Special Agents.—George W. Maher, 1805 Belmont road.
Disbursing Clerks.—W. S. Richards, The Portner; J. W. Townsend, Kensington, Md.
SUPERVISING ARCHITECI’S OFFICE.
(Treasury Department Building.)
Supervising Architect.—James K. Taylor, The Highlands.
Assistant.—Charles E. Kemper, 1512 Park road.
BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING.
(Fourteenth and B streets SW.)
Director.—]Joseph E. Ralph, 1246 Newton street NE.
Assistant.—Frank E. Ferguson, 1239 Kenyon street.
SECRET SERVICE DIVISION.
(Treasury Department Building.)
Chief.—John E. Wilkie, 2233 Eighteenth street.
Assistant Chief.—W. H. Moran, 1935 Biltmore street.
LIFE-SAVING SERVICE.
(The Evening Star Building, Eleventh street and Pennsylvania avenue. Phone, Main 6400.)
General Superintendent.—S. 1. Kimball, 1316 Rhode Island avenue.
Assistant.—Oliver M. Maxam, 1749 Park road.
250 Congressional Directory.
COMPTROLLER OF THE TREASURY.
(Treasury Department Building.)
Comptroller.—Robert J. Tracewell, 1746 Q street.
Assistant. —1,. P. Mitchell, The Leamington.
Chief Clerke.—C. M. Foree, The Rockingham.
REGISTER OF THE TREASURY.
(Treasury Department Building.)
Register. —William T. Vernon, 420 T street.
Assistant. —Cyrus Field Adams, 934 S street.
AUDITOR FOR THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT.
(Treasury Department Building.)
Auditor.—W. BE. Andrews, 1223 Fairmont street.
Deputy.—S. J. Abbott, The Oxford.
AUDITOR FOR THE WAR DEPARTMENT,
(Winder Building, Seventeenth and F streets.)
Auditor.—Benjamin F. Harper, The New Berne.
Deputy.—Edward P. Seeds, 204 Tenth street NE.
AUDITOR FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT.
(Treasury Department Building.)
Auditor.—Robert S. Person, 3030 Q street.
Deputy.—James B. Belt, The National.
AUDITOR FOR THE NAVY DEPARTMENT.
(Munsey Building.)
Auwuditor.—Ralph W. Tyler, 1918 Eleventh street.
Deputy.—Byron J. Price, 1428 K street.
: AUDITOR FOR THE STATE AND OTHER DEPARTMENTS.
(Small Building, corner Fourteenth and G streets.)
Auditor.—Caleb R. Layton, 1435 Euclid street.
Deputy. —George W. Esterly, 1324 R street.
AUDITOR FOR THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT.
(Post-Office Department Building and Union Building. Phone, Main 1410.)
Auditor.— Merritt O. Chance, 1227 N street.
Deputy.—Charles A. McGonagle, The Windsor.
Deputy.—Charles H. Keating, The Woodley.
Chief Clevk.—David W. Duncan, 115 Fifth street NE.
TREASURER .OF THE UNITED STATES.
(Treasury Department Building.)
Treasurer.—Charles H. Treat, The Highlands.
Assistant.—Gideon C. Bantz, 1628 S street.
Deputy Assistant.—W. Howard Gibson, 2136 1, street.
Cashier.—E. R. True, 1437 Clifton street.
Chief Clerk.—Willard ¥. Warner, The Concord.
National Bank Redemption Agency.
Supervintendent.—Thomas E. Rogers, The Columbia.
COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY.
(Treasury Department Building.)
Comptroller.—Lawrence O. Murray, The Benedick.
Deputy.—Thomas P. Kane, 1931 Calvert street.
Deputy. —Willis J. Fowler, 205 Hammond Court.
Chief Clevk.—Geo. T. May, 2119 F street.
on
Executive Departments. 251
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAI, REVENUE.
(Treasury Department Building.)
Commissioner.—John G. Capers, The Cumberland.
Deputy.—Robert Williams, jr., The Manor House.
Deputy. —James C. Wheeler, 1912 H street.
Chief Clerk.—J]. S.Richardson, The Cumberland.
DIRECTOR OF THE MINT.
(Treasury Department Building.)
Director of the Mint.—Frank A. Leach, The Buthingion,
Examiner. —R. E. Preston, 53 K street NE.
BUREAU OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND MARINE-HOSPITAI, SERVICE.
(Surgeon-General’s Office, 3 B street SE.)
Surgeon-General.—Walter Wyman, Stoneleigh Court.
Assistants.—A. H. Glennan, Chevy Chase, Md.; W. J. Pettus, 1722 Connecticut
avenue; H. D. Geddings, The Westmoreland; J. M. Eager, 1318 Thirteenth street;
J. W. Kerr, 1410 Girard street.
Chief Clerk.— William P. Worcester, 1108 Spring road.
Director of Hygienic Laboratory.—Surg. M. J. Rosenau, 3211 Thirteenth street.
REVENUE-CUTTER SERVICE.
Chief.—Captain Commandant Worth G. Ross, The Woodley.
Assistant. —Henry S. Merrill, 416 'T street.
Engineer in Chicf.—Chas. A. McAllister, The Westmoreland.
CUSTOM-HOUSE.
(Phone, West 243.)
Collector of the Port.—Howard S. Nyman, 1406 Twenty-first street.
DEPARTMENT OF WAR.
(Seventeenth street, south of Pennsylvania avenne, Phone, Main 2570.)
LUKE E. WRIGHT, of Memphis, Tenn., Secretary of War (2009 N street), was
born in Giles County, Tenn. , August 29, 1846; attended the University of Mississippi
in 1866; was admitted to the bar of Tennessee in 1868; was a member of the United
States Philippine Commission 19oo to 1904, and civil governor and governor-general
of the Philippines 1904 to 1906; ambassador.to Japan 1906 and 1907. Appointed
Secretary of War July 1, 1908. :
Assistant Secretary of War.—Robert Shaw Oliver, 1753 N street.
Assistant and Chief Clerk.—]John C. Scofield, 1614 P street.
Private Secretary to Secretary of War. Walter R. Pedigo, The Alabama.
Clerk to Assistant Secretary.—Robert E. Parker, The Portner.
Clerk to the Assistant and Chief Clerk.—John B. Randolph, 1711 Corcoran street.
Disbursing Clerk.—Sydney HE. Smith, 3037 O street.
Appointment Clerk.—William D. Searle, 1131 Twelfth street.
Chefs of Division.
Correspondence.—John I’. Dillon, 807 Eighteenth street.
"Record. —Frank M. Hoadley, 2303 First street.
Requisition and Accounts.—George R. Taylor, Ballston, Va.
Supply. —Martin R. Thorp, 1725 Corcoran street.
252 Congressional Directory.
GENERAL, STAFF.
Chief.—Maj. Gen. J. Franklin Bell, Fort Myer, Virginia.
Secretary.—Capt. Fred W. Sladen, 1941 Calvert street.
Assistant Chief.—Maj. Gen. Wm. P. Duvall, 2110 O street.
Chief of Awrtillery.—Brig. Gen. Arthur Murray, 1616 Rhode Island avenue.
President Army War College.—Brig. Gen. Wm. W. Wotherspoon, The Dupont.
On Duty in the Office of the Chief of Staff.
Colonels Joseph W. Duncan, The Westmoreland; Montgomery M. Macomb, 1271
New Hampshire avenue.
Lieut. Cols. Robert K. Evans, 1715 I street; Thaddeus W. Jones, The Wyoming ;
Erasmus M. Weaver, The Farragut.
Majs. Eben Swift, 1028 Sixteenth street; John T. Knight, 1938 Calvert street;
Daniel H. Boughton, 1758 Q street; Francis J. Kernan, 8 Grafton street, Chevy
Chase; Samuel D. Sturgis, 2117 O street: Henry D. Todd, jr., 1626 Nine:
teenth street.
Capts. Walter H. Gordon, Army War College ; Julius A. Penn, 806 Seventeenth
street; Marcus D. Cronin, Army and Navy Club; Michael J. Lenihan, 821 Nine-
teenth street ; Peter C. Harris, 1865 V street; George W. Read; Henry G. Learnard,
The Woodley; P. D. Lochridge, The Damariscotta ; Milton F. Davis, The West-
over; John W. Furlong, 1413 Twentieth street; Ralph H. Van Deman, The Sher-
man; Frank S. Cocheu, The Dupont; Joseph P. Tracy, 1404 Twenty-first street ;
Johnson Hagood, 1908 I street; Samuel C. Vestal, 1437 Park road; Thomas E.
Merrill, The Damariscotta ; Fox Conner, 1821 Nineteenth street; Sherwood A.
Cheney, 1718 H street.
Chief Clerk.—N. Hershler, Cleveland Park.
OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT-GENERAL.
(War Department Building.)
The Adjutant-General.—Maj. Gen. F. C. Ainsworth, The Concord.
Assistants.—Brig. Gen. William P. Hall, 1707 Nineteenth street.
Col. Henry P. McCain, 1856 Mintwood place.
Lieut. Cols. Benjamin Alvord, The Ontario; Charles McClure, The Westmore-
land; Charles W. Taylor, 1810 Newton street.
Chief Clerk.—]Jacob Frech, 514 I, street NE.
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR-GENERAL.
(War Department Building.)
Inspector-Geneval.—Brig. Gen. E. A. Garlington, 2117 Bancroft place.
Assistants.—Lieut. Col. W. T. Wood, The Farragut.
Majs. Parker W. West, 1712 H street; Joseph T. Dickman, Fort Myer, Va.
Chief Clerk.—Warren H. Orcutt, 509 East Capitol street.
OFFICE OF THE JUDGE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL.
(War Department Building.)
Judge- Advocate-General. —Brig. Gen. George B. Davis, 1734 Columbia road.
Assistanis.—Maj. John Biddle Porter, 1732 I street.
Capt. Charles R. Howland, The Cairo.
Chief Clerk and Solicitor.—Tewis W. Call, 1448 Newton street.
OFFICE OF THE QUARTERMASTER-GENERAL.
(War Department Building. Phone, Main 2570.)
Quartermaster-General.—Brig. Gen. James B. Aleshire, 1719 Eighteenth street.
Assistants.—Col. John W. Pullman, The Farragut.
Majs. David S. Stanley, 1810 Nineteenth street; William E. Horton, The Farragut;
B. Frank Cheatham, 1714 I street; George G. Bailey, The Marlborough.
Capts. Amos B. Shattuck, 1601 Twenty-third street; Pegram Whitworth, 918
Fighteenth street; Bertram T. Clayton, The Ontario; Archibald W. Butt, 1901 I
street; John R. R. Hannay, 2015 Nineteenth street; Richard C, Marshall, jr., 1737
Corcoran street; Evan H. Humphrey, 1620 Eighteenth street.
Chief Clerk. —Henry D. Saxton, 1922 Calvert street.
Lxecutive Departments. 253
Depot Office.
(Seventeenth and F streets. Phones, Main 1306, 1307, and 1308.)
In Charge.—Maj. Moses G. Zalinski, 1521 K street.
OFFICE OF THE COMMISSARY-GENERAL.
(War Department Building.)
Commissary-General.—Brig. Gen. Henry G. Sharpe, 1713 M street.
Assistants.—Capts. F. A. Cook, The Naples; Jas. A. Logan, jr., 1718 H street.
Chief Clerk.—Emmet Hamilton, 162 Tennessee avenue NE.
OFFICE OF THE SURGEON-GENERAL.
(War Department Building.)
Surgeon-General.—Brig. Gen. Robert M. O'Reilly, 1825 Q street.
Assistants.—Col. George H. Torney, Surgeon-General’s Office; Majs. Jefferson R.
Kean (on duty in Cuba as adviser to the Sanitary Department of the Provisional
Government of Cuba, Havana, Cuba); Merritte W. Ireland, 1917 S street; Charles
F. Mason, 1839 Ustreet; Paul F. Straub, The Concord; Charles Lynch, 1723 Twenty-
first street.
Chief Clerk.—John Wilson, The Alabama.
Army Medical Museum and Library.
(Seventh and B streets SW.)
In Charge.—Col. Valery Havard, 2025 O street.
Librarian.—Maj. Walter D. McCaw, 1915 S street.
Curator of Museum and in Charge of Laboratory.—Capt. Frederick F. Russell, 1928
Biltmore street.
Assistant in Laboratory.—1ieut. John R. Barber, 1010 B street SW.
In Charge of Field Medical Supply Depot.—Maj. Carl R. Darnall, 1618 Fifteenth
street.
Office of Attending Surgeon.
(1720 H street. Phone, Main 80.) :
Attending Surgeon.—Maj. Guy L. Edie, 1907 S street.
Assistant.—Capt. Matthew A. De Laney, The Buckingham.
OFFICE OF THE PAYMASTER-GENERAL:
(War Department Building.)
Paymaster-General.—Brig. Gen. Charles H. Whipple, The Westmoreland.
Assistant.—Maj. George F. Downey, 2129 Bancroft place.
Chief Clerk.—Royall O. Kloeber, Irving Flats.
Office of Post Paymaster.
(Lemon Building.)
Fost Paymaster.—Lieut. Col. Harry I. Rogers, The Westmoreland.
Majs. Wm. B. Rochester, jr., 1320 Eighteenth street; Pierre C. Stevens, 1332
Jefferson place.
Capt. C. E. N. Howard, 1910 I street.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS.
(War Department Building.)
Chief. —Brig. Gen. W. L.. Marshall, Stoneleigh Court.
Assistants.—Col. Smith S. Leach, Woodley Inn.
Lieut. Col. Frederic V. Abbot, 2013 Kalorama road.
Maj. James B. Cavanaugh, The Westmoreland.
Capts. William J. Barden, 2024 N street; Edward N. Johnston, 1725 Kilbourne
place; Richard C. Moore, Washington Barracks.
Chief Clevk.—P. J. Dempsey, 217 South Fairfax street, Alexandria, Va.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ORDNANCE.
(War Department Building.)
Chief.—Brig. Gen. William Crozier, 2339 Massachusetts avenue.
Assistants.—Majs. John T. Thompson, Army and Navy Club; George Montgomery,
Florence Court; Jay E. Hoffer, 1925 S street; J. H. Rice, 1722 S street.
Capts. Herman W. Schull, The Portsmouth; J. B. Dillard, 1927 S street.
Chief Clerk.—John J. Cook, 925 M street.
66525—60-2—2D ED—I8
254 Congressional Directory.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAI, OFFICER.
(War Department Building.)
Chief.—Brig. Gen. James Allen, Army and Navy Club.
pissing =Vajs. George O. Squier, The Highlands; Charles McK. Saltzman, The
Mendota.
Lieuts. Frank P. Lahm, The Bachelor; Benjamin D. Foulois, The Ontario; John
G. Winter, jr., The Cecil.
Disbursing Officer.—Capt. Charles S. Wallace, gor Thirteenth street.
Chief Clevk.—Herbert S. Flynn, The Maury.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ARTILLERY.
(War Department Building.)
Chief.—Brig. Gen. Arthur Murray, 1616 Rhode Island avenue.
Assistants.—Lieut. Col. C. J. Bailey, The Westmoreland.
Capts. PF. W. Coe, 1873 V street; R. E. Callan, The Benedick; P. P. Bishop, 1712
H street; Edw. Carpenter, 2013 O street; Stanley D. Embick, 1703 De Sales street.
Chief Clerk.—Leon Chapuis, 806 Twelfth street.
BUREAU OF INSULAR AFFAIRS.
(War Department Building.)
Chief.—Brig. Gen. Clarence R. Edwards, 4 Jackson place.
Assistants.—Majs. Frank McIntyre, 1815 U street; George H. Shelton, The
Marlborough.
Law Officer.—Paul Charlton, 1712 H street.
Chief Clerk.—A. D. Wilcox, 2610 University place.
BOARD OF ENGINEERS FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS.
(Colorado Building. Phone, Main 3464.)
President.—Col. Daniel W. Lockwood, 132 West Forty-seventh street, New York N.Y.
Col. John G. D. Knight, Governors Island, New York, N. VY.
Lieut. Col. W. C. Langfitt, Washington Barracks.
Maj. J. J. Morrow, 1930 Calvert street.
Capt. William J. Barden, 2024 N street.
Assistant Engineer.—Alexander H. Weber, The Portsmouth.
Chief Clevk.— Alfred H. Ritter, 1302 Park road.
OFFICE OF PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS AND WASHINGTON MONUMENT.
(Lemon Building. Phone, Main 1537.)
In Charge.—Col. Charles S. Bromwell, 1608 New Hampshire avenue.
Chief Clerk.—E. F. Concklin, 513 Eleventh street.
Landscape Gardener.—George H. Brown, 1357 Euclid street.
Custodian of Monument.—]. A. Olsen, The Iowa.
UNITED STATES ENGINEER OFFICE.
(920 Seventeenth street. Phone, Main 7906.)
In Charge.—Maj. J. J. Morrow, 1930 Calvert street.
Assistant.—Iieut. Warren T. Hannum, The Kenesaw.
Chief Clevk.—Pickering Dodge, 2118 P street.
BOARD OF ORDNANCE AND FORTIFICATION.
(1744 G street.)
President.—Maj. Gen. J. Franklin Bell, Fort Myer, Va.
Brig. Gens. William Crozier, 2339 Massachusetts avenue; Arthur Murray, 1616
Rhode Island avenue; W. I,. Marshall, Stoneleigh Court.
Col. Montgomery M. Macomb, 1271 New Hampshire avenue.
Lieut. Col. Erasmus M. Weaver, The Farragut.
Thomas J. Henderson, civilian member (Princeton, I1l.), 1126 East Capitol street.
Recorder. —Capt. Sherwood A. Cheney, 1718 H street.
Secretary,—Grahame H. Powell, 2503 Wisconsin avenue,
Executive Departments. 255
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE.
(K street, between Vermont avenue and Fifteenth street. Phone, Main 196.)
CHARLES JOSEPH BONAPARTE, of Baltimore, Md., Attorney-General (The
_ Portland), was horn in Baltimore June 9, 1851; graduated from Harvard College,
1871, and from Harvard Law School, 1874; admitted to the bar of Maryland, 1874;
appointed Secretary of the Navy July 1, 1905; appointed Attorney-General Decem-
ber 12, 1906.
Solicitor-General.—Henry M. Hoyt, 1701 Rhode Island avenue.
Assistant to the Attorney-General.—Wade H. Ellis, The Highlands.
Assistant Attorneys-General.—John G. Thompson, The Cairo; Charles W. Russell,
The Burlington; James A. Fowler, The Burlington; Wm. Wallace Brown, The
Dewey; John Q. Thompson, The Dewey
Assistant Attorney-Geneval for Interior Department.—Geo. W. Woodruff, 1433 L
street (office in Interior Department).
Chief Clerk.—Orin J. Field, Kensington, Md.
Private Secretary to the Attorney-General.—Henry C. Gauss, 1359 Park road.
Disbursing Clerk.—Alexander C. Caine, 1528 T street.
Appointment Clerk.—Charles B. Sornborger, Garrett Park, Md.
Attorney in Charge of Pardons.—Jas. A. Finch, Grant foad.
Law Clerk and Examiner of Titles.—Reeves T. Strickland, Kensington, Md.
Chief of Division of Accounts.—John J. Glover, 1505 R street.
Superintendent of Prisons and Prisoners.—Robt. V. La Dow, The Ontario.
Chief Examiner.—Stanley W. Finch, 531 T street.
Attorneys.—Marsden C. Burch, in the field; Oliver E. Pagan, 1965 Biltmore street;
John W. Trainer, 1830 S street; Anthony C. Campbell, 1758 Q street; Wm. J.
Hughes, 24 P street; Robert A. Howard, The Cecil; Franklin W. Collins, 182¢c New-
ton street; Philip M. Ashford, 1930 First street; Chas. F. Kincheloe, 1501 Eleventh
street; Geo. M. Anderson, Rockville, Md.; William R. Harr, 1647 Lamont street;
Frederick De C. Faust, The Portner; Malcolm A. Coles, 1311 K street; Edwin P.
Grosvenor, The Marlborough ; Charles E. McNabb, The Gladstone; Wm. F.
Norris, T he Marlborough.
Assistant Attorneys.—Iincoln B. Smith, 1758 Oregon avenue; William W. Scott,
914 Westminster street; Samuel S. Ashbaugh, 1745 Kilbourne place; Glenn E.
Husted, 2320 Woodridge street; Henry C. Lewis, 1918 K street; William H. Lamar,
Rockville, Md.; George E. Boren, in the field; Clark McKercher, 1243 Kenyon
street; Matt I,. Blake, 1420 Fifteenth street; John S. Mosby, 1311 L street; Stan-
hope Henry, Seat Pleasant, Md.; A. McD. McBlair, The Virginia.
Special Assistant Attorneys.—Robert McD. Allen, 1708 Q street; Albert A. Richards,
The Sherman; IL. Allison Wilmer, 1225 N street; Thomas C. Spelling, 813 K street;
J. Harwood Graves, The Sorrento; F. FE. Hutchins, 1632 Riggs place.
Special Agent.—V. N. Roadstrum, The Raleigh.
DEPARTMENT SOLICITORS.
State.
Solicitor.—James B. Scott, 1956 Calvert street.
Treasury.
Solicitor.—Maurice D. O'Connell, The Woodley.
Assistant.—Felix A. Reeve, 1628 Nineteenth street.
Chief Clerk. —Charles E. Vrooman, Hyattsville, Md.
Internal Revenue.
Solicitor.—Fletcher Maddox, 1758 Q street.
Commerce and Labor.
Solicitor. — Charles Earl, Riverdale, Md.
Chief and Law Clevk.—Edward T. Quigley, 616 Fast Capitol street.
SPANISH TREATY CLAIMS COMMISSION.
(1415 H street. Phone, Main 2464.)
President.—]. P. Wood, The Dewey.
W. A. Maury, 1767 Massachusetts avenue.
W. L. Chambers, The Laclede.
Harry K. Daugherty, The Laclede.
Roswell P. Bishop, East Falls Church, Va.
(lerk.—Harold Blake, 316 East Capitol street.
Special Counsel. —Hannis Taylor, 2018 O street.
256 Congressional Directory.
POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT.
(Pennsylvania avenue, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets. Phone, Main 5360.)
GEORGE von LENGERKE MEYER, of Hamilton, Mass., Postmaster-General
(Connecticut avenue and S street), was born in the city of Boston June 24, 1858;
was educated in Boston schools and graduated from Harvard University in 1879; is
trustee Provident Institution for Savings, Boston; director Old Colony Trust Com-
pany, Boston, Amoskeag Manufacturing Company, Manchester, N. H., and United
Electric Securities Company, Boston; was a member of the city government of
Boston, 1890-1892; member of the Massachusetts house of representatives, 1892—
1896; speaker of the Massachusetts house of representatives, 1894-1896; Republican
national committeeman, 1898 to 1905; confirmed as ambassador. to Italy December 14,
1900; transferred as ambassador to Russia March 8, 1905; recalled in February, 1907,
to enter the Cabinet as Postmaster-General, and took oath of office March 4, 1907.
Chief Clerk.—Charles A. Conrard, 223 S street NE.
Assistant.—George G. Thomson, 1612 Monroe street.
Private Secretary lo Postmaster-General.—John A. Holmes, 1768 Willard street.
. Assistant Attorney-General.—Russell P. Goodwin, The Portland.
Special Counsel.—Richard M. Webster, The Revere.
Assistant Altorneys.—Paul V. Keyser, 208 F street; Edwin A. Niess, 61 Rhode
Island avenue.
Purchasing Agent.—Chief Clerk O. H. Briggs, 622 C street NE.
Chief Inspector.—Y¥rank E. McMillin, 2417 Eighteenth street; chief clerk, Theodore
Ingalls, 1300 Fairmont street.
Appointment Clerk.—George S. Paull, Kensington, Md.
Disbursing Clerk.—William M. Mooney, 1919 I street.
OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL.
First Assistant Postinaster-General.—Charles P. Grandfield, 949 S street.
Chief Clerk.—Eliphalet T. Bushnell, 1757 Church street.
Superintendents of Division:
Postmasters’ Appointments.—Bayard Wyman, The Westmoreland; assistants,
Christian B. Dickey, 3351 Mount Pleasant street; Edgar W. Ford, 824 Ninth
« Street NE.
Salaries and Allowances.—Charles M. Waters, 509 Twelfth street; assistant,
George 1. Wood, 2109 Twelfth street, Baltimore, Md.
City Delivery.—FE. H. Thorp, 138 B street NE.; assistant, Bliss N. Davis, 1737 H
street.
OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL.
Second Assistant Postmaster-General.—Joseph Stewart, 1644 Newton street.
Chief Clerk.—]John W. Hollyday, 1924 Thirteenth street.
Superintendents and Chiefs of Division:
Railway Mail Service.—General Superintendent, Alexander Grant, The Cecil;
assistant, George F. Stone, 3023 Macomb street; chief clerk, Aleyne A. Fisher,
1757 Euclid street.
Foreign Mails.—Superintendent, Basil Miles, 1733 Twentieth street; chief clerk,
Robert I,. Maddox, The Alabama.
Railway Adjustments.—Superintendent, Clyde M. Reed; assistant, Joseph I.
Porter, 3225 Eleventh street.
Contracts.—Chief, E. P. Rhoderick, 924 Westminster street.
Inspection.—Chief, James B. Cook, Kensington, Md.
Equipment.—Chief, Thomas P. Graham, 2410 Eighteenth street.
OFFICE OF THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL.
Third Assistant Postmaster-General.—Abraham I,. Lawshe, 1423 Chapin street.
Chief Clerk.—Arthur M. Travers, 1841 Kalorama road.
Superintendents of Division: :
Finance.—Harry H. Thompson, 1720 Willard street; assistant, Charles H. Fulla-
way, 1812 Newton street.
Stamps.—William C. Fitch, The De Soto.
Money Orders.—Edward F. Kimball, 1316 Rhode Island avenue; chief clerk, F. H.
Rainey, 2105 O street. ]
Registered Mails.—C. Howard Buckler, 4o9 Sixth street SE.
Classification.—Harwood M. Bacon, 1728 Willard street.
Redemption.—Fdward McCauley, 1719 Rhode Island avenue.
Postal Card Agent.—W. P. Zantzinger, Rumford Falls, Me.
Stamped Envelope Agent.—William W. Barre, Dayton, Ohio.
|S) Ov ~3 Executive Departments.”
OFFICE OF THE FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL.
Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General. —P. V. DeGraw, 210 Maryland avenue NE.
Chief Clerk.—Robert H. Prender, 145 Carroll street SE.
Superintendents of Division:
Rural Delivery.— William R. Spilman, 324 Fifth street SE.; assistant, H. Conquest
Clarke, 1752 N street.
Supplies. "Richard P. Covert, North Chevy Chase, Md.; assistant, Henry M.
Bradley, 1007 Massachusetts avenue NE.
Dead Letters. —James R. Young, 1001 New Hampshire avenue; chief clerk, Charles
N. Dalzell, 1731 Park road.
Topography.—Topographer, Maj. Adolph von Haake, Hammond Court; assistant
topographer, William B. Todd, 1243 Irving street.
DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY.
(Seventeenth street, south of Pennsylvania avenue. Phone, Main 2790.)
TRUMAN HANDY NEWBERRY, of Detroit, Mich., Secretary of the Navy
(1315 Sixteenth street), was born in Detroit, Wayne County, Mich., November
5, 1864; graduated from Yale University, Sheffield Scientific School, in ‘the class of
1885; is a manufacturer; was appointed Assistant Secretary of the Navy November
1905, and Secretary of the Navy December 1, 1908. I,
Assistant Secretary.—Herbert 1,. Satterlee, Stoneleigh Court.
Chief Clervk.—F. S. Curtis, The Savoy.
Private Secretary to the Secretary of the Navy.—Roy H. Moses, The Allenhurst.
Disbursing Clerk.—M. 1. Croxall, Bethesda, Md.
Special duly. —Commander A. E. Culv er, 1703 Rhode Island avenue.
Superintendent Naval War Records Office and Library.—Charles W. Stewart, 1211
Kenyon street.
OFFICE OF THE ADMIRAL OF THE NAVY.
(Mills Building, corner Pennsylvania avenue and Seventeenth street.)
Admiral of the Navy.—George Dewey, 1601 K street.
Aid. —I1ieut. Commander Henry V. Butler, 2024 Hillyer place.
Secretary.— Lieut. Leonard G. Hoffman, 1303 Fairmont street.
BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS.
(First floor, east wing.)
Chief.—Civil Engineer R. C. Hollyday, 2117 Connecticut avenue.
Chief Clerk.—Wm. M. Smith, 3105 Eleventh street.
Civil Engineers U. S. G. White, The Portland; F. T. Chambers, 1520 H street;
R. E. Bakenhus, 816 Fifteenth street; FR. Harris, 1120 Vermont avenue; J. O.
Shultz, 1279 Twenty-first street.
BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT.
(Third floor and basement, east wing.)
Chief.—Rear-Admiral Wm. S. Cowles, 1733 N street.
Chief Clerk.—A. C. Wrenn, 234 Tenth street NE.
Special Duty. _Rear-Admirals H. N. Manney {retired), The Elsmere; C. M. Chester
(retired), 1736 K street.
Commander G."W. Denfeld (retired), The Burlington.
Lieut. G. C. Sweet, 2121 N street.
Assistant. —Capt. William F. Halsey (retired), The Marlborough.
Lieut. Commanders Cleland Davis, Metropolitan Club; W. R. Gherardi, Bradley
Lane, Chevy Chase.
Lieut. N. G. Sparrow, The Benedick.
Naval [Inspector of Electrical Appliances. — Lieut. Commander I,. S. Thompson
The Bachelor.
General Inspector of Equipment.—Commander J. T. Newton, The Toronto.
258 Congressional Directory.
tHydrographic Office.
(Mills Building.)
Hydrographer.—Commander A. G. Winterhalter, The Portner.
Assistants.—Commanders H. H. Barroll (retired), The Dupont; Harry Kimmell
(retired), 1817 Kalorama road; Lieut. Commander Geo. F. Cooper, The West-
moreland.
Hydrographic Engineer. —G. W. Littlehales, 2132 Leroy place.
Clerk.—H. 1. Ballentine, 1822 Calvert street.
Naval Observatory.
(Georgetown Heights. Phone, West 290.)
Superintendent.—Rear-Admiral William J. Barnette, at the Observatory.
Assistant to the Superintendent. —Commander B. W. Hodges, The Benedick.
Commander E. E. Hayden, 1802 Sixteenth street.
Profs. A. N. Skinner, The Alabama; W. S. Eichelberger, 1756 Park road; F. B.
Littell, 2507 Wisconsin avenue; Asaph Hall, at the Observatory.
Director of the Nautical Almanac.—Prof. Milton Updegraff, 1719 Thirty-fifth street.
Superintendent of Compasses.—Lieut. Commander J. S. Doddridge, 1615 Twenty-
first street.
Assistant Astronomers.—George A. Hill, at the Observatory; John C. Hammond, at
the Observatory; Herbert R. Morgan, 3420 R street.
Assistants ( Nautical Almanac Office).— James Robertson, 3018 Q street; H. B. Hed-
rick, 3240 S street; H. G. Hodgkins, 1613 Thirtieth street.
Assistant (Nautical Instrument Department). —F. A. Boeger, 3106 P street.
Libravian.—W. D. Horigan, 3028 Wisconsin avenue.
BUREAU OF NAVIGATION.
(Second floor, east wing.)
Chief.—Rear-Admiral John E. Pillsbury, 1755 Q street.
Assistant to Bureau.—Capt. Nathaniel R. Usher, 1760 Corcoran street.
Assistants.—Commanders Richard T. Mulligan, 1432 M street; William S. Sims, 1228
Seventeenth street; John M. Poyer, The Champlain; William R. Shoemaker,
2007 Kalorama road.
Lieut. Commanders Lloyd H. Chandler, 2144 California street; George B. Brad-
shaw, The Iroquois; Fred. R. Payne, The Westover; David F. Sellers, 1618
Fighteenth street.
Iieuts. Needham I. Jones, 1525 New Hampshire avenue; Robert I. Berry, The
Farragut.
Chief Clerk.—Edward W. Callahan, 1918 H street.
‘Clerk to the Naval Academy. —1eonard Draper, 2036 F street.
Office of Naval Intelligence.
(Mills Building.)
Chief.—Rear-Admiral Raymond P. Rodgers, 1715 Connecticut avenue.
Lieut. Commanders Humes H. Whittlesey, 1606 K street; Robert K. Crank, The
Grafton.
Lieuts. Horace P. McIntosh, The Oakland; Charles H. Fischer, 1730 Corcoran
street.
BUREAU OF ORDNANCE.
(Third floor, east wing.)
Chief.—Rear-Admiral N. E. Mason, 1973 Biltmore street.
Assistants. —Commanders W. Irving Chambers, 1834 I street; V. O. Chase, Drum-
mond, Md.; C. M. Knepper, The Benedick.
Lieut. Commanders H. B. Price, 2121 N street; J. R. Brady, 1615 Twenty-first
street; A. G. Kavanagh, 2121 N street.
Lieuts. T. C. Hart, The Benedick; W. McDowell, Florence Court.
Prof. P. R. Alger, 5 Maryland avenue, Annapolis, Md.
Chief Clervk.—E. S. Brandt, 1518 Corcoran street.
BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR.
(First floor, east wing.)
Chief.—Chief Constructor Washington Lee Capps, 1823 Jefferson place.
Naval Constructors Joseph H. Linnard, 1712 H street; David W. Taylor, Navy-Yard;
D. C. Nutting, 1814 Newton street; S. F. Smith, The Marlborough; R..H. Rob-
inson, 1322 Nineteenth street; Henry Williams, The Decatur.
Assistant Naval Constructor William McEntee, 1832 Jefferson place.
Chief Clerk.—Michael D. Schaefer, 117 Fourth street NE.
Fxecutive Departments. ND wn O
BUREAU OF STEAM ENGINEERING.
(Third floor, east wing.)
Chief.—
Assistant.—Commander Robert S. Griffin, 2003 Kalorama road.
Commanders Frederick C. Bieg, 1765 Church street; Harold P. Norton, Stoneleigh
Court; Frederic C. Bowers, The Damariscotta; W. Strother Smith, The West-
moreland; William W. White, 1718 Q street; Theodore C. Fenton, 1769 Church
street; Gustav Kaemmerling, The Benedick; Charles W. Dyson, 1814 Belmont
road.
Lieut. Commander John McC. Luby.
Lieuts. Henry C. Dinger, 1723 Q street; James B. Gilmer, The Rochambeau.
Chief Clerk.—W. H. H. Smith, 2122 H street.
BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS.
(First floor, east wing.)
Chief.—Paymaster-General Fustace B. Rogers, 2109 O street.
Assistant to Burean.—Pay Inspector J. S. Carpenter, 417 Fourth street.
Assistants.—Paymasters Charles Conard, 3752 Oliver street, Chevy Chase; Geo. P.
Dyer, 2150 Florida avenue; C. J. Peoples, The Mount Pleasant; Donald W.
Nesbit, New Varnum ; Felix R. Holt, Florence Court. rT
Passed Assistant Paymasters S. E. Barber, The Highlands; D. C. Crowell, The
Rochambeau; Fred W. Holt, 1638 Seventeenth street.
Civilian Assistant. —P. A. Tucker, 1116 Thirteenth street.
BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY.
(First floor, south wing.)
Chief.—Surg. Gen. P. M. Rixey, 1518 K street.
Assistant.—Surg. W. C. Braisted, The Rochambeau.
Surgs. R. M. Kennedy, 2021 Q street; W. H. Bell, 1410 Twenty-first street; F. L.
Pleadwell, The Marlborough.
Chief Clerk.—W. S. Gibson, 2736 St. Paul street, Baltimore, Md.
OFFICE OF THE JUDGE-ADVOCATE-GENERAL.
(Second floor, east wing, room 288.)
Judge-Advocate-General.—Capt. Edward H. Campbell, 1729 Twenty-first street.
Commanders Walter O. Hulme (retired), 2106 O street; Benjamin W. Wells (re-
tired), The Westmoreland.
Lieut. Commander J. P. Morton, 1615 Twenty-first street.
Capt. Philip S. Brown, U. S. M. C., 1722 Twenty-first street.
Capt. I.eof M. Harding, U. S. M. C., The Cecil.
OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR.
Solicitor.— Edwin P. Hanna, 700 ‘I'wentieth street.
Law Clerks.—Pickens Neagle, 1467 Irving street; Edgar H. May, 17 Quarry road.
NAVY-YARD AND STATION, WASHINGTON, D. C.
(Foot of Eighth street SE. Phone, Lincoln 1360.)
Commandant and Superintendent Naval Gun Factory.—Rear-Admiral E. H. C.
Leutze.
First Clerk to Commandant.—F. H. Bronaugh, 332 South Carolina avenue SE.
Assistant Superintendent Naval Gun Factory, Captain of the Yard, and Head of
Departments of Yards and Docks and Steam Engineering.—Capt. 'T'. M. Potts.
Iuspector of Ordnance.—Commander H. P. Jones.
Ordnance Duty.—l1ieut. Commanders U. T. Holmes, A. M. Procter.
Lieuts. W. M. Falconer, C. Shackford, J. R. Defrees, H. W. Osterhaus, P. W.
Foote, T. A. Kittinger, F. J. Cleary.
Head of Departments of Equipment and Navigation.—Capt. Chas. Laird.
General Storekeeper.—Pay Director J. R. Martin.
Assistant.—Paymaster Charles R. O'Leary.
Paymaster of the Yard.—Pay Inspector S. I. Heap.
Medical Officer.—Medical Inspector H. T. Percy.
Chaplain. —
In Command of Seamen’s Quarters.—Lieut. Commander G. H. Burrage.
Commanding Marines.—Maj. W. C. Neville.
U.S. S. Sylph.—1ieut. Roger Williams.
Executive Officer, Seamen’s Quarters.—Chief Gunner F. T. Applegate.
260 Congressional Directory.
NAVY PAY OFFICE.
(Mills Building.)
Purchasing Officer.—Pay Director John N. Speel, 1516 K street.
Disbursing Officev.—Pay Inspector George W. Simpson, The Rochambeau.
Chief Clerk.—F. V. Walker, 1526 Corcoran street.
NAVAI, HOSPITAL.
(Pennsylvania avenue, between Ninth and Tenth streets SE. Phone, East 548.)
Medical Director Thomas H. Streets, 2008 Hillyer place.
Surg. M. S. Elliott, 2128 LeRoy place.
NAVAL MEDICAL SCHOOL.
(T'wenty-third and E streets.)
Medical Director John C. Boyd, 1836 Sixteenth street.
Medical Inspector J. D. Gatewood, 1825 Nineteenth street.
Surgs. E. J. Grow, The Benedick; E. R. Stitt, 2310 Twentieth street.
Passed Asst. Surgs. C. S. Butler, 1333 Harvard street; O. J. Mink, 1810 I street
Naval Medical School Hospital.
(Foot of Twenty-fourth street.)
Medical Directors G. E. Harmon, The Benedick; W. S. Dixon, 1516 R street
Surg: H.C, Curl, The Burlington.
Passed Asst. Surg. H. W. Smith.
NAVAIL, DISPENSARY
(Mills Building.)
Passed Asst. Surg. C. D. Grayson, 1518 K street.
GENERAL BOARD.
(Mills Building.)
President.—Admiral of the Navy George Dewey, 1601 K street.
Rear-Admirals John P. Merrell, president of Naval War College, Newport, R. 1.;
John E. Pillsbury, 1755 OQ street; Raymond P. Rodgers, 1715 Connecticut ave-
nue; R. R. Ingersoll, The Highlands.
Capt. Sidney A. Staunton, 1735 N street.
Secretary. — Commander J. 1. Jayne, 1706 P street.
On duty in connection with the Board.
Rear-Admiral R. D. Evans, 324 Indiana avenue.
Commanders C. S. Williams, The Westmoreland; F. K. Hill, 2017 O street.
Lieut. Commander Henry V. Butler, aid to the Admiral of the Navy, 2024 Hillyer
place. a
BOARD OF INSPECTION AND SURVEY.
President.—Rear-Admiral Thomas C. McLean, The Benedick.
Capts. I. S. K. Reeves, 1720 Twenty-second street; Benjamin Tappan, The Bene-
dick.
Commander Argnstis EF. Fechteler, 1910 Biltmore street.
Naval Constructor R. Stocker, The Highlands.
Recorder.—Commander G. R. Evans, 1920 Calvert street.
—S
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Executive Departments. 261
NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD.
{Mills Building.)
President.—Rear-Admiral Joseph N. Hemphill, 1724 P street.
Rear-Admirals Gottfried Blocklinger, 1756 N street; William W. Kimball, 1224
Seventeenth street.
Capt. Frank H. Eldridge, The Highlands.
Recorder. —Charles B. Cheyney, 3027 Q street.
NAVAL RETIRING BOARD.
(Mills Building.)
President.—Rear-Admiral Joseph N. Hemphill, 1724 P street.
Rear-Admirals Gottfried Blocklinger, 1756 N street; William W. Kimball, 1224
Seventeenth street.
Medical Directors Dwight Dickinson, 1806 R street; Thomas H. Streets, 2008
Hillyer place. :
Recorder.—Charles B. Cheyney, 3027 Q street.
BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS.
(Mills Building.)
President.—Medical Director Abel F. Price, 2233 Q street.
Medical Directors Dwight Dickinson, 1806 R street; John C. Wise, The Portland.
Recorder.—Charles B. Cheyney, 3027 Q street.
HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS.
(Mills Building. Phone, Main 4600.)
Commandant.—Maj. Gen. George ¥. Elliott, commandant’s house, Eighth and G
streets SE.
Aids.—Capt. Richard S. Hooker, 1814 Jefferson place; Lieut. Russell B. Putnam,
1023 Vermont avenue. :
On Duty in Commandan?t’s Office.—Capt. William C. Harllee, The Damariscotta.
Adjutant and Inspector.—Col. Charles H. Lauchheimer, The Farragut.
Assistants. —Lieut. Col. Henry C. Haines, 2018 Columbia road; Maj. Louis J.
Magill; Maj. David D. Porter, 1751 Q street.
Quartermaster.—Col. Frank IL. Denny, 1634 Connecticut avenue.
Assistants. —Lieut. Col. Thomas C. Prince, The Albany; Lieut. Col. Charles IL.
McCawley, 1610 New Hampshire avenue; Capt. Percy F. Archer, 2020 R street;
Capt. Edward W. Banker, The Damariscotta.
Paymaster.—Col. Green C. Goodloe, 1103 Sixteenth street.
Assistants.—Lieut. Col. George Richards, The Richmond; Capt. Harold C. Reis-
inger, The Highlands.
MARINE BARRACKS.
(Eighth street SE. Phone, Lincoln 1231.)
Commanding. —Lieut. Col. James E. Mahoney.
Capt. Logan Tucker, Quartermaster.
Capts. John F. McGill, Louis M. Gulick, Harold C. Snyder, Harry R. Lay.
First Lieut. Thomas H. Brown.
262 Congressional Directory.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR.
(Corner of Seventh and F streets. Phone, Main 6280.)
JAMES RUDOLPH GARFIELD, of Ohio, Secretary of the Interior (1717 Massa-
chusetts avenue), son of James Abram Garfield, twentieth President of the United
States, was born in Hiram, Ohio, October 17, 1865; graduate of Williams College,
Massachusetts, 1885; studied at Columbia Law School; admitted to the bar in 1888;
practiced law in Ohio 1888-1902; member of Ohio Senate 1896 to 1900; trustee
Williams College; member United States Civil Service Commission 1902 to Feb-
ruary, 1903; Commissioner of Corporations, Department of Commerce and Labor,
from February, 1903, to March, 1907. Appointed Secretary of the Interior March
5, 1907.
First Assistant Secretary.—Frank Pierce, The Rochambeau.
Assistant Secvetary.—Jesse E. Wilson, 2625 Eleventh street.
Chief Clerk.—Edward M. Dawson, 1746 S street.
Assistant to the Secretary.—John W. Holcombe, 182g Corcoran street.
Assistant Attorney to the Secveltary.—James I. Parker, 221 Florida avenue.
First Assistant Attorney. —Francis W. Clements, 1460 Irving street.
Private Secretary to the Secretary of the Interior.—Hugh A. Brown, 128 A street NE.
Chiefs of Division:
Disbursing. —George W. Evans, 918 Nineteenth street.
Mails, Files and Archives.— William O. Deatrick, 1507 Park road.
Publications.—I1aurence F. Schmeckebier, 1769 Columbia road.
Supplies.—Amos Hadley, 1330 Harvard street.
Board of Pension Appeals.—Chief, Harrison I. Bruce, 1316 B street SW.
Captain of the Waitch.—Walter F. Halleck, 635 Maryland avenue NE.
GENERAI, LAND OFFICE.
(01d Post-Office Department Building.)
Commissioner.—YFred Dennett, The Burlington.
Assistant Commissioner.—Samuel V. Proudfit, 2550 Fourteenth street.
Chief Clerf.—Frank Bond, 3127 Newark street.
Chief Law Clerk.—James W. Witten, 2518 Thirteenth street.
Law Clerks.—Edward C. Finney, 456 Park road; John McPhaul, 1223 Irving street NE.
Law Examiners.—William B. Pugh, Kenilworth street, North Chevy Chase, Md.;
John H. Thomas, 1439 Belmont road.
Receiving Clerk.—Julius H. Hammond, The Ontario.
Recorder.— Henry W. Sanford, 1207 Sixth street.
Chiefs of Division:
Accounts.—Irving Rittenhouse, Glen Echo Heights, Md.
Contest.—Clement S. Ucker, 60 Bryant street.
Desert and Indian Lands, State Selections, efc.—Stephen W. Williams, Takoma
Park.
Drafting.—Ithamar P. Berthrong, 3409 Ashley terrace.
Field Service.—John D. Yelverton, 3615 Newark street.
Homestead, Timber, and Stone. —Anthony F. Rice, 644 G street NE.
Lieu Selections, Scrip, and Warrant.—Alva S. Taber, 3610 Lowell street.
Mail and Files.—Carl F. Mayer, 3459 Holmead place.
Mineral.—Charles C. Heltman, 121 U street.
Posting and Tract Records.—James W. Byler, 1778 Willard street.
Public Surveys.—Charles L.. Du Bois, 1835 Monroe street.
Railroad Grants and Rights of Way.—Samuel S. Marr, 1318 Corcoran street.
Reclamation, Swamp Land, Special Entries.—William H. Lewis, 1270 Morse street.
PATENT OFFICE.
(Interior Department Building.)
Commissioner.—FEdward B. Moore, 2332 Columbia road.
Assistant Commissioner.— Cornelius C. Billings, 1819 Q street.
Chief Clerk.—William F. Woolard, 3615 Newark street.
Examiners in Chief.—Thomas G. Steward, 1336 Monroe street; Frank C. Skin-
ner, 3425 Holmead place; John B. Macauley, Grafton street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Financial Clerk.—Frank D. Sloat, 1214 1, street.
Law FExaminers.—Webster S. Ruckman, 3414 Mount Pleasant street; Frederick A.
Tennant, The Portner.
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Executive Departments. 263
Principal Examiners:
Artesian and Oil Wells, Stone Working. —G. P. Tucker, 633 G street NE.
Builders Hardware, Locks, Latches, etc.—A. G. Wilkinson, 1526 K street.
Calorifics.—Millard J. Moore, Glencarlyn, Va.
Chemaistry.—William H. Seaman, 1424 Eleventh street.
Civil Engineering. —B. W. Pond, 1887 Newton street.
Classification.—
Electricity, A.—Wm. A. Kinnan, 1110 Fairmont street.
Electricity, B.—A. P. Shaw, 2513 Cliffbourne place.
Electricity, C.—Arthur F. Kinnan, 1215 Newton street NE.
Fine Arts.—A. D. Merritt, 3327 Seventeenth street.
Firearms, Ordnance, Marine Propulsion, and Shipbuilding.—]. H. Colwell, 2124
Pennsylvania avenue.
Furniture.— Walter Johnson, 109 First street NE.
Gas, Distillation, Hides, Skins and Leather, Alcohol, and Oils.—George S. Ely,
300 First street SE.
Harvesters.—Charles H. Lane, The Concord.
Horology, Recorders.—James I. Newton, 1625 R street.
Hydraulics.—F. M. Tryon, 1225 Massachusetts avenue SK.
Interferences.—Fairfax Bayard, 1325 Irving street.
Internal Combustion Engines.—]James W. Anderson, 1521 Twenty-eighth street.
Lamps, Gas Fittings, and Typewriters.—M. R. Sullivan, The Normandie.
Land Conveyances.—Thomas H. Mitchell, 1313 Fairmont street.
Leather-working Machinery and Products.—I. P. Disney, 922 C street NE.
Liquefaction of Gases, Refrigeration, efc.—Jay F. Bancroft, The Brunswick.
Masonry, and Fireproof Buildings.—William A. Cowles, 1731 Lamont street.
Measuring Instruments.—G. L. Morton, The Ontario.
Mechanical Engineering. —Herbert Wright, Kensington, Md.
Metal Bending and Wire Working.—ILouis W. Maxson, Kensington, Md.
Metallurgy.—Wm. J. Rich, 1468 Clifton street.
Metal Working.—Eugene D. Sewall, 1233 Girard street.
Mills and Threshing. —1,. B. Wynne, 1424 Chapin street.
Paper Manufactures, Velocipedes.—W. W. Townsend, 1447 Irving street.
Plastics, Glass.—C. C. Stauffer, 1513 Twenty-eighth street.
Printing and Linotype Machines.—E,. S. Henry, 1320 Columbia road.
Railway Cars, elc.—George R. Simpson, Lincoln Hotel.
Sewing Machines.—John J. Darby, 311 A street NE.
Signals.—G. A. Nixon, Florence Court.
Steam Engineering. —Otto C. Gsantner, Twenty-fourth and Franklin streets NE.
Zextiles.—Arthur H. Giles, 1853 Mintwood place.
7illage.-—Frank A. Loeffler, 3410 Thirteenth street.
Tobacco, Presses, Pneumatics.—G. S. Rafter, 3105 Sixteenth street.
Trade-Marks and Designs.—E. L. Chapman, 2112 Wyoming avenue.
Washing, Brushing, Abrading.—C. G. Gould, 1617 Thirteenth street.
Water Distribution.—Arthur W. Cowles, 1823 Kalorama road.
Wood Working.—Ballard N. Morris, 1761 Willard street.
Chiefs of Division:
Assignment.—Willis B. Magruder, 1732 North Capitol street.
Copy-Sales.—Alex. Mosher, 1730 Twentieth street.
Draftsman.—Alexander Scott, 1201 Kenyon street.
Issue and Gazette.—W. W. Mortimer, 1755 Columbia road.
Phololithographs.—Finis D. Morris, 63 S street.
Mail and Express.—A. L. Pope, 627 East Capitol street.
Libravian.—Howard I,. Prince, The Portner.
BUREAU OF PENSIONS.
(Pension Building, Judiciary Square. Phone, Main 4491.)
Commissioner.—Vespasian Warner, The Portland.
First Deputy.—James L. Davenport, 940 T street.
Second Depuly.—1.everett M. Kelley, The Cecil.
Chief Clerk.—Charles C. Stouffer, 1207 Kenyon street.
Law Clerk.—Stephen A. Cuddy, 701 Twelfth street NE.
Board of Reviewwv.—Chief, Thomas W. Dalton, 427 Massachusetts avenue.
264 Congressional Directory.
Chiefs of Division:
Army and Navy.—ILatimer B. Stine, 140 E street NE.
Certificate.—Herbert R. C. Shaw, The Hawarden.
FEastern.—Jos. A. Scott, 504 Eighth street NE.
Finance.—A. H. Thompson, go4 Massachusetts avenue NE.
Medical. —Charles F. Whitney, Silver Spring, Md.
Record. —Gilbert C. Kniffin, Takoma Park.
Southern.—Jno. T. Clements, 3105 Mount Pleasant street.
Special Examination.—Alvin 1,. Craig, 2206 First street.
Western.—Frank A. Warfield, 1537 T street.
Admitted Files.—In charge: Tory Olesen, 644 KE street NE.
Superintendent’s Division.—George M. Lockwood, 937 French street.
PENSION AGENCY.
(Pension Building. Phone, Main 4491.)
Pension Agent.—John R. King, 25 West Mount Royal avenue, Baltimore, Md.
Chief Clerk.—Allen Bussius, 1341 Emerson street NE.
OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS.
(Old Post-Office Department Building.)
Commissioner.—F¥rancis HE. Leupp, 1813 Sixteenth street.
Assistant.—Robert G. Valentine, 1028 Sixteenth street.
Chief Clevk.—Frank M. Conser, 1412 Fifteenth street.
Superintendent of Indian Schools.—Miss Estelle Reel, The Arlington.
Chiefs of Division.
Law Clerk.—Geo. A. Ward, law clerk in charge, 1521 Monroe street.
Accounts.—Hamilton Dimick, 1464 Chapin street.
Education.—Josiah H. Dortch, 1510 Park road.
Land.—Charles ¥. Hauke, 605 Massachusetts avenue NE.
Purchase.—Samuel E. Slater, 1415 S street.
Cooperation.—James F. Allen, Rockville, Md.
Library.—M. S. Cook, 1328 Twelfth street.
- Mails and Files.—H. W. Shipe (Acting), Ballston, Va.
BUREAU OF EDUCATION.
(Eighth and G streets.)
Commissioner.—FElmer FE. Brown, The Richmond.
Chief Clerk.—Lovick Pierce, 911 Massachusetts avenue.
Compiler.—W. Dawson Johnston, 317 New Jersey avenue SE.
Statistician.—Alexander Summers, 1000 Eighth street.
Chief of the Alaska Division.—Harlan Updegraff, The Stratford.
OFFICE OF THE GEOLOGICAI, SURVEY.
(Hooe Building, 1330 F street. Phone, Main 3116.)
Director.—George Otis Smith, 2137 Bancroft place.
Chief Clerk.—Henry C. Rizer, The Denver.
Geologic Branch:
Chief Geologist.—C. Willard Hayes, 3432 Ashley terrace.
Mining and Mineval Resources. —E. W. Parker, 1815 Corcoran street.
Alaskan Minerval Kesources.—A. H. Brooks, 3100 Newark street.
Chemical and Physical Researches.—G. F. Becker, 1700 Rhode Island avenue.
Topographic Branch: :
Chief Geographer.—R. B. Marshall, 3157 Eighteenth street.
Atlantic Division.—Frank Sutton, Cosmos Club.
Central Division.—W. H. Herron, 1706 Oregon avenue.
Rocky Mountain Division. —¥. C. Barnard, The Normandie.
Pacific Division.—T. G. Gerdine, 1813 Adams Mill road.
Water Resources Branch:
Chief Hydrographer.—M. O. Leighton, 2735 Ontario road.
A
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Lxecutive Departments. 265
Technologic Branch.
Expert in Charge.—J. A. Holmes, 2137 Leroy place.
Chief Engineer.—H. M. Wilson, The Oakland.
Administrative Branch:
Disbursements and Accounts.—John D. McChesney, The Ontario.
Correspondence and Records.—]efferson Middleton, 3412 Thirteenth street.
Library.—Miss J. 1. V. McCord, 1600 Q street.
Publication Branch:
Editor. —G. M. Wood, 1438 Irving street.
Chief Engraver. —S. J. Kubel, 1000 East Capitol street.
RECLAMATION SERVICE.
. (Twelfth and G streets. Phone, Main 3797.)
Director.—Yrederick H. Newell, 2101 S street. :
Chief Enginecr.—Arthur P. Davis, 2212 First street.
Supervising Engineer in Charge of Legal Matters.—Morris Bien, 1130 Lamont street,
Executive Officcr.—Chas. H. Fitch, 3031 N street.
Chief Clerk.— Edwin G. Paul, College Park, Md.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE.
(The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth streets. Phone, Main 4650.)
JAMES WILSON, of Traer, Tama County, Iowa, Secretary of Agriculture
(The Portland), 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 Secretary.—Willet M. Hays, 1937 Biltmore street.
Chief Clerk.—Sylvester R. Burch, The Sherman.
Solicitor.—George P. McCabe, 1428 Newton street.
Appointment Clerk.—Joseph B. Bennett, 147 Eleventh street NE.
Private Secretary to Secretary of Agriculture.—Jasper Wilson, The Portland.
Private-Secretary to Assistant Secretary of Agriculture.—H. N. Mowry, Lanham, Md.
Chief of Supply Division.—Cyrus B. Lower, 3719 New Hampshire avenue.
Chief Engineer and Captain of the Watch.—Iewis Jones, 42 R street NE.
WEATHER BUREAU.
(Corner Twenty-fourth and M streets. Phone, West 74.)
- Chief.—WIllis 1. Moore, The Shoreham.
Assistant Chief.—Henry E. Williams, The Windsor.
Chief Clerk.—Daniel J. Carroll, The Portner.
Editor of Monthly Weather Review.—Prof. Cleveland Abbe, 1679 Thirty-first street.
In Charge of—
Climatological Division.—Prof. Frank H. Bigelow, 1625 Massachusetts avenue.
Instrument Division.—Prof. Charles F. Marvin, 1404 Girard street.
Forecast Division. —Prof. Edward B. Garriott, 1318 Harvard street.
River and Flood Service.—Prof. Harry C. Frankenfield, 1735 New Hamsphire
avenue.
Chiefs of Division:
Distributing. —James Berry, 14 Third street SE.
Publications.—John P. Church, 201 Third street NE.
Telegraph.—Jesse H. Robinson, 1607 S street.
Marine Meteorology.—Henry 1. Heiskell, Bethesda, Md.
Supplies.—Robert Seyboth, 21 V street NE.
Librarian.—Charles F. Talman, Woodley Inn, Cathedral Heights.
266 Congressional Directory.
In Charge of Forecast Districts.—Prof. Henry J. Cox, Chicago, Ill.; Prof. Alexander
G. McAdie, San Francisco, Cal.; District Forecasters John W. Smith, Boston, Mass. ;
Edward A. Beals, Portland, Oreg.; Isaac M. Cline, New Orleans, La.; Frederick
H. Brandenburg, Denver, Colo.; Ferdinand J. Walz, Louisville, Ky.
Inspectors.—Norman B. Conger, Detroit, Mich.; Henry B. Hersey, Milwaukee, Wis.
Research Staff, Mount Weather, Virginia.
Lxecutive Officer in Charge.—Prof. Alfred J. Henry.
In Charge of—
Physical Laboratory.—Prof. William J. Humphreys.
Solar Radiation Work.—Prof. Herbert H. Kimball.
Upper Air Research.—William R. Blair.
BUREAU OF ANIMAIL INDUSTRY.
Chief.—Alonzo D. Melvin, 1751 Park road.
Assistant.—Arthur M. Farrington, 1436 Chapin street.
Chief Clerk.—Charles C. Carroll, 29 Fifth street NE.
Chiefs of Division.
Dairy.—
Inspection.—Rice P. Steddom, 1617 Swann street.
Quarantine.—Richard W. Hickman, 2329 First street.
Animal Husbandman.—George M. Rommel, The Decatur,
Editor.—James M. Pickens, 1303 Wallach place.
Laboratories.
(1362 B street SW.)
Chiefs of Division:
Btochemic.—Marion Dorset, The Iowa.
Pathological.—John R. Mohler, 2317 First street.
Zoology.—Brayton H. Ransom, 3012% R street.
Experiment Station.
(Bethesda, Md.)
Superintendent. —FE,. C. Schroeder, Bethesda, Md.
BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY.
Pathologist and Physiologist, and Chief of Burean.—Beverly T. Galloway, Takoma
Park.
Pathologist and Physiologist, and Assistant Chief.—Albert F. Woods, Takoma Park.
Chief Clerk.— James E. Jones, 1490 Monroe street.
Editor.—J. E. Rockwell, 31 S street.
Records.—I.eon M. Estabrook, 1026 Seventeenth street. .
Superintendent of Experimental Gardens and Grounds.—FEdward M. Byrnes, 58 M
street.
Superintendent Vegetable Testing Gardens. — William W. Tracy, sr., The Kenesaw.
In Charge of—
Alkali and Drought Resistant Plant Breeding [Investigations.—Thomas H.
Kearney, Cleveland Park.
Arlington Experimental Farm and Truck Crop Investigations.—I1,. C. Corbett,
Takoma Park.
Bionomic Investigations of Tropical and Subtropical Plants.—Orator F. Cook,
Lanham, Md.
Corn Investigations.— Charles P. Hartley, 3420 Center street.
Cotton Breeding Investigations.—Archibald D. Shamel, St. James Hotel; D. N.
Shoemaker, Takoma Park.
Crop Technology and Fiber Investigations.—Nathan A. Cobb, Falls Church, Va.;
Lyster H. Dewey, 1337 Wallach place.
Drug Plant, Poisonous Plant, and Tea Culture Investigations. =Rodusy H. True,
Glendale, Md.
Dry Land Ag oricullure Investigations.—E. C. Chilcott, Fairfax, Va.
Farm Management Investigations.—William J. Spillman, 3153 Mount Pleasant
street.
Farmers’ Coopervative Demonstration Work.—Seaman A. Knapp, 1410 Euclid
street.
Executive Departments. 267
In Charge of—Continued.
Grain [nvestigations.—Mark A. Carleton, 1743 Kilbourne place.
Grain Standardization.—John D. Shanahan, 1742 S street.
Pathological Investigations:
Investigations of Diseases of Cotton and Truck Crops.—W. A. Orton, Takoma
Park.
Investigations of Diseases of Fruits.—Merton B. Waite, 1506 Columbia road.
Laboratory of Forest FPathology.—Haven Metcalf, 3620 Eleventh street.
Laboratory of Plant Pathology.—Frwin F. Smith, 1460 Belmont street.
Physical Laboratory.—L,yman J. Briggs, 3451 Mount Pleasant street.
Plant Life History Investigations.—Walter T. Swingle (temporarily in the field).
Pomological Collections.—Gustavus B. Brackett, 1010 I street.
Pomological Field Investigations.—Williama A. Taylor, 55 Q street NE.; G.
Harold Powell, 1867 Park road.
Seed Laboratory.—Edgar Brown, Lanham, Md.
Seeds, Purchase and Distribution of:
Forage Crop Investigations.—Charles V. Piper, 1647 Lamont street.
Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction.—David Fairchild, 1331 Connecticutavenue.
Seed Distribution.—Directed by the Chief of Bureau; assistant, Lisle Morrison,
Takoma Park.
Soil Bacteriology and Water Purification Investigations.—Karl F. Kellerman, 1824
S street.
Sugar-Beet Investigations. —Charles O. Townsend, Takoma Park.
Taxonomic and Range Investigations.—Frederick V. Coville, 1836 V street.
Tobacco Investigations.—A. D. Shamel, St. James Hotel; E. H. Mathewson, 1486
Meridian place.
Western Agricultural Extension.—Carl S. Scofield, Lanham, Md.
FOREST SERVICE.
(Atlantic Building, 928-930 F street. Phone; Main 3572.)
Forester and Chief.—Gifford Pinchot, 1615 Rhode Island avenue.
Associate Forester.—Overton W. Price, Braddock Heights, Va.
Law Officer.—Philip P. Wells, 1325 Vermont avenue.
Editor. —Herbert A. Smith, 2016 R street.
Dendrologist.—George B. Sudworth, 2942 Newark street.
In Charge of—
Operation.—Assistant Foresters James B. Adams, The Cordova; C. S. Chapman,
The Marlborough.
Occupancy.—M. J. McVean, Mount Rainier, Md.
Geography.—Fred G. Plummer, 1333 Q street.
Maintenance.—R. K. Helphenstine, jr., The Windsor.
Accounts.—H. B. Cramer, Gaithersburg, Md.
Stlviculture.— Assistant Foresters Wm. T. Cox, The Wyoming; E. E. Carter, 1826
M street. ;
Federal Cooperation.—A. B. Patterson, The Marlborough.
State and Private Cooperation.—]. G. Peters, Baltimore, Md.
Silvics.—Raphael Zon, The Stonehurst.
Grazing .—Assistant Forester Albert F. Potter, 1307 P street.
Products.— Assistant Foresters William F. Hall, Hyattsville, Md.; R. S. Kellogg,
Riverdale, Md.
Wood Utilization. —McGarvey Cline, Y. M. C. A. Building.
Wood Presevvation.—W. FE. Sherfesee, The Benedick.
Publication.—Findley Burns, 1426 Park avenue, Baltimore, Md.
BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY.
Chemist and Chief of Burean.—Harvey W. Wiley, 1314 Tenth street.
Associate Chemist.—F. L. Dunlap, 1613 Riggs place.
Assistant Chief of the Bureau and Chief of the Division of Foods.—W. D. Bigelow,
1734 Lamont street.
Chief Clerk.—F. B. Linton, 220 Holly avenue, Takoma Park.
Editorial Clerk.—A. 1. Pierce, 1328 Eleventh street.
Librarvian.—M. W. Taylor, 1838 Wyoming avenue.
Chief Food and Drug Inspector.—Walter G. Campbell, The Chapin.
Chiefs of—
Food-Inspection Laboratory.—L. M. Tolman, 1408 Emerson street.
Food Technology Laboratory.—E. M. Chace, 411 G street.
Division of Drugs.—1L. F. Kebler, 1322 Park road.
Drug Inspection Laboratory.—G. W, Hoover, 1345 Vermont avenue.
268 Congressional Directory.
Chiefs of—Continued.
Synthetic Products Laboratory.—W. O. Emery, 2132. Flagler place.
Miscellaneous Division.—John K. Haywood, 1521 Lamont street.
Water Laboratory.—W. W. Skinner, Kensington, Md.
Insecticide and Fungicide Laboratory.—C. C. McDonnell, 2129 Eighteenth street.
Contracts Laboratory.—P. H. Walker, 1718 Corcoran street.
Dairy Laboralory.—G. E. Patrick.
Leather and Paper Laboratory. —F. P. Veitch, College Park, Md.
Microchemical [aboratory.—B. J. Howard, 1 366 North Carolina avenue NE.
Sugar Laboratory (Acting). —A. H. Bryan, The Tulane.
Nitrogen Section.—T. C. Trescot, Hammond Court.
In Charge of Special I nvestigations—
Physiological Chemistry (Animal ).—F. C. Weber, 1214 Twelfth street.
Physiological Chemistry ( Vegetable).—]. A. LeClerc, Takoma Park.
Bacteriological Chemistry.—G. W. Stiles, 4820 Iowa avenue.
BUREAU OF SOILS.
Soil Physicist and Chief of Burean.—Milton Whitney, Takoma Park, Md.
Chief Clerk.—A. G. Rice, Livingston Heights, Va.
Physical and Chemical [nvestigations.-—Frank K. Cameron, 3417 Brown street.
Fertility Investigations.—Oswald Schreiner, 1436 W street.
Soil Survey, Eastern Division.—]Jay A. Bonsteel, 2807 Quarry road.
Soil Survey, Western Division.—Clarence W. Dorsey, Chevy Chase, Md.
Soil Erosion Investigations.—W J McGee, Cosmos Club.
BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY.
Entomologist and Chief.—1.. O. Howard, 2026 Hillyer place.
Assistant Entomologist and Acting Chief in absence of Chief.—C. 1,. Marlatt, 1440
Massachusetts avenue.
Chief Clerk.—R. S. Clifton, Annapolis Junction, Md.
In Charge of—
Truck Crop Insect Investigations.—¥. H. Chittenden, 1323 Vermont avenue.
Forest Insect Investigations.—A. D. Hopkins, Cosmos Club.
Southern Field Crop Insect and Tick Investigations.—W. D. Hunter, Dallas, Tex.
Cereal and Forage Plant Insect Investigations.—F. M. Webster, Kensington, Md.
Deciduous Fruit Insect Investigations.—A. 1. Quaintance, 1807 Phelps place.
Apicultural Investigations.—E. F. Phillips, 1770 Willard street.
BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAI, SURVEY.
Biologist and Chief.—C. Hart Merriam, 1919 Sixteenth street.
Administrative Assistant, Acting Chief in absence of Chie/.—H. W. Henshaw, The
Ontario.
Assistants in Charge of—
Economic Investigations.—A. K. Fisher, The Plymouth.
Game Preservation.—T. S. Palmer, 1939 Biltmore street.
Geographic Distribution.—Vernon Bailey, 1834 Kalorama road.
DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS AND DISBURSEMENTS.
Chief and Disbursing Clerk.—A. Zappone, 2222 First street.
Assistant (in Charge of Weather Bureau Accounts).—E. B. Calvert, Livingston
Heights, Va.
Cashier and Chief Clerk.—DM. E. Fagan, 1455 W street.
DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS.
Editor and Chief.—George William Hill, The Benedick.
Editor and Assistant Chief.—Joseph A. Arnold, 134 Sixth street NE.
Chief Clerk.—A. 1. Mudd, 1925 Fifteenth street.
Associate Editor.—B. D. Stallings, 948 S street.
Assistants in Charge of—
Document Section.—Robert B. Handy, 23 Eighth street SE.
Indexing. —C. H. Greathouse, Fort Myer Heights, Va.
lllustrations.—1.. S. Williams, 2304 First street.
BUREAU OF STATISTICS.
Statistician and Chief.—Victor H. Olmsted, 1761 P street.
Associate Statistictan.—Charles C. Clark, 1362 Newton street.
Assistant Statistician.—Nat, C. Murray, Takoma Park.
Chief Clevk.—Samuel A. Jones, 2594 Wisconsin avenue.
Executive Departments. 269
Chiefs of Division:
Domestic Crop Reports.—Fred. J. Blair.
Production and Distribution.—George K. Holmes.
Editorial and Library.—Charles M. Daugherty.
LIBRARY.
Librarian.—Claribel R. Barnett, 2750 Fourteenth street.
Assistant. —Emma B. Hawks, 941 S street.
OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS.
Director.—A. C. True, 1604 Seventeenth street.
Assistant, and Editor of Experiment Station Record.—E,. W. Allen, 1923 Biltmore
street.
Chiefs of—
Editorial Division.—W. H. Beal, 1923 Biltmore street.
Division of Insular Stations.—Walter H. Evans, Cleveland Park.
Nutrition Investigations.—C. F. Langworthy, 1604 Seventeenth street.
Irrigation Investigations.—S. Fortier, 1723 Corcoran street.
_ Drainage Investigations.—C. G. Elliott, The Executive.
In Charge of— :
Alaska Experiment Stations.—C. C. Georgeson, Sitka.
Hawaii Experiment Station.—E. V. Wilcox, Honolulu.
Porto Rico Experiment Station.—David W. May, Mayaguez.
Agricultural Education.—D. J. Crosby, Lanham, Md.
Farmers’ Institute Specialist.—John Hamilton, 2718 Thirteenth street.
Chief Clerk.—Mrs. C. E. Johnston, The Henrietta.
OFFICE OF PUBLIC ROADS.
Director.—Iogan W. Page, 2223 Massachusetts avenue.
Assistant Dirvector.—Allerton S. Cushman, 1314 Sixteenth street.
Chief Engineer.—Vernon M. Peirce, 3401 Sixteenth street.
Chief of Road Management.—J. E. Pennybacker, jr., 2308 First street.
Chief of Records and Chief Clerk.—W. Carl Wyatt, 36 Randolph place.
Testing Engineer.—P. 1. Wormeley, jr., 3014 Dent place.
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND LABOR.
(513-515 Fourteenth street. Phone, Main 5060.)
OSCAR S. STRAUS, of New York City, Secretary of Commerce and Labor (2600
Sixteenth street), was born December 23, 1850; beginning his education in the
schools of Talbotton and Columbus, Ga., where he passed his boyhood days, he suc-
cessively graduated from Columbia Grammar School, Columbia College (now Colum-
bia University), New York City, and Columbia Law School, concluding his studies
at the latter institution in 1873; practiced law 1873-1881; engaged in mercantile pur-
suits as a member of the New York firm of L. Straus & Sons; minister to Turkey
1887-1889, 1897-1900; appointed by President Roosevelt, in 1902, as a member of the
Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague in the place of ex-President Harrison,
deceased; formerly president of the New York Board of Trade, and of the National
Primary League; vice-president of the National Civic Federation; vice-president of
the International Taw Association of America; formerly president of the American
Social Science Association; author of numerous publications dealing with history
and internationallaw: ‘‘The Originof Republican Form of Government in the United
States;”’ ‘‘ Roger Williams, the Pioneer of Religious Liberty;”’ ‘‘The Development
of Religious Liberty in the United States;’’ ‘‘U. S. Doctrine of Citizenship and Ex-
patriation;”’ ‘‘Reform in the Consular Service,” etc.; I. H. D., Brown University;
and LL. D., University of Pennsylvania, Washington and Lee, and Columbia uni-
versities. Appointed Secretary of Commerce and Labor December 12, 1906.
Assistant Secvetary.—William R. Wheeler, The Highlands.
Chief Clerk.—Frank H. Bowen, 1500 Newton street, Brookland.
Disbursing Clerk.—William L. Soleau, 1361 Harvard street.
Private Secretary to the Secvetary.—Theodore I,. Weed, 1628 Riggs Place.
Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary.—Otis B. Goodall, 82 T street.
Chiefs of Division:
Appointments.—George W. Leadley, The Van Cortlandt.
Printing and Publications.—George C. Havenner, Minnesota avenue and Eight-
eenth street, Anacostia.
Supplies. —Wilbur W. Fowler, Blair road.
66525—60-2—2D ED——I9
270 Congressional Directory.
BUREAU OF CORPORATIONS.
(513-515 Fourteenth street.)
Commissioner.—Herbert Knox Smith, The Highlands.
Deputy. —E. Dana Durand, 3325 Holmead place.
Chief Clerk.—Warren R. Choate, Rockville, Md.
BUREAU OF MANUFACTURES.
(Adams Building, 1335 F street.)
Chief.—John M. Carson, 1332 Vermont avenue.
Assistant and Acting Chief Clerk.—Edgar J. Gibson, 207 A street SE.
Chief Consular Division.—Charles S. Donaldson, Berwyn, Md.
Tariff Expert.—Nahum I. Stone, 1674 Irving street NE.
BUREAU OF LABOR.
(National Safe Deposit Building, corner Fifteenth street and New York avenue.)
Comnissioner.—Charles P. Neill, 3556 Macomb street.
Chief Statistician.—G. W. W. Hanger, 2344 Massachusetts avenue.
LIGHT-HOUSE BOARD.
(Builders’ Exchange Building, 721 Thirteenth street.)
Hon. Oscar S. Straus, Secretary of Commerce and Labor, ex officio President of
the Board.
Chaivinan.—Rear-Admiral Adolph Marix, 1725 H street.
Col. Walter S. Franklin, 24 Fast Vernon place, Baltimore, Md.
Dr. Henry S. Pritchett, Carnegie Foundation, 576 Fifth avenue, New York, N. VY.
Col. D. W. Lockwood, Corps of Engineers, Army Building, New York, N. VY.
Capt. S. P. Comly, U.S. N., 2158 California street NW.
Maj. James B. Cavanaugh, Corps of Engineers, The Westmoreland.
Naval Secretary.—Capt. H. T. Mayo, The Ontario.
Engineer Secretary.—1ieut. Col. Thos. I. Casey, Stoneleigh Court.
Chief Clerk.—Walter B. Hindmarsh, 1839 Ontario place.
BUREAU OF THE CENSUS.
(B street, between First and Second streets. Phone, Main 4210.)
Dirvector.—S. N. D. North, 1414 Twenty-first street.
Chief Clerk.—William S. Rossiter, 1424 K street.
Disbursing and Appointment Clerk.—Thomas S. Merrill, 3751 Northampton street,
Chevy Chase.
Chief Statisticians: :
Agriculture.—XLe Grand Powers, 3355 Eighteenth street.
Manufactures.— William M. Steuart, The Kensington.
FPopulation.— William C. Hunt, 928 Westminster street.
Vital Statistics.—Cressy 1,. Wilbur, 1374 Harvard street.
Geographer.—Charles S. Sloane, 1521 Tenth street.
Expert Chiefs of Division:
Agriculture.—Hart Momsen, Garrett Park, Md.
Disbursements and Aron, —George W. Crane, 2428 South Dakota ave-
nue NE.
Manufactures.—Joseph D. Lewis, 238 Delaware avenue NE.; Frank I,. Sanford,
1458 Fairmont street; Jasper FE. Whelchel, 2803 Eighteenth street; Daniel C.
Roper, 816 Massachusetts avenue NE.
FPopulation.—Edward W. Koch, Woodside, Md.
Publication. — William S. Rossiter, 1424 K street.
Revision and Results.—I.ewis Meriam, 1606 Seventeenth street.
Vital Statistics.—Richard C. Lappin, 203 Fast Capitol street.
COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY.
(New Jersey avenue, near B street SK.)
Superintendent.—Otto H. Tittmann, 2014 Hillyer place.
Assistant.—Frank Walley Perkins, 1723 De Sales street.
Assistant in Charge of the Office.—Andrew Braid, The Columbia.
Inspector of Hydrography and Topography. _Johmn J. Gilbert, The Iroquois.
Inspector of Charts.—Gershom Bradford, 1326 Park road,
Disbursing Agent.—Scott Nesbit, The Luxor,
Editor. —Isaac Winston, The Portner,
Executive Departments. 271
Chiefs of Division:
Computing .—John F. Hayford, 2729 Ontario road.
Drawing and Engraving.—G. R. Putnam, Cosmos Club.
Instrument.—Ernest G. Fischer, The Ethelhurst.
Library and Archives.—Ralph M. Brown, 1324 Monroe street.
Terrestrial Magnetism.—R. 1,. Faris, 66 U street.
7idal.—Leland P. Shidy, 1617 Marion street.
BUREAU OF STATISTICS.
(Adams Building, 1335 F street.)
Chief of Burean.—Oscar P. Austin, 1620 Massachusetts avenue.
Chief Clerk.—]. N. Whitney, 1619 Seventeenth street.
STEAMBOAT-INSPECTION SERVICE.
(Builders’ Exchange Building, 721 Thirteenth street.)
Supervising [nspector-General.—George Uhler, 1433 Huclid street.
Chief Clerk.—William F. Gatchell, 1452 Clifton street.
BUREAU OF FISHERIES.
- (Office, corner Sixth and B streets SW.)
Commissioner.—George M. Bowers, The Champlain.
Deputy.—Hugh M. Smith, 1209 M street.
Chief Clerk.—1. H. Dunlap, 1728 Q street.
Assistants in Charge of Division:
Inquiry Respecting Food Fishes.—B. W. Evermann, 1425 Clifton street.
Fish Culture.—John W. Titcomb, 1605 Irving street.
Statistics and Methods.—A. B. Alexander, 404 Sixth street SE.
Architect and Engineer.—Hector von Bayer, 2418 Fourteenth street.
BUREAU OF NAVIGATION.
(Builders’ Exchange Building, 721 Thirteenth street.)
Commissioner.— Eugene Tyler Chamberlain, The Ethelhurst.
Deputy.—Thomas B. Sanders, 2144 P street.
BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION.
(513-515 Fourteenth street.)
Commissioner-General.—Daniel J. Keefe.
Assistant.—F. H. Larned, 1821 I street.
Commissioners of Immigration. —Robert Watchorn, Ellis Island, New York Harbor;
George B. Billings, Long Wharf, Boston, Mass.; John J. S. Rodgers, Delaware
Insurance Building, Philadelphia, Pa; Touis 7, Weis, Stewart Building, Balti-
more, Md.; Hart H. North, San Francisco, Cal.; john H. Clark, Montreal,
Province of Quebec; Graham I,. Rice, San Juan, P. R.
Division of Naturalization.
(Munsey Building.)
Chief.—Richard K. Campbell, 1977 Biltmore street.
Assistant Chief.—Raymond F. Crist, 1330 U street.
Division of Information.
(513-515 Fourteenth street.)
Chief.—T. V. Powderly, 502 Quincy street.
Assistant.—P. A. Donahue, The Sterling.
BUREAU OF STANDARDS.
(Pierce Mill Road. Phone, Cleveland 300.)
Director.—S. W. Stratton, The Farragut.
Physicist. —FEdward B. Rosa, The Ontario.
Chemist.—W. F. Hillebrand, 3023 Newark street, Cleveland Park.
Associate Physicists.—1,. A. Fischer, 923 Massachusetts avenue; F. A. Wolff, 1429
R street; C. W. Waidner, 1429 R street.
Associate Chemist.—H. N. Stokes, 1443 Q street.
Secretary.—Henry D. Hubbard, The Wilton.
Chief Engineer.—C. F. Sponsler, 1450 Girard street.
272 Congressional Divectory.
INDEPENDENT AND MISCELLANEOUS.
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION.
(The Mall. Phone, Main 1811.)
Presiding Officer ex officio.—Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States.
Chancellor.—Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the United States.
Members of the [nstitution.—Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States;
Charles W. Fairbanks, Vice-President of the United States; Melville W. Fuller,
Chief Justice of the United States; Elihu Root, Secretary of State; George B.
Cortelyou, Secretary of the Treasury; Luke E. Wright, Secretary of War; Charles J.
Bonaparte, Attorney-General; George von I. Meyer, Postmaster-General; Truman
H. Newberry, Secretary of the Navy; James R. Garfield, Secretary of the Interior;
James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture; Oscar S. Straus, Secretary of Commerce
and Labor.
Regents of the Institution.—Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the United States,
chancellor; Charles W. Fairbanks, Vice-President of the United States; Shelby
M. Cullom, member of the Senate; Henry Cabot Lodge, member of the Senate;
Augustus O. Bacon, member of the Senate; John Dalzell, member of the House of
Representatives; James R. Mann, member of the House of Representatives; William
M. Howard, member of the House of Representatives; James B. Angell, citizen
of Michigan (Ann Arbor); Andrew D. White, citizen of New York (Ithaca); John
B. Henderson, citizen of Washington, D. C.; Alexander Graham Bell, citizen of
Washington, D. C.; George Gray, citizen of Delaware (Wilmington); Charles F.
Choate, jr., citizen of Massachusetts (Boston).
Executive Committee.—]John B. Henderson, Alexander Graham Bell, John Dalzell.
Secretary of the Institution.—Charles D. Walcott, 1743 Twenty-second street.
Assistant Secretary.—Richard Rathbun, 1622 Massachusetts avenue.
Chief Clerk.—H. W. Dorsey, Hyattsville, Md.
FEdiftor.—A. Howard Clark, Florence Court.
NATIONAL MUSEUM.
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; Walter Hough (acting).
Curators.—R. S. Bassler, A. Howard Clark, F. W. Clarke, Frederick V. Coville, W. H.
Dall, B. W. Evermann, J. M. Flint, U. S. N. (retired), W. H. Holmes, L. O. Howard,
Richard Rathbun, Robert Ridgway, Leonhard Stejneger, C. D. Walcott.
Associate Curators.—J. N. Rose, David White, ”
Chief of Corrvespondence.—R. 1. Geare, 3554 Tenth street.
Disbursing Agent.—W. Irving Adams, The Ontario.
Registrar.—S. C. Brown, 305 New Jersey avenue SE.
Editor.—Marcus Benjamin, 1703 Q street.
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY.
(Office in Adams Building, 1333 F street. Phone, Main 300.)
Chief.—W. H. Holmes, 1444 Belmont street.
INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGES.
Chief Clerk.—F. V. Berry, 616 Ninth street NE.
NATIONAL, ZOOLOGICAL PARK.
(Adams Mill road. Phone, Columbia 744.)
Superintendent.—Xrank Baker, 1728 Columbia road.
Assistant Supt.—A. B. Baker, 1845 Lanier place.
ASTROPHVYSICAT, OBSERVATORY.
Director.—C. G. Abbot, 36 Q street NE.
REGIONAT, BUREAU FOR THE UNITED STATES, INTERNATIONAL CATALOGUE OF
SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE.
Chief Assistant.—Leonard C. Gunnell, 1525 Twenty-eighth street.
tm
ES
ei
Independent and Miscellaneous. : 293
INTERNATIONAL BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS.
‘““ PAN-AMERICAN BUREAU.”
(2 Jackson place. Phone, Main 6638.)
Director.—John Barrett, The Connecticut.
Secretary.—Francisco J. Yanes, The Oakland.
Chief Statistician (acting).— William C. Wells, Hyattsville, Md.
Chief Clerk pro tempore.—Franklin Adams.
Chief Translator.—Emilio M. Amores, 1531 I street.
Special Compiler—Albert Hale, 1412 Massachusetts avenue.
Librarian (acting ).—Charles E, Babcock, Vienna, Va.
GOVERNING BOARD.
Chairman ex officio.—Elihu Root, Secretary of State, 1500 Rhode Island avenue.
* - Joaquim Nabuco, Ambassador of Brazil, 22 Lafayette square.
Enrique C. Creel, Ambassador of Mexico, 1415 I street.
. J. N. Léger, Minister of Haiti, 1429 Rhode Island avenue.
Joaquin Bernardo Calvo, Minister of Costa Rica, 1329 Eighteenth street.
Luis F. Corea, Minister of Nicaragua, 2003 O street.
Gonzalo de Quesada, Minister of Cuba, The Wyoming.
Ignacio Calderén, Minister of Bolivia, 1633 Sixteenth street.
FEpifanio Portela, Minister of Argentina, 1800 Massachusetts avenue.
Felipe Pardo, Minister of Peru, 1737 H street.
Luis Felipe Carbo, Minister of Ecuador, 1614 I street.
Enrique Cortes, Minister of Colombia, 1728 N street.
Luis Melidn Lafinur, Minister of Uruguay, 1529 Rhode Island avenue.
Luis Toledo Herrarte, Minister of Guatemala, The Highlands.
Federico Mejia, Minister of Salvador, The Portland.
Anibal Cruz, Minister of Chile, 1529 New Hampshire avenue.
Luis Lazo Arriaga, Minister of Honduras, 66 Beaver street, New York City.
C. C. Arosemena, Minister of Panama, The Highlands.
Emilio C. Joubert, Minister Resident of Dominican Republic, The Shoreham.
INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION.
(American Bank Building, 1317 F street. Phone, Main 2563.)
[The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the 1 designates those whose daughters
accompany them; the | those having other ladies accompanying them.]
Chairman.—* Martin A. Knapp, of New York, Stoneleigh Court.
*t Judson C. Clements, of Georgia, 2113 Bancroft place.
*t+ Charles A. Prouty, of Vermont, The Portner.
+ Francis M. Cockrell, of Missouri, 1518 R street.
* Franklin K. Lane, of California, 1866 Wyoming avenue.
1 Edgar E. Clark, of Iowa, The Rochambeau.
* || James S. Harlan, of Illinois, 1720 Rhode Island avenue,
Secretary. —*t Edward A. Moseley, 1113 Sixteenth street.
CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION.
(Offices, corner Eighth and KE streets. Phone, Main 75.)
Commiissioners.—John C. Black, President, 1717 S street.
Henry F. Greene, 1527 Thirty-first street.
John A. McIlhenny, 1341 New Hampshire avenue.
Chief Examiner.—George R. Wales, The Cordova.
Secretary.—John T. Doyle, near I,yonhurst, Va., R. F. D. 4.
274 Congressional Directory.
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE.
(Corner North Capitol and G streets. Phone, Main 6840.)
Public Printer —Samuel B. Donnelly, 1424 K street.
Deputy Public Printer.—Henry ‘I’. Brian, 1244 Columbia road.
Secretary to the Public Printer.—William J. Dow, 145 Rhode Island avenue.
Attorney.—Frank E. Elder, 31 Seaton place.
Purchasing Agent.—Edward S. Moores, 467 M street.
Accountant (Acting).—B. 1,. Vipond, Hyattsville, Md.
Superintendent of Work.—John R. Berg, 319 F street NE.
Assistant Superintendent of Work (day).—Jerome Kendall, 37 Rhode Island avenue.
Assistant Superintendent of Work (night).—Chas. FE. Young, 75 Rhode Island
avenue.
Foreman of Printing. —Frank C. Wallace, 135 T street.
Assistant Foreman of Printing.—John Greene, 41 Rhode Island avenue.
Foreman of Congressional Record.—ILouis P. Kenney, 1755 U street.
Superintendent of Documents.—William 1,. Post, 1513 Lamont street.
UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD. ’
Chairman.—Henry Gannett, Geographer, Geological Survey.
Secretary.—Charles S. Sloane, Geographer, Bureau of the Census.
Frank Bond, Chief Clerk, General Land Office.
Andrew Braid, assistant, in charge of office, Coast and Geodetic Survey.
Maj. Adolph von Haake, Topographer, Post-Office Department.
Arnold B. Johnson, Superintendent, Office of Inspector, Fifth District, Light-House
Establishment.
Tieut. Col. Thaddeus W. Jones, General Staff, Department of War.
Frank A. Kidd, Editor and Chief of the Editorial and Proof Reading Section, Gov-
ernment Printing Office.
William McNeir, Chief Bureau of Rolls and Library, Department of State.
Dr. C. Hart Merriam, Chief Biologist, Department of Agriculture.
John S. Mills, Office of the Secretary, Department of the Treasury
Fred G. Plummer, Forest Service, Department of Agriculture.
Charles W. Stewart, Superintendent, Library and Naval War Records Office,
Department of the Navy.
‘Com. A, G, Winterhalter, Hydrographer, Department of the Navy.
NATIONAL BOTANIC GARDEN.
(West of the Capitol grounds.)
Superintendent.—William R. Smith.
Assistants.—C. Leslie Reynolds, 1824 S street; John Clark, Maryland avenue
and Second street SW.
NATIONAI, HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS.
Branches.—Central, Dayton, Ohio; Northwestern, Milwaukee, Wis. ; Southern, Hamp-
ton, Va.; Eastern, Togus, Me.; Western, Leavenworth, Kans. ; Marion, Marion, Ind.;
Pacific, Santa Monica, Cal.; Danville, Danville, Ill.; Mountain, Johnson City, Tenn.;
Battle Mountain Sanitarium, Hot Springs, S. Dak.
Managers.—The President of the United States, the Chief Justice, the Secretary
of War, ex officiis, Washington, D. C.; Maj. James W. Wadsworth, president,
346 Broadway (New York Life Building), New York, N. Y.—term expires 1910;
Gen. Thomas J. Henderson, first vice-president, Princeton, Ill. —term expires 1914;
Capt. Henry KE. Palmer, second vice-president, Omaha, Nebr.—term expires 1910;
Col. Walter P. Brownlow, secretary, Jonesboro, Tenn.—term expires 1914; Gen.
Charles M. Anderson, Greenville, Ohio—term expires 1912; John M. Holley, esq.,
La Crosse, Wis.—term expires 1910; Maj. William Warner, Kansas City, Mo.—term
expires 1912; Col. Henry H. Markham, Pasadena, Cal.—term expires 1910; Lieut.
Franklin Murphy, Newark, N. J.—term expires 1912; Col. Edwin P. Hammond,
Lafayette, Ind.—term expires 1914; Gen. Joseph S. Smith, Bangor, Me.—term
expires 1914.
General Treasurer.—Maj. Moses Harris.
Inspector-General and Chief Surgeon.—Col. W. EF. Elwell.
SR
i
Independent and Miscellaneous, 275
SOLDIERS’ HOME.
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS.
(Office, Root 219, War Departineiit, west wing. Phone; Main 2570.)
Maj. Gen. Fred C. Ainsworth, The Adjutant- General.
Brig. Gen. Hamilton S. Hawkins (retired), Governor of the Soldiers’ Homie,
Brig. Gen. George B. Davis, Judge-Advocate-General,
Brig. Gen. Robert M. O’ Reilly, Surgeon-General.
Brig. Gen. James B. Aleshire, Quartermaster-General,
Brig. Gen. W. I,, Marshall, Chief of Engineers.
Brig. Gen. Henry G. Sharpe, Commissary-General of Subsistence.
Secretary of the Board.—Nathaniel Hershler.
OFFICERS OF THE HOME.
(Residing at the Home. Phone, North 2660.)
Governorv.—Brig. Gen. Hamilton S. Hawkins (retired).
Deputy.—Brig. Gen. Wm. pb. Rogers (retired).
Secretary and Treasure j
Attending Surgeon. — Maj 3s William S S. Crosby.
(retired).
ISTHMIAN CANAL COMMISSION.
(Seventeenth and G streets. Phone, Main 4294.)
General Purchasing Officer and Chief of Office.—Capt. F. C. Boggs, Corps of
Engineers, U. S. A., The Westmoreland.
Assistant to the Chief of Office.—Rufus A. Lane, The Rochambeau.
Chief Clerk, Purchasing Office.—Charles E. Dole, The Decatur.
General Counsel. —Richard Reid Rogers, 929 Farragut square.
Disbursing Officer.—James G. Jester, The Ashburn. °
Appointment Clerk. —Ray 1. Smith, 1319 Massachusetts avenue SE.
ON THE ISTHMUS.
Commissioners.
Lieut. Col. Geo. W. Goethals, Corps of Rhuthbers U.. 8. A, Chairman and Chief
Engineer, Culebra.
Lieut. Col. H. F. Hodges, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., Assistant Chief Engineer,
Culebra.
Maj. D. D. Gaillard, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., Division Engineer of Central
Division, Empire.
Maj. William I. Sibert, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., Division Engineer of Atlan-
tic Division, Gatun.
H. H. Rousseau, U. S. N., Assistant to the Chairman, Culebra.
JCS Blackburn, head of the Department of Civil Administration, Ancon.
Col. Wm. C. Gorgas, Medical Department, U. S. A., head of the Department of
Sanitation, Ancon.
Secretary.—Joseph Bucklin Bishop, Ancon.
Chief Quartermaster.—Maj. C. A. Devol, U. S. A., Culebra.
Disbursing Officer.—Edward J. Williams, Empire.
Examiner of Accounts,—Walter W, Warwick, Empire.
- COMMISSION TO THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS.
(Headquarters, Manila.)
Chairman and Governor-General of the Islands.—]James F. Smith.
Vice-Governor.—W. Cameron Forbes. |
Dean C. Worcester, W. Morgan Shuster, Trinidad H. Pardo de Tavera, José R.
Tuzuriaga, Gregorio Araneta, Newton W. Gilbert, Rafael Palma.
Secretary. —Yrank W, Carpenter,
276 «Congressional Directory.
INTERNATIONAL WATERWAYS COMMISSION.
(Room 606 Westory Building, 605 Fourteenth street. Phone, Main 7343.)
Chairman.—Brig. Gen. O. H. Ernst, U. S. A. (retired), 1321 Connecticut avenue.
George Clinton, Prudential Building, Buffalo, N. VY.
Prof. E. E. Haskell, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
Secretary.—W. E. Wilson, Federal Building, Buffalo, N.Y.
CANADIAN MEMBERS.
Chairman.—Geo. C. Gibbons, London, Ontario.
TLouis Coste, Ottawa, Ontario.
Wm. J. Stewart, Ottawa, Ontario.
Secretary. —Thomas Cote, Ottawa, Ontario.
AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS.
(Room 341, War Department building. Phone, Main 5836-M.)
President.—William H. Taft.
Treasurer.—Beekman Winthrop, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury.
Counselor.—Henry M. Hoyt, Solicitor-General.
Secretary.—Charles 1. Magee, 116 Tennessee avenue NE.
Board of Consultation.—Brig. Gen. Robert M. O’Reilly, Surgeon-General U. S. A.;
Rear-Admiral Presley M. Rixey, Surgeon-General U. S. N.; Surg. Gen. Walter
Wyman, U. S. Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service.
CENTRAL COMMITTEE.
Chairman.—Maj. Gen. Geo. W. Davis, (retired); Brig. Gen. Robert M. O'Reilly;
Robert Bacon, Assistant Secretary of State; Beekman Winthrop; Medical Director
John C. Wise, U. S. N.; Henry M. Hoyt ; Miss Mabel T. Boardman; James R.
Garfield, Secretary of the Interior; James Tanner, Washington, D. C.; Gen. Charles
Bird (retired), Wilmington, Del.; Col. William Cary Sanger, Sangerfield, N. Y.;
Lambert Tree, Chicago, Ill.; Benjamin Ide Wheeler, University of California;
Samuel Mather, Cleveland, Ohio; A. C. Kaufman, Charleston, S. C.; Charles G.
Washburn, House of Representatives; John C . Pegram, Providence, R. I; W., W.
Farnam, New Haven, Conn.
COLUMBIA INSTITUTION FOR THE DEAF AND DUMB.
(Kendall Green. Phone, Lincoln 225.)
Patron ex officio.— Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States.
President. —FEdward M. Gallaudet, Kendall Green.
Directors.—George C. Perkins, Senator from California; Charles N. Fowler, Repre-
sentative from New Jersey; Thetus W. Sims, Representative from Tennessee;
Francis M. Cockrell, ex-Senator from Missouri; David J. Brewer, John W. Foster,
Theodore W. Noyes, R. Ross Perry, citizens of Washington, D. C.; John B. Wight,
citizen of New York.
Secretary.—Charles S. Bradley, 1722 N street.
Treasurer.— William W. W. Parker, 1738 Connecticut avenue.
President, and Professor of Moral and Political Science, Gallaudet College.— Edward
M. Gallaudet.
Vice-President, and Professor of Languages.—Edward A. Fay.
Emeritus Professor of Natural Science, and Lecturer on Fedagogy.—John W.
Chickering.
Professor in “Charge Department of Articulation.—Percival Hall.
Principal, K endall School. —James Denison.
Supervisor of Domestic Department and Disbursing Officer.— Wallace G. Fowler.
Visitors admitted on Thursdays from g a. m. to 12 m. and 2 to 3 p. m.
war
Independent and Miscellaneous. 27 ~~
GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL FOR THE INSANE.
(St. Elizabeth, Nichols avenue, beyond Anacostia. Phone, Lincoln 1428.)
Board of Visilors.—F. M. Gunnell, M. D., ex-Surgeon-General, U. S. N., president;
Mrs. Gardiner Hubbard; William A. Maury; Walter Wyman, M. D., Surgeon-
General Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service; G. Lloyd Magruder, M. D.;
Scott C. Bone; Mrs. Kate M. Sharp; George M. Sternberg, ex-Surgeon-General,
U..S. A.; Rev. John M. Schick, D. D.
Superintendent. — Wm. A. White, M. D.
First Assistant Physician.—Maurice J. Stack, M. D.
Assistant Physicians.—B. R. Logie, M. D.; Alfred Glascock, M. D.; George H.
Schwinn, M. D.
Clinical Dirvector.—Henry W. Miller, M. D.
Histopathologist.—Nicolas Achucarro, M. D.
Woman Assistant Physician.—Mary O’Malley, M. D.
Junior Assistant Physicians.—W. H. Hough, M. D.; M. Edith Conser, M. D.;
Wm. L,. Sheep; M. D.
Pathologist.—I1. W. Blackburn, M. D.
Psychologist.—S. 1. Franz, A. B., Ph. D.
Night Medical Officer.—Arthur C. Fitch, M. D.
Medical Internes.—Geo. M. Gehringer, M. D.; Harry Sicherman, M. D.; Eva C.
Reid, M. D.
Dentist. —A. D. Weakley, D. D. S.
Dental! Interne.—Erwin E. Downing, D. D. S.
Ophthalmologist.— Arthur H. Kimball, M. D.
Veterinarian.—John P. Turner, V. M. D.
Steward.—Monie Sanger.
Purchasing Agent.—A. E. Offutt. +
Matron.—Mrs. H. O’Brien.
Chief Clerk.—Alice M. Hardy.
HOWARD UNIVERSITY.
(Howard place, Seventh street. Phone, North 1660.)
Patron ex officio.—James Rudolph Garfield, Secretary of the Interior.
President Board of Trustees.—]Justice Job Barnard, IL. D., Supreme Court, District
of Columbia. ; :
President.—Rev. Wilbur P. Thirkeld, D. D., LL. D.
Secretary and 1reasurer.—George H. Safford, 2445 Brightwood avenue.
Executive Comimniltee.—President Wilbur P. Thirkeld, chairman; George H.
‘Safford, secretary; John F. Cook, Dr. J. N. Waring, Wm. V. Cox, Henry M.
Baker, Cuno H. Rudolph, Judge George W. Atkinson.
* Dean of Faculty of School of Theology.—Isaac Clark.
Dean of Faculty of School of Medicine.—Robert Reyburn, M. D.
Secretary and Treasurer School of Medicine.—W. C. McNeill, M. D.
Dean of Faculty of School of Law.—B. FE. Leighton, LIL. D.
Secretary and Treasurer School of Law.—]James F. Bundy, A. M., LI. M.
Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.—XKelly Miller, A. M., LL. D.
Dean of the Teachers’ College.—Iewis B. Moore, A. M., Ph. D.
Dean of the Commercial Colleye.—George William Cook, A. M., LI, M.
Dean of the Academy.—George J. Cummings, A. M.
Director of the School of Manual Artsand Applied Sciences.— Walter S. Graffam, B. S.
NATIONAL CONSERVATION COMMISSION.
(Atlantic Building. Phone, Main 3572.)
Chairman.—Gifford Pinchot.
Secretary.—Thomas R. Shipp.
Executive Committee.—Gifford Pinchot, Theodore E Burton, Reed Smoot, Knute
Nelson, John Dalzell, W J McGee, Overton W. Price, G. W. Woodruff, Joseph A.
Holmes.
Water Section.—Theodore E. Burton, Ohio, chairman; W J McGee, secretary.
Forests Section.—Reed Smoot, Utah, chairman; Overton W. Price, secretary.
Lands Section.—Knute Nelson, Minnesota, chairman; George W. Woodruff, secretary.
Minerals Section.—John Dalzell, Pennsylvania, chairman; Joseph A. Holmes, sec-
retary.
*This department is undenominational and wholly supported by endowment and personal
benefactions.
278 Congressional Directory. .
GOVERNORS OF THE STATES AND TERRITORIES.
States and Terri-
tories.
STATES.
Alabama ..........
Colorado... 5.5
Connecticut .......
Idaho
Towa. ...... ivi
Kansas unui
Kentucky... oo.
Louisiana .........
Maine... 000m
Maryland .........
Massachusetts ....
Michigan©.b..0.
Minnesota ........
Mississippi........
Missourt ....... 50
Montana... 0%
Nebraska .........
New Hampshire. .
New Jersey. .......
New York, ......:
North Carolina ...
North Dakota... .
OHO is
Oregon. i. da oa
Pennsylvania .....
Rhode Island ....
South Carolina....
South Dakota.....
‘Pennessee ... ....~
Vermont: -......5..
Virginia... 00.
Washington. ......
West Virginia.....
Wisconsin. .......:
Wyonmning'..........
TERRITORIES. *
Alaska onto hs
Arizona... ee
Hawail...... 0
Capitals.
Montgomery .....
Tittle Rock .......
Sacramento..."
Denver...
Hartford...
Dover: ida.
Atlanta...
Boise... ho ns
Springfield... 5...
Indianapolis .....
Des Moines .......
Topeka... 0:
Frankfort........
Baton Rouge.....
Augusta’, iano
Annapolis........
Bostom. aan
Lansing... 0
StaPaul oot eos
Jackson: iv.
Jefferson City....
Helena cc.
Lincoln: oi. ics
Carson City ......
Concord: .. sou.
Trenton... ix
Bismarck .......5
Columbus...)
Guthrie... .. ....
Salem. i heats
Harrisburg.......
Providence.......
Columbia... ....:.
Plerre ou.
Salt Lake City ..
Montpelier.......
Richmond...
Olympia... .....:
Charleston .......
Madison. ..........
Cheyenne... wv.
Juneau..... alah
Phoenix... "ax
Honolulu: is
Santa Fe... ......
San Juan...
Governors.
Braxton B. Comer ...........
George W. Donaghey.........
James N. Gillett... zt
Johh FF. Shafroth..............
George, Lilley.......
Simeon 8S. Pennewill..........
Albert W,. Gilchrist...../0. 0
Hoke Smith. ili
James H. Brady... ......2-...
Charles'S, Deneen....... .....
Thomas F. Marshall..........
Benjamin BP. Carroll ............
Walter R. Stubbs:..... =.
Augustus FE. Willson ..........
Jared’L. Sanders. vin 0.
Bert Mo Rernald:... 0. i000
Austin 1. Crothers’..........."
Eben S;' Draper... hoc
Fred Mi Warner oil. aninl
John A Johnson .......&%.....
Edmond F. Neel. -.......
Herbert S. Hadley...... 0..."
Bdwin Norris; i. 0
Ashton C. Shallenberger. .....
John Sparks... . outa.
Henry: B..Quinby.... ... vw... ...
J Franklin Port... ....e oo
Charles B. Hughes.........5..
William W. Kitchin ..........
John Burke... cian, Sait,
Judson Harmon . -.....o. x.
Charles N. Haskell. ...........
George E. Chamberlain.......
Bdwin S:Stuart.\ ..- ae
Aranty. Pothier. nil. bo.
Martin Bo Ansel... oo...
Roebert'S.\Vessey..............
Malcolm R. Patterson........
Thomas M. Campbell.........
William Spry... ............
George H. Prouty............:
Claude A. Swanson ..........
Samuel G. Cosgrove ..........
William M. O. Dawson .......
James O. Davidson ...........
Bryant B. Brooks........... 3
Wilford B. Hoggatt ...........
Joseph H. Kibbey. .
Walter: BB. Frear ©... 0... 0.00
George CUEEY a iro Bos
Régis H. Post .....c. 0. es vids
Term
of serv-
ice.
Years.
ANARPAANAUNNNNHDARARNNANOANANARAARADNNNHHANPRARADOUDNARRONNRRDODODDS
NA
RN
NN
NS
Expiration
of term.
Jan., 1911.
Jan. 1011...
Jan. i
Jan., 1911...
Jan.,lo11...
Jan. 19137.
Jan..1913...
June; 1909 . .
Jan., 191r...
May, 1912...
vo TOLL: vir
Jan., 1911...
Mar.21,197I0.
Feb.27, 1909.
Dec.18, 1911.
Jan. 14, 1912.
Jan. 16, 1912.
Salary.
* Governors nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate.
Washington City Post. Office. 340
WASHINGTON CITY POST-OFFICE.
(Post-Office Department Building, Pennsylvania avenue, Eleventh and I'welfth streets. Phone,
day service, Main 1720; night service, incoming mail, Main 1747; outgoing mail, Main 1772.)
Postmaster.—B. F. Barnes, 48 R street NE.
Assistant.—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 and holidays excepted:
At main office, 9 a. m. to 11.30 p. m.
From 8a.m.to6p.m., or as long as the stations are open for the transaction of
other business, at Brightwood Station, Congress Heights, Good Hope, Brookland
Stadion, Takoma Park Station, Tennallytown Station, Stations A, B, C, D, F, G, H,
XK, 1, and stations I, 2,3, 4, 5,6,7, 3,9, 10, IT, 12, 13, 14,15, 16, 17,18, 19, 20, 21,
22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36; 37, 38,39,40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47,
48, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, and 68. A single
money order may include any amount from T cent to $100, inclusive, but must not
contain the fractional part of a cent. There is no limit as to number in the i issue of
Honey. orders; any number may be sent.
DOMESTIC MONEY ORDERS.
Domestic money orders issued, payable at any money-order office in the United
States; alsoin Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, British Guiana, British Honiduras, Canada,
Canal Zotle, Cuba, island of Guam, Hawaii, Jamaica, I,eeward Islands, Newfoundland,
the Philippine Islands, Porto Rico, Shanghai (China), Trinidad and Tobago, Tutuila
(Samoa), and Windward Islands. 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, including countries named in preceding
paragraph:
On orders not exceeding $2.50. ............ ; Over $30 and not exceeding $40............ $0.15
Over $2.50 and not exceeding $5. 5 Over $40 and not exceeding $50. ........... .18
Over $5 and not exceeding $10. .. Over $50 and not exceeding $60............ .20
Over $10 and not exceeding $20... : Over $60 and not exceeding $75... ......... .25
Over $20 and not exceeding $30........... 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, XK, 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 Austrian crown at 204; cents; the German mark at 23% cents;
French, Swiss, or Belgian franc and Italian lire at 194% cents; Danish, Swedish,
and Norwegian kroner at 27 cents; Netherlands florin at 10 I cents; Portugal milreis
at $1.09; Russian ruble at 514% cents, $1—1 ruble 94:7; copecks.
International money orders issued payable i in Africa, Algeria, Apia (Samoa), Arabia,
Argentine Republic, Australia, Austria, Azores Belgium, Beloochistan, Beirut, Bolivia,
Borneo, Bosnia, British Bechuanaland, British Central Africa, British Fast Africa,
280 Congressional Directory.
Bulgaria, Cape Colony, Caroline Islands, Cayman Islands, Ceylon, Chile, China,
Congo Free States, Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Crete, Cyprus, Danish West Indies,
Denmark, Dutch Fast Indies, Egypt, Falkland Islands, Faroe Islands, Fiji
Islands, Finland, Formosa, France, Germany, Gibraltar, Great Britain and Ireland,
Greece, Heligoland, Herzegovina, Holland, Republic of Honduras, Hongkong,
Hungary, Iceland, India, Italy, Jaffa, Japan, Jask (Persia), Java, Jerusalem,
Korea, Liberia, Luxemburg, Madeira, Malacca, Malta, Manchuria, Mauritius,
Mexico, Monaco, Montenegro, Morocco, Mukho (Korea), Netherlands, New Guinea,
New South Wales, New Zealand, North Borneo, Northern Nigeria, Norway, Orange
River Colony, Palestine, Panama, Penrhyn Island, Persia, Peru, Pescadores Islands,
Portugal, Queensland, Rhodes, Rhodesia, Roumania, Russia, St. Helena, Saghalien
(Japanese), San Marino, Savage Island, Servia, Seychelle Islands, Siam, South
Australia, Spice Islands, Straits Settlements, Sumatra, Sweden, Switzerland, Tasma-
nia, Tobago, Transvaal, Tripoli, Tunis, Turkey, Turks Island, Victoria, Wales,
Western Australia, Zambesia, Zanzibar, and Zululand (South Africa).
Rates of fees for money orders payable in—
Apia, Germany, Norway,
Austria, Hongkong, Orange River Colony,
Belgium, Hungary, Peru,
Bolivia, Japan, Portugal,
Chile, Luxemburg, Sweden,
Costa Rica, Mexico, Switzerland,
Denmark, Netherlands, Transvaal.
Egypt, New Zealand,
Orders for $10.01 188 cv utcnvens vraiment $0.08 | Over $50 and not exceeding $60............ $o. 30
Over $1o0.and not exceeding $20............ .10 | Over $60 and not exceeding $70............ .35
Over $20-and not exceeding $30............ .15 Over $70 and not exceeding $30.:.........: . 40
Over $30 and not exceeding $40............ .20 | Over $80 and not exceeding $90............ . 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... ves reaier sensi. 30.10 | Notiexceeding $00. iid sivas doses alos $0.60
Notrexceeding Toot. h ce dive ivan oun 20 Not exceeding $70... su votes cau anas rec .’70
Notexceeding $30.74... .na.c 00 wid ai bigo dh Not lexeceeding $80... oo cvcv ove ve onivaie sans .80
Not exceeding $40... cine inon den vuideis 40 NOt exXCeediNg $00. . otis cis seston saan losivisia nis .90
Not exceeding $50. . <a hi cvaiivaie Suites 50 |: Not exceeding FT00.. viv cv risiunvesens soinieinnie ele 1.00"
The maximum amount for which a single international money order may be drawn
is $roo0. :
The amount payable in Mexico is governed by the rate of exchange on the day of
certification of advice at Laredo, Tex.
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.
The delivery window is open daily from 8.30 a. m. to 6 p. m., except Sundays and
holidays, when the hours are from g to 11 a. m.
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 and 50 francs ($10) in case of the loss of a registered article addressed to a
country in the Universal Postal Union, under certain conditions. 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 mattér 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.
.
Washington City Post-Office.
Australia.
Austria.
Bahamas.
Barbados. Parcels cannot
not be registered.
Belgium.
Bermuda.
Bolivia.
British Guiana.
Chile.
Colombia.
Costa Rica.
Danish West Indies. (St.
Croix, St. John, St.
Thomas.)
Denmark.
Ecuador.
France. Parcels can not
be registered.
Germany.
Great Britain and Ireland.
Parcels can not be reg-
istered.
Guatemala. .
Honduras. (British.)
Honduras. (Republic of.)
Hongkong. (Includingthe
following cities in China:
Amoy, Canton, Chefoo,
Foochow, Haihow, Han-
kow, Liu Kung Tau,
Ningpo, Shanghai, Swa-
TOW. )
Italy.
Jamaica. (Including the
Turks and Caicos Is-
lands.)
Japan.
PARCELS-POST CONVENTIONS.
(Including For-
mosa, Karafuto, (Japa-
nese Saghalien ), and Ko-
rea; Amoy, Canton,
Changsha, Chefoo,
Chinkiang, Foochow,
Hangchow, Hankow,
Kiukiang, Nankin,
Newchwang, Peking,
Shanghai, Shanghai-
kwan, Shasi, Soochow,
Swatow, Tientsin,
Tongku, Wuhu (in
China); Antoken (An-
tung), Choshun (Chang-
chun), Dairen (Talien),
Daisekkio (Tashichiao),
Daitoko (Tatungkou),
Furanten (Fulantien),
Gaihel (Kaiping), Giu-
katon (Newchatun),
Gwaboten( Wafangtein),
Hishika (Pitzuwo ), Hon-
keiko (Penhsihu), Ho-
ten (Mukden), Howojo
(Fenghuangcheng),
Kaigen (Kaiyuan), Kaijo
(Haicheng), Xinshu
(Chinchow), Koshurei
(Kungchuling), Riojun
(Port Arthur), Rioyo
(Liaoyang), Riujuton
(ILiushutun), Senkinsai
(Chienchinsai), Shihei-
gai (Supingchien), Shin-
minfu (Singmingfu),
Shoto (Changtu),Sokako
281
(Tsaohokow), Sokaton
(Suchiatun), Taikozan
(Takushan), Tetsurei
(Tiehling), Yendai (Yen-
tai), Yugakujo (Hsiung-
yocheng),in Manchuria.)
Leeward Islands. (An-
tigua with Barbuda and
Redonda, St. Kitts,
Nevis, with Anquilla,
Dominica, Montserrat,
and Virgin Islands.)
Mexico.
Netherlands. Parcels can
vot be registered.
Newfoundland. (Includ-
ing Labrador.) From
October to June Parcels-
Post packages are not
forwarded from New-
foundland to Labrador.
New Zealand. (Includ-
ing Fanning Island.)
Nicaragua.
Norway.
Peru.
Salvador.
Sweden.
Trinidad.
bago.)
Uruguay. Parcels can not
be registered.
Venezuela.
Windward Islands. (Gre-
nada, St. Vincent, the
Grenadines, and : St.
Lucia.)
(Including To-
Unsealed packages of mailable merchandise may be sent to above-named places,
subject to conditions obtainable at main office or branches. Limit of weight, 11
pounds; greatest length, 3 feet 6 inches; greatest length and girth combined, 6 feet;
postage, 12 cents a pound or fraction thereof.
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, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland, Cuba, Canada, Germany (sent by sea direct and not by way of either Great
Britain or France), Mexico, Shanghai (China), the Canal Zone, and the Republic of
Panama. The foreign letter rate is 5 cents for the first ounce of each letter, and 3
cents for every additional ounce or fraction thereof, and it applies 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 five-trip routes, 7.15and 10.30 a. m., 12.30, 2.10, and 4 p. m.
Delivery by carriers on three-trip routes, 7 a. m., 12.30 and 4 p. m.
Delivery by carrier to Post-Office Department only, 9 a. m., 12.30 and 3 p. m.
Delivery by carriers to hotels, 7.30 and 10.30 a. m., 12.30, 4, 7, and 10.30 p. m.
Collections on business routes commence at 6.30, 7.50, 9.10, 10.30, and 11.40 a. m.,
12.50, 1.30, 2, 2.50,:3.30, 4.10, 4.50, 5.30, 6.10, 6.50, 7.30, 9.50 and 11.40 p.m,
Collections on residence routes commence at 7.20, 9.20, and 11.20 a. m., I.20, 4,
6.45, 8.45, and II.15 p. m.
Sundays, business routes, 10.15 a. m., 4.30 and 11 p. m.
4.30 and 11 p. m.
Sundays, residence routes, 4.30 and 11 p. m.
Holidays, 9.30 a. m.,
282 Congressional Directory.
DEPARTURE OF THROUGH PASSENGER TRAINS.
ATLANTIC COAST LINE.
(Phone, Main 189.)
For Wilmington, Charleston, Augusta, Savannah, Jacksonville, Tampa (for Cuba),
and Florida points—4.20 a. m.; 3.45 p. m. (Florida and West Indian Limited).
For Charleston, Savannah, Jacksonville, St. Augustine, Ormond, Palm Beach,
Miami, Knights Key (for Cuba), 8.08 p. m. (Florida Special.)
BAL/IIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD.
(Phone, Main 1591.)
For Chicago and Northwest—1.22 and 5.30 p. m.
For Cincinnati, St. Louis, Louisville, and Indianapolis—g.10 a. m.; 4.05 p. m.;
12.40 night.
For Pittsburg and Cleveland—1.22 and 9.10 p. m.; 12.30 night.
For Wheeling—og.10 a. m.; 5.30 p.m. (and Columbus).
For Philadelphia, New York, and the East—12.15, 2.52, 7.00, 9.00, and 11.00 a. m.
(except Sunday); 1.00, 3.00 (Royal Limited), 5.00, and 9.00 p. m. (to Philadelphia
only). : :
For Atlantic City—7.00, 9.00, and 11.00 a. m.; 1.00, week days only, and 3.00 p. m.
daily.
CHESAPEAKE & OHIO RAILWAY.
(Phones, Main 1066 and 2206.) :
For Virginia Hot Springs, Cincinnati, Louisville, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Chicago,
and the West and Southwest—4.00 and 11.10 p. m. daily.
NORFOLK & WESTERN RAILWAY.
(Phone, Main 758.)
For Knoxville, Chattanooga, Memphis, Jackson, Vicksburg, and New Orleans—
8.15'a. m. and 10.10 p. m.
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD LINES.
(Phone, Main 5350.)
For New York—S8.00, 9.00 (dining car), 10.00 (dining car), and 11.00 a. m. (dining
car); 12.30 (dining car), 3.00 (dining car), 4.00 (Congressional Limited, all parlor,
observation, and dining cars), 4.30 (dining car), 6.50, 9.00 p. m.; 12.10 and 12.30
night. On Sundays, 9.00 (dining car), 11.00 (dining car), and 1.55 a. m.; 3.00
(dining car), 4.00 (Congressional Limited, all parlor, observation, and dining cars),
4.30 (dining car), 6.50, 9.00 p. m., 12.10 and 12.30 night.
For Boston—7.30 a. m. week days and 5.35 p. m. daily.
For Pittsburg—7.30 week days, 7.50 Sundays, 10.00 week days, 10.10 Sundays,
and 11.55 (Limited) a.m.; 1.55 (Limited), 3.40, 5.45 (Limited), 7.00, and 10.45 p. m.
daily.
For Chicago and the West—r10.00 week days, 10.10 Sundays, and 11.55 (Limited)
a.m.; 3.40, 5.45 (Limited), 7.00, and 10.45 p. m. daily.
For Cincinnati, St. Louis, and the West—10.00 week days, 10.70 Sundays, and
11.55 a.m.; 1.55 (Limited) (except Cincinnati), 3.40, and 7.00 p. m. daily.
For Cleveland—r10.00 week days, 10.10 Sundays, and 11.55 (Limited) a. m.; 5.45
(Limited), 7.00, and 10.45 p. m. daily.
For Buffalo (via Emporium Junction)—7.30 a.m. week days, 7.50 a. m. Sundays;
7.00 and 10.45 p. m. daily.
For Buffalo, Rochester, and Northern Central Railway points—7.30 a. m. week
days; 7.00 and 10.45 p. m. daily.
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY.
(Phone, Main 440.)
For Raleigh, Pinehurst, Camden, Columbia, Savannah, Florida points, Atlanta,
Birmingham, Montgomery, and New Orleans—g.05 a. m., 7.35 p. m. (Seaboard
Florida Limited), and 6.20 p. m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
(Phone, Main 1212.)
For Atlanta, Birmingham, Montgomery, Mobile, and New Orleans—S8.15 a. m.
(U. S. Fast Mail) and 10.45 p. m. (New York and New Orleans Limited).
For Columbia, Aiken, Augusta, Charleston, Savannah, Jacksonville, and all Florida
points—4.10 p. m. (Washington and Florida Limited).
For Knoxville, Chattanooga, Memphis, Birmingham, and New Orleans—8.15 a, m.,
10.10 (New York and Memphis Limited), and 10.45 p. m.
For Asheville and Hendersonville—8,15 a. m. and 10.45 p. m,
Official Duties. 283
OFFICIAL DUTIES.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE.
SECRETARY OF STATE.
The Secretary of State is charged, under the direction of the President, with the
duties appertaining to correspondence with the public ministers and the consuls of
the United States, and with the representatives of foreign powers accredited to the
United States; and to negotiations of whatever character relating to the foreign
affairs of the United States. He is also the medium of correspondence between the
President and the chief executives of the several States of the United States; he
has the custody of the Great Seal of the United States, and countersigns and affixes
such seal to all executive proclamations, to various commissions, and to warrants for
the extradition of fugitives from justice. He is regarded as the first in rank among
the members of the Cabinet. He is also the custodian of the treaties made with
foreign States, and of the laws of the United States. He grants and issues pass-
ports, and exequaturs to foreign consuls in the United States are issued through his
office. He publishes the laws and resolutions of Congress, amendments to the Con-
stitution, and proclamations declaring the admission of new States into the Union.
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. :
CHIEF CLERK.
" The chief clerk has the direction of the consular service and 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, indexing, and registering all correspondence to and from the depart-
ment; 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 supply bonds; care of the property of
the department.
BUREAU OF ROLLS AND LIBRARY.
Custody of the rolls, treaties, etc.; promulgation of the laws, treaties, Executive
orders and proclamations; care and superintendence of the library and public doc-
uments; care of papers relating to international commissions.
BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS.
Matters relating to appointments, applications, and recommendations for office,
etc.; the preparation of commissions, exequaturs, consular bonds, and warrants of
extradition, the Department Register, and diplomatic and consular lists; custody of
the Great Seal.
BUREAU OF CITIZENSHIP.
Examination of applications for passports, issuance of passports and authentica-
tions thereof, registration, etc., under act of March 2, 1907, in reference to expatria-
tion of citizens and their protection abroad, keeping of necessary records thereunder,
and correspondence relating thereto.
284 Congressional Directory.
BUREAU OF TRADE RELATIONS.
Preparation of instructions to consular officers for reports to be printed by the
Department of Commerce and Labor; revision and transmission of such reports to
said department and to other branches of the government service, and compilation
of commercial information for the use of the Department of State.
DIVISION OF FAR EASTERN AFFAIRS.
Diplomatic and consular correspondence, on matters other than those of an admin-
istrative character, in relation to China, Japan, Korea, Siam, Straits Settlements,
Borneo, East Indies, India, and in general the Far Fast.
OFFICE OF THE LAW CLERK.
Editing and indexing the laws, resolutions, public treaties, and proclamations for
publication in the Statutes at Large. :
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.
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,
ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF THE TREASURY.
To Assistant Secretary Reynolds 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 divisions: The division of customs and
the division of special agents.
To Assistant Secretary Winthrop is assigned the general direction and supervision
of all matters relating to the public business and assigned to the following bureau,
offices, and divisions: The Office of the Supervising Architect; the Office of the
Chief Clerk and Superintendent; the Office of Internal Revenue; the Bureau of
Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service of the United States; the Office of the
Life-Saving Service, and the division of Revenue-Cutter Service.
To Assistant Secretary Coolidge 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; the
division of printing and stationery; and the division of mails and files. :
Official Duties. 285
CHIEF CLERK.
The chief clerk is the general executive officer of the department, and, under the
immediate direction of the Secretary and the assistant secretaries, is charged with
responsibility for the enforcement of departmental regulations general in their
nature, superintends all buildings occupied by the department in the District of
Columbia, and expenditures for the care of all public buildings under control of
the Secretary of the Treasury, and has the custody of the records, files, and library
of the Secretary’s office.
SUPERVISING ARCHITECT.
The duties of the Supervising Architect are subject to the direction and approval
of the Secretary of the Treasury. They embrace the following subjects-matter: 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 hospitals, etc.; 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; maintain-
ing 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 supply of vaults, safes, etc., for all public buildings.
COMPTROLLER OF THE, TREASURY.
The Comptroller of the Treasury, under the direction of the Secretary of the Treas-
ury, prescribes the forms of keeping and rendering all public accounts except those
relating to postal revenues and the expenditures therefrom. He is charged with the
duty of revising accounts upon appeal from settlements made by the auditors.
Upon the application of disbursing officers, the head of any executive depart-
ment, or other independent establishment not under any of the executive depart-
ments, the comptroller is required to render his advance decision upon any question
involving a payment to be made by them or under them, which decision, when ren-
dered, governs the auditor and the comptroller in the settlement of the account
involving the payment inquired about. He is required to approve, disapprove, or
modify all decisions by auditors making an original construction or modifying an
existing construction of statutes, and certify his action to the auditor whose duties
are affected thereby. Under his direction the several auditors superintend the
recovery of all debts finally certified by them, respectively, to be due the United
States, except those arising under the Post-Office Department. He superintends the
preservation by the auditors of all accounts which have been finally adjusted by
them, together with the vouchers and certificates relating to the same. Heis
required, on his own motion, when in the interests of the Government, to revise
any account settled by any auditor. In any case where, in his opinion, the inter-
ests of the Government require he may direct any of the auditors forthwith to
audit and settle any particular account pending before the said auditor for settle-
ment. It is his duty to countersign all warrants authorized by law to be signed
~ by the Secretary of the Treasury.
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.
AUDITOR FOR THE WAR DEPARTMENT.
The Auditor for the War Department audits and settles all accounts of salaries and
incidental expenses of the office of the Secretary of War, and of all bureaus and
offices under his direction; all accounts relating to the military establishment,
armories and arsenals, national cemeteries, fortifications, public buildings and
grounds under the Chief of Engineers, rivers and harbors, the Military Academy,
the Isthmian Canal Commission, and to all other business within the jurisdiction of
the Department of War,
66525—60-2—2D ED——20
286 Congressional Directory.
AUDITOR FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT.
The Auditor for the Interior Department audits and settles all accounts of salaries
and incidental expenses of the office of the Secretary of the Interior, and of all
bureaus and offices under his direction; all accounts relating to the protection, survey,
and sale of public lands and the reclamation of arid public lands, the Geological
Survey, army and navy pensions, Indian affairs, Howard University, the Govern-
ment Hospital for the Insane, the Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, the
Patent Office, the Capitol and grounds, the Hot Springs Reservation, the reimburse-
ment from accrued pensions of the expenses of the last sickness and burial of pen-
sioners under the act of March 2, 1895, and all other business within the juris-
diction of the Department of the Interior.
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,
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 relating to accounts settled in his office, Executive Office,
Civil Service Commission, Interstate Commerce Commission, District of Columbia,
Court of Claims, Smithsonian Institution, Territorial governments, the Senate, the
House of Representatives, the Public Printer, Library of Congress, Botanic Garden,
and accounts of all beards, commissions, and establishments of the Government not
within the jurisdiction of any of the Executive Departments.
AUDITOR FOR THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT.
The Auditor for the Post-Office Department audits and settles all accounts for
salaries and incidental expenses of the Office of the Postmaster-General and of all
bureaus and offices under his direction; all postal and money-order accounts of
postmasters, all accounts relating to the transportation of mails, and to all other busi-
ness within the jurisdiction of the Post-Otfice Department, and certifies the balances
arising thereon to the Postmaster-General for accounts of the postal revenue and
expenditures therefrom, and to the Secretary of the Treasury for other accounts.
He countersigns and registers the warrants upon the Treasury issued in liquidation of
indebtedness; superintends the collecting of debts due the United States for the serv-
ice 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 pay-
ment of money due the United States for the service of the Post-Office Department,
and for this purpose has direct official relations with the Solicitor of the Treasury,
Department of Justice. He receives and accepts, with the written consent of the
Postmaster-General, offers of compromise under sections 295 and 405, Revised
Statutes.
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. Louis, 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 deposits in national banks; is custo-
dian of miscellaneous trust funds; is fiscal agent for paying interest on the public
debt and for paying the land purchase bonds of the Philippine Islands, principal
and interest; 1s special disbursing officer for the school fund of the Indian Territory
and for the Philippine Islands tariff fund; 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 and Deputy Assistant Treasurer of the United States, author-
ized 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.
Official Duties. 287
REGISTER OF THE TREASURY.
The Register of the Treasury signs and issues all bonds of the United States,
the District of Columbia, the Spanish indemnity, the three series of Philippine
Islands public improvement bonds, and the city of Manila, P. I., bonds, and trans-
mits to the Treasurer of the United States schedules showing the name of every
individual, corporation, etc., holding registered bonds and entitled to receive inter-
est thereon. He receives, examines, and registers coupon bonds exchanged for regis-
tered 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.
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 organization of national banks;
the preparation and issue of national-bank circulation; the examination and consoli-
dation of the reports of national banks, and 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. He 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 INTERNAI, 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.
PUBLIC HEALTH AND MARINE-HOSPITAI, 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. Thissupervision includesthe 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.
He is charged with the framing of, regulations for the prevention of the introduc-
tion and spread of contagious disease and is also charged with the conduct of the
quarantine service of the United States,
288 Congressional Directory.
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, quaran-
tine authorities, and state health officers (the District of Columbia included) for the
purpose of considering 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 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.
He is charged with the control of an experiment station for the study of the
prevention and cure of leprosy, now in course of establishment on the island of
Molokai, Hawaii, under direction of the Secretary of the Treasury.
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
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.
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
Official Duties. 289
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; recruiting service, discharges, commutation of rations, courts-martial, and
other questions relating to enlisted men, including clemency cases and matters relat-
ing to prisoners at military prisons and penitentiaries.
He also has charge of all matters relating to the militia; the supervision of miscel-
laneous claims and accounts; matters relating to national cemeteries, boards of sur-
vey, open-market purchases, and medals of honor.
The Assistant Secretary of War is also vested with authority to decide all cases
which do not involve questions of policy, the establishment or reversal of precedents,
or matters of special or extraordinary importance.
ASSISTANT AND CHIEF CLERK.
Under the immediate direction of the Secretary, the assistant and 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, and
the departments at large; War Department printing and binding, and official adver-
tising and job printing for the Army and the War Department; War Department
supplies; routine calls for information from the records; expenditures from appro-
priations for contingent expenses and stationery for the War Department, and mat-
ters of routine character not requiring the personal action of the Secretary or the
Assistant Secretary of War,
GENERAI, 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, of The
Adjutant-General’s department in matters pertaining to the command, discipline,
or administration of the existing military establishment, and of the Imnspector-
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. For purposes of administration the office of the Chief of
Staff constitutes a supervising military bureau of the War Department. Duties for-
merly prescribed by statute for the Commanding General of the Army as a member
of the Board of Ordnance and Fortification and of the Board of Commissioners of
the Soldiers’ Home are performed by the Chief of Staff or some other officer desig-
nated by the President.
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 Adjutant-General is charged with the duty of recording, authenticating, and
communicating to troops and individuals in the military service all orders, instruc-
tions, 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 consolidating the general returns
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290 Congressional Directory.
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 recruiting service; and of
recording and issuing orders from the War Department remitting or mitigating
sentences of general prisoners who have been discharged from the military service.
The Adjutant-General is vested by law with the charge, under the Secretary of
War, ‘‘of the military and hospital records of the volunteer armies and the pen-
sion 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 Adjutant-General’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.
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.
Me Surgeon-General has administrative control of the Medical Department; the
disbursement of its appropriations; the designation of the stations of medical officers,
and the issuing of all orders and instructions relating to their professional duties; the
recruitment, instruction, and control of the Hospital Corps and of the Army Nurse
Corps. He directs as to the selection, purchase, and distribution of the medical sup-
plies 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 anyother 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-
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Official Duties. 291
formity and economy ip 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 hooks, 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 Philippine Islands being the only ones so subject at the present time. To
the Chief of the Bureau of Insular Affairs is also assigned the transaction of all
business in this country in relation to the temporary administration of the gov-
ernment of the Republic of Cuba, established, under the provisions of the Platt
Amendment, on September 29, 1906, which is subject to the supervision of the
Secretary of War, as well as making it a matter of official record. The Bureau
is the repository of all the civil records of the Philippines and of the former gov-
ernment of occupation of Cuba (which terminated May 20, 1902), as well as the
records of Porto Rico during the period (ending April 30, 1900) in which the War
Department exercised jurisdiction over that island. It is required to furnish infor-
mation relative to these subjects. It prepares, compiles, and arranges for publi-
cation executive documents regarding the Philippines. 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
purchases of supplies in the United States for the Philippine government and
arranges their shipment to Manila; and a preliminary audit of all expenditures of
Philippine funds in the United States is made in this Bureau before final accounting
of same to the Philippine authorities. It has charge of appointments in the United
States to the Philippine civil service, including arrangements for the transportation of
employees and their families. It gathers statistics of insular imports and exports,
shipping and immigration, and monthly summaries of the same are issued. The
duties of the law officer of the Bureau consist in investigating such propositions of
law as require consideration, and submitting verbal or written reports thereon.
BOARD OF ENGINEERS FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS.
The Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors is a permanent body created by
the river and harbor act of June 13, 1902. To it are referred for consideration and
recommendation all reports upon examinations and surveys provided for by Congress,
and all projects or changes in projects for works of river and harbor improvement
upon which report is desired by the Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army. It is further
the duty of the Board, upon request by the Committee on Commerce of the Senate,
or by the Committee on Rivers and Harbors of ,the House of Representatives, in the
same manner to examine and report through the Chief of Engineers upon any exami-
nations, surveys, or projects for the improvement of rivers and harbors. In its inves-
tigations the Board gives consideration to all engineering, commercial, navigation,
and economic questions involved in determining the advisability of undertaking
such improvements at the expense of the United States.
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
292 Congressional Directory.
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 States wheneverrequired 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.
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.
The several Assistant Attorneys-General assist the Attorney-General in the per-
formance of his duties. They assist in the argument of cases in the Supreme Court
and in the preparation of legal opinions.
Three Assistant Attorneys-General are located in the main Department building
at 1435 K street, and, in addition to their general duties, particular subjects are
assigned to them by the Attorney-General for the transaction of business arising
thereunder with United States attorneys, other departments, and private parties in
interest.
The office of the Assistant Attorney-General, including a number of assistant attor-
neys and clerks charged with defending suits in the Court of Claims, is located at 8
Jackson square. :
The Assistant Attorneys-General charged with the defense of Indian depredation
claims is located in the Bond Building, at the corner of Fourteenth street and New
York avenue.
The Assistant Attorney-General charged with the defense of suits before the
Spanish Treaty Claims Commission, together with his force of assistant attorneys,
interpreters and clerks, is located in the offices of the Spanish Treaty Claims Com-
mission, at 1415 H street.
The Assistant Attorneys-General and the Solicitors for the several Executive
Departments, under the provisions of sections 349-350, Revised Statutes, 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
for the Department of State, the Solicitor of the Treasury, the Solicitor of Internal
Revenue, and the Solicitor of the Department of Commerce and Labor.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY-GENERAI, FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT.
This Assistant Attorney-General is the chief law officer of that 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
number of assistant attorneys.
SOLICITOR FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE.
The Solicitor is the chief law officer of that 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
pe
Official Duties. 293
governments, claims of subjects or citizens of foreign governments against the
United States, and upon applications 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 gerieral charge of extradition and citizenship matters.
SOLICITOR OF THE TREASURY.
The Solicitor of the Treasury is charged with the supervision of much of the litiga-
tion of the Government, and it is his duty to give necessary instructions to United
States attorneys, marshals, and clerks of courts in matters and proceedings apper-
taining to the suits under his superintendence, and to require reports from such offi-
cers; to take cognizance of all frauds or attempted frauds upon the revenue (customs)
and to exercise a general supervision over the measures tor their prevention and
detection and for the prosecution of persons charged with the commission thereof;
to have charge of lands acquired by the United States in payment of debts (except
internal revenue); to make recommendations on offers of compromise (except in
post-office cases and in internal-revenue cases before judgment); to effect the release
of property owned or held by the United States where it has been attached; to
approve the bonds of United States assistant treasurers, collectors of internal revenue,
and Department disbursing clerks, and to examine all contracts of, and official bonds
filed in, the Treasury Department; to issue distress warrants against delinquent col-
lectors and other officers receiving public money, and disbursing officers and their
sureties; to examine titles to life-saving station sites; and as the law officer of the
Treasury Department to give legal advice to the Secretary and other officers of that
Department on matters arising therein.
SOLICITOR OF INTERNAIL 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-
revenue compromise cases, section 3229, Revised Statutes. ;
SOLICITOR OF THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND LABOR.
The Solicitor is the chief law officer of that 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.
CHIEF CLERK.
The chief clerk, under the direction of the Attorney-General, has general super-
vision of the clerks and employees; the consideration of applications for leave of
absence; the direction of the force of laborers, charwomen, and watchmen; superin-
tends all buildings occupied by the Department in Washington, D. C.; has charge of
the horses, wagons, and carriages employed; has supervision of the division of mails
and files; the purchase and distribution of supplies for the Department and the
United States courts; the expenditure of the appropriations for contingent expenses
and rents; supervision of the library; the consideration of requisitions upon the
Public Printer for printing and binding, and supervision of the preparation of the
annual report and the estimates of the Department.
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.
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
Th
294 Congressional Directory.
the Senate; prepares commissions and appointments for the officers and employees of
the Department in Washington, and for United States judges, attorneys, and marshals
and other officers under the Department. He also compiles the Register of the
Department of Justice and matter relating to that Department for the Official Reg-
ister of the United States.
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, these being 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.
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 opinions upon all
legal matters growing out of the same. He has charge of all proceedings to acquire
land under eminent domain, and conducts all the correspondence relating to the
above matters.
DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS.
The division of accounts examines accounts payable from judiciary appropriations,
including accounts of United States marshals, attorneys, clerks, and commissioners;
conducts the correspondence relating thereto; authorizes certain court expenses;
supervises the advancing of funds to United States marshals; prepares certain data
for the annual report, and compiles the estimates of appropriations.
SUPERINTENDENT OF PRISONS AND PRISONERS.
The superintendent of prisons and prisoners has charge, under the direction of
the Attorney-General, of all matters relating to United States prisons and prisoners,
including the support of prisoners in United States penitentiaries, reform schools,
and jails; the support of United States prisoners confined in penitentiaries and jails
throughout the country, and the construction work in progress at United States
penitentiaries.
CHIEF EXAMINER.
The chief examiner has general supervision of the examination of the offices and
records of United States court officials throughout the United States, and directs the
work of examiners and certain special agents.
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 adviceand consent of the President; awards and executes
contracts, and directs the management of the domestic and foreign mail service.
CHIEF CLERK.
The chief clerk of the Post-Office Department is charged with the general super-
intendence of the clerical force of the Department; the assignment of clerks to offices
and divisions; the consideration of applications for leaves of absence by clerks and
Department employees; the supervision of the preparation of estimates for the depart-
mental and postal service; the keeping of the journals and order books; the super-
vision of the advertising; the supervision of requisitions upon the Treasury and the
expenditure of the appropriations for the departmental service; the furnishing of
stationery supplies for the departmental service out of the appropriation for sta-
tionery, contingent expenses, Post-Office Department; the preparation of contracts
for the publication of the Official Guide, compilation of the matter therefor, and
supervision of its publication and distribution; the furnishing of information for settle-
ment of Government telegraph accounts; the miscellaneous business correspondence
Official Duties. 295
of the Postmaster-General’s Office; the care of the department and other buildings
rented in connection therewith, and of all the furniture and public property therein;
also the direction of the force of laborers and charwomen, and general superintendence
of the watchmen through the captain of the watch; and the performance of such
other duties as may be required by the Postmaster-General.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEV-GENERAI, FOR THE POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT.
The Assistant Attorney-General for the Post-Office Department is the chief law
officer of that Department. He is charged with the duty of giving opinions to the
Postmaster-General and the heads of the several offices of the Department upon
questions of law arising upon the construction of the Postal Laws and Regulations,
or otherwise, in the course of business in the postal service; with the consideration
and submission (with advice) to the Postmaster-General of all claims of postmasters
for losses by fire, burglary, or other unavoidable casualty, and of all certifications by
the Auditor for the Post-Office Department of cases of proposed compromise of lia-
bilities to the United States, and of the remission of fines, penalties, and forfeitures
under the statutes; the keeping and preparation of all correspondence with the
Department of Justice relating to prosecutions and suits affecting or arising out of
the postal service; and with the consideration of applications for pardon for crimes
committed against the postal laws, which may be referred to the Department; with
the preparation and submission (with advice) to the Postmaster-General of all
appeals to him from the heads of the offices of the Department depending upon
questions of law; with the determining of questions as to the delivery of mail the
ownership of which is in dispute; with the hearing and consideration of cases relat-
ing to lotteries and the misuse of the mails in furtherance of schemes to defraud the
public; with the consideration of all questions relating to the mailability of alleged
indecent, obscene, scurrilous, or defamatory matter; with the examining and, when
necessary, drafting all contracts of the Department; and with such other like duties
as may from time to time be required by the Postmaster-General.
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-General such action as in his judgment should be taken thereon.
CHIEF INSPECTOR.
The Chief Inspector supervises the work of post-office inspectors and of the
division of post-office inspectors. To him is charged the consideration and adjust-
ment of accounts of inspectors for salary and expenses, the preparation and issue
of all cases for investigation, all matters relating to depredations upon the mails and
losses therein, the custody of money and property collected or received by inspectors,
and the restoration thereof to the proper parties or owners. To his office are referred
all complaints of losses or irregularities in the mails and all reported violations of
the postal laws.
FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL.
The First Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the following divisions, to
which are assigned the duties specified:
Postmasters’ Appointments. —The preparation of cases for the appointment of
postmasters, and for the establishment, discontinuance, and change of name of post-
offices, and change of site of fourth-class offices; the recording of appointments of
postmasters, the supervision of their bonding, the obtaining, recording, and filing
of their oaths, and the issuing of their commissions; the consideration of charges and
complaints against postmasters; the granting of leaves of absence to postmasters; the
regulation of hours of business at post-offices, and the handling of certain miscel-
laneous correspondence relating to postmasters and post-offices.
Salaries and Allowances.—The annual readjustment of Presidential postmasters’
salaries; the preparation of cases for allowances for clerk hire, rent, light, fuel, can-
celing machines, and miscellaneous items; the supervision and recording of the
appointment, bonding, removal, and salaries of assistant postmasters and other post-
office employees, except letter carriers; the fixing of the sites of Presidential post-
offices; the establishment of postal stations; the execution of leases, and the regulation
of box rents and key deposits.
296 Congressional Diveclory.
City Delivery.—The supervision of the establishment and extension of city delivery
service; the preparation of cases for allowances for pay of letter carriers, and for
horse hire, wagon-collection equipment, bicycles, and car fare; the supervision and
recording of the appointment, bonding, removal, and salaries of carriers, and the
control of schedules of deliveries and collections.
SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL.
The Second Assistant Postmaster-General is charged with the general supervision
of matters pertaining to the transportation of the domestic and foreign mails, and
his bureau comprises six divisions with duties as hereinafter indicated.
Railway Adjustments.—Has charge of the preparation of cases authorizing the
transportation of mails by railroads, cable and electric roads, wagons and pneumatic
tubes in cities, and by mail messengers; the establishment of railway postal-car serv-
ice, and changes in existing service; prepares orders and instructions for the weigh-
ing of mails on railroads, 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; authorizes expenditures and credits for the weighing of the
mails, and transportation by freight or express of postal cards, stamped envelopes,
and mail equipment, and attends to all correspondence relative to these matters.
Contracts.—Prepares all advertisements inviting proposals for star and steamboat
service; receives proposals; prepares orders for the awarding of contracts; attends to
the execution of contracts; prepares orders and cases for new service or changes in
existing service; prepares schedules for the performance of service; prepares the
daily report for the Auditor for the Post Office Department affecting accounts for
mail transportation; prepares statistics and reports of mail service required by law,
and handles all correspondence relating thereto.
Foreign Mails.—Is charged with the duty of arranging all details connected with
the transportation of foreign mails (except those relative to the money-order system);
supervises the preparation of postal conventions and the regulations for their execu-
tion, as well as the consideration of the questions arising under them, and prepares
all correspondence relative thereto. Also has supervision of the ocean mail service,
including the adjustment of accounts with steamship companies for the transportation
of mails to foreign countries.
Railway Mail Service.—1s charged with the supervision of the railway mail serv-
ice and railway postal clerks; prepares: cases for the appointment, removal, pro-
motion, and reduction of said clerks; conducts correspondence and issues orders
relative to the moving of the mails on railroad trains; has charge of the dispatch
and distribution of mail matter on railway postal cars and post-offices; conducts the
weighing of mails, and attends to all correspondence relative to these matters.
Inspection.—Is charged with the examination of reports as to the performance of
mail service by contractors and carriers on the several classes of mail routes under
the supervision of the Second Assistant Postmaster-General; prepares all cases and
orders for deductions for nonperformance of service and for the imposition of fines
for delinquencies of contractors and carriers; for deductions from compensation to
railroads on account of failures and late arrivals; authorization for the payment of
railway postal clerks; the certification of service to the Auditor for the Post-Office
Department, and the preparation of correspondence relative to the nonperformance
of contract requirements for carrying the mails. :
Equipment.—Is charged with the preparation of matters pertaining to the furnish-
ing of mail bags, mail locks, and keys, label cases, and mail-bag cord fasteners; the
issuing of such articles for the use of the service, repairing of the same, the keeping
of records and accounts pertaining thereto, and the preparation of correspondence
incident to these duties.
THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL.
The Third Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the following divisions:
Finance.—The financial system, including the payment by warrant or draft of
accounts chargeable against appropriations for the postal service; the designation of
depositories for postal funds; the supervision and instruction of all postmasters rela-
tive to the disposition of the postal revenue from whatever source, and the receipt
and disposition of all moneys coming directly to the Department.
Stamps.—The supervision of the manufacture of postage stamps, stamp books,
stamped envelopes, newspaper wrappers, and postal cards by the various contractors,
and of the issuance of this stamped paper to postmasters; the keeping of the accounts
and records of these transactions; the supervision and collection of the postal revenue
accruing through the sale of such stamped. paper or otherwise.
Official Duties. 297
Money Orders.—The supervision and management of the money-order service, both
domestic and international; the preparation of conventions for the exchange of
money orders with foreign countries.
Registered Mails.—The supervision and management of the registered-mail service,
the establishment and control of all through registry exchanges; the instruction
of all postmasters in registry matters, and the consideration of all claims for limited
indemnity for lost registered matter. :
Classification.—The general control of all business relating to the classification of
domestic mail matter and the rates 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 penalty envelopes, the
franking privilege, and the limit of weight of mail matter.
Redemption.—The receipt and disposition of damaged and unsalable stamped
paper returned by postmasters for redemption and credit.
FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERATL.
The Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General has charge of the following divisions:
Rural Delivery.—In this division all petitions for the establishment and extension
of rural free-delivery service are received and examined, and, if accepted, prepared
for investigation. Through it all orders pertaining to the extension of existing
service or installation of new service are issued, and all orders pertaining to appoint-
ment and discipline of rural letter carriers, together with all correspondence incident
to these matters. Requisitions for such supplies as are furnished in connection with
the rural delivery service are received and passed on by this division, and requisi-
tions on the purchasing agent for the purchase of such supplies originate therein.
All correspondence pertaining to the supervision and maintenance of the rural free-
delivery service, including the requirements for rural mail boxes, is handled in this
division.
Supplies.—Has custody of supplies for the postal service, and disburses the same
upon proper requisition. :
Dead Letters.—Has charge of 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, and
the investigation, by correspondence, of complaints made with reference thereto;
the verification and allowance of claims for credit by postmasters for postage-due
stamps affixed to undelivered matter; the examination and forwarding or return of
all letters which have failed of delivery; 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.
Topography.—Has charge of the making, printing, and distribution of post-route
maps, including the maps of the rural free-delivery service,
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.
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.
CHIEF CLERK.
The chief clerk has general charge of the records and correspondence of the Sec-
retary’s Office and performs such other duties as may be assigned to him by the
Secretary of the Navy.
298 Congressional Divectory.
BUREAU OF NAVIGATION.
The duties of the Bureau of Navigation comprise all that relates to the promulga- z
tion, record, and enforcement of the Secretary’s orders to the fleets and to the officers
of the Navy, except such orders as pertain to the Office of the Secretary; the education
of officers and men, including the Naval Academy and technical schools for officers
(except the War College and Torpedo School), the apprentice establishment, and
schools for the technical education of enlisted men, and to the supervision and control
of the Naval Home, Philadelphia; the enlistment and discharge of all enlisted per-
sons, including appointed petty officers for general and special service. It controls all
rendezvous and receiving ships, and provides transportation for all enlisted persons and
appointed petty officers; establishes the complement of the crews of all vessels in
commission; keeps the records of service of all squadrons, ships, officers, and men,
and prepares the annual Naval Register for publication; has under its direction the
preparation, revision, and enforcement of all tactics, drill books, signal codes, cipher
codes, and the uniform regulations.
BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS.
The duties of the Bureau of Yards and Docks comprise all that relates to the plan-
ning, construction, and maintenance of all docks (including dry docks), wharves,
slips, piers, quay walls, and buildings of all kinds, for whatever purpose needed,
within the limits of the navy-yards, but not of hospitals and magazines outside of
those limits, nor of buildings for which it does not estimate. It repairs and fur-
nishes all buildings, stores, and offices in the several navy-yards, and is charged
with the purchase, sale, and transfer of all land and buildings connected with the
navy-yards; has under its sole control the general administration of the navy-yards;
provides and has sole control of all landings, derricks, shears, cranes, sewers, dredg-
ing, railway tracks, cars, and wheels, trucks, grading, paving, walks, shade trees,
inclosure walls and fences, ditching, reservoirs, cisterns, fire engines and apparatus,
all watchmen, and all things necessary, including labor, for the cleaning of the yards
and the protection of the public property.
BUREAU OF EQUIPMENT.
The duties of the Bureau of Equipment comprise all that relates to the equipment
of all vessels with rigging, sails, anchors, yeomen’s stores, furniture not provided by
other bureaus, navigation stores and supplies of all kinds, including nautical and
navigating instruments and books, stationery, and blank books for commanding
and navigating officers ashore and afloat, binnacles, flags, 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
and 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, han-
dling, 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. It installs 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
Official Duties. : 299
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-
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 lists. 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 ammunition 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 KEngineering 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.
300 Congressional Directory.
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.
The duties of the Judge-Advocate-General of the Navy are as follows: 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 charges and specifications for courts-martial, and
the necessary orders convening 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 court-martial cases; to prepare the
necessary orders convening courts of inquiry and boards for the examination of
officers for promotion and retirement, and for the examination of candidates for
appointment as commissioned officers in the Navy other than midshipmen, and to
conduct all official correspondence relating to such courts and boards. It is also the
duty of the Judge-Advocate-General to examine and report upon all questionsrelating
to the construction of the regulations, including those relating to rank and precedence,
promotions, and retirements, and those relating to the validity of the proceedings in
court-martial cases; all matters relating to the supervision and control of naval
prisons and prisoners; the removal of the mark of desertion; the correction of records
of service and reporting thereupon in the regular or volunteer navy; certification of
discharge in true name; pardons; bills and resolutions introduced in Congress
relating to the personnel and referred to the Department for report; references to the
Comptroller of the Treasury with regard to pay and allowances of the personnel;
questions involving points of law concerning the personnel; and to conduct the
correspondence respecting the foregoing duties.
OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR.
The duties of the Solicitor are to examine and report upon questions of law,
including the drafting and interpretation of statutes, and matters submitted to the
accounting officers not relating to the personnel; preparation of advertisements,
proposals, and contracts; insurance; patents; the sufficiency of official contract and
other bonds and guaranties; acquisition of and questions affecting lands; proceed-
ings in the civil courts by or against the Government or its officers; claims by or
against the Government; questions submitted to the Attorney-General; bills and
Congressional resolutions and inquiries not relating to the personnel and not else-
where assigned; and to conduct the correspondence respecting the foregoing duties.
It is also the duty of the Solicitor to render opinion upon any matter or question of
law when directed so to do by the Secretary.
COMMANDANT OF THE 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,
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; the Geological Survey and Reclamation Service;
Official Duties. Sei 101
the Hot Springs Reservation, Arkansas; Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, and
the Yosemite, Sequoia, and General Grant parks, California, and other national
parks; distribution of appropriations for agricultural and mechanical colleges in
the States and Territories; and supervision of certain hospitals and eleemosynary
institutions in the District of Columbia. He also exercises certain powers and duties
in relation to the Territories of the United States.
FIRST ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR.
This officer performs such duties in connection with the matters over which the
Secretary of the Interior has jurisdiction as that officer may prescribe or as may be
required by law. His duties as a rule are in connection with public lands, national
parks, the eleemosynary institutions of the District of Columbia, and the various
appropriations over which the Department has jurisdiction.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR.
This officer performs such duties in connection with the matters over which the
Secretary of the Interior has jurisdiction as that officer may prescribe or may be
required by law. His duties as a rule are in connection with matters coming from
the Indian Office, the Patent Office, the Bureau of Pensions, the Bureau of Education,
and various miscellaneous matters over which the Department has jurisdiction.
CHIEF CLERK.
This officer, under the direction of the Secretary, has supervision over the clerks
and employees; enforces the general regulations of the Department; is superintend- °
ent of the buildings occupied by the Department; has charge of correspondence
relating to miscellaneous matters; and is required to report to the Secretary any
existing defects he may be aware of in the arrangement and dispatch of business.
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 and a chief clerk.
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 GENERAT, LAND OFFICE.
The Commissioner of the General Land Office performs all executive duties apper-
taining to the surveying and sale of the public lands of the United States; also such
as relate to private claims of land and the adjudication of, and the issuance of pat-
ents for, all grants of public land, and such other duties pertaining to the public
domain as may be directed by Congress. He is aided by an Assistant Commissioner,
a chief clerk, and a recorder.
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 and a chief clerk.
*Appeals lie from his decisions to the United States Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia.
66525—60—2—2D ED——21
302 Congressional Directory.
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 natives in Alaska, and the administration of
the endowment fund for the support of colleges for the benefit of agriculture and
mechanic arts. :
DIRECTOR OF THE GEOLOGICAL 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.
DIRECTOR OF THE RECLAMATION SERVICE.
The Director of the Reclamation Service has charge of the reclamation of arid
lands, including the engineering operations to be carried on by the use of the recla-
mation fund created by act of June 17, 1902 (32 Stat. L., 388), from proceeds of sales of
public lands. He recommends to the Secretary the approval of reclamation projects
and the allotment of amounts estimated as necessary therefor. He is assisted by a
chief engineer, who has charge of engineering matters, and six supervising engi-
neers in charge of field divisions.
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 bureaus,
divisions, offices, and the Forest Service, embraced in the Department. He exercises
advisory supervision over agricultural experiment stations, which receive aid from the
National Treasury; has control of the quarantine stations for imported cattle, of inter-
state quarantine rendered necessary by sheep and cattle diseases, and of the inspection
of cattle-carrying vessels; and directs the inspection of domestic and imported food
products under the meat inspection and pure-food and drugs laws. He is charged
with the duty of issuing rules and regulations for the protection, maintenance, and
care of the National Forest Reserves. Healso is charged with carrying into effect the
laws prohibiting the transportation by interstate commerce of game killed in vio-
lation of local laws and excluding from importation certain noxious animals, and has
authority 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.
SOLICITOR.
The Solicitor acts as the legal adviser of the Secretary, and has charge of the
preparation and supervision of all legal papers to which the Department is a party,
and of all communications to the Department of Justice and to the various officers
thereof, including United States attorneys. He examines and approves, in advance
of issue, all orders and regulations promulgated by the Secretary under statutory
Official Duties. | 303
authority. He represents the Department in all legal proceedings arising under the
laws entrusted to the Department for execution, and prosecutes applications for pat-
ents by employees of the Department. He is a member of the Board of Food and
Drug Inspection. His duties are performed under the immediate supervision of the
Secretary.
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 law and regulations, and with the
preparation of all papers necessitated thereby. He has charge of all correspond-
ence of the Department with the United States Civil Service Commission, and of all
certificates and communications issued by that Commission to the Department, and
deals with all questions affecting positions in the classified service. He supervises
the preparation of all documents to be submitted to the Secretary of Agriculture for
his signature in making appointments, transfers, promotions, reductions, furloughs,
and removals in the Department of Agriculture. 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 supervi-
sion in the Department. He has the custody and use of the Department seal.
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 and display of weather
forecasts and storm, cold-wave, frost, and flood warnings for the benefit of agricul-
ture, commerce, and navigation; the gaging and reporting of rivers; the mainte-
nance and operation of seacoast telegraph and telephone lines, and the collection
and transmission of marine intelligence for the benefit of commerce and navigation;
the reporting of temperature and rainfall conditions for the corn, wheat, cotton,
sugar, rice, and other interests; the distribution of meteorological information in the
interests of agriculture and commerce, and the taking of such meteorological observa-
tions 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.
BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY.
The Bureau of Animal Industry conducts the inspection of animals, meats, and
meat food products under the act of Congress of June 30, 1906, and has charge of
the inspection of import and export animals, the inspection of vessels for the trans-
portation of export animals, and the quarantine stations for imported live stock;
generally supervises the interstate movement of animals, and reports on the condition
and means of improving the animal industries of the country. It makes investi-
gations as to the existence of dangerous communicable diseases of live stock, super-
intends the measures for their control and eradication, and makes original scientific
investigations as to the nature and prevention of such diseases. It makes investiga-
tions concerning the breeding and feeding of animals and in regard to dairy subjects,
inspects and certifies dairy products for export, and supervises the manufacture of
and interstate commerce in renovated butter.
BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY.
The Bureau of Plant Industry studies plant life in all of its relations to agriculture.
It investigates the diseases of plants and carries on field tests in the prevention of
diseases. It studies the improvement of crops by breeding and selection, maintains
demonstration farms, and carries on investigations with a view to introducing better
methods of farm practice. It conducts agricultural explorations in foreign countries
for the purpose of securing new plants and seeds for introduction into the United
States. It studies fruits, their adaptability to various climates, and the methods of
harvesting, handling, storing, and marketing them. It determines the adaptability
of tropical and subtropical plants to the newly acquired territories of the United
States. It has charge of the purchase and distribution of Congressional seeds, studies
the adaptability of seeds to different regions and investigates their purity and vitality.
It maintains tea gardens with a view to the production of tea in this country. It
carries on investigations relative to drug plants and plants poisonous to stock. It con-
ducts intensive work upon horticultural crops grown under glass and elsewhere.
FOREST SERVICE.
The Forest Service is charged with the administration of the National Forests.
It gives practical assistance in the conservative handling of national, State, and
private forest lands, and in methods of utilizing forest products; investigates
304 Congressional Directory.
methods and kinds of trees for planting, and gives practical assistance to tree
planters; conducts operations in forest planting on the National Forests; 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 increasing their durability through seasoning and preservative
treatment; investigates the control and prevention of forest fires, and other forest
. problems; and advises, when requested, concerning State legislation to encourage
the holding and protecting of growing timber.
BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY.
The Bureau of Chemistry makes such investigations and analyses as pertain in
general to the interests of agriculture, dealing with fertilizers and agricultural
products. It investigates the composition and adulteration of foods and the composi-
tion of field products in relation to their nutritive value and to the constituents which
they derive from the soil, fertilizers, and the air. It examines foods and drugs for
the purpose of determining whether such articles are adulterated or misbranded
within the meaning of the food and drugs act, June 30, 1906. Under this law it also
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 agricultural experiment stations in all mat-
ters pertaining to the relations of chemistry to agricultural interests. It also co-
operates with the other scientific divisions of the Department in all matters relating
to chemistry, and conducts investigations of a chemical nature for other Depart-
ments of the Government at the request of their respective Secretaries.
BUREAU OF STATISTICS.
The Bureau of Statistics collects information as to crop areas, conditions, yields,
values and allied data, and the numbers, values, and status of farm animals, through
corps of county and township correspondents, State agents, special field agents, and
other agencies, and obtains similar information from foreign countries through a
special agent, assisted by consular, agricultural, and commercial authorities. It
records, tabulates, and coordinates statistics of agricultural production, distribution,
and consumption, the authorized data of governments, institutes, societies, boards of
trade, and individual experts; and issues a monthly crop report for the information
of producers and consumers. It includes a division of production and distribution,
which 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 information collected.
BUREAU OF SOILS.
The Bureau of Soils investigates soils in all their relation to climate and to organic
life. Itmakesfield investigations and prepares soil-survey maps showing the extent,
distribution, and characteristic properties of all the important soil types found in
various portions of the United States, and in its published reports suggests possible
lines of improvement in the treatment, management, and use of these soils. It
investigates and represents upon maps the distribution and concentration of alkali
salts in soils of various portions of the arid regions. Through its laboratories it
investigates the fundamental causes of the fertility or infertility of soils and the
causes for low yields of crops. It also investigates the causes of soil erosion and the
effects of soil erosion upon the agricultural efficiency of soils and investigates the
methods for protecting agricultural soils from destructive erosion.
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. The information gained is dissemi-
nated in the form of 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,
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Official Duties. 305
BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAI SURVEY.
The Bureau of Biological Survey investigates the economic relations of birds and
mammals, recommends measures for the preservation of beneficial and the destruc-
tion of injurious species, and has been charged with carrying into effect the pro-
visions of the Federal laws for the importation and protection of birds, contained
in the act of Congress of May 25, 1900, and certain provisions of the game law of
Alaska, contained in the act of May 11, 1908. It is intrusted with the care and main-
tenance of the Federal Bird Reservation in charge of the Department of Agriculture.
It also studies the geographic distribution of animals and plants and maps the natural
life zones of the country.
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 and schedules for annual supplies, and letters
of authority; writes, for the signature of the Secretary, all letters to the Treasury
Department pertaining to fiscal matters; examines and signs requisitions for the pur-
chase of supplies; issues bills of lading and requests for passenger and for freight
transportation; prepares the annual estimates of appropriations; prepares annual
reports to Congress; and transacts all other business relating to the financial interests
of the Department.
DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS.
The Division of Publications is charged with the supervision of the publication,
printing, indexing, and illustration work of the Department. It edits, prepares for
the printer, and reads the proof of all the bulletins, reports, circulars, blanks, blank
books, etc., ordered for the various bureaus, divisions, and offices, with the exception
of those of the Weather Bureau, and keeps the official record of all expenditures for
printing and binding. It has immediate charge of the Yearbook and Farmers’ Bul-
letins and controls the general printing and Farmers’ Bulletin funds, and conducts
all correspondence with the Government Printing Office. It issues, in the form of
press notices, official information of interest to agriculturists and distributes to agri-
cultural publications and to newspaper correspondents notices and synopses of
Department publications, and distributes all publications issued by the Department,
with the exception of those turned over by law to the Superintendent of Documents
for sale at the price fixed by him.
LIBRARY.
The Librarian of the Department library purchases all books and periodicals and
supervises their arrangement and cataloguing; prepares for publication bibliographies
of special subjects and a quarterly bulletin containing current accessions to the
library; also has charge of the foreign mailing lists of the Department publications.
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, Porto Rico, and Guam. It seeks to promote the interests of agricultural edu-
cation and investigation throughout the United States. Itcollectsand disseminates
general information regarding the collegesand 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
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 and agricultural schools in the
several States and Territories, 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 drainage and other phases of agricultural engineering,
which are largely conducted in cooperation with the colleges and stations.
OFFICE OF PUBLIC ROADS.
The Office of Public Roads collects information in regard to systems of road
management; furnishes expert advice on road building; makes investigations in
regard to methods of road construction; tests road-making materials and materials of
construction relating to agriculture; makes investigations in regard to road-making
materials in the various States and prepares publications on these subjects.
306 Congressional Directory.
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 superin-
tendency of all buildings occupied by the Department in Washington, D. C.; the
direction of the watchmen, engineers, mechanics, firemen, laborers, and other em-
plovees connected with the care and protection of the Department buildings; the
care of the horses, wagons, and carriages employed; the expenditure of the appropria-
tions for contingent expenses and rents; the receipt, distribution, and transmission
of the mail; the custody of the records and files of the Secretary’s Office; and the
charge of all business of the Secretary’s Office unassigned.
DISBURSING CLERK.
The disbursing clerk is charged by the Secretary of Commerce and Labor with the
duty of preparing all requisitions for the advance of public funds from appropriations
for the Department of Commerce and Labor to disbursing clerks, special disbursing
agents, and officers of the Light-House Establishment charged with the disbursement
of public funds; the keeping of appropriation ledgers relating to the advance and
expenditure of three hundred and twenty-five items of appropriations; the adminis-
trative examination required by the Department of all accounts submitted by bureau
disbursing officers and agents. He has charge of the issuing, recording, and account-
ing for Government requests for transportation issued to officers of the Department
for official travel; the audit and payment of all vouchers and accounts submitted
from the Office of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, the Bureaus of Corpora-
tions, Manufactures, Labor, Light-House Board, Statistics, Office of the Supervis-
ing Inspector-General, Steamboat-Inspection Service, Steamboat-Inspection Service
at Large; Navigation, Immigration and Naturalization; Immigration Service at
Large; Standards and Fisheries, and the general accounting of the Department.
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Official Duties. 307
DIVISION OF APPOINTMENTS.
The chief of the division of appointments is charged by the Secretary with the
supervision of all matters relating to appointments, transfers, promotions, reduc-
tions, and removals, including applications for, and recommendations concerning,
the same, and the correspondence connected therewith; the consideration of appli-
cations for leave of absence of clerks and employees in the District of Columbia;
the preparation and submission of all questions affecting the personnel of the
Department in itsrelations to the civil-service law and rules; the preparation of nomi-
nations sent to the Senate and of the commissions and appointments of all officers
and employees of the Department; the preparation of official bonds; the compila-
tion of matter for the official register and other statistics in regard to the personnel,
and the custody of oaths of office, records pertaining to official bonds, service
records of officers and employees, the correspondence and reports relating to the
personnel, the reports of Bureau officers respecting the efficiency of employees, and
the records relating to leaves of absence.
DIVISION OF PRINTING.
The chief of the division of printing is charged by the Secretary of Commerce
and Labor with the conduct of all business the Department transacts with the Gov-
ernment Printing Office, excepting that of the Bureau of the Census; the general
supervision of printing, including the editing and preparation of copy, illustrating
and binding, and the distribution of all publications issued by the Office of the Sec-
retary. All blank books and blank forms, and the printed stationery of all kinds
used by the bureaus and offices of the Department in Washington and the various
outside services of the Department are in his custody and are supplied by him. The
advertising done by the Department is in his charge. He also keeps a record of all
expenditures for the publishing work of the Department, conducts the correspond-
ence it entails, and is a member of the Department’s advisory committee on printing.
DIVISION OF SUPPLIES.
Under the direction of the chief clerk the chief of the division of supplies has
personal supervision of all the work incident to the purchase and distribution of
supplies for the Department proper and for the services of the Department outside
of Washington, and of the keeping of detailed accounts of all expenditures from the
appropriation for contingent expenses of the Department. He receives, verifies, and
preserves the semiannual returns of property from the offices and bureaus of the
Department which are supplied from the contingent appropriation, and examines
and reports on the semiannual property returns of all other bureaus and services.
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
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 as
the President may direct.
It is also the duty of the Bureau of Corporations, under the direction of the Sec-
retary of Commerce and Labor, to gather, compile, publish, and supply useful
information concerning corporations engaged in interstate or foreign commerce,
including corporations engaged in insurance.
BUREAU OF MANUFACTURES.
It is the province and duty of the Bureau of Manufactures, under the direction of
the Secretary, to foster, promote, and develop the various manufacturing industries
of the United States, and markets for the same at home and abroad, by gathering
and publishing all available and useful information concerning such industries and
markets; and, through the Secretary of State, to gather and compile from the reports
of consular officers and commercial agents such valuable and material information
as will accomplish the objects above set forth,
308 Congressional Directory.
The Bureau publishes daily and monthly the reports received from United States
consuls and special agents of the Department, and special reports on various sub-
jects made by consuls from time to time; also, the annual reports of consular officers
laid before Congress, entitled ‘‘ Commercial Relations of the United States.”
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 Hawaii, 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 propatty 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
by 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, the consumption of cotton, and (by transfer
from the Bureau of Labor) statistics of cities of 30,000 or more inhabitants,
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 measure, 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 sury eys.
The results obtained are published in annual reports, and in special publications;
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 special publications as may be required to carry
out the organic law governing the Survey.
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
Official Duties. 309
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 between interior centers, at Atlantic, Gulf,
and Pacific seaports; shipments of coal and coke; ocean freight rates, etc.; and is
also charged with the duty of collecting and publishing information in regard to the
tariffs of foreign countries.
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 superintendence 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 AND NATURALIZATION.
The Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization is charged with the administration
of the laws relating to immigration and of the Chinese exclusion laws; also the
naturalization laws. It supervises all expenditures under the appropriations for
“Expenses of regulating immigration,’ ¢ Enforcement of the Chinese exclusion act,”’
and ‘‘ Enforcement of the naturalization laws.’ 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. It also has charge of distributing information
to arriving aliens regarding desirable places of settlement, etc. 2
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
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
310 Congressional Directory.
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.
INTERNATIONAL BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS.
‘““ PAN-AMERICAN BUREAU.”
The International Bureau of the American Republics was established under the
recommendation of the First International American Conference, held in the city of
Washington in 18go for the purpose of developing and maintaining closer relations of
commerce and comity between the several Republics of the Western Hemisphere.
It was reorganized by the Second and Third International American Conferences,
held in the City of Mexico in 19071, and in Rio de Janeiro in 1906, respectively, and
its scope widened by imposing many new and important duties. The International
Bureau corresponds, through the diplomatic representatives of the several Govern-
ments in Washington, with the executive departments of these Governments, 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 sustained by
contributions from the American Republics in proportion to their population, and
is governed by a board consisting of the diplomatic representatives at Washington
from the several countries composing the Union, and the Secretary of State, who is
ex officio itschairman. Its chief executive officer is a Director elected by this gov-
erning board. It publishes a monthly bulletin containing the latest official infor-
mation respecting the resources, commerce, and general features of the American
Republics, as well as maps and geographical sketches of these countries, handbooks
of description, travel, and history, and special reports on trade, tariffs, improve-
ments, concessions, new laws, etc. Italso conductsa large correspondence not only
with manufacturers and merchants in all countries looking to the extension of Pan-
American trade, but with travelers, scientists, students, and specialists for the pur-
pose of promoting general Pan-American intercourse. Another and practical feature
of the Bureau is the Columbus Memorial Library, which contains 15,000 volumes
relating to the American Republics and is open to visitors for consultation.
INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION.
Under ‘An act to regulate commerce,” approved February 4, 1887, as amended
March 2, 1889, February 1o, 1891, February 8, 1895, the ‘‘ Elkins Act”’ of February
19, 1903, and the amending act approved June 29, 1906, the Interstate Commerce
Commission is composed of seven members, each receiving a salary of $r1o,000 per
annum. The regulating statutes apply to all common carriers engaged in the trans-
portation of oil or other commodity, except water and except natural or artificial
gas, by means of pipe lines, or partly by pipe line and partly by rail, or partly by
pipe line and partly by water, and to common carriers 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). The statutes apply generally to interstate
traffic, including import and domestic traffic, and also that which is carried wholly
within any Territory of the United States. Only traffic transported wholly within a
single State is excepted.
The Commission has jurisdiction on complaint and after full hearing to determine
and prescribe reasonable rates, regulations, and practices, and order reparation to
injured shippers; to require any carriers to cease and desist from unjust discrimina-
tion or undue or unreasonable preference, and to institute and carry on proceedings
for enforcement of the law. The Commission may also inquire into the management
-
Offictal Duties. 311
of the business of all common carriers subject to the provisions of the regulating
statutes, and it may prescribe the accounts, records, and memoranda which shall be
kept by the carriers, and from time to time inspect the same. The carriers must file
annual reports with the Commission, and such other reports as may from time to
time be required. Carriers failing to file and publish all rates and charges, as re-
quired by law, are prohibited from engaging in interstate transportation, and penal-
ties are provided in the statute for failure on the part of carriers or of shippers to
observe the rates specified in the published tariffs.
The Commission also appoints a secretary and clerks, whose duties are not spe-
cifically 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, prohibits rebating, allows proceedings in the courts by injunction to
restrain departures from published rates, and provides that cases prosecuted under
the direction of the Attorney-General in the name of the Commission shall be in-
cluded within the expediting act of February 11, 1903.
Under the act of August 7, 1888, all Government-aided railroad and telegraph com-
panies are required to file certain reports and contracts with the Commission, and
it is the Commission’s duty to decide questions relating to the interchange of busi-
ness between such Government-aided telegraph company and any connecting tele-
graph company. The act provides penalties for failure to comply with the act or
the orders of the Commission.
The act of March 2, 1893, known as the “Safety Appliance Act,” provides that
railroad cars used in interstate commerce must be equipped with automatic couplers,
and drawbars of a standard height for freight cars, and have grab irons or hand holds
in the ends and sides of each car; and 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. Theact directs the Commission to lodge with
the proper district attorneys information of such violations as may come to its know-
ledge. 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 what-
ever design are brought together, and to all locomotives, cars, and other equipment
of any railroad engaged in interstate traffic, except logging cars and cars used upon
street railways; and provides for a minimum number of air-braked cars in trains.
The act of June 1, 1898, known as the ‘‘Arbitration Act,” directs the Chairman of
the Interstate Commerce Commission and the Commissioner of Labor to use their best
efforts, by mediation and conciliation, to settle controversies between railway com-
panies engaged in interstate commerce and their employees.
The act of March 3, 1901, makes it the duty of every common carrier engaged in
interstate commerce to report monthly, under oath, all collisions and derailments of
its trains, and accidents to its passengers and employees, and to state the nature and
causes thereof. Theact prescribes a penalty for failing to make the reportso required.
The act of March 4, 1907, makes it the duty of the “Inter state Commerce Commis-
sion to enforce the provisions of the act wherein it is made unlawful to require or
permit employees engaged in or connected with the movement of trains to be on duty
more than a specified number of hours in any twenty-four.
The act of May 23, 1908, by section 16 thereof, gives the Interstate Commerce Com-
mission limited control over the street railroads in the District of Columbia.
The act of May 30, 1908, directs the Interstate Commerce Commission to make
regulations for the safe transportation of explosives by common carriers engaged in
interstate commerce, A penalty is provided for violations of such regulations.
The act of May 30, 1908, makes it the duty of the Interstate Commerce Commis-
sion to enforce the provisions of the act wherein it is provided that after a certain
date no locomotive shall be used in moving interstate or foreign traffic, etc., not
equipped with an ash pan which can be emptied without requiring a man to go under
such locomotive. A penalty is provided for violations of this act.
Public Resolution No. 46, approved June 30, 1906, and the sundry civil appropria-
tion act of May 27, 1908, direct the Commission to investigate and report on the use
and need of appliances intended to promote the safety of railway operation.
i
312 Congressional Directory.
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 imprisonmient, 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.
CLASSIFIED SERVICE.
There are about 352,000 positions in the executive civil service, of which 206,637
are classified subject either to competitive examination under the civil-service rules or
to a merit system governing appointments at navy-yards. Inthe latter class are about
18,000 mechanics and skilled workmen. The total expenditure for salaries in the
executive civil service is about $200,000,000. Persons merely employed as laborers
or workmen and persons nominated for confirmation by the Senate are exempted
from the requirements of classification. Within these limits certain classes of posi-
tions are excepted from examination, among them being employees at post-offices
not having free delivery, exclusive of postmasters of the fourth class in Maine, New A
Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Michigan who were
made subject to examination under an executive order approved November 30, 1908,
Indians in the Indian service, attorneys, pension examining surgeons, office deputy
marshals, and a few employees whose duties are of an impertant confidential or
fiduciary nature.
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, 1908, 167,391 persons were examined, of whom
93,920 passed and 42,153 were appointed.
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.
ISTHMIAN CANAIL COMMISSION EMPLOYEES.
The examinations for employees of the Isthmian Canal Commission upon the
Isthmus extend only to positions of clerk, bookkeeper, stenographer, typewriter,
surgeon, physician, trained nurse, and draftsman,
Official Duties. 313
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.
The transfer is permissible, of classified employees who have served for three years,
from the Philippine service to the federal service.
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 Hawaii, but such a system for Porto Rico has been approved
to become effective January 1, 1908.
UNCLASSIFIED LABORERS.
Appointments of unclassified laborers in the Departments at Washington and in
the large cities 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, veterinarians, patent examiners, draftsmen of the various kinds, and for
civil, mechanical, and electrical engineers; superintendents of construction, com-
puters, and aids in the Coast and Geodetic Survey; also for teachers, matrons, seam-
stresses, farmers, and physicians in the Indian Service, and for railway mail clerks in
most of the Western and some of the Gulf States.
Persons who become eligible in any of the examinations for positions outside of
Washington, D. C., which are not apportioned usually 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.
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE.
The Public Printer is the executive head of the Government Printing Office.
Directly or through his principal officers he purchases all materials and machinery
subject to the provisions of law, disburses all money, appoints all officers and
employees, and exercises general supervision over the affairs of the office.
The Deputy Public Printer acts as chairman of boards to examine and report on
paper and material purchased, and also of a board of condemnation. He has super-
vision over the office of the Superintendent of Documents, the details of manufac-
ture, the maintenance of the buildings, and the care of the stores, and performs such
other duties as are required of him by the Public Printer. In case of the death,
resignation, absence, or sickness of the Public Printer he performs the duties of the
Public Printer.
The Secretary to the Public Printer has direct charge of the personnel of the office,
and is charged with the duty of interviewing all who call on matters in connection
with appointments or transfers; he has charge of the general correspondence and
the care of the files.
The Attorney examines and passes upon all bills, checks, vouchers, specifications,
contracts and orders for paper, material, machinery, and equipment, requiring the
expenditure of money, before the same are presented to the Public Printer for sig-
nature; certifies that specifications and contracts are drawn so that the interests of
the Government are protected, and acts generally as the legal adviser of the Public
Printer in matters relating to public printing and binding.
314 Congressional Directory.
The Congressional Clerk has charge of the Congressional Record at the Capitol
and acts as the Public Printer’s representative in furnishing information and esti-
mates to Senators, Representatives, and Delegates.
The Purchasing Agent prepares the annual proposals to furnish paper and the
schedule of material required to be purchased, secures proposals for open market
purchases, draws contracts for the same, and draws orders for the purchase of paper,
material, and supplies, and prepares the papers necessary for the Public Printer to
complete the purchase.
The Accountant has charge of the keeping of the records of material, of the time
of employees, of the accounts with the several allotments of the appropriation and
with the Treasury Department, computes the cost of operation, prepares for the sig-
nature of the Public Printer pay rolls and vouchers requiring the payment of money,
renders bills for work done, and keeps all other accounts.
The Superintendent of Work has direct charge of all the manufacturing divisions
of the office, including the composing divisions, press division, electrotype and
stereotype division, binding division, and money-order division; also of the stores
division and the buildings division.
The Assistant Superintendent of Work (night) has immediate charge of the manu-
facturing divisions at night.
The Foreman of Printing has charge of the composing divisions, where the work
of preparing copy for the printer, setting type, and reading proof is done.
The Assistant Foreman of Printing (night) is responsible for the work in this
division at night.
The Foreman of the Congressional Record is in immediate charge of that section
of the composing division where the Congressional Record is printed.
The Superintendent of Documents has general supervision over the distribution of
all public documents, excepting those printed for the use of the two Houses of Con-
gress and for the Executive Departments. He is required to prepare a compre-
hensive index of public documents and consolidated index of Congressional docu-
ments, and is authorized to sell at cost any public document in his charge the
distribution of which is not specifically directed.
UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD.
By Executive Order of August 10, 1906, the official title of the United States Board
on Geographic Names was changed to United States Geographic Board, and its
duties enlarged.
The Board passes on all unsettled questions concerning geographic names which
arise in the departments, as well as determining, changing, and fixing place names
within the United States and its insular possessions, and all names hereafter sug-
gested by any officer of the Government shall be referred to the Board before pub-
lication. The decisions of the Board are to be accepted by all the departments of
the Government as standard authority.
Advisory powers were granted the Board concerning the preparation of maps com-
piled, or to be compiled, in the various offices and bureaus of the Government, with
a special view to the avoidance of unnecessary duplications of work; and for the
unificatlon and improvement of the scales of maps, of the symbols and conventions
used upon them, and of the methods of representing relief. Hereafter, all such
projects as are of importance shall be submitted to this Board for advice before being
undertaken,
Supreme Court of the United States. 315
THE JUDICIARY.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES.
(In Capitol Building. Phones, marshal’s office, Main 1 and 2; clerk’s office, Main 3476.)
MELVILLE WESTON FULLER, Chief Justice of the United States, was born
in Augusta, Me., February 11, 1833; was graduated from Bowdoin College in 1853;
studied law, attended a course of lectures at Harvard Law School, and was admitted
to the bar in 1855; formed a law partnership in Augusta, Me., and was an associate editor
of a Democratic paper called The Age; in 1856 became president of the common
council, and served as city solicitor; removed to Chicago, Ill., in 1856, where he
practiced law until appointed Chief Justice; in 1862 was a member of the State con-
stitutional convention; was a member of the State legislature from 1863 to 1865; was
a delegate to the Democratic national conventions of 1864, 1872, 1876, and 1880; the
degree of LI,. D. was conferred upon him by the Northwestern University and by
Bowdoin College in 1888, 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. He is chancellor of Smithsonian Institution; chair-
man trustees Peabody Education Fund; vice-president John ¥. Slater Fund; member
board of trustees of Bowdoin College; one of the arbitrators to settle boundary line
between Venezuela and British Guiana, Paris, 1899; member permanent court of
arbitration, The Hague; member arbitral tribunal in the matter of the Muscat Dowhs,
The Hague, 1905; received thanks of Congress December 20, 1889.
JOHN MARSHALI, 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 the Whig candidate for
Congress in the Ashland district in 1859; was elector on the Bell and Everett ticket;
removed to Louisville in 1861 and formed a law partnership with Hon. W. F. Bul-
lock; 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 that office until 1867, when he returned to active practice in Louisville;
was the Republican candidate for governor in 1871; his name was presented by the
Republican convention of his State in 1872 for the Vice-Presidency; in 1875 was
again the Republican candidate for governor; 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; has
received the degree of LIL. D. from Bowdoin College and the University of Penn-
sylvania; was a “member of the Behring Sea tribunal of arbitration which met in
Parisin 1 1893; was vice-moderator of the general assembly of the Presbyterian Church
in the United States of America in 1905. He has been for more than fifteen years
and is now a lecturer on constitutional law in George Washington University.
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 oraduated from Yale College in 1856
and from the Albany Law School in 1858; established himself in his profession at
Ieavenworth, Kans., in 1859, where he resided until he removed to Washington to
enter upon his preserit 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 I.eavenworth; 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 Fighth district; was appointed
to his present position, to succeed Justice Stanley Matthews, deceased, in December,
1889, and was commissioned December 18, 1889; president of the Venezuelan Bound-
ary Commission, appointed by President Cleveland; member of Arbitration Tribunal
to settle boundary between British Guiana and Venezuela; orator at bicentennial,
Yale University, 1901; president International Congress of Lawyers and Jurists, St,
316 Congressional Divectory.
Louis, 1904; received degree of LL. D. from Iowa College, Washburn College, Yale
University, State University of Wisconsin; Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn.;
University of Vermont, and Bowdoin College.
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 I,ouisiana in December, 1868; elected
state senator in 1874; was appointed associate justice of the supreme court of Louisiana
in 1878; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed James B.
Fustis, and took his seat March 4, 1891; while serving his term as Senator from
Louisiana was appointed, February 19, 1894, an Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court, and took his seat March 12, 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 Tremain
& Peckham, which continued until the death of Mr. Tremain in December, 1878.
In 1866 Mr. Peckham was married to a daughter of D. H. Arnold, an old New York
merchant and at that time president of the Mercantile Bank in New York City. In
1868 he was elected district attorney of Albany County; was subsequently cor-
poration counsel of Albany City, and in 1883 was elected a justice of the supreme
court of the State. While serving as such he was elected, in 1886, an associate judge
of the court of appeals of New York State, and while occupying a seat on that bench
he was, in December, 1895, appointed by President Cleveland an Associate Justice
of the Supreme Court of the United States.
JOSEPH McKENNA, of San Francisco, Cal., Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States, was born ia 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
Collegiate Institute, at which he studied law; was admitted 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 1
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
‘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 LL. 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 § of that year was commissioned ’
a member of the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts; on August 2, 1899, he
EE it A Skt i i i i i a ie NS
Supreme Court of the United States. 317
was made chief justice of the same court. He was appointed a justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States by President Roosevelt, confirmed by the Senate Decem-
ber 4, 1902, and sworn in and took his seat December 8, 1902. 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 188ghe 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 resightied to accept the chairmanship of the commission which negotiated the
treaty of peace with Spain at the close of the Spanish-American war. In F ebruary,
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.
WILLIAM HENRY MOODY, of Haverhill, Mass., was born in Newbury, Mass.,
December 23, 1853; he was graduated at Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., in 1872,
and from Harvard College in 1876; was district attorney for the eastern district
of Massachusetts from 18go to 1896; was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress to fill
a vacancy, and to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses; was
appointed Secretary of the Navy by President Roosevelt 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. On December 3,
1906, was appointed by President Roosevelt an associate justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States, and was confirmed by the-Senate December 12,1906,
and took his seat on the bench on the 17th day of December, 1906.
RESIDENCES OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE AND ASSOCIATE JUSTICES.
[The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the + designates those whose daughters
accompany them.]
1 Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, 1801 I street.
* ail Mr. Justice Harlan, Fourteenth and Fuclid streets.
Mr. Justice Brewer, 1923 Sixteenth street.
* Mr. Justice White, 1717 Rhode Island avenue.
* Mr. Justice Peckham, 1217 Connecticut avenue
* Mr. Justice McKenna, The Connecticut.
* Mr. Justice Holmes, 1720 I street.
* Mr. Justice Day, 1301 Clifton street.
Mr. Justice Moody, The Connecticut.
RETIRED.
* Mr. Justice Shiras,
* Mr. Justice Brown, 1720 Sixteenth street.
OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT
Clerk.—James H. McKenney, 1523 Rhode Island avenue.
Deputy Clerk.—James D. Maher, 2025 H street.
Marshal. —]. M. Wright, Metropolitan Club.
Reporter.—Charles Henry Butler, 1535 I street.
66525—60-2—2D ED——22
318 Congressional Directory.
CIRCUIT COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES,
First Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Holmes. Districts of Maine, New Hampshire,
Massachusetts, and Rhode Island.
Circuit Judges.—Le Baron B. Colt, Providence, R. 1.; William I,. Putnam, Port-
land, Me.; Francis C. Lowell, Boston, Mass.
Second Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Peckham. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut,
Northern New York, Southern New York, Fastern New York, and Western
New York. :
Circuit Judges.—E. Henry Lacombe, New York, N. Y.; Alfred C. Coxe, Utica,
N. Y.; Henry G. Ward, New York, N. Y.; Walter C. Noyes, New London,
Conn.
Third Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Moody. Districts of New Jersey, Eastern Penn-
sylvania, Middle Pennsylvania, Western Pennsylvania, and Delaware.
Circuit Judges.—George M. Dallas, Philadelphia, Pa.; George Gray, Wilming-
ton, Del.; Joseph Buffington, Pittsburg, Pa.
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.; Jeter C. Pritchard, Ashe-
ville, N. C.
Fifth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice White. Districts of Northern Georgia, South-
ern Georgia, Northern Florida, Southern Florida, Northern Alabama, Middle
Alabama, Southern Alabama, Northern Mississippi, Southern Mississippi,
Eastern Iouisiana, Western I,ouisiana, Northern Texas, Southern Texas,
Fastern Texas, and Western Texas.
Circuit Judges.—Don A. Pardee, Atlanta, Ga.; Andrew P. McCormick, Dallas,
Tex.; David D. Shelby, New Orleans, La.
Sixth Judicial Circuit.—Mr, Justice Harlan. Districts of Northern Ohio, Southern
Ohio, Fastern Michigan, Western Michigan, Eastern Kentucky, Western
Kentucky, Eastern Tennessee, Middle Tennessee, and Western Tennessee.
Circuit Judges.—Horace H. ILurton, Nashville, Tenn.; Henry F. Severens,
Kalamazoo, Mich.; John K. Richards, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Seventh Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Day. Districts of Indiana, Northern Illinois,
Fastern Illinois, Southern Illinois, Eastern Wisconsin, and Western Wisconsin.
Circuit Judges.—Peter S. Grosscup, Chicago, I1l.; Francis KE. Baker, Indianapolis,
Ind.; William H. Seaman, Sheboygan, Wis.; Christian C. Kohlsaat, Chicago,
I.
Eighth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Brewer. Districts of Minnesota, Northern
Towa, Southern Iowa, Eastern Missouri, Western Missouri, Eastern Arkansas,
Western Arkansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota,
Fastern Oklahoma, Western Oklahoma, Wyoming, and Utah, and Territory
of New Mexico.
Circuit Judges.—Walter H. Sanborn, St. Paul, Minn.; Willis Van Devanter,
Cheyenne, Wyo.; William C. Hook, Leavenworth, Kans.; Elmer B. Adams,
St. Louis, Mo.
Ninth Judicial Cirvcuit.—Mr. Justice McKenna. Districts of Northern California,
Southern California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, Eastern Washingtor, West-
ern Washington, Idaho, and Territories of Alaska, Arizona, and Hawaii.
Circuit Judges.—William B. Gilbert, Portland, Oreg.; Erskine M. Ross, Los
Angeles, Cal,; William W, Morrow, San Francisco, Cal.
COURT OF CLAIMS.
(Pennsylvania avenue and Seventeenth street. Phone: Main 642.)
Chief Justice.—Stanton J. Peelle, The Concord.
Judge Charles B. Howry, 1728 I street.
Judge Fenton W. Booth, 1752 Lamont street.
Judge Samuel S. Barney, The Hamilton.
Judge George W. Atkinson, 1600 Thirteenth street.
Chief Clerk.—Archibald Hopkins, 1826 Massachusetts avenue,
Assistant.—John Randolph, 28 I street.
Bailiff —Stark B. Taylor, 1504 S street,
E—
Recorder of Deeds. 319
COURT OF APPEALS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.
(United States court-house, Judiciary square. Phone, Main 2854.)
Chief Justice.—Seth Shepard, 1447 Massachusetts avenue.
Associate Justices.—Charles H. Robb, The Rochambeau; Josiah A. Van Orsdel, 2500
Ontario road.
Retired Justice.—Martin F. Morris, 1314 Massachusetts avenue.
Clevk.—H. W. Hodges, 2208 Q street.
Assistant Clerk.—Moncure Burke, 1810 Calvert street.
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.
(United States court-house. Phone, Main 2854.)
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, Silver Spring, Md.; Daniel
Thew Wright, 2032 Sixteenth street; Wendell P. Stafford, 1603 Irving street.
Retired Justice.—Alexander B. Hagner, 1818 H street.
Clerk.—]John R. Young, 1522 R street.
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE.
George C. Aukam, 456 D street.
Charles S. Bundy, 416 Fifth street.
Thomas H. Callan, 617 F street.
Samuel C. Mills, 1205 G street.
Luke C. Strider, D street and John Marshall place.
Robert H. Terrell, 911 G street.
POLICE COURT.
(Sixth and D streets. Phone, Main 396.)
Judges.—A. R. Mullowny, 1735 Oregon avenue; I. G. Kimball, 620 North Carolina
avenue SE.
Clerk.—F. A. Sebring, 1209 Kenyon street.
Deputy Clerk.—N. C. Harper, 308 East Capitol street.
JUVENILE COURT.
(1816 F street. Phone, Main 2403.)
Judge.—William H. De Lacy, Chevy Chase.
Clerk.—Joseph Harper, 412 B street NE.
UNITED STATES ATTORNEY'S OFFICE,
(United States court-house. Phones, Main 4950, 4951.)
United States Attorney.—Daniel W. Baker, Blenheim Court.
Assistants.—Ralph Given, 218 B street SE.; Stuart McNamara, 2409 Eighteenth
street; Charles H. Turner, 1322 Twelfth street; James M. Proctor, Kensington,
Md.; Frank Sprigg Perry, The Imperial.
Special Assistants.—Jesse C. Adkins, 2321 First street; James A. Cobb, 1911 Thir-
teenth street.
UNITED STATES MARSHAI'S OFFICE.
(United States court-house. Phone, Main 2834.)
United States Marshal.—Aulick Palmer, 1401 Belmont road,
Chief Office Deputy.—William B. Robison, The Imperial.
REGISTER OF WILLS AND CLERK OF THE PROBATE COURT.
(United States court-house. Phone, Main 2840.)
Register end Clerk.—James Tanner, The Richmond.
Deputies.—W. C. Taylor, 1400 Twenty-first street; Michael J. Griffith, 1629 P street.
RECORDER OF DEEDS.
(United States court-house. Phone, Main 672.)
Recorder of Deeds.—John C. Dancy, 2139 I, street.
Deputy.—Robert W, Dutton, 1721 Kilbourne place,
320 Congressional Directory.
DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR SERVICE.
EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS TO THE UNITED STATES.
[Those having ladies with them are marked with * for wife, { for daughter, and | for otherladies.]
ARGENTINE REPUBLIC.
(Office of the Legation, 1800 Massachusetts avenue. Phone, North 4098.)
* Sefior Don Epifanio Portela, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Mr. Alberto Palacios Costa, First S=cretary of I.egation, The Benedick.
Commander Don Virgilio Moreno Vera, Naval Attaché. (Absent.)
Sefior Don Julidn Portela, Second Secretary.
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY.
(Office of the Embassy, 1304 Eighteenth street. Phone, North 872.)
* Baron Hengelmiiller von Hengervar, Privy Councilor, Ambassador Extraordinary
and Plenipotentiary, 1305 Connecticut avenue.
Baron Louis Ambrézy, Counselor of Legation, 1816 Jefferson place.
* Commander Baron F. Preuschen von und zu Liebenstien, Naval Attaché, The High-
lands. 2
Baron F. Haymerle, Secretary, 1816 Jefferson place.
Baron Demeter Hye, Attaché.
Count Alexander Torok, Attaché, 1903 N street.
Prince Vincent zu Windisch-Graetz, Attaché, Rauscher’s.
BELGIUM.
(Office of the I,egation, 1719 H street. Phone, Main 3534.)
*+Baron Moncheur, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Mr. E. de Cartier de Marchienne, Counselor of Legation, S18 Seventeenth street.
Mr. Francis Janssens, Attaché, 1748 M street.
‘ BOLIVIA.
(Office of the Legation, 1633 Sixteenth street. Phone, North 3140.)
*t Sefior Don Ignacio Calderon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Sefior Don Jorge E. Zalles, First Secretary. (Absent.)
BRAZIL.
(Office of the Embassy, 1758 K street. Phone, Main 5136.)
*1 Mr. Joaquim Nabuco, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, 22 Iafayette
square.
Gi Mr, Sylvino Gurgel do Amaral, Counselor of Embassy, 1712 H street.
Lieut. Col. A. V. de Pederneiras, Artillery Corps, Military Attaché. (Absent.)
* Lieut. Commander Radler de Aquino, Naval Attaché, The Grafton.
* Mr. E. I,. Chermont, Second Secretary, 1501 Eighteenth street.
Mr. Gustavo de Vianna-Kelsch, Second Secretary, Rauscher’s.
: CHILE.
(Office of the Legation, 1529 New Hampshire avenue. Phone, North 6969.)
*Sefior Don Anibal Cruz, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1529
New Hampshire avenue.
Sefior Don Alberto Yoacham, First Secretary of Legation, The Burlington.
Sefior Don Manuel Salinas F., Second Secretary, 1915 N street.
Col. Vicente del Solar, Military Attaché. (Absent.)
CHINA.
(Office of Embassy, 1301 Sixteenth street. Phone, North 1994.)
I’ang Shao Yi, Ambassador on special mission.
Prince Tsai Fu, First Secretary of Embassy.
Mr. Chung Mun-Yow, Secretary.
Embassies and Legations to the United States. 221
*Mr. Yung Kwai, Secretary, 1505 Rhode Island avenue.
Mr. Wang Chintsu, Secretary.
Mr. Ke Kinsun, Secretary.
Mr. Ii Ching Fen, Secretary.
Mr. Fung Yuan Ting, Secretary.
Mr. Low Kia Chau, Secretary.
Dr. Hsaio Chi Nan, Medical Attaché.
Capt. Hsu Shih Yang, Military Attaché.
Mr. Ow Keng Hsiang, Secretary.
Mr. Chu Sing Yuen, Secretary.
Mr. Yang Yu Siu, Secretary.
(Office of the Iegation, 2001 Nineteenth street. Phone, North 138.)
* Dr. Wu Ting-fang, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary,
Mr. Wu Chao-chu. (Absent. )
Mr. Ou Shou-tchun, First Secretary.
Dr. Wei-ching W. Yen, Second Secretary.
* Mr. Kwei Chih, Second Secretary.
Mr. Kuan Ying-lin, First Secretary-Interpreter.
Mr. Kong U Chiing, Second Secretary-Interpreter.
Mr. T. K. Liang, Commercial Attaché. -
* Mr. Lin Shih-yuan, Attaché.
Mr. Yuan Ko-shuan, Attaché.
Mr. Wu Chang, Attaché.
COLOMBIA. |
(Office of the Legation, 1728 N street. Phone, North 6825.)
*Sefior Don Enrique Cortes, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
* Sefior Don Pomponio Guzmén, First Secretary of Legation.
Sefior Don Eduardo Pombo, Attaché.
COSTA RICA.
(Office of the I,egation, 1329 Highteenth street. Phone, North 1191.)
* f Sefior Don Joaquin Bernardo Calvo, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-
tentiary, 1329 Fighteenth street.
Sefior Don Luis Anderson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary on
special mission, The Portland.
CUBA.
(Office of the Legation, The Wyoming. Phone, North 2941.)
* Sefior Don Gonzalo de Quesada, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary,
1750 Massachusetts avenue.
Sefior Don Arturo Padré y Almeida, First Secretary. (Absent.)
Sefior Don Antonio Montero, Second Secretary, The Benedick.
Sefior Don José F. Campillo, Chancellor.
Sefior Don César A. Barranco, Chancellor.
Seilor Don Miguel a Cabello. (Absent.)
DENMARK.
(Office of the I egation, 2622 Sixteenth street.)
*Count Moltke, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.
(Office of the Legation, The Benedick. Phone, Main 4520.)
Sefior Don Emilio C. Joubert, Minister Resident, The Shoreham.
*Sefior Don Arturo L. Fiallo, Secretary of Legation, The Burlington.
ECUADOR.
(Office of the Legation, 1614 I street. Phone, Main 1601.)
*t11 Sefior Don Luis Felipe Carbo, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten-
tiary.
Sefior Ingeniero Don Luis Alberto Carbo, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.)
Sefior Don Esteban Felipe Carbo, Attaché.
Congressional Directory. (¢%) §) nN
FRANCE.
(Office of the Embassy, 2460 Sixteenth street. Phone, Columbia 828.)
* Mr. J. J. Jusserand, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Mr. des Portes de la Fosse, Counselor of Embassy. (Absent.)
Captain de Chambrun, Artillery Corps, Military Attaché.
* Lieutenant-Commander de Blanpré, Naval Attaché.
Viscount Charles de Chambrun, Secretary, Stoneleigh Court. (Absent. )
* Viscount de Martel, Third Secretary, 1731 N street.
Mr. Velten, Commercial Attaché, New York, N. Y.
GERMANY.
(Office of the Embassy, 1435 Massachusetts avenue. Phone, North 7200, 7201.)
*1 Count J. H. von Bernstorff, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, The
Shoreham.
*Count von Wedel, Counselor of Embassy, First Secretary of Embassy, The Portland.
Commander Retzmann, Naval Attaché, The Portland.
* Maj. von Livonius, Military Attaché, 1628 K street.
Baron Hartmann von Richthofen, Gentleman in Waiting to His Majesty, the German
Emperor, Second Secretary, 1530 Twenty-second street.
Mr. von Stumm, Third Secretary, 1744 P street.
Mr. von Prittwitz und Gaffron, Attaché, 1744 P street.
Baron von Hardenbroek, Attaché.
GREAT BRITAIN.
(Office of the Embassy, 1300iConnecticut avenue. Phone, North 124.)
* Right Hon. James Bryce, O. M., Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
* Mr. Alfred Mitchell Innes, Counselor of Embassy.
Capt. C. F. G. Sowerby, R. N. Attaché, 1915 N street.
* Lieut. Col. B. R. James, Military Attaché, 2028 Columbia road.
*Mr. G. Young, M. V. O., Second Secretary.
*Mr. H. W. Kennard, Second Secretary.
Mr. Esmond Ovey, M. V. O., Third Secretary, The Albany.
Mr. H. Beresford-Hope, Attaché, 1610 Nineteenth street.
The Hon. H. F. Charteris, Honorary Attaché, 1610 Nineteenth street.
GREECE.
(Address of the Legation, 2020 Columbia road. Phone, North 719.)
Mr. I,. A. Coro-Milas, Minister Resident.
GUATEMATA.
(Office of the Legation, The Highlands. Phone, North 1240.)
*Sefior Dr. Don Luis Toledo Herrarte, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-
tentiary.
Sefior Don Juan Barrios, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, on
special mission, New Willard.
Senor Don Francisco Sanchez Latour, First Secretary of Legation, New Willard.
Sefior Dr. Ramon Bengoechea, Secretary of Legation, 2-4 Stone street, New York City.
HATTI.
(Office of the Legation, 1429 Rhode Island avenue. Phone, North 380.)
*|]| Mr. J. N. Léger, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleripotentiary.
Mr. Perceval Thoby, Secretary.
HONDURAS.
(Office of the Iegation, New Willard. Phone, Main 4420.)
Dr. Luis Lazo, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
ITALY.
(Office of the Embassy, 1400 New Hampshire avenue. Phone, North 4156.)
* Baron Edmondo Mayor des Planches, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-
tiary.
Marquis Paolo di Montagliari, Counselor. (Absent.)
Signor Roberto Centaro, Second Secretary, 1143 Connecticut avenue.
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Embassies and Legations to the United Stcles. 323
Signor Giuliano Cora, Attaché, Rauscher’s.
Prof. Antonio Ravaioli, Commercial Delegate.
Lieut. Filippo Camperio, Naval Attaché, Rauscher’s.
JAPAN.
(Office of the Embassy, 1310 N street. Phone, North 381.)
* Baron Kogoro Takahira, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, 1321 K
street.
Mr. Keishiro Matsui, Counselor of Embassy, 2131 Bancroft place.
Mr. Masanao Hanihara, Second Secretary, 1310 N street.
Mr. Matsuzo Nagai, Third Secretary, The Champlain.
Mr. Isaburo Yoshida, Attaché, 1310 N street.
Commander Naomi Taniguchi, I. J. N., Naval Attaché, The Champlain.
Maj. Kunishige Tanaka, I. J. A., Military Attaché, The Portland.
MEXICO.
(Office of the Embassy, 1415 I street. Phone, Main 4990.)
Sefior Don Enrique C. Creel, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
(Absent. )
*f Sefior Don José F. Godoy, Minister Plenipotentiary and Chargé d’Affaires ad
interim, 1006 Sixteenth street.
Sefior Don Julio W. Baz, Second Secretary.
Sefior Don Leopoldo Blazquez, Second Secretary, The Benedick.
Sefior Don J. Bermudez de Castro, Third Secretary, The Benedick.
Sefior Don Angel Algara Romero de Terreros, Third Secretary.
Maj. Don Fortino M. Davila, Military Attaché, 1431 Twenty-first street.
NETHERLANDS.
(Office of the Iegation, 1901 F street.)
*Jonkheer J. Loudon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1gor EF
street.
Mr. W. A. Royaards, Counselor of I .egation, Rauscher’s.
Mr. G. L. Thurkow, Attaché, The Bachelor.
NICARAGUA.
(Office of the I,egation, 2003 O street. Phone, North 794.)
*Sefior Don Luis F. Corea, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
NORWAY,
(Office of the T,egation, The Highlands. Phone, North 1240 )
* Mr. O. Gude, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Mr. O. Skybak, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.)
Mr. Hugo Mowinckel, Secretary of Legation.
PANAMA.
(Office of the Iegation, The Highlands. Phone, North 1240.)
Mr. C. C. Arosemena, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Mr. José de Obaldia, J., First Secretary of Legation.
Sefior Don Arturo Amador Garcia, Attaché. (Absent.)
PERSIA.
(Office of the I.egation, 1800 Nineteenth street. Phone, North 3226.)
Gen. Morteza, Khan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
PERU.
(Office of the Legation, 1737 H street.)
Mr. Felipe Pardo, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, The Shore-
ham. (Absent.)
Mr. Manuel de Freyre y Santander, First Secretary of I,egation and Chargé d’ Affaires
ad interim.
324 Congressional Directory.
.s PORTUGAL.
(Office of the Legation, The Shoreham. Phone, Main 3103.)
Viscount de Alte, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Mr. d’Arenas de Lima, Secretary of I.egation. (Absent.)
Mr. A. T. Carvalho, Attaché.
RUSSIA.
(Address of Embassy, 1634 I street. Phone, Main 2714.)
Baron Rosen, Master of the Imperial Court, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni-
potentiary.
Mr. Kroupensky, Chamberlain to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia, Counselor of
Embassy. (Absent.)
Prince Nicolas Koudacheff, Chamberlain to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia,
First Secretary, 824 Eighteenth street.
Mr. de Thal, Gentleman in Waiting to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia,
Second Secretary. (Absent. )
Baron Sta€l de Holstein, Second Secretary, 1034 Connecticut avenue.
Mr. B. de Struve, Attaché. ;
Baron de Bode, Military Attaché, 2106 R street.
Commander Nébolsine, Naval Attaché, 2115 Bancroft place.
SALVADOR.
(Office of the I,egation, The Portland. Phone, North 1550.)
Sefior Don Federico Mejia, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary,
The Portland.
Dr. J. Gustavo Guerrero, Secretary of Legation, The Benedick.
SIAM.
(Address of the Iegation, The Arlington. Phone, Main 2550.)
Phya Akharaj Varadhara, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
(Absent. )
Phra Ratanayapti, Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim.
* Mr. Edward H. Loftus, First Secretary of Legation, The Arlington.
Nai Cheun, Attaché, The Hamilton
Nai Terr, Student Attaché, The Hamilton.
Nai Jajaval, Student Attaché, “The Hamilton.
SPAIN.
(Office of the T,egation, 1521 New Hampshire avenue. Phone, North 4493.)
Sefior Don Ramén Pifia, Chamberlain to His Catholic Majesty, Envoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary.
* Sefior Don Luis Pastor, First Secretary of Legation, 1721 Q street.
Sefior Don Manuel Walls y Merino, Second Secretary of Legation.
*Lieut. Col. Don Nicolas Urcullu y Cervijo, Military Attaché.
. SWEDEN. :
(Office of the I egation, 2620 Sixteenth street. Phone, Columbia 364.)
*t1Mr. Herman de Lagercrantz, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Mr. A. Ekengren, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.)
Me, U. T. Undén, Secretary of Legation.
Count L. af Ugglas, Attaché.
SWITZERLAND.
(Office of the Iegation, 2013 Hillyer place. Phone, North 3242.)
Mr. Leo Vogel, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
Mr. Henri Martin, Secretary of Legation, 1748 M street.
TURKEY.
(Address of the Iegation, 1730 Columbia road.)
Reouf Ahmed Bey, First Secretary.
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Embassies and Legations of the United States. 325
URUGUAY.
(Office of the Legation, 1529 Rhode Island avenue.)
*++ Dr. Luis Melian Lafinur, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
tSefior Alberto Nin Frias, Secretary of Legation.
EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES.
ABYSSINIA.
Hoffman, Philip, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Adis Ababa.
ARGENTINE REPUBLIC.
Huntington Wilson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Buenos
Aires (appointed).
Charles S. Wilson, Secretary of Legation, Buenos Aires.
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY.
Charles S. Francis, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Vienna.
George B. Rives, Secretary of Embassy, Vienna.
Nelson O'Shaughnessy, Second Secretary of Embassy, Vienna.
Maj. William H. Allaire, Military Attaché, Vienna.
TLieut. Commander Reginald R. Belknap, Naval Attaché, Berlin.
BELGIUM.
Henry Lane Wilson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Brussels.
Robert Woods Bliss, Secretary of Legation, Brussels. ®
BOLIVIA.
James F. Stutesman, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, La Paz.
Gustavus I,. Monroe, jr., Secretary of Legation, Ia Paz.
BRAZIL.
Irving B. Dudley, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Rio de Janeiro.
Henry L. Janes, Secretary of Embassy, Rio de Janeiro.
, Second Secretary of Embassy, Rio de Janeiro.
CHILE.
John Hicks, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Santiago.
U. Grant Smith, Secretary of Legation, Santiago.
Second Lieut. Francis A. Ruggles, Military Attaché, Santiago.
CHINA.
William W. Rockhill, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Peking.
Henry P. Fletcher, Secretary of Legation, Peking.
Fred Morris Dearing, Second Secretary of Legation, Peking.
Charles D. Tenney, Chinese Secretary, Peking.
Willys R. Peck, Assistant Chinese Secretary, Peking.
Commander John A. Dougherty, Naval Attaché, Tokyo.
Capt. James H. Reeves, Military Attaché, Peking.
COLOMBIA.
Thomas C. Dawson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Bogota.
Paxton Hibben, Secretary of Legation, Bogota.
COSTA RICA.
William I. Merry, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, San José.
, Secretary of Legation, San José.
326 Congressional Directory.
CUBA. :
Edwin V. Morgan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Habana.
, Secretary of Legation, Habana.
G. Cornell Tarler, Second Secretary of Legation, Habana.
DENMARK.
Maurice Francis Egan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Copen-
hagen.
Charles Richardson, Secretary of Legation, Copenhagen.
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC,
Fenton R. McCreery, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Santo Domingo.
Philip M. Hoefele, Secretary of Legation, Santo Domingo.
ECUADOR.
Williams C. Fox, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Quito.
, Secretary of Legation, Quito. :
Lieut. Constant Cordier, Military Attaché, Lima.
EGYPT.
Lewis M. Iddings, Agent and Consul-General, Cairo.
FRANCE.
Henry White, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Paris.
Henry Vignaud, Secretary of Embassy, Paris.
Arthur Bailly-Blanchard, Second Secretary of Embassy, Paris.
, Third Secretary of Embassy, Paris.
Commander Frederick I,. Chapin, Naval Attaché, Paris.
Capt. William S. Guignard, Military Attaché, Paris.
GERMANY. LJ
David J. Hill, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Berlin.
R. S. Reynolds Hitt, Secretary of Embassy, Berlin.
Joseph C. Grew, Second Secretary of Embassy, Berlin.
, Third Secretary of Embassy, Berlin.
Lieut. Col. John P. Wisser, Military Attaché, Berlin.
Lieut. Commander Reginald R. Belknap, Naval Attaché, Berlin.
GREAT BRITAIN.
Whitelaw Reid, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, London.
John R. Carter, Secretary of Embassy, I,ondon.
Craig W. Wadsworth, Second Secretary of Embassy, London.
Arthur Orr, Third Secretary of Embassy, London.
Commander John H. Gibbons, Naval Attaché, Iondon.
Capt. Sydney A. Cloman, Military Attaché, London.
GREECE AND MONTENEGRO.
Richmond Pearson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Athens.
Irwin B. Laughlin, Secretary of Legation, Athens.
GUATEMALA.
William Heimke, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Guatemala.
Algernon Sartoris, Secretary of Legation, Guatemala.
HATTI.
Henry W. Furniss, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Port au Prince.
HONDURAS.
Philip M. Brown, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Tegucigalpa.
Hugh S. Gibson, Secretary of Legation, Tegucigalpa.
ITALY.
Lloyd C. Griscom, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Rome.
John W. Garrett, Secretary of Embassy, Rome.
Robert M. Winthrop, Second Secretary of Embassy, Rome.
Lieut. Commander Reginald R. Belknap, Naval Attaché, Berlin.
Maj. J. F. Reynolds Landis, Military Attaché, Rome.
Embassies and Legations of the United States. 327
JAPAN.
Thomas J. O’Brien, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Tokyo.
Peter Augustus Jay, Secretary of Embassy, Tokyo.
Ransford Stevens Miller, jr., Japanese Secretary and Interpreter, Tokyo.
George P. Wheeler, Second Secretary of Embassy, Tokyo.
Leland Harrison, Third Secretary of Embassy, Tokyo. ;
Charles Jonathan Arnell, Assistant Japanese Secretary, Tokyo.
Commander John A. Dougherty, Naval Attaché, Tokyo.
Lieut. Col. James A. Irons, Military Attaché, Tokyo.
Capt. Harry H. Pattison, Attaché, Tokyo.
Second Lieut. George V. Strong, Attaché, Tokyo.
Second Iieut. Nicholas W. Campanole, Attaché, Tokyo.
Second Lieut. James G. McIlroy, Attaché, Tokyo.
LIBERIA.
Ernest Lyon, Minister Resident and Consul-General, Monrovia.
George W. Ellis, Secretary of Legation, Monrovia.
LUXEMBURG AND THE NETHERLANDS.
Arthur M. Beaupré, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, The Hague.
Charles D. White, Secretary of Legation, The Hague.
MEXICO.
David E. Thompson, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Mexico.
William F. Sands, Secretary of Embassy, Mexico.
A. Campbell Turner, Second Secretary of Embassy, Mexico.
Thomas Ewing Dabney, Third Secretary of Embassy, Mexico.
Capt. Girard Sturtevant, Military Attaché, Mexico.
MOROCCO.
Samuel R. Gummeré, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Tangier.
, Secretary of Legation, Tangier.
NICARAGUA.
, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Managua.
john H. Gregory, jr., Secretary of Legation, Managua.
NORWAY.
Herbert H. D. Peirce, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Christiania.
M. Marshall Langhorne, Secretary of Legation, Christiania.
Maj. Stephen IH. Slocum, Military Attaché, St. Petersburg.
PANAMA.
Herbert G. Squiers, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Panama.
George T. Weitzel, Secretary of Legation, Panama.
PARAGUAY AND URUGUAY.
Edward C. O’Brien, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Montevideo.
Harry B. Owsley, jr., Secretary of Legation, Montevideo.
PERSIA.
John B. Jackson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Teheran,
Frederic Ogden de Billier, Secretary of Legation, Teheran.
John Tyler, Interpreter, Teheran.
PERU.
Leslie Combs, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Lima.
Richard R. Neill, Secretary of Legation, Lima.
Lieut. Constant Cordier, Military Attaché, Lima.
PORTUGAL.
Charles Page Bryan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Tisbon.
George I. Lorillard, Secretary of Legation, Lisbon.
328 Congressional Directory.
ROUMANTIA, SERVIA, AND BULGARIA.
Spencer F. Eddy, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary (Diplomatic
Agent for Bulgaria), Bucharest (appointed).
Norman Hutchinson, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General (Secretary of
Agency, Bulgaria), Bucharest.
RUSSIA.
John W. Riddle, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, St. Petersburg.
Montgomery Schuyler, jr., Secretary of Embassy, St. Petersburg.
John Van A. MacMurray, Second Secretary of Embassy, St. Petersburg.
Henry Coleman May, Third Secretary of Embassy, St. Petersburg.
Commander Frederick I,. Chapin, Naval Attaché, Paris.
Major Stephen IH. Slocum, Military Attaché, St. Petersburg.
SALVADOR.
H. Percival Dodge, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, San Salvador.
Arthur Hugh Frazier, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, San Salvador.
SIAM.
Hamilton King, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Bangkok.
, Secretary of Legation and Consul-General, Bangkok.
Leng Hui, Interpreter, Bangkok.
SPAIN.
William M. Collier, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Madrid.
William. H. Buckler, Secretary of I.egation, Madrid.
SWEDEN.
Charles H. Graves, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Stockholm.
James G. Bailey, Secretary of Legation, Stockholm.
Major Stephen IH. Slocum, Military Attaché, St. Petersburg.
SWITZERIT, AND.
Brutus J. Clay, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Berne.
Jacob Sleeper, Secretary of Legation, Berne.
TURKEY.
John G. A. Leishman, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Constanti-
nople.
Lewis Einstein, Secretary of Embassy, Constantinople.
William Blumenthal, Second Secretary of Embassy, Constantinople.
, Third Secretary of Embassy.
A. A. Gargiulo, Interpreter, Constantinople.
VENEZUELA.
———— ————, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Caracas.
~— —, Secretary of Legation, Caracas,
opm
*
United States Consular Officers.     329
UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS.
CONSULS-GENERAIL AT LARGE.
Name. Salary.
Horace Lee Washington... oii uu. cai veins sis isan panini
For Europe, excepting Eur opean Russia, the Balkan States, and Greece.
George H. Murphy
For North America, including Mexico and the Bermudas.
Fleming D. Chetlilte. 0 bre ae an a
For eastern Asia, including
islands of the Pacific.
Albert B. Morawelz. «0 inanden To nidiann veins wo gobi mes ia
For South America, Central America, the West Indies, and Curagao.
For Kuropean Russia, the Balkan States, Greece, Asia Minor, Persia, India (as far as | |
the western frontier of the Straits Settlements), and Africa.
Office.
ABVSSINIA.
ARGENTINE REPUBLIC.
Buenos Ayres... ......
SER EG Ae
Triosis, Austria Ee a
PO. re ay ee
ABYSSINIA—BELGIUM.
Hoffman Philip... ...
Edward D. Vialle........ |
Alban G. Snyder. .
Otto Hollender .
Thos. B. Van Horne.
I.atham Hall . ey eels
Paul Nash... .. in
Frank E. Mallett........
Alfred W. Donegan......
John S, Twells......
Sigmund Freund .
Clarence Rice Slocum
G. Andrews Moriarty, jr.
Joseph I. Brittain. ...
Arnold Weissberger.....
Charles B. Harris ...
BEdward’l. Heyn.........
George M. Hotschick
Orestes de Martini.......
Vincent Bares... ......
William A. Rublee. .
Robert W. Heingartner. .
Henry W. Diederich.
Harry Tuck Sherman ...
Ethelbert Watts... ...
Gregory Phelan .........
William P. Atwell...
Julius A. Van Hee.......
Henry Abert Johnson
Alexander P. Cruger.....
.f Conml genes] dee i
Vice and deputy consul-general
Consul. oa,
Vice and deputy consul... ..
Consul-general...........
Vice and deputy consul-general
Vice and deputy consul-general
Consul o.oo
Vice and deputy consul. .......
Consul, 0h 0 a
gs
$5; 000
5, 000,
5, 000
the Straits Settlements, Australia, Oceania, and the |
5, 000
5, 000
Salary.
$3, 500
Viceand deputy consul ....... I... .;
Conall a oi ia
Consul: hone 0.
Nice-consul. i niu si
Consuleno wo. a oo
Vice consul
Deputy consul’... cou os
Consnl-general...........
Vice and deputy consul-general
Consul-general...........
Viceand deputy consul-general
Consul-general...... .....
Viceand deputy consul-general
Consul. oii :
Vice and deputy consul ........
Consul
Vice and deputy consul ........
330 Congressional Directory.
BRAZIIL—CHINA.
Office. Officer. Rank. Salary
BRAZIL.
Bahia. oo 0, Pierre Paul Demers... Consul .................. $4, 000
i A Bi A] Burr Gould Eels......... Viceand deputy consul... ......[....0..
Baran ana Georgeill, Pickerell.| Consul... .... ......... 4, 000
DO ow fh ed Julius F. Tiedeman...... Vice and deputy consul ........[.. cou.
IDOL a William R. Cox.......... Deputy consul................ of. Ll
Manaos Lost. doesn John H. Hamilton. ....... gents tile es Yowety
Maranhfio.....o .ce: vido eons Joaquim B. do Prado . Se a SI I
Pernambuco: .......... 0... George A. Chamber | Consul... oo] 4, 000
lain.
10 Pe re Sn Se Enrique Bachilleres .....| Vice and deputy-consul.........|.........
CCAR on ae ae Antonio EF. da Frota..... Agent rh ona re se sn
IMaceln: Lia hi te She aes George SIMPSON .< can iAsent i ss ei aah a
Natal...oo. coo. ciclin nan. os Henry]: Green....... 5... Agent rar asin nr RRS
Bio de Jaxeive........... George E. Anderson.| Consul-general........... 8, 000
Le weit on reise epee Sa LAT J=Slechta....5..0 Vice and deputy consul-general|.........
Victoria snd. aie ie so veieics Jean Zinzen............. Agent... va SL aS FR
Santos. aan ah Joh W, O'Hara... Consul, ......0..... 0. 4, 000
| BSE SE Pe A William H. Lawrence. .|. Vice-consul... cl... Lil nnn nab LL
DO..... ceo reernrnanenrans, Frank N. West-.......... Deputy consul. ........h Lol es
Rio Grande do Sul.......... Jorge Vereker......50.. FN EE
Se Paula. Jo ai an a William EB. Tee ......... Agent icin ini di ihe,
CHILE
Lquigne Ne OS Ee ReaHdanna......... Consul Li ca ovhis vis 3, 000
A RS HS SE Fdward BE. Muecke ......."Vice-consul ............ cov. even ivio aie
ATs ee a eh Samuel C. Greene. ...--. LNT TE Se i ae ae a RIB a Be ee
BTICA, Sh Cia amis aa ‘tomas Bradley .......... Agent, oo. a se fy sae ee
Punta Arenas. ........... John BE, Rowen ..... Consnliic oo iss 3, 000
Valparaiso... ...0.....00 Alfred A. Winslow ..| Consul ...... A Rr 4, 500
A a ee HS eM RR ES Vice and deputy consul ’........|..... i...
Caldera ........ beh ve Sian. John ‘Thomas Morong...[ Agent. ..... ices veveveensnns]ssvnisnees
Coquimbo .::..i<vvvs wae es Andrew Kerr... Nr NS SR Se Ie
Palcahnano::. ..«.v.ceivsnaentt Joseph O.:Smith......... ATCNL i rT a Ui wna ow esi.
CHINA
AMOY cs ate Julean I. Arnold. .| Consul’. ......5 vue rain 4, 500
Do. : os Ne vie a eto iw i a Cera Vice and deputy consul.........|J...ci.its
LI a a I Ta Ra tn Marshaliz on ose oreiie I, 000
Te A ay I I LS SR Er an Interpreter... inhi hal Jl 1, 000
Awtung oon nol on Frederick D. Cloud .| Consul ................).. 2, 500
Canton... coun a Leo Allen Bergholz. .| Consul-general........... 5, 500
BO sa Te A Willard B. Hull......... Vice and deputy consul- “Zeneral Se
HE ee A SR Ss Tsang Chue Sun......... Interpreter oon. nin da no 1, 000
1 A RR ES LR Willard B. Hull...... 0... Trterpreter sv. daa ais aie: I, 000
Chefoo vi vs oi John Fowler. ....... Consul cutis si aah 4, 500
DO, 1s She ts bey eae Chas. I. L. Williams..... Viceand deputy consul . SU Se dea
DO tiers ios alee atures niaiale who [i Melle wie wiolbigietala lula ainleluistaatn ior uints Deputy consul. ............ NA IAI ST
i Tg Se SR Eo Bdgar Kopp... . acess ve Marshals on oii. dnt dee aise: 1,000
TS AE eR Sr EW Chas. I... Willlams'....... Interpretert ... ieeeeodevianss I, 500
HT hr TR PA rr Wh Agents sono dl dnl aay ani Bilan Shida
Chungking... ori Se Constli ono. taal 3, 500
Fooehow..... oh. san. Samuel 1. Gracey.....[[Consal ..........5... 0 4, 500
BO. Ra Edward C. Baker.........[! Vice and deputy consul ....... |... ......
1B Pe A TR ha NR Edward C. Baker........ Marshals roi odo nso 1, 000
ADO itn HL Se ee EE srreereianeeaieni... Iaterpreter.. no... ov hoe, I, 000
HanXoW-.. «iv anes William Martin...... Consul-general........... 4, 500
PIO fs ee aa Albert W. Pontius....... Vice and deputy consul-general] ...... 7
DO A Bi Albert W. Pontius....... Interpreter... ic nid 1, 500
Harbin. ...... voici Fred D. Fisher. ..... Constr aii 4, 000
Mulder... Willard D. Straight. .| Consul-general........... 4, 500
DDO ts as aa aie a tre ws wh we as Aa en rare Sa mT dn Dare leis tee iw a de Vice and deputy consul-general | .........
A I EN er ey LR iM, G.Faunlkner.......... Marshal. ooo na aang I, COO
EE Nd a eR fe ph ER ML am ies) Interpreter. . ad. do. ln ean, 1, 500
Nonking im ha a J James ©. McNally... Consul... ooh 4, 000
ie LC IR SS Charles Reider..........[: Viceand deputy consul ........[.........
Do Se rele te ys ie vive Wit lee Rao Tuen King.......... Interpreters... iis cla re I, 000
Newchwang ............. Thomas E. Heenan. .| Consul ............. TE Ea
DO. sis sn aa a ae a ae a he ai we eee a er Viceand deputyconsul......... J anc de.
DOr a har ea ‘Thomas Miles ...iv...... Marshal. i a aires aa 1, 000
A a I A Ns eB Ss REE Sie ais Interpreter... .......00. 0 0. 1, 500
Shanghal ............... Charles Denby... .. Consul-general........... 8, 000
LB I A Ln SS I LR ‘W. Roderick Dorsey..... Vice and deputy consul-general | .........
DE Si eS ed Clarence X. Gauss....... Deputy consul-general ........|.........
DO, inns Thaddeus C. White...... Marshal sc... fans. saa 1, 000
BT RN ES OS John L.iViney............ Student interpreters........... 1, 000
Do. ves ' , George Hamilton Butler.! Interpreter. vvvrevrssesers-ass 1, 500
a]
x
United States Consular Officers. 331
CHINA—DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.
Office. Officer. Rank. Salary.
CcHINA—continued
SWatow o.oo. ah aan Consals oor iin inn $2, 500
Tentsin... o.oo Edward T. Williams.| Consul-general........... 5, 500
Do. Hubert G. Baugh ........ Vice and deputy consul-general |.........
10 Se Re Re a eR Robert B: C. Stevenson. Marshal... i to ion 1, 000
DON SE a es ra Hubert G. Baugh.......: Interpreter eae ii 1, 500
COLOMBIA.
Barvanguilla..... ........ Charles C. Eberhardt) Consul ............. 3, 500
Pot. Sil as A Albro I Burnell ......... Vice and deputy consul’... Solin hE
Medellin .0 0. oie Silas TWi- Wright... 00 Agent dot ed SL ER
Santa: Marta -o. 0.0 a William A. Trout... ..... Agent leo es RR
Bogotd. -.. >. can Jay White... ......... Consnl-general.........., 3, 500
DOL, a eh a ‘Hugene Betts." ......... Vice and deputy consul-general.........
Dugarammnan SE Se Gustave Volkman ....... Agent. fe, in Ss rea A
ali’... . Henry], Bder........... Agemtic sr. cio huni ane aaa
Cuenta oa ns a Philip Tillinghast, ir. Agent nid eee Sans
Hondas: i ial re Jas John Owen ...... [REET ATenbi aa eh Stays
Cartagena. .... hi. vu Isaac A. Mauning...[[Consul..:............... 2, 000
DO ei ean a William B. MacMaster ..| Vice and deputyconsul.........|.........
COSTA RICA
Port Limon... .... 0... Chester Donaldson. .| Consul ... 0.0... 0.0 2; 500
18 es TH eR Es Henry: O. Faston........ Vice and deputy consul ........[....5 0
Sam Jose. on John C. Caldwell... I Consul... ..... aici on 3, 000
DOE ae a i Charles S. Caldwell...... Vice-consuly. on won ns nll NEE vs
Punta Arenas........., Yeon A. Marquez........ yh RC RR AR BL a
CUBA.
Glenfuegos. io he. Max]. Baelir....... Consul ilu wii, 4, 500
ER Tr ES SS Buenaventura Carbo ....| Vice and Sepiy CONSUL wi afin iia, is
Caibarien.....: Be ini Alta, <P. B..Anderson.......... Agen Re RS SI
Nuevitas io oo teen Dean BR. Wood........... Agente. a es
Sagua la Grande............| John F. Jova............. ATONE El si a ee ees palais
Mabana.. o.oo James Linn Rodgers. Consul-general. RE 8, ooo
18 eH a Cs Joseph A. Springer...... Vice and deputy consul-general.........
8 eh ee Me Tr Henry P. Starrett........ Deputy consul-general ...o... f= os
Cardenas... ...........00.00 Pedro M. Mederos....... Agent oo a Re
Matanzas. Ceti ea, Alfred Heydrich......... Agents ols a lnm
Santingo doCuba.. ..... Ross E. Holaday . Consul. iin 0 0a 4, 500
em I a Sl Henry M. Wolcott... «..["Vice and deputy. consul’........l.........
Anis Ne NE George Bayliss . Agen rR HE SE,
Baracoa coi aie dhe vin Arthur Field Lindley. . Agent ors aCann mia aay
Manzanillo... ove vaansn Francis B. Bertot........ ATENEI LL Cosi ici ek wae fe eee aie
DENMARK AND DOMIN-
IONS.
Popsuhagen El ala Frank R. Mowrer...| Consul-general .......... 3, 000
SO SO Victor Juhler ............| Viceand deputy consul-general|.........
eRe as Se vy sein Axel Permin...... ......| Deputy consul-general........ .[.... .....
St. Thomas, WoT: ... Christopher HH. Payne Consul ...0.......... 3, 000
isle he eS Anders B,. Schrder......[ Vice-consul..... ovo. onl S00 Ske)
Coated St. Croix | Andrew]. Blackwood -..[ Agent .......... o.oo sons ea oats
Island.
Fredericksted, St. Croix | Robert IL. Merwin....... Agent vn a i Ea ER TA
Island.
St. Bustatins......... 0. YG. C.Hvery. oii, Agent itn iin Sie ei tan a a
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.
Puerty Plata. =i... Ralph J. Totten... ... Consul. ii wh oie 2, 000
CR RE Arthur W. Vithgow......[: Viceconsul,................... .[......
Monte Christi... Sana) IsaactPetits, Lo vn, Agen a re TE
Samana. wns ari Federico TLample ob Age co i a casas iraivieide is
Santo Domingo .......... Fenton R. McCreery. Consul-general: ....... | 0.
DO sisters is rar es Juan A:Read ............ Vice-consul-general............[. ooo,
ATU Di oie oteie sive tits ns cibainieis John Hardy. u...0 0. v.. Agent ant aL ot ee Se ent et
MaCoLIS sori = Seana Bdward:C. Reed... ....: Agenht Si rs a Se es
Sanchez.....:.:vve-s.--..... J. Brique Leroux....... Agent !
332 Congressional Divectory.
ECUADOR—FRANCE AND DOMINIONS.
Office. Officer. Rank. Salary.
ECUADOR.
Guagoqnil SA aS Herman R. Dietrich.| Consul-general........... $4, 500
A Robert B.Jones..........|: Vice-consul-gemeral ........... loot 000
Eu de Samus: Sik sa Alberto Santos ...... ... AZCRE io. vl, Lr scree ite dikes fe Stats aisles
Esmeraldas George D. Hedian....... ABER or LS ri whens wees Sl ea eee
Manta or a sees MaxsVoeleker |. nih nl Agel i, sr ra eek reas lke
FRANCE AND DOMINIONS
Algions, Algeria... James Johnston... Consul -.. -. 0.0 2, 500
Se he ey Louis I..T.egembre......[ Vice and deputy consul... ......|.....20
Eh BR ee Re i Re LD John Towlson:, 7 wu u.spsDepatyeonsul. «oo soon Bia
BONE sie ratianish sine George S. Burgess ....... Zo) ah NS Sr a Sel gn NL
Oran Lal a sae Albert H. Elford........: Agent Sn aE
Panis, Tunle. he noes Auguste J. Proux........ Agent on en en SER
Bordeanx.  ..... ......... Dominic. Murphy... Consul .0.....0 0... 4, 000
Oh ER A John Douglas Wise. ..... Vice and deputy consul os
Biarritz nh Frederic B. Gibert...... fp Agent... 0 TE
CGalaigr o.cgl ooo my James B. Milner... ... Consol opm | 3 000
DO i a ee LS en i Herbert: C. Hall... 0-5... Vice'and deputy consul... ... Zl. ora.
Boulogne-sur-Mer William Whitman....... Agent ou sad nA
Cognng cio. i in George H.Jackson. Consul oi. ii iival, 2, 500
BDO ois ene rss eed Elisée Jouard............ Vice and deputy consul ........ |... oo
Goréde-Dakar, Senegal ... 0... 0... 0... Lael Consul sai on, EL 2, 000
Grenoble eS Ne Charles'P. HH. Nasom.f Consul... .... ovo. i 2, 000
ar here a A a Thomas W. Murton......| Viceand deputy consul sents
Guadeloupe, BE Ma Joseph M. Amthiier.. Consul... o.oo. on 2, 000
a eR SEE Joseph O. Florandin.....| Vice and deputyconsul........ ea
Tavs RES eT RA Alphonse Ganlin.”. ..{ Consul... ...... 5 5, 000
Do.. John Preston Beecher...| Vice and deputy consul........|.........
Cherbourg . a Octave Canuet .......... a RE Bn Re Se MOL Si
Henflear S.-i. ios John N. Bourke.......... AGEN Ln Sn sent
St, Malo. oi oat eae Raymond Moulton ...... BEent U0, con hs RT
Limoges. iol en Fugene 1, Belisle: .[ Consul .................; 2, 500
Ot viii re tea at ay as Charles Roy Nasmith ...| Vice-consul..................... bles anit
Tyons.. ...0.. oun Jolin C: Covert... .. Consul vs. a | 5,000
DOs aves eg ......| Thomas Nicoll Browne..| Vice and deputy consul........ espera
Don sre se Nicholas Chapuis........ Agent al ais | ot iy
Marseilles i iv. l Horace I.ee Wash- | Consul-general........... 5, 500
ington. |
DO. St ee eat ri Panl BL. Cram... Vice-consul-general ............ Pan,
BE A ET el Allan Macfarlane ....... Deputy consul-general......... | RR PEA
Bastia, Corsica...... oi Simon Damiani........ NRAgERt iT th LS Si oe ey eee PR ro
Cette: ad cn tine Carl'D. Hagelin... ...... Agentcici Lowi iy no sean I
Tomlom wth ea Benjamin A. Jouve...... Agent i Se ar een Cori,
Martinis Wola sins George B.:Anderson.} Consul =... vv... 00 | 2,500
aR SE Tar Jacques D. Schnegg......| Vice and deputy consul........|.........
Ns Sn Louis: Goldschmidt..! Consul .. 0... ..... | 3,000
PO niin sib amas eas Hiram D. Bennett ....... Vice-consuliznl ciilstin iin lessee,
Angers... oun ann nn Leon Ponsolle 0... Agenito ob onus btn ie ate ha
Brest vu sur R Eee APlel oi a AT ETH i e  i e NE
Niee.-. coin William Dulany | Consul -....... .......... 2, 500
Hunter.
Doissi si iE Barn Harry A. Lyons ......... Vice and deputy consul........[:. ee.
Paviw ooo hee Frank H. Mason....| Consul-general........... 12, 000
DOL Se ees Dean B.Mason........... Viceand deputy consul-general. .........
DOs cr LS Hanson €. Coxe... Deputy consul-general....... la 0000
18 SB Ce ES Ellwood A. Welden...... Deputy consul-general.. ion, oe
Do ns a A DeanB. Mason .......... Consularagent.......c.... con. 1, 800
pra e SE a Ellwood A fWelden...... Consular agent................. 1, 000
Rheims... 0... William Bardel ..... Consul lon danas 1 3, 500
Wout. liao rey Bion:B:1ibby............ Vice and deputy consul........|.........
Roubaix ie Joseph B. Flaven.. | Consul... .....oi i a: 2, 500
Boi. he aaa Gaston Thiery........... Vice-consul... iain Te ae
DO, es nh ee and Alfred C. Harrison ...... Deputy consul «...:... vues
Candry...-.............00 Hans Dietiker. oo iAgent oe. coin oid vt ed
Dunkirk... oa a Benjamin Morel......... nae ep a
Tr Le SS ER pS Christopher J. King ..... TN yh mre IE EL Se TRIN
Bonen... oo Oscar Malmros. . . .. giConsul oo. io ca 2,000
DO dS Re E. M. J. Dellepiane...... Vice-consul...:... oo inl al
Atnlens hie sii Charles Tassencourt..... Agent oi dari Sin rita
DIEPPE viv cries Snide eis Walter P. :S. Palmer=|: Agent i. vias sien no] sie coi sents
Sanborne.
United States Consular Officers. 333
FRANCE AND DOMINIONS—GERMAN EMPIRE.
Office. | Officer. Rank. Salary.
| | FRANCE AND DOMIN- |
1I0NS—continued. |
Srigon, Cochin China. . 5 Jacob E. Conner. Consultee aly $2, ooo
ey a Ho a a ee ae a IRE Louis René Gage . VicerconSil oo rn hn
St. Brienne San ra) William H. Hunt . Comsnl, o.oo 0 if 2, 500
EE CR Ne re Edmond A. Burrill’...... | "Vice and deputy consul ........ fi 0
St. io St.: Pierre Is- Douglas Jenkins... Consul ovo 0, 000 0 2, 000
Pond, |
Taniti Society Islands ...|
GERMAN EMPIRE.
Aix la Chapelle, Prussia . .
Bremen HA Np SER |
Bs, ‘Oldenburg ..........]
Bremerhaven, Bremen...
Breslau, Prussia. ........
D
Coburg, Saxe-C oburg-
Gotha.
Sonneberg, Saxe - Meinin-
gen.
a Prussia......
sia.
Cassel, Prussia... i750. 00 |
Wiesbaden, Prussia .........
Cuxhaven, Hamburg. .... Ei
Kiel, Prussia. .... oo. 0 0
Bibeck. on an
[."W., Porter Boyd..... Sees
| William W. Brunswick. .
| Frederick von Versen ...
[JohmW. Dye... ........
| William B. Murphy......
Julius D. Dreher ..
Homer Tourjée..........
James G. Carter. .
Oscar d’E. de Charmoy..
Pendleton King. ....
William J. Reuters ......
Mason Mitchell.....
C. E. Parkhouse . .
George Fugene Ea-
ger.
Alexander M.Thack-
ara.
Frederic W. Cauldwell ..
Frederic W. Cauldwell ..
John W. Dye..............
Archibald B. Dorman ...
William FC. Fee... ..
Fredk. Hoyermana......
Wilhelm Clemens.......
John H.Schnabel........
Herman I, Spahr...
Richard Wackerow......
Talbot J. Albert. .....
Julius Seckel........ ....
Thomas H. Norton. .
Frederick J. Dietzman ..
Frank Dillingham . .
Matthew C. Dillingham.
Franst €. Meyer.....#....
Hiram J. Dunlap. ...
Charles ILesimple........
T. St. John Gaffney .
Alfred C. Johnson .......
Ulysses J. Bywater .....
Will I. Lowrie .....
Gustav Lauter, jr .
Richard Guenther. .
Charles A. Risdorf ......
Simon W. Hanauer......
Gustav. C.Kothe ..... ....
John B. Brewer... .......
Robert P. Skinner ..
F. H. I,. Mummenhoff...
Otto W. Hellmrich.......
Johann G. F. Starke ..... |
Paul H. J. Sartorl i ...«. 0.
Wolfgang Gaedertz ..... |
Robert J. Thompson.
James M. Bowcock ......
William J. Pike..... |
Carl W. Schmitt..........
66525—60—2—2D ED——23
Vice and: deputy consul. ......00l ..o0.000
Conswly oi oy |
Consul
Vice-consul. roils orn itis
Consul aaa
Vice and deputy consul ........
Consul-veneral........... |
Viceand deputy consul-general |
Deputy consul-general........ : salad raids
Deputy consul-general.........
Consulariagent.;.v... 00500
Consularagent............... A
Consularagent............c...
Consul cdi. ons i,
Conn us ss a |
Vice and deputy.consul........ J...
Consul-genesal. .........
|
Vice and deputy consul-general ...
AGERE ns ea,
Congml 0 vr anid
Vice and deputy consul ........
Consul-general...........
Vice-consul-general . Rd i
Deputy consul- -general.. TRA
Coneulic sian ctor awn
Vice and deputy consul........
A Consul-general... ........
Vice and deputy consui- general
Deputy consul-general .. oa
Ne ER RR Pg en LS |
Agent. rn a aE
| Consul- general... .....
Vice and deputy consul- Jensen}
| De consul-general ..
Agent alin aoa Sissel
Congul se. 0 aa hen |
334 Congressional Directory.
GERMAN EMPIRE—GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS.
Office. Officer. Rank. Salary.
GERMAN EMPIRE—coON,
Leipzig, Saxony... cc... Southard P. Warner. Consul ................... $4, ooo
pr ey CE pe SE Frederick Nachod.......| Vice and Qeputyc consul . er
be ES OR SR Rudolph Fricke .........| Deputy consul. : .
Gera, Reuss Schleitz........ Charles Neuer... .... Ty RE RE ee a ES
Magdeburg, Prussia... .. Frank 8. Hannah. [Consul ." 2, 500
ies md oa a ab a a aT James I. A. Burrell......| Vice and deputy. consul ........J..........
Morseim, Baden... ... Samuel H. Shank... | Consul... ............... 3, 500
EN Joseph H. Iéute.... ....5 Vice-cotsul.... oc toii. on soon dls Soins
Neustadt - an - der - Hardt, | Leopold Blum ........... Agent CR es as
Bavaria. : as
Munich, Bavaria ...... ... Thomas Willing Pe- | Consul-general...........| 4, 500
ters,
DOs a Abraham Schlesinger ...| Viceand deputy consul-general | .........
SRA a Sa LT SN a seen Deputy consul-generalk.........] o.oo.
N nrombers, Bavaria:..... Heaton: W. Harris. ...l Consul on oo iw.iovoa ce, 4, 000
A NE EN Oscar Bock ..............| Viceand deputy consul .........|.........
Plauen, Saxony. bi Carl Bailey Hurst. [Consul .................... 4, 000
es Re a te Richard B. Washington .| Vice and deputy consul ........|[.........
Mo henk hen, Saxony..| W. Bruce Wallace....... Agent vor a Ot a a
Stettin, Prussia. ...... .. Selah Merrill ....... .. Consul |... io iia 2, 500
ADOT at si Sa a Sa Henry Harder........... Vice'and deputy consul... .... of. ios
Danzig, Prussia: ..... Ernst A. Claaszen ....... 2 Ce ali SPS en Ba
Konigsberg, Prussia ........ Alexander Bekhardt... ['Adent oi inn nas lo ah
Swinemiinde, Prussia.......| Wilhelm Potenberg...... Agent oar na laa
Spmbigort, Warttemberg. | Fdward Higgins... {Consul .................. 4, 000
a Ernest Entenmann......| Viceand deputy consul ....... |... ...5
Toingaz, China. =o... Wilbur '[: Gracey ...[[Consul .................. 4, 000
OE ne Se SR ie a a al Ernest Vollmer..........[ Vice and deputy consul ........[. 41...
De Sa re ER a Ernest Vollmer.......... IECEPICICT Vs ass va veins sais niente 1, 000
GREAT BRITAIN AND
DOMINIONS.
Aden, Arabia... hn. uh ail al Consul ii... ...0 ners. 2, 500
TR pe Ne a George M. Gordon....... Vice-consnl,..o. inn avanti ins
Hodelda.. io. dies vaiciiiiinis Erich Lindenmeyer re TANT TE Ree se CAR es REG 0
RueBland, New Zealand. .| William A. Prickitt .| Consul- ~general Aen 4, 500
a a TR I,eonard A. Bachelder. ..[ Vice-consul-general ............|.........
Cs, Frank Graham .......... AGCNL. Ji lini sia sve vei nists ais lies tte Sere
Dunedin... 2 nec ht, Frederick: O. Bridgeman fl Agente. bu ir ran sessions
Wellington... o-oo vee John G. Duncan ......... Agent........... ee
Barbuda, West Tndies ...| Chester W. Martin... Consul ..... .... ......... 3, CO
Hl a Houghton R. Kervey....| Vice and deputy consul fri
in Dominiea iz: Henry A. Frampton... lt Agent................... oof.
St. Lucia’ SIRT nen as se dun 1 William Peter ...........| ‘Agent Fad ee a eee ape hae
SVincent oo. loan lL Ernest A. Richards ...... Agent. lira Ba Sa a Ty
Belfast, Ireland... ..... Samuel. S. Ryaben- | Consul ....-..... ....... 5, 000
shue.
ID rare tat i eine x vedi Soria ele Paul Knabenshue........ Vice-consul...... co no csi baa
D0, hte RA et Edward Harvey ......... ‘Peputy consul, ~..... 0... 00. Lake
Ballymena: o. 0." vic iveciie Wilson MclEeoWn i=. | Agent.i. oon aha ess beige
Londonderry...» 00 oui Philip O'Hagan ......... Agent... alii naan aan,
3s pC ENC Si iB. Ww. Magahan ar Ral ate a Agent... on a Pe, | ET an
Belize, Honduras. ....... William I, Avery... Consul ... 0. ....0 =. | 2,500
ARR NR Be PRE John HH: Biddle...........[ Viceand deputy consul ......=..| ........
Birmingham, England Albert Halstead. .... Consuls. =o. on |" 4, 500
Do. sa Nee Arthur V. Blakemore... Vice-consul’.......0 lot des aad.
Do. st BE Hrnest Harker... o.oo. Deputy consul. .........0.. 25.00 | BRSse Tone
Eidderminster............. James Moston ........... ATS Se BR Re
Redditch r,s William U. Brewer ...... ATT, ri nn in at ve Podie ns
Wolverhampton . ea Edward PB. Cresswell....| Agent... ..i.... 00.00 oi le a
Bombay, India........... BE. Haldeman Denni-| Consul ................... 4, 000
Som.
ie Pn Re aie eT Charles Davis Healy... .[ Vice-consul...........c.o.c.on leon B
Bradord, England RHA ErastnsSheldonDay.fi Consul. ........ co... 0 I 2,500
A Sa ln Re Hi Thomas, .Renton.... ..l' Vice and deputy consul .........[.........
ae en A Richard B. Nicholls..-.. | Deputy consul.......h oo inne
Bristol, Pagland ........ J. Perry Worden.» . Consul ........... 00... 2, 000
Sal he SR en te Richard Castle... };.%....|l Viceand deputy consul...... a+... cei.
Burslon, Bugland....... Fdward B. Walker. .| Consul .......:.......... 3, 000
John H, Copestake
at
5
Office.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DO-
MINIONS—continued.
Chittagong... ior.
gay Alberta...
wick.
Paspeblac: «bee aan nes
Cape Town, Cape of Good
Hope.
Kimberley ...... Ca aaa
Candid, Wales... iii
Cha siotin Prince Ed-
ward Island.
CONTIG ss statis tos nats ibe
Summerside ...... nis
Ealomb, Ceylon. oi
land
imericks Joi vi indie,
Waterford iio. ves
Cornwall, Ontario. . ....
Athlone io nv ining
CalWaY 0. coi cic seveans
Dundee, Scotland. .......
TE Se
Danfermiing, Scotland ...
Ss eR a
Darien, Natal 000.
Galashiels La a A
Fernie, British Columbia. .
Do
Cayenne ... i. iin chins
Paramaribo....... an eas
Sioraiar, Span. oa.
THIEL 1 An ee REN
Bridgewater .
TAVErpool cious tas
Lunenburg, oo oe beni
Hamilton, Bermuda... ...
D ;
United States Consular Officers. 335
GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS.
Officer. Rank. Salary.
William H. Michael.| Consul-general........... $6, ooo
Olin M. Eakins ............ Vice and deputy consul-general.|.... .....
John 1. Brown ........... LO TEA EL RR
E. Scott Hoichkiss..] Consul .................. 3, 000
H. Edgar Anderson ..... Vice and deputy consul... l=. oie
Walter R. Dobbin ...... Agente on SL aaa lh SE
Theodosius Botkin: Consul... o.oo... 0 0 2, 000
Francis BE. Matheson’... [-Vice-eonsul./... =... .... Ja aionl, Colette
Daniel:Bisson...... AGERE ir ee sa ma ae eS
Julius G. Lay ....... Consul-general........... 6, 000
George I,. Foster ........| Viceand gspulye consul- A-general EE
Alpheus F. Williams ....| Agent 2 de Stil RR,
Torin A. Lathrop... J Consul. loon. a. 2, 500
Albert S. Phillips..iv.. J... Vice and deputy consulis.. ol i..00
Franklin DD. Hale'.. l1.:Congul Ln iodo, oui 2, 000
Arthur George Peake ...| Vice and deputy c consul. Eee
Caleb C..Carlton, jr.....= Agen TE
Neil Sinclair... .... i... Agent. oi Sr a a HH
War..C.Leichmann: .Consnl. . Los a. 3, 000
William H. Doyle. ....... Vice and deputyconsul ........... 0...
Henry S. Culver. (Consul. ............ ..... 2, 500
George B. Dawson....... Vice and deputy consul ..... ..c. J... a0
Edmund Ludlow....... Agent vo inn Saha nee
William H. Farrell ...... ASR a Sy re teats
John BE. Hamilton. --iConsul ..... ...... ...... 2, 000
David A. Black .......... Vice and deputy consul........./.... oc.
George C. Cole ...... Consul ox nian tan 5, 000
G. Carlton Woodward. ...| Vice and deputy consul ........|.........
Alfred K. Moe...... Conall. oii 4, 000
Arthur Donn Piatt ...... Vice and deputy consul... |...
John Burgess. ...... i... Ny SRE ER SR J La a
Robert A. Tennant ...... Agent rn Se sila ae
John C. Higgins. as pQonsnl So 4, 000
Allan Baxter.. ei Viceand deputy consul... con 0
William P. Quann.. HE Ey A SR SE DS
Maxwell Blake..... Consnle ooo ean 3, 000
Charles’ Drysdale. ©. 5: Vieeteonsul it... .. coo ada
Tod ockhnsf Innes: anand Ament on nd cn na Set ls, Fier
Bd, 8: Cunningham. Cons .. Loon on 3, 500
Alphyon P. Richardson .| Vice and deputy consul ........ Rr
Rufus Fleming ..... Consul. 5. ain 3, 500
Frederick P. Piatt. ...... Vice and deputy consul... .. lL 0 20 =
John Stalker............. Agente, oa sa aiiae in
Frank C. Denison... Consud:........ 0.00... 2, 000
John R. Pollock ....... 1 Viceconsul........... .u.alni, a Nie
Horace J. Harvey. Consul...» 0.00.0 2, 000
Lewis H. Manly......... Vice and deputyconsul .......0{......
Arthur]. Clave, ..... Consnle 7 3 ce hia 3, 500
Donald Mitchell........ Viceand deputy consul... .....|.........
Charles: Henri Hourrage:l Agent. ............ o.oo LTE eo
Sl Ae Ee SE Be Age a Ta
Richard], Sprague. Consul... .... ....... 2, 500
Arthur D. Hayden....... Vice and deputy consul..... on FIRE
Jolin No McCunn.. {Consul ................... 4, 500
Alfred Middleton........ NVicecomSuly. vv ratii vin an hei ete
Robert: A. Thomson:.....[ Deputy consul...........on vent le
James: Av Tove: ooo Agent i ns ne ve al Se
Peter H. Waddell........ Ager. ea
David F. Wilber ....| Consul-general........... 4, 500
George B. Stephenson... Vice and deputy consul-general|.........
Willian EH. Owen... LliAgenbay,, Ca oh SL SRS
Jason M. Mack..... Agent in a Se
Daniel J. Rudolf.. JAments cs a A RRR ae
W. Maxwell Greene.| Consul .................. 2, 500
Willlam H. Heyl ......... Vice and deputy consul... ......[.5.......
336 Congressional Directory.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS.
Office. Officer. Rank. Salary.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DO-
MINIONS—continued.
Hendiien, Ontario... .-. James M.: Shepard... Consul... ~............... $3, ooo
Tail ae vue Anis hg Vat Richard Butler...........| Vice'and deputyiconsul... .....|...........
Binaitord A Sr Le Martin W. McEwen..... Agent oie ee SR
Galt ae ei James Ryerson .......... ATENL G0 i es coe be sn eis Ae Ret a
Hobart, Tasmania pe Henry D. Baker. .... Consul = .............0 2, 000
Do.. ks Saeraaee sje iCharles Ernest Webster! Vice-consul......o. ... 0 oo 0 ol, Ee
Launceston ER Lindsay Tullock. ....... Agent ou a a
Hengleong, China... Amos P. Wilder..... Consul-general.. .......» 8, 000
a Gm he Ce I Se Stuart J. Fuller..........| Vice and deputy consul-general|. ........
AT SE A Er SE JamesiChue. .. ...... . LAF Interpreter... .. cs ies eieriseis 1, 000
Huddersfield, ¥agland i... Frederick I. Bright. (Consul ..... 7. 00000 3, 000
A I David J. Bailey ..........[. Vice and deputy consul .........[.....
Hull England ERT Walter C. Hamm... | iConsul ........ co 00, 2, 500
I RBroest Ii, Maller... [aVice-consul ....... cov ean so,
ats Transvaal. .| Edwin N.Gunsaulus| Consul .................. 5, 000
i rh Herman A. Toeser....... VICECONBUL sive ase sine va fst let als
Bloemfontein,Orange River | Arthur E. Fichardt ...... Agent. ho Go tae a,
Colony.
Karachi, India ..........
i Jamaica .... .:.
Montego Bay. ...............
Port Morant...... Es
StANTIS Bay La
Savannah-la-Mar ...........
Kingsion, Ontario. .......
Dit re
GE THEE nae eR es a
Loody, Ei hh
St. elens A Sa ANA)
Lenton, England... ...
DOVer:. i. reser esa
Madras, India ............
Mar, Maltese Islands. .
adelide. Lo oa
Fremantle, Western Aus-
tralia. :
Moncton, New Brunswick.
Neweasfle.... oo... 0000
ParrsbOrO ci hci oe nina
Montreal, Quebec. .......
Hemmingford . aie
Huntingdon... ..... freee
Nosson, New Providence.
Wallace C. Bond. ...
Frederick Van Dyne.
William H. Orrett .......
C. M. Farquharson ......
Harry M. Doubleday ....
Cecil C. ILanglois........
Anthony B. D. Rerrie. ...
Ch. S. Farquharson. .....
Howard D. Van Sant
Matthew H. Folger......
Erank Brennan...:..:...
Stephen J. Young .......
Lewis Dexter... ....
Edmund Ward ..........
Charles'H. Faylor.......,
John I.. Griffiths . ...
William J. Sulis..........
William Pierce 2.00...
Ernest I,. Phillips. .......
Robert J. Wynne....
Richard Westacott ......
Francis W. Frigout......
Richard Westacott ......
Francis W. Prescott .....
Nathaniel B. Stewart
William H. Gale. ...
James A. Turnbull.......
Church Howe... ....
John W.’ Thomas ........
FErnald S. Moseley ..... :
John E. Jewell... 0...
Alfred P.Mersill.........
Wilbur K. Bouton ..... 3
George H. Prosser. ......
Frank R. Perrot. .........
Michael J. Hendrick.
Chipman A. Steeves .....
Byron N. Call
Laurence H. Hoke. ......
William Harrison
Bradley.
Patrick Gormamn.........
Robert I. Crane... . @...
Robert Il. Crane. ........
Wellington W. Wark.
John Diheen.............
Julian Potter. .......
Edwin Charles Moseley.
José G. Maura ...........
Samuel M. Sweeting ....
Abner W. Griffin ........
Daniel D. Sargent.......
Congnle ol soins na oy,
Vice-consul.... iii. vias.
Deputy consul. ..... vw... 0 ELS
Coneul'y oo 0 Srna
Vice and deputy consul ........
Deputy consul. w......o 0.0
AgeNtr Vr er ser ae
Consul-general...........
Vice and deputy consul-general
Deputy consul-general.........
Consular agent... i. enil,
Agen. rs crn et a BS
Consular Sin La
Consul 0.0. oan aia
Vice and deputy consul........
Consul
Vice and deputy consul........
Deputy consul....................
Consul... ors ni
Vice consul-general............
Deputy consul-general.........
Congul = oor ates ay
Vice and deputy consul ........
AZENRD oor sa sah he Lie mrs
Agent... 5...
Vice and deputy consul- Zensral =
Deputy consul-general..
Consularagent.................
. a
i
hh
} | 13
United States Consular Officers.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS.
337
Office. Officer. Rank. Salary.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DO- |
MINIONS—continued.
Newcastle, New South
Wales.
Brisbane, Queensland ......|
Townsville, Queensland.. .|
Newcastle-on-Tyne, Eng-
land.
Carlisler i oneness
Sunderland... .. oo 0.0
West Hartlepool. . :
Niagara Falls, Ontario .
Derby: oh ial
Leicester:..... fos dn son an
Orillia, Ontario. .........
0 EL MS Sala
North Bay, Nipissing .......
Parry Seuna i. ois
Ottawa, Ontario... ......
Do
Arnprior . ile
Owen Sound, , Ontario. are
Ca
St. Marys, Scilly Islands .
Port Antonio, Jamaica . .
Port Maria.
Port Elizabeth, Cape of
Good Hope.
Do.. I nh
East London. ..... el
Port Louis, Mauritius . . . |
Do Sirona
Prescott, ‘Ontario ........ |
TIAN
Rangoon, India... .......
Rimouski, Quebec .......
Edmundston. .
St. John, New Brunswick .
Fredericton .....
St. John’s, Newfoundland. |
Port aux Basques .
St. Jolin 8, Quebec. eine
St. HN New Bruns-
wick.
Dol a aR
Campobello Island.
Sandakan, British North |
nen,
| John EK. Foster ...........
I John Banfield, jr... .....
George B. Killmas-
fer.
J. Asbury Caldwell......
David J. Brownhill ......
Horace W. Metcalf . .
Hetherington Nixon ....
Thomas S. Strong .......
‘Thomas A. Horan........
Hans C. Nielsen
William H. H. Web-
ster.
Neville B. Colcock..... ...
Frank W. Mahin. .
William Force Stead....
Chomas HH. Cook... ..nm.
Charles KX. Eddowes.....
Samuel S. Partridge .... |
Harey P. Dill... ...
Robert H. Jupp... «vu
Ronald EF. White.........
Edgar C. Wakefield... ...
Walter R. Foot...........{
John G. Foster... ... |
Horace M. Sanford .
James J. McBride. . A
Augustus G. Seyfert. |
William I". Robertson. .
Joseph G. Stephens. .|
John J. Stephens. .......
F
|
Nicholas R. Snyder. |
Daniel H. Jackson.......
Alfred Savariau. . |
Robert Brent Nodes.
Charles J. Wright. ... {
William H. Fuller.......| A
Samuel C. Reat..... |
Robert F..Snceden’......
Martin R. Sackett .. .|
JamesiBuckly ...........
William W. Henry . |
Frank S. Stocking .......|
Charles M. Barclay......
George FE. Beaudet.......|
Ernest A. Wakefield. |
Frederick M. Ryder.
Michel Ringuet, jr....... |
Thomas T. Hammond. . |
J. Adolphe Guy..
Gebhard Willrich .
| Vice and deputy consul-general |.
Agen i a Sn alate
Omar E. Mueller........ |
James S. Benedict. . .
Henry F. Bradshaw .....
James W. Keating......
Charles Deal.....  ..
John Donaghy...
| James T. Sharkey:-.-..... |
Charles A. McCul- I
lough.
Charlie N. Vroom ......"
John J. Alexander... ..
Orlando H. Baker. ..
John Wardrop . A
Charles Francis Giddy 4
Agents alo. asa Ras
Agent a Te
Agents. ht aT
Vice and deputy consul........
Cones. Creo ar i
Vice and deputy consul ........|.
Deputy consul.....i. 0... RANI
ATZERET Avex etureie
Consul-general...........
Congal oo. olan
PATENT Ll sian adn ae [CR
Vice and deputy consul... of... 00 Ms
ATEN Cr RS LE RE CR
Consul ..
Vice and Jeputy consult SEES
Agent % AA
Consulc oh Dimas
Consulo. un 0 vi
Vice and deputy consul ........
Consuls iia ini pny
Agent wi. ior any a od
Const. va i ies
Agent... 0... ll a
Agentoos: ni ose Pn
Vice-ConSulis: inhoud lv car ah be nd ae,
TT) Ee Sa I Rh ut
Consul on. Lr oh 2, 000
Vice and deputy consul ....... er
Comsull. =. aes nh 2, 000
| Vice and deputy consul . bo
Agent. . ovr sane dustin hs
Se 3, 000
Vice-consul. wie Livin nada iia ns
Agent, ow vo Ea nn nl a
338 Congressional Directory.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS.
Office. Officer. Rank. | Salary
GREAT BRITAIN AND DO- |
MINIONS—continued. |
Bain, Ontario... .... Neal McMillan ..... Comal... ion. v.00 cu - = 590
El a a RS Arthur J. Chester. ......:" Vice and deputy consul... ...
chicos pe HE RE a A. 0. Pattison... Agen, i ra Re aT es
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario.| George W. Shotts... | Consul .................. 2, 500
ROSS mal SBN John N. Fairbairn....... Vice and deputy consul ..:.... J. c.ii
Sudbury... David M. Brodie’....... .. FATent of ra ne sn ew al
Bheffiels, England... ... Charles N. Daniels. | Consul. 0 0 000 3, 000
A a Sn IMS Herbert Hughes:........[-Vice:consul. vin oi. woos i ativan
De im ay eR Sr es Tuther J. Parr: rs Deputy consul... Lo Ln Se
Barnsley rhs ata Charles McNaughton. Sel ATent ae Ls se a ab saa
Bheilimooks, Quebec. ... ... Panl Lang. 0... 0% Consul... inks aus 3 5C0
A ne ee Re George KE. te .......| Vice and deputy consul Sites
Ei resent WIA B, Given. ic oo. AGEN. a sh ah ies
Megantie: a... vrai Henry W. Albro......... AGEL, i ri er
Stanstead: Junction ......... Hoel 'S. Beebe.....:...... Agent cour, hans Sat ed a,
Waterloo. : Charles M. Fastman..... Agent... on na sina Sv hr
Blerrn Leone, West Africa.| William J. Xerby. | Consul... no. sis 2, 000
EP Sor Ot LT AN John R. King. .~.. oo. ela Vice-consul cor sn nia at asa
Sinko, Straits Settle- | Thornwell Haynes ..| Consul-general........... 4, 500
ments.
1 PE I Geo. E. Chamberlin...... Vice and deputy consul-general| .........
Penang... ae Otto:Sehule. Cc. i, ra ER RE Br BERL
Soufnampion, Fugland,..[ Albert W, Swalm (Consul... ...o roi 4, 500
rs Tr ea Richard Jones...........| Vice and deputy cont re Ra le
ie oh Dh Es patie William Carey iat lA menlo i. ooo Cri ies v danas ve asin deteioss
JEeEsey ny sr E.B.Renouf.... =. xn...% Agent AB a ate are ir Se
iPostsmenth:. . ... nn John Main. .... a5. ATOLL Sh aes See Re ni
Weymouth. ................. Brederick W. Buller... Agent o.oo. oo anh ro a,
Suva, Bil Islands. nll San cata m Consul 70 an 2, 000
BO a a ses Jeslie BE. Brown ......... VICE COMBE. is ainsi sesame tiyaiss a alsiote
Bwansen, Wales oo. Jesse Hl. Jolmsoer. ...[ Consul ©... ...0........... 3, 000
RC He William D. Rees... .... [Vice and deputy consul........|.........
sydney, Nova Scotia. .... John EB. Kehl....... Consul onan aro 3, 000
rE a KY John BE. Burchell ......iiliViece-consul.. coon see nila n sons
Tae : Alfred W. Hart.......... TE RRA lS ree i es
LL OMISDUYE. on ae seer Henry €.V. Te Vatte... [iL Agent. oor Ln) se. a eile?
Pletou.:. 0. ais ain. John'R. Davies.... ..... LV EE aN Le Ee Li die saved
Port Hawkesbury. .......... AlexanderBain.......... ETI hve ses a a [oemenns
Syaney, New South Wales.| John P. Bray........ Consul-general........... 5, 500
ler RL ie Harold I. Hughes i CL iVice-constle is oo. i cif tei
Noli: Island on. en Isaac Robinson ....... Pal ATent. Ltn en
Toronto, Ontario......... Robert: S: Chilton, jr.iiConsal yo... 0h oof 4, 000
10 Sr eS ee a David S.Fovell ........ Viceand deputy consul 00 i teil
Peterborough .............<. FrankJ. Bell... 5.c..5. Agent oan nn RN Re Le
Trinjdod, West Indies. obo i i 500 Consul ..o. cov th, 3, 000
i ne IE Sl TR Spencer J. Kirton iii [vVice-consul. rat igen
Sida SEE AE EE ATR PosJe Dear. i doin Agent. un manna inden ileasgan
Turks Island, West Indies.| Joseph A. Howells... Consul ............... =. 2, 000
DO. ci ees W. Stanley Jones........ Viee-consul...n is siete Sa
Cockburn Harbor. . Cleophas Hunt Durham. [P Agents i... sisi sev sien ole coisivnioto.
Salt Cay .................... Daniel F. Harriott....... Agentons. ona iii dimnihals vias
Vancouver, British Colum- George N. West... Consul-general ....... 4, 500
: bia. $
BOs nt nian ron dates rh isnsinnts Harry BH. Phillips =.=: Vice-consul-general............J..0.....
DO ae on wr eva steers eies Alfred E. Galpin ........ Deputy consul-general......... 3
Nelsons... oni) loth, Walter S. Riblet..... ..... on ree er RR BRE Sm
Victoria, British Columbia | Abraham E. Smith ..| Consul .................. 4, 000
os eR Sa a ee a Rs Robert M. Newcomb. ...| Vice and deputy consul NET
Chenialons i sr et Et Albert Lee Palmer...... NTE a Re nl ee eas
Camberland ..-o......0... George W. Clinton: .........". ATENE Ln eee seas Cat RA rere
NaANGIMO: 0 ie anew Joseph 1. Pashley :...... PT aa ee Ea RE Be Bs
Windsor, Ontario. ....... Harry A Copant:. Consul. =. 7. 0 2, 500
Do.. aa Daniel Chater... 25h Vice and deputy consul... .....[.... oq
Winuipeg, Manitoba. . ... John Edward Jones .| Consul-general........... 4, 500
ir Rl eR MN Carli R. 1L,00p ...........=j Viceand Bepuiye consul-general.|.........
Ly SN I Duncan Snrthor.. Agent. = ATA ENE
Fort William, Ontario...... C.W. Jatvis...o A. wives Agent . a ae Ale rey ae ST ae ven ee ee] A ate eth
Gretna . Sates neni eMac LONG. viv tvs AGEN ei Se
Kenora, Ontario oi. John Dean... ico. 0, AEN ee ees eA oy
North Portal ,Saskatchewan! W. H. Dorsey............! Agent ..........................L.ooeeee
Te a
hd
iiss
SER
A
di
AY
Nos
am
United States Consular Officers. 339
GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS—ITALY.
Office. Officer. Rank. Salary.
GREAT BRITAIN AND DO- |
MINIONS—continued.
Yarmouth, Nova Scotia...| Alired J. Fleming... Consul .................. $2, 500
POS vise teins sient ros poll g- HY Watson 5000 Vice and deputy consul... ..-.of-... 0.0.
Annapolis Royal............ Jacob M. Owen .......... Ament ss nS Ee
Barrington Passage. ......[ ‘ThomasW. Robertson ..| Agenti-.........o.....cc. 000 (a
DIghY Sane sen William B. Stewart. ..... FEET RE SN Re EE
GREECE.
Athens... oo 000. George Horton... ... Consul-general.......... 3, 000
DOL Si re a Bernard-Melissinos:.:.. .[/ Vice-consul-general ............[L.0 0
Bireeus ol i nee [SC Bermard-Melissinost. Lr Agent. ........ vn Lat Laan LL SC
Patrog. ona Edward I. Nathan... Consul .................. | 2,000
10 3 Ten KE ee FR ...| Haworth J. Woodley..... Vice-consSul... i. or. ste ba ia, Loi id
(TS 0 LO SR ty hea ei Ee Charles FE. Hancock ..... Agent oon ri Taira ee
|
GUATEMALA.
Guatemala... ...... 0. William P. Kent ....| Consul-general...........| 3,500
Or a RE a William Owen... ....:.. Vice and deputy consul-general .........
Champerico......-a wi... Carl CG Heltman wv. n H-Amentii sm vali sii sas
Tivingston . ov. oe os Edward Reed ............ Avent rn Beas
OGO8: EL va Sh Samuel Wolford dirs Agent i cna rsd einen
San José de Guatemala ..... Frank Sims Swan ....... Agent oni ris Sr Rn ER
HATLIL. |
Capo Haitlen ... i... i. Temuel W. Living-[ Consul, ................ 2, 000
ston. ;
DOL nth 0 ind Cream sa Otto EB. Schiitt:.....L..... Vice-consul.. eo. oun aviv, |i
GONBIVER, viievs  onons saan J- William Woél........... EE a a Loti.
Postde Paix ni... cain? CarbAbegg Lotion Ament, ro. [os shan
Portaw Prince. ..:........ Jolin B. Terres... ... Consnl ET | 3,000
Dts san sh re bon ie Alexander Battiste ......! Vice and deputy consul ........ lian ads
BUT CAYER. cen de lewis Adolph Strehm .... :... Agent. vr A Le aan HE she
Jaemel ol no ia nA TouisVital...... canis, Agent, Sh sree Di Se boluses
Jeremie vat sad soi aian nis a rnicn St. Charles Villedronin....| Agent... c...coa.. nie suns on snide AE
Miragoane...... co vada (< BEmiliGoldenberg inl Agent ic 0 i ee nis Elavil
Petit Goflive- =... ... ess 1. Kampmeyer........ i. Agent iy
|
HONDURAS. |
; . Cota... ois, Drew linard. ....... Consul. a sGsvi abn | .2,000
|B Dep e SS SE Virgil C. Reynolds....... Viceconsuli. tov. oo on ai dee. oats
IBONACER vist cts inn slim dtm tine Sandy Kirkconnell...... Agent liana. Pe Be I
Roatan. ....cccsemicinsi aie Samuel Grant... eR a i boss areas
Bela hi anni ond Wallace CoHutehinson. J Agent... coo ou. vans ian
Mraxillo. ovis. rah, John T. Glynn........... Agent. i dss see Ae Sa
Puerto Cortes .............. Albert W. Brickwood, i Consul =o... 0), | 2, 500
jr;
Ten ee i Te Albert G. Greeley .......| Vice and deputy consul........|
SanPedro Sula. .........0 5. J-M. Mitchell, jr......... Agent. oon ln aa og PEER
Tegucigalpa. ...........; William B. "Alger... Consul... 0. ao 0 | 2,500
DOR in a mer tt rae aes Benjamin D. Guilbert...| Vice and deputy consul........ is
AMapAla 0. ree William Heyden......... Agents a a NS SORRELL
San Juancite.....5 on... Joseph M. De Hart...... Agent i iin cr, Urns
ITALY.
Florence... .:....o. vs Jerome A. Quay. .... Consul... TRTEaLE en [3,000
PO se ian ras ae John Val. Jackson........ Vice and deputy consul....... hl... 0.
Bologna ri ais Carlo Gardini............ AGEN ag aS
Benoa... Lo James A.-Smith..... Constl-general...... ..... 4, 500
ee I Sa Viceconsnl.... on Gain SAR Raat
By a CS EC Re I EVE Angelo Boragino........ Deputy.consul.....-. coir na any
SAN REMOT. rea es Albert Ameglio.......... Agent. ve se eae.
Teghorn ............. Ernest A. Man...... Conall. oh ad a | 3,000
DO. 7 nis «iets sieieie wi unis = AldenMarch....... 0. 5. Vice and deputy consul ........ [Shee nants
Carrara. re or ed Beets Ulisse Boccacel on... ah Agent. co Ll aaa
Nessina: ool oven ar inion en aN Consnll unions sii, 2, 000
DO: re inne eae as Joseph H. Peirce ........| Vice and deputy consul........ rere
Milan =. 5 SRR James FB. Dunning | Consul... uh 4, 000
DBO ees a eet Bayard Cutting, jr ....... Vice and deputy consul...... Jf... ...
340 Congressional Directory.
ITALY—MEXICO.
| Office. Officer. | Rank. Salary
: I
| ITAT,Y—continued.
Naples. v0 ai Caspar S. Crownin- Consul --:-.............. $4, ooo
shield.
DOs Soh Shs i eR aa Lucien Memminger ..... Vice and deputy consul ........l.........
ES Eee Te LR ER Lucien Memminger ..... I Consularagent.........< Ji... 1, 000
RE Ee Henry M. Hadght'.. a loAgent 0 no Lan rh Siiins
Caps nr a NE Thomas Spencer Jerome.| Agent.................LL LLL
Palermo... i William H., Bishep..| Consul =. 2... ..... 3, 500
DO i aa a a Giovanni Paterniti ..... .| Vice and deputy consul ........|.........
Rome... cn oe Chapman Coleman ...{ Consul -........ ... ...... 3, 500
Ei er ae re Homer M. Byington..... Viceand deputy consul. .... 5 lt 0k
LB HR SR al en Sn I Re Se Deputy consul-general...... it. oii
ae Ur Sn Homer M. Byington..... Consularagent..... .....0. ot 1, 600
i Ee Albert H. Michelson. Consul .................. 2, 000
BO tn Sw SE Hugo Pizzotti........... | Vice-consul...... aan
Venlo! oo ian lays James Verner Long..| Consul :.............. = 2, 000
BOL ens aan Alexander Thayer...... | Vice and deputy consul ....... .........
JAPAN.
Dany, Manchusia.......| Roger S, Greene =. \{ Consull.................. 3, 500
SA SL ET ST [oereseeiiinaiiiiaiiieen | Viceconsul......co.ee oan lL
Kobé ia ne SL) | John H. Buodgios F Consul. 0... ooo, 5, 000
Do ..| Walter Gassett . 22 Vice and deputy consul ..>%... Sb. LLL 0
Fh Te ee Gn A I Walter Cassett ......... Interpreter sc. can nie ea 1, 800
Nagasakl 0 0.0 George H. Seidman, Qonenl oon pony 3, 500
De nr ET | Carleton Miller . i= Vice and deputy consul... i... la J
D0 fr Re im eas |" Carleton Miller... .;..... Interpreter... ... oan 1,200
Seon], Korea ............ | Thomas Sammons. ..| Consul-general........... 5, 500
| Era ne GEE Se | Gordon Paddock........ | Vice-consul-general............}.....
DARE Si aa 1 Ozro/C..Gould............ . iConsularagent......... i... 1, 000
IT Se TB Ee a PET Interpreter... ....... oc. ....... 500
Tamsui, Formosa ........ {Carl FF. Deichman:. | Consul... ........... 3, 000
Oo ts ey ars a G. Padgett Tayler'....... Vice and deputy consul ......l....0.
Yokohama. .............. Henry B, Miller... .|:Consul-general.... ....., 4, 000
Do. eee cee nn Blwood C. Babbitt... | Vice and deputy consul-general . Sek
Dobe. os a sh Tenyy Bo Albright Lf Deputy consul-general, lL. ooo
Do.. . | Elwood G. Babbitt ...... [Interpreters n.d 1, 800
Hakodate. ih oy (“Hdward Julian Ring... Agent... .. or cantata an,
|
KONGO, INDEPENDENT |
STATE OF. La | Boma.................. William W. Handley | Consul-general........... 4, 500
Do - Milton B. Kirk.......... Vice and deputy consul- general| a a'e lero
Do - Milton B.Kirk........... li'Consular agent... ..... =... 0 1, 000
LIBERIA
Monrovia -............... Ernest Lyon........ Consul-general........... Se
Do.......... ea John IG Reed. ........... Vice-consul-general............ | SE int
MEXICO. |
Acapulco, Guerrero. . .. ... Maxwell BK. Moore-{ Consul .................. 2, 500
head.
Dove Harry K. Pangburn..... Vice and deputy. consul ....... |... = =...
Aguascalientes, Aguasca- | Walter D. Shaugh- | Consul .................. 2, 000
lientes. nessy.
DO........ceceeaaarecnran.. Frank T. Anderson...... Vice and:deputy consul........[.........
Zacatecas ..... irate ates Le weit oi aa etal a ale ie es san Re gent Ln ann east
Chihuahua, Chihuahua... Tewis A. Martin ....[ Consul ...... ............ | 2,500
Re RN Seiad Charles M. Leonard ..... Vice and deputy consul Heimat
Pasral..................0... James J. Tong. ......... Agent inl oni an a
Sinden Juarez, Chihuahua.| Thomas D. Edwards.| Consul .......0.......... | 2,500
RR RS RC BN John W.Gourley.........|: Vice and deputy consul.........I.........
Ciudad Porfirio Diaz, Co- | Luther T. Bllsworth:| Consul. ...... ....... i... 2, 500
ahuila. |
Lr a a BS Ei John A. Bonnet, jr.. .| Vice and deputy consul........ fsa
Darengs, Durange....... Charles M. Freeman. Consul .................. 2, 000
AR Ral Le A Walter C. Bishop. .......| Vice and deputy consul.........l...5.. ...
Toreson A Tra George C. Carothers..... | Agentiog ih ial noe ri a
Pe
———
Office.
MEXICO—continued.
Hagonada, LowerCalifornia
Guadalajara, Jalisco. .....
Hermosillo, Sonora. ......
Alamos i... bs. eda
CUAYMIAS. ei ei his
La Paz, Lower California.
D
Topolobam po edna Se
Mexico, Mexico..........
OATACA +e viverra as
Puebla: os asa
Gananea:....... oo. 0...
Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas.
HES on ee AL Cy
Laguna de Terminos........
Solin Cruz, Oaxaca. .....
San 1 ak Potosi, San Luis
Potosi.
Tampico, Tamaulipas. . . ..
Do
Victoria ....... rr. en
Tapachula, Chiapas... ...
Veracruz, Veracruz... ....
CoatzacoalCos :. vows sv eins
Mlacotalpan..... io.
MOROCCO.
Casa Blanca. ..c.. coin. he
Mogador... a aid
NETHERLANDS AND
DOMINIONS.
Do. SRT
Macassar, Celebes oi.
Padang, Sumatra.... ......
Samarang...... Ca Sn
United States Consular Officers. 341
MEXICO—NETHERLANDS AND DOMINIONS.
Officer. Rank. | sotary.
|
Bverelt EB. Bailey -.[ Consul... ........ y | $2, ooo
GL aa Vice and deputy consul ...o......[0 ln
Alphonse J. Lespi- Consul ................ 0. | 3,000
nasse.
Charles W. Rickard...... Vice and deputy consul Ha Soro
Samuel B: Magill 1: Consul’... 1 i. | 3,500
Louis Hostetter... ... Comal. net os oir, | 2,000
Robt. S. Van R. Gutman.| Vice and deputy consul... ..... [i
Marion 8 MacCarthys. ele Reenter head
Charles: D. Faylor i: il Agent. br. nods sai snags, foie n ool
George. McCoogan|- Consul... ........_:... | 2,000
William Silver........... Viee-consul:, oo Ln huni (reas
ArmininsT. Haeberle| Consul... .... -. . ...| 2/000
Richard M. Stadden. ...| Vice and deputy consul ........ ome in
Clarence A. Miller. .| Consul... ............., i 2,500
J: Bielenberg ............ lsVice-consul.... 5 co an ais nada
TLounis Kaiser... Congnl a lia, 500
Gustavus A. Kaiser...... Vice and deputy consul ........ Fes any
Johp G. Dawkins. . Agent . a
Benjamin H. Ridgely Consul-general . . Re a | 6,000
C. Piquette Mitchel...... Vice and deputy consul-general | NE
Norman Rowe........... Agent vc ov dan Se a At
Ezra M. Lawton......... CY ie Se | SE Sa
William Headen ........ Adel. oo alone ne arta
Philip C. Hanna ... .{ Consul-general.........., | 3,500
T. Ayres Robertson...... Vice and deputy consul-general | .........
Samuel T. Lee ...... | Consul..." eat 2,500
Richard H. Clarke, sr....| Vice and tanuive consul....... fac tl am
J. B. Breathitt...... .....0- Agent ARRAS
Alonzo B Garrett | Conenl +... | 2,500
James Gl Buse...i. a. Viceandi deputy consul ........1...~ ....
Fdwd. HH. Thompson. Consul .................. [3,000
Raymond'A. Williams. .[Vice-consul ......................[... 2.
Rafael Ramirez. ......... AOENE Co Sl es ae fiir
Robert S: Boyd........... Ey A ar Ear
C. Ludlow 3 vingston Congr hay ny | 2,000
Warren W. Rich... .. Vice and deputy consul... 70... 4.00.
Thomas W. Voetter..| Consul ...... rire 2, 000
John R.Silliman......... Yiceand deputy consul’... . ..[.....
George A. Bucklin; { Consul .......... ....... | 2,500
jr.
P, Merrill Griffith... Consul. ......c........... | 3, 000
Russell H. Millward..... Viceconol on oe is. Soh sw de Nh SG,
A Ts pe Agent eae Se
a Consul ji... 0 er0e0
WilllamW. Canada... Consnl .............. 0... | 4,500
BErestol ux... ......... Vice and deputy consul... ...{........%
Alired Roland Stubbs. | Agent i... a | a
Be RS EE So, Agent... .... EE EERE EPR
A Consul-general.. .........[0 3 500
George Bi. Holt: .......... Vice and deputy consul-general|.........
oer eis ante a Sietatie a Fria t ruta ya eT Interpreter... 0. anand 8oo
Conrad HH. Toel.......... Agent ne STN Loose
George Broome... ...... ATONE nor eer es nr a Ea
Henry FH, Morgan. . [Consul ................., 5, 000
Walter A. Manice........ Viceanddeputyconsul ....... |...
| BradstreetS. Rairden | Consul... 0.000 3, 000
|<-1,eopeld’ 1}. Haasmann [= Vice-consul..... soon Sanh Loa
‘Wiebe P. de Jong.......: Agent Li a en aa
Johann Schild..o... ...... Agente a A RS
B. Caulfield-Stoker ...... Agent. a RL ON
Benjamin’N. Powell... Agent... evans Selere Scerabaya wv... vie ive. |
342 Congressional Directory.
NETHERLANDS AND DOMINIONS—PERU.
Office.
|
i
Officer.
NETHERLANDS AND DO-
MINIONS—continued.
Curacao, West Indies . ...|
Do Elias H. Cheney
Christoffel S. Gorsira....
|
|
|
Rank.
Consul ....5
Vice-consul . yw 0
Agent . RE
Consul- general . heals
Vice and deputy consul-general
Deputy consul-general
HE Ely a SB SE i ea Se
Bonaire i aaa Gottlob Ww. Hellmund...
Botterdam .............0.. Soren Iistoe .... ...
Do CH RST ESO ia Edward P. Theobald.....
a aa ey Leonard Xoot...... ..-.
Plain OR RE Pieter Fo Auer. .......-
Luxemburg, luxemburg Brnest Derulles..........
Schiedam ..... ean Anders €C.'Nelson.......
NICARAGUA.
Bluefields . . ... else Rd or NR A
Cape Gracias d Dios. ...... Edwin W. Trimmer. .
10 li pe Sea Ber A William H. Seat ........
Corinto ros Co nm a
DO. esis oh aie aatlo Cr nisin Henry H. Leonard valet
Manggna: i... on José de Olivares. . ..
Doi rr i eee Henry Caldera. .........
Matagalpa’.. o.oo donne William H. De Savigny. .
San Juanidel Sur. ...........[- Charles Holmann........{
NORWAY.
Borgen =... 0.0. ; Felix S. S. Johnson. .
Bs AE Sit Johm A. Merkle.........
DIO. ce Se wah we elt Thorvald K. Beyer ......
Christiania’... .......... Henry Bordewich . ..
LR SE dN CS | MichaeliAlger’. .........
Chrisfiansand........ 5. i. Berne Reinhardt ........
Trondhjem.....500 0 0.0 Claus Berg..............
Stavanger... 0. Bertil M. Rasmusen. .
TR SR Kt CB Balen
OMAN
Maskat =. or il se
ea CE Mahomed Fazel ........
PANAMA
Colon: oo. James C. Kellogg ...
IY dee eee Le el Ts Jesse:M. Hyatt... ......
Bocas del Torow..i.... Sue.) Louis F. Ryan.. Sh ohiets os
Panama... 2h on Arnold Shanklin. ...
10 IT Ree Re a a Felix Ehrman... ........
a Bn eh 0 a
SANIAGO) Sui smn ean Nathaniel T. Hill. .......
PARAGUAY |
Asuncion: .............. Fdward J. Norton...
BRET SE re a |: Henry V. Plate -...... i
PERSIA
Mable oo. 5 omnes, William F. Doty ....
Feleran nl Si sae, John'Pyler:. ...........0..
PERU.
Calla oo ae Samuel M. Taylor...
a le SEA ET C. Hamilton Jones .....
Cerro de Paseo... .............| | Joseph H. Fleming. ie
Fen one a es .| Juan A. Ioredo.. sivas
Mollendo. os vis ona Enrique Meler:.........
alta ii. ann | Charles B. G. Wilson....
Salaverry ............ rear...| Cecil H. H. Caldicott....
Iquitos TR LS a nad Ra
| Louis Edgar Sanceau....
Consnls wou ilatiihan
Comenl oa
Vice-consul 0 i arava |
Consul. ia
Salary.
Vice'and deputyiconsul...... 0...
Consul
Vice and goputy: consuls, cl Al Ser
Agent. Te Ce
Agent Lo...
Consal =. an SE
Vice and deputy consul......... [roi vain,
Deputy. consul.a..... i. fe.
Consul-general.....v.....
Vice-consul- genet.
Agent . os
Consul: hi aaa
Vice and deputy consul ........ fan
Consul bon nod suai
Vice and deputy consul ... .....
Agente. coon i nie,
Consul-general. ........0..
Vice-consul-general ...........
Deputy consul-general.........
Agent Lot, th
Consul. tar i cin
Vice-consul.. oie. coi ia
Consul...
Agent... Co iar £5
Consul-general
Viceand deputy consul.........
United States Consular Officers.
PORTUGAL AND DOMINIONS—SPAIN AND DOMINIONS.
343
Office. Officer. Rank. Salary.
PORTUGAL, AND DOMIN-
IONS.
Tishon: os nda adh, Tounis HH, Aymé. .... Consul-general........... $3, 500
ITT rE I Ln RE Charles BE. 1 Serre.i:.... | Viceand depity o consul-general|.........
Oporto: nat nan [* William H. Stuve.. ..... gen RA ee
St. Vincent, Cape Verde J: BrGuimaraes... i... ATE a
Islands. :
Lourengo Marquez, East | W.. Stanley Hollis... Consul... oo. a 5,000
Afvien, | |
rer DE ES eR Se Te EE RT ER ET Se ud Be Se Se eR TO ES
St. Michaels. Azores. .... | Bdward A.Creevey. [Consul .......... 0.0. vinx | 3,000
DO. eee ra es “Wm, W. Nicholls... -... .]. Viceand'deputy consul. .... .}..5 ai
Hayalt in nia in i. i Moyses Benarus.. Jona dd Agentas Ln LL naa Lai ERR
Flores Shilo vanepr ames Mackay Li oh in AEEALE, Pron onl siin oe onion an isin) isoe sisearain
San Jorge J... ov viii fev | Joaquin J. Cardozo ...... Boent rl e Se
Berceira. wt on a [ Thomé de Castro... Agenb oo on a
ROUMANTIA.
Bucharest... ... 5... ....... Norman Hutchinson.| Consul-general...........|.......
1 A RE EE A Tl Wm. G. Boxshall........| Viceand deputy consul- general fo,
RUSSIA :
Batam... ona Alexander Tleingart-| Consul .................... 2, 500
ner,
D0 oS ea ea Emerio Mattievich ...... Viceseonsul. ci on a vnaii aid oiaas
MOSCOW... o.oo ve Hunter Sharp... ... Consul-general........... 5, 500
DIO oi iii anniv ibe ieee Harry Suslow............ Vice-consul... 5 eit oa, Te FRE
OmslEie.e eco rn nen Adolph F. Reinecke..... AGENL ci hee na anes eT,
Odessa... ........ BALE John H..Grout...... Consul... evi... 3, 500
18 en i Alfred W. Smith......... Vice and deputy consul | te Nr
Rostoff-on-Don.............. George R. Martin........ Agent oe a ea RE
Bigs a Le Hernando de Soto... Consul. ..........~ ...., I* 2,000
eS  ehwrar eh Somes os Jaurance Hill ..........| Vice and deputy.consul........1....0.
St. Foiorsburg eine Jamies W. Ragsdale. :| Consul ..-............... 3, 500
TR SR H. CustisiVezey...........| Viceand deputy consul..=..... |.
Ale ad a i Ry Moritz Kramer .......... AGERE i or a ee Ne se
Cronstadl,. co iia Peter Wiglus +... v0.00 ABER a RS RRA Bats og
Helsingfors, Finland ....... Victor Bl... Asentiant Ln re aE rR
Da a RR A PR i ls a a a AGEL. or a a SS bo
Bevel. oh hia ahinas Christian Retermann <.:[vAgent nuh 0 Gian anh ey,
WIbOrg 5 i ian sins C. Edwin Ekstrom ...... 2 EA A I J ee ET ER
Vladivostok, Siberia... ... Lester Maynard... .. Consuls o.oo. 3, 500
DOs. wins sei hai Nicholas Gray. ......... Vicerconsul =, vo cin nies nin
OS OR I EP DS ls Ihierpreter.. i. to. Jon dnd nd | 1, 200
Warsaw oe George NE Consul... .. 0, 4, 0CO
SR IR ORE RS ES RN Witold Buchs. cd. Vice-conanloi. Lo. lanai onan bh Sr an
SALVADOR |
San Salvador ...........: Arthur Hugh Brien. Consul-general ......
ats oe we ieee re wale eter rk ee John J. Ernster.. Sa Vice- consul-general Ea Eel Oe
SERVIA |
2 A
Belgrade... 0 Roberts. S. Bergh. Consuls... Jo. ov... | 3, 000
10 er A SU AIR Woislav Perovich........ Vice-consul. oho. ulna, fis iniria hs
STAM.
Bangkok... .. =. i... 0. fsa Consul-general.... ...... | EE A
re Ee I Ee BR Ge en Vice-consul-general............ | biota oH
|
SPAIN AND DOMINIONS |
Bareelons loos. Frank Di HEL... Consul-ceneral........... | 5,500
DOs i i i aah William Dawson, jr...... Viceand deputy consul-generall.........
Bilbao ian | Iouis Karakadze....... ent cL aa a eae
Palma de Mallorca......... | Lorenzo Roses y Sira- Agent Re ERR EE Pa BT
; gusa. :
San Feliu de Guixols.......| Francis Esteva .......... Agent vo A I SG a
Santander... 0. san. Baustino Odriozola.:;.... Agent :
PATTAZONA.  (ovvies eric vr iiain Touis J.;Agostini ........ Agent... oni sade al sesnain
344 Congressional Directory.
SPAIN AND DOMINIONS—TURKEY AND DOMINIONS.
Office. Officer. Rank. Salary.
SPAIN AND DOMINIONS—
continued.
Feros. de la Frontera... ... Percival Gassett. .... Conertl Jai wnaanah $2, 500
ER Ae iy Eman’l W. Fernandez...| Viceand deputyconsul.........[.........
Madrid EL A SL Richard M, Bartle- | Consul’... i... 0........ ... 2, 500
man.
a i SRS TA RES Maddin Summers... .....| Vice-consul... fn... ...0. rn naa
18 TES SR i José Maria Gay. ......... Deputy eonsnl ol, . rn cate
OLS or Cas or ds Aas Maddin Summers .......| Consularagent...........7....0 1, 800
Corunna =... i Enrique Fraga .......... ATERE ce Ee
Viger... ini nn Enrique Mulder... Jha Agent oo ER
Malaga... 0. Sheva Charles M. Caughy. AeConegul,. iis wdinntoae 3, 000
BIG rs ne Eee ‘Thomas'R. Geary... .... | :Vice-eonsul. co. Coo Ln DR mies
I TL SA Albert S. Troughton..... Deputy consul. i vay, 0s al ane in,
AImenia. on hi nae Algar E. Carleton ....... Agent... oo crn ds fr
Sevillow. = 2.0L i ics Fouls. Rosenberg .! Consul. =... ...... .. 3, 000
BE eh i Sr a RE UN IE Charles Karminski...... Vice and deputy consul........ nse
Cadiz. nanan James Sanderson........ Aoentici. Son aT es fete A
Huelva, i. fon he William J. Alcock....... 7 yy ERR eee A SRA Cia i Ci La
Port. St. Mary's... ... 50 George M. Daniel ....... Amends nin a a a
Teneriffe, CanaryIslands.| Solomon Berliner ...| Consul ................. 2, 500
8 SLR ae i Robert C. Griffiths....... Vice-consul, i... ov her ei
Grand Canary i............. Peter Swanston ......... BONE i Te sta ey fat Tl i
LasPalmat soe in ns Manuel Yanes.. Se ATRL (Sa
Valenoia 75. >. oo oo Charles S.- Winans . .[ Consul........... .....: 2, 500
Re at Br Joseph I. Byrne........ Vice and deputy consul........[......08
ANCANEC apne. 5 ie ise rer Henry W. Carey......... Agents ein ee
Carthagena'................. Alexander: J. Marks. Ament oo. 00 oR a Se a ie §
DERIA ron iets sai aA Gr BIE Ha (oD eh a Ie har Uh Agemb rit oe Ls a aa |
SWEDEN.
Gothenburg. .........., William HH. Robert-| Consul... ................ 2, 500
So11.
{0 Cr ER RE SC I BE Wilhelm Hartman. {Vice and deputyconsul.......\=.......,
Malmo 2. han a any Hugo Lindgren... .... To Ld Ee a TA A Ce I aR LD SS
Stockholm. .. =... .... Sar Edward 1. Adams. . | Consul-general SARI Aa 3, 500
BIOL nh a SR ar Te Axel Georgil....... 0.0.0 Vice-consul-general ........ Ta
DO. ae Carl B. A. Friberg... -- Deputy consul-general.........]1.........
Sundsvallic. os ta Ernst H. Amnéus ....... Agent ul ss Re
SWITZERLAND
Bagel i na George Gifford... ... Consnll. 0 ara f= 3,500
Poi: seins A aT Samuel Hollinger ....... Vice and deputy consul ........ 0.0L. 0...
Berne CLE George Heimirod .. .:{ Consul ......  —....... ... 3, 500
om Ra er ea Leo J. Frankenthal .....| Vice and deputy consul ....... |... ......
on Fe Bonds. oR er ee a See NI EA SG SE SR i
Geneva i... 00 Francis B. Keene | Consal .... 5.0 4 3, 500
DDO, eat eae De Louis I. Munier......... Viceand deputy consul... ....{.........
Vevey: Ooo has nnls Theodore F. Dwight . Agent a aaa ae ni ae
StGall. ..........-.. Robert E. Mansfield. Consnl vo h 4, 500
POC de ie RE Eugene Nabel......... Viceanddeputy consul... ...00 (cu i,
garioh io 2 a 0 a Hector de Castro. ...| Consul- general.oo. nari, 4, 500
I RR a mr a ee, Joseph:Simon......... Vice and deputy consul-general |.........
TURKEY AND DOMINIONS.
Aleppo, Syria......... ... Jesse B: Jackson. 5.3 Consul ... oc i 0 3, 000
Alevandretta..... oo. John T. Peristiany....... Agent doin ou LL nl ah er
Alexandria, Egypt ....... David R. Birch...... Consul... i... Laine 3, 500
Bogne SoU William C. Magelssen| Consul ..... 5 cin oiis 2, 000
a SRL LS ER Albert B.C: Bird 0:0. Vice-consul iv. do vin a a a a
Bovasrl ei eet tate Sd SIE Henry P. Chalk.......... AGEN. ie hh nee | BAIT la)
Beirut, Syria... Gabriel Bie Ravndal. Consul-general Sh Pana | 4, 500
DO ie ss ash sR Te eae Clarence C.Kochenderfer| Vice and Soniye consul- L-general Ean
DaAMasCns Jat. do anh anti Nasif Meshaka .......... Agent. ..} ERA
Balin on ii is «== "Fheodore J. Struve’...... FAAmeRb ss ee EE ea bea
Tripoli .. cena] Ira Harris. ...... pals Agent. io ah a ve 3 Saleh
Cairo, Egypt . Tm | Lewis M. Tddings...| Consul-general........... Ee
Eee aS i | Francis M. Endicott ....| Vice and deputy consul- general |. ee ti
{I Sh I as ER Iouis Belrose...... ...5. Deputy consul-general......... | Ape
Assiooti Lit Sra nue. Jey I“Ceorge Wissa Bey... J Agent. oo ian aes
Port Said....... i a Harry Broadbent........ A TeRE a Sa 3,
Suez. i a Frederick I’. Peake...... | Agent oi oan ea nis sinnteivie
United States Consular Officers.
TURKEY AND DOMINIONS—ZANZIBAR.
345
Office. Officer. Rank. | Salary.
| =
TURKEY AND DOMIN- {
10NS—continued. |
Constantinople........... Fdward H. Ozmun.. Consul-general........... $6, ooo
3 8 SN RS | (Oscar 8S. Heizer.......... Vice and deputy consul-general|.........
1 pn tA MR SR William Smith-Iyte.....| Deputy consul-general.........]....
Do. ra a i William Smith-Lyte.... |] Marshal ........... 0.00 A 1, 000
1 TR I Cer SEE, Arshag’X. Schmavonian.i Interpreter..................... 1, 000
Do. William Smith-Lyte..... Interpreter. oa iV nanan SEL
ID Orreelore oii dhe es 0 anne al Qscar S, Melzer... oo Interpreter so bin Said 1, 500
Dardanelles... 0:5 oh TANF TH eae a Agent co Bh ce
Havout. oo ona, Wm. W. Masterson... Consul... 00... 0. 3, 000
DO ir Felix*Margot -...=. 0.00, Vice-consuli. iif hata liad ERE
Jernselom, Syria. Eee Thomas R. Vlloce JeConsult ooh a 3, 000
en Herbert E. Clark. Vice-consul.. mv. cicadas fate,
Tole, TC SR RANA E. Hardegg. .. Arent. wor. A es a hes Se
Merging... 0. oo Robert P. Pooley. . FComsnl. ono, saa 2, 500
POA is, ht ase Ta John Debbasi:. Ja... Vice and deputy consul... ....F.........
Salondlcii. ...... Evan FE. Young..... 1 Consul. noe. onan, 3, 500
1 0 PR ea RS Cleon H.:l,azzar0...-..- | Vice'and deputy consul... |...
Sivas... A a ei, [Consul ci 0h von, 2, 000
10 TS A SR tawaiatl Jortniys. Aa (Interpreter... in iiean i 800
Smyrna...... se Ernest 1,. Harris... .| Consul-general........... 3, 500
DO i Es Ernest A. Magnifico..... = Vice and deputy consul-general |.........
Bn RR ee James W. Wilkinson . Deputy consul-general........ dan
Trebizond ........ ..... Milo A. Jewett. .... Consul #0 iho So iis 2, 500
DO. tere ri Se dr ER Isaiah Montesanto....... Vice:consull.. oh alo rans PVE
A a CE Isaiah Montesanto.»... | Interpreter... ol... 0. este aire
Samsoun..............o00 William Peter ............. (EA gent la ST see CR
Tripoli, Tripoli .......... William Coffin... ... Consul... no, 2, 500
URUGUAY :
Montevideo... ........... Frederic W. Goding.;Consul .................. 3, 500
LE AR ER James H. O'Hara ........ Vice and deputy consul........ ES
VENEZUELA
|
TaGuaira. 5 io... | Thomas P. Moffat”. | Consul... ............ % 3, 000
a Herman F. Betow. Vice-consul.. «J. sian. I ators
Barcelona: iv... wind ann Ignacio H. Balz.......... Agent .
Caracas Lv sn eee John Brewer............. NE RR Cen Be ei
Carupanos. io... vo. ont Jose Blasind ov. cus Agent | SY
Ciudad Bolivar. ............. Robert Henderson. .... | Agent SHEE
Moxacaibo............ =. | Bugene H.Plumacher| Consul.............. = | 2,500
Doon on ann gig August Otamendi........ Vice-consul. ui cia snnaiain ate
15 pare SR RRS Federico E. Schemel, jr. .[" Deputy consul... .......... S55... (ent
COE Os re ato ial Su Sate er fawn 0 whe eup ate ean a Te wwe AZEND ves sied tenia ci Suite EASE L
Bova. oll dsr one Friedrich F. Burchard Agent Fahey a ee ea
Valera 3... cd lie dibs thw LL PL se sae ATONE i riety fon a ee
PuertoCGabello........... James W. Johnson Consul lore ow uy 2, 000
enna EE aE ee BRI an dS Sa i Viceand deputy consul ....... ll...
ZANZIBAR
Zanzibar. on Arthur Garrels. ..... Comsultt 2 tn a 2, 500
IDO n i ee Se William B. Arnold....... Vice-consul......L 00 at onli a
346 Congressional Directory.
CONSULAR ASSISTANTS.
Richard Westacott..... London. Elwood Austin Welden .
Dean B. Mason........ Paris. Archibald B. Dorman. ..
Maddin Summers ..... Madrid. OzroC. Gould... ..0
Augustus E. Ingram... Washington. Robert Treat Crane... ...
Frederic W. Cauldwell. Berlin. Bartley: F. Vost.... ....:
Homer M. Byington... Rome. Prank Bohr..... Save
John WW, Dye... ...... Berlin. Alfred W. Donegan.....
Milton B. Kirk. ...... Boma. Kenneth S. Patton... ...
Lucien Memminger.... Naples. Charles Lyon Chandler .
STUDENT INTERPRETERS.
China.
Willys: R. Peck........ Peking. MyrlS, Myers..........
John I. Viney......... Shanghai. Prank W. Hadley ......
J. Paul Jameson... . Peking. Hagen M. Gale .........
Nelson T. Johnson..... Peking. Harold O. Henry... ..
Japan. ;
Adolph A. Williamson . Tokyo. Alfred Salisbury. .......
John K. Caldwell... ... Tokyo. Edwin 1. Neville.......
Paris.
Berlin.
Seoul.
Montreal.
Washington.
Do.
Budapest.
Washington.
Do.
Tokyo.
Tokyo.
Consuls in the United States, 47
CONSULS IN THE UNITED STATES.
ARGENTINE REPUBLIC—AUSTRIA-HUNGARY.
Residence.
ARGENTINE REPUBLIC.
Mobile Ala. .....0..0.....
San Francisco, Cal... ...
Washington, D.C.......
Apalachicola, Fla
Fernandina, Fla ........
Pensacola, Fla. .........
Brunswick, Ga... .......
Savannah, Ga... .......-;
Ghiteaso, Tl... oo...
New Orleans, Ia........
Portland, Me... ...........
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass... 5... .o 5.
Pascagoula, Miss. .......
St. Towis, Mou... oan
New York City, N. Y....
Philadelphia, Pa........
Manila, P. I
Noziolle. Va. .......
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY.
Mobile; Ala... ......
San Francisco, Cal... ...
Pensacola, Fla. .........
Savannah, Ga... ....... ..
Honolulu, Hawaii.......
Chicago, Wooo 5 2%
Lonisville, Ky..........
New Orleans, Ia........
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass. .... 0 on
St. Louis, Mo
Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
Juan S. Attwell 0 0
William W. Poeser. -.-.... 0.
Tomas C. Borden
J. Harris Pierpont
Rosendo-Lorras. 0c ion
Andrés’ Bi Moynelo,. ..........0. 0.
Eduardo Oldendorft
Alfred Ie Blanc
Claretice W. Small... ... i...
James Fi Ferouson. il. o.oo.
Guillermo McKissock
Juan I,. Dantzler
Gustavovon Brecht... . . ...........
José Vicente Fernandez...........
For the United States.
Carlos A. Galarce
Guillermo P. Wilson... ...... Lv.
Vicente de Fernandez
For the Island of Luzon.
Guillermo Klyver
For Norfolk, Portsmouth, and New-
port News.
Seigfried Kissler. 0 oo... on
Rarl Ruizde Roxas -......0.......
For Arizona, Alaska, California, Idaho,
Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Wash-
ington.
For Florida.
Fduard Karow
For Georgia and South Carolina.
Federico A. Schaefer
Alexander Nuber von Pereked.....
For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Montana,
Nebraska, North Dakota, South Da-
kota, and Wyoming; temporary
jurisdiction over Michigan, Minne-
sota, and Wisconsin.
ein alee wie inet wie elie a ieee a
For Kentucky and ‘Tennessee; tem-
porarily under the jurisdiction of
the consulate in Richmond, Va.
Franz Hindermann .
Yor Louisiana and Mississippi.
G. Louis Hester
For Maryland and Delaware.
Arthny Donner... ony,
For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, and Vermont.
Ferdinand Diehm. .. o-.. ... 50...
For Arkansas, Kansas, Colorado, Mis-
souri, New Mexico, and Oklahoma.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul. :
Acting consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul.
348 Congressional Directory.
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction.
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY—COT1.
New York City, N.Y... ..
Cincinnati. Ohio... ...
Cleveland, Ohlo.........
Hazleton, Pa............
Philadelphia, Pa. .......
ate Te leit iieiin iy Pittsburg, Pa...
Manila, P. Li... 0...
San Jnan, Po R: 000
Galveston, Tex. .........
Norfolle, Va, 2.05 0 in
Charleston, W.Va.......
Clarksburg, W. Va.......
Otto Freiherr von Hoenning O’Car-
roll.
For Connecticut, New Jersey, New
York, and Rhode Island.
EA ‘For the other counties of the State of
Ohio; temporarily under the juris-
diction of the Vice-Consulate in |
Cleveland.
Hergo Silvestri... 0...
For the counties of Ashland, Ashta-
bula, Coshocton, Crawford, Cuya-
hoga, Delaware, Brie; Fulton,
Geauga, Hancock, Henry, Holmes,
Huron, Knox, Iake, Licking, I,o-
rain, T,ucas, Marion, Medina, Mor-
row, Ottawa, Portage, Richland,
Sandusky, Seneca, Stark, Summit,
Trumbull, Wayne, Williams, Wood,
and Wyandot.
For the counties of Schuylkill and
Sullivan; temporarily under the
jurisdiction of the consulate in
Philadelphia.
Theodor Ritter Thodorovich von
Schiuitzenbiirg.
For the counties of Adams, Berks,
Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Chester,
Columbia, Cumberland, Dauphin,
Delaware, Franklin, Juniata, Lack-
awanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Ie-
high, Luzerne, I,ycoming, Monroe,
Montgomery, Montour, Northamp-
ton, Northumberland, "Perry, Pike,
Philadelphia, Snyder, Susque-
hanna, Tioga, Union, Wayne, and
Wyoming.
Baron Julius von Bornemisza.
For the counties of Allegheny, Arm-
strong, Beaver, Bedford, Blair, But-
ler, Cambria, Cameron, Center,
Clarion, Clearfield, Clinton, Craw-
ford, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest,
Fulton, Greene, Huntingdon, Indi
ana, Jefferson, Lawrence, McKean,
Mercer, Mifflin, Potter, Somerset,
Venango, Warren, Washington,
and Westmoreland.
Peter rate... fi. hr
Joanmes DD. Stubbe.................
John Reymershoffer...........
For Texas.
Temporarily under the jurisdiction
of the consulate in Richmond.
Christophorus I. D. Borchers... ...
For Virginia: temporary jurisdiction
over Kentucky, North Carolina, and
Tennessee. :
Chevalier Michael von Strassewski.
Bartholomeus von Péchy..........
For the counties of Barbour, Berkeley,
Braxton, Calhoun, Doddridge, Gil-
mer, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy,
Harrison, Jefferson, Lewis, Marion,
Mineral, Monongalia, Morgan, Pen-
dleton, Pleasants, Pocahontas, Pres-
ton, Randolph, Ritchie, Taylor,
Tucker, Tyler, Upshur, Webster,
Wetzel, Wirt, and Wood.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Do.
Consular agent.
» Consul.
Vice-consul.
Deputy consular
agent.
Consuls in the United States.
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY—BELGIUM.
349
Residence.   Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY—CON.
Milwankee, Wis. Lo a Te ea Consul.
For Michigan, Minnesota, and Wis-
consin; temporarily under the juris- i
diction of the eonsulate-general in |
Chicago, Ill.
BELGIUM.
Mobile, Ala. ........ ... Robert BoduMont. =. c=... Consul.
3 For Alabama.
Little Rock, Ark........ EB. Vinsonhaler: 5 uri h Consul.
Tos Angeles, Cal...
Sani Francisco, Cal. .....
Denver, Colo... ...... i.
Jacksonville, Fla........
Pensacola, Fla... .:...
Atlanta, Ga. .... ......
Savannah, Ga... ..
Honolulu, Hawaii... . ...
Chicago, 111... ..... ...
Lonisville, Ky... ..... ...
New Orleans, La
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass. ........ 5
Detroit, Mich
St. Louis, Mo
Omaha, Nebr... .......
New York City, N. Y....
Philadelphia, Pa
|
§
For Arkansas.
BWoden [oi id nn
For California, Idaho, Montana, Ne-
vada, Oregon, Utah, Washington,
Alaska, Arizona, and Hawaii.
TMignolet sn ov an sani
For Colorado, Wyoming, and New
Mexico.
J Buttgenbach, -..... .............
Woh. Howe, oo on 0 0
Iourentde Give... ....  / ...5
I. M. Le Hardy de Beaulieu
For southeastern Georgia.
RB Tange... 0
Ch. Henrolin. ......... of.
St.DeRidder: .o...... vo...
For Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee.
C.H. de Waepenaert he ait Tie ee
For Alabama, Arkansas, North Caro-
lina, South Carolina, Florida,
Georgia, Kansas, I,ouisiana, Missis-
sippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, and
Texas.
C.8:Schaefer....... o.oo
For Louisiana and Mississippi.
AL Telbwieh o.oo. on a
For Delaware and Maryland.
B.S: Mansfield......... =...
For Massachusetts, Vermont, New
Hampshire, and Maine.
‘Théophile Francois. iv... oa...
L. Seguenot
For Kansas and Missouri.
Al. Delammey.. 0
For North Dakota, South Dakota, and
Nebraska.
Plerre Mall. 5
For Connecticut, New Jersey, New
York, and Norfolk, Va.
Paul Hagemans SERIE en
For the United States.
H. Hessenbrich. =... 00.000
For the counties of Adams, Bedford,
Berks, Blair, Bradford, Bucks, Car-
bon, Center, Clinton, Chester, Co-
lumbia, Cumberland, Dauphin,
Delaware, Franklin, Fulton, Hunt-
ingdon, Juniata, Lackawanna, Lan-
caster, Tebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne,
Lycoming, Mifflin, Monroe, Mont-
gomery, Montour, Northampton,
Northumberland, Perry, Pike, Pot-
ter, Philadelphia, Schuylkill, Sny-
der, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioga,
Union, Wayne, Wyoming, and
York.
Vice-consul.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul-general,
Consul,
350 Congressional Directory.
BELGIUM —BRAZIL,.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
BELGIUM—continued.
Pittsburg, Pa...
Manila, P. I
Mayaguez, P. R.........
Ponce, P, RB. oc: 0.0.00
San-Juan, P. Bo
Charleston, S. C.........
Galveston, Tex. ...........
Norfolk and
News, Va.
Richmond, Va...........
Seattle Wash. =. rn...
Green Bay Wis... .......
BOLIVIA.
San Diego, Cal... ... ....
San Prancisce, Cal ......
Chicago, Il...
Baltimore, Md... ......-
Boston, Mass... .......
Kansas City, Mo... ...
New Vork City, N. Y¥....
Philadelphia, Pa. ........
BRAZIL.
Mobile, Alan... ~~ >.
San Francisco, Cal... ...
Fernandina, Fla. ........
Tr. MOCSEE. sas is os is snares
For the counties of Allegheny, Arm-
strong, Beaver, Butler, Cambria,
Cameron, Clarion, Clearfield, Craw-
ford, Elk, FErie, Fayette, Forest,
Greene, Indiana, Jefferson, ILaw-
rence, McKean, Mercer, Somerset,
Venango, Warren, Washington,
and Westmoreland.
Ch. Te Vionnols += i vib
For the Philippine Islands.
ALBrave. oh eR |
For the departments of Mayaguez |
and Aguadilla.
HE ES ET
For the departments of Guayama and
Ponce.
HH. Cloromanme 5 i
For Porto Rico.
YB. Saldafin:. =o 00.
For the departments of Arecibo,
Bayamon, and Humacao, and the
island of Vieques.
FR Rutledge... ion ove
For North Carolina and South Caro-
lina.
[1 Vanden Broeck.......-... 0.
For Texas and Oklahoma.
Newport | J. 2 Andee Mottu:. 0...
W.OuNelting:.. 0 So
For Virginia and West Virginia.
B:CoNewlelder. 0 |
QO, 1-8. Brice... a
For Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Da-
kota, and South Dakota.
Philip Motse...«...0 oo 0
Gabriel Valverde Calle ...........
For Nevada, Oregon, Washington, and
Arizona.
CarlosSanjinés PB... .o..oo. 00
Frederick Harnwell ..............
Raymond M. Glacken ............
Arthur P. Cushing... ... .....
Bdwin RiHeath. ©... iin .o
ADignil Sanjines. ci oo
Wilfred HH. Scholl... =.=... ..
Tuiz-M, Moraguez...........- coo)
T.G-McGonigal'....o....... 0.0
Archibald Barnard... .. 0.
Devereux Bacon... i... ou
YE BoC. Hallo
ILeoncio' l,. Boreas...
WalleeB. Cook. arn 0
B.S. Hincks. vic oy boo i»
Charles Dittmany =... 0
Fmmanuel Dittmann ..............
William A Muzrchie . 0... ...
Ieonce Rabillon , ...............,
Vice-consul,
- Consul.
Do.
Comnsul-general.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Honorary consul.
| Consul-general.
Honorary consul.
Vice-consul.
Commercial agent.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Commercial agent.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Commercial agent.
Vice-consul.
Commercial agent.
Vice-consul.
Commercial agent.
Vice-consul.
Do,
Consuls in the United States.
BRAZIL—COLOMBIA.
351
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
BRAZII—continued.
Boston, Mass... ........
Gulfport, Miss =... 00
Pascagoula, Miss. .......
St. Youlsy Mo. =... .....
New York City, N. ¥. ...
Philadelphia, Pa
San Juan, P.R.... .. aa
Norfollz, Va.............
Richmond, Va
CHILE.
San Prancisce, Cal... ...
Canal Zone, Panama... ..
Savannah, Ga...........
Honolulu, Hawaii... ...
Chicago, 111... >.
New Orleans, Ia........
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass... i...
St. Louis, Mo
New York City, N. Y....
Portland, Oreg..........
Philadelphia, Pa
Manila, P. I
Son Juan, BD. RU...
Noriolk, Va... ...
Port Townsend, Wash. ..
Tacoma, Wash..........
CHINA.
San Francisco, Cal......
Honolulu, Hawaii
Boston; Mass.............
New York City, N. Y....
Portland, Oreg
Philadelphia, Pa
Vanda, PY. 0
COLOMBIA.
Mobile, Ala
San Francisco, Cal
New Haven, Conn.
Washington, D. C
Tampa, Fla
Chicas, A11:. ......
New Orleans, 1a. .......
Jayme Mackay d’Almeida. ........
Pedro Mackay d’Almeida
Frank -Fester sii snub 0 00s
Mannel Bos. wl cian aS
Andrew Gray
Affonso de Figueiredo, 2... 2:
José Joachim Gomez dos Santos . . .
Francisco Garcia Pereira Ledo .. ..
Napoleon Bonaparte Kelly... .....
Henry C. Sheppard. 2.0 «0...
Waldemar E. Lee
Basten Myers. con-inss Lo. ol
R. Baldwin Myers. 2... 0...
George Annesley Barksdale
Robert Ni Brooke. == == oo.
Juan Searle
Antonio B. Agacio
Roberto B..Reppard.... i... .....
H. Renjes
M. 7. Steffens... 01... fool
Steward Alfred Le Blanc. .........
B.C. Lenpolde nian oo,
Prnesto. Cramer... o.oo
Ricardo Sanchez Crnz. ©... =...
For the United States.
Antonio B-Vejar.. .... .. ......
John Ried
Dudley Bartlett
A. Malvehy
Charles Barnett... i. 0.
Osear Wloeker.o 0.0 ow
J Tenant Steeh..... 0...
Hsu Png-chen ..... 0. i 0.
Owyang King. .c ie wa iii.
Tseng Mat... nl.
Stephen W. Nickerson... o......0...
WingshinS. How... 0.00000
Luk Wing
Moy Back Hine... oo.
Thomas W. Barlow
Su Yu-tchu
Juan Lloren Marty
Rafael J. Prieto vaio.
Alejandro F. Ramirez, ............
José Sirvent
Erskine M. Phelps... ......... ih
José Miguel Rosales... .........
Augusto Mastello..............
Vice-consul.
Commercial agent.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Commercial agent.
Vice-consul.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Commercial agent.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Commercial agent.
Vice-consul.
Commercial agent.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Henorary consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Honorary consul.
Do.
Comnsul-general.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Do,
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
352 Congressional Directory.
COLOMBIA—CUBA.
San Francisco, Cal... . ...
Chicago, TN. ....0. 0 0.
New Orleans, Ia........
Baltimore, Md... ........
Boston, Mass... ...........
Ste Tome, Mo... ... nh
New York City, N. Y....
Portland, Oreg....«... ..
Philadelphia, Pa........
San Juan, P. R
Galveston, Tex..........
Norfolk, Va
Richmond, Va..........
CUBA.
Mobile, Ala
Los Angeles, Cal........
Fernandina, Fla ........
Jacksonville, Fla. .......
Key West, Fla
Pensacola, Fla
Tampa, Fla
Brunswick, Ga..... ....
Savannah, Ga... ........
Chicago, Tl. .v:. 0.
Kansas City, Kans
Louisville, Ky
New Orleans, La
Baltimore, Md
Poston, Mass. . =... .....
Detrolt, Mich. ...........
Gulfport, Miss... ..:....
Pascagoula, Miss. .......
Ransas City, Mo... ....
St. Louis, Mo
Ine M Moragnes.. .........-....
Guillermo Figueroa
Berthold Singer
Tamar ©. Quintero... ....
With jurisdiction in the south of the
United States.
John Marshall Quintero...........
William A. Riordan
Frost B. Filslnger... 0...
Jmol. lea G...... 0...
Juan J. Ulloa G..... Toate aL
Alejandro Monestel...............
Grandville G. Ames... ........
Gustavo Niederlein. ...............
Sergio Ramirez
Hemry Mosle.. 0 i.
Charles M. Barnet... 0
Rafael Villafrapea. ......-.........
Teopoldo Dolz y Arango..........
Tomas I,. Duque y Amara
William B. C. Duryee
Harry: B. Stont..o 00a
Antonio Diaz y Carrasco..........
Vineent J. Vidal. ...... i...
Rafael Martinez Ibor ....
For Port Tampa also.
RosendoTorras. hs,
A.B. Moynelo:. o.oo
Tmis Vallin.y Alfonso. ..... ......
Henry F. Carnes
Richard P. Cane ...
J. Nelson Polhamus. .
Serafin Garcia Menocal ...........
José Monzé6n y Aguirre. ... ..
C. W. Harrah
Waller Poster... 0.007
Bo, Clinton, oo ies
With jurisdiction in Scranton and
Moss Point.
W. H. Booran o>. oe soon
Alberto Santiso y Tariche.........
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
COLOMBIA—continued.
Baltimore, Md... ......; BW.Peldner odin oli nis Consul.
Boston, Mass... i. 0. Jorge Vargas Heredia... ....... Do.
Francis Russell Hart... Vice-consul.
Detroils, Mich. ..00... 5h cher ean oe Consul.
Guliportand Pascagoula, | D. N. Henvigquez .... ....-........ Do.
Miss.
Stiloms, Mo... ...... Jo Ahuckle =o en a aan Do.
New York City, N.Y... {| Carlos M, Sarzia’ =... ...--. Consul-general.
Philadelphia, Pa......... Willam Harper... vv. Consul.
San Juan: P.R..... Wenceslao Borda... ooo Do.
Nopiolk, Va...........-. Howard P. Wilson... ........ Do.
COSTA RICA.
Mobile, Aln...0......... Paul B. Rapier... oto on 000) Consul.
Honorary vice-con-
sul.
Comnsul-general.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Honorary consul.
Consul.
Do.
Honorary consul.
Do.
Consul.
Honorary consul.
Consul.
Honorary consul.
Do.
Consul.
Honorary consul.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
.| Honorary consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consuls in the United States.
CUBA—DENMARK.
353
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
CUBA—continued.
New York City, N.Y ....
Cincinnati, Ohio
Philadelphia, Pa
Aguadilla, P. R
Arecibo, P. R
Mayagiiez, P. R
Ponce, P. BR
San Juan, P. R
Galveston, Tex
Norfolk, Va
DENMARK. .
Mobile, Ala
San Francisco, Cal
Denver, Colo
Apalachicola, Fla
Pensaccla, Fla
Savannah, Ga
Honolulu, Hawaii
Boise City, Idaho
Chicago, Ill
Council Bluffs, Towa ...
Kansas City, Kans
Louisville, Ky
New Orleans, La
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass
Detroit, Mich
St. Paul, Minn
Scranton, Miss
St. Louis, Mo
Onnmha, Nebr... ....
. Lovelocks, Nev
Perth Amboy, N. J
New York City, N.V....
Wilmington, N. C
Fargo, N. Dak
Cleveland, Ohio
Portland, Oreg
.. Viggo oi
Octavio Zayas y Adan
For the United States.
Antonio Altamira’... ..........
Federico Nogueira y Udaeta... ..
Francisco Pefia y Hernandez
Jacinto, Yads, bo vt oo Toning
With jurisdiction over Wilmington,
Del.
Otto Philippi... .. oc. ooh ts
Fernando Aleman y Vallee
. Alberto Bravo Gonzalez
Carlos Morales Alvarado
Salvador Rosy Pochet =... oi.
José R. Cabrera y Zunzunegui
CM. Baylor. ooo. i
With jurisdiction over Portsmouth.
Georg A. Schmelz
I,ouis Donald
For Alabama.
H.-H. Birkholm .. -.. .:;.
Viggo Egede Baerresen. ..
For Colorado.
Sol Braghl. io bln naam tan
Carl McKenzie Oerting
For Florida.
LB Helston ania a niin
H. R. Macfarlane
Walter S. Bruce
For Idaho.
For Iowa.
~ Jep Hansen Mailand
| For Kansas.
Charles BS, Currie... i. a0. a
For Kentucky, Tennessee, and Ohio.
Thyge Soegaard
Holger A. Koppel
For Maryland.
Gustaf T,undberg
Peter SOrensen... iv... vv voinisvins
John C. Nelson
For Minnesota.
i es
Anthony M. Matson . ..
For Missouri.
LP. Helm. . viii ers
For New Jersey.
Martin Julius Charles Theodor Clan
Alexander Severin Heide
For North Carolina.
Henry Krogh... ici cin
Mark I,. Thomsen
For Ohio.
For Oregon.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Honorary consul.
Consul.
Do.
Honorary consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
| Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
| Acting vice-consul.
| Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
~ Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Do.
| Consul.
Vice-consul.
354 Congressional Directory.
DENMARK—FRANCE.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
DENMARK—continued.
Philadelphia, Pa... . ..... EN Wallewi....ooo.o 0. 0s Vice-consul.
For Pennsylvania.
Manila, P. Vos 0 Robert Henry Wood-........... .. | Consul.
Huwmaeao, P.R... .... Antonio Roig... 0.0.00... 4 Vice-consul.
Mayaguez, P. Ro... .. bP Albert Bravo... ooo. aie. i Do.
Ponce, P. Bolas | Carlos Armstrong ......... 0... 0 | Consul.
San Juan, P.R........... TC. LWaymonth 0... 0... Vice-consul.
Vieques (Crab Island), {| Victor Duteil........ 0 ......... Do.
P. RB.
Charleston, S.C... .. James M. Seignious ..... 0... ... Do.
For South Carolina. :
Galveston, lex... .. 7. Jens Maller toc: ioe na Do.
| Salt Lake City, Utali: | Ceterflangen.... i. ......nh... Do.
Newport News, Va...... LH. BE. Puker....0....... Do.
| Norfolk, Va... .....:.., Charles M. Barnett 7... 000 Do.
Seattle. Wash... ... John P. Jacobsen. 2. oe Do.
For Washington.
Racine, Wis. . 5... Peter Bering Nelson... 5.5... Do.
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.
Chicago, Ill... ....... ..; | Frederick W. Job. -............... Vice-consul.
Baltiniore, Md. ....... : | William A. Riovdan .............. Do.
Boston, Mass............ | Joseph Henry Emslie.......... Consul.
New Vorle City, NV... Pablo BF. Fiallo... ........ .... . Consul-general.
Wilmington, N.C. ...... | Afdrew J. Howell jr... na... \ Vice-consul.
Philadelphia, Pa... . ... | Rodman Wanamaker.............| Consul.
Aguadilla, T°. R..... (Simeon Rovira... o.. 0. . - Vice-consul.
Arecibo, Pr Ru ..o0. 0 0. | Angel Sanz v. Ambros... 0. Do.
Humacao, T. BR .... fF José Taner... So ii inant Do.
Mayaguez, P.R.... Enrique A. Rousset’... 0... Do.
Ponce, B..R... &... ns Antomlo Cabral, 0. 0h +. Consul.
Ernesto Moringlane .......... .... Vice-consul.
San Jran, PR... Juan Fugenio Medina y Cortés.... Consul-general.
For Porto Rico. .
Vieques, P.R.Z ..... .. Juan N. Julbe Ponpart............ | Vice-consul.
Norfolk, Va. ......... .. Harry Reymor oo. n-ne... 0 | Do.
ECUADOR.
1.08 Angeles, Cal. . =... Tomdsil, Dugqué ....... ... .  ._. | Honorary consul.
| general.
San Francisco, Cal... .| Dr. D. PedroArcentales........ .. Comnsul-general.
Pablo A Andrade... - 0 | Vice-consul.
Chicago, Ill........ TmdsMillet! 0.0 oo | Consul.
New Orleans, Ia........ Carlos NV. Coello >.» oo | Acting consul.
Boston, Mass... ... Gustavo Preston... i... 0 0, | Consul.
New York City, N.V....| PelicisimoYopez..... ........... | Consul-general.
Rafael Zevallas Ch... ........ - Vice-consul.
Cincinnati, Ohio... .... . .. | David S. Reinberg................ | Honorary consul.
Philadelphia, Pa. ....... [Cassine A. Green. .> 5.7... - Consul.
Manila, P. FL... 0... | Ricardo 5. Barretto. .............. Do.
Charleston; S.C... =... | Guillermo Oliveras Haal.......... | Vice-consul.
Galveston, lex... ........ HenuyMosle.v.. on Consul.
Norfolk, Va... .......... Charles M, Barnett... ..... 0... Vice-consul.
FRANCE.
Birmingham, Ala. ....... Smoniilotz.. .......... Consular agent.
Mobile, Ala... .......... CGC. A Riviere... 5 al Do.
Nome, Alaska .......... Albert: Schneider... .... 0.0. Do.
Tos Angeles, Cal... .... Marc Lucien Durand... ........ EN Do.
8an Diego, Cal.......... Abraham Blochuiar.... ........... == Do,
Consuls in the United States.
FRANCE.
Name and jurisdiction.
333
Rank.   Residence. |
FRANCE—continued. |
| San Francisco, Cal. .
SanjJose, Cal.>. iu .
Denver; Colo...
Apalachicola, Fla........ |
Pensacola, Fla... ........
Tampa, Fla... 0...
Savannah, Ga...........
Honolulu, H.T... -.... |
Chicago, 11. 2. |
Youisville, Ky... ....... |
New Orleans, Ia........
Baton Rouge, Ia........].
Portland, Me ......... .. |
Baltimore, Md... |
Boston, Mass...
Detroit, Mich. ..........
St. Paul, Minn. .........
Gulfport, Miss: .........]
Kansas City, Mo... .. ...|
St. Louis, Mo... .......
New York City, N. Y....
Cincinnati, Ohio... ..,..
Portland, Oreg........ ..
Philadelphia, Pa. .......
Manila, Pol. ov
Arroyo-Guayama, P. R. ..
Humacas, P.R .........
Mayagnez, P. Re... .....
Ponce, P.R ,.....~..
Vieques, P.R...........
Charleston, S. C.........
Brownsville, Tex........
Pallas, Pew. .onoc ni
¥lPaso,Tex.........
Galveston, Tex.-.......
San Antonio, Tex... ....
Noriolk, Va... =..."
Seattle, Wash... ........
Tacoma, Wash........... E
Henri Avine Joseph Mérou. .......
For California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon,
Washington, Alaska, Arizona, and
Utah.
A. Bonrquin. oor ioe ont oon
Antoine TeanMuraf..... iv
Westerby Howe ......... .......-
Ernest W. Mofirose............ 0.
Alexis Nicolas 5 iii vn 0 on ois
René Etienne César Menant ......
For Hawaii.
Touis Emile Houssin de Saint
TLaurent.
For Colorado, North Dakota, South Da-
kota, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas,
Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio,
Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Michel Hermann... ...... ...
Marie Paul Véran Dejoux ......:.
For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Geor-
gia, TLouisiana, Mississippi, Tennes-
see, Oklahoma, and the Territory of
New Mexico.
| Ernest de Beaufort le Prohon. . ...
TGonceRabillon oi... ......... |
Joseph J. Flamand ...............
| Joseph: Belanger... ......... .... |
. Frangois Célestin Boucher... ........
| John Paoli oni eso rte TL 0
| Bmile-Stanislas Brus..............
| Louis Seguenof. no. ven |
Ftienne Marie Louis Lanel. .......
For North Carolina, South Carolina,
Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland,
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, New Jersey, New York, Penn-
sylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont,
West Virginia, and Virginia.
Fugene C-Pocley.. v..o ii. voi
Charles HenriIabbhé..............
Raymond de Loobel-Mahy.........
Jean Baptiste Gabriel Bertrand . . ..
Louis Raphael Vincent Leccia. . . ..
Paul Charles Marie Robin ........
For Porto Rico.
Ch TeBrun oan
Celestin Jagou ....
Jean: Batiste Adone............. 0.
A Comvchesneryy, U0 00
Charles Joseph Zénon Marie Milon
de Peillon.
For Texas.
Walter Herron Taylor. iol...
Pierre jean Bapiste Joujon-Roche.
Consul, in charge of
consulate-general.
Consular agent.
Do.
Vice- consul.
Consul.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Consular agent.
Do.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consular agent.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Consular agent.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Consular agent.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consular agent.
Do.
Do.
Do.
356 / Congressional Directory.
GERMAN EMPIRE.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
GERMAN EMPIRE.
Mobile, Ala... ........ ©. EB. Holzbom... ooo. ins Consul.
For Alabama. |
San Francisco, Cal... ... | Beanz Boppi.oo aio : Do.
For California and Nevada.
Denver, Colo... =... Ll Georg Plelm oi. saa fi. Do.
For Colorado and Utah and the Terri-
tories of New Mexico and Arizona.
Washington, D. C....... Gustav Dittmar er oo wt ay Consular agent.
Pensacola, Fla. .... ...... Gerhard Rolfe... ooo hoa. | Consul.
For Florida.
Atlanta Ga. 000. 000, Dr, Brich Zoepflel...... x0... .... Consul.
For Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North
Carolina, South Carolina, and Ten-
: nessee.
Savannah, GR........... Ernst Bichhorn. 00 aon. Do.
. For Georgia.
Honolulu, Hawaii....... W. Plotenbiader 0. ocd Do.
For Hawaii.
|: Johann F.-Hackfeld .. ...c.. .. i |
; In charge of consulate.
Chicago, TL... 0... Walther Wevers.: oo... Consul-general.
For Illinois (except St. Clair, Madison,
and Monroe counties), Towa, Michi.
gan, Nebraska, and Wisconsin.
| Pant ROS, = aa ne Vice-consul.
New Orleans, Ia........ Freiherr Ferdinand von Norden- | Consul.
flycht.
Li Iouisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. Do.
Baltimore, Md .......... FCS Tadesity. oo.
For Maryland and the District of
Columbia.
Boston, Mass... =. | Wilhelm Theodor Reincke. ....... Do.
For Maine, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, and Rhode Island.
St. Paul Minn. ......0 Johannes Grunow ............... Do.
: | For Minnesota, North Dakota, and
South Dakota.
St. Tonis, Mo:2. 7. wi |. Maximilian von Toehr......:..... Do.
: | For Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Okla-
homa, and St. Clair, Madison, and
| Monroe counties in Illinois. :
New York City, No. Vn saa dias nari on ....| Consul-general.
For Connecticut, New Jersey, New
York, and Vermont.
Rarl Gneist. «ov Consul.
~ For the port of New York.
Wilmington, N. C....... JomesSprumt. Do.
g | For North Carolina.
Cincinnati, Ohio ........ I Tosef:Lettenbaur... = 0... =... Do.
| For Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and
West Virginia.
Portland; Orem. visi cniimmpad an ath namie wa ein is Do.
| For Oregon and Idaho.
Philadelphia, Pa... ..... Werner Hagen .......-..  ...... Do.
For Delaware and Pennsylvania.
Cebu, BL... | Carl Janssen... oo one. Vice-constil.
ofl: Po Loco EE Se a eg Do.
* For Iloilo. : |
Manila, BT... ...n.. Franz Grunewald... ............. Consul.
For the Philippine Islands, the Sulu
| Islands, I, adronelIslands, and Guam.
Aguadilla, P. B ...... OO PMBppL. oh Seed on Vice-consul. 2
Mayaguez, 'P.-R...... Hubert Koberg.... .... 0... Do.
Ponce, PoR..0n.. ai. Julins Umbach, chest on) | Do.
SanJuan, P.R.......... Waldemar Hepp... cocoon Consul.
| For Porto Rico.
Charleston, S.C... .. tBmilJatme ois Do.
! For South Carolina. J
Consuls in the United States.
GERMAN EMPIRE—GREAT BRITAIN.
357
| :
Residence. | Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
GERMAN EMPIRE—cCO1.
Galveston, Tex... 0... LOttoScheldt hain. oT Consul.
| For Texas. i
Newport News, Va ...... { Frederick]. Gammtlett.... i... .... Vice-consul.
Yor Norfolk, Newport News, and
: Portsmouth.
Richmond, Va... ........ | Emil Carl: Vietor oi. oi. ooo o ios, Consul.
For Virginia, except Norfolk, New-
port News, and Portsmouth.
Port Townsend, Wash. . . bran Duddenhausen.. ...........
For Clallam, Island, Jefferson, and
San Juan counties, Washington.
Seafile, Wash... .. ...... Allred Gedgaler...i iin.
For Montana, Wyoming, Alaska, and
Chelan, Douglas, Ferry, King, Kit-
sap, Kittitas, Lincoln, Mason,
Okanogan, Skagit, Snohomish, Spo-
kane, Stephens, and Whatcom coun-
. ties, Washington.
‘Pacoma, Wash .......... OttorRichier 0. 0 i .0.0
For Adams, Asotin, Chehalis, Clarke,
Columbia, Cowlitz, Franklin, Gar-
field, Klickitat, Lewis, Pacific,
Pierce, Skamania, Thurston, Wah.
kiakum, Wallawalla, Whitman, and
: Yakima counties, Washington.
GREAT BRITAIN.
Mobile, Ala.............| Edmund Joshua Seiders ..........
Nome, Alaska... 7... | Lionel Rupert Weatherly .........
Los Angeles, Cal... ..... Charles White Mortimer ..........
| For the district of I,os Angeles.
San Diego, Cal... .. ... Allen Hutchinson ......... .... Eh
San Francisco, Cal... .. | Walter Risley Hearn... ..... | For California, Nevada, Utah, and
Arizona.
Wellesley Moore... 0
| Halford Dumergue Gerrard . ......
Denver, Colo. ......... = Alfred i Cribben, . iio ii
Apalachicola, Fla ....... TI. EF. Porter... oo nein |
Pernandinag, Bla......... | Brest Vo Nicholl ....... .... .-..
Jacksonville, Fla. ....... | John Willlam Morris..............
Key West, Pla... .... | WJ. XH. Taylor. ..s. 5 coon
Pensacola, Fla... ....... Charles Alexander Spencer Perceval
Port Tampa, Fla... ...... James Ward Morgis..... 0.00 00.0,
Punta Gorda, Fla... .... ‘Albert Folger Dewey: 1. "0...
Brunswick, Ga... .... | RoseridoTorras:...... 0 i. 0.
Darien; Ga. is | Robert: Manson: 0. ho 0.
Savannah, Ga... |. James Applewhite Donnelly. ......
For North Carolina, South Carolina,
and Georgia.
Honolulu, Hawaii....... Alfred Ernest Wileman...........
; For Hawaii.
Theophilus Clive Davies. ..........
Chicago, Tl. oo. 00... Alexander Finn... ioe...
For Colorado, North Dakota, South Da-
kota, Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Mich-
igan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Wiscon-
sin, and Wyoming.
Alexander Annan Adams.........
New Orleans, Ia........ Heury Thomas Carew-Hunt.......
For Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi,
Alabama, and Florida.
Harry Craven Ricardo... .......
Portland, Me... ..... w-s="John Bernard Keating... noo.
| For all the ports of entry in Maine.
Baltimore, Md........., Gilbert Brager. ........cv.iies ins
For Maryland, Virginia, and West Vir-
ginia.
Joseph Pike i na an
James Guthrie: o1 cn it mi
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Comnsul-general.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Proconsul.
358 Congressional Directory.
GREAT BRITAIN—GREECE—HONDURAS.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
GREAT BRITATN—cont’d.
Boston, Mass, ... =...
Detroit, Mich
Duluth, Minn
St. Paul, Minn
Biloxi, Migs...» oon
Kansas City, Mo
St. Louis, Mo... sx...
Omaha, Nebr
New York City, N. V....
Wilmington, N. C
Astoria, Oreg.. ..
Portland, Oreg.... .....
Philadelphia, Pa
Arecibo, B.R
Arroyo de Guayama,P.R.
Humacao, BP. Ri... i...
Ponce, P. R
Vieques, 2. R...........
Providence, R. I
Beaufort, S. C
Charleston, S.C... ......
Galveston, Tex... :.....
Sabine Pass, Tex
Apia, Tutuila, Samoa . ...
Newport News, Va.......
Norfolk, Va... os
Richmond, Va
Port Townsend, Wash. ..
Seattle, Wash
Tacoma, Wash
Frederick Peter Leay......:.:...-
For Maine, Massachusetts,
Hampshire, and Vermont.
Constantine Graham... . ..........
Howard G. Meredith. ...
Henny Laylor.....o0n ni
Charles Edward Hamilton
James]. Lemon... of on
Herbert Whitehead MacKirdy.. ...
Thomas Edward Erskine... .......
For Missouri, Kansas,
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Oklahoma, |
Kentncky, and Tennessee and the |
city of East St. I,ouis, Ill.
Rearny Bloss,... «.:. ui... 00
Matthew Alexander Hall..........
Courtenay Walter Bennett ........
For New York, New Jersey, Rhode
Island, and Connecticut. .
Reginald Walsh... cr oo.
Edward William Sind T hurston . .
Norn Ringo. aed
John Greenop
James Sprunte.. oii J
Willian H. Sprung... 000
Edward Mackey Cherry
For Oregon, Washington,
Montana, and Alaska.
James Ernest Laidlaw .............
Wilfred Powell... ........5 0... Se
For Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Delaware.
Idaho,
Charles Liyons Markham Pearson. . |
Norman Supplee Sherwood .......
Charles Agustin Fulcher. .......
John Talbot Knowles.......... .....
Raymond de Burgh Money Layard .
For the Philippine Islands.
David Wilson... ........
John: Charles McCormick. ..... ..
Antonio Bolg... oie choos
For Humacao, Naguabo, and Fajardo.
Adoli Steffens. ........
Fernando Miguel Toro
William Brown Churchward
Thomas G.I. Waymouth ..........
Leonard Read sh ie [on
George A. Stockwell... ......... ....
John Ernest Ressler. 2. =. =
For Beaufort and Port Royal.
Alexander Harkness... .. .....
James Cuthbert Roach... .......
Horace Dickinson Nugent.........
For Texas and New Mexico.
Samuel Wythe Barnes ...........
John BR. Adams...
For Sabine Pass and Port Arthur.
Thomas Trood
Barton Myers
Robert Baldwin Myers... .........
Arthur Ponsonby Wilmer
Oscar locker: 0 ca 00
Bernard Pelly: icon ae tn 000
WH. Mummy ooh as
Charles Ernest Lucian Agassiz. ...
James Taddlaw. too. v0 oon oo
James Hanghton;.... 0... 0...
|
| Proconsul.
| Vice- consul.
| Consul-general.
Consul.
First vice-consul.
Second vice-consul,
Vice-consul.
Acting vice-consul.
Vice-consul.
Acting vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
| Consul.
Vice-consul.
Proconsul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
| Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Proconsul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Acting vice-consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
| I Proconsal.
| Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Proconsul.
.I Vice-consul.
Consuls in the United States.
GREECE—HONDURAS.
359
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
GREECE.
San Francisco, Cal ..... Richard de Fontena... .......... Consul.
Chicago, T.. i:v. 00 ok Nikolaos Sallopoulos ............. Do.
Boston, Mass. .......... Anthony YX. Benachi.......... ... Do.
Towell, Mass... .......... George Gonzoulls ..0............ Acting vice-consul.
St. Younis, Mo... 0. 0. |
Butte, Mont ....-........
New York City, N. V. .. |
Philadelphia, Pa ........ |
Nashville, Tenn. ........ |
Tacoma, Wash'..........
GUATEMATA.
Mobile, Ala. ..... ....
San Diego, Cal... ......
San Prancisco, Cal...
Pensacola, Fla... .. .. >
Chicago, 111... ... Li.
Kansas City, Kans. .....
Louisville, Ry...........
New Orleans, Ia... .. ..
Baltimore, Md... ......
Boston, Mass. .....
St. Tons, Mo... ......
New York City, N. VY...
Philadelphia, Pa........
SanJuan, P.R. 0... ...
Providence, R. IL... .....
Galveston, Tex. ........
Seattle, Wash... ..... ..
Tacoma; Wash. ......  ..
HAITI.
Mobile, Ala...
Savammah, Ga... ......
Chicago, Ill... .
Bangor; Me... ©. oc...
Boston, Mass. . .
New York City, N. V. ...
Wilmington, N. C.......
Mayaguez, P.R....... ..
San Toman, P.R ........,
HONDURAS.
Mobile, Ala. =~...
1.08 Angeles, Cal... .....
San Diego, Cal... .. ...
San Francisco, Cal ......
Washington, D.C... ....
Chicago, TI. 00 00 |
Kansas City, Kans. .....
Louisville, Ky..........
New Orleans, Ia ........
Baltimore, Md .......... |
Hector M. Pesmasoglou.... ........
For Montana and Utah.
Andrée Code Teon ta 00
Ormond W. Pollin;.. ............
Felipe Galicia... oi. a0.
Vincente J. Vidal... 00g
AC Garsias. o.oo LS
For Illinois.
BdwinR. Heath... .....-... ..
For Kansas.
Shirley M.Crawiord..............
JndloNovella. o.oo
C. Morton Stewart, jr... ..v......
For Maryland.
Benjamin Preston Clark... ... ... ...
LD. Kingsland... oot
For Missouri.
Dr. Ramon Bengoechiea.’.....
Gustav Niederlein......... ......
Carlos Vere... oi. 0 oa
Leo Francisco Nadean............
TJ Merrow. coin nih
ETT 200 0 RE SALW ToL S53 RECS, pf AE SE at NE ht Rr I Ti ar Er A Yr Lae or
Vice-consul.
Comnsul-general.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Comnsul-general.
Hon. vice-consul.
Comnsul-general.
Hon. vice-consul.
Honorary consul.
Do.
Do.
Comnsul-general.
Honorary con. gen.
Honorary consul.
Honorary con. gen.
Consul-general.
Honorary consul.
Consul.
Do.
Honorary consul.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Cuthbert Singleton.............«...
Pre, McConville. i. ov = 50
Benjamin C.Clark. 00 |
Gefirard Cegvel...... a...
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul-general.
E.D.- Bassett 2... anno . Vice-consul.
William M,. Camming ............
AdolfoSteffens’.. =. -..... |
Charles Nére = hoi in |
Friesto Hletea: nic ti vag
Tmis Mi. Moragiiez’. ;. ~i7 0. co)
Toms. Duque... loo... 0
Toms Dowellt 0 nid tes aul
George EF. Stone: ..................
PAwinR Heath .... 0... .....
James FE. Buckner... 0...
Jesus Ulloa. o.oo
Biolerndudez 0 vl or
C, Morton Stewart; jr... 0...
Do.
Do.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Do.
Do.
| Consul.
| Vice-consul.
Consul-general.
360 Congressional Directory.
HONDURAS—ITALY.
Residence.
HONDURAS —continued.-
Detroit, Mich
St. Louis, Mo
New York City, N.Y....
Cincinnati, Ohio
Philadelphia, Pa ........|
Galveston, Tex... ........
Seattle, Wash... .......
ITALY.
Birmingham, Ala
Mobile, Ala
Los Angeles, Cal
San Francisco, Cal
Denver, Colo
Trinidad |
New Haven, Conn.......
Washington, D. C..... ...
Pensacola, Fla... ...... |
Xampa, Fla... .....
Savannah, Ga
Honolulu, Hawaii
Chicago, Ili
Springfield, Ill
Indianapolis, Ind
Louisville, Ky... ........
New Orleans, La
Portland, Me
Baltimore, Md. .
Boston, Mass
Lawrence, Mass
Springfield, Mass. .......
Calumet, Mich
Detroit, Mich
Minneapolis, Minn
St. Paul, Minn ;
Gulfport Miss. ........
Vicksburg, Miss... ......
Ransas City, Mo. ....... .. |
St. Louis, Mo... ..
Butte, Mont
Newark, N. J
Trenton, N. J
Albany, N. Y
Buffalo, N. Vv...
' IL. D. Kingsland
| Giovanni Savarese
| Guido Sabetta
| August Franceschini
Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
Carlos M. Grebus
Guillermo G. Griffiths
Guillermo Monceda . . ..
I. Willard Hein
E. F. Peters
Robert J. Winsmore
Michele Stancati
Giovanni Ivulich
For California, Nevada, Oregon, Wash-
ington, and Alaska. _
Chevalier Adolio Bossi... .........
For Colorado, Utah, Idaho, Montana,
Wyoming, Kansas, Nebraska, North
Dakota, South Dakota, Oklahoma,
Arizona, and New Mexico.
Giulio Servadio
Giusseppe Maio
Michele Riccio
Giovanni Battista Cafiero SEL
Mose Cafiero
Federico Augusto Schaefer
For Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Ken-
tucky, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota,
and Missouri.
Arturo Granata
Giovanni Passarelli
Giuseppe Cuneo
Count Luigi Aldrovandi Marescotti.
For Iouisiana,I'exas, Mississippi, Ar-
kansas, Alabama, Florida, and Ten-
nessee.
Carlo Papini
Count Gerolamo Moroni
Gaspare Vervena
Prospero Schiaffino
elaine fniin niu aul Oia lB ells ali ntieeie win. a le ee ee eee
Giuseppe Sinclitico
Giacomo Rubeo Lisa
Cardiello Pietro di Antonio
Edgardo Perera
| Francisco'Franchino:........ ....
Nicola Ferro
Dr. Alfredo Magnani
Pelice Roneca.. oh. ory
Germano Placido Baccelli
Giovanni Banchetti TOT SS Tet So drt a gt
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul-general.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Do.
Consular agent.
Do.
Do.
Comnsul-general.
Do.
| Vice-consul.
| Consular agent.
| Do
| In charge consulate,
| Consular agent.
| Do.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Consular agent.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consular agent.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consular agent.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consular agent.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consular agent.
Do.
Do.
Consuls in the United States.
ITALY—LIBERIA.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction.
ITAT,v—continued.
New York City, N. V. ...
Yonkers, N. Y
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
South McAlister, Okla. ..
Portland, Oreg
Dubois, Pa
Philadelphia, Pa
Pittsburg, Pa
Scranton, Pa
Manila, P. I
Mayaguez, P. R
Ponce, P. R.
San Juan, P. R
Providence, R. 1
Charleston, S. C
Memphis, Tenn
Galveston, Tex
Ogden, Utah
Barre, Vt
Norfolk, Va
Seattle, Wash
Fairmont, W. Va
Milwaukee, Wis
JAPAN.
Mobile, Ala
San Francisco, Cal
Honolulu, Hawaii
Chicago, Ill
New Orleans, La
Boston, Mass . ..
St. Louis, Mo
New York City, N. Vv...
Portland, Oreg
Philadelphia, Pa
Manila, P. I
Galveston, Tex
Seattle, Wash
KONGO.
Baltimore, Md
LIBERIA.
Mobile, Ala
San Francisco, Cal
New Orleans, La
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass
St. Louis, Mo
Annibale Raybaudi Massiglia
For Connecticut, New Jersey, New
York, and Rhode Island.
Gustavo Di Rosa
Adolfo Falkenburg
Giuseppe Gentile
Adolfo Vinci
With jurisdiction in
County.
Carlo Ginocchio
Nicola Cerri
Guiseppe Fossino
Ferdinando Candiani d’Olivola . . ..
Giuseppe Federici
Giacomo Fara Forni
For Pennsylvania, Delaware, Mary-
land, Virginia, West Virginia,
North Carolina, South Carolina,
and Georgia.
Tuizi Villari
Guilio Iccardi
Westchester
Francisco Reyes
Giacomo Antonio Coino
Alessandro Bozzo
For Porto Rico.
Mariano Vervena
Giovanni Sottile
Rolando Arata
Clemente Nicolini
Cesare Frazzini
Enrico Solari. . .
Arturo Parati
Augusto J. Ghiglione
Giuseppe Caldara
Arminio Conte
William Peter Hutchison
Choso Koike
Senichi Uyeno
Kazuo Matsubara
John Walker Phillips =... .....
Erwin H. Walcott
Yasutaro Numaro
J. Franklin McFadden
Shosuke Akatsuka
J. H. Langbehn
Tokichi Tanaka
James Gustavus Whiteley
George W. Lovejoy
Ray P. Saffold
IL. H. Reynolds
Charles Hall Adams
For the United States.
Hutchins Inge
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consular attaché.
Consular agent.
Consular agent.
Deo.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Consular agent.
Do.
Consul.
Consular agent.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consular agent.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Honorary consul.
Comnsul-general.
Do.
Consul.
Honorary consul.
Do.
Do.
Comnsul-general.
Consul.
Honorary consul.
Consul.
Honorary consul.
Consul.
Comnsul-general.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Consul,
Congressional Directory.
LIBERIA—MEXICO.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction.
ILIBERIA—continued.
Jersey City, N. J
New Vork City, N.Y...
Philadelphia, Pa
Manila, P. I
Galveston, Tex
MEXICO.
Mobile, Ala
Clifton, Ariz
Douglas Ariz... .........
Naco and Bisbee, Ariz...
Nogales, Ariz... -........
Phoenix, Anz...
Tucson, Ariz
Yuma, Ariz
Calexico, Cal
Los Angeles, Cal
San Diego, Cal
San Francisco, Cal
Denver, Colo
Pensacola, Fla
Honolulu, Hawaii
Chicago, 111
Indianapolis, Ind
Louisville, Ky
New Orleans, La
Baltimore, Md..........
Boston, Mass
Albert W. Minick
Edward G. Merrill
Thomas J. Hunt
Robert C. Moon
R. Summers
J. R. Gibson
Alfonso Jimenez
For Alabama.
Miguel Lopez Torres
For Graham County.
Daniel E. Montes
For Douglas.
Toribio Garcia
For Cochise County.
Manuel Mascarefias
For Santa Cruz County.
Arturo M. Elias
For Apache, Coconino, Gila, Mari-
copa, Mohave, Navajo, Pinal, and
Yavapai counties, and the State of
Utah.
Augustin Escudero
For Pima County.
Enrique Camacho
For Yuma County.
¥nrique de la Sierra
For Imperial County.
Antonio Lozano y Castro
For Kern, J,os Angeles, Orange, San
Bernardino, San Luis Obispo, Santa
Barbara, and Ventura counties.
Jose Losano y Castro
Joaquin Diaz Prieto
For Riverside and San Diego countics.
Dr. Plutarco Ornelas
Indirect jurisdiction over Arizona,
California, Colorado, Idaho, Mon-
tana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Wash-
ington, and Wyoming.
Direct jurisdiction over the State of
California, except the consular dis-
tricts of Los Angeles and San Diego,
and the State of Nevada.
Gustavo Levy
For Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana.
Adelaido José Ortiz
Abraham Diaz
For Florida and Georgia.
ignacio J. Diaz
Guillermo Lanz
For Honolulu and dependencies.
Augustin Pina
For Illinois, Minnesota, and Wiscon- |
sin.
Russell B. Harrison
For Indiana.
Horace C. Brannin
For Kentucky and Tennessce.
Fernando Baz, jr
For Iouisiana.
Rogelio Fernandez Giiel
For Delaware, Maryland, and West
Virginia.
Arturo P. Cushing
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Frederick O. Houghton. ............,
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Consul ad interim.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Comnsul-general.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consuls in the United States.
MEXICO.
363
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
MEXICO—continued. |
Detroit, Mich
St. Louis, Mo
New York City, N.Y...
Cincinnati, Ohio
Portland, Oreg
Philadelphia, Pa
Ponce, P. R
San Juan, P. R
Brownsville, Tex
Del Rio, Texas. .
Fagle Pass, Tex.
El Paso, Tex...
Galveston, Tex. .
Laredo, Tex
Port Arthur, Tex
Riogrande City, Tex... ..
Roma, Tex
: | Cayetano Romero
Daniel F. Altland
For Michigan.
Vicente Ros
For Mississippi.
Jost V.Dosal,... in lis
For Kansas City, and the States of
Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota,
Oklahoma, and South Dakota.
Hiram S. Thompson
Miguel E. Diebold
For Arkansas, Iowa, and Missouri,
except Kansas City.
Indirect jurisdiction over Alabama,
Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware,
Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, I,ouisi-
ana, Maine, Massachusetts, Mary-
land, Michigan, Minnesota, Missis-
sippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mex-
ico, New York, North Carolina,
North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South
Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee,
Texas, Vermont, Virginia, West Vir-
ginia, "and Wisconsin.
Direct jurisdiction over Connecticut,
New Jersey, and New York.
Manuel A. Esteva Ruiz
Hugo Fromman
For Ohio.
| Frank A. Spencer
For Idaho and Oregon.
| Manuel Torres y Sagaseta
| For Pennsylvania, except the city of
Pittsburg.
| James W. Wardrop
For Pittsburg.
Manuel Paniagua y Oller .........
Miguel Barraganw. ....... oo v.s.vs
For Cameron, Hidalgo, Nueces, Refu-
gio, and San Patricio counties.
Manuel Cuesta
For Valverde County.
Francisco de P. Villasana
For Brewster, Dimmit, Edwards, Jeff
Davis, Kinney, Maverick, Pecos,
Terrell, Uvalde, Valverde, and Za’
valla counties.
Antonio V. Lomali
For El Paso, Loving, Presidio, Reeves,
Ward, and Winkler counties, and
the Territory of New Mexico.
Joaquin A. Alvarez
Manuel N. Velarde
For Calhoun, Brazoria, Chambers,
Galveston, Harris, Jackson, and
Matagorda counties.
Antonio Leon Grajede
For Duval, Webb, and Zapata coun-
ties.
Jose y Gamboa
For Orange County.
Alberto Leal
For Starr County, except Roma.
Roberta Gayén
For Roma and vicinity.
| R. Voight
For Jefferson County.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
| Vice-consul.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.,
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Vice-consul,
364   Congressional Directory.
MEXICO—NETHERLANDS.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
MEXICO—continued.
San Antonio, Tex... .... Barigue Ornelas... ..0... co 00. Consul,
For the State of Texas, except the
consular districts of Brownsville,
Hagle Pass, El Paso, Galveston,
ILaredo, Port Arthur, Riogrande
Sz Roma, Sabine Pass, and Texas
Fexng Clty, ..o:0 vo. ATS ‘Zuckermann ............. Do.
Newport News, Va... ...
Norfolk and Newport
News, Va.
Seattle, Wash
Tacoma, Wash. .........
MONACO.
San Francisco, Cal. ....
New York City. N. V.....
NETHERLANDS.
Mobile, Ala... ~........ |
LosiAngeles, Cal... ..
San Francisco, €al..... |
Pensacola, Pla:.........
Savannah, Ga...........
Honolulu, Hawaii. ......
Chicago, 1112...
New Orleans, La........
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass... ....
Grand Rapids, Mich. . . ..
St Baul, Minn.....o...
Gulfport, Miss. ......:..
St. Louis, Mo
New York City, N. Y...
For Texas City.
Ramon Axle ifr... 0.0.
For the port of Newport News, Va.
Juan Pedro Didap
For North Carolina, South Carolina,
and Virginia.
J. D. Trenholme
For Seattle.
Ancil F. Haines
For Washington, except the port of
Seattle.
Ray P. Saffold
Auguste Jouve
Ao Progkanels. iv oii
For Alabama.
| J. Zeehandelaar
For Southern California and Arizona.
la J.C. Marslly ovo ovis
For Arizona, California, Nevada,
Oregon, and Washington.
ATAU ST ee had
For Florida.
W. de Bruyn ops, vai... vv:
For Georgia, North Carolina, and
South Carolina.
W. van der Schoor de Boer
For the city of Savannah.
H. M. von Holt
For Hawaiian Islands.
GCG. Blrkhofls ut
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
For Delaware, Maryland, Virginia,
and West Virginia.
CoV, Dagens
For Massachusetts, Maine, Rhode
Island, New Hampshire, and Ver-
mont.
Jacob Steketee
For Michigan.
Theodore T. Koch... soo ies
For Minnesota.
J. W. Corry
For Mississippi.
G. H. Ten Broek
For Missouri, Iowa, Kansas, Colorado,
Arkansas, Utah, New Mexico, and
Oklahoma.
a). Re Plamdern:.. 0. avn
For NewYork, New Jersey, and Con-
necticut.
H. Pluijgers
For New York.
Vice-consul,
Consul.
Vice-consul,
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Hon. vice-consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.:
Consul.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Vice-consul,
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Consuls in the United States.
NETHERLANDS—NORWAY.
365
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
NETHERIANDS—cont’d.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Portland, Oreg
Philadelphia, Pa
Manila, P. I
San Juan, P. R
Galveston, Tex
Port Arthur, Tex........
Newport News, Va
Norfolk, Va
NICARAGUA.
Mobile, Ala
Los Angeles, Cal
San Diego, Cal
San Francisco, Cal
Chicago, Ill
Kansas City, Kans
New Orleans, Lia
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass
Detroit, Mich
Kansas City, Mo
St. Louis, Mo
New York City, N. Y....
Philadelphia, Pa
Manila, P. I
Ponce, P. R
Norfolk, Va
Seattle, Wash
NORWAY.
Mobile, Ala
Nome, Alaska
San Diego, Cal
San Prancisco, Cal......
San Pedro, Cal
- Denver, Colo
Washington, D. C
Fernandina, Fla
Key West, Fla
OrrisP. Cobb in charge of consulate
For Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, and
Tennessee.
J. W. Matthes
For Oregon.
Cone Fe Re AR RE Se
For Pennsylvania.
P. K. A. Meerkamp van Embden. .
Anjo Cornelio Crebas
Jacobo Bravo
For west coast of Porto Rico.
Otto E. A. ¥. Wantzelius
For south coast of Porto Rico.
For Galveston and vicinity.
A. J. M. Vuylsteke
For Port Arthur and suburbs.
James Haughton
For city of Newport News.
Barton Myers
For Virginia, except city of Newport
News.
Luis M. Moraguez
Tomds L. Duqué
Tomés Dowell
Victor Zelaya
B. Singer
Edwin R. Heath
Gustavo A. Bonilla
Enrique H. Lee
Charles Hall Adams
Arthur I.. Bresler
Willis Wood
L. D. Kingsland
Adolfo D. Straus
Pio Bolafios Alvarez
Timoteo Vaca Seydel
Trinidad Eugenio Lacayo
Ignacio Garcia Rojas
Francisco Cancio y Vendrell
Charles M. Barnett
R. Chilcott
Towig Donalds. ive on dian. Lo
For Alabama.
Rasmus Thorolf Lyng
For Alaska.
John Engebretsen
Knud Henry Lund
For California, Oregon, and Wash-
ington, and the Territory of Alaska.
George H. Peck, jr
Johan Peter Paulson
For Colorado.
Kort Berle
For Fernandina.
William John Hamiilton Taylor. ...
| For Key West.
66525—60-2—2D ED——25
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Comnsul-general .
Consul.
Comnsul-general.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Comnsul-general.
Vice-consul.
Vice-consul ad
terim.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
in-
RS i a ie re tc
366 Congressional Directory.
NORWAY.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
NORWAY —continued.
Pensacola, Ha....... ...
Savannah, Ga...........
Honolulu, Hawaii. ......
Chicago, HL. i. 2. vi avi
Decorah, Towa..........
New Orleans, 1a........
Portland, Me... .........
Boston, Mass:...........
Detroit, Mich...........
St. Panl, Minn. .........
Gulfport, Miss. ..... So
St. Toms, Mo...
Omaha, Nebr... ........
Buffalo, N..V...........
New York City, N. Y....
Wilmington, N. C.......
Grand Forks, N. Dak....
Cleveland, Ohio... ...
Portland, Oreg....... ........
Philadelphia, Pa........
Cebu, Pod. ivi
San Juan, B.R..........
Charleston, S.C ........
Sioux Falls, 8. Dak.....
Galveston, Tex .........
Port Arthur, Tex........
Salt Lake City, Utah....
Newport News, Va ......
Eric Alexander Zelius ............
For Florida, except the ports of Key
West and Fernandina.
Einar Sto Trogdale sie 0
For Georgi
William Adolf Arnold Ulrich Pfo-
tenhauer.
For Hawaii.
T.F. Hackfeld ee eT
For Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan.
Johannes B.Wist vo. .... oo niasio
For Iowa.
Andreas Emil Ugland..... ...... ...
For Louisiana.
Tewksbury Loring Sweat .........
For Maine.
Arthur Frederick Sidebotham.....
For Maryland.
Peter Justin Paasche... ..... .......
For Massachusetts.
For Michigan.
Engebreth Hagbarth Hobe. .......
For Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa,
North Dakota, South Dakota, Mon-
tana, Wyoming, and Idaho.
Joseph William Corry... .......... ..
For Mississippi.
Johan Guldbrand Borresen........
For Missouri.
A. LL. Undeland..........5.....
For Nebraska.
Soren Th. M. B. Kielland.........
Che Ravn. ea ani sn
For the United States (except the
Territory of Hawaii) and Porto Rico.
Thiodolf Klingenberg . .... co...
Alexander Severin Heide ....... a
For North Carolina.
Halidan Bendeke .... 2.0...
For North Dakota.
Ole M. Triegtads. o.oo ooo
For Ohio.
Endre Martin Cederbergh ........
For Oregon.
Johan Nordahl Wallem ...........
For Pennsylvania.
John Talbot Knowles... ............
Bric St, Clair Purdun... = ........
Walter George Stevenson .........
For Philippine Islands.
Friedrich Schreoder..............
For the Department of Mayaguez.
Thomas Edward Tee .............
For the Department of Ponce.
Joaquin PF. Fernandez, ............:
For the Island of Porto Rico.
Chr. To larsen yy mas its ins
For South Carolina.
Wollert Hildahl. .. = ove...
For South Dakota.
John'W, Focke. cian aii, oo
For Texas, except the harbors of Port
Arthur and Sabine Pass.
John Robert Adams ..............
For Port Arthur and Sabine Pass.
Jom Halvorsen ..........-.:.....
For Utah.
James Honghton .. ..... 0...
For Newport News.
Vice-consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Acting vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
==
Consuls in the United States.
NORWAY—PARAGUAY.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction.
NORWAY—continued.
Norfolk, Va
Port Townsend, Wash . ..
Seattle, Wash
Tacoma, Wash
Milwaukee, Wis
PANAMA.
Mobile, Ala
San Francisco, Cal
Atlanta, Ga
Hilo, Hawaii
Chicago, Ill
New Orleans, La
Baltimore, Md
Gulfport, Miss
St. Louis, Mo
New Vork City, N.Y. ...
Philadelphia, Pa
San Juan, P. R
Chattanooga, Tenn
Galveston, Tex
Puget Sound, Wash
PARAGUAY.
Mobile, Ala
Wilmington, Del
Washington, D. C
Savannah, Ga
Chicago, Ill
Indianapolis, Ind
Baltimore, Md
Detroit, Mich
Kansas City, Mo
St. T.ouis, Mo...
Newark, N. J
Trenton, N. J
Buffalo, N. Y
New York City, N.Y...
Rochester, N. Y
Cincinnati, Ohio
Philadelphia, Pa
San Juan, P. R
Aubrey Gregory Bailey
For Virginia, except ‘the port of
Newport News.
Oscar Klocker
For the counties of Chehalis, Clallam,
Island, Jefferson, Kitsap, Mason,
Pacific, San Juan, and Wahkiakum.
Thomas S. H. Kolderup
For the counties of Whatcom, Skagit,
Snohomish, King, Chelan, Okano-
gan, Douglas, Ferry, Stevens, Lin-
coln, and Spokane.
Dirk Blaauw
For the counties of Pierce, Thurston,
Lewis, Cowlitz, Clarke, Skamania,
Kittitas, Yakima, Klickitat, Benton,
Franklin, Adams, Wallawalla, Whit-
man, Columbia, Garfield, and
Asotin.
Olaf I. Rove
For Wisconsin.
Juan de Dios Amador
Manuel Quintero V
Diogenese Quintero
Rodman C. Pell
Russell Hopkins
Reginaldo T. Guard
C. Gilbert Wheeler
Rodolfo Perez
James F. Ferguson
David Nufios Henriquez
Ernest B. Filsinger
Manuel de Obaldia
Wilfred H. Schoff
Charles Vére
James R. Shaler
A. A. Van Alstyne
Harry S. Garfield
Elliott K. Rickarby
Teodoro A. Leisen
Clifford Stevens Walton
Charles E. Coffin
Guillermo Love
Juan Walker
Guillermo C.Winsborough
C. M. Prynne
James A. Coe
Richard C. Oliphant
Charles H. Funnell
Felix Aucaigne
For New York.
William Wallace White
Jolin Modlves ar on a0 on ol
Eduardo H. Hargrave
Rodman Wanamaker
For Pennsylvania, Delaware, New
Jersey, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wis-
consin, Michigan, and Missouri.
Howard S. Jones. ...........i....
Manuel Fernandez Juncos
For Porto Rico,
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Comnsul-general.
| Consul.
Vice-consul.
Vice-consul.
Honorary consul.
= Do;
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul-general,
Consul.
Vice-consul.
; Do.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.,
Consul,
368 Congressional Directory.
PARAGUAY—PORTUGAL.
Ee
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
PARAGUAY—continued.
Norfolk, Va... ....... 0... Carlos Barnet Sf oinn ot Consul.
For Norfolk and Newport News. |
Richmond, Va .......,.. M.D. Hoge ........00.. io... Vice-consul. J
PERSIA.
Washington, D. C....... MivsaAiRoli Khan .............. Consul.
Chicago, Ill
St. Toms, Mo...... 0.x
New York City, N. Y....
Pittsburg, Pai... oo...
PERU.
Y.08 Angeles, Cal... .....
San Diego, Cal... .......
San Francisco, Cal
Savannah, Ga... ..........
Honolulu, Hawaii. ......
Chicago 111... .. fins
New Orleans, Ia........
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass... ..........
New York City, N.Y....
Toledo, Ohio
Portland, Orez ......... ..
Philadelphia, Pa
Sam Juan, PR.
Charleston, S. C...........
Norfolk, Va
Port Townsend and Pu-
get Sound, Wash.
PORTUGAL.
San Francisco, Cal
Washington, D.C...
Pensacola, Fla
Brunswick, Ga ..........
Savannaly, Ga... ........
Honolulu, Hawaii... ....
Chicago, Il... ...........
New: Orleans, 1.a........
Baltimore, Md... .......
Boston, Mass. ...........
Pall River, Mass........
New Bedford, Mass. .....
New York City, N. V....
Richard Crane, jr... . ...uiie son
Milton Seropyan
HRP oc so ly
Alphonse Rulis. ...... ..... ..:.
With jurisdiction over New Jersey.
Haig Herant Pakradooni..........
Elmer B. Mackosich..............
E. J. Louis
Enrique Grant... .....00.. 0.00 000
For Georgia and Florida.
Bruce Cortwright........ ov ics
WaoNM-T Bigke.. iii dis aad
Richard Barthel... .. ... 0.0...
Q.G. H.B. Rehrhahn. i -....«......
Eugenio C. Andres
Eduardo Higginson
Antonio Rafael Vejar.. 0.0... ..
Wilfredo H.Schoff ...............
Dr. Manuel J. Nuflez:..... ..........
For North Carolina, South Carolina,
and Tennessee.
Bl Budeoard.. 5.5000 ad
LaAlbert Bartlett 0 Conse
For Port Townsend and Puget Sound.
Ignacio R. da Costa Duarte. .......
For San Francisco and its consular
district.
Dr. José de Souza Bettencourt.....
Emmanuele Fronani i
Juan, Bowrds. 0 aa
Rosendo Xorg... 0
Antonio de Souza Canavarro .:....
Aleixo de Queiroz Ribeiro
For Illinois.
8, Chapman Simms... 0 eas
Maurice Generelly.........0......
Adelbert W. Mears... .............
Viscount de Valleda Costa. .......
For Maine, Massachusetts,
Hampshire, and Vermont.
Jayme Mackay d’Almeida.........
For Boston.
Manoel Pedro Mackay d’Almeida. .
For Fall River and its consular district.
Joao Carlos da Silva Pitta... .......
Tunis de Sousa Monteiro Ferreira de
Castro.
For all the States except California,
Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, New
Hampshire, Oregon, Vermont, and
Washington,
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Comnsul-general.
Consul.
Consul.
Honorary consul,
Consul.
Do.
Vice Consul.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Vice-consul,
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul-general.
8)
f
{
4
Consuls in the United States.
PORTUGAL-—SPAIN.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction.
PORTUGAI—continued.
New York City, N.V....
Philadelphia, Pa
Manila, P. I
San Juan, P. R
Newport News and Nor-
folk, Va.
RUSSIA.
Mobile, Ala
San Francisco, Cal
Pensacola, Fla
‘Savannah, Ga
Chicago, Ill
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass
New York City, N.Y....
Portland, Oreg
Philadelphia, Pa
Pittsburg, Pa
Manila, P. I
Galveston, Tex
SALVADOR.
‘San Diego, Cal
San Francisco, Cal
New Orleans, Ia
Boston, Mass
St. Louis, Mo
New York City, N.Y....
SIAM.
Chicago, Ill
New Vork City, N. Y....
SPAIN.
Mobile, Ala
San Francisco, Cal
Fernandina, Fla
Jacksonville, Fla
Pensacola, Fla
Tampa, Fla
Brunswick, Ga
Savannah, Ga
Honolulu, Hawaii
Chicago, 111
New Orleans, La
Roberto Rumsey
John Mason °
Miguel Osorio y Cembrano
For the Philippine Islands.
Alejandro Gaos Berea
Dr. Esteban Garcia Cabrera
James Haughton
Murray Wheeler
Paul Kozakévitch
Horace G. Platt
Fannin Chipley
William W. Williamson
Baron Ernest de Schilling
Charles Nitze
T. Quincy Browne
Baron Albert Schlippenbach
William R. Tucker
Pierre V..Rovnianek. ............
T,uis Mendelson
Fncarnacién Mejia
For the United States.
Dr. Felix Formento
George Andrew Lewis
L. D. Kingsland
Ernesto Schernikow
Milward Adams
Loring Townsend Hildreth
Luis Marty Moragues
For Alabama.
Jose Maria Lamé de Espinosa
For California, Utah, Wyoming, Mon-
tana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon,
Nevada, Arizona,Alaska,and Hawaii.
Orel Martin Goldaracena y Eche-
varria.
Santiago Carrio
Juan Ferrer y Quintana
For Florida.
Juan L. Borras
Vicente Guerra
Rosendo Torras
Javier Esteve y Borrell
For Georgia, North Carolina, South
Luiz Fernandez Alvarez
Berthold Singer
José Teixidor y Jugo
For Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado,
Kansas, I,ouisiana, Mississippi, Mis-
souri, Texas, and the Territory of
New Mexico.
Carolina, Tennessee, and Kentucky.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul,
Do.
Comnsul-general.
Vice-consul.
Hon. vice-consul.
Consul-general.
Honorary consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Hon. vice-consul.
Consul.
Hon. vice-consul.
Consul.
370 Congressional Directory.
SPAIN—SWEDEN.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
SPAIN—continued.
Portland, Me...............
Baltimore, Md.... ....
Boston, Mass: ..... .....
Gulfport, Miss ..........
Pascagoula, Miss... .....
St. Youla, Mo ..... 0.
New York City, N.Y ....
Aguadilla, PR ..........
Arecibo, PR... .-
Arroyo-Guayama,P.R...
Humacao, P.B.. =... ..
Mayagiiez, P. Bio
Ponce, P.B.......i....:
San Juan; 2. Ron
Vieques, P.R.. .........
Charleston, S. C.........
Brownsville, Tex. .......
Galveston, Tex..........
Notfolk, Va. i... .-.
SWEDEN.
Mobile, Ala... vii. .5
Nome, Alaskn...........
Chauncey Red Bure... ........
For Maine.
Prospero Schiaffino...............
For Maryland and the District of
Columbia.
Pedro Mackay de Almeida ........
FrankeBoster it. oi. soo. on
_ For Gulfport and its district.
Nicente Ros. tr 00. Sn,
For Mississippi.
James Arbuckle. ................
Antonio Diaz Miranda y Arango. ..
Teodomiro Aguilar y Sales. .......
Avelino Pazos. on... 6 nnn
Horace Chester Newcomb. ........
For Pennsylvania and Delaware.
Jesus Sanchez Mellado ...........
For Cebu, Leyte, Behol, and Samar.
Juan Estrada 'y Acebal............
l'or the Visayas and Calamianes
Islands, Paragua, Masbate, Tablas,
Sibuyan, theislands adjacent there-
to except Cebu, and the Sulu Archi-
pelago.
Arturo Baldasano y Topete........
General jurisdiction over the Philip-
pine Archipelago; special jurisdic-
tion over the Batanesand Babuyanes
islands, I,uzon, Mindoro, Guam, and
the territory ofthe Philippine Archi-
pelago, except the consular district
of Iloilo. :
Joaquin de Travesedo y Martinez
de Tejada.
Emilio Mazarredo....... .--..-..:
For Aguadilla and its district.
Angel Sanz y Ambros. ......... ...
For Arecibo, Camuy, Ciales, Hatillo,
Barceloneta, Manati, Morovis, Que-
bradillas, Utuado, and Vega-Baja.
Policarpo de Fchevarria y Diaz. ...
For Guayama, Arroyo, Salinas, Patil-
las, and Maunabo.
AntonioMa. Oms yCall...........
For Humacao, Ceiba, Fajardo, Lu-
quillo, Naguabo, Piedras, Yabucoa,
Hato Grande or San Iorenzo, and
Juncos.
Juan Vazquez y Lopez Amor ......
For Mayagiiez, Anasco, Las Marias,
Cabo Rojo, San German, Hormi-
gueros, Lajas, Sabana Grande, and
Maricao. .
Prancisco Pelegri Roger ...........
Florencio Suarez ....... ..+.-......
For the District of Ponce.
Joaquin: Cassi y Rivera... .........
Ramon Noboa y Manuel de Villena.
Avelino Portela Rolan............
For Vieques and its district.
Antonio Gastaver J... ..
_ For South Carolina.
Simon Celaya... oi. i aie od
HendrichMosle. i... ..........
For Texas, except Brownsville.
Charles C. Richardson... ............
Bobert H. Smith ................:
Rasmus Thoroli Lyng. .........»
Hon. vice-consul.
Do.
Vice-consul.
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Hon. vice-consul.
Do.
Hon. vice-consul.
Consul.
Comnsul-general.
Vice-consul.
Hon. vice-consul.
Do.
Honorary consul.
Hon. vice-consul.
Do.
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Hon. vice-consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
|
1
ip Lm
aa
a
Consuls in the United States. 371
‘SWEDEN—SWITZERLAND.
Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
SWEDEN—continued.
San Diego, Cal... .. Nils Malmberg... oui ia Vice-consul.
San Francisco, Cal....... William Matson, =... oe. Consul.
o g For the States of California, Idaho,
iV Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Wash-
ington, and the ‘Territories of
Alaska and Arizona.
Fredrik Westeberg ...o......0 0. Vice-consul.
i Denver, Colo. ........ ou: Hjalmar R. Sahlgaard............ Do.
Pensacols, Fla. ......... Charles McKenzie-Oerting ... .... Do.
] Savamnnaly, Ga........... James Lee Rankin... ........ | Do.
¥ Honolulu, Hawaii....... Georg Friedrich Rodick .......... Consul.
| For the Territory of Hawaii.
Chicago, TL... JR ldnderen ain. Do.
For the States of Arkansas, Illinois,
Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio,
and Wisconsin.
Sioux City, Iowa. ....... Gustavus Nelson Swan... ......... Vice-consul.
New Orleans, La........ Pearl Wight... 000. 8 2h Do. -
Baltimore, Md... ...... Herman Rauschenberg............ Do.
Boston, Mass. ............ Birgar Gustaf Adolf Rosentwist. . .. Do.
Grand Haven, Mich... .. Daniel Frederick Pagelson........ Do.
Minneapolis, Minn... ... CoA Smith... Lia Consul.
For the States of Colorado, Iowa,
Kansas, Minnesota, Montana, Ne-
braska, North Dakota, Oklahoma,
South Dakota, and Wyoming, and
For Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico,
and Utah.
Af the Territory of New Mexico.
St. Paul, Minn... ... co. Joseph A. Jackson: wi is an In charge of vice-
consulate.
St. Touis, Mo»... + CAA FlhstrOmer. 0 0 oo Vice-consul.
Omaha; Nebr... ....... Emric’M. Stenberg... 005... Do.
New Vork City, Nov. LAB Johnson... wl... 0.0... Consul.
For the States of Alabama, Connect-
icut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Mary-
land, Massachusetts, Mississippi, |
New Hampshire, New Jersey, New |
York, North Carolina, Pennsylva- |
nia, Rhode Island, South Carolina, i
Tennessee, ‘Texas, Vermont, Vir-
ginia, West Virginia, and the District |
of Columbia. .
WM. Clavholmie, 0 5 dl yon, Vice-consul.
Grand Forks, N. Dak. ...| Andrew Isidor Widlund .......... Do. |
Cleveland, Ohio... .. =. -.. Laurentius Ludwig Malm......... Do.
Portland, Oreg.-........ Blof: Valdemar Lidell 2... ... 0. Do.
Philadelphia, Pa... .... MarcelAlonzo VL... nics Do.
Mamila: 2,0... oc W.G.Stevenison ,... ............. In charge of consu- |
late.
Ponce, PR... hn LL Brancleco oro: ois anes Vice-consul. I
San Juan, POR... Johann Friedrich von Uffel Schom- | Consul. |
: berg. i
For the island of Porto Rico.
Galveston, Tex. ....... J-Bevrand Adome .. .. Lo. LL Vice-constul. |
Saltlake Clty, Utah ol. oo iro raises vas Do. |
Notiolk, Va....5........ Henning Fernstromy.—................ Do. |
Port Townsend, Wash. ..| Oscar Klécker.................. .. Do. i
Seattle, Wash... ... Andrew Chilberg.... oios ons oo Do. |
Madison, Wig... ....... Halle Steensland =o... coo. oo. Do. |
i
SWITZERLAND. |
San Francisco, Cal... .. JiAnioine Borel. .... 0. vo. ... Lo. Consul. :
For California and Nevada.
Jean Preuler 0... hia, Vice-consul.
Denver, Colo............. Pant Wels. voi. onde veiias Consul.
372   Congressional Directory.
SWITZERLAND—URUGUAY.
Residence.
SWITZERLAND—cont’d.
Washington, D.C.......
Chicago, Hl... i. 7. ....
Louisville, Ky ...........
New Orleans, Ia........
St. Paul, Minn..........
St. Lous, Mo... .........
New York City,N.Y.....
Cincinnati; Ohio........
Portland, Oreg..........
Philadelphia, Pa........
Manila BL no ia
Galveston, Tex..........
TURKEY.
San Francisco, Cal... ...
Washington, D. C.........
Ehieago, Tl... 5a 00
Boston, Mass... .........
New York City, N.Y. ...
URUGUAY.
Mobile Ala... 00
San Francisco, Cal ......
Apalachicola, Fla.......
Fernandina, Fla .........
Jacksonville, Fla... .....
Pensacola, Fla. .........
Brunswick, Ga..........
Savannah, Ga... .........
Chicago, TI... .......
New Orleans, Ia........
Calais, Me. .o....o....
Portland, Me ............-
Baltimore, Md ...........
Boston, Mass. ...........
Pascagoula, Miss. .......
Albany, N.V...........
Name and jorisdiction.
The ILegation 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, and
Florida.
Arnold Flolinger..... "oo
For Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, and
northern Illinois.
J.C. Baumberger.: .. .. 0 c.
For Kentucky and Tennessee.
Pmile TO Le ea
For Iouisiana, Alabama, Arkansas,
and Mississippi.
Arnold Schwyzer .................-
For Minnesota, North Dakota, South
Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana.
Jocques Buff... ...... .... is
For Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, and
southern Illinois.
Jacques Bertschmanm.............
For New York, Maine, New Hamp-
shire, Vermont, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, and Connecticut.
Fdmund Inthy 0.000
For Ohio and Indiana.
CharlegBivcher. i oii in
For Oregon, Washington, and Idaho.
Gustave A. Walther................
For Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
Bile Sprimgl.. cv va oon
Jenn Pretsig. on chain
eich Miller. .... 00. via ana
George Fall. ooo oon a
Doctor Schoenfeld... ........
SamliArslan Bey...
Charles Henrotin.. 0...
Frank G. Macomber... ............
Mundji Bev. ...... 0.0 on
Tonis M. MoOragues.. uve. coe yess
For Alabama.
O. M. Goldaracena. ... ........ >
For California.
Salomon Brash........o.. .......
George l,. Baltzell ...~.........
BC Sell a
Jaime Co Watsons oo 0th. oon
RosendoTorras =o... cc. cani
For Brunswick and Darien.
Ramon Bsteve ot. ove
Juan Moffitt, o.oo
For Iouisiana.
Guillermo A. Murchie ............
James B. Marrett vo. ...0. 0.000.
Prudencio de Murguiondo .........
For the United States.
Teonce Rabillon....... 5 Lo...
W. Allen Taft, jr. 0... 0.000)
Manuel Vl, Ros... oi. niin. on a
For Pascagoula, Biloxi, and Gulfport.
Guillermo A. Saxton .............
Consul.
Vice-consul.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Do.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Honorary con. gen,
Consul-general.
Vice-consul.
Consul.”
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do. -
Consul.
Do.
Vice-consul,
Do.
Consul.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Prov. vice-consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
roms
Consuls in the United States.
URUGUAY -VENEZUELA.
373
Residence.
URUGUAY—continued.
New York City, N. Y....
Philadelphia, Pa........
Manila, BT. 0000
Mayaguez, P.R.........
Ponce, PR... Fre
San Juan, BR. RR... ...
Charleston, S.C... ...:...
Galveston, Tex. .........
Port Arthur and Sabine
Pass, Tex.
Norfolk, Va....... ES
Richmond, Va..........
VENEZUELA.
San Francisco, Cal... ....
Chicago, II... 00...
New Orleans, ILa........
New York City, N. Y....
Philadelphia, Pa.....
Arecibo BR... i.
Mayaguez, Po R....ce
San Juan, PB...
Name and jurisdiction. Rank.
Alfredo Metz Green do 0.3.00. Consul.
Henry XH. Jennings... .... ... 5..¢ Hon. vice-consul.
Johan Nordahl Wallem ...... ....... Consul.
Manuel Peypochi..... -.0. .. =... Do.
Jacobo Bravo y Gonzalez .......... Vice-consul.
For Mayaguez and Aguadilla.
Carlos Armstrong. ................. Do.
For Ponce and Guayama.
Carlos Conde... oa
For Bayamon, Arecibo, and Humacao.
Antonio Gastaver.. 0...
Burique Schroeder. ..0......
Juan Ro Adams, iwi ur So
Carlos M. Barnett... 080
© For Norfolk, Newport News, and
Yorktown.
George Hl. Batksdale... ......:....
Joseph Lander Eastland ..........
Jose M. Aliza oui is oot
Emiliano Martinez"... . . . ..
Gonzalo Picon Febres..............
Wor. Wilsorm:.... ta
Sehastian Bonet 2. ho oi
AdolloStelfens: bi 0.0
CarlogiConde. ia.
Honorary consul.
Vice-consul.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul-general.
Consul.
Do.
Do.
Consul.
374 Congressional Directory.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.
DISTRICT GOVERNMENT.
(District Building, Pennsylvania avenue and Fourteenth street. Phone, Main 6000.)
Commissioner.—Henry B. F. Macfarland, president of the Board, The Marlborough.
Private Secretary.—Waldo C. Hibbs, The Kanawha.
Commissioner.— Henry I. West, 1364 Harvard street.
Private Secretary.—Ralph B. Pratt, 1511 U street.
Engineer Commissioner.—Maj. Spencer Cosby, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., Stone-
leigh Court.
Private Secretary. —F. C. Lee, The Massachusetts.
Chief Clerk.—Daniel E. Garges, 50 U street.
Assistants to Engineer ‘Commissioner. —Capt. Wm. Kelly, Corps of Engineers,
0. S. A., 2014 TR street; Capt. Edw. M. Markham, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A.,
3017 N street.
Secretary to the Board.—William Tindall, 1132 Fifth street.
Assistant Secretary.—Wm. F, Meyers, 1319 Irving street.
DISTRICT OFFICERS.
Assessor.—William P. Richards, 137 S street.
Assistant Assessors.—]. I. Petty, 3331 O street; B. F. Adams, 1219 I, street.
Board of Assistant Assessors of Real Estate. SE Kalbfus, 1727 De Sales street.
Alexander McKenzie, 1446 Harvard street; E. G. Davis, 2211 R street.
Board of Assistant Assessors of Personal Property.—Francis Nye, 1443 Belmont
road; Matthew Trimble, 1320 Rhode Island avenue.
Auditor.— Alonzo Tweedale, 2825 Fourteenth street.
Deputy.—Daniel J. Donovan, 1532 T street.
Boards:
Automobiles.—E. F. Vermillion, chairman; H. M. Woodward, secretary.
Charities.—John Joy Edson, president; Geo. S. Wilson, secretary, 7001 Georgia
avenue.
Children’s Guardians.—B. Pickman Mann, president; Miss Mary Ella Moore,
secretary.
Control, Rock Creek Park.—The Commissioners of the District of Columbia; the
Chief of Engineers, U. S. A.
Dental Examiners.—A. D. Weakley, president, 1339 K street; Wm. B. Daly,
secretary, 1340 New York avenue.
Education ( Thirteenth and K streets).-—James F. Oyster, president; Alexander T.
Stuart, superintendent of schools, 16 Fourth street SE.; H. O. Hine, secretary.
Examiners Veterinary Medicine. DE Buckingham, president.
Excise.—Matthew Trimble, 1320 Rhode Island avenue; S. T. Kalbfus, 1727 De
Sales street; Alexander McKenzie, 1446 Harvard street; chief clerk, Roger
Williams, 18 Third street NE.
Medical Examiners:
Regular.—George C. Ober, president, 210 B street SE.
Eclectic.—FE]bert C. Benson, president, 824 Fifth street NE.
Homeopathic.—]. B. G. Custis, president, g12 Fifteenth street.
Medical Supervisors.—]. B. G. Custis, president; Geo. C. Ober, secretary.
Nurses’ Examining. —Katharine Douglass, secretary, 320 Fast Capitol street.
Pharmacy.—Frank C. Henry, president, 703 Fifteenth street; S. I. Hilton, secre-
tary, Twenty-second and I, streets.
Plumbing .—Peter C. Schaefer, president; Richard A. O’Brien, secretary.
Trustees of Industrial Hone School.—J. Ormond Wilson, president; C. W. Skinner,
superintendent.
Trustees National Training School for Boys.—William M. Shuster, president;
Samuel W. Curriden, secretary and treasurer; O. E. Darnall, superintendent.
Trustees Public Library (Ninth and K streets). Theo. W. Noyes, president; Geo.
F. Bowerman, librarian, The Ontario.
Trustees of Reform School Jor Girls.—J]. Nota McGill, president; Elizabeth A.
Whitney, superintendent.
District Government. 375
Collector of Taxes.—Chas. C. Rogers, 1745 Park road.
Deputy.—C. W. Collins, 52 C street NE.
Coroner.—Dr. J. Ramsey Nevitt, 1820 Calvert street.
Corporation Counsel. —Edw. H. Thomas, 926 S street.
Assistants.—Henry P. Blair, 213 East Capitol street; Francis H. Stephens, 1714
Summit place; James L. Pugh, jr., 3402 Mount Pleasant street; James Francis
Smith, 1339 K street.
Disbursing Officer.—ILouis C. Wilson, 1501 Park road.
Deputy.—C. M. Lewis, 3319 Seventeenth street.
Electrical Engineer.— Walter C. Allen, 3307 Newark street.
Engineer of Bridges.—W. J. Douglas, 3021 P street.
Engineer of Highways.—C. B. Hunt, 1815 M street.
Engineer in Charge of Street Extension.—E. M. Talcott, 3126 Q street.
Inspectors of—
Asphalt and Cements.—]. O. Hargrove, 1603 O street.
Boilers.—FE. F. Vermillion, 123 Thirteenth street NE.
Buildings.—Snowden Ashford, 1508 Twenty-first street.
Fuel.—Michael Bergin, 711 P street NE.
Gas and Meters.—Elmer G. Runyan, 300 R street NE.
Markets.—William C. Haskell, District building.
Flumbing.—Henry B. Davis, 1339 Fairmont street.
Permit Clerk Engineer Depaviment.—H. M. Woodward, Brookland.
Property Clerk.—M. C. Hargrove, 1603 O street.
Sealer of Weights and Measures.—William C. Haskell, The Cumberland.
Special Assessment Clerk.—John W. Daniel, 1622 Riggs place.
Superintendents of—
District Building. —Capts. William Kelley and Edw. W. Markham; clerk, J. M.
Ward, 1201 Girard street.
Home for Aged and Infirm.—W. J. Fay, Blue Plains.
Insurance..—Thomas E. Drake, 1632 Riggs place.
Municipal Lodging House.—A. H. Tyson, 312 Twelfth street.
Roads.—1,. R. Grabill, Takoma Park.
Sewers.—A. E. Phillips, The Portner.
Streets.—H. N. Moss, 1790 Lanier place.
Street Cleaning. —]. M. Wood, 611 Tenth street NE.
Trees and Parking. — Trueman Ianham, I,anham: Station, Md.
Tuberculosis Hospital (Fourteenth and Upshur streets).—Dr. P. G. Smith.
Water Department.—W. A. McFarland, 1123 Thirteenth street.
Surveyor.—M. C. Hazen, 213 Eleventh street SW.
Veterinary Surgeon.—C. B. Robinson, 222 C street.
Washington Asylum ( Nineteenth and C streets SE.).—Louis F. Zinkham, superin-
tendent; visiting physician, D. Percy Hickling, 1304 Rhode Island avenue.
Water Registrar.—G. W. Wallace, The Portner.
FIRE DEPARTMENT.
Chief Engineer.—Frank J. Wagner, 1910 Eighth street.
Deputy.—Andrew J. Sullivan, 1506 Thirty-second street.
Battalion Chief Enginecers.— James Keliher, 733 North Capitol street; Samuel R.
Henry, gog Lawrence street, Brookland; C. B. Proctor, 1221 G street, NE.
Fire Marshal.—Philip W. Nicholson, 1619 New Jersey avenue.
Chief Clevk.—Geo. S. Watson, 310 Third street.
HEALTH DEPARTMENT.
Health Officer.—William C. Woodward, 508 I street.
Deputy and Chief Clerk.—Harry Clay McLean, 1373 Irving street.
Deputy and Chief Inspector.—H. F. Sawtelle, 3001 Eleventh street.
Inspector in charge of Contagious Disease Service.—William C. Fowler, 1812 First
street.
Chemist.—R. 1. Lynch, 2930 Fourteenth street.
Medical Sanitary Inspector.—John E. Walsh, 202 East Capitol street.
Poundmaster.—Samuel Einstein, 3406 N street.
METROPOLITAN POLICE.
Major and Superintendent. —Richard Sylvester, 1223 Euclid street.
Chief, also Property, Clerk.—Edwin B. Hesse, 506 A street SE.
Police Surgeons.—Dr. Edmund Barry, Dr. W. H. R. Brandenburg, Dr. J. S. Wall,
Dr. Alfred Richards.
376 Congressional Directory.
Harbor Master. —Iieut. J. R. Sutton, 925 R street.
Sanitary Officer.—Robert Sroufe, 523 Twelfth street NE.
Hack Inspector.—Geo. H. Dawson, 41 Florida avenue.
Inspector of Pharmacy.—J. W. Vanzant, 129 Fourth street SE.
Detective Headquarters.—Inspectors R. H. Boardman, 1218 Morse street NE.;
F. E. Cross, 319 Ninth street SE. ; Harry I. Gessford, 416 Fourth street SE.; John
A. Swindells, 3328 Q street.
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.”
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,
|
\
[
i |
| | i |
i
: 1
Newspapers Represented in Press Galleries. 377
PRESS GALLERIES.
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED.
(Phone: House Press Gallery, Main 1246; Senate Press Gallery, Main gg.)
Name. |   Paper represented. Office.
|
Albany Jousnal....... ol Jehn BF, Monlc <r. uni Hibbs Bniding
Albuquerque Citizen... ....0....L. oo... Ira M. Bond......... mr 42 Fs
Alexandria Gazette... 000 nin Hubert Snowden .......... an Va.
Anaconda: Standardi i saa ae
Arizona Republican... i... 0... 000.
Associated Press... nhl oun aan
Atlanta: Journalii odo i a. SRI
Baltimore American... 00. iad
Baltimore American-Star .........0......%
Baltimore Wews!, 0h sn oii sa a,
Baltimore Sun... oh en Tan
Birmingham Age-Herald..................
Birmingham News.....i..........., rete
Bisbee Review...............0. 0...
Boston Evening Transcript........... ...
Boston Globe» Jt. wun tl ren
Boston Journals... ia ooiada. Sain,
Brooklyn Dally. Bagle ........ co...
Brooklyn Standard Union................
Brooklyn Limes.........0....0.. 0.0. atk
Buffalo Commercial... emis a wae a aT
Bulfalo Express’ ....o.. lo... vais. Sa
Buffalo Cimes 3 vo rinse nanny
Charlotte ODSCIVER. vies ovis vanities
Chicago Dally News .......... 0... 0 5
Chicago Hvening Post. ....................
Chicago Bxaminer. uc lr ores
Chicago Inter-0eceam..... ...... oun tite]
Chicazo Record-Herald ................. 5
Chicago Bribune not on iianning
Cincinnat] Enquirer... i... oil ons
Cincinnati Post, =. rae
Cincinnati] Times-Star ............... a.
Cleveland Teader ic. dias viarens
Cleveland Plain Dealer’... oon
Cleveland Press. . ii i as aees
Cleveland News... 0s aos cule wri
Columbia (S. C.) State.
Columbus Dispatch. i. a an
Cologne Gazette. ho... inl. ciao
Pallas News. ia adi da baie
RE A a A Ae Bt EM BT Cr Rp
Penver. Post 5... te sa Si
Dea Moines Capital... i version vas
Des Moines Register and Ieader..........
Detroit Free Press... ci iidaieasas
Detroit Journal oot eid ent don een
DElrOl NEWS, i se hes nahn es
Alfred W. Greeley..........
Charles P. Hunt ...:........
C.‘A.' Boynton, supt........
Edwin M. Hood, asst. supt.
FrnestW. Emery... .... ...
Jackson S. Elliott, .........
Charles A. Cotterill... .....
Charles. Bern. va ouin.i-
Jerome S,-Fanciulli........
Carl Dd. Sheppard... .......
Elmer B.Paine...........
Ralph Smith...............
ToulsGarthe.. .. ..cv.u. sn
John S.Shriver............
Thomas O. Monk...........
John'S, Shriver ............
JHC Welliver:, 0.550.
Walter: J. Bahy....c.n 0-0...
!Pheodore H.Tiller.........
John: Miller... non
Hal IL. Smith... ...........
QO. HF. Stewart i. ..o...oane.
Watterson Stealey.........
Sheldon S.'Cline™...........
Charles P. Hunt ...........
Harry J. Brown... .........
JohnIovance. ..........5..
Broest:G. Walker... .....
Willard Brench............
William E. Brigham .......
A. Mauricel,ow............
HA Challam: 7. nu
Ernest CG. Walker..........
George Rothwell Brown..
Walter], Fahy..........5..
Theodore H. Filler. ........
Bdwin S. Hoskins .........
William Wolff Smith ......
Ernest:H. Pullman .........
JTohnB. Monk... .s0i oo...
Ci A. Hamilton ..... 5.0...
PH McGowan ...........-
HH. B.C; Bryant. ..... ....5
Ieroy’l. Vernon..-.......
Edward BB. Clark......x ar
James'S. Hvans............
Oswald F. Schuette ........
Walter Wellman ..........
Johnol. Sutevdi ial nis,
William B.Cuartis..........
Raymond Patterson. .......
Arthur €. Johnson ........
Ered Starek................
Gus J. Karger, «avi 0000
Frederick C. Weimer. ....
Justin H. Forrest ..........
W. 8. Couch................
Gus J. Karger. oor: rok
Zach McGhee voui.i.vun. ii
Cus J. Karger. onto oie
Julius Dittmar... .......u5
Alonzo Wassen ... :....... ...
Willis J2Abbott......... 00
Bdgar €C. Snyder...........
Geo Ha Carter ve oo
John Sure... ein.
Edward HE. Coyle..........
E. B. Clark
Geo, E. Miller. .......
Post Building.
608 Fourteenth st.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
326 Munsey Building.
1410 Pennsylvania ave.
1410 Pennsylvania ave.
1410 Pennsylvania ave.
1410 Pennsylvania ave.
Munsey Building.
Munsey Building.
Munsey Building:
1306-8 G st.
1306-8 G st.
1306-8 G st.
1421 G st.
613 Fifteenth st.
608 Fourteenth st.
613 Fifteenth st.
38 Post Building.
1406 G st.
1406 G st.
44-45 Wyatt Building.
1410 G st.
1410 G st.
1406 G st.
1406 G st. -
Munsey Building.
Munsey Building.
608 Fourteenth st.
32 Post Building.
6.3 Fifteenth st.
904 Colorado Building.
315 Munsey Building.
315 Munsey Building.
Hibbs Building.
725 Fourteenth st.
32 Post Building.
300 Congress Hall.
22 Wyatt Building.
801-805 Munsey Building.
32 Post Building.
31 Wyatt Building.
400-401 Hibbs Building.
400-401 Hibbs Building.
Home Life Building.
42 Wyatt Building.
42 yay Building.
1517 H st.
9oI Colorado Building.
16 Post Building.
35 Wyatt Building.
35 Wyatt Building.
1345 Pennsylvania ave.
gor Colorado Building.
16 Post Building.
12-14 Post Building.
16 Post Building.
1126 Sixteenth st.
45 Post Building.
427 Munsey Building.
725 Fourteenth st.
The Ventosa.
623 Munsey Building.
48 Post Building.
801-805 Munsey Building.
903 Colorado Building.
378 Congressional Directory.
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED, ETC.—Continued.
Paper represented. Name. Office.
DuluthiBerald, oc a ina sini en. Chas. B. Lockwood ........." 725 Fourteenth st.
Duluth News-Tribune... ... ose ere. B.A. Johnson. ............. 40 Post Building.
El Diario, City of Mexico........... ..... JacksonTinker ... =....... 31 Wyatt Building.
BlPasoHerald. .. =. vi. nf DAL Ira M. Bond. =... oon 42 F st
Fort: Worth Record... 0. van aavin, Frank H. Bushick .........| 44 Post Building.
Brankfurter Zeitung ....c - ove vere. ih: Wilhelm Cohnstaedt ...... The Hthelhurst.
Galveston News 0... dh Sn dh Alonzo Wasson ............. 45 Post Building.
Grand Rapids Evening Press Sar
Great Falls Tribune. ......o0 oi iiaaie.
Greensboro Industrial News
Hartlord Conrant. ava r oi an,
Hartford Post . whi dan volo aad
Havana Diario Bspanoel...... ............
Hearst News ServiCe i. vv. hs vi it via wd ina
Hearst's Boston Afepican. nin
Hearst's Chicago American... ...........
Houston Chronicles... vi... oi. 0 Tay
Indianapolis Star... 0... no
Johnstown Democrat.
Kansas City Journal ...................v..
RansasiCity:Star. 7.0.0 bd aii along ea
Kansas Clty: Pimtes a olin nis
Tittle: Rock Gazette... ii io on sia
London Morning Post. ...c....... 0.0
Tondon Times. a. hun a
Fos Angeles BExaminer.................0.. a
Jos Angeles!Pimes Lit. ula
Louisville Courier-Journal ................
Tounisville Herald. i inn, oro
Founlsville Times on ii ins ids
Madrid. Heraldo.... oo aie cnon an ninsins sa
Memphis Commercial Appeal.............
Memphis News Scimitar..................
Mexican Herald os win anion
Milwaukee Sentinel... 0. i. ou
Milwaukee Wisconsin ....................
Minneapolis Journal... ...................
Minneapolis Tribune. ....................
Mobile Register... unio. olin,
Montgomery Advertiser...................
Muskogee Times-Democrat...............
Nashville American. «oi iit ins
Nashville Banner. ............... ood a
Nashville Tennessean. .
Nebraska State Journal...............-...
Newark Evening News ..................
New Orleans Plecayune..:.................
New: Orleans States... ai oud ona
New Orleans Times-Democrat............
New York Amerlean...... 0.000 aan
New. York: Commercial. ................0 5:
New York Evening Journal ..... Sra,
New York Evening Maile... 0. i... 0iz00
New York Evening Post ........ 0 5000
New York Evening World................
New-York Globe i i cin. ne areas ants
New YorkiHerald.. oc ov onions
New York Journal of Commerce .........
New Vora Press... coi nh iio oie ia sa wine
New York Staats-Zeitung .................
New York Sun (Press Association) .......
New York Times sui. oi isin anaes
Jo Starrair rio. staan ve
VG: Valdes oon sonia
John € Klein, mgr... .:...
Winfield Jones... ........
George V. Johnson. alla
William Hoster. haa
William:Hoster.........-..
Otto Praeger........ ......
James P. Hornaday ........
AW. PTaCY. be div fii
ToulsTudlow:..... oi iv
Willis J. Abbott.......... =
Arthur ].Dodge......... an
Henry J. Haskell...
H.B.iNesbitt -.....o. 0.
HL. B: Nesbitt: 0 vs anale,
John B. Lathrop... .;....--.
A. Manrice Low. ...v......
RobertiP. Porier.... ....\.
0. 0. Stealeyit. ori.
Watterson Seiler iron
Fred Slarek.. i... on
‘Waller BW. Harris... ....-
V. CG. Valdes ..............c
Robert M. Gates... i...
Alfred J. Stofer:........... 2
Otto Praeger. .... 0 ov
TW. Braliany ............:
Charles B. Lockwecod ......
W. Jermane.............
Alfred J. Stofer...........-
Chas. A, Tooney...........
Robert H.Watkins.........
Walter E, Harris --........
Jesse I. Suler.. ch. vin
I... William Thavis..........
Herman B. Walker .........
Edwin S. Hoskins ,........
Corry M. Stadden...<......
Robert H. Watkins.........
A. E. 1s Ca CA PATE eS
M.B. Tighe ..........c.....
John'S: Shriver... .. =
Edward G.Lowry..........
B. W.Brahany.. 0. 00.
Wendell H. Lawson... ...
Otto Carmichael. ...... ..:
FB: Jesse Conway «vu...»
John Snure.......... oo...
Henry Shroff Brown.......
Sherman P. Allen .........
Albert Whiting Fox ......
HL. Parker Willis...........
Tacksow Binker. co... 0,
Reginald Schroeder .......
Richard V. Oulahan........
Jerry A. Mathews..........
Howard Flanagan.........
Alfred L. Geiger Se Tl
0. R. Davis i
W. Sinkler Manning......
903 Colorado Building.
315 Munsey Building.
Hibbs Building.
1410 G street.
302 Munsey Building.
The Benedict.
914 Munsey Building.
914 Munsey Building.
914 Munsey Building.
32 Post Building.
32 Post Building.
40 Post Building.
40 Post Building.
44 Wyatt Building.
44 Wyatt Building.
321 Munsey Building.
427 Munsey Building.
33 Wyatt Building.
15 Post Building.
15 Post Building.
15 Post Building.
421 Munsey Building.
1410 G st.
801-805 Munsey Building.
801-805 Munsey Building.
32 Post Building.
421 Munsey Building.
1421 G st.
1421 G st.
1517 H st.
327 Munsey Building.
The Benedict.
45 Post Building.
1010 Twenty-second st.
40 Post Building.
801-805 Munsey Building.
725 Fourteenth st.
gor Colorado Building.
got Colorado Building.
22 Wyatt Building.
45 Post Building.
1010 T'wenty-second st.
40 Post Building.
45 Post Building.
327 Munsey Building.
420 Munséy Building.
613 Munsey Building.
904 Colorado Building.
go4 Colorado Building.
45 Post Building.
45 Post Building.
Wyatt Building.
32 Post Building.
32 Post Building.
32 Post Building.
606-608 Hibbs Building.
32 Post Building.
1410 Pennsylvania ave.
801-805 Munsey Building.
801-805 Munsey Building.
801-805 Munsey Building.
20-21 Wyatt Building.
20-21 Wyatt Building.
623 Munsey Building.
1502 H st.
1502 H st.
1502 H st.
206 Corcoran Building.
Wyatt Building.
14 Post Building.
Hibbs Building.
Hibbs Building.
Hibbs Building.
Hibbs Building.
12-14 Post Building.
12-14 Post Building.
12-14 Post Building.
ot
Newspapers Represented in Press Galleries. 379
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED, ETC.—Continued.
Paper represented. Name. Office.
New York Tribune... i iia oiindinallins Richard Lee Fearn ........ 1322 F st.
George Griswold Hill......| 1322 F st.
Gerald Hgan... ir... 000. 1322 F st.
New: York World whoo. voc via seinen Qtio Carmichael Ji... ..... 20-21 Wyatt Building.
Oklahoma City Oklahoman...............
Oklahoma City Fimes . oo. avian os
Omaha Bee) a TL a
Oshkosh Northwestern. ....l...........
Paris (Brance)HemIdi si clings
Philadelphia Evening Bulletin ...........
Philadelphia Evening Star’... .......-i...
Philadelphia Evening Telegraph.........
Philadelphia Evening Times ....... I
Philadelphia Inquirer... i... .... 0.
Philadelphia North American ..
Philadelphia Press. i i. ii oon sinas
Philadelphia Public Tedger...... i... %.
‘Philadelphia Record ..i.o0. co iain
Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph ...........
Pittsburg Bvening Sun... ...... hea,
Pittsburg Gazette Times......c.....0....0
Pittshurg Dispatch. =. wu. oo oaolana n 8
Pittsburg leader... Soa ii wn
Pittsburg Post vic a is
Ritshurs Press i in loaiaiasiii armas
Porlland Journal soi nina
Portland Oregonian. ......... iis si
Providence Evening Bulletin .............
Providence Journal... i. liane
Raleigh News and Observer ..............
Readimg Bogle... i olin nies
Richmond Jourmal . oo... ai is
Richmond News Leader...............
Richmond Times-Dispatch ...............
RutlandeHemldi wi i ings,
$6. TouisiClobe-Democratl -..-. i. 0. 2.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch ....... enh th
Stilouis Republic... inn asta
St Tonle Star... oi asain rn ay
Sto onls LImes oi. cin vo aes saan
St. Panl Dispatch. Lo a asa a
St. Paul Pioneer Press... . coves eines
Saginaw Courier-Herald ............. ....
Salt Take Deseret News... ..ol... 0. -.0.
Saltdaeribune 0 0
San Antonio BWI Press,.. oie sees
San Prancisco Bulletin............ .......
Santa'Fe New Mexican... vai.
Savannah Morning News.................
Seattle Post-Intelligencer.................
Seattle TIMES. csv ivia nanan
Sloux Clty Journal... i nn oh
South Bend Tribune... ... 00 Sa
Spokane Chroniele roi ni.
Spokane Spokesman-Review..............
Springfield Republican. .............. er
Springfield Union. =... ci. nan
Tacoma NOWE reversions Sra as Laevny
Toledo Blade .
Topeka Capital... .......0 ere ene fen
Toronto Blobel ra aE
Charles S,iAlbert.. ........0
HL. Dunlap ooo
ChasiZA. Trooney....... 7.
Edgar C. Snyder... 0.
H.C. Stevens... .............
Henry Shroff Brown.......
John XK. Stauffer.......-...
J. Russell Young.......... ...
J CWelliver....-......00
ohn Snure.. i... oi. wes
homas'R.T,0gan..........
W: B..Shaw......... hee arias
Angus McSween...........
James S. Henry............
W. A.Crawford oi...
W. Sinkler Manning ......
Maurice Splaini...... ....s
Henry Hall... ......0.5 :
Manrice Splain. oo... <k.
Robert: Simpson £5... .0u
LAW Strayer. Lae.
Charles W. Metzgar........
MauriceSplain.. ..........
HB Neshitt ool ohn
John I. Lathrop...........
Harry J. Brown. ............
DavidiSuBanrry. ssl
David: S.- Barry. ...0....5
MN TcPenee ra aitiel ins
John K. Stauffer....... SA
W. J. Showalter. .:........ a
PH. McGowan ........00..
HAR. CuBryant. oon
Henry B. Bolten. ..........-
Jewell H. Aubere ..........
Charles’P. Keyser........ ..
Chester C. Riders... ......0.
D. Hastings MacAdam.....
Fred W. Steckman.........
Arthas W. Dunn. ..........
Edward B.Clark...........
FA Johnson. .2. coun
Arthur J-Dodge 0.4...
H.Bidohns 0 it na,
Edwin S. Hoskins. .........
C. A Hamilton... ..........
Clifford Roge....0u ins
OttolPracger. o.oo. i nie
Jesse ¥,. Carmichael i x...
Ira FB. Bennett . 3.5. ou.
Frank]. Dyerco avi.
James: SS, Bvans:. ... 0. .....
Ira M.Bond. shan
Zach: MeGhee .; .........
Walter B.Clark.~...... ..:
Mercer Vernon... ......
W.W. Jermane........ i...
HC. Stevens... ..o 0.0.
George H. Carter...
AW. racy... Lanna
CB. Tockwood. 0h. 0s.
John E. Iathrop...........
Richard Hooker ...........
Sheldon'S. Cline... ..........
Harry I. Brown ............
ASW racy. o.oo nn
Frederick Weimer.........
Justin EH. Forrest .....<...
F--William-Thavis...... ...
Walter B. Clark... ....0000
Chas. A. Hamilton =... 0...
Charles Po Hunt...... ....
E.T.Xeen, manager......
Henry E. Fland... i...
WG. Miller, oil. 0 000 Tet
20-21 Wyatt Building.
20-21 Wyatt Building.
40 Post Building.
713 Fourteenth st.
725 Fourteenth st.
gor Colorado Building.
1502 H st.
Wyatt Building.
46 Post Building.
Wyatt Building.
622 Munsey Building.
622 Munsey Building.
28 Post Building.
28 Post Building.
16 Post Building.
903 Colorado Building.
12-14 Post Building.
12-14 Post Building.
12-14 Post Building.
48 Post Building.
47 Post Building.
48 Post Building.
47 Post Building.
33 Wyatt Building.
304 Corcoran Building.
48 Post Building.
15 Post Building.
421 Munsey Building.
613 Fifteenth st.
606-608 Hibbs Building.
606-608 Hibbs Building.
207 Hibbs Building.
Wyatt Building,
327 Munsey Building.
32 Post Building.
300 Congress Hall.
1227 Thirteenth st.
Fourteenth and F sts.
Fourteenth and F sts.
926 Colorado Building.
23 Wyatt Building.
23 Wyatt Building.
1426 New York ave.
1426 New York ave.
1426 New York ave.
801-805 Munsey Building.
38 Post Building.
1403 F st.
1403 F st.
904 Colorado Building.
725 Fourteenth st.
Colorado Building.
40 Post Building.
46 Post Building.
27 Post Building.
421 Munsey Building.
32 Post Building.
42 F st.
12-14 Post Building.
606-608 Hibbs Building.
606-608 Hibbs Building.
gor Colorado Building.
2 1 Colorado Building.
he Ventosa.
45 Wyatt Building.
725 Fourteenth st.
421 Munsey Building.
206 Corcoran Building.
613 Fifteenth st,
613 Fifteenth st.
45 Wyatt Building.
35 Wyatt Building.
35 Wyatt Building.
613 Munsey Building.
606-608 Hibbs Building.
725 Fourteenth st.
608 Fourteenth st.
1014 Munsey Building.
1014 Munsey Building.
1014 Munsey Building.
1014 Munsey Building.
380 Congressional Directory.
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED, ETC.—Continued.
Paper represented.   Name. Ofice
United Press Associations. ................. Jacob Waldeck ...... 5... 1014 Munsey Building.
Blimey Marphy .....0...... 1014 Munsey Building.
AGPoAmneld Su 1014 Munsey Building.
Wall Street Journal... .....
Wall Street Summary........
Tar a N::O.: Messenger... .....-:..u- Washington Evening Star ..
Washington Herald .. .......
Washington Post............
Washington Times ..........
Wheeling Intelligencer ......
Wheeling NewS ..............
Winnipeg Telegram..........
Woman's National Daily (St.
SamuellBvans ..............
Red I JohmiBeyle wo. ..oo nl
Tle he N-O-Messenger..... 2. 65.
Irving C. Norwood.........
Donald A. Craig... .5u....
renee i J. Harry Cunningham .....
T. Hooper Caffee.........
Michael 'W. Flynn .... ....
et peta Frank I. Whitehead........
Gi:Gould Lincoln .. .....
AS a JC. Welliver . 0... ns
Walter J. Fahy... ........:.
‘Fheodore I. Tiller... ......
Francis B. Gessner.........
a a Francis B. Gessner.........
Se Hdgar € Snyder... >. =...
Toms)... Arthur W..Dunn...........
1014 Munsey Building.
1418 F st.
30 Wyatt Building.
1101 Pennsylvania ave.
1101 Pennsylvania ave.
1101 Pennsylvania ave.
Herald Building.
Herald Building.
Herald Building.
Post Building.
Post Building.
Munsey Building.
Munsey Building.
Munsey Building.
Dewey Hotel.
Dewey Hotel.
725 Fourteenth st.
1426 New York ave.
1426 New York ave.
1426 New York ave.
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION.
[The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the f designates those whose daughters
accompany them; the | designates those having other ladies with them.]
Name. Paper represented. Residence.
#Abboll, Willis'J.............
®Albest; Charles'S o...........
kX Allen, Sherman P.........
RArnold, A. P..............0
*Aubere, Jewell H..........
#4 Barry, David S..........-..
“Bennett, Tra BB. ...... ov
#1 Bolton, Henry B..........
Bond Tra Me, oe ave.
[Boyle,;John..............5.%
®% Boynton, C. A ....-...o..
#Brahany, B-W............-
* Brigham, William E.......
* Brown, George Rothwell. .
#Brown, Harry J.........05."
* Brown, Henry Shroff ......
#Bryant, H. BE.C............
*Bushick, Frank H ........
Caffee, J. Hooper... ...-.. |
Carmichael, Jessel, .........
Carmichael, Otto. ...........
RY eds BR A EO Se
Carter, George H .........
*t Clark, Fdward B........ 3
%| Clarks, Walter B..... 0...
*Cline, Sheldon S..:........
Cohnstaedt, Wilhelm .......
|| Conmnor, BB. Wi... i...
#Conway, B. Jesse ..........
* || Cotterill, Charles A ......
[Couch W.. Bs... 0...
| Coyle, Edward E...........
Craig, Domald A ....... ....
Crawford, Wo A ...... ......
| Crist, Harris Mc...
*tCunningham, J. Harry...
kh Curtis, William ¥F,.........
DAVES, IO. TT a ae
Denver News, Johnstown Democrat ....
New VorkiWeorld ... oo. ov
United Press Associations ...............
St. Touis Globe-Democrat...............
Providence Journal, Providence Even-
ing Bulletin.
San Branecisco:Call. sis. oS vais
Rutland: Herald . nv. on won oo oor;
Albuquerque Citizen, Santa Fe New
Mexican, E1 Paso Herald, I,as Vegas
Optic.
Wall Street Journal. coo iva ian
Superintendent Associated Press........
New York Fvening Post, Milwaukee
Sentinel.
Boston Evening Transcript....... SIRE,
Boston Herald So. en ns oor Lai
Portland Oregonian, Tacoma News,
Boise Statesman.
New York Herald, Paris Herald........
Charlotte Observer, Richmond Times
Dispatch.
Houston Post, Fort Worth Record.......
Washington Herald. .......... 0.0.
San Francisco Bulletin ...................
New York World, New York Evening
World. ;
Tos Angeles’ Times... inns ii id. suis
Sioux City Journal, Des Moines Capital
Chicago Evening Post, St. I,ouis Times,
Detroit Journal.
New York Commercial, Seattle Post-
Intelligencer, Toronto Globe.
Springfield Union, Birmingham News. .
Prankfurter Zeitung. ei un.
New York Fvening World...............
Woman’s National Daily, St. Iouis Star.
ASSoclateQ PLES ios tits valerate
Cleveland Plain Pealer..................
Baltimore News, Detroit Free Press.....
Washington Evening Star...............
New York Times, Philadelphia I,edger.
Chicago: Record-Herald:...... ..n.......
New York Times, Philadelphia I,edger.
Dittmar, Julius. vv. .n vin vel COLONIE COZELLE, ols sins ins ssnsavisinn i
The Congressional.
The Hawarden.
Stoneleigh Court.
The Elkton.
1300 Kenyon st.
1511 T'wentieth st.
The Ontario.
1227 Thirteenth st.
42 F st.
Hotel Montrose.
1357 Girard st.
The Congressional.
2431 Eighteenth st.
1464 Newton st.
3200 Highland ave.
529 Eighteenth st.
Congress Hall.
1024 Seventeenth st.
1446 Irving st.
1338 New York ave.
1338 New York ave.
Hotel Lincoln.
The Ventosa.
1412 Fifteenth st.
2236 Q st.
2927 Macomb st.
The Ethelhurst.
1336 I st.
626 I, st. NE.
1837 Corcoran st.
The Savoy.
632 Fast Capitol st.
129 Tennessee ave. NE.
920 Fourteenth st.
The Portner.
Kensington, Md.
1801 Connecticut ave.
1946 Calvert st.
1126 Sixteenth st.
on
i
SA
AA
SLA
am
ew
apr—
Persons Entitled to Admission to the Press Galleries. 381
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS, ETC.—Continued.
Name. Paper represented. Residence.
Dodge, Arthur J............. St. Paul Pioneer Press, Kansas City | 1736 G st.
Journal.
#Dunlap, H.T,............., New York Worldl.., .......coodeee sine ani The Brunswick.
ZPunn, Arthur W.........5. St. Louis Star, Woman’s National Daily.| 2334 Massachusetts ave,
Dyer, Frank JT... L000 San Francisco Chronicle... .-..--. 2. The Burlington.
Hgan, ‘Gerald A a New York Bribune. ...c..v. cdi cvoasen The Oakland.
* Eland, Henry E- -......... United Press Associations’... ............ College Park, Md.
Elliott, Jackson Oe aa Associated Press ooo. vil conan, Star Building.
* Emery, BruestW.......... ASSOCiated Press... suv ivr eerie sonnei 233 Morgan st.
Hvans,JamesS.... ........
Evans, Samuel..............
Fahy, Walter J..............
Fanciulli, Jerome S.........
%} Fearn, Richard I.ee......:
Flanagan, Howard..........
Flynn, Michael W..........
Troms Justin BH ....0.000
Fox, A wn
Garthe, Touls ..oc.c. ti
*Gates, Robert M...........
Geiger, Alfred I, ... 0. 0
Gessner, Francis B. .........
* Greeley, Alfred W... .....
Hall, Henry ....... coin
Hallam, I1.C...............
*i Hamilton, Chas: A =...
®X Harder, Worth'C....-.. an
X Harris, Waller BE ..........
%' Harvey, Wells. ..........
*Haskell Henry J... ..-.0.
* Hayward, AIO ve
XN Hazard, RH. ..0. 00
* Heiss, A. Brel hs
Henry, James'S. ...........
| * Hill, George Griswold .
* + Hood
Hooker, "Richard... reas
* Hornaday, JamesP.... 0.
* + Hoskins, Edwin S........
Hoster, William ....... .....
Hunt, Charles PP... ........
Xl Jermane, W.W...........
XJjohns,<B, Bu... ......i.
ohnson, Arthur C..........
Johnson, BoA. a
Johnson, Geo, V-..........4..
Jones, Winfield ..............
KATZ el, GUST oe ven. hssnens
Hl Keen, B. 1, ca. curses
X|Kern, Charles: ...
#*RKReyser,Charles P....... ...
¥Rlein,; fom C.-............
# Lathrop, John E...........
Lawson, Wendell H........
|| Lincoln, G. Gould.........
*Y.ockwood, Chas. B........
Jogan,,ThomasE...........
Jooney, Chas. A.... .......
Torance John =... 00h,
*T.0w, A.-Maurice...........
*ILowry, Edward G.........
*1udlow, Louis.............
| MacAdam, D. Hastings....
McGhee, Zach... .......
Xl McGowan, P.I ...~....
66525—60-2—2D ED
New York American-Journal, Chicago
American-Examiner, San Francisco
Examiner.
United Press Associations................
Washington Times, Baltimore News,
Boston Journal.
Associated Pre8S. Loi seb sa ses ainsi
New York Sun ......... a in
Washington Herald... ..... 0m
Cleveland Ieader, Toledo Blade. .
New York Herald... ..................
Baltimore American. ....................
Memphis Commercial Appeal............
New Vork Sus, o.oo ins.
Wheeling Intelligencer, Wheeling News.
Anaconda Standard: .. . i... ens sansa
Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph.........
Boston Globe, Hartford Courant ........
Rochester Post- -Express, Salt Lake
Deseret News, Troy Times, Buffalo
Times.
Minneapolis’ Iribune....... ..... 0
Louisville Times, Nashville Banner.....
Grand Rapids Evening Press............
Kansas City Start, cre, di nein ni,
New York American... oun ii,
United Press Associations
New Orleans Times-Democrat, Phila-
delphia Evening Telegraph.
Philadelphia Press... Lo...
New York Tribune. i... ahs shi
Associated Pred. ti vl ies
Springfield Republican ..................
IndianapolisNews.. .............0......
Newark Evening News, Saginaw Cou-
rier-Herald, Buffalo Commercial.
New York American-Journa, Chicago
American-Examiner, San Francisco
Examiner, Boston American.
Arizona Republican, BisbeeReview, Tuc-
son Star,
Minneapolis Journal, Seattle Times.....
St. Paul Plofieer Press............ .......
ChICago LrIDUNe vine oii 0 deals ae vies
St. Paul Dispatch, Ia Crosse Chronicle,
Duluth News-Tribune.
Hearst News Service ...............0.,
Hearst News Service.....................
Cincinnati Times-Star, Cleveland News,
Columbus Dispatch.
United Press Associations . Sei
Associated Press........... ..... amines
St. Louis Globe-Democrat...
Hearst News Service... .................
Portland Journal, Spokane Spokesman-
Review, Little Rock Gazette.
New York RveningPost.................
Washington Post.........................
Milwaukee Wisconsin, Duluth Herald,
Spokane Chronicle.
Philadelphia Inquirer .....:............
Muskogee Times Democrat, Oklahoma
City Oklahoman.
Boston Advertiser... ...... ce. svat cannes
Boston Globe, London Morning Post. .
New York Evening rE ke i Se
IndianapolisiStar.........................
St. Louis Republics o.oo ciate ane.
Columbia State, Savannah Morning
News.
Charleston News and Courier, Brooklyn
Standard Union, Richmond News
Leader.
26
734 Fifteenth st.
1813 F st.
1736 G st.
2202 Massachusetts ave.
.| The Brunswick.
733 North Capitol st.
1343 East Capitol st.
1736 G st.
Cairo Hotel.
The Rochambeau.
Riggs House.
1726 Fifteenth st.
3500 O st.
Dewey Hotel.
706 Fleventh st.
The Westminster.
1032 Lamont st.
2233 Eighteenth st.
816 Fighteenth st.
32 Channing st.
550 Shepherd st.
2444 South Dakota ave. NE,
1504 Park road.
1762 N st.
The Savoy.
1226 Fairmont st.
1207 Connecticut ave.
1419 Newton st.
1934 First st.
Langdon, D.C.
19 Bryant st.
1360 Girard st.
The Wagar.
3433 Holmead place.
gog Fourteenth st. SE.
2467 Eighteenth st.
.| The Kenesaw.
1328 Harvard st.
1336 Harvard st.
The Everett.
Chevy Chase.
The Dewey.
The Dupont.
gor I st.
The Donald.
1421 K st.
1326 L st.
1730 Connecticut ave.
1409 Twentieth st.
1427 New Jersey ave.
1420 Girard st.
The Brunswick.
The Cecil.
382 Congressional Directory.
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS, ETC.—Continued.
Name. Paper represented. Residence.
*McSween, Angus. .........
* McWade, Robert M........
Manning, W. Sinkler.......
Mathews, Jerry A..........
* | Messenger, N.O..........
XMetzgar, Chas. W.........
Zl Miller, Geo. B......... =:
Miller, John® ... =...
* | Miller,Wilbur G..........
* Monk, John B.............
%| Monk, Thomas O:.......-
Murphy, Elmer... .......:.
XE NeaDIEE, TL. Bvvsssss esses
% Norwood, Irving C.........
XOulahan, R.V............
* + Paine, Elmer BB. add
*Patchin, Robert Halsey. Fi
* Patterson, Raymond......
Pence, T. 3
EPrice Wi W....iieeeinn-in
Pullman, Broest H......." .-
Richmond, Carl H..........
% Sheppard, Carl Doss,
#Showalter, W., J... viata
Shriver, John Ses nares os
Simpson, RODE ever ss
ESmitlvy al I. o.oo
Zl Smith iRalph.............
* Smith, William Wolff. .....
Snowden, Hubert ...........
RONUTE, TORI ic ves iveininn ois
* Snyder, Edgar C..........
Splain, Maurice .. Senter
#} Stadden, Corry M ....... ...
XStarvek, Fred... ........0..0
SATE. SE eats a vnie a wetrasinis
Stauffer, John X ......... ete
x 1Stealey, @. O.5.-svvcin
|| Stealey, Watterson ........
Steckman, Pred W.........:
#liStevens Bl Co. is conics
Stewart, Orville H ..........
Stofer, Alfred J .............
EStrayer, 1. Wii. oven
Suter Jessel i i. ante
%2 Suter; John' TT... .........s
Xk Thavis, I. William........
kpiche, WM. Boueeoernes neni
Piller, Theodore H.........
# Pinker, Jackson........-..
BIETACY AL Wo weaves iain’
Valdes. NV. CG ,.. 0 ioe eiants
¥l Vernon, Leroy 'L..-..-.
Vernon Mercer... ........
Waldeck, Jacobi. ces veer.
®* Walker, Ernest G.... ...
X Walker, Herman B........
Philadelphia North American...........
Woman's National Daily 5
New York Times, Philadelphia Ledger :
New York Sun......c.c.v0n cust nish preted
Washington Evening Star.......... EE
Pittsburg Leader ta. oy ves devices srr ins
Detroit NEWS rl ee cuisine parses
Baltinibre SUN 0 ae
United Press Associations ...............
Albany Journal, Greensboro Industrial
News, Buffalo Express.
Baltimore Ameriean....o. 0. Lc...
United Press Associations ...............
Pittsburg Press, Kansas City Star, Kan-
sas City Times.
‘Washington Evening Star ...............
New YorkSun............% oo. De.
New: York Hleraldiy. co init semis rnn oe
Chicago Tribune... rec. ai as
Raleigh News and Observer.............
London TImies iin, a hs ments
San Antonio Express, Mexican Her-
ald, Houston Chronicle.
Brooklyn Times oo ides. te sotvetnr- es iamreiit:
Buffalo Bvening News...... oc. ic cain.
LE ETE Ye na ee ae ee
St. Louis Posl-DISPatCIl. nies sn sionicniniies
Salt Lake! tribime  . ues es naar
New York Staats-Zeitung.......ce.e-.--
Chicago Inter-Ocean......... cover.
Oklahoma City ‘Times... x, vosiveriviss os
Philadelphia Inquirer... .......... ...c.0.
Associated Press... 0. ui snare tes
Richmond Journal. .... 2. niin
Baltimore American, New York Even-
ing Mail, Baltimore American Star.
Pittsburgh Gazette-I'imes ...............
Baltimore SUN Jo. woe is tonne. sa es
Atlanta Jourmal...\.. o.oo. Ln
Buffalo Evening News, Great Falls
Tribune.
Alexandra Gazette... o.oo. ania
New York Globe, Des Moines Register
and Ieader, Philadelphia Evening
Times.
Omaha Bee, Denver Post, Toronto World,
Winnipeg Telegram.
Pittsburg Post, Pittsburg Sun, Philadel-
phia Record.
New Orleans-Picayune .......}.......- .
Cincinnati Enquirer, Louisville Herald. .
Hartford Post. ons tvs diesen
Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, Reading
Eagle.
Louisville Courier-Journal ...... .......
Louisville Courier-Journal, Birmingham
Age-Herald.
St. Touls Republic..: .... oa atin Dus.
Minneapolis Journal, Oshkosh North-
western, Seattle Times.
Baltimore Sum ioe. ehh oh ai thesiarion hie
Montgomery Advertiser, Memphis News
Scimitar.
Pittsburg Dispatch... ...... conti. heonn
Nashville TeNNessean ,....c.-« x= rerio:
Chicago’ Record-Herald......\...-.......
Nebraska State Journal, Topeka Capital,
Leavenworth Times.
New York American-Journal, Chicago
American-Examiner, San Francisco
Examiner, Los Angeles Examiner.
Washington Times, Baltimore News,
Boston Journal.
New York Press, El Diario, City of
Mexico.
Terre Haute Tribune, Indianapolis
News, South Bend Tribune.
Havana Diario Espanol, Madrid Heraldo.
Chicago-Dally News... .........o.i. 08
Seattle Post-Intelligencer................
United Press Associations. .............
Boston Herald, Boston Evening Herald.
Newark Evening NEWS: vs veiv's vinivm vin a’   |
1304 Monroe st.
1720 Fifteenth st.
2013 Ist.
Florence Court.
Hammond Court.
2475 Eighteenth st.
44 V st.
1329 Harvard st.
1673 Park road.
149 A st. NE.
1812 G st.
The Oakland.
The Baltimore.
1421 Twentieth st.
The Denver.
1309 Kenyon st.
‘The Cumberland.
The Shoreham.
1482 Monroe st.
Congress Heights.
469 H st. SW.
1423 Q st.
The Brunswick.
The Jefferson.
1523 O st.
1745 Q st. 1819 U st.
2574 University place.
Florence Court.
The Glendower.
1338 New York ave.
The Brunswick.
1765 P st.
The Ethelhurst.
Alexandria, Va.
1331 Emerson st.
1108 Fairmont st.
1011 M st.
3002 Thirteenth st.
Stoneleigh Court.
I3i2 I st.
1539 I st.
1728 P st.
2722 Thirteenth st.
1224 Eighth st.
The Benedick.
1010 Twenty-second st.
1474 Clifton st.
727 Eighteenth st.
215 H st.
509 Rhode Island ave. NE.
1506 Park Road.
1232 Massachusetts ave.
The Brandon.
1470 Newton st.
The Benedict.
3585 Thirteenth st.
3585 Thirteenth st.
The Driscoll.
2509 Cliffbourne place.
EER aL
ci
Rules Governing Press Galleries. : 383
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS, ETC.—Continued.
Name. Paper represented. Office.
* Wasson, Alonzo ........... Dallas News, Galveston News........... 1408 M st.
* 1+ Watkins, Robert H..... Nashville American, Mobile Register, | The Portner.
Knoxville Sentinel, New Orleans
States.
Weimer, Frederick C.......| Cleveland Leader, Toledo Blade.........| 920 Fourteenth st.
FWelliver JC... io onih Washington Times, Baltimore News, | 1743 Q st.
Philadelpia Evening Times.
Wellman Walter... ........ Chicago Record-Herald........... .....| 1827 Phelps place.
*+ Whitehead, Frank I... .... Washington Post. ...... oder. ..| Stoneleigh Court.
#Willert, Arthur... ..... Tondon Times «nhs ives ats ..| The Champlain.
Willis, H, Parker.... .......| New York Journal of Commerce ........| The Mendota.
Young, J. .Russell.......... Philadelphia Evening Star ..............| 2224 F st.
Charles H. Mann, Superintendent House Press Gallery; residence, 627 A st. NE.
James D. Preston, Superintendent Senate Press Gallery, 1366 Meridian st.
RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES.
1. Persons desiring admission to the press galleries shall make application to the
Speaker, as required by Rule XXXVI of the House of Representatives, and to the Com-
mittee on Rules of the Senate, as required by Rule V for the Regulation of the Senate
Wing of the Capitol; and shall also state, in writing, for what paper or papers they
are employed; and shall further state that they are not engaged in the prosecution of
claims pending before Congress or the Departments, and will not become so engaged
while allowed admission to the galleries; and that they are not in any sense the
agents or representatives of persons or corporations having legislation before Con-
gress, and will not become either while retaining their places in the galleries, and
that they are not employed in an Executive or Legislative Department, and will not
become so employed while accepting the privileges of the galleries. Visiting jour-
nalists who may be allowed temporary admission to the galleries must conform to the
restrictions of this rule. ;
2. The applications required by above rule shall be authenticated in a manner that
‘shall be satisfactory to the Standing Committee of Correspondents, who shall see that
the occupation of the galleries is confined to bona fide telegraphic correspondents of
reputable standing in their business, who represent daily newspapers, and not exceed-
ing one seat shall be assigned to each paper; and it shall be the duty of the Standing
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.
P. C. KNOX,
Chairman Committee on Rules.
MAURICE SPLAIN, Chairman,
THOMAS J. PENCE,
JAMES P. HORNADAY,
ARTHUR J. DODGE,
CHARLES S. ALBERT, Secretary,
Standing Committee of Corvespondents,
334 ; Congressional Directory.
MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES.
NAMES, HOME POST-OFFICES, WASHINGTON RESIDENCES,
AND PAGE ON WHICH BIOGRAPHY APPEARS.
[The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the { designates those whose unmarried
daughters in society accompany them; the | designates those having other ladies with them. ]
THE, SENATE.
*+tCHARLES W. FAIRBANKS, Vice-President, 1701 K street.
[WirLriam P. FRYE, President pro tempore, The Hamilton.
*tRev. EDWARD EVERETT HALE, Chaplain, 1748 N street.
*CHARLES G. BENNETT, Secretary, The Shoreham.
*HENRY M. ROSE, Assistant Secretary, The Burlington.
*1||| DANIEL, M. RANSDELL, Sergeant-at-Arms, 130 B street NE.
Name. Home post-office. | Washington residence. hoe raphy.
Page.
*itAldrich, Nelson W.........¢ Providence, R. I....| 1727 Massachusetts ave. 115
Ankeny, Levi ..0i.n.i cian Walla Walla, Wash.| The Shoreham ........ 131
Bacon, Augustus O...... 0... Macon; Ga. >... .o.00 18th st. and Oregon ave. 16
Bailey, Joseph W'.......... Gainesville, Tex ...| Stoneleigh Court.....:: 122
ill Bankhead, John H......... Fayette, ‘Ala, . J. 0% Riggs House... a... I
=Beveridge, Albert J... .... Indianapolis, Ind ..| 1155 Sixteenth street. .. 27
*Borah, William EF... ........ Boise, Idaho....... Stoneleigh Court :-..... 20
*Bourne, Jonathan, jr... ..... Portland, Oreg..... Stoneleigh Court...... 103
|Brandegee, Frank B ..... -.[ New London, Conn.| 1521 K street... i... 11
*Briges, Frank O............. Trenton; N. J... = 2204; R streef,...... 0 73
*Brown, Norris... 00 Kearney, Nebr.i. i. The Portland... ........ 68
*Bulkeley Morgan G........ Hartford, Conn ....| 1701 Twenty-second st . 11
*Durkett Elmer Ju. os fo Lincoln, Nebr... . .. 1816 Nineteenth street . 68
“Burnham, Henry FE... .... Manchester, N. H ..| The Richmond ........ 71
Burrows, Julius C... ....... Kalamazoo, Mich ..| 1406 Massachusettsave . 53
ZCarter, Thomas FH ....... ... Helena, Mont... ... 1528 Sixteenth street. .. 68
Clapp, Moses B............. St. Paul, Minn ..... 1370 Fuclid street... ... 57
ZhiClark, Clarence Di... ... .... Evanston, Wyo ....| The Burlington........ 138
Clarke, James P 2. J... Tittle Rock, Ark. li, ou, oon, 4
Clay, AlexanderS ...... :.... Marietta, Ga....... The Normandie........ 16
*Crane, W. Murray... -:....... Dalton, Mass... .. 1915 Massachusetts ave. 48
%||Culberson, Charles A... ... Dallas, Tex... ..... The Connecticut....... 122
MilCullom, Shelby M .......: Springfield, Ill... . .. 1413 Massachusetts ave. 20
*Cumming, Albert B ......5.; Des Moines, lows . .| The Arlington......... 3I
[Curtis, Charles ©- 0° =... Topeka, Kans:..... The Raleigh... .. 0... 34
Daniel, John W..... .~ o.. Lynchburg, Va..... The Dewey............ 128
Davis, Jeff. ...v. 0... ; Little Rock, Ark...| Metropolitan Hotel .... 4
*| Depew, Chauncey M ....... New York,N.Y....[ 1775 Nstreet .......... 76
¥Dick, Charles... ......... Akron, Ohio... ... 1821 Adams Mill road. . 94
| Dillingham, William P...... Waterbury, Vt..... The Cochran i... 127
¥Dixon, Joseph M........... Missoula, Mont ....| 1818 Nineteenth street. 68
*l|Dolliver, Jonathan P ....... Fort Dodge, Iowa ..| 1415 Massachusetts ave . 31
[du Pont, Henry A........... Winterthur, Del ...} 1711 Massachusetts ave. 13
FpElzing, Stephen B'.......... Elkins, W.Va...... 1626 K street... . 1 132
ARlint, Frank P ...........: Los Angeles, Cal ...| 2205 Massachusetts ave . 6
Members’ Residences. 385
THE SENATE—Continued.
Name. Home post-office. | Washington residence. on
Page.
¥jBoraker, Joseph B:.-....... Cincinnati, Ohio ...| 1500 Sixteenth street .. 94
Foster, Murphy J ............ Franklin,la.....%. The Cochiran.........; 41
' * Frazier, James B........... Chattaricoga,; Tenn.| The Cochran.......... larg
A fPrye, William. P............ Lewiston, Me. ..... The Hamilton. ........ 43
Pulton, Charles W... =... ... Astoria, Oreg..... ... The Arlington ...... |. 103
Gallinger, Jacob H.. =... 0... Concord, N. H..... The Normandie. ...... | 71
¥Gomble, Robert J... 0. 1: Yankton, S. Dak...| The Portland .......... = 1S
Cary, Frank Bo. oo oo Abbeville, S.C. ..li Congress Hall... .... .. =: 116
: *Core, Thomas P............ Lawton, Okla... :... Congress Hall: ...... “101
§ *Guggenheimy, Simon... ....... Denver, Colo ...... 1535 0, street... 9
®Hdle:Fuagene i. w.. Fllsworth,Me...... 1001 Sixteenth street . .| 43 |
Hansbrough, Henry C....... Devillslake, NoDall i. ao ade 93 |
tHemenway, James A........ Boonville, Ind... .. New Willard... ...... 27
*Heyburn, WeldonB. ......... Wallace, Idaho ....| Stoneleigh Court...... 19 |
| *Hopkins, Albert-J .......... Aurora, Ml... ....... New Willard. ......... 20
Johnston, Jeseph EB . .......... Birmingham, Ala. | "I'he Cochran... ....... 2
UliRean Jom. .......... .. Elizabeth, N.J ..... 1700 street... 72
| Kittredge, Alfred B........... Sioux Falls, S. Dak.| The Shoreham. ....... 118
| *|Knox, Philander C......... Pittsburg, Pa... .. 1527 Kostreelas 1, 0 105
| %1a Follette, Robert M.... ..".. Madison, Wis. ..... 1864 Wyoming avenue. 135
®1.0dge, Henry Cabot ........ Nahant, Mass... ... 1765 Massachusetts ave. 48
| *1ong, Chester. I... 00 000s. Medicine Lodge, | 1455 Massachusetts ave. 34
/ Kans.
1 McCreary, James B..0......... Richmond, Ky..... Ebbitt House .........| 37 |
=lMcCumber, Porter]. ....... Wahpeton, N. Dak. .| 1534 Twenty-second st. 93 |
McEnery, Samuel D......... New Orleans, La. ...| Metropolitan Hotel. ... 41
*McLaurin, Anselm J ........ Brandon, Miss ..... Congress Hall... ... ... | 59
Martin, Thomas S.... ........ Charlottesville, Va .| The Benedick...... ... i+ 128
| #Milton, William H......... Marianna, Fla ..... Congress Hall... . 50: 14
||IMoney, HernandoD ....... Mississippi: City, | The Windsor. ..... ..%. 59
Miss. |
®iNelson, Knute... .......-.... Alexandria, Minn. .| 649 East Capitol street y 56
*||Newlands, Francis G....... Reno, Nev......... Woodley, Woodley lane | 70
Nixon, George S.....o...... Reno, Nev... ..... New Willard... .....%| 71
EOverman; lee S. i... Salisbury, N.C... .[["The Cochran. ...... ol Qo
Owen, Robert Lo... .... Muskogee, Okla ....| The Shoreham ........ }: 01
Page Carroll 8... tna Hyde Park, Vt..... The Arlington... ....... | aay
*Paynter, Thomas Bl... .. .... Greenup, Ky..... = the Cochran... ....... | 37
Penrose, Boles... 0... Philadelphia, Pa...| New Willard... ...... |. “105%
Perkins, George C......... .... Oakland, Cal... 3: Stoneleigh Court... 6
Piles, Samuel H.............. Seattle, Wash... .... The Cochran... .:: i. | 132
Platt, Thomas Coron Owego, N. VV... .q.. The Arlington... ..... 75
Rayner, Isidor---.... 5. 0 Baltimore, Md..... The Highlands... “C0. 45
*+||Richardson, Harry A. ..... Dover, Deli. ...... New Willard.......... 14
*Scott, Nathan B... .......... Wheeling, W. Va... New Willard..........| 133
®rSimmons, BE, M.. 0... 0... Prenton (BR. X. DD.) | The Portland ...:..... 90
Jones €o., N.C.
Smith, John Walter. ........ | Snow Hill, Md..... The Sherwood, Balti- | 45
more, Md. |
*Smith, Wm. Alden... ....... | Grand Rapids, Mich | 1100 Sixteenth street. .| 53
| *Smoot, Reed... ... 0.0L Provo, Utah ...1..L The Raleigh 700 0 Ls iimay
*lIStephenson, Isaac... ..... Marinette, Wis. . ... The Shoreham... ... | 13%
Stone, William J... 0». 0... Jefferson City, Motifs. 0.0. La 63
*iSutherland, George. ....... Salt LakeCity,Utah.| The Highlands. ....... L127
Taliaferro, James Po... Jacksonville, Fla...| Stoneleigh Court...... 15
| M[Taylor, Robert I... +... Nashville, Tenn. ...| Stoneleigh Court...... Ll. 119
XlTeller, Henry Mi... Central City, Colo. [i The Cairo... ......... 9
i *#Tillman, Benjamin R ...... Prenton; S. C...... The Toronto. ......... [<< 716
1 * Warner, William .......... Kansas City, Mo... [The Cairo.....ai vovc.; 63
1 Warren, Francis E+.......... Cheyenne, Wyo. ...| New Willard.......... 138
*17Wetmore, George P....... Newport, R.1...... 1609 Kistreet.. ........ 115
386 Congressional Directory.
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
tJosEPH G. CANNON, Speaker, 1014 Vermont avenue.
*Rev. HENRY NOBLE CoUDEN, D. D., Chaplain, 1310 Columbia road.
*+TALEXANDER MCDOWELL, Clerk, The Dewey.
*HENRY CASSON, Sergeant-at-Arms, 33 B street.
*tFRANK B. LOX, Doorkeeper, The Van Dyke.
SAMUEL A. LANGUM, Postmaster, The Luxor.
Name. Home post-office. Washington residence. | Bios raphy,
Page.
*tAcheson, Ernest F....... Washington, Pa ...... The Normandie .......| 112
Adair, John A.M... 0... Portland, Ind ......... Congress Hall... .. -.. 29
*Adamson, William C....... Carrollton, Ga... =... Congress Hall... ....... 17
#iAiken, Wyatt ............ Abbeville, S.C... ..... The Barmgut.. ... os: 117
Alexander, 1D. S. .... Buffalo, N. ¥...... =. The Connecticut... ... 89
*Alexander, Joshua W..... Gallatin, Mo........... 1343 Girard street ..... 64
jAllen, Ames In... oid, Alfred, Me... ...» us The Roland... ......... 44
Ames, Butler... ........... Lowell Mass......... 1755 Sixteenth street . 50
*Andrus, John B.......... Yonkers, N. V'....... The Arlington . ....... 84
*||||Ansberry, Timothy T...| Defiance, Ohio...... 1712: H street... .. | 96
#Anthony, D. R., jr ....... Leavenworth, Kans. ..| 2339 Massachusetts ave. 34
*Ashbrook, William A.... | Johnstown, Ohio ..... Congress Hall... ....... 100
Bannon; Henryl... Portsmouth, Ohio ....| New Willard.......... 98
*j||Barchfeld, Andrew]... | Pittsburg, Pa......... New Occidental....... 114
Barclay, Charles F......... Sinnemahoning Pa lo. ica aan I11
*tBarnhart, Henry A... .. Rochester, Ind....... Congress Hall. ........ 30
*||Bartholdt, Richard ... ... St. Louis, Mo. 0... ; 1603 Fuclid street ..... 65
*Bartlett, Charles L,........ Macon, Ga... ......... ‘The Cochiran. i. ....... 18
Bartlett, George A... ..: Tonopah, Nev.......: Chevy Chase, Md..- ... 71
Bates, Arthur L...... .. Meadville, Pa... ..... The Normandie. ...... 112
=4Beale, Joseph G.......... T.cechbure, Pa... ... 2015 Kalorama road 113
2Peall, Jack, ..... 00 Waxahachie, Tex... ul... i. sian. oe 124
Bede, J]. Adam... .....;.. Pine City, Minn... .. 1343 1, street’... =... 59
MiBell, Thomas M........ Gainesville, Ga... .... 1759 Qrstreet. 0... 19
¥Bennet, William S........ New York, N.V ..... ooo S streets. ©... 83
®l|Bennett, Joseph B-...... Greenup, Ky i. 5 ie mie 40
Bingham, Henry H........ Philadelphia, Pa ..... Metropolitan Club. . . .. 105
Birdsall, Benjamin P...... Clarion, Towa... . =. .: Congress Hall......... 32
*Bonynge, Robert W ...... Denver, Colow. 0... The Cairo... 5, 0 0c 10
*1Booher, Charles E....... Savannah, Mo........ ‘The National. 2... . 64
*Doutell Henry 8S... ........ Chiicago, Til... a... The Highlands. =... 22
Bowers, Baton 'J........... Bay St. Louis, Miss. ..| 1002 Rhode Island ave. | 62
*Boyd, John Fi... Neligh, Nebr. ........ ‘The Dewey '..........- 69
||Bradley, Thomas W ...... Walden, N.Y... ... Congress Hall... .... 84
*Brantley, William G ...... Brunswick, Ga ....... The Calro.......o.i: ov 19
*fBrodhead, J. Davis ......| South Bethlehem, Pa .| 1314 Connecticut ave . 112
*Broussard, Robert F...... New Iberia, La....... Riggs House... .. ..... | 42
Brownlow, Walter P....... Jonesboro, Tenn ....... 1803 Belmont road... ... | ‘rig
*Brundidge, Stephen, jr ..[ Searcy, Ark.......... The Richmond ........ .. 4
Burgess, GeorgeF ......... Gonzales, Tex .......... The Normandie ....... 125
2Burke, Jomes FF ..... Ho... Pittsburg, Pa......... The Shoreham ........ 114
*Burleigh, Edwin C........ Augusta, Me ......... 1100 Vermont avenue. . 45
Burleson, Albert S......... Austin, Tex ,......... Cosmos Club... ....... 125
Members’ Residences. 387
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued.
Name. Home post-office. Washington residence. iy
i
Page
] ABurnett, John I o..o oo... Gadsden, Ala......... CongressHall......... 3
fBurton, Hiram RR. ... ..... Yewes Del... ........ The Highlands. ....... 14
Burton, Theodore E. ....... Cleveland, Ohio ...... The Rochambeau... ... 101
%/{/Butler, Thomas S ....... West Chester, Pa... .. The Cumberland ...... 108
ibyrd, Adam M Cio Philadelphia, Miss....| Congress Hall... .... ... 61
¥Calder, William M ......... Brooklyn, N. V.... ... New Willard... ......... 78
Calderhead, William A ..... Marysville, ans culos ou oc 35
HCaldwell; Ben. BE... .... Chatham, Tl. 50 Ebbitt House... 5... 26
#*t{iCampbell, Philip P..... Pittsburg, Kans pe The Cumberland .... .. 35
Candler, Ezekiel S., jr..... Corinth, Miss ........ 413 New Jersey ave. SE. 60
Cannon, Joseph CG. : Danville, 111... i. i 1014 Vermont avenue. 25
*iCapron, Adin B...... =. Stillwater, R.1..... The Cochran... 13
Carlin, Charles C.... . Alexandria, Va... 0... Alexandria, Va... J. 0 131
Carter, Charles Di... . 0. Ardmore, Okla ....... New Occidental ....... 102
Cory, Willlam J... =. Milwamkee," Wis... 0h 0 0b nal is G 136
i Cassel, Henry B... ..... Marietta; Pa. ili The Shoreham ........ 108
t|Canlfield, Henry 8... .. St. Tonis, Mo... oo. 0 The Cairo... 00... 66
*|||l||Chaney, John C . of Sullivan, Ind... The Everett... : 28
*t||[|Chapman, Pleasant 1. Vienna, TH... 0 2440 Columbia road. . .. 26
*Clark, Champ... ok .| Bowling Green, Mo... The Toronto... ..... 65
*Clark, Feank. acs Gainesville, Fla... .. The Driscoll... ..... 15
Clayton, Henry D1... 0. Fufanla, Ala... Riggs House; io 0... 2
*Cockran, W. Bourke ...... New York, N. ¥:..... 1333 Sixteenth street. .. 81
Cocks, William W.. ......... Old Westbury, N. Y..| 305 New Jerseyave. SE. 77
%Cole, Ralph D........, i Findlay, Ohio... The Arlington. ..... & 97
*Conner, James P........... Dénison, Iowa. ........ The Hamilton......... 33
*Cook, George W.......... .. Denver, Colo. .5i0il Congress Hall... x 9
| 2Cook Joel... nn Philadelphia, Pa...... The Arlington. ......... 106
Cooper, Allen FP. ....... .. Uniontown, Pa... i. hina sal oo II2
i *Cooper, Henry A ....0.. Racine, Wis... -..... The Richmond ........ 135
: *7liCooper, Sam'B Beaumont, Tex... .. Metropolitan Hotel. . .. 123
*l|Condrey, Henry M.. ...:.. St. Lonis, Mo. =... ‘The Normandie ....... 66
Cousins, Robert G....... Tivtong Iowans. all on or ER aa 32
Cox Willlam E......... Sok Tasper, indo nL, The Driscoll .T2.... .. 28
Craig William B.. ........ Selma, Ala. 0) Congress Hall. ........ | 2
*||Cravens, William B...... Fort Smith, Ark....... The Normandie ....... 5
| Crawford, William T....... Waynesville; N.. Ca... Lv si oni She 93
1 *Crumpacker, Edgar D..... Valparaiso, Ind ...... The Dewey..." i. 0. 30
Currier, Frank D....... .... Canaan, N. J... ...... The Dewey... ...0 72
#iCushman, Francis: W'. . ..| Tacoma, Wash...) | gz2 Mstreel........... 132
*Palzell, John =. 00000 Pittsburg, Pa......... 1605 N. Hampshire ave. 114
Darragh, ArchibaldB.......[ St Louis, Mich ....... The Hamilton... ...... |= 56
J *|||| Davenport, James S. .... Vinita, Okla ...... Congress Hall. .......... | TIoz
A *Pavidson James H ....... Oshkosh, Wis........ The Dewey... 0 i 0 137
*Pavis, Charles: R .... 0... St Peter, Minn..... .. The Normandie ....... 57
y Dawes, Beman G.......... Marietta, Ohio <=... The Arlington... ... 99
*|Dawson, Albert BF ........ Preston, Iowa. ....... 514 Seward square. . . .. 31
*||De Armond, David A. .... Butler, Mo... ..0 4 Congress Hall... ... 65
2 Denby, Bdwin ........... Detroit, Mich. ......;.. 1724 Connecticut ave. . .| 53
> *||Denver, Matthew R ..... Wilmington, Ohio. ...| Congress Hall......... 96
1 HM Diekema GCG. J... 0 bu Holland, Mich... .... The Dewey... ....... 54
i *Dixon, Lincoln... i. North Vernon, 1nd ...{ Congress Hall. ........ 28
*Douglas, Albert... ...... Chillicothe, Ohio. .... Stoneleigh Court...... 98
*¥Draper, WilllamH....... Troy, No ¥.....o.... The Cochran... ...-.. 85
*¥Driscoll, Michael E. ...... Syracuse; No'V. 0... TheColro. hil, 87
Durey, Cyrus. i. Sand Johnstown, N.Y ..... The Arlington... 5... .: 86
Dwight, John W ......... Dryden, N.Y ........ 1765 Rustreets 87
*||Edwards, Charles G. ..... Savannah, Ga. i... Congress Hall... ...... 16
| *Pdwards, Don C............ London, Ky.......... The Everett............ 40
388 Congressional Directory.
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued.
Name. Home post-office. Washington residence. Dox raphy
Page.
*tFllerbe, J. Edwin. ...... Sellers, S.C... 0.0 0 Metropolitan Hotel . . . . 118
*Pls, Bdgar C.......... Kansas City, Mo ..... The Dewey... .....c. 7. 64
Ells, William R ........ Pendleton, Oreg...... 1343 Columbia road ...| 104
*Englebright, William F...| Nevada City, Cal..... The Cairo ..... 00. ... 6
*MBsch, John J... ni, La Crosse, Wis ....... Congress Hall... ....... 136
*}Estopinal, Albert........ St. Bernard, Ia. ...... Riggs House... ...... 41
*||Fairchild, George W..... Oneonta, N. Vi... New Willard. ......... 11486
XFassett, J. Sloat =... ....... Blmira, NoY......... 1739 N street. ......... 88
#Pavrot, George KX..." ... Baton Rouge, La..... Riggs House.......... 43
ER Perris, Scott... ........ Lawton, Okla........ Congress Hall... ..... 103
Binley, David B........ Yorkville, 8. C ...... 1. The National ......... 117
*Fitzgerald, John] ........ Brooklyn, N. Y...... 1312 Twenty-first street. 79
Rlood, Henry D:..... Appomattox, Va. ol 131
Floyd, John C...... ... Yellville, Ark........ 309 New Jersey ave. SE. 5
*ttFocht, Benjamin K..... Jewisburg, Pa ....... The Dewey ............ 110
Poelker, Olio GCG... ........ Brooklyn NY sil a Sa Hat)
*tFordney, Joseph W...... Saginaw, Mich ....... The Dewey .........:, 55
||||Fornes, Charles V....... New York, N. V..... The Westminster...... 8I
*Poss, George I. ....... | Chicago, TIL... .... . 5 1921 Nistreet. .......... 23
*riPoster, David J .......... Burlington, Vii ool a 128
*jFoster, Jom H.......... Bvansville,Ind....... 1505 Lstreet....... J. 27
*|Foster, Martin D........ Olney, I... C0, The Driscoll...:... +... 26
*||Foulkrod, William W....| Philadelphia, Pa...... 1218 Connecticut ave. . . 107
*Fowler, Charles N ........ Rlizabeth, N.J .. ...... The Highlands........ 74
*Prench, Burton l,.......... Moscow, Idaho....... ‘the Woodley.......... 20
*Fuller, Charles E. ........ Belvidere, I11......... RiggsHouse.......... 23
XPulton, Elmer, ........ Oklahoma City, Okla.! The Driscoll .......... 102
Gaines, John™W., ~~... 7 Nashville, Tenn ...... New Occidental....... 121
M/Gaines, Joseph H....... .. Charleston, W.Va ....| The Everett .......... 134
*Gardner, Augustus P ..... Hamilton, Mags. =... di oo en er. 50
*jGardner, John]... ... ... Egg Harbor City, N. J. The Dewey ........... 73
*Gardner, Washington ..... Albion, Mich .. =... Congress Hall ........ 54
HliGamer, John N.......... Uvalde, Tex: ...... The Burlington .. ..... 126
RGarrett, Finis T0000. li Dresden, Tenn ....... 129 Maryland ave. NE. 121
Gilhams, Clarence C....... Ta Grange Indl ful oo LN 30
Gill; John, jr. .c0L 00 Baltimore, Md. ir. cls. rs a sa 47
*t1Gillespie, Oscar W...... Fort Worth, Tex. ..... 1724 Q street. ......... 125
Gillett, Frederic H ... ... .. Springfield, Mass . . ... The Connecticut... 49
Glass, Carter... 000000 Lynchburg, Va ivi. o.oo ois ol sis 130
®|Godwin, Hanniballl, .... J Dunn, N.C .......... New Varnum......... 92
Goebel, Herman P......... Cincinnati, Ohio... ... ‘the Cochran... ....... 95
Goldfogle, Henry M ....... New Yorke, N.Y 0 hi seal e 8o
*||Gordon, George W...... Memphis, Tenn. ...... Congress Hall........ 122
*Goulden, Joseph A ....... New York, N.Y... ... The Westminster. . .... 84
*iGraff, Joseph V........... Peoria, TW... ....... The Dewey. .......... 24
*tGraham, William H ..... Allegheny, Pa........ The Dewey ........... 113
||Granger, Daniel L.D ..... Providence, R. 1 ...... The Richmond. .......".: 115
Greene, William S......... Fall River, Mass... ... 1107 Seventeenth street. 52
RiGrege "A.W... 0. Palestine) Lex un Jo or ar hi, 124
Griggs, James M.......... Dawson, Ga. vo volo EE aa 17
®jGronna Asgle J .... ...., Lakota, N. Dak ...... TheCalro..;... a... 94
*Guernsey, Frank H....... Dover; Me oo 0 The Arlington ......... 45
Hackett, Richard N........ Wilkesboro, N.C ..... Congress Hall........ 92
*||Hackney, Thomas ....... Carthage, Mo. ........ Congress Hall ........ 67
Haggott, Warren A... ..... Idaho Springs, Colo ..| Congress Hall ........ 10
Hale, Nathan W........... .. Knoxville, Tenn... ... The National ......... 120
Hall, Philo... ...... 0. Brookings, S. Dak. if. cic. eee sr 118
*Hamill, James'A.......... Jersey City NLT Lo vs hn ag ah 75
*Hamilton, Daniel W ...... Sigourney, Iowa. ..... Congress Hall ......... 32
© *Hamilton, Edward L. ..... Niles, Mich .......... The Dewey..... ...... 54
*tHamlin, Courtney W ....| Springfield, Mo....... New Varnum'........... 65
a
i
hn
1 Members’ Residences. 389
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued.
Name Home post-office Washington residence Bog : * * [raphy
| Page.
Hammond, Winfield S..... St. James, Minn ...... The Dewey. ... 0. 57
*Harding, John E:......... Fxcello, Ohlo.......... The Highlands ....... 95
I *|Hardwick, Thomas W. ...| Sandersville, Ga ..... ‘The Normandie....... 19
¥ Hardy, Bufus............. Corefeana, Tem. ait. a nia gos. 124
*Harrison, Francis B....... New York, N. ¥V..... 17171 street. i ovina 83
*||||Haskins, Kittredge .... | Brattleboro, Vt....... The Grafton... vii 128
tHangen, Gilbert N........ Northwood, Towa... bo coi Cis a ie os 32
*Hawley, Willis C.......... Salem, Oreg........ .. The Oakland... ... 104
Hav, James ..........0.... Madison, Va ....... The Bancroft «rc... 130
% *illayes, Everis A ......... San Jose, Cal. ......:.. Congress Hall... ..... 8
1 Heflin, J. Thomas. ..... Lafayetie Ala 1 cic loi biol io si nen tiny 3
| Helm, Harvey. ....... eo Stanford, Ky. .0. 0. Congress Hall... .. .... 39
*Henry, E. Stevens ........ Rockville,Conn ...... 1427 XK street i aan II
| “Henry, Robert Li... 0... Waco, Temi ox v0: TheCairo. 5, vi ih 125
*||Hepbusn, William P... .. Clarinda, Iowa ....... 1124 East Capitol street. 33
*Higgins, Edwin W ....... Norwich, Conn.iii... The Portland; ».. .. - 12
*3$0311, Ebenezer}.........: Norwalk, Conn ........ The Burlington... .... 12
Hl, Wilson'S... ois Winona, Miss ........ Metropolitan Hotel. ... 61
*Hinshaw, Edmund H. .... Fairbury, Nebr. ....... The Normandie....... 69
I *Hitchcock, Gilbert M.. ... Omaha, Nebr.......... ‘The Highlands. ....... 69
| *Hobson, Richmond P..... Greensboro, Ala. ..... 2117. S street... vu... 3
Holliday, Flias S.....i. Brazil, Inde. oc New Varnum......... 29°
| * *||Houston, William C ..... Woodbury, Tenn... Jil. oti isi aves I2I
4 *¥Howard, William M ...... Lexington,Ga........ The Richmond... ..... ETS
*Howell, Benjamin F...... New Brunswick, N.J..| The Cochran.......... 73
*iHowell, Josephs... 0 Logan, Utah.:........ 1026 Vermont avenue. . 127
*Howland, Paunl..:.. ... .. Cleveland, Ohio. ..... TheCairo)... c.ovss 100
*iHubbard, Elbert H...... Sioux City, Iowa ..... The Ontario... .....e. 34
tHubbard, William P...... Wheeling, W. Va.... | The Portland .......... i133
3 | Hufi, George PF. ......... Greensburg, Pa....... 1600 N. Hampshire ave. III |
i ijHughes, James A........ Huntington, W.Va. .[ Riggs House. ........ 134
*t||Hughes, William. ...... Paterson, N. J........ The Driscoll. ......... 74
Hull, Cordell. .i0n 4 Carthage, Tenn....... Riggs House.......... 120
*Hall, John A. T.-....... Des Moines, Iowa. .... 1302 M street. ........ 33
*|Humphrey, William E . . .| Seattle, Wash ........ The Royalton i...v0, oi b132
*Humphreys, Benjamin G..| Greenville, Miss... ... 1364 Girard street ..... 61
#*Jackson, William H...... Salisbury, Md........ The Arlington'........ 46 |
James, Addison D......... Penrod, Ky «vi adh on ra rain 38
*James, Ollie M:.... ....... Marion, Ky .......... The Cochran. .......... 37
¥enkins; JohnT. 0. in. Chippewa Falls, Wis. .| The Hamilton ........ 138 |
*+iJohnson, Ben....o.. 5 Bardstown, Ky....... The Cochram.......... 38
Johnson, Joseph T ........ Spartanburg, S.C aul. . a ie ba 117
Jones, Wesley I,............ North Yakima, Wash .| 1501 Eleventh street... 132
4 ¥Jones, William A......... Warsaw, Va... ....... 1700.) street. ....... ...., 129
Kahn, Juling ...o..... 00. San Francisco, Cal ...! The Shoreham ........ 7
Keifer; J. Warren. .....o.¢. Springfield, Ohio.... | The Marlborough..... 96 |
Keliher, John A ......... 5. Boston, Mass... bi vn in sa sia 5I
Kennedy, Charles A .......| Montrose, Towa........ Congress Hall .......... 31
*+Kennedy, James......... Youngstown, Ohio....| The Cairo............. 100 °
J Kimball, William P........ Lexington, Ky....... The Driscoll .......... 39 |
4 Kinkaid, Moses P.......... O’Neill, Nebr ........ Congress Hall. ........ 70
| *Kipp,. George W ......... Towanda, Pa......... Congress: Hall... Co. 109
Kitchin, Claude ........... Scotland Neck, N. Cole 0 0 0 fon dai oI
Kitchin, William W ....... Roxboro, NiC coil oiv iyiniavtas 3,0 91
Knapp, Charlesl,......... Towville N.Y .. i... The Cochran... ..:. i... 87
*Knopi, Philip:.......5... Chicago, TL... ..0 The Dewey... ..... 22 |
Knowland, Joseph R ...... Alameda, Cal ......... 1823 Nineteenth street. 7 1
tTKiistermann, Gustav. .... Green Bay, Wis...... Congress Fall ,....... 137
%lil{|1alean, Daniel BP ....... Nor, Pac el nui i New Occidental....... III
: Tamar, Rebert............ Houston, Mo.........[.... SE HE Ee 67
! *Lamar, William B ........ Tallahassee, Fla... ... New Willard.......... 15
| 1
390 Congressional Directory.
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued.
Name. Home post-office. Washington residence. ox 1
£
Page. |
tlamb, John ........ 005... Richmond, Va ....... The National ......... 129 i
*7landis, Charles B....... ... Delphi, Ind:.....=.. {The Farragut... .. 30 Bi
*Langley, John W......... Spuflock. By.......0. The De Soto... ...n 40 bl
Hilaning, Joy B.. .o..0 Norwalk, Ohio....... Congress Hall ....: 99 i
Lassiter, Francis R ........ Petersburg, Va....... TheRaleigh +. .>....... 129 :
Law, Charles B.............. Brooklyn, N.Y ...... 305 New Jersey ave. SE. 78 i
*Lawrence, GeorgeP ...... North Adams, Mass. ..| The Shoreham........ 48
*|||| Leake, Eugene W...... Jersey City, N.J....... The Shoreham. ....... 75 S|
Xllee, Gordon ......0.0 0. Chickamauga, Ga..... The Shoreham... ..v. 18
Legare, George S.......... Charleston, S.C... en das i AE 117
¥tlenahan, John IT. .%..... Wilkes-Barre, Pa... | Congress Hall ..... 108
Lever, Asbury B00 0d Lexington, S.C... J. 103 Maryland ave. NE. 118 |
*tLewis, Bhjnh Bie. ..| Montezuma, Ga ...... Metropolitan Hotel... . . 17 4
Lilley, George I, ........ .. Waterbury, Comnc chilis nn circa io to II
Lindbergh, Charles A... ... Little Ballas Mirman hs ride vais 58
T|| Lindsay, George H ...... Brooklyn, N.Y... 0... TheRaleigh. ..... i]
Livingston, Leonidas ¥ ....| Covington, Ga ....... 1916 Biltmore street... 18
| ®lilloyd, James'E |. ..... Shelbyville, Mo. ..... The Olympia ......... 63
*Longworth, Nicholas ..... Cincinnati, Ohio'...... 831 Eighteenth street. . 95
| Lorimer, William .......... Chicago, IM oye... Y.M.C A.Building... 22
| *tiiLoond, George A . ....... Au Sable, Mich....... The Dewey... ........ 56
*||Loudenslager, Henry C. ..| Paulsboro, N.J ....... TheDewey........x 73
fl.overing, William C ...... Taunton, Mass, ... ». 1602 K street ...... 5%. 52 |
| *T.owden, Frank O ........ Oregon, Wl... coo 0 1719 Massachusettsave. 23
*+McCall, Samuel W....... Winchester, Mass. . ... New Willard.......... 50
*McCreary, George D. ... ... Philadelphia, Pa...... Stoneleigh Court... .. 107
*¥McDermott, James T...... Chicago, I¥i...00 cnr, 650 East Capitol street. oY
McGavin, Charles ........ Chicago, 11... The Dewey. ....... 22
*McGniye, Bird... 0 oui Pawnee, Okla ........ New Willard... .... > 101
*McHenry, JohnG....... Benton, Pa... ...0 +... 1315 Clifton street..... 110
McKinlay, Duncan E...... Santa Rosa, Cal ...... 413 Fourth street...... 7
|| McKinley, William B..... Champaign, Ill....... 919 Farragut square. .. 25
*McKinney, James... ..... Aledo, 1... ..... The Portland ......... 24
+McLachlan, James ....... Pasadena, Cal ........ New Willaxd.......... 8
*Meclain, Frank A... 0... Gloster, Miss ........ Congress Hall a 62
McLaughlin, James C. ..... Muskegon, Mich. ili... ou saaina saindln 55
tT] McMillan, Samuel. ..... TLake Mahopac, N. Y..| The Burlington ela 85
*t|| | McMorran, Henry . .... Port Huron, Mich .:..| The Arlington: ....... 55
®Macon, Robert B ........ Helena, atk Congress Hall. 7... 4
*+Madden, Martin B....... Chicago, 111. 1.0 The Highlands:....... 20
*Madison, Edmond H. ..... Dodge City, Kans... .| Congress Hall... .... 36
*Malby, George R......... Ogdensburg, N. VV... [iNew Willard... ........ 86
Mann, James R........... Chicage, lla... The Shoreham. ....... 21
*Marshall, Thomas F ...... Oakes, N. Dak ....... Fhe Farragut ......... 93
¥Martin, Eben Wi... 0000; Deadwood; S. Dak... .{ The Dewey ........... 119
#Maynard, Harry L,. ...0. Portsmouth, Va... .. New Occidental....... 129
¥Miller, James M .......... Council Grove, Kans. .| 3213 Thirteenth street . 35
*Mondell, Frank W. .... ...1 Newcastle, Wyo ...... The Cairo. 0.0 138
Moon, John A... ....i0 0 vl. Chattanooga; Tenn: aol soo. Lous di. nai 120
Moon, Reuben O .......... Philadelphia, Pa... ... New Willard.......... 106
*Moore, J. Hampton. ...... Philadelphia, Pa ..... New Occidental....... 106
*tMoore, John M.....:.... Richmond, Tex ...... The Normandie. ... ... 124
*Morse, Elmer A .......... Antigo, Wis... ... oie The Dewey: a, 137
Mouser, Grant B.............. Marion, Ohiou. ool sa sd ioe els 99
Mudd, Sydney EB, ........... La-Platn, MAS a oie sada oa 47
*|Murdock, Victor .......: Wichita, Kans. ....... | 1742 Street... ... 36
Murphy, James W......... Plattville, Wis, ioe. tos dn soem 136
*Needham, James C........ Modesto, Cal ......... The Champlain ....... 8
Nelson, John M ..... .... Madison, Wis ........ 312 Maryland ave. NE. 135
Nicholls, Thomas D....... Scranton, Pa. ith rn a Sa Sens 108
Norris, George W.......... McCook, Nebr-./. i tv is bah iE 0
Members’ Residences. 391
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued.
Name. Home post-office. Washington residence. Blog raphy.
Page.
XiNye, Frank M........% Minneapolis, Minn...| The Cairo ............ 58
O'Connell, Joseph F...... Boston, Mass, .... 0. New Occidental....... 5I
Z@lcott; J. Van Vechten. ..]'New York, N.Y ..... 2223 Rostreet. .. ... .... 83
Olmsted, Marlin B...... ... Harrisburg, Pa........ The Arlington... .... 110
*Qverstreet, Jesse. ......... Indianapolis, Ind ..... New Willard. ......... 29
Padgett, Lemuel P.......... Columbia, Tenn ...... The Dewey............ 321
Page, Robert N.. ....... Biscoe; N.C. ......... TheCaire, >. 05... 92
Xfi Parker, R. Wayne ..... Newark, NJ. .<..... 1723 Rhode Island ave. 74
*Parsons, Herbert ............ New York, N.Y ..... 1229 Nineteenth street. 82
*t|||| Patterson, James O’H..| Barnwell, S.C ....... New Varnum . ........ 117
Payne, Sereno BF . ....... Auburn, NV... The Burlington .......... 88
*Pearre, George A... .... Cumberland, Md. ohn oa a i a, “ 47
#Perkins, James B.-..... Rochester, N. VV ...... 1613 N. Hampshireave. 88
Peters, Andrew J.......... Boston, Mass. ......\.... 1718S Histreet =... ... 51
*Pollard, Froest M.... =... Nehawka, Nebr ...... Congress Hall... .... 69
*Porfer, Peter A... J... Niagara Falls, N. V...| The Connecticut... 89
Pou, Edward W. .......  ... .. Smithfield N.C...... Congress'Hall . ......; 9I
Pratt le. Gage. ........ = Rast Orange, N. J... .[ Congress Hall.......... 7
*Pray, Charles N.... ..... .... Fort Benton, Mont...| The Champlain ....... 68
|| Prince, George W ...... Galesburg, HI... 3113 Thirteenth street . 24
¥Pujo, Arséne PP... ... Lake Charles, 1a..... The Arlington ........ 43
®l Rainey, Henry T....... Carrollton, U1... ...5 The Driscoll... i. 25
*Randell, Choice B........ Sherman, Tex. ....... The National... ...... 124
Ransdell, Joseph E ........ Lake Providence, la..| The Dewey........... 42
Rauch, George W,........ Marion, Ind.......... Congress Hall -. ...... 30
Reeder, William A. ........ Togan, Kans. ....... 334 Md. ave. NE... 36
Reid, Charles ©... 0)... Mormailllon, Arle... 0 eh cid i es 5
*iReynolds, John M....... Bediord Pa. ors die ea RT, 1I0
*Rhinock, Joseph I, ...... Covington, Ky ....... New Willard. ......... 39
ttRichardson, William. ....| Huntsville, Ala....... The Normandie....... 3
*||| Riordan, Daniel J....... New: York, N. V+... The Raleigh ..:....... 79
Roberts, Brnest W._........ Chelsea, Mass. ....... Ioog Nistreet ......... 50
*Robinson, Joseph T ....... Lonoke, Ark ..... 0... Ebbitt House. =... ..- 5
*Rodenberg, William A"... (Fast St. Touts, I.......0 o.oo ooo 26
*IRothermel, John H...... Repding, Pa... 0... . Riggs House... ..-'on 109
*IRucker, William W....| Keytesville, Mo...... The Congressional. . ... 63
Russell, Gordon ............. Tyler, Vex, 0 eee 123
HlRussell, Joseph J....:.. Charleston, Mo... .... Congress Hall ..... 67
HRyan, William H. ....... Buffalo, NV ......... TheCaivol, oi: oon 89
Sabath, Adolph J.......-.. Chicago, LIL. ....... CongressHall...... ... 21
“Saunders, Edward W..... Bleak HilliVa... ... New Varnum ....... 130
#Secott, Charles B......... .. lola; ans... .... .. i. 1607 Irving street ..... J 35
#*Shackleford, Dorsey W...| Jefferson City, Mo ....| Congress Hall ........ 65
llISheppard, Morris. .. .... Texarkana, Tex... .. New Willard... . ..... 123
¥*Sherley, Swagar......... Yonisville, Ky........ 2119 Connecticut ave. . 38
*Sherman, James S........ Utica, N.Y Lona New Willard.......... 86
*||Sherwood, Isaac R ...... Toledo, Ohio.......... Congress Hall... .... 97
*71Sims, Thetus W........ Linden Tenn ........ 1614 Nineteenth street. 121
#l{iSlayden, James L,.. ... -. San Antonio, Tex..... ¥631R street... onal, 126
iSlemp, C. Bascom ......... Big: Stone Gap, Va ...{ Ebbitt House... ..... 131
HiSmall John H-........ Washington, N.C. cole. ui daiin. cen 90
Smith, Madison R......... Farmington, Mo ..... New Varnum......... 66
*Smith, Samuel W ........ ‘|: Pontiac, Mich-.......: The Buckingham...... 55
*Smith, Sylvester C". .. ..... Bakersfield, Cal... The Rochambeau ..... 9
Smith, Walter I... Council Bluffs, Iowa ..; The Dewey ..... =... 33
*Smith, William R.......... Colorado, Tex......-. 1740 Q street ......... 126
*t||Snapp, Howard M ....... Johet, TI.....2 si... TheCniro......... 5 23
Southwick, George N ..... Albany, N. Y......... The Champlain....... 85
. *}ySparkman, Stephen M.. Tampa, Fla.......... Metropolitan Hotel. ...
*Sperry, Nehemiah D...... New Haven, Conn ....| The Buckingham... ... 12
392 Congressional Directory.
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued.
Name. Home post-office. Washington residence. hi
Page.
*iiSpight, Thomas. ...... Ripley, Miss ,........ New Varnum ......... 60
Stafford, Willlam H ....... Milwaukee, Wis ..... The Cochran... ....... 136
*Stanley, Augustus O...... Henderson, Xy...... The Normandie. ...... 38
*Steenerson, Halvor....... Crookston, Minn..... 1748 Pstreet ..... ix 59
jStephens, JohnH ... .... Vernon, Tex ....c. New Varnum.......".. 126
Sterling; John A .......... Bloomington, Ill..... Congress Hall... ...... 25
*Stevens, Frederick C ..... St. Panl, Minn........ The Cairo... ..... a... 58
*Sturgiss, George C........ Morgantown, W. Va..| CongressHall......... 123
tll|Sulloway, Cyrus A...... Manchester, N. H..... New Varnmm:......... 72
*Sulzer, William. ........... New York, N. Y...... I3T Bstreet SB....... 80
*4Swasey, John P ,........ Canton, Me .......... The Hamilton. ........ 44
‘Falbott, J. Frederick C..... Tatherville, Md... lenis de renee ihe 46
Tawney, James A... ...... Winona, Minn....... The Shoreham ....... 57
*Taylor, Edward 1., jr. ...| Columbus, Ohio....... 1524 Eighteenth street. 98
*yii’laylor, George W......... Demopolis, Ala....... 1354 Columbia Road. 2
jThistlewood, Napoleon B .| Cairo, Ill ............ Congress Hall... 27
*iThomas, Charles R....... Newbern, N.C... o.oo. lion vd nin vn oa 9I
Thomas, W. Aubrey....... Niles, OBO... :.cvvis ves ‘The Raleigh .....i.... 100
Hi Lirrell, Charles OQ .. ...... Natick, Mass ......... The Portland ......... 49
*on Velle, William E..... Celia Olio. et aa ra i ie 95
*Townsend, Charles E..... Jackson, Mich ....... The Dewey... ......... 54
*Underwood, Oscar W ..... Birmingham, Ala... ... Congress Hall .......; 4
*Volstead, Andrew J....... Granite Falls, Minn ..| The Dewey........... 58
*Vreeland, Edward B...... Salamanca, N. Y..... The Dewey. .......:.. 89
*Waldo, George F......... Brooklyn, N.Y... ..... The Arlington -(...... 78
*Wallace, Robert M. ....... Magnolia, Ark ....... New Varnum.......... 6
Wanger, Irving P............ Norristown, Pa. ...... New Varnum ......... 108
*¥Washburn, Charles G..... Worcester, Mass ...... 1721 Rhode Island ave. 49
Till Watkins, John T ....... Minden, Im........... Y. M. C. A. Building. . 42
Watson, James BE .......... Rushville, Ind ....... New Willard... ....... 29
*Webh, Edwin Y.......... Shelby; N. C.......:. The Normandie....... 92
* Weeks, John W ....... -} Newton, Mass... ...... 1526 N. Hampshire ave. 51
Weems, Capell L........... $t. Clairsville, Ohio... The Riggs............. 99
Weisse, Charles’ HL. ........ Sheboygan Falls, Wis.| Congress Hall......... 136
*$Wheeler, Nelson P....... Endeavor, Pa.......... New Willard... ......... 113
tll Wiley, Oliver C. ... .. Montgomery, Ala... os ovdi cosine uns 2
*Willett, William, jr....... Far Rockaway, N. V..| Congress Hall ........ 82
Williams, John S......... Yazoo City, Miss ..... Metropolitan Hotel. ... 62
*+ Wilson, William B....... Blossburg, Pa........ New Varnum ......... 109
*|| Wilson, William W...... Chicago, 111... = ..... The Dewey ..... ccc... 2%
Wolf, Hore: B ... vai oa Baltimore, Md... .... 131 Aisquith street, 46
: Baltimore, Md,
Wood, Ira Wi, ioc .-a. Trenton, N. J........ The Cochran ......... 74
*Woodyard, Harry. C ...... Spencer, W.Va....... he Bancroft ......... 134
*¥Voung, H. Olin ......... Ishpeming, Mich..... The Portland . ........ 56
DELEGATES.
Andrews, William H....... Albuquerque, N. Mex.| The Shoreham ........ 140
Cale, Thomas .>.........-. Fairbanks, Alaska. ...| 215 Fourth street SE .. 139
*||Kalanianaole, Jonah K . . .| Honolulu, Hawaii. ...| 1410 Massachusettsave. 139
Smith, Marcus A ........-... ‘Pucson, Ariz... -.. .-. New Occidental. ...... 139
RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS.
de Leon, Pablo Ocampo ...[ Manila, P.I1.......... The Sherman ......... 140
#iLarrinaga, Tulio......... San Juan, P.R........ CongressHall,........ 140
Legarda, Benito.,......... Manila, P,X.......... The Sherman......... 140
RR SL
pa
ii
|
OR ry
Directory of Apartment Houses, Clubs, and Hotels. 393
APARTMENT HOUSES, CLUBS, AND HOTELS.
Name.
Avlington o.oo es.
Army and Navy Club ......
Ashburn cline ses
Bachelors or ona on
Bancroft uel bi hs
Bedford... mwas
Blenheim Court... 05:
Brandow ox naan
Braniswick . . uu a
Buckimghamtic v.00
Rurlington = .................
Burton Hotel... :. ... 0...
Calro il ners ns Aa
Calumet. on ae a nh
Carlisle... iva ohana
Cecil Aas ha a
Century. Club ........
Champlain... 00
Chapin daa. ahs biuains :
Chicago'Ilotel i... . co.
Cochran. ainsi hs as
Columbia.
Concord rion rat vai vin ta
Congress -Hall.~.« ........0.
Congressional =r ton oo
Connecticut...
Cordova aii. oo 0 cvivinng sean
Cosmos. Club. sii. oo... :
Cumberland... ............
Damariscotta ,. ........ 00
Decatur Jini bon eas
Denver........... ..........
Pe SOLO a ena
Driscoll .
Dupont. . lalate side ale secatone
Ebbitt House. th i da
Ethelhurst . are a
Byeretl oo oi yn Tar Je
Bxecullve ..s. ia 000
Farragut ..
Florence Court.
Fritz Reuter.. SEA
Gainshoro.......... vii
Germania nso hai
Gladstone. iis A.
Glendower. . viii shia.
Grafton. aan Sr.
Hamilton RS Rs STK
Hammond Court...........
Hawarden nn. oon ain
Hentlelta 0. oon nut
Highlandsy do ins
Imperial s.r us Si
FOWA re ai an
Iroquois, 5. vo. ha
Irving Flats ........... PE
Kanawha .........o.....4 ox;
a I A A er Rh SOE
Kensington'.................
LACledE ass vin se as
Ta Relra . ih uss san salsa
Lambert coon inse hina
Lincoln Hotel... ...-...... 0
TL OZan ihn oe
Te ofos Club: on. isa oi
Foudomn. nn dha
TL HXO  vevece cies Rae te ieee
Mcltinleyi oo. ooh ods
Manor House... .......-...-
Marlboroagh.............
Massachusetts... ........
VEnAotn oo: ceivr er inrinves oi
R street, between Fourteenth and Fifteenth streets.
| 21 Sixth street NE
Thirtletlvand Qstreets’, oi 2 ir i. oo es
TI R-SEreer Zi tale EE
os NN Streel.. oo re SS ee ins
Connecticut avenue and California street. .........
1769 Columbia road i tf a rs a
Thivteenthiand QO sireets...... 0... 0.0
Tro Mstreeh. in sda a an RS
Zot ent place... a a
90160: Dumbarionavende... .................. .......
Sixteenth and Irving streefs..................
Fourteenth and Cliffon streets.....................
1223 Vermont avenue, ioe ve sonar Jost cas
Eleventh and G streets ........... Rane Re
Isr A Street INE Snes ne aE
FenthandiELstreels. |. 0 nh os
ToWR CEC Eo ee i ie a i Setar fe ane
oi Fifteenthistreel ...... 0... oct LS
314-316 East Capifolistreel +... ccc ona.
227 New Jersey avenue SE ........ Sm a rad
Third and EF; streets'SH.... io... 40 a da,
1324 Monroe street....... TA Sn ieee
or7 Eighteenth street... ....0.0 ul du.
1412 Massachusetisavenue................0. 0...
Cen CRE RY RR a EE i al
igs Cliffonvistyeets vil oR a al
Twentieth street and Kalorama road.............-
Location. Telephone.
Bleventh:and Natreets: oo. n lant Co aid North 3650.
Seventeenth and Histreets......c.... 0... cus, Main 1987.
12o6:Columbia read... Ld... cai a ees
Vermont avenue and I street... o.oo. LLL, Main 2550.
Connecticut avenue and I street ..................| Main 1382.
1306 Harvard street i. oh Sh es saints
1737 HE Streeties iris cient Badia ats NL LS Main 4980.
Eighteenth and H streets............. Se Ra Main 4800.
RR ST rR se Lie ee i pL
1808=18veilistrett. ttm ctl Te es Main 4520.
LY EE EC le LL aR Sr SR
1012 Massachusettsiavenue.......... nov
1352 Lebreel, i EE Ae Main 2726.
018 Bifteenth streel..-............ a as Main 3431.
1120. VErMONE AVEC, ides olives boee atiiniv sivisis eiaiste late North 72.
226 North: Capliol steel. 5h. i in ons. oh Iincoln 603.
Q, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets. . North 2106.
300: Bast-Capifelistreel sii in, said ih || Lincoln 805.
Zig Nsireet oo i a a a a ei
Fifteenthiand'T, streets... i 0 ae Main 661.
Sis Vermontavenue. eo. ilu a. Main 389.
Ey HS ER Se RR eS Main 5215.
r415: Chapin street. J oo sa sis ah ae de North 3330.
345 Pennsylvania avenue ohh an shed aun Main 2981.
Fourteenth and XK streels...... 5... 005, e...| Main 4284.
Fourteenth and Girardistreets .................... North 3068, 3070
New Hampshire and Oregon avenues............. North 2272.
New Jersey avenue, between B and C streets SE .| Lincoln 2000.
100 Kast Capitol Sticel, oo aa Lincoln 1997.
Connecticut avenue and M street.................. North 1783.
Twentieth street and Florida avenue.............. North 3730.
Madison place and H street. ........................ Main 116.
1332 Massachusetts avenue... .......0 a... 1000 North 2283.
013 Bighteenthisireet. oc .idioin icon a. oe.. Main 2468.
213 Plorldar avenue. occ. los en ee North 1722.
ig'Chapin street... oc. hv na nh La) Columbia 676.
y76v Columbia road: Jo... 0 oe i as
Massachusetts avenue and Thirteenth street...... North 2138.
yggeiletraet. a Main 2093.
1012 Thirteenth street... .. x... oo ol
Tinstand-B streets. chi. cou os ne Lincoln 1860.
7 bwentieth street Li. .o. do mh North 2286.
Fourteenth and Ei streefsi... ... ol. Sn Lo, Main 5035.
Bifteentlniand I sireets.. 0... ons. Hn oa Main 3721.
1730 FL Steet dio Aa erat ae a Main 3604.
gaorSixteenthistreetl hn ain San oh va Columbia sco.
Seventeenth and I streets ...... A AD rE Main 2651.
California street and Phelps place................. North 4470.
Pennsylvania avenue and John Marshall place...| Main 3995.
216 Maryland avenue NEI... i. 6 Lol. 0 0 || Lincoln 582.
12 Third streel SB... as aii sii
North 2279.
Lincoln 652.
North 1370.
Main 3045.
West 561.
North 22871.
North 2397.
North 1240.
North 2615.
North 2294.
North 3150.
West 252.
Columbia 712.
North 2325.
North 3231.
Main 2134.
Lincoln 1142.
Main 3465.
North 2342.
Main 3291.
Lincoln 2370.
Lincoln 1036.
North 3780.
Main 3142.
North 3546.
Main 2153.
Columbia 936.
North 2287.
394
Apartment Houses, Clubs, and Holels—Continued.
Congressional Directory.
Name. Location. Telephone.
Metropolitan Club.......... Vermont avenue and H srteet.............o....... Main 85, 87.
Metropolitan Hotel......... Pa. avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets...| Main 4200.
VHIDuyn, oes hee. sane 308 Hast Capitolstreet Siva. cil dais on
Mount Pleasant ............ 3155: Mount Pleasant street... oo ns oa. North 2670.
Nansemond.. oz... iii Twenty-second and Nistreets....0. 5... 0.0.
Naples . HE yr Nineteenth sree... iit sneer ira Main 6054.
Natchez. iid alive vie A a Ce A el
National... eesti. an iiss Pennsylvania avenue and Sixth street....... he Main 7000.
New Berne ovo ol. hv. Twelfth street and Massachusetts avenue. ....... North 2991.
New Occidental........ .... Ir Pennsylvania avenue... aan ii, Main 5138.
New Varnum ........ 000 0 New Jersey. avenue and Cstreet:SE, .............. Lincoln 1244.
New Willard. .... 5 00. Pennsylvania avenue and Fourteenth street....... Main 4420.
Newton. a. nna ii: Sixthiand Fistreets NE... oa. o  G
Normandie. «ov... chi, Fifteenth and Tistreets. .......... o.oo EMaln 4070.
Oakland. reai ns san sor7: Columbia road... iii... ST North 2093.
Olympia eros ate Fourteenth and Fuelid streets... .. oa. Columbia 610.
OREO. an a aa Ontario road and Poplar avenue, .5.. 0 North 3280.
OXIOTA cuits cen New York avenue and Fourteenth street.......... Main 4169.
Pennsylvania Club.......... 026 Bifteentli street. ic civaines ior tare nin area a Main 4906.
Plymouthic vi na. hi nus, 1236: Fleventhistreet,.. .. coi. eo ison ocs wiva, Seer NOrt 17094.
Portland...» nv Vermont avenue and Fourteenth street............ North 1550.
Portneért, oi noi np Bifteenthiand Uistreets... vis ees SE North 1421.
Portsmouth... cr. ca? 1735 New Hampshire avenue. sien orth 3760,
Boleighe. on im ens Pennsylvania avenue and Twelfth street. ......... Main 3810.
Ralston... ovuisee rao ht zor North Capitol sireet..n. i. vs von. oo
Rauschens.. ..0n. si. via Togs Connecticut avenue. . i... coe oven Pann dea Main 3181.
Regent.............n0. Fifteenth street and Pennsylvania avenue......... Main 1932.
Reyere La. Coa Tze ME street. so. ul i i a te North 2432.
Rhode Island .........c +o. T4109: Rhode Island avenue... civ. on. oa a North 2249.
Richmond ...... oo... Seventeenth:and H streets’ .... oan. al nC, Main 2566.
RiggsHouse ..-oot. oobi Fifteenth and CG streets... ... 0. io ni no Main 5455.
Roanoke: aie shal 1343 BucHdistreat ol. Gina a North 2035.
Rochambeau...... i... 1515 Connecticut avenue... i cuisine. Main 3514.
Rockingham o.oo Rhode Island avenlie , co aie dar oy fh alan Sune North 1404.
Roland... Shc iin Maryland avenne and Second street NE.......... | Lincoln 736.
Royallom. vw... ai ivan CIS ME SEFC. atv iss eines vii sien su eisininiots soa laminine North 229.
St alameston Sil oat Pennsylvania avenue and Sixth street.............| Main 3447.
SAVOY weit nS ane eas 2304 Pourteenthistreet ..li. i. oon no a North 4145.
Seville Li. lish grz7 Bighteenthistrect. vn. vi cava nit i North 345.
SCTE IAT ah vi aide cermin Rifteenth and streets) co an ovat diay .| North 2285.
Shoreham. ...oi. vit. ies Fifteenth and H streets..... ERs Sh ee Main 3103.
Sorrento... oa sin nai 223s. Bighteenthrstreet.i or. ei ace. os North 2350.
Stesling: oi. 1915 CAlYEHE SIIEEh: oars i Columbia 697.
Stonehfirst lo. ain ris Ewelfth street SR lo. ci i ne see
Stoneleigh Court... ....:.% Connecticutavenue and I street .......o0 0 00 Main 2270.
Stratford... vom Sn Fourteenth and Monroe streets..................% North 2359.
ennesseer.. iL. Lan Ld Nineteenth and Sstreels.....c.-0v.. 000 00,
Boronto ee te, Bwenticth and P streets... cae ovine, North 106.
Tremont oi nae Second street and Indiana avenue................. Main 3978.
Tulaine..:... etna bareg Biehteentiustreet. hr se ios iat ci oe
Van Cortlandt . i AR ae 1417. Belmont street... i aad a as aa North 3127.
Van-Dyke... io 0. Sodan dor rd street. one aie se ee i a Main 5662.
Vendome. ...v hii, Pennsylvania avenue and Third street ............ Main 5230.
Venteosa...o-. n. Do ininy Tirstand Bistreets lili Sl rrr Lincoln 1860.
Visgindal oi. 0 ae aes, PI20IG reel a Ee rs shh Se West 417.
Westminster... o.oo... [ Seventeenth and Q streets... Lo a0. roo North 2296.
Westmoreland ........ 2... 2172 Callforniastreet a ae ran North 4134.
Westover. co. oo a a. Sixteenth and U streets... i... oy... 0h. 0. North 1653.
Wicomico... .. .. 225 NeW Jersey Venue... ov. unis ins vie ie esis Lincoln 6.
Wilton ..o.. or sins ates 1931 Seventeenthistreet.. ovis Li sion
Windsor... ro aaa was street cL a ne aE Aen, North 2252.
Woodley =... nan, Columbia road and Mintwood place ............... North 2274.
Woodley Inn. ....... 0.0... Woodleyiane oi. ci. vie ae ue ere West 686.
Wyoming... nl Columbia road and V street... 0.0. uF Neth 20943.
VM. CA: Building... 25... 1736: CG street. voy oni SR ae EN Main 4890.
Unofficial List. 395
UNOFFICIAL LIST OF MEMBERS-ELECT OF THE HOUSE
OF REPRESENTATIVES, SIXTY-FIRST CONGRESS.
[Republicans in Roman (219); Democrats in 7/alic (172). Whole number 391. Those marked *
served in the Sixtieth Congress. Those marked f served in a previous House. Those marked
with a { were elected also to fill vacancies in the Sixtieth Congress.]
ALABAMA.
* George W. Taylor, Demopolis. | * Richmond P. Hobson, Greensboro.
Stanley H. Dent, jr., Montgomery. | * John L. Burnett, Gadsden.
* Henry D. Clayton, Eufaula. * William Richardson, Huntsville.
*William B. Craig, Selma. * Oscar W. Underwood, Birmingham.
* J. 1homas Heflin, Lafayette.
ARKANSAS.
* Robert Bruce Macon, Helena. * Charles C. Reid, Morrillton.
William A. Oldfield, Batesville. * Joseph 1. Robinson, lonoke.
* John C. Floyd, Yellville. * Robert EE. Wallace, Magnolia.
* Ben Cravens, Fort Smith.
CALIFORNIA,
*William F. Englebright, Nevada City. | * Everis A. Hayes, San Jose.
* Duncan E. McKinlay, Santa Rosa. *James C. Needham, Modesta.
* Joseph R. Knowland, Alameda. * James Mclachlan, Pasadena.
* Julius Kahn, San Francisco. | * Sylvester C. Smith, Bakersfield.
COLORADO.
At Large.
Edward 1. Taylor, Glenwood Springs.
Attevson W. Rucker, Fort Logan. | John A. Martin, Pueblo.
CONNECTICUT.
At Large.
John Q. Tilson, New Haven.
*H. Stevens Henry, Rockville. *Hdwin W. Higgins, Norwich.
*Nehemiah D. Sperry, New Haven. *Ebenezer J. Hill, Norwalk.
DELAWARE.
At Large.
William H. Heald, Wilmington.
FLORIDA.
*Stephen M. Sparkman, Tampa. Dannitte H. Mays, Montice. -
* Frank Clark, Gainesville.
GEORGIA.
*Charles G. Edwards, Savannah. *Gordon Lee, Chickamauga.
*James M. Griggs, Dawson. *Wialliam M. Howard, Lexington.
Dudley M. Hughes, Danville. * Thomas NM. Bell, Gainesville.
* William C. Adamson, Carrollton. * Thomas W. Hardwick, Sandersville.
* Leonidas F. Livingston, Covington. * William G. Brantley, Brunswick,
*Charles L. Bartlett, Macon,
396 Congressional Directory.
IDAHO.
At Large.
Thomas R. Hamer, St. Anthony.
ILLINOIS.
*Martin B. Madden, Chicago.
*James R. Mann, Chicago.
*William W. Wilson, Chicago.
*James 1. McDermott, Chicago.
* Adolph J. Sabatlh, Chicago.
*William Lorimer, Chicago.
Frederick Lundin, Chicago.
Thomas Gallagher, Chicago.
*Henry S. Boutell, Chicago.
*George Edmund Foss, Chicago.
*Howard M. Snapp, Joliet.
*Charles E. Fuller, Belvidere.
*Frank O. Lowden, Oregon.
| *James McKinney, Aledo.
*George W. Prince, Galesburg.
*Joseph V. Graff, Peoria.
*John A. Sterling, Bloomington.
*Joseph G. Cannon, Danville.
*William B. McKinley, Champaign.
*Henry 71. Rainey, Carrollton.
James M. Graham, Springfield.
*Wm. A. Rodenberg, East St. Louis.
*Martin D. Foster, Olney.
*Pleasant T. Chapman, Vienna.
*Napoleon B, Thistlewood, Cairo.
INDIANA.
John W. Boehne, Evansville.
William A. Cullop, Vincennes.
* William E. Cox, Jasper.
* Lincoln Dixon, North Vernon.
Ralph W. Moss, Carterpoint.
William O. Barnard, Newcastle.
Charles A. Korbly, Indianapolis.
*Charles A. Kennedy, Montrose.
*Albert F. Dawson, Preston.
Charles E. Pickett, Waterloo.
*Gilbert N. Haugen, Northwood.
James W. Good, Cedar Rapids.
N. E. Kendall, Albia.
*John A. M. Adair, Portland.
Martin A. Morrison, Frankfort.
*Edgar D. Crumpacker, Valparaiso.
*George W. Rauch, Marion.
Cyrus Kline, Angola.
(Henry A. Barnhart, Rochester.
IOWA.
*John A. T. Hull, Des Moines.
W. D. Jamieson, Shenandoah.
*Walter I. Smith, Council Bluffs.
Frank P. Woods, Estherville.
*Elbert H. Hubbard, Sioux City.
KANSAS.
*Daniel R. Anthony, jr., Leavenworth.
*Charles F. Scott, Iola.
*Philip P. Campbell, Pittsburg.
*James M. Miller, Council Grove.
*William A. Calderhead, Marysville.
*William A. Reeder, Logan.
*E. H. Madison, Dodge City.
*Victor Murdock, Wichita.
KENTUCKY.
*QOllie M. James, Marion.
* Augustus O. Stanley, Henderson.
R. Y. Thomas, jr., Central City.
* Ben Johnson, Bardstown.
*Swagar Sherley, Louisville.
* Joseph L. Rhinock, Covington.
J. Campbell Cantrill, Georgetown.
*Harvey Helm, Stanford.
*Joseph B. Bennett, Greenup.
*John W. Langley, Prestonburg.
*Don C. Edwards, London.
LOUISIANA.
Albert Estopinal, St. Bernard.
* Robert F. Broussard, New Iberia.
*John T. Watkins, Minden.
*Joseph E. Ransdell, Lake Providence.
Robert C. Wickliffe, St. Francesville,
*Arsené P. Pujo, Lake Charles.
MAINE.
*Amos I. Allen, Alfred.
{John P, Swasey, Canton.
*Edwin C. Burleigh, Augusta.
{Frank E. Guernsey, Dover,
§ i .
Unofficial List.
MARYLAND.
J. Harry Covington, Easton.
* Joshua F. C. Talbott, Lutherville.
John Kronmiller, Baltimore.
*John Gill, jr., Baltimore.
*Sydney E. Mudd, La Plata.
*George A. Pearre, Cumberland.
MASSACHUSETTS.
*George P. Lawrence, North Adams.
*Frederick H. Gillett, Springfield.
*Charles G. Washburn, Worcester.
*Charles Q. Tirrell, Natick.
- *Butler Ames, Lowell.
* Augustus P. Gardner, Hamilton.
*Ernest W. Roberts, Chelsea.
*Samuel W. McCall, Winchester.
*John A. Keliher, Boston. -
*Joseph I. O’ Connell, Boston.
*Andrew J. Peters, Boston.
*John W. Weeks, Newton.
*William S. Greene, Fall River.
*William C. Lovering, Taunton.
MICHIGAN.
*Fdwin Denby, Detroit.
*Charles E. Townsend, Jackson.
*Washington Gardner, Albion.
*Fdward IL. Hamilton, Niles.
*Gerrit J. Diekema, Holland.
*Samuel W, Smith, Pontiac.
*Henry McMorran, Port Huron.
*Joseph W. Fordney, Saginaw.
*James C. McLaughlin, Muskegon.
*George A. Loud, Au Sable.
Francis H. Dodds, Mount Pleasant.
*H. Olin Young, Ishpeming.
MINNESOTA.
*James A. Tawney, Winona.
*W. SS. Hammond, St. James.
*Charles R. Davis, St. Peter.
*Frederick C. Stevens, St. Paul.
*Frank M., Nye, Minneapolis.
*Charles A. Lindergh, Little Falls.
*Andrew J. Volstead, Granite Falls.
Clarence B. Miller, Duluth.
*Halvor Steenerson, Crookston.
MISSISSIPPI,
* Ezekiel S. Candler, jr., Corinth.
* Thomas Spight, Ripley.
* Benjamin G. Humphreys, Greenville.
7. U. Sisson, Winona.
*Adam M. Byrd, Philadelphia.
* Eaton J. Bowers, Bay St. Louis.
W. J. Dickson, Centerville.
J. W. Collier, Warren.
MISSOURI.
* James T. Lloyd, Shelbyville.
* William W. Rucker, Keytesville.
*Joshua W. Alexander, Gallatin.
*Charles F. Booher, Savannah.
William P. Borland, Kansas City.
* David A. De Armond, Butler.
*Courtney W. Hamlin, Springfield.
*Dorsey W. Shackleford, Jefferson City.
*Champ Clark, Bowling Green.
*Richard Bartholdt, St. Louis.
Patrick F. Gill, St. Louis.
*Harry M. Coudrey, St. Louis.
Politte Elvins, Elvins.
Charles A. Crow, Caruthersville,
Charles H. Morgan, Joplin.
tArthur P, Murphy, Rolla.
MONTANA.
At Lar ge.
* Charles N. Pray, Fort Benton.
NEBRASKA.
John A. Maguire, Lincoln.
* Gilbert M. Hitchcock, Omaha.
James P. Latta, Tekamah.
66525—60-2—2D ED——27
* Edmund H. Hinshaw, Fairbury.
* George W. Norris, McCook.
* Moses P. Kinkaid, O’Neill.
397
398   Congressional Directory.
NEVADA.
At Large.
* George A. Bartlett, Tonopah.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
* Cyrus A. Sulloway, Manchester. | ¥ Frank D. Currier, Canaan.
NEW JERSEY.
*Henry C. Loudenslager, Paulsboro.
*John J. Gardner, Atlantic City.
* Benjamin F. Howell, New Brunswick.
*Ira W. Wood, Trenton.
* Charles N. Fowler, Elizabeth.
* William Hughes, Paterson.
*Richard Wayne Parker, Newark.
t William H. Wiley, East Orange.
Eugene F. Kinkead, Jersey City.
* James A. Hamill, Jersey City.
NEW YORK.
* William W. Cocks, Old Westbury.
* George H. Lindsay, Brooklyn.
{Otto G. Foelker, Brooklyn.
* Charles B. Law, Brooklyn.
Richard Young, Flatbush.
* William M. Calder, Brooklyn.
* John J. Fitzgerald, Brooklyn.
* Dantel J. Riordan, New York.
* Henry M. Goldfogle, New York.
* William Sulzer, New York.
* Charles V. Fornes, New York.
Michael F. Convoy, New York.
* Herbert Parsons, New York.
* William Willett, jr., Far Rockaway.
*J. Van Vechten Olcott, New York.
* Francis Burton Harrison, New York.
*William S. Bennet, New York.
* Joseph A. Goulden, New York.
*John E. Andrus, Yonkers.
*Thomas W. Bradley, Walden.
Hamilton Fish, Garrison.
*William H. Draper, Troy.
*George N. Southwick, Albany.
*George W. Fairchild, Oneonta.
*Cyrus Durey, Johnstown.
*George R. Malby, Ogdensburg.
Charles S. Millington, Herkimer.
*Charles I. Knapp, Lowville.
*Michael E. Driscoll, Syracuse.
*John W. Dwight, Dryden.
*Sereno E. Payne, Auburn.
*James Breck Perkins, Rochester.
*7. Sloat Fassett, Elmira.
James S. Simmons, Niagara Falls.
Daniel A. Driscoll, Buffalo.
*De Alva S. Alexander, Buffalo.
*Hdward B. Vreeland, Salamanca.
NORTH CAROLINA.
* John H. Small, Washington.
*Claude Kitchin, Scotland Neck.
*Charles R. Thomas, Newbern.
* Edward W. Pou, Smithfield.
John M. Morehead, Spray.
* Hannibal L. Godwin, Dunn.
* Robert N. Page, Biscoe.
Charles H. Cowles, Wilkesboro.
*Edwin Y. Webb, Shelby.
John G. Grant, Hendersonville.
NORTH DAKOTA.
At Large.
I,. B. Hanna, Fargo. | *Asle J. Gronna, Lakota.
OHIO.
*Nicholas Longworth, Cincinnati.
*Herman P. Goebel, Cincinnati.
James NM. Cox, Dayton.
* William E. Tou Velle, Celina.
* Timothy T. Ansberry, Defiance.
*Matt R. Denver, Wilmington.
*J. Warren Keifer, Springfield.
*Ralph D. Cole, Findlay.
*Isaac R. Sherwood, Toledo.
Adna R. Johnson, Ironton.
*Albert Douglas, Chillicothe.
*Edward L. Taylor, jr., Columbus.
Carl C. Anderson, Fostoria.
William G. Sharpe, Elyria.
James Joyce, Cambridge.
David A. Hollingsworth, Cadiz.
*William A. Ashbrook, Johnstown.
*James Kennedy, Youngstown.
*W. Aubrey Thomas, Niles.
*Paul Howland, Cleveland.
*Theodore E. Burton, Cleveland.
Unofficial List. 399
OKLAHOMA.
*Bird S. McGuire, Pawnee.
Charles E. Creager, Muskogee.
*Willis C. Hawley, Salem.
Dick Thompson Morgan, Woodward.
*Charles D. Carter, Ardmore.
*Scott Ferris, Lawton,
OREGON,
| *W. R. Ellis, Pendleton.
f PENNSVILVANIA.
*Henry H. Bingham, Philadelphia.
*Joel Cook, Philadelphia.
*J. Hampton Moore, Philadelphia.
*Reuben O. Moon, Philadelphia.
\ *W. W. Foulkrod, Philadelphia.
*George D. McCreary, Philadelphia.
*Thomas S. Butler, West Chester.
*Irving P. Wanger, Norristown.
William W. Griest, Lancaster.
*7. D. Nicholls, Scranton.
tHenry W. Palmer, Wilkesbarre.
| Alfred B. Garner, Ashland.
*John H. Rothermel, Reading.
Charles C. Pratt, New Milford.
| *William B. Wilson, Blossburg.
“John G. McHenry, Benton.
*Benjamin K. Focht, Lewisburg.
*Marlin E. Olmsted, Harrisburg.
*John M. Reynolds, Bedford.
*Daniel F. Lafean, York. ;
*Charles F. Barclay, Sinnemahoning.
*George F. Huff, Greensburg.
*Allen F. Cooper, Uniontown.
John K. Tener, Charleroi.
*Arthur I,. Bates, Meadville.
A. Mitchell Palmer, Stroudsburg.
Jonathan N. Langham, Indiana.
*Nelson P. Wheeler, Endeavor.
*William H. Graham, Allegheny.
*John Dalzell, Pittsburg.
*James Francis Burke, Pittsburg.
*Andrew J. Barchfeld, Pittsburg.
il RHODE ISLAND.
William P. Sheffield, Newport.
*George S. Legare, Charleston.
*James O. Patterson, Barnwell.
“Wyatt Aizen, Abbeville.
*Joseph 1. Johnson, Spartanburg. ees
| #*Adin B. Capron, Smithfield.
SOUTH CAROLINA.
*David E. Finley, Yorkville.
*J. Edwin Ellerbe, Sellers.
*Asbury F. Lever, Lexington.
SOUTH DAKOTA.
tCharles H. Burke, Pierre.
At Large.
|' tffEben W. Martin, Deadwood.
TENNESSEE.
*Walter P. Brownlow, Jonesboro.
! Richard W. Austin, Knoxville.
i *fohn A. Moon, Chattanooga.
i *Cordell Hull, Crossville.
i * William C. Houston, Woodbury.
* Morris Sheppard, Texarkana.
j Martin Dies, Beaumont.
3 *Gordon Russell, Tyler.
*Choice B. Randell, Sherman.
* Jack Beall, Waxahachie.
* Rufus Hardy, Corsicana.
* Alexander W. Gregg, Palestine.
*John M. Moore, Richmond.
Joseph W. Byrnes, Nashville.
*Lemuel P. Padgett, Columbia.
*Thetus W. Sims, Linden.
* Finis J. Garrett, Dresden.
*George W. Gordon, Memphis.
TEXAS.
*George IF. Burgess, Gonzales.
* Albert S. Burleson, Austin.
* Robert L. Henry, Waco.
*Oscar W. Gillespie, Fort Worth.
*John H. Stephens, Vernon.
*James L. Slayden, San Antonio.
*John N. Garner, Uvalde.
* William R, Smith, Colorado.
UTAH.
At Large.
| *Joseph Howell, Logan,
400 Congressional Directory.
VERMONT.
¥David J. Foster, Burlington. | Frank H. Plumly, Northfield.
VIRGINIA.
* William A. Jones, Warsaw.
“Harry L. Maynard, Portsmouth.
*John Lamb, Richmond.
*Francis R. Lassiter, Petersburg.
*E. W. Saunders, Rocky Mount.
*Carter Glass, Lynchburg.
* James Hay, Madison.
*Charles C. Carlin, Alexandria.
*C. Bascom Slemp, Big Stone Gap.
*Henry D. Flood, W. Appomattox.
WASHINGTON.
*William E. Humphrey, Seattle.
*Francis W. Cushman, Tacoma.
Miles Poindexter, Spokane,
WEST VIRGINIA.
*William P. Hubbard, Wheeling.
*George C. Sturgiss, Morgantown.
*Joseph Holt Gaines, Charleston.
*Harry C. Woodyard, Spencer.
*James A. Hughes, Huntington.
WISCONSIN.
*Henry A. Cooper, Racine.
*John M. Nelson, Madison.
Arthur W. Kopp, Plattville.
*William J. Cary, Milwaukee.
*William H. Stafford, Milwaukee.
*Charles H. Weisse, Sheboygan Falls.
WYOMING.
Frank W. Mondell. on ..o0 0s ho svn i EEL Newcastle.
TERRITORIES.
. ALASKA.
James Wickersham. .../0. ol cons ree a eae .. Fairbanks.
ARIZONA.
RAP HCameron. «vive ooh vv iivi nis vei ss i ia a Flagstaff.
NEW MEXICO.
% Williem H Andrews iii) nana rh ce al pe i Albuquerque.
HAWAII
# Jonah KK. Ralapianaole....... oor Gn 0s JA Saag Sn 0 Honolulu.
*John J. Esch, La Crosse.
*James H. Davidson, Oshkosh.
*Gustav Kustermann, Green Bay.
*H. A. Morse, Antigo.
Irvine L. Lenroot, Superior.
PORTO RICO.
Resident Commissioner.
Blallo larrinaga i... inn ai i ep bE SE San Juan.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS.
Resident Commissioners.
Benito Tegarda. .... =... 0.00. Manila. | Pablo Ocampode Leon......... Manila.
hi "
INDIVIDUAL INDEX.
(Alphabetical list of Members of Congress with their addresses, pp. 384-392.)
The following is a list of the names of persons and their addresses given in the Directory,
located in Washington for official purposes, whose names are not otherwise alphabetically
arranged:
Page.
Abbe, Prof. Cleveland, editor Weather Re-
view, 1670 ‘Thirty-first street............. 265
Abbot, C. G., Director, Astrophysical Ob-
servatory; 26 OQ street NF... vec vee ds 272
Abbot, Lieut. Col. Frederic V., assistant
to Chief of Engineers, U. S. A., 2013 Kalo-
sama road. i iis The J es sees set 253
Abbott, James A., Senate messenger, Bur-
HE BO A BE CS 222
Abbott, S. J., Deputy Auditor, Treasury
Depariment; The Oxford -........0.. 00, 250
Achucarro, Nicholas, M. D., Hospital for
the Insane. oo is Thats sheen 277
Adams, B. F., assistant assessor, District
of Columbia, 1219 1, street .....-.... i... 374
Adams, Cyrus Field, Assistant Register of
the reasury, 034: S street. .... .. cic vee 250
Adams, Franklin, chief clerk protempore,
Bureau of American Republics .......... 273
Adams, James B., Assistant Forester,
The Cordova... sar ial a tes srinivas 267
Adams, J. Ray, Senate messenger,100g Fifth
EC UT 221
Adams, W. Irving, disbursing agent, Na-
tional Museum, The Ontario. ........... 272
Adee, Alvey A., Second Assistant Secre-
tary of State, 1019 Fifteenth street ...... 248
Adkins, Jesse C., Special Assistant United
States Attorney, District of Columbia, 2321
First street... 0 tivo ve Sotenonian vires 319
Ainsworth, Maj. Gen. F. C.:
Adjutant-General, The Concord....... 252
Board of Commissioners Soldiers’
Home .vo..ei ose vn A 275
Alden, Charles Edwin, clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Pacific Islands and Porto Rico,
34 Rhode Island avenue. ................. 222
Aldrich, Nelson W., chairman National
Monetary Commission, 1727 Massa-
ChuSeHS AVENUE. . iii vais see tins isniaeislents 219
Aleshire, Brig. Gen. James B.:
Quartermaster-General, 1719 XKight-
centhastrects rou cosiican svn iodssest 252
Board of Commissioners Soldiers’
HOME . «vores orc snissnsicn ss intivessss 275
Algara, Sefior Don Angel Romero de Ter-
roros, Mexican embassy.........cscseoee 323
Alexander, A. B., Bureau of Fisheries, 404
Sixthistreet ST... ous oi on cid ruicoes 271
Alger, Prof. P. R., Naval Bureau of Ord-
nance, 5 Maryland avenue, Annapolis,
Md. ae ee ea 258
Allen, Brig. Gen. James, Chief Signal Offi-
cer, U. S. A, Army and Navy Club ...... 254
Allen, E. W., Assistant Director Experi-
ment Stations, Agricultural Department,
Yoz3 Biltmore street. .c..... LL. Lal 269
Allen, James F., division chief, Office of
Indian Affairs, Rockville, Md ........... 264
Allen, Robert McD., special assistant at-
torney, Department of Justice, 1708 Q
HS a A rT eR A aE He RR iR 255
Allen, Walter C., electrical engineer, Dis-
trict of Columbia, 3307 Newark street... 375
Page.
Alte, Viscount de, Portuguese minister, The
Shoreham wn: he ea nn
Alvord, Lieut. Col. Benjamin, assistant to
Adjutant-General, The Ontario..........
Alward, Dennis E., reading clerk of the
House, The Dewey... hhh anershies
Amador Garcia, Sefior Don Arturo, lega-
tion of Panama). i... ives ivniaareis se
Ambrézy, Baron Luis, counselor, embassy
of Austria-Hungary, 1816 Jefferson
PlACE al sass oh sven meas v fa ree
Amores, Emilio M., chief translator,Bureau
of American Republics, 1531 I street.....
Anderson, Geo. M., attorney, Department .
of Justice, Rockville, Md.'...............:
Anderson, James W., patent examiner,
1521 Twenty-eighth street. :.............
Anderson, Thomas H., associate justice,
supreme court, District of Columbia, 1531
New Hampshire avenue.....:...........
Andrew, A. Piatt, assistant to National
Monetary Commission. ... .c.. Joee ness.
Andrews, H. P., assistant printing and bill
clerk of the House, 13 First street NK...
Andrews, W. E., Auditor Treasury Depart-
ment, 1223 Fairmont street...............
Andrews, Wesley R., Clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Post-Offices and Post-Roads,
The Portland... v0. 0s onanle sven.
Angell, James B., Regent, Smithsonian In-
stitution, Ann Arbor, Mich..............
Applegate, Chief Gunner F.T., executive
officer, seamen’s quarters, Navy-Yard...
Aquino, Lieut. Commander Radler de,
Brazilian embassy, The Grafton ........
Archer, Capt. Percy F., assistant to quar-
termaster, Marine Corps, 2020 R street...
Arnold, Joseph A., assistant chief, Divi-
sion of Publications, Agricultural Depart-
ment, 134 Sixth street NE. ........00.. 200
Arosemena, C. C.:
Ministerof Panama... ...cicaaseenivais
Governing board, Bureau of American
RepubDlCe es tune saa lente
Ashbaugh, Samuel S., assistant attorney,
Department of Justice, 1745 Kilbourne
io)
Ashford, Philip M., attorney, Department
of Justice; 1030 First street. .........«---
Ashford, Snowden, inspector of buildings,
District of Columbia, 1508 Twenty-first
A a a SO el a SS Ee
Atkinson, C. S.:
Clerk, House Committee, Immigration
and Naturalization, 1226 Massachu-
Seti avenue... Joe can hi,
Secretary, Immigration Commission. .
Atkinson, George W.:
Judge, Court of Claims, 1600 Thir-
teenthistreel. oo. ol din sii
Executive Committee Howard Uni-
TX ER RY EE TR i rE rar
Atkinson, John P., Senate messenger, 324
Second street SH, cvs vee iors shh rlenaeis
324
252
224
402 Individual Index.
Page.
Aukam, George C., justice of the peace, 456
DDESEECEE 8 Solve sien ec dion cian lure eiuin = relics
Austin, Oscar P., Chief Bureau of Statis-
tics, Department of Commerce and
Labor, 1620 Massachusetts avenue.......
Avery, Bryant E., assistant,’ Senate docu-
ment room, 213 North Capitol street.....
Babcock, Charles E., acting librarian, Bu-
reau American Republics, Vienna, Va...
Babcock, EH. Is private secretary to the
St Secretary of State, 1334 Thirteenth street.
Bacon, Augustus O.:
Committee inaugural ceremonies,
Eighteenth and Oregon avenue.....
Regent, Smithsonian Institution. .
Bacon, Harwood M. , division superintend-
ent, Post-Office Department, 1728 Willard
EE a Ts Re AR le Re
Bacon, Robert:
Assistant Secretary of State, 1201 Six-
teenth street... .................. 0 00s
Bailey, Joseph W., National Monetary
Commission, Stoneleigh Conrt J. ees
Bailey, Lieut. Col. C. J., assistant to Chief
of Artillery, The Westmoreland. ........
Bailey, Maj. George G., assistant to Quar-
termaster-General, The Marlboro.......
Bailey, Vernon, Bureau Biological Survey,
1834. Kalorama 108d... ceive vsas vrai
Bakenhus, Civil Engineer R. E., Bureau
of Yardsand Docks, 816 Fifteenth street.
Baker, A. B., assistant superintendent, Na-
tional Zoological Park, 1845 Lanier place.
Baker, Daniel W., United States attorney,
District of Columbia, Blenheim Court .
Baker, Frank, superintendent, National
Foto] Park, a Columbia road ....
Bancroft, Jay F., patent examiner, The
Biomech re arin
Banker, Capt. Edward W., Assistant to
Quartermaster Marine Corps, The Da-
INABISCOLIA. viele ndioinis sinvisnisrion diate swe ons
Bantz, Gideon C., Assistant Treasurer of
the United States, 1623'S street. ... co»
Barber, Lieut. John R., Army Medical
Museum, 1010 B street SW RAE
Barber, Passed Assistant Paymaster S. E.,
Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, The
Highlands... .. J. oh viet Sis sei ap ovens
Barden, Capt. William J. :
Assistant to Chief of Engineers, U. S.A.,
2024 N street................enees
River and Harbor Board...............
Barnard, E. C., division chief, Geological
Survey, The Normandie. . coo vsnss evs
Barnar 1 L,., special officer, Capitol po-
lice, 439 New Jersey avenue ‘SE ie esiveisietete
Barnard, Job:
Associate justice, supreme court, Dis-
trict of Columbia, 1306 Rhode Island
AVENUE Leite: vie tse smut og ia lerele
President board of trustees, Howard
UNIVErSITY. ve coieismive ets sieot oldie wuie
Barnes, B. F., postmaster, Washington,
D.C. 48 R street NE
Barnett, Claribel R., Librarian, Agricul-
tural Department,2750 Fourteenth street.
Barnette, Rear-Admiral William J., Super-
intendent Naval Observatory... cscs»
Barney, Edward A., clerk, House Commit-
tee, Patents, 714 Eighteenth Street ton
Barney, Harry Wilder, clerk, House Com-
mittee, District of Columbia .
Barney, Samuel S., judge, Court of Claims,
Phe Hamilton. .... avec tainindive vovals
Barranco, César A., chancellor, Cuban le-
NRT arg A A Ge A a Be Be
Barrett, John, director, Bureau of American
Republics, The Connecticut RRNA,
Barrios, Sefior Don Juan, special Guatema-
lan Envoy, New Willard .. coo vrrevane
319
219
272
248
276
253 254
Barroll, Commander H. H. (retired), As-
sistant Hydrographer, The Dupont .....
Barry, Dr. Edmund, District police sur-
et Ba EE
Barto, Frank H., clerk, House Committee,
Pensions, The Hawarden. ............:..
Bassford, Wallace D., clerk, House Com-
mittee, Conference of Minority, 212 North
Capitol street crt aa
Bassler, R. S., Curator National Museum.
Bauskett, William T., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, "Revolutionary Claims, 912 S street
Bayard, Fairfax, patent examiner, 1325
Inving street. oo. un LL a a as
Baz, Sefior Don Julio W., Mexican em-
bassy, rars YL street... oi 0 uh esa
Beal, W. H., division chief, Office of Experi-
ment Stations, Agricultural Department,
1gz3Biltmere street ........ o.oo
Beaman, Middleton G., law librarian, I,i-
brary of Congress, The Cordova.........
Bean, Wm. S., clerk, Senate Committee, In-
dustrial Expositions, 1312 I, street.
Becker, G. F., division chief, Geological
Survey, 1700 Rhode Island avenue .......
Bell, Alexander Graham, Regent, Smith-
sonian Institnlion.. ... ve. cise sere seen oe
Bell, Maj. Gen. J. Franklin:
Chief General Staff, Fort Myer, Va..
President Board of Ordnance and For-
Hbcatlon i. oi. rd lh der asen ies
Bell, Surg. W. H., Bureau of Medicine and
1410 - Twenty-first
Bell, Thomas O., assistant clerk, House
Committee, Interstate and Foreign Com-
merce, 330 Maryland avenue NE ........
Bellah, Wm. Henry, Senate messenger... .
Beller, J. W., clerk, office Secretary of the
Senate, 1726 amont street ...............
Belt, James B., Deputy Auditor, Interior
Department,’Ehe National ..............
Bengoechea, Sefior Dr. Ramon, secretary
Guatemalanlegation. i. ee.» ssessnsss ozs
Benjamin, Marcus, editor, National Mu-
seum, 1703 Q Feel... rs
Bennet, William S., Immigration Commis-
sion, 1909 S BETOEL i Ce ei
Bennett, Charles Goodwin, Secretary of
the Senate (biography), The Shoreham.
Bennett, Joseph B., appointment clerk,
Agriculfural Department, 147 Eleventh
Street NE. iii vino ieiinvh sshd vnae oo
Benson, Elbert C., president, Board of Ec-
lectic Medical Examiners, District of Co-
lumbia, S24 Fifth street NE..............
Beresford-Hope, Mr. H., British embassy. .
Berg, John R., superintendent of work,
Government Printing Office, 319 F street
ION CI EE RE a ER Se
Bergen, Michael, district fuel inspector,
71% P street NE A LS
Berger, David ]J.,clerk, House post-office,
50 Seaton Place. da. i Deal Re a
Bermudez de Castro, Sefior Don J., Mexi-
can embassy, The Benedick ......... ...
Bernstorff, Count J. H. von, German am-
bassador, ‘The Shoreham... i os
Berry, F. V., chief clerk, International Ex-
changes, "Smithsonian Institution, 616
Ninth street NH... cero vo sie rsa.
Berry, James, division chief, Weather Bu-
rean, 14 Thirdstreel SE ............ .....
Berry, Lieut. Robert L,., Bureau of Naviga-
tion, ’Ehe Farragut... ow i n
Berry, Mary A., assistant clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Claims, 1401 Massachusetts ave-
TINE tie at res mae Pe eas ta
Berthrong, Ithamar P., division chief, Gen-
eral Land Office, 3409 Ashley terrace. .
Best, J. B. ,superintendent clerk’s document
room, 138 I SErcetiST ose ieee
Bethune, John F., Senate messenger, 322
Astrect SH Loi ea sree
Bieg, Commander Frederick C., Bureau of
Steam Engineering, 1765 Church street. .
Bien, Morris, supervising engineer, Rec-
lamation Service, 1130 Lamont street. ...
374 322
ms
p—
a
—
Individual Index.
Bigelow, Prof. Frank H., division chief,
Weather Bureau, 1625 Massachusetts ave-
Ee Ts as
Bigelow, W. D., assistant chief, Bureau of
Chemistry, 1734 Lamont street...........
Billings, Cornelius C., Assistant Commis-
sioner of Patents, 1819 OQ street. i. ion ness
Bingham, Willian T., indexer, Congres-
sional Record, g27 Farragut square A2 aaie ls
Bishop, Capt. P. P. , assistant to Chief of Ar-
tillery, 1712 H SIIGEl. ies ier nahi
Bishop, Joseph Bucklin, secretary, Isth-
mian Canal Commission ..........o......
Bishop, R. F., assistant librarian of the
House, Rast Falls Church; Va ....... ..%
Bishop, Roswell P. , Spanish’ Treaty Claims
Commission, Fast Falls Church, Va ....
Bishop, W. W.. superintendent reading
room, Congressional Library, 1015 East
Capitol Street. cee nai ae
Black, Charles F., Senate messenger, 1404
PILIEEnI STEAL se savers ot sonaion ot
Black, John C., president Civil Service
Commiission, 17 Sistreel... avon.
Diagichud, I. W., M. D., Hospital for In-
Ban, J. C. S., Isthmian Canal Com-
11 E1107] Rar saan LE Se J
Blair, Fred. J., division chief. Bureau of
Statistics, Agricultural Department.....
Blair, Henry P., assistant corporation coun-
sel, District of Columbia, 213 East Capitol
BIfdel es
Blake, Emmons R., bookkeeper, Office
Clerk of the House, 507. A street SB.....
Blake, Harold, clerk, Spanish Treaty
Claims Commission, 316 East Capitol
Blake, Matt I,., assistant attorney, Depart-
ment of Justice, 1420 Fifteenth street. .
Blanpré, Lieut. Commander de, French
embassy ro a a Lh RP
Blauvelt, Arthur E., assistant clerk, House
Committee, Ways and Means............
Blazquez, Sefior Don I.eopoldo, Mexican
embassy,’I'he Benedick..................
Blocklinger, Rear-Admiral Gottfried, na-
val examining and retiring boards, 1756
INSET CE oii ene von svt oe sarge ot slonieialutare
Blumenberg, M. R., stenographer to House
committees, 21 First street NE...........
Blumenberg, Milton W., official reporter,
Senate, The Arlington... ..............
Boardman, Miss Mabel T'., National Red
COBB su aieis inns cinnltine init aie kiueie siolew ain tine
Boardman, R. H., District detective, 1218
Morse street NE... \ cesses vieisinion vers
Bode, Baron de, military attaché, Russian
embassy, FTOBR STEEL +vso aoe rsnssstors
Boeger, E. A., assistant, nautical instru-
ment department, Naval Observatory,
SIO6P.Streets. . vo daa hia i entre sna aie
Boggs, Capt. F. C, general purchasing offi-
cer and chief of office Isthmian Canal
Commission, The Westmoreland........
Boifeuillet, John T., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Engrossed Bills, The FKthelhurst.
Bonaparte, Charles Joseph:
Attorney-General (biography), The
Portland
Member, Smithsonian Institution.....
Bond, Frank
Chief ew General Land Office, 3127
Newaslmstreet ono vid gi vedi vives
United States Geographic Board ......
Bone, Scott C., board of visitors, Hospital
for Insane. co. edd a sea as
Bonsteel, Jay A., Bureau of Soils, 2807
Quarry TOAQer tie ere ee ae
Bonynge, Robert W,, National Monetary
Commission, The Cairo... =. vs ceeseneers
Boobar, John J., Librarian of the House,
IOSAPATIC Toad i i his vias sive ana wate
Booth, Fenton W., judge, Court of Claims,
1752 1, amonListreet. cv cd viidien oo love
Boren, Geo. E., assistant attorney, Depart-
ment of Justice, in the field
Boucher, Herman, House messenger, 227
A Street. ..ovcvteesrerrnecsscsseseseanseess
Page.
265
267
255
Brown, George. H.,
Boughton, Maj. Daniel H., General Staff,
758.0 Street. ve cuiniis sei inte svn iontesipitelione
Boulden, William C., chief engineer, Con-
gressional Library, 1612 North Broadway,
Baltimore, Md oi. 0 0 oe an ara
Bowen, Frank H. , chief clerk, Department
of Commerce and Labor, 1500 Newton
street; Brookland ....... oi iL 0 va
Bowerman, Geo. F., public librarian, Dis-
trict.of Columbia, The Ontario. ..........
Bowers, Comdr. Frederic C., Bureau of
Steam Engineering, The Damariscotta. .
Bowers, George M., Commissioner of Fish-
eries The Champlain. i... ie ves
| Bowman, Robert, jr., assistant clerk, House
Minority Conference, Metropolitan Ho-
VASAT a Se Se Ie I a er
Boyd, Allen R., chief clerk, Library of
Congress, 1515 Twentieth street .........
Boyd, George H., superintendent, Senate
document room, LotosClub............:
Boyd, Medical Director John C., Naval
Medical School, 1836 Sixteenth street. ..
Brackett, Gustavus B., Bureauof Plant In-
dustry, TOIT SECO civic anions sas isin slain
Bradford, Gershon, inspector, Coast and
Geodetic Survey, 1326 Park road........
Bradley, Charles S., secretary, Columbia
Institution for Deaf and Dumb, 1722 N
SETCCT. ve vie sens ieater ei atarateta Tun ets tots em ate
Bradley, Henry M., assistant division su-
perintendent, post-office department, 1007
Massachusetts avenue NE .... ..........
Bradshaw, Lieut. Commander George B.,
Bureau of Navigation, The Iroquois .
Brady, Lieut.Comdr J. R., Naval Bureau of
Or nance, 1615 T'wenty- first street.......
Braid, Andrew:
Assistant in charge of office, Coast and
Geodetic Survey, The Columbia.....
United States Geographic Board.......
Braisted, Surg. W. C., Bureau of Medicine
and Surgery, U.S, N., The Rochambeau.
Brandenburg, Dr. W. H. R., District police
SUTTCOIY wives cid vie dpe vats ns mi iatos in sonatas e
Brandt, E. S., chief clerk, Naval Bureau of
Ordnance, 1518 Corcoran street..........
Breckons, Joseph A., clerk, Senate Commit-
tee, Military Affairs, 1814 G street.......
Brewer, David Josiah:
Associate justice, Supreme Court (biog-
raphy), 1923 Sixteenth street..
Director Columbia Institution for Deaf
and Dumb i reese Sele
Brewer, H. H., foreman, Senate folding
room, 21 Bstreet............cociineen.l
Brian, Henry T., Deputy Public Printer,
1244 CONIDIA FOR. venrress iar sres
Briggs, Benj. F., Senate messenger, 1306
HIRI ICCnll SILREE ove vecras ens crswnnss
Briggs, Frank H., clerk, Office Secretary of
Senate, The Hamilton ............va.ea:
Briggs, Lyman J., Bureau Plant Industry,
3451 Mount Pleasant street ...............
Briggs, O. H., chief clerk, purchasing
agent, Post-Office Department, 622 C
CIR RA ER Ne a IRL a SE SER ST
Brockway, Charles B., clerk, Office Clerk of
the House, New VArntm. ... cv.ees ee ssiis
Bromwell, Col. Charles S., in charge Pub-
lic Buildings and Grounds, 1608 New
Hampshire avenue ................ 5.0
Bronaugh, F. H., clerk to Commandant
Navy-vard, 332 "South Carolina ave. SE.
Brooks, A. H., division chief, Geological
Survey, 3100 "Newark street .............
Brown, Capt. Philip S., U. S. M. C., Office
Judge-Advocate-General, U. S. N., 1722
Twenty-frstistreet, 0... Jol. Joven 4s
Brown, Edgar, Bureau of Plant Industry,
Lanham, Md. aR SA
Brown, Elmer E., Commissioner of Edu-
cation, Ihe Richmond. avin ts fehts
landscape gardener,
Public Buildings and Grounds, 1357
Buclidistreet ...0 iil Le
Brown, Henry Billings, associate justice,
Supreme Court (retired), 1720 Sixteenth
SETECL ives vais usisnnnen var unas sons te seinve
403
Page.
252
246
270, 274
|
|
404 Individual Index.
Page.
Brown, Hugh A., private secretary to Sec-
retary of Interior, 128 A street NE.......
Brown, Lieut. Thomas H., Marine Barracks
Brown, Ralph M., division chief, Coast and
Geodetic Survey, 1324 Monroe ‘street.....
Brown, S. C., registrar, National Museum,
305 New Jersey.avenue SH... 0 veers
Brown, Wm. B. C., clerk, Senate Commit-
tee, Mississippi "River and Tributaries,
CT a
Brown, Wm. Wallace, Assistant Attorney-
General, The Dewey... .. ier, aecnions ee
Browning, William J., Chief Clerk of the
House, 146 Fast Capitol street ..........
Brownlow, J. F., assistant in House library,
323 East ‘Capitol street. nin aun
Bruce, Harrison I,., chief, Board of Pen-
sion Appeals, 1316 Bstreet SW ..........
Bryan, A. H., division chief, Bureau of
Chemistry, The Tulaine.................
Bryan, Henry I., assistant law clerk,
State Department,604 FastCapitol street.
Bryan, James F., clerk, House Committee,
Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 326
Maryland avenue NE....................
Bryce, Right Hon. James, O. M., British
ambassador, 1300 Connecticut avenue .
Buck, Geo. M., clerk, Senate Committee,
Privileges and Elections, 116 Maryland
Avene NE. co. on oi eh
Buck, John R., bureau chief, State De-
partment, 1646 Irving street... . cco... .ie
Buckingham, D. E., president, board ex-
aminers veterinary medicine, District of
Columbia, ovo veh ise Ce vrtia na
Buckler, C. Howard, division superintend-
ent, Post-Office Department, 409 Sixth
SET CCh. ve sie oieids/ sieivlo elo oe sibic un isinio iui ate imine
Bumphrey, M. H., Senate messenger, 217
Rousthistreet..o. cvil. cdi dadraii ives
Bundy, Charles S., justice of the peace, 416
Bifthistreet co ov ivi iii ainreires
Bundy, James F., secretary and treasurer,
school of law, Howard Unjversity.......
Burch, Marsden Cor altornes Department
of Justice, IN the field esses ins ens
Burch, Sylvester R., chief clerk, Agricul-
tural Department, The Sherman. .......
Buren, Frank, clerk, Senate Committee,
Geological Survey, Y. M. C. A. Building.
Burgess, George F., National Monetary
Commission, The Normandie aToaiewidle li
Burke, E. B., assistant engineer of the
House, 514 BE NL EI RR AR Re TE ol
Burke, James F., Committee Inaugural
Ceremonies, The Shoreham .............
Burke, Moncure, assistant clerk, court of
appeals, 1810 Calvert sireet..............
Burnett, John IL., Immigration Commis-
sion, Congress Hall.
Burns, Findley, Forest Service, 1426 ‘Park
avenue, Baltimore, Md...............
Burns, Ww. RB., Senate messenger, 707 Sev-
ENR SECEl Eh sin raters: vera
Burrage, Lieut. Commander G. H., in com-
mand seamen’s quarters, Navy-Vard .
Burrows, Julius C., National Monetary
Commission, 1406 Massachusetts avenue.
Burton, Theo. E.:
National Monetary Commission.......
National Conservation Commission .
Busbey, I. White, secretary tothe Speaker,
2336 Massachusetts avenue. ..............
Bushnell, Eliphalet T., chief clerk, Office
First Assistant Postmaster-General, 1757
ChurchiStreet ... o.oo ican Meads
Bussius, Allen, chief clerk, pension agency,
1347 Bmerson street NI... ....i. code e.
Butler, Charles Henry, reporter Supreme
Court, 1535 I street .....oevnvneinininnnn.
Butler, Lieut. Comdr. Henry V.:
Aid to Admiral of the Navy ...........
General Board, U. S. N., 2024 Hillyer
Butler, Pa Passed Asst. Surg. C. S., Naval Med-
ical School, 1333 Harvard street. .........
Butt, Capt. 'Archibald W., assistant to
Quartermaster General, 1901 I street.
262
261
271
374
219
277
Page.
Byler, James W., division chief, General
Iand Office, 1778 Willard street Avani
Byrnes, Edward M., Bureau of Plant In-
dustry, s8 M BTEet ovr rh
Cabello, Sefior Don Miguel a, Cuban lega-
OM A ae Tas snag a STs nS
Caine, Alexander C., disbursing clerk, De-
partment of Justice, 1528 'Pistreet.......
Calderén, Sefior Don Ignacio:
Bolivian minister, 1633 Sixteenth street.
Governing board, Bureau of American
RepUbMCS. Sion vi aie abate i
Call, Lewis W., chief clerk, Office Judge-
Advocate-General, U. S. A. 1448 Newton
street. .o.. ono otn sd SS Te,
Callahan, Edward W., chief clerk, Bureau
of Navigation, 1918 Hstrect.. os ove:
Callan, Capt. R. rE assistantto Chief of Ar-
tillery, The Benodick.. vi teereee on
Callan, Thomas H., justice of the peace,
617 Blicel. i. yr aa
Calvert, Edgar B., assistant chief, division
accounts and disbursements, Agricultu-
ral. Department, vn dos avin anon
Calvo, Sefior Don Joaquin Bernardo:
Costa Rican minister, 1329 Eighteenth
SErCCE our i ei ieee ee
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republics. Liat shernie.
Cameron, Frank K., Bureau of Soils, 3417
BrOWIL SLICE. ser nrressnssies ss orats
Cameron, John J., assistant to official re-
porters of House, 223. B street... iv.
Campbell, Anthony C., attorney, Depart-
ment of Justice, 1758 Q'street..........
Campbell, Capt. Edward H., Judge-Advo-
cate-General, U. S. N. , 1729 Twenty-first
Campbell, Richard K., chief, Division of
Naturalization, 1977 Biltmore street .....
Campbell, Walter G., Chief Food and Drug
Inspector, Bureau of Chemistry, The
Chapin ..........ioereoinersreranunnsisae,
Camperio, Lieut. Filippo, naval attaché,
Italian embassy, Rauscher's.l .ni.. Wh
Campillo, Sefior Don José F., chancellor,
Cuban legation ce ivicav ions cession sie
Cannon, Joseph G., Speaker of the House
of Representatives, 1014 Vermont avenne.
Capers, John G., Cominissioner of Internal
Revenue, The ‘Cumberland ........ .....
Capps, Chief Constructor Washington Lee,
Bureau Construction and Repair, 1823
Jcfierson place.................... L050
Carbo, Sefior Don Esteban Felipe, Ecuado-
lam legatlon. oi i ils Ton Ss anieans
Carbo, Sefior Don Luis Alberto, secretary
Ecuadorianlegation ........... coun ee
Carbo, Sefior Don Luis Felipe:
Ecuadorian minister..............0.c.
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republits nia oiionsiinaulrisaices
Carleton, Mark A., Bureau of Plant In-
dustry, 1743 Kilbourne place.............
Carpenter, Capt. Edw., assistant to Chief of
Artillery, 2013 O SUEEEE ror ives on
Carpenter, Pay Inspector J. S., assistant
to Bureau Supplies and Accounts, 417
Rousth street. iil. oon. Dae desi ns
Carr, Wilbur J., chief clerk, State Depart-
ment, The Omatio... var oor
Carroll, Charles C., chief clerk, Bureau of
Animal Industry, 29 Fifth street NE..
Carroll, Daniel J., chief clerk, Weather
Bureau, THe POLICE... c= ioeacies dens
Carroll, May, assistant clerk, House Com-
mittee, Pensions, 107 Maryland ave. NE.
Carson, John M., chief, Bureau of Manu-
factures, 1332 Vermont avenne ..... i...
Carter, E. B Forest Service, 1826 M street.
Cartier de Marchienne, E. de, counselor,
Belgian legation, 818 Seventeenth street.
Carvalho, Mr. A. T., Portuguese legation..
Case, Ralph H., Senate messenger, 1016
TRATEEITtR SEFECE cv. sv reserves osonnsvniss
Casey, Lieut. Col. Thos. L., Engineer secre-
day Light-House Board, Stoneleigh
ORT Lie h es ania ae Verna ass ee main ds
262
266
321
270
267
320
324
223
270
EN
AR
Individual Index.
Page.
Cassidy, James H.,clerk, House Committee,
Rivers and Harbors, The Dewey........ 22
Casson, Henry, Sergeant-at-Arms of the
House, 33 B street. vn dln derail is 225
Castor, John W., House messenger, 208
Indiana avenue o.oo. i i ees 225
Cavanaugh, Maj. James B.:
Asnsian to Chief of Engineers, U.S.
>. The Westmoreland......-........ 253
Linn Light-House Board... ........ 270
Centaro, Signor Roberto, Italian embassy,
1143 Connecticut AVENUE. ra 322
Chace, E. M., division chief, Bureau of -
Chemistry, 411 G street, nr aaa 267
Chamberlain, Fugene Tyler, Commis-
sioner of Navigation, The Ethelhurst. . 271
Chambers, Civil Engineer F. T., Bureau
of Yards and Docks, 1520 H street ..... 257
Chambers, Commander W. Irving, Naval
Bureau of Ordnance, 1834 I street........ 258
Chambers, W. L., Spanish Treaty Claims
Commission, The Laclede.:......... 255
Chambrun, Captain de, French embassy. 322
Chambrun, Viscount Charles de, French
embassy, Stoneleigh Court .............. 322
Chance, Merritt O., auditor, Post-Office
Depar tment, 1227 N Street. oon vena 250
Chancey, John T., House special employee,
os ME street os. ao a 225
Chandler, Lieut. Comdr. Lloyd H., Bureau
of Navigation, 2144 California road...... 258
Chang, Mr. Wu, Chinese legation, 2001
Nineteenth street o.oo oii or eris os 321
Chapman, C. S., Assistant Forester, The
Marlborough ate aa ee ele a wee are ae 267
Chapman, E. I., patent examiner, 2112
Wyoming avenue: So.o 50 lL hl, 263
Chapuis, Leon, chief clerk, Office Chief of
Artillery, 806 Twelfth street. ............ 254
Charles, Garfield, assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Foreign Relations, 1314 Four-
teenthistreetn 0 i an aes 221
Charlton, Paul, law officer, Bureau of In-
sular Affairs, yz Hl street - his in 254
Charteris, Hon, H. F., honorary attaché,
British embassy, 1610 Nineteenth street. 322
Chase, Commander V. O., Naval Bureau of
Ordnance, Drummond, Mais ot 258
Cheatham, Maj. B. Frank, assistant to
Quartermaster-General, 1714 I street..... 252
Cheney, Capt. Sherwood A.:
General Staff, 1718 H street ............. 252
Board of Ordnance and Fortification.. 254
Chermont, Mr. E. 1,., Brazilian embassy,
1501 Eighteenth RI 320
Chester, Frank J., assistant journal clerk
of the House, 18 "Third street od IRE RATA 224
Chester, Rear-Admiral C. M. (retired),
Bureau of Equipment, 1736 K street..... 257
Cheun, Nai, Siamese legation, The Hamil-
rE A eS Ha a SE SR Rs pn 324
Chorney, Charles B., recorder, Naval Ex-
amining Board, Naval Retiring Board,
and Board of Medical Examiners, 3c27 Q
Erect Taha a an ern 261
Chickering, John W., professor, Gallaudet
Colleae ll ai hind or hres 276
Chilcott, E. C., Bureau of Plant Industry,
Fairfax, AEE eT Ne 266
Childs, Ferdinand W., clerk, House Com-
mittee, War Claims, The Champlain.... 227
Chittenden, BI division chief, Bureau
of Entomolog Y, 1323 Vermont avenue... 268
Choate, Charles F., jr., Regent, Smith-
sonfanInstitution So ail van 272
Choate, Warren R., chief clerk, Bureau of
Corporations, Rockville, Md... 270
Christian, Dan. messenger, House Post-
Office, 601 Seventh street NE ves 227
Chung Mun-Yow, Mr., Chinese special em-
DASEY eo ee a 320
Chu Sing Yuen, Chinese special embassy . 321
Church, A. W., clerk, Office Secretary of the
Benale ir dl a 220
Church, John P., division chief, Weather
Burean, 201 Third street NB. ............ 265
Clabaugh, Harry M., chief justice, supreme
court, District of Columbia, 1842 Mint-
wood place .. AT pr a ame Tal! 319
405
Page.
Clark, A, Howard, editor, Smithsonian In-
stitution, Florence'Courd ....... 0. 0.
Clark, Charles C., associate statistician,
Agricultural Department, 1362 Newton
BETCCE. vide iss ei hiv vu nti ie ds diuie lain wars vies
Clark, Edgar EKE., Interstate Commerce
Commissioner, The Rochambeau........
Clark, Edward T.,clerk,Senate Committee,
Philippines Sooo ham ii inns,
Clark, Isaac, dean, school of theology,
Howard University EE SR ra
Clark, John, assistant superintendent
National Botanic Garden, Maryland
avenue and Second street SW............
Clark, Joshua Reuben, jr., assistant solic-
itor, State Department, 1803 Belmont
pl nel ai tea Ride ta
Clark, Reed Page, clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Cuban Relations, The Ven-
Clarke, F. W., curator, National Museum.
Clarke, H. Conquest, assistant division
superintendent, Post-Office Department,
Er BE i i A I eR A SR
Clayton, Capt. Bertram T., assistant to
Quartermaster-General, The Ontario... .
Cleary, Lieut. F. J., ordnance duty, Navy-
Yards ri anal ee
Cleaves, Thomas P., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Appropriations, 1819 ‘Tenth
Clements, Francis W., first assistant attor-
ney, Interior Department, 1460 Irving
ET eS Es SI RT
Clements, Jno. T., division chief, Pension
Office, 3105 Mount Pleasant street .......
Clements, Judson C., Interstate Commerce
Commissioner, 2113 Bancroft place.......
Clifton, R. S., chief clerk, Bureau of Ente-
mology, Annapolis Junction, Md.
Cline, McGarvey, Forest Service, Y. M..C.
oA Building he a NT
Clopton, A. J., assistant clerk, Conference,
Senate Minority, 1520 0street’.. ,... A,
Cobb, James A., special assistant United
States attorney, District of Columbia,
roti Chirteenth street. o.oo... L.,
Cobb, Nathan A., Bureau of Plant Indus-
try, Falls Church, Va. ide ee
Cocheu; Capt. Frank S., General Staff, The
TIPO a i sian ie vin wie wate stale tery
Cochrane, Allister, official reporter, House,
The Benesaw...... La laa oi
Cockrell, Francis M.:
Interstate Commerce Commissioner,
ISIS R Street. on iin a eats
Director, Columbia Institution for
Deal and- Dumb. =n ae.
Coe, Capt. F. W., assistant to Chief of Artil-
lery, 1879: Vostreet ci oo if rn erates
Coggeshall, H. T., clerk, Office Secretary of
the Senate oo ve data sri,
Coles, Malcolm A., attorney, Department
of Justice, 1311 K Wtreet  a a
Collier, ¥. W., messenger, House post-
office, 230 North Capitol street... ........
Collins, C. W., deputy collector of taxes,
District of Columbia, 52 C street NE.
Collins, Franklin W., attorney, Depart-
ment of Justice, 1820 Newton street. .....
Collins, Walter F., assistant superintend-
ent, Senate folding room, 223 Ninth street
i a Sar Pa Rat
Colwell, Eugene, clerk, Office Secretary of
the Senate, 609 Eighth street NE
Colwell, J.H., patent examiner, 2124 Penn-
sylvania BYES. he
Colwell, Ray, Senate messenger, 60g Eighth
A SE I
Comstock, M. E., clerk, House Committee,
Expenditures Interior Department, The
Bramswick oo onan sana aes
Conard, Paymaster Charles, U. S. N., 3752
Oliver street, Chevy Chose. ne
Concklin, E. F., chief clerk, Office Public
Buildings and Grounds, 513 Eleventh
Street. . are a en
Comly, Capt. S. P., Light-House Board,
2158 California Street, rhs an
272
221 272
221
406 Individual Index.
Page.
Conner, Capt, Fox, General Staff, 1821 Nine-
teenth steel. ul vn iliainat divans
Conrard, Charles A., chief clerk, Post-
Office Department, 223 S street NE......
Conser, Frank M., chief clerk, Indian
Office, 1412 Fifteenth street..............
Conser, M. Edith, M. D., Hospital for In-
Constantine, J. J., House manager, depart-
mental telegraph, ‘he Milburn. ........
Cook, Capt. F. A., assistant to Commissary-
General, The Naples Sa a a
Cook, George William, dean, Commercial
College, Howard University en er et
Cook, James B., division chief, Post-Office
Department, Kensington, MA,
Cook, John F., executive committee, How-
ard University SE
Cook, John J., chief clerk, Office Chief of
Ordnance, U.S. A., 925 M street...........
Cook, ILeonard B., House elevator comn-
ductor, 485 Maryland avenue SW .......
Cook, M. S., division chief, Indian Office,
1528 Cwelfth street... oo aed i a.
Cook, Orator F., Bureau Plant Industry,
Lanham Md. ou cn aie ai shee alte
Coolidge, Louis A., Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury, 2419 Massachusetts ave-
LIE ath a a a
Coombs, C. W., assistant House Depart-
men messenger, 216 Maryland avenue
I EH A a A LE
Cooper, Lieut. Commander Geo. F., As-
sistant Hydrographer, Navy Department,
The Westmoreland... o.oo he,
Cora, Signor Giuliano, Italian embassy,
RANSChEEIS. ih a ads iain sole
Corbett, Lee C., Bureau Plant JAndustng,
TPAROIAE PATE +» irnas ia dirnine
Corea, Sefior Don Luis F.:
Nicaraguan minister, 2003 O'street.....
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republics... ou id in as ri aaa
Cornelius, E. Livingston, clerk to Ser-
geant-at-Arms of the Senate, Glen Echo
Welghts, Md: ina ccsoni io and sae,
Coro-Milas, Mr. I,. A., minister resident of
Greece. ....- 7 ie ole Sia re Se diated ele wee
Corrigan, John, jr., Senate messenger... .
Cortelyou, George Bruce:
Secretary of the Treasury (biography),
CIN BANCIOTE PACE... austin od des niv
Member, Smithsonian Institution.....
Cortes, Sefior Don Enrique:
Colombian minister, 1728 N street.....
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republics. ....i............. 0 0.0
Cosby, Maj. Spencer, Engineer Commis-
sioner District of Columbia, Stoneleigh
ET RA a ne ls
Couden, Rev. Henry N., D. D., Chaplain of
the House, 1310 Columbia road. .. ...
Courts, James C., clerk, House Committee,
Appropriations, 1837 Kalorama road.....
Covert, Richard P., division superintend-
ent, Post-Office Department, North
Chevy Chase, Md... oe eats iin
Coville, Frederick V.:
Bureau Plant Industry, 1836 V street. .
Curator, National Museum. wed
Cowan, J. O., House document room, "132
Third street SH i se an
Cowart, Robert E., jr., House special em-
Ployee i ni LS hi ane
Cowles, Arthur W., patent examiner, 1823
RaloTama FORA. =. oi oil Sa ie iyie ele sobs
Cowles, Rear-Admiral Wm. S., chief Bu-
reau of Equipment, 1733 N street........
Cowles, William A., patent examiner, 1731
Tamontstreet. .... od ni vidi ie.
Cowperthwaite, Mortimer Thorne, clerk,
Senate Committee, Revision of the Laws,
LE Re ap a
Cox, Wm. T., Forest Service, The Wyo-
TERI AAA eS Te a SE ART
Cox, Wm. V., executive committee, How-
ard Universtiy. © or i nal, Laan
Craig, Alvin I,., division chief, Pension
Office, 2206 First street. is. vcore veoh
252
256
264
277
228
267
272
Cramer, H. B., Forest Service, Gaithers-
burg, Md
Crane, George W., division chief, Bureau
of the Census, 2428 South Dakota avenue
N E Crane, Morton E., secretary, Immigration
Commission, Century Club...
Crank, Lieut. Commander Robert Ris
Office Naval Intelligence, The Grafton..
Crawford, Edward T., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Expenditures State Department,
1857 street ive Sane nee
Creel, Sefior Don Enrique C.:
Mexican ambassador, 1415 I street ....
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republics oi, ani maha
Cremer, John D., stenographer to House -
committees, 112:C street SE.............
Crider, Edgar L., clerk, Senate Committee,
Coast and Insular Survey, 1443 Massachu-
SES AVERINE ro. lh Satine lis asin ane
Crist, Raymond F., assistant chief
Division = of Naturalization, 1330 U
Py S. M., division chief, Library of Con-
gress, 316 Tenth street NE.
Cronin, Capt. Marcus D., General Staff,
Army and Navy Club... ...0 0.
Crook, William H., executive clerk, White
House, 1473 Parkiroads........ 0.000.000,
Crosby, D. J., Office Experiment Station,
Agricultural Department, Lanham, Md
Crosby, Maj. William S., attending sur-
geon Soldiers) Home. ..........-.........
Cross, F. K., District detective, 319 Ninth
streel>SR Lu rl ns a a ah
Crowell, Passed Asst. Paymaster D. C.,
Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, The
Rochambenn. clu ve. na sis seni as
Croxall, M. L., Ssh clerk, Navy De-
partment, Bethesda, Md ..................
Croy, Chas. H., Senate messenger... ....-
Crozier, Brig. Gen. William:
Chief of Ordnance, 2339 Massachusetts
AVENUE, 0. voi. araisins sie REI ais
Board of Ordnance and Fortification. .
Cruz, Sefior Don Anibal:
Chilean minister, 1529 New Hampshire
Avene. Ton asain
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republics oo. dha wins i his
Crystal, James A., postmaster of the Sen-
ate, 108 Fifth street NB ...o....coia anaes
Cuddy, Stephen A., law clerk, Pension
Office, 701. Twelfthstreet NE ...........:
Culley, B. Franklin, clerk, House Commit-
tee, Agriculture, The Tennessee.........
Cullom, Shelby M., Regent, Smithsonian
THStItlon. es re ere
Culver, Commander A. E., special duty,
Navy Department, 1703 "Rhode Island
AVENE i a al a de bs ae a
Cummings, George J., dean, academy,
Howard University... ....L oui,
Curl, Surg. H. C., Naval Medical School
Hospital; ‘The Burlington................
Curriden, Samuel W., secretary and treas-
urer, Training School for Boys..........
Currier, KE. L., messenger,soldiers’ roll, 126
Tenth street SHE... iin aii
Curtis, F. S., chief clerk, Navy Depart-
ment, Fhe Savoy... 0... ocala.
Curtis, Theresa P.,clerk, Senate Committee,
Indian Depredations, The Raleigh ......
Curtiss, Claude M., principal clerk of the
Senate, 49 D street SE... Le l a
Cushman, Allerton S., assistant director,
office of Public Roads, Agricultural De-
partment, 1314 Sixteenth street..........
Cushman, John E., House messenger, sol-
diers’ rol, 214 A street SB alae
Custis, J. B. Sn president, board of District
Homeéopathic examiners and medical su-
pervisors, 912 Fifteenth street...........
Dahlgren, A. F., House document room,
6. Cstreet,. vv Gv Leia
Dall, W, H., curator, National Museum. .,
Page.
221
257 221
253 254
269
——
he
SS
————
Individual Index.
Page.
Dalton, Thomas W., chief, board of pension
review, 427 Massachusetts avenue .......
Daly, Wm. B., secretary board of dental
examiners, District of Columbia, 1340
New York avenue... iv. oie Srnnneiinn
Dalzell, Charles N., chief clerk, dead-letter
division, 173v Park vead. .v.. cn. 0 oh
Dalzell, John:
Regent, Smithsonian Institution ......
National Conservation Commission...
Dancy, John C., recorder of deeds, District
of Columbia, 2139. Y, street ....... 00...
Daniel, John w., National Monetary Com-
mission, The Dewey. Eh i SR
Daniel, john W., District special assess-
ment clerk, 1622 Riggsplace.............
Daniel, John W., jr., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Public Health and National Quar-
HEE a a
Darby, John J., patent examiner, 311 A
Street NI Joan a rane ah
Darlington, R., clerk, House Committee,
Pactiic Railveads. .. 0 0 eis is
Darnall, Maj. Carl R., in charge field
medical supply depot, U.S. PA. 1618
Fifteenth street: i... ose,
Darnall, O. K., superintendent National
Training SchooliforiBoys ... hi oavhs
Daskam, KE. B., division chief, Treasury
Department, 1433 Ristreet,.. 0.00 LL
Daugherty, Charles M., division chief, Bu-
reau of Statistics, Agricultural Depart-
LE LL Fs
Daugherty, Harry K., Spanish Treaty
Claims Commission, The Taclede:.......
Davenport, James L,., First Deputy Com-
missioner of Pensions, oqoil’streetl.......
D4vila, Maj. Don Fortino M., Mexican
embassy, 1431 Twenty-first street. .......
Davis, Arthur P., chief engineer, Reclama-
tion Service, 2212 First street.............
Davis, Bliss N., assistant division super-
intendent, Post-Office Department, 1737
Ho street oh a sda na na
Davis, Brig. Gen. George B.:
Judge-Advocate-General, U.S. A, 1734
Colmmbia read... 4... lL UE
Board of Commissioners, Soldiers’
Home i... oo ina bl ares i oe
Davis, Capt. Milton F., General Staff, The
IWeSIOVEL...... ae ois sorioreins ais vies ivinivinis
LE I ee SR RA
Davis, Eugene, assistant clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Judiciary, The Portner...........
Davis, Frederic Laurence, clerk, House
Committee, Foreign Affairs, The High-
dads a i SL
Davis, Henry B. ,inspector of plumbing, Dis-
trict of Columbia, 1339 Fairmont street. .
Davis, Lieut. Commander Cleland, Bureau
of Equipment, Metropolitan Club.......
Davis, Madison, assistant postmaster,
Washington, D.C., 316 A street SE. .....
Davis Maj. Gen.Geo. W. (retired), National
Rea Coat, = emia
Davison, Matthew, clerk, House post-office,
534 Fourteenth street SE.................
Dawson, Clarence E., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Education and Labor, Irving
street, ‘Chevy Chase Md. aint 8
Dawson, Edward M. , chief clerk, Interior
Department, 1746 8 shreel. oun ial
Dawson, Geo. H., District hack inspector,
41 Ploridn aveniie. ie
Dawson, Thomas F., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Private Land Claims, 2572 Uni-
versity Place a eh aed
Day, William R., associate justice, Su-
preme Court (biography), zor Clifton
Sireel oy a Tr a
De Coster, F. V., House document room, 120
Third street SB. Uh. nana,
De Graw, P. V., Fourth Assistant Postmas-
ter-General, 210 Maryland avenue NE ..
De Lacy, William H., judge juvenile
const, Chevy: Chase ni uy. arihinh
De Laney, Capt. Matthew A., assistant
attending surgeon, U. S. A, The Buck-
GNA ,isivvnsivrvese sirens vssrenss erinaivs
263
374
272
277
407
Page.
Deane, Samuel D., jr., House messenger,
he TLUXOk, coiauioiis aod ones inate 225
Dearden, W. H., clerk, House Committee,
Reform in Civil Service. .....oouuenenns. 227
Deatrick, William O., division chief, In-
terior Department, 1507 Park road ...... 262
Defres, Lieut. J. R., ordnance duty, Navy-
rd re a ee 259
Do: R. A, clerk, superintendent State,
War, and Navy Building, 1228 Co-
lumbla read. he Se aaa 248
Dempsey, P. J., chief clerk, Office Chief
of Engineers, U.S. A., 217 South Fairfax
street, Alexandria, Vos oo ean loai
Denfeld, Commander G. W. (retired), Bu-
reau of Equipment, The Burlington .....
Denison, James, principal, Kendall School.
Dennett, Fred, Commissioner, General
Iand Office, The Burlington... ...........
Denney, Wm. D., clerk, Senate Committee,
Expenditures i in Interior Department..
Dennis, Fred, clerk, House Committee,
Militia .......
Dennis, William C. ,assistant solicitor, State
Department, heMendota....... eee
Denny, Col. Frank I,., quartermaster, Ma-
rine Corps, 1634 Connecticut avenue.....
Devendorf, H. E., clerk, House Committee,
Indian Affairs, 229 B Street NB, oeeire
Devol, Maj. C. 5 U. S. A, chief quarter-
master, Isthmian Canal Commission. ...
Dewey, George:
Admiral of the Navy, 1601 K street... ..
President: General Board..............
Dewey, Lyster H., Bureau of Plant Indus-
try, 1337 Wallach place J... 0. 50.
Dickey, Christian B., assistant division
superintendent, Post-Office Department,
3357. Mount Pleasant street... ...........
Dickie, Katherine B., assistant clerk, House
Committee, District of Columbia, 1604 K
Street coun nS Ry
Dickinson, Medical Director Dwight, Naval
Retiring Board and Board of Medical
Examiners, 1806 R street.
Dickman, Maj. Jos. a2; assistant to In-
spector- ‘General, Fort Myer, Va..
Dillard, Capt. J. 5. assistant to Chief of
Ordnance, 1927 S mee a a
Dillingham, Paul S., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Immigration, The ‘Cochran SRE
Dillingham, Wm. P., chairman, Immigra-
tion Commission, The Cochran ..........
Dillon, John T., division chief, War Depart-
ment; 807 Eighteenth streel...
Dimick, Hamilton, division chief, Office of
Indian Affairs, 1464 Chapin street .......
Dinger, D. C., index clerk of the House,
Phe Lambert: do tims arn aia
Dinger, Lieut., Bureau of Steam Engineer-
ing, U.S. N., 1723 QO street ...............
Disney, I. P. , patent examiner, 922 Cstreet
EEA eT I SIE A RS RR
Dixon, Medical Director W. S., Naval Medi-
cal School Hospital, 1516 R street........
Djelal, Munif Bey, first secretary, Turk-
ishilegation.. Lo. n.d
Doddridge, Lieut. Commander J. S., super-
intendent compasses, Naval Observatory,
16157 Cwenty-first street... .........a.
Dodge, Harry F., stenographer to House
committees, 11 Yifth street SB ..........
Dodge, Pickering, chief clerk, U. S. Engi-
ncers? office, 2118 Fstreet................
Dodson, F. BE, assistant engineer of the
Senate, 1654 Monroe Seren
Doesberg, Frank KE. Senate messenger,
Y. M.C.A. Building Sale at ae ae TAN
Dole, Charles E., chief clerk, Isthmian
Canal Commission, The Decatur. .......
Donahue, P. A., assistant chief, division of
information, Bureau of Immigration, The
Stevling ws mei Sn a eo
Donaldson, Charles S., chief, consular di-
en Bureau of Manufactures, Berwyn,
M
Donaldson, Jacob C., assistant librarian of
the Senate, 219 Third street NE .........
Donnelly, Florence A., clerk, House Com-
mittee, Elections No. I , 310 Seventh st. NE
253
257 276
257
260
408
Page.
Donnelly, Samuel B,, Public Printer, 1424
eo nr i rd ae
Donovan, Daniel J., deputy auditor, Dis-
trict of ‘Columbia, 1532 street...
Dorset, Marion, division chief, Bureau of
Animal Industry, Thelowa............
Dorsey, Clarence W., Bureau of Soils,
Chevy Chase Md wo. oui ar des
Dorsey, H. W., chief clerk, Smithsonian
Institution, Hyattsville, Md
Dorsey, W. R. , stenographer, Senate clerk,
Indian Depredations i RS Sr
Dortch, Josiah H., division chief, Office of
Indian Affairs, 1510 Park road... 0.
Douglas, W. J., engineer of bridges, District
of Columbia, gozr Pistreet oc.
Douglass, Kathrine, secretary nurses’ ex-
amining board, District of Columbia, 320
East Capitol street ..... AEA te TO
Dow, William J., secretary to Public
Printer, 145 Rhode Island avenue.......
Downey, Maj. George F., assistant to
Paymaster-General, 2129 Bancroft place.
Downing, Erwin E., D. D. S., Hospital for
the Insane... orn iv
Doyle, John °T., secretary Civil Service
Commission, near Lyonhurst, Va., R. F.
LE a a PT Sa me!
Drake, Thomas E., superintendent of in-
surance, District of Columbia, 1632 Riggs
Placer os era rl
Draper, Leonard, clerk to Naval Academy,
Bureau of Navigation, 2036 F street......
Drew, Walter, clerk Senate Committee,
Potomac River Front, The Ventosa......
Du Bois, Charles I,., division chief, General
Land Office, 1835 Monroe street.........
. Dubois, James T., law clerk, State Depart-
ment, 1421 Chapin gStreeb Lali oii.
Duckwall, T. W. B., assistant keeper of
Senate stationery, "2134 Brstreet 0...
Duncan, Col. Joseph W., General Staff, The
Westmoreland oo. oars lidar inns
Duncan, David W., chief clerk, Auditor for
oy -Office Department, 115 Fifth street
Ee Te TE i a an Ss Se
Duncan, J. K., House elevator conductor,
320 Massachusetts aveuue NE tas
Duncan, Robert J., clerk, House post-office,
518% Second street SE I ER A
Dunham, Dio W., assistant document clerk
of the House, 1717 Euclid street..........
Dunlap, F. I,., associate chemist, Bureau of
Chemistry, 1613 Riggs place. .......5.5.
Dunlap, I. H., chief clerk, Bureau of Fish-
eries, 1728 0 ER Be SR A
Dunn, Nellie H., Senate messenger, 1864
WYOMING avenue i... cc. vasa reiorve vas
Durand, E. Dana, deputy commissioner,
Bureau of Corporations, 3325 Holmead
I A Up RR et
Durfee, Benjamin, statistical clerk, Senate
Committee Finance... i vais acesines
Dutton, R. R., Senate messenger, 657 C
street SF on LL alana aan
Dutton, Robert W., deputy recorder of
deeds, 1721 Kilbourne place..............
Duvall, Maj. Gen. Wm. P., assistant chief,
General:-Staff, 2170.0 street... ........
Dyer, Paymaster Geo. P.,, U. S. N., 2150
Florida avenue... hico ddl 08
Dyer, Robert W., clerk, House Committee
Public Lands, 1423 Tifth street... ... 0...
Dyson, Commander Charles W., Bureau of
Steam Engineering, 1814 Belmont road. .
Kager, J. M., assistant, Marine-Hospital
Service, 1318 Thirteenth street. ..........
Earl, Charles, Solicitor of the Department
of Commerce and Iabor, Riverdale, Md.
Ebel, Rudolph, Senate messenger, The
Champlal.. Ss inns ala,
Eby, Milton, House messenger Ered,
Eckstein, BEA clerk, post-office of the
Senate, 3361 Eighteenth street... ...... vo.
Edgerton, Frank, Senate messenger ......
Edie, Maj. Guy L., attending surgeon, U.S.
SIG07-SIStreCt esl vvi Je, aioe cain se vei
EA John Joy, president Board of Chari-
ties, District of Columbia. .
274
374
266
268
272
222
264
375
374
274
253
277
273
375
258
Individual Index.
Page.
Edwards, Brig. Gen. Clarence R., chief Bu-
reau of Insular Affairs, 4 Jackson place. .
Edwards, John, assistant engineer of the
Sennte, 106 street... vce. v isves ree
Eichelberger, Prof. W. S., Naval Observa-
tory, 1756 Park road... . oven reevisson arises
Einstein, Samuel, District poundmaster,
3406 N BUTOCL. onsets ates ins gama,
Ekengren, Mr. A., secretary, legation of
Sweden: Ky cio li inns se serie
Elder, Frank E.,-attorney, Government
Printing Office, 31 Seaton place..........
Eldridge, Captain Frank H., Naval Exam-
ining Board, The Highlands PRIA OE
Elkins, Stephen B., Printing Investiga-
tion Commission, 1626 K street ..........
Elliott, C. G., division chief, office of ex-
periment stations, Agricultural Depart-
ment, The Bxecutive'...........n.ouvnl
Elliott, Maj. Gen.George F.,Commandant,
Marine Corps, Eighth and G streets SE ..
Elliott, Surg. M. S., naval hospital, 2128
Le Roy place. oi es vas s rysiieneinne
Ellis, Edgar, messenger, House post-
Office, 220 C Street i ini sn dina sees
Ellis, Wade H., assistant to the Attorney-
General, The Highlands ................
Elton, Theo. B., clerk, Senate Committee
Agriculture, Y. M. C. A. Building.........
Elwell, Col. W. E., Inspector-General and
Chief Surgeon National Soldiers’ Homes.
Ely, George S., patent examiner, 300 First
strech SH. i sve ci i ei ss ae
Embick, Capt. Stanley D., assistant to Chief
of Artillery, 1703 De Sales street. .........
Emery, W. O., division chief, Bureau of
Chemistry, 2132 Flagler place FEET Sa
Enright, I. J., office Secretary of the Sen-
ate, 231 New Jersey avenue. .... cc...
Erly, A. A. clerk House Committee Ex-
penditures Treasury Deparment, The
Massachusetts i... ne vc ies
Ernst, Brig. Gen. O. H., Chairman Interna-
tional Waterways Commission, 1321 Con-
Hecticut avenue... i, Tees
Ersfeld, Will R., assistant clerk Senate
Committee Enrolled Bills, 933 H street.
Hsterly, George W., Deputy Auditor, State
and Other Departments, 1324 R street... .
Estabrook, I,eon M., Bureau Plant Indus-
try, 1026 Seventeenth Street ..............
Estey, W. H., cashier, office Sergeant-at-
Arms of the House, 3013 Eleventh street.
Evans, David J., driver, House post-office,
1354 Pennsylvania avenue SK............
Evans, Frank E., clerk Senate Commit-
tee Expenditures Treasury Department,
Metropolitan Club. i vo oes
Evans, George W., division chief, Interior
Department, 918 Nineteenth street . .....
Evans, Lieut. Col. Robert K., General Staff,
T735 TiStreet i. wien ie see sie ess iiss
Evans, Commander G. R., recorder Board
of Inspection and Survey, U. S. N., 1920
Calvertgtreeti,. or vv sii eas
Evans, Rear-Admiral R. D., General Board,
zg Indiana avente ot. a
Evans, Walter H., division chief, office of
Experiment Stations, Agricultural De-
partment, Cleveland Park...
Evans, William W., assistant clerk, House
Committee Ways ‘and Means, 1340 New-
ton street... o.oo ve ee rT,
KEvermann, B. W.:
Bureau of Fisheries, 1425 Clifton street.
Curator National Museum .............
Eversman, John C., clerk House Commit-
tee Coinage, Weights, and Measures,
i770 Columbinroad ... oo. ue,
Evers, George F., Deputy Sergeant-at-Arms
of the House, 508 A street NE ...........
Fagan, M. E., cashier, Agricultural De-
partment, 1455 We street oo ee. vrs nssueeiinss
Fairbanks, Charles Warren:
Vice-President of the United States
(biography), 1701 Kstreet............
President of the Senafe..
Member and Regent Smithsonian In-
SHU On Se
254
223
258
375
324
274
260
271
272
Individual Index. 409
Page. Page.
Fairchild, David, Bureau of Plant Industry, Forbis, William A,, House special em-
1331 Connecticut avenue. ...... sive cs vevins 267 Dloyer3zaC street jn ah onl chant ik 225
Falconer, Lieut. W. M., ordnance duty, Ford, Edgar W., assistant division super-
Navy-Yard I id SAE I I PA 259 intendent, Post-Office Department, 824
Faris, R. L., division chief, Coast and Geo- Ninth street NE... 0 000i dar, 256
detic Survey, 66: TY street. ona a 271 | Foree, C. M., chief clerk, Office Comptroller
Farnum, Jessica I., secretary Library of of the Treasury, The Rockingham...... 250
Congress, 3415 Brown place van on 246 | Forster, Rudolph, .Assistant Secretary to
Farrar, Robert W., clerk Senate Com- the President, 1120. I, amont street ....... 247
mittee Pensions, 2029 Thirteenth street. 222 | Fortier, S., division chief, office experi-
Farrington, Arthur M., assistant chief, Bu- ment ‘stations, Agricultural Department,
reau of Animal Industry, 1436 Chapin 1723 Corcoran Street: Cu Lainie 269
CRY Ty AN eT a a ae eS Oa 266 | Foster, Everett W., Senate messenger..... 222
Faust, Frederick De C., attorney, Depart- Foster, John W., director, Columbia 1nsti-
ment of Justice, The Portier. er. 255 tution for Deal and Dumb ......-....-... 276
Faxon, Ralph H., clerk Senate Committee Foster, M., clerk House Committee Ex-
Census, 33 Bstieet «oo ha a 221 peanditures Department of Commerce
Fay, Edward A., vice-president, Gallaudet A BE Be se Se 226
College i es ta 276 | Foulois, Lieut. Benjamin D., assistant to
Fay, W.T., superintendent Home for Aged Chief Signal Officer, The Outario........ 254
and Infirm, District of Columbia, Blue Fowler, Charles N., director, Columbia In-
Pans a a ae ee a 375 stitution for Deaf and Dumb............. 276
Fechteler, Commander Augustus F., Board Fowler, James A., Assistant Attorney-
of Inspection and Survey, 1910 Biltmore General, The Burlington. .........2n0 |. 255
Uy of Rt rl JE cal Re BRS 260 | Fowler, Wallace G., disbursing officer Co-
Feeley, W. D., messenger, House post- lumbia Institution for Deaf and Dumb.. 276
Boffice; 220 Calreet i. ana 227 | Fowler, Wilbur W., division chief, Depart-
Fellows, Fred. P., assistant clerk House ment of Commerce and Labor, Blairroad. 269
Committee Appropriations, 146 Tennes- Fowler, William C., inspector contagious
seeavenne NH C0. oii vii aiid hes 226 diseases, District of Columbia, 1812 First
Felton, Charles E., Senate messenger, The Lr] in eal SS Cn SE EE Sr 375
Champlain. or Sana sins 223 | Fowler, Willis J., Deputy Comptroller of
Fenton, Commander Theodore C., Bureau the Currency, 205 Hammond court ...... 250
of Steam Engineering, 1769 Church street 259 | Frankenfield, Prof. Harry C.,division chief,
Fenton, Jno. W., jr., assistant clerk Sen- Weather Bureau, 1735 New Hampshire
ate Committee Interstate Commerce, AVERIC Ln i i se sini eo ainnnss ees att 265
10r3 Florida avenue NB.................. 222 | Franz, S.I.,A.B.,Ph. D., Hospital for Insane 277
Ferguson, Frank KE., assistant director, Frech, Jacob, chief clerk, Office of the
Bureau Engraving and Printing, 1239 Adjutant-General, 514.4, street NE...... 252
Kenyon street............................ 249 | Freeman, Gath P., messenger, House
Fiallo, Sefior Don Arturo I,., legation of post-office, 1016 Thirteenth street ....... 227
the Dominican Repu pi ene husingion, 321 | French, George N., chief clerk, superin-
Field, Orin J., chief clerk, Department of tendent Congressional Library, 1834 I
Justice, Kénsington, Md... 255 Erect. oli ae nt ea 246
Finch, Jas. A., attorney in charge of par- Freyre y Santander, Mr. Manuel de, sec-
dons, Department of Justice, Grant retary Peruvian legation, chargé d’af-
s een A a Se aS ee 255 falres ad interim... hn NS 323
Finch, Stanley W., chief examiner, De- Frias, Sefior Alberto Nin, secretary, lega-
partment of Justice, 531 Tstreet.. 255 tion of EGA os sis stv iain va hn toss 325
Finley, David E., Printing Investigation Fruit, Henry D., messenger, House post-
Commission, The Natlonal. 2. nbn 219 office, 209 C ri sR 227
Finney, Edward C., law clerk, General Frye, William P., President pro tempore
Land Office, 456 Parkrond.....ia.. 262 of the Senate, The Hamilton. ........... 220
Fischer, Ernest G., division chief, Coast Fuller, Melville Weston:
and Geodetic Survey, The Ethelhurst.. 271 Chief Justice of the United States
Fischer, I,. A., Bureau of Standards, 923 (biography), 1801 K street ........... 315
Massachusetts avenue ...... ............ 271 Chancellor, Regent, and member
Fischer, Lieut. Charles H., office of Naval Smithsonian Institution ............. 272
Intelligence, 1730 Corcoran street. ....... 258 | Fulloway, Chas. H., assistant division su-
Fishback, Fred. I,., clerk Senate Commit- perintendent, Post-Office Department,
tee Canadian Relations, 907 8 street. .... 221 1812: Newtonistreet ion onan oos. cine! 256
Fisher, A. K., Bureau of Biological Survey, Fung Yuan Ting, Chinese special embassy 321
The Plymouth AR Lt er eo ee eh ae 268 | Furlong, Capt. John W., General Staff,
Fisher, Aleyne A., chief clerk, Railway 1413 Fwentiethistreet ix. 252
Mail’ Service, 1757 Euclid street. ......... 256 | Gage, Mary A., assistant clerk Senate
Ritch, Arthur C., M. D., Hospital for In- Committee Privileges and Elections,
FL oe SS RIL EE 277 1310 North Carolina avenue NE. . 222
Fitch, Chas. H., Executive officer, Recla- Gaillard, Maj. D. D., Isthmian Canal
mation Service, 3031 Nistreet ....0....... 265 COMMIBRON +r rien: coin nd 275
Fitch, William C., division superintendent, Gaines, John W., Committee Inaugural
Post-Office Department, The De Soto.. 256 Ceremonies, New Occidental............ 219
Fitzpatrick, Chas., assistant clerk House Gaines, S. M., division chief, Treasury
Committee Indian Affairs, 812 Ninth Department, 1257 Hamlin street......... 249
Street NI ha ver saws antes ats 226 | Gallaudet, Edward M., President Colum-
Flack, William H., stenographer to Ser- bia Institution for Deaf and Dumb, Ken-
geant- -at-Arms of the House, 12 T street. 225 dall Green. fv toil in 276
Fleharty, R. E., assistant stationery clerk Galloway, Beverly I., chief Bureau of
of the House, 318 Fast Capitol street . 224 Plant Industry, Takoma Park ........... 266
Fleharty, Ward W., assistant clerk, House Gannett, Henry, Chairman United States
Committee, Foreign Affairs, 653 Mary- | Geographic Board, 1829° Phelps place. . 274
land avenue NE, ov i ction. Vas 226 | Gardner, John W., assistant clerk House
Flint, J. M.; U. S. N. (retired), corn Committee Claims, ooz-Mistreet...... A. 226
National MUSEUM. .......nneenennnnnnnes 272 | Gardiner, William, Senate messenger. . 221
Flournoy, Richard W., jr., bureau chief, | Garfield, James Rudolph:
State Department, 1129 Fourteenth street. 248 Secrefary of the Interior (biography),
Flynn, Herbert S., chief clerk Office Chief 1717 Massachusetts avenue. 262
Signal Officer, U.S.A. so rhe Maury...... 254 National Red Cross. voice hele, 276
Foote, Lieut. P. W., ordnance duty, Savy: Member, Smithsonian Institution... . 272
ard ce Nrsiunrtiyaveivaiesysveve 259 Patron ex officio, Howard University... 277
410 Individual Index.
Page.
Garges, Daniel H., chief clerk Engineer
Commissioner District of Columbia, 50 U
SETCEL, Jac ie slots sity a tln tite ote orvinly lela ais atten tate
Garlington, Brig. Gen. E. A., Inspector-
General, 2117 Bancroft place. said
Garriott, Prof. Edward B. , division chief,
Weather Bureau, 1318 Harvard street...
Garver, Leonard J., clerk, office Secretary
of the Senate, Y. M. C. A. Building......
Gatchell, William F., chief clerk, Steam-
boat-Inspection Service, 1452 Clifton st. .
Gatewood, Medical Inspector J. D., Naval
Medical School, 1825 Nineteenth street. .
Gauss, Henry C., private secretary to the
Attorney-General, 1359 Park road .......
Gauss, Herman, examiner detailed to
House Committee Invalid Pensions, 221
Eifthstreet SF... oon vo
Gay,R.H. assistant engineer of the Senate,
r72s Newton street... a ian
Geagan, Margaret V., clerk House Com-
mittee Elections No. 3, 212A street SE. .
Geare, R. I., chief of correspondence, Na-
tional Museum, 3554 Tenth street.......
Geddings, H.D., assistant, Marine-Hospital
Service,’I'he Westmoreland. .............
Gehringer, Geo. M., M. D., Hospital for the
TRSANC LL uteldios cdo si nis sie cilealais stole ies Yeiugete
Gensler, Henry J., official reporter, Senate,
EE CR LE SE ESA SE IR
Gerdine, T. G., Geological Survey, 1813
Adams Millivoad.... .. o.oo vie
Gessford, Harry 1,., District detective, 416
Rourth street SHE........... va. iond na
Gherardi, Iieut. Comdr. W. R., Bureau of
Equipment, Bradley lane, Chevy Chase.
Gibson, Chas. A., assistant clerk House
Committee Agriculture... ..........0....
Gibson, Edgar J., assistant chief, Bureau
of Manufactures, 207 A street SK........
Gibson, James A., assistant in House sta-
tionery room, Pakoma Park.............
Gibson, W. Howard, Deputy Assistant
Treasurer United States, 2136 I, street...
Gibson, W. S., chief clerk, ‘Bureau of Medi-
cine and Surgery, U. S. N., 2736 St. Paul
street ‘Baltimore, Md............c.... 0
Giffin, Esther J., Library of ‘Congress,
Phe Mendota. rs. i
Gilbert, John J., inspector, Coast and Geo-
detic Survey, The Iroquois. .
Gilbertson, Martin G., assistant “clerk
House Committee Judiciary, 227 P street.
Giles, Arthur H., patent examiner, 1853
Mintwood place... or ond ais
Gilfry, Henry H., Chief Clerkof the Senate,
229 New Jersey avenue: SKE. ..............
Gilmer, Lieut. J. B., Bureau of Steam En-
gineering, U. S. N., The Rochambeau .
Given, Ralph, assistant United States attor-
ney, District of Columbia, 218 B street
ES al a en
Givens, KE. L., clerk, office Secretary of the
Senate, in Nineteenth street. . .......
Glascock, Alfred, M. D., Hospital for In-
SIE a a
Glennan, A. H., assistant, Marine-Hospital
Service, Chevy Chase, M
Gliem, Christian P., chief electrical en-
gineer of the Capitol, 642 East Capitol
a rE I ee or
Glover, John J., division chief, Department
of Justice, 1505 Restreet’i ln oos
Godoy, Sefior Don José F., Mexican minis-
ter, 1006 Sixteenth Breet. ei
Goethals, Lieut. Col. Geo. W., chairman
Isthmian Canal Commission. ............
Goetz, Edward P., assistant clerk Senate
Committee Territories, The Cairo........
Goldenbogen, John F., superintendent
Senate folding room, 1700 I, street.......
Goodall, Otis B., private secretary to the
Assistant Secretary of Commerce and
Tabor, Sz Lstreet NF. ..oii ena vnt.
Goode, P. J., register clerk, House post-
office, 717 A street SE-...................
Goodloe, Col. Green C., paymaster, Ma-
rine corps, 1103 Sixteenth street, .,......
Page.
Goodwin, Edward C., librarian of the Sen-
ate, 1865 Kalorama road .................
Goodwin, Russell P., Assistant Attorney-
General, Post-Office Department, The
Portland no. fa tela soa ean ul
Gordon, Capt. Walter H., General Staff,
Army War College... .... la cain. vi
Gordon, Charles S., Senate messenger,
3319 Holmead PLACE i al a
Gorgas, Col. Wm. C.. chief sanitary officer,
Isthmian Canal Commission. ............
Gould, Ashley M.,associate justice,supreme
court, District of Columbia, Silver
Spring, Wd ss eit anise a fins mat ntere sits
Gould, C. G., patent examiner, 1617
TP IATECENEIL SLECET © sensors ss iss irons
Grabill, L. R., superintendent of roads, Dis-
trict of Columbia, Pakoma Park... ....
Graffam, Walter S. director, School of
Manual Arts, Howard University. .
Graham, Thomas P., division chief, "Post-
Office Department, 2410 Eighteenth
Sree i a a lee oh
Grandfield, Charles P., First Assistant
Postmaster-General, 949 S street. .
Grant, Alexander, General Superintend-
ent Railway Mail Service, The Cecil
Graves, J. Harwood, special assistant at-
torney, Department of Justice, The Sor-
TEREO i aa rr i a ah
Gray, George, Regent Smithsonian Insti-
tution, Wilmington, Del... ............
Gray, Samuel H., official reporter, House,
The Logan... ak aa banda.
Grayson, Joel, House document room, Vi-
CNA: Viivin sina nins saison sass ta ty
Grayson, Passed Asst. Surg. C. D., Naval
Dispensary, 15181 street. ...............
Greathouse, C. H., Division of Publica-
tions, Agricultural Department, Fort
Myer Heights, Va i 0 a aes
Green, Bernard R., superintendent Con-
gressional Library, 1735 N street ........
Greene, Henry F., Civil Service Commis-
sioner, 1527 Thirty-first street..
Greene, John, assistant foreman of print-
ing, Government Printing Office, 4r1
Rhode Island avenue.......... i. iia.
Greenwood, Charles S., clerk, House
Committee, Banking and Currency......
Griffin, Appleton P. C., Chief Assistant
Librarian of Congress, 3 Kirke street,
Chevy Chase, Mdis,.. voi. hoeia oc del,
Griffin, Commander Robert S., Bureau of
Steam Engineering, 2003 Kalorama
ond St a hE Se
Griffith, John D., assistant postmaster of
the Iouse, The McKinley ....-.......c..
Griffith, Michael J., deputy register of
wills, 1629°P street... oul Lan Sa
Grosvenor, Edwin P., attorney, Depart-
ment of Justice, The Marlborough ......
Grow, Surg. KE. J., Naval Medical School,
The Benedick',. ...ioil iin: foes ves
Gsantner,Otto C., patent examiner, Twen-
ty-fourth and Franklin streets NE .....
Gude, Mr. O., Norwegian Minister........
Guerrero, Dr. J. Gustavo, secretary, Sal-
vadorean legation, The Benedick........
Guittard, Claude B., division chief, Library
of Congress, The Roland = ii
Gulick, Capt. Louis M., Marine Barracks.
Gunnell, F. M., president board of visitors,
Hospital for Insane ......................
Gunnell, Leonard C., Bureau International
Catalogue of Scientific Literature, 1525
Twenty-eighth street ............. Ll
Gurgel do Amaral, Mr. Sylvino, counselor
Brazilian embassy, 1712 H street .......
Guzman, Sefior Don Pomponio, secretary
Colombian legation..... (i... ....h. oe,
Hadley, Amos, division chief, Interior
Department, 1330 Harvard street........
Haggard, B. W., clerk, office of the Clerk
of the House, 15 B street NE..
Hagner, Alexander B., associate justice
supreme court, District of Columbia (re-
tired), 1313 H street... i coves baiveiisae
"
-
—
TREE
Individual Index.
Page.
Hagood, Capt. Johnson, General Staff, 1908
Lstreet i. cv. iis Suvi vide Se see as
Haines, Lieut. Col. Henry C., Asst. Adju-
tant and Inspector Marine Corps, 2018 Co-
TUINDIa TOA ii i ah as a ales
Halderman, Charles W., clerk Senate
Committee Claims, T'he National........
Hale, Albert, special compiler, Bureau
American Republics, 1412 Massachusetts
a TI bmn I RS UR Eee BIR
Hale, Rev. Edward Everett, Chaplain of
the Senate,i1748 Nistreet ................
Hale, Eugene, National Monetary Com-
mission, 1001 Sixteenth street ...........
Hall, Brig. Gen. William P., Assistant Ad-
jutant-General, 1707 Nineteenth street .
Hall, Percival, professor, Gallaudet Col-
1
Hall, Prof. Asaph, Naval Observatory ..
Hall, William F., assistant forester, Hy-
attsville, Wd San inn
Halleck, Walter F., captain of the watch,
Interior Department, 635 Maryland ave-
Me NB: rohan as
Halsey, Capt. William F. (retired), Bureau
of Equipment, U.S.N., The Marlborough.
Halsey, John W. D., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Public Health and National
Quarantine NR SRE RE
Halvorsen, J. R., superintendent House
folding room, 448 Park road... ... ....
Hamel, C. D. , assistant clerk Senate Com-
mittee Agriculture, The Burlington .....
Hamilton, Emmet, chief clerk, Office Com-
missary-General, 162 Tennessee avenue
TE AA Re Se TE
Hamilton, John, Farmers’ Institute spe-
cialist, ‘Agricultural Department, 2718
Thirteenth street oc oiie. io vrr is
Hammond, John, lieutenant, Capitol po-
lice, 413 B street NE .
Hammond, John C., assistant astronomer,
Naval Observatory EE I a
Hammond, Julius H., receiving clerk,Gen-
eral Land Office, The Ontario...........
Hance, Thomas C., clerk House Com-
mittee Territories, The Dewey ............
Handy, Robert B., Division of Publications,
Agricultural Department, 23 Eighth
Stree SI at or Shr a
Hanger, G. W. W., chief statistician, Bu-
reau of TIabor, 2344 Massachusetts
TR RS a SN A Ra
Hanihara, Mr. Masanao, Japanese em-
bassy, he Nistreet bien boii sg
Hanley, M. J., House document room, 1207
Bestreet. ro i ae a SE
Hanlon, M. V., lieutenant, Capitol police,
225 B street Re a
Hanna, Edwin P., Solicitor of the Navy,
zoo wentiethstreet:, oi. ai oy. oi
Hannay, Capt. John R. R., assistant to
Quartermaster-General, 2015 Nineteenth
EE a SE SL
Hannum, Lieut. Warren T., U. S. Engi-
neers’ office, The Kenesaw...............
Hanson, Geo. M., clerk Senate Commit-
tee Trespassers on Indian Lands, 1437
Rhode Island avenue... ovis.
Hanson, J. C. M., division chief, Library
of Congress, 1244 Monroe street .
Hardenbroek, Baron von, German em-
Bas en i se ae.
Harding, Capt. Leof M., U. S. M. C., office
nil -Advocate- General, U..S. N., The
Cell tl Sake BT SN
SEE Ea si Sab Sa BR
Hargrove, J. O., ager asphalt and
cements, District of Columbia, 1603 O
Hargrove, M. C., District property clerk,
160i @ street. Lol en,
Harlan, James S., Iaterstate Commerce
Commission, 1720 Rhode Island avenue.
Harlan, John Marshall, associate justice,
Supreme Court (biography), Fourteenth
and Buclid streets... uni lie a0,
Harllee, Capt. W. C., office of Commandant
Marine Corps, The Damariscotta........
252
315
261
411
Page.
Harmon, Medical Director G. E., Naval
Medical School Hospital, The Benedick. 260
Harper, Benjamin F., Auditor War Depart-
ment, Che New Berne ................... 250
Harper, Joseph, clerk juvenile court, 412
Bistrecl NI... 0 civic. cides veiereniverenis 319
Harper, N. C., deputy clerk, police court,
303 Hast Capitol street... .. 000... 319
Harr, William R., attorney, Department of
Justice, 1647 Lamont street... ........... 255
Harris, Capt. Peter C., General Staff, 1865
Nstreeb. co et a er eas 252
Harris, Civil Engineer F. R., Bureau of
Yards and Docks, 1120 Vermont avenue.. 257
Harris, Maj. Moses, general treasurer
National Home for Disabled Volunteer
Soldiers alo aL Nh 274
Harris, William J., clerk, Senate (om-
mittee, Woman Suffrage............ .... 223
Hart, Lieut. T. C., Naval Bureau of Ord-
nance, TheBenedick -.... J. i... 258
Hartley, Charles P., Bureau of Plant In-
dustry, 342oiCenter'street....... 5.0... 266
Haskell, William C., District sealer of
weightsand measures, The Cumberland. 375
Hastings, Charles H., division chief, Li-
brary of Congress, 225 Eleventh street SE. 246
Hauke, Charles F., division chief, Office of
Indian Affairs, 605 Massachusetts avenue
EAE Ae Ee Te 264
Havard, Col. Valery, in charge Army Med-
ical Museum and Library, 2025 O street.. 253
Havenner, George C., division chief, De-
partment of Commerce and Labor, ‘Min-
nesota avenue and Eighteenth street. .. 269
Hawkins, Brig. Gen. Hamilton S., govern-
or and member of Board of Commission-
ers Soldiers’ Tome, M0 is ae. 275
Hawks, Emma B., assistant librarian, Agri-
cultural Department, 941 S street........ 269
Hayden, Commander E, E., Naval Obsetv-
atory, 1302 Sixteenth street.............. 258
Hayes, C. Willard, chief geologist, Geolog-
ical Survey, 3432 Ashley terrace ......... 264
Hayes, John F., clerk Senate Committee
Territories, Fhe Calron............. 0 223
Hayford, John F., division chief, Coast and
Geodetic survey, 2729 Ontario road..... 271
Haymerle, Baron F., embassy of Austria-
Hungary , 1816 Jefferson Place... 5... 320
Hayes, Willet M., Assistant Secretary of
Agriculture, 1037 Biltmore streef....... 265
Ha wood, John K., division chief, Bureau
i Brent ey 1521 Lamont street. ....... 268
Hazen, M. C., District surveyor, 213 Elev-
CNEL SETCCE BW. ess de iia 373
Heap, Pay Inspector S. L., paymaster,
navy- ha De A Re 259
Hedrick, H. B., assistant, Nautical Al-
manac Office, 3240 oO street Lr I aN 258
Heiskell, Henryl. division chief, Weather
Bureau, Bethesda, Md. oo ire 265
Helphenstine, R. K., jr., Forest Service,
The Windsor, ob cm ai a Sg rh 267
Heltman, Charles C., division chief, Gen-
eral Land Office, 121 U street............ 262
Hemenway, William I., House messenger,
216 North Capitol street... .....0.... 0.0 225
Hemler, House document room............ 225
Hemphill, Rear-Admiral Joseph W., presi-
dent Naval Examining and Retiring
Boards, 1722 P street... ...0.0L Ao vi, 261
Henderson, John B., Regent, Smithsonian
Inglitation a iso isan ne oases: 272
Henderson, Thomas J., Board of Ordnance
and Fortification, 1126 East Capitol street 254
Hengelmiiller von Hengervar, Baron,
ambassador of Austria- -Hungary, 1305
Conmecticntavedue =... 0 0 ol 320
Hengstler, Herbert C., bureau chief, State
Department, 38 Flor ida avenue. ......... 248
Henry, E. S., patent examiner, 1320 Co-
ia a 263
Henry, Frank C., president District board
of pharmacy, 703 Fifteenth street........ 374
Henry, Prof. Alfred J., in charge of staff,
Mount Weather Virginia. ..1............ 266
Henry, Samuel R., battalion chief engi-
neer, fire department, District of Colum-
bia, oog: Lawrence street.................
412
Page.
Henry, Stanhope, assistant attorney, De-
partment of Justice, Seat Pleasant, Md.
Henshaw, H. W., administrative assistant,
Biological Survey, The Ontario..........
Herbert, Henry B., House messenger, 220
Ab Be eA Te A a a a
Herndon, J. W., House folding room, Alex-
ARATIa; VAL ie ii ade edi ser es ba
Herron, W. H., division chief, Geological
Survey, 1706 Oregon avenue.............
Hershler, Nathaniel:
Chief clerk, General Staff, Cleveland
Nt eb
Secretary Board of Commissioners
Soldiers Home... ih an
Hertzler, William, clerk House Committee
War Claims, The National... ........0...
Hesse, Edwin B., chief clerk, Metropoli-
tan police, 506 °A street SE ........ 5. ......
Hibbs, Waldo C., private secretary to Com-
missioner Macfarland, The Kanawha....
Hickey, Edward J., assistant clerk Senate
Committee Naval Affairs, 6oo Twenty-
second street. i iii sii Vea
Hickman, Richard W., division chief, Bu-
reau of Animal Industry, 2329 First street.
Hicks, Cleveland H., clerk Senate Com-
mittee Public l,ands, The Ventosa ......
Higginbotham, R. F., House Document
Room, 404 East Capitol street. ...........
Hill, Commander F. K., General Board,
UU. SN: 2017 Oistreel. ou ioral. oa on
Hill, George A., assistant astronomer,
Naval Observatory.........v.....0. 0.0.
Hill, George William, editor in chief,
Division of Publications; Agricultural
Department, The Benedick..............
Hillebrand, W. F., chemist, Bureau of
Standards, Cleveland Park ...............
Hilton, S. I., secretary District Board of
Pharmacy, Twenty-second and I, streets.
Hindmarsh, Walter B., chief clerk, Light-
House Board, 1839 Ontario place.........
Hinds, Asher C., clerk at Speaker’s table,
oso4. Cliffbourne place... . 0.
Hine, H. O., secretary, Board of Education.
Hoadley, Frank M., division chief, War
Department, 2303 First street............
Hodges, Commander B. W., assistant to
superintendent of Naval Observatory,
The Benedick'.... .l..... a,
Hodges, H. W., clerk court of appeals, 2208
QQ BLECCE wv io eis dials se ein tie See nieh les
Hodges, Lieut. Col. H. F., Assistant Chief
Engineer Isthmian Canal Commission. .
Hodgkins, H. G., assistant, Nautical Alma-
nac Office, 1613 Thirtieth street..........
Hoffer, Maj. Jay E., assistant to Chief of
Ordnance, U. S.A: 1925 S street... ..n....
Hoffman, Lieut. Leonard G., secretary to
the Admiral of the Navy, 1303 Fairmont
SERECEt oon Sr et Sr a eR aE
Holcombe, John W., assistant to Secretary
of Interior, 1829 Corcoran street .........
Hollingsworth, J. H., pair clerk of the
House, Riverdale, Md............0.00.0,
Holloway, J. B., clerk to continue digest of
war claims, 20 Third street SE ..........
Hollyday, Chief Engineer R. C., chief Bu-
reau of Yards and Docks, 2117 Connecti-
cH avenue. n..o Sra oo. Sree eas
Hollyday, John W., chief clerk, Office
Second Assistant Postmaster-General,
1924 Thirteenth street... 00a on.
Holmes, George K. division chief, Bureau of
Statistics, Agricultural Department.....
Holmes, John A., private secretary to the
Postmaster-General, 1768 Willard street.
Holmes, Joseph A.:
Division chief, Geological Survey, 2137
LeRoy place’. i oh ln said,
National Conservation Commission ...
Holmes, Lieut. Commander U. T., ord-
nance duty, Navy-Yard........... Sede
255
268
225
225
264
252
275
227
375
374
222
224
374
264
277
Individual Index.
Page.
Holmes, Oliver Wendell, associate justice
Supreme Court (biography), 1720 I street
Holmes, W. H., chief, Bureau of American
Ethnology, curator, National Museum,
1444 Belmont road oi... .iv.. co oor ou
Holstein, Baron Stael de, Russian legation,
1034 Connecticut avenue. Juv. ov. vais srie
Holt, Passed Asst. Paymaster Fred. W.,
Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, 1638
Seventeenth streets’ voi ca tees
Holt, Paymaster Felix R., Bureau of Sup-
plies and Accounts, Florence court......
Holt, Thomas M., messenger, House post-
office, 153 BH street SI... oi...
Hooker, Capt. Richard S., aid to Com-
mandant Marine Corps, 1814 Jefferson
place uh hs ee cea
Hoover, G. W., division chief, Bureau of
Chemistry, 1345 Vermont avenue........
Hopkins, A. D., division chief, Bureau of
Entomology, Cosmos: Clubi. 2... Lo
Hopkins, Albert J., National Monetary
Commission, New Willard...............
Hopkins, Archibald, chief clerk, Court of
Claims, 1826 Massachusetts avenue......
Horigan, W. D., librarian, Naval Observa-
tory, 3028 Wisconsinavenue .............
Korne, W. W., clerk, office Secretary of
the Senate, The Towa... 0.0 oe: oad
Horner, Errol O., Senate messenger, 1700
Pifteentlvafreel. Su i ie es o.,
Horton, Maj. William FE., assistant to
Quartermaster-General, The Farragut. .
Horton, Ralph B., clerk House Committee
Insular Affairs, 1401 Decatur street......
Hough, W. H., M. D., Hospital for Insane.
Hough, Walter, acting head curator, Na-
Homal Musenm. ir. i. i ie sors es
Houk, C. O., House document room, 322
GCstreel NI.) se Tah are
Houtz, Harry C., clerk House Committee
Elections No. 2, The Arlington..........
Howard, B. J., division chief, Bureau of
Chemistry, 1366 North Carolina avenue
RE EE ia Se Hl Tes
Howard, Capt. C. E. N., office Post Paymas-
ters1g10 Tetreet 4 voc. Ln La ive e i ae
Howard, IL. O.: .
Chief, Bureau of Entomology, 2026
Hillyen place... oc diniisnny
Curator, National Museum ...... .....
Howard, Robert A., attorney, Department
of Justice, The Cecil
Howard, William M., Regent Smithsonian
Institgtion io. coi cheese linn on eh
Howell, Benj. F., Immigration Commis-
sion: The Cochran... 5... tiie sass.
Howland, Anna I,., clerk Senate Commit-
tee Expenditures Department of Justice,
The DEWEY... uo. io. cil ivi ss weiss vines
Howland, Capt. Charles R., assistant to
Judge-Advocate-General, U. S. A., The
Cairo
Howry, Charles B., judge, Court of Claims,
I7zSiEstrect os Jo. cu a a ens
Hoyt, C. S., disbursing clerk of the House,
The Londoun in. is sans
Hoyt, Henry M.:
Solicitor-General, 1701 Rhode Island
AVENE. oo id en Sad sna a eet ie was
Counselor, National Red Cross. ........
Hronisk, J. J., House messenger ..........
Hsaio, Chi Yan, Dr., Chinese special em-
DASSY sis ces ttt iy er eS
Hsu Shih Yang, Capt., Chinese special
EMDABSY ie oie ii venison aes
Hubbard, Henry D., secretary Bureau of
Standards, The Wilton... .............h..
Hubbard, John W., House messenger, 212
New:Jersey avenue... Lunt La.
Hubbard, Mrs. Gardiner, board of visitors,
Hospital for Insane... ..... can
Huggett, Martin C., clerk Senate Commit-
tee National Banks, The Farragut.......
Hughes, Lucille A., assistant clerk Senate
Committee District of Columbia, 1708 R
SEFECER Ai, vei tin bly or vitals wd ire
316
272
324
259
259
227
261
267
268
219
318
Individual Index.
Hughes, Wm. J., attorney, Department of
Justice, 24 P street NE
Hulme, Commander Walter O. (retired),
Office Judge-Advocate-General, U.S. N.,
ob OQ streel. oh ea Ee
Humphrey, Capt, Evan H., assistant to
Quartermaster-General, 1620 Eighteenth
SEECCE. so irs vials unten sissieis ar RL SR
Hunsicker, F. G., House indexer, docu-
ment room, The Loudoun
Hunt, C. B., engineer of highways, District
of Columbia, 1815 M street...............
Hunt, Gaillard, division chief, Library of
Congress, 1711 De Sales street
Hunt, William C., chief statistician, Bureau
of the Census, 928 Westminster street...
Hunter, E. J., assistant clerk, House post-
office, 236: New Jersey avenue............
Huntington, A. T., division chief, Treasury
Department, Vienna, Va... ......00 000
Husband, W. W., secretary Immigration
Commission, 2924 Newark street.........
Husted, Glenn E., assistant attorney, De-
partment of Justice, 2320 Woodridge st. .
Hutchins, F. E., spect) assistant attorney,
Department o Justice, 1632 Riggs
place oe in heen an
Hyde, Thomas M., clerk, Office of the
Clerk of the House, The National
Hye, Baron Demeter, Austro-Hungarian
CMDASEY = i la ede ts ees meee
Hynson, N. Thornton, clerk House Comni-
mittee Expenditures Navy Depart-
IMENE wl Sa re ie BT i a ee ae
Ingalls, Theodore, chief clerk, chief in-
spector Post-Office Department, 1300
Fairmontetreel. <n cis
Ingersoll, Rear-Admiral R. R., General
Board, The Highlands...................
Innes, Mr. Alfred Mitchell, counselor,
British embassy. Joh. telat hha ves sensane
Iredale, John, stenographer to Clerk of the
House, 100215 Street. ii os cir ens
Irelan, W. T., assistant enrolling clerk
of the House, 234 New Jersey avenue... .
Ireland, Maj. Merritte W., Assistant to
Surgeon-General, 1917 S street..........
Irland, Fred, official reporter, House, 1845
OMATIO PIACE couse vee ve coe es
Irvine, A. A., House messenger............
Irving, William, messenger, soldiers’ roll,
321 A street NE
Jacobson, Nelson R., clerk, House Commit-
tee, CENSUS ah cirri vata os ns ansin insn atts
Jajaval, Nai, Siamese
Hamilton. oes iin nda sn nis 5s
James, Lieut. Col. B. R., military attaché
British embassy, 2028 Columbia road....
Janssens, Francis, Belgian legation, 1748
BY ETB A SR en TE EE
Jarvis, Grant, document and bill clerk of
the House, 10 Csireet SB................
Jayne, Commander J. I. Secretary General
Board, U. S. Navy, 1706 P street.........
Page.
255
259
252
225
375
240
270
227
249
219
255
255
Jaynes, L. S., Senate messenger, 23 First
gtreet NI. iret. a vaes Cree
Jaynes, W. B., clerk, Senate Committee,
Disposition Useless Papers, 23 First
Sheet NIB ot ie ic rir es
Jenkins, George P., clerk, House Commit-
tee, Judiciary, 128 A street NE...........
Jenks, Jeremiah, W., Immigration Com-
missions Tthaca, WN. Y..o.o0. oon is
Jennings, Arthur M., assistant clerk, House
Committee, Post-Office and Post-Roads,
=oz ‘Fenth street....... eR a eT a eh
Jennison, George, House special messen-
ger, New Varnum
Jester, James G., disbursing officer, Isth-
mian Canal Commission, The Ashburne.
Jewell, G. G., House document room, 308
SETEeliNI Lo isn cv ssrmais nines dios sats
Johnson, Arnold B., United States Geo-
graphic Boards... ceceics aise ve oicin- Ly
Johnson, Clarence, executive clerk of the
Senate, The Driscoll. ..... o.co. Le
Johnson, Israel D., assist nt in office dis-
bursing clerk of the House, The Luxor..
66525—60-2—2D ED——28
413
Page.
Johnson, J. E., assistant to stenographers
to House committees, 2009 Fourteenth st. 228
Johnson, Walter, patent examiner, 109
Tirst street NE... ... .cccvsiese. veicsinenis 263
Johnston, Capt. Edward N., assistant to
Chief of Engineers, 1725 Kilbourne place. 253
Johnston, Mrs. C. E., chief clerk, Office
Experiment Stations, Agricultural De-
partment, The Henrietta ................ 269
Johnston, W. Dawson, compiler, Bureau of
Education, 317 New Jersey avenue SKE... 264
Jones, Commander H. P., inspector of ord-
nance, Navy-Yard.........v... ...ove ose 259
Jones, Dwight V., clerk, Senate Committee,
Coast Defenses, The Sherman........... 221
Jones, Geo. F., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Interoceanic Canals, 222 New
Jersey avenye................. coon
Jones, John H., in charge Weather Bureau
map station, Senate, 1217 New Jersey
AVENUEC..., oi fee selene cierien ne simsisonivaintn siois
SEER ieee sir si csieis winie is leinl sirininiswiniutenisisiateiel
Jones, James E. chief clerk, Bureau of Plant
Industry, 1490 Monroe street
Jones, Lewis, chief engineer, Agricultural
Department, 42 R street NE.............
Jones, Lieut. Col. Thaddeus W.:
General Staff, The Wyoming..........
United States Geographic Board
Jones, Lieut. Needham I,., Bureau of Navi-
gation, 1525 New Hampshire avenue... .
Jones, 0. M., Senate messenger............
Jones, Samuel A. chief clerk, Bureau of
Statistics, Agricultural Department,
2594 Wisconsin avenue..........eeeueuen.
Jones, Winthrop C., tally clerk of the
House, 18 Third street SE.......... CA
Jorgensen, J. C., Senate messenger, Mt.
Rainier, MAG. is cn haan sansnsinsianintein
Joubert, Sefior Don Emilio C.:
Minister resident of the Dominican
Republic, The Shoreham
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republics
Jurney, Chesley W., clerk, Conference of
Senate Minority, 23 First street NE... ..
Jusserand, Mr. J. J., French ambassador. .
Kaemmerling, Commander Gustav, Bu-
reau of Steam Engineering, The Bene-
GE eS Se TS a RE A RL
Kalbfus, S. T., assistant assessor and
member Excise Board, District of Colum-
bia, 727 De Sales street................
Kane, Thomas P., Deputy Comptroller of
the Currency, 1931 Calvert street
Kavanagh, Lieutenant-Commander A. G.,
Naval Bureau of Ordnance, 2121 N street.
Ke Kinsun, Mr., Chinese special embassy.
Kean, Maj. Jefferson R., assistant to Sur-
geon-General, U.S. A .
Kearney, Mary G., assistant clerk, Sen-
ate Committee, Public Buildings and
Grounds, 1125 Fourteenth street.........
Kearney, Thomas H., Bureau of Plant In-
dustry, Cleveland Park
Keating, Charles H., deputy auditor, Post-
Office Department, The Woodley
Kebler, IL. F., division chief, Bureau of
Chemistry, 1322 Park voad..............
Keblinger, W. W., secretary, Mexican
Water Boundary Commission, 715 Four-
teenth street
Keefe, Daniel J., Commissioner-General
of Immigration
Kehoe, W. J., stenographer to House com-
mittees, Stoneleigh Court
Keliher, James, battalion chief engineer,
fire department, District of Columbia,
735: North Capitol street..................
Kellerman, Karl F., Bureau of Plant Indus-
try, 1824 S street
Kelley, John B., clerk, Senate Committee,
Forest Reservations
Kelley, Leverett M., Second Deputy Com-
missioner of Pensions, The Cecil........
Kellogg, R. S., assistant forester, River-
dale Md cer rraTTINL AY SY ste av en
252
274
258
222
414 Individual Index.
Kelly, Capt. Wm., U. S. A., assistant to
Engineer Commissioner, District of Co-
lumbia;zot4 Ristreet.c.....c. 0.00 0
Kelly, Thomas J., House messenger, 228 M
CIA Ea Ea SAR Be SR TN
Kemper, Charles K., Assistant Supervising
Architect, 1512 Park roads... -....i oy
Kendall, Jerome, assistant superintendent
of work, Government Printing Office, 37
Rhode Island avenue..... SRI
Kendall, Maj. Henry M., secretary and
freasurer, Soldiers’ Home. .............7%,
Kennard, Mr. H. W., British embassy .....
Kennedy, Bert W., Assistant Doorkeeper,
House of Representatives, 1753 Columbia
UI A SAR SR ea
Kennedy, Surg. R. M., Bureau of Med-
icine and Surgery, U.S.N., 2021 Q street.
Kenney, Louis P., foreman of Congres-
sional Record, Government Printing Of-
Hee, i7zslistreel nn. o.oo iii ee
Kernan, Maj. Francis J., General Staff,
8 Grafton street, Chevy Chase ...........
Kerr, D., examiner, detailed to Senate
Committee Pensions. ............ i...
Kerr, J. W., assistant, Marine-Hospital
Service, 1410' Girard street... ....... ....
Keyser, Paul V., assistant attorney, Post-
Office Department, 208 F street..........
Kidd, Frank A., United States Geographic
LL ne ats ee ln aa
Kilbourn, Olin B., Senate messenger, 328 B
SE I os rev a luis hae po wba a ata
Ler CRIS TEL SRE RR
Kimball, Arthur R., division chief, Library
of Congress, 1827 Kalorama road ........
Kimball, Rear-Admiral William W., Naval
Examining and Retiring Boards, 1224
Seventeenthistreet 00 0 Joi.
Kimball, Edward F., division superintend-
ent, Post-Office Department, 1316 Rhode
Island avenue. 0 lie at. tira aan ins ei
Kimball, I. G., judge police court, 620
North Carolinaavenue SEL... ...........
Kimball, S. I., General Superintendent,
Life-Saving Service, 1316 Rhode Island av.
Kimmell, Commander Harry (retired), as-
sistant hydrographer, 1817 Kalorama
goad et ee HE
Kincheloe, Chas. F., attorney, Department
of Justice, 1501 Eleventh street.........
King, Carl V., Senate messenger, 1813
RIGGS PIACE. oe ids sais s nav sininined ;
‘King, Ed. A, locksmith of the House, 1333
LT ol Ny Sma Sag hu I AOR
King, John R., pension agent, 25 West
Mount Royal avenue, Baltimore, Md... .
King, Russell, messenger to the Vice-Pres-
ident, The Calumet =. 0 oi.
Kinnan, Arthur F., patent examiner, 1215
Newton street NE 2
Kinnan, Wm. A., patent examiner, 1110
Palrmontistreet. ov. oi on ih ee
Kittinger, Lieut. T. A., ordnance duty,
Navy-Vard ot. ci... ness meen ees
Kloeber, Royall O., chief clerk, office Pay-
master-General, The Irving Flats.......
Knapp, Martin A., chairman Interstate
Commerce Commission, Stoneleigh Court
Knapp, Seaman A., Bureau of Plant In-
dustry, 14ioBuclid street ..................
Knepper, Commander C. M., Naval Bureau
of Ordnance, The Benedick..............
Kiffin, Gilbert C., division chief, Pension
Office; Takoma Park ..........c.., sive
Knight, Col. John G. D. River and Har-
bor Board, Governors Island, New York.
Knight, Felton B., House special messen-
ger, Metropolitan Hotel. .................
Knight, J. Broadus, Senate messenger....
Knight, Maj. John T., General Staff, 1938
Calves street... re ese veh
Knox, Philander C.:
National Monetary Commission, 1527
SR RS a Ne
Committee Inaugural Ceremonies.....
Knox, Reed, Senate messenger, 1527 K st. .
Page.
374
225
249
274
275 322
Koch, Edward W., division chief, Bureau
of the Census, Woodside, Md.............
Kong U Chung, Mr., secretary-interpreter,
Chinese legation, 2001 Nineteenth street.
Ko-shuan, Mr. Yuan, Chinese legation, 2001
Nineteenth street. ..... coc. ih
Koudacheff, Prince Nicolas, first secretary,
Russian embassy, 824 Eighteenth street.
Kroupensky, Mr., counselor and chargé
d’affaires, Russian embassy .............
Kuan Ying-lin, Mr., secretary-interpreter,
Chinese legation, 2001 Nineteenth street.
Kubel, S. J., Geological Survey, 1000 Hast
Capitol street. oi ran lat i a Gr,
Kwei-chih, Mr., Chinese legation..........
La Dow, Robt. V. superintendent of
prisons and prisoners, Department of
Justice, The Ontario... .5 liar
Lafferty, George C., official reporter,
House, Metropolitan Club. ......... .
Iagercrantz, Mr. Herman de, minister of
Sweden. oi vn aS re
Lahm, Iieut. Frank P., assistant to Chief
Signal Officer, The Bachelor... ..i......5
Laird, Capt. Charles, Department of Equip-
ment and Navigation, Navy-Yard ..... =
Lamar, William H., assistant attorney,
Department of Justice, Rockville, Md...
Lambeck, Arthur H., Senate messenger,
S13 Twenty-first street.................
Lampson, KE. I,., reading clerk of the House,
313 Bast Capitol street ......0.n.. oh
Lamson, F. E., House messenger..........
Landis, Charles B., Printing Investigation
Commission, The Farragut ..............%
Landsittel, Louis H., Senate messenger,
419 Massachusetts avenue................
Lane, Charles H., patent examiner, The
Concord a eh ah as
Lane, Franklin K., Interstate Commerce
Commissioner, 1866 Wyoming avenue...
Lane, Rufus A., assistant to chief, office
Isthmian Canal Commission, The Ro-
chambeau. fo eile dvs staat
Langfitt, Lieut. Col. W.C., River and Har-
bor Board, Washington Barracks, D.C..
Langum, Samuel A., postmaster of the
House, The TL UROr ve revis assis
Langworthy, C. F., division chief, office of
Experiment Stations, Agricultural De-
partment, 1604 Seventeenth street.......
Lanham, Truman, superintendent of park-
ing, District of Columbia, Lanham, Md.
Lappin, Richard C., division chief, Bu-
reau of the Census, 203 ¥ast Capitol
Streel. oii se (a, Se heats re
Larned, F. H., Assistant Commissioner-
General of Immigration, 1821 I street...
Iatta, Maurice C., Assistant Secretary to
the President, sz Ustreet................
Lauchheimer, Col. Charles H.,adjutant and
inspector, Marine Corps, The Farragut
ILawshe, Abraham I,, Third Assistant
Postmaster-General, 1423 Chapin street. .
Lay, Capt. Harry R., Marine Barracks ....
Layton, B.W., Acting Assistant Doorkeeper
of the Senate, 12 B street NE
Layton, Caleb R., Auditor State and Other
Departments, 1435 Euclid street.........
ILazo-Arriaga, Luis:
Minister from Honduras, 66 Beaver
street, New York City..............
Governing Board, Bureau of Ameri-
can: Republics... ..... 0. cee oven
Leach, Frank A., Director of the Mint, The
BUurlinglon. . cveie. veal sems os vivnisisitsis vival
Leach, Col. Smith S., Assistant Chief of En-
gineers,U. S. A., Woodley Inn............
Leadley, George W., division chief, De-
partment of Commerce and Labor, The
Van Cortlanaf,. .. cae ioreeriisnns zon rons
Learnard, Capt. Henry G., General Staff,
The Woodley... ile ovaorb vive nes
Leech, E. O., assistant clerk Senate Com-
mittee Military Affairs, 2011 Thirteenth
Street. oe et sie ties sl eli ates 3 ele ans
LeClerc, J. A., Bureau of Chemistry, Tako-
ma Park. cle Cees
Page.
E43,
os
Be
Individual Index.
Page.
Lee, F.C, secretary to Engineer Commis-
sioner, District o Columbia, The Massa-
CRUGEEITS 1. Ls ror bon dar iis oda rs
Léger, Mr. J. N.:
Haitian minister, 1429 Rhode Island
AVENE. Sk So Sih se nes sre eke tntuiee
Governing board, Bureau of American
REPUDHES for chili nis Suivi stein is sin siuivs
Leighton, B. F., LL.D., dean, school of law,
Howard University BE Si
Leighton, M. O., division chief, Geo-
logical Survey, 2735 Ontario road. .
Lenihan, Capt. Michael J., General Staff,
821 Nineteenth Street... ......ooesennnss
Leupp, Francis E., Commissioner of Indian
Affairs, 1813 Sixteenth street. ............
Ieutze, Rear-Admiral E. H. C., Comman-
dantiof the Navy-Vard,::....... oe.
Lewis, C. M., deputy disbursing officer,
District of Columbia, 3319 Seventeenth
Streel,. «or sa Se
Lewis, Elijah, messenger, soldiers’ roll, 213
NEW JCrsey avenue i a duis. sisi hati
Lewis, Henry C., assistant attorney, De-
partment of Justice, 1918 K street... .....
Lewis, Hugh, messenger, soldiers’ roll, 815
Fifteenthistreet.... oon vi vitint a
Lewis, Joseph D., division chief, Bureau
of the Census, 238 Delaware avenue NE.
Iewis, William H., division chief, General
Land Office, 1270. Morse street ...... i...
Ii Ching Fen, Chinese special embassy...
Liang, Mr. T. K., commercial attaché,
Chinese legation, 2001 Nineteenth street.
Lieuallen, W. G., assistant, Senate doc-
ument room, 3008 Seventeenth street NE.
Iima, Mr. d’Arenas de, Portuguese lega-
lon i a ea a Se
ILinnard, Naval Constructor Joseph H.,
Bureau of Construction and Repair, 1712
Eistrecti viii ven shnivdan wiihis sie sik ein sive
Iinton, KF. B., chief clerk, Bureau of Chem-
istry, 220 Holly avenue. Takoma Park ..
Littell, Prof. F. B., Naval Observatory, 2507
Wisconsinavenue iio... Joie ola.
Littlefield, Edward Irving, assistant clerk,
Senate Committee Cuban Relations, The
Congressional... i ilo Uo inraiii
Littlehales, George W., Hydrographic en-
gineer, Navy Department, 2132 Leroy
Place ns i i ee ee
Littlepage, Thos. P., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, University of the United States. .
Lloyd, Daniel B., official reporter, Senate,
Xoo IE street. a he
ILochridge, Capt. P. D., General Staff, The
Damariscotia.. Shinar alii aa sin
Lockerman, B. G., Senate messenger.....
Lockwood, Col. Daniel W., Qpesicens iver
and Harbor Board, New York, 2 3
Lockwood; George B., 4 the
Vice-President... iver bears,
Lockwood, George M., division super-
intendent, Pension Office, 937 French
I SR en ee BA ret ST
Lodge, Geo. Cabot, assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Philippines, 2346 Massachu-
SCHIST AVENE, ote de Gad ave pein toils
Lodge, Henry Cabot:
Immigration Commission, 1765 Massa-
chusetigs avenues. vc... ec. cesn-aer ct
Committee Inaugural Ceremonies.....
Regent, Smithsonian Institution 5
Loeb William, jr., Secretary to the Presi-
dent (biography), 1454 Rhode Island
AVENE i ah weir ets nae
Loeffler, C. A., Senate gsseuser, 1444 New-
ton street..
Loeffler, Frank A. patent examiner, "3410
Thirteenth street.
Loftus, Mr. Edward H., first secretary
Siamese legation, The Arlington........
Logan, Capt. “Jas. A., jr., assistant to Com-
missary-General, 1718 Hstreet...........
logan, John S., assistant engineer of the
House, 633 Massachusetts avenue NE..
Logie, B. R., M. D., Hospital for Insane .
Loudon, Jonkheer I minister from the
Netherlands, 1901. F..street..... vi Shri
227
277
415
Page.
Love, Florence, assistant clerk, House
Committee, Public lands, 1412 Fifteenth
Stree etic ascitic isdyia te
Lovell, Jennie, clerk, House Committee,
Railways and Canals: it sens
Low Kia Chau, Chinese special embassy. .
Lower, Cyrus E, division chief, Agricul-
tural Department, 3719 New Hampshire
AVENUE vd es ss Sada Seis nines
Luby, Lieut. COmmARAIEIohY Mec., Bureau
Steam Engineering, U. S. N
Ludlow, Walter W., chief clerk, Treasury
Department, 712 Twentieth street .
Lufkin, W. W., clerk, House Committee,
Industrial Arts and’ Expositions, 2102 O
a Be Br I eS
Lyle, W. J., messenger, office Secretary of
the Senate, 204 New York avenue........
Lyman, Charles, division chief, Treasury
Department, The Ontario................
Lynch, Maj. Chas. assistant to Surgeon-
General, 1723 Twenty-first street........
Lynch, R. I., chemist, District of Colum-
bia, 2930 Fourteenth STeet. aiini
Lynn, David, foreman, Office Superintend-
ent of the Capitol. Hyattsville, Md......
Lyon, Frank B., Doorkeeper, House of
Representatives, The Van Dyke ........
Lyon, Lena M., clerk to Doorkeeper,
House of Representatives, The Van Dyke.
McAllister, Chas. A., chief engineer, Rev-
enue-Cutter Service, The Westmoreland.
McBlair, A. McD. assistant attorney, De-
partment of Justice, ‘The:Virginia.......
McCabe, George P., Solicitor, Agricultural
Department, 1428 Newton street ........
McCain, Col. Henry P., Assistant Adjutant.
General, 1856 Mintwood place...
McCambridge, Glen, messenger,
post-office, 3413 Holmead plage... 00
McCauley, Rdward, division superintend-
ent, Post-Office Department, 1719 Rhode
ISIN AVENUE S.. Sih vi hres wins iats miei 3 irs aed
McCaw, Maj. Walter D., librarian, Army
Medical Library, 1915 S Streets rn ue,
McCawley, Lieut. Col. Charles L., assistant
to quartermaster; Marine Corps, 1610 New
Hampshire avenue... 00. 0 0 0
McChesney, John D., division chief, Geo-
logical Survey, The Ontario... ........5
McClelland, Wm. F., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Expenditures in Navy Depart-
ment, 1302 I, street oul oh ve ea
McClintock, Abraham G., clerk, Office Sec-
retary of the Senate, 1725 H street. ......
McClure, James B., Senate messenger,
115 East Capitol Sirol. vo
McClure, Lieut. Col. Charles, assistant to
Adjutant-General, The Westmoreland. .
McConnell, James I., messenger, soldiers’
roll, oo5 Hast Capitol street... ..........
McCord, Miss J.L. V., librarian, Geological
Survey, 16opiQ street cna LET
McDermott, Eugene H., Senate messenger,
The Rockingham rs leEa he St Sh Sia teh er
McDonnell, C. C., Bureau of Chemistry,
2129 Eighteenth’ Shree foie aad
McDowell, Alexander, Clerk of the House,
The DEWEY. oui nos vintners oy ioe
McDowell, Lieut. W., Naval ‘Bureau of Ord-
nance, Florence Contte vio,
McEnery, Charles P., Senate messenger. .
McEnery, Douglas W., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Transportation and Sale of Meat
Products, 1366 Kenyon street............
McEntee, Assistant Naval Constructor
William, Bureau of Construction and
Repair, 1832 Jefarson place. ivan ane
McFarland, W. A. water department,
District of Columbia, 1123 Thirteenth
street... NY ER LR HC SRR Se SS
McGann, Joseph H., assistant clerk, House
Committee, Rivers and Harbors, 1345
Park road... iden Danis sani ns
McGee, W J:
Bureau of Soils, Cosmos Club..........
National Conservation Commission ...
McGill, Capt. John F., Marine Barracks...
227
227
321
265
259
249
416 Individual Index.
Page.
McGill, J. Nota, president, Reform School
HOT CITI =. hens toed
McGonigle, Charles A., Deputy Auditor,
Post-Office Department, The Windsor. .
McGrain, John J., storekeeper of the Sen-
ate, 122 V er
McGuffey, Margaret D., division chief, Li-
brary of Congress, 926 Seventeenth street.
McIlhenny, John A., Civil Service Commis-
sion, 1341 New Hampshire avenue.......
McIntosh, Lieut. Horace P., Office Naval
Intelligence, The Oakland...............
McIntyre, Maj. Frank, assistant to chief,
Bureau of Insular Affairs, 1815 U street. .
McKee, J. M., foreman, Housefolding room,
2I23 KR street... oo ee
McKenna, Joseph, associate justice, Su-
preme Court (biography), ‘The Con-
mechicnl ia in CE na
McKenney, C. R., enrolling clerk of the
House, the Congressional. ..............
Mcaegnsy, James H., clerk, Supreme
Court of the United States, 1523 Rhode
sland avenne:. co. dic bunt a vaio
McKenzie, Alexander, assistant assessor
and member Excise Board, District of
Columbia, 1446 Harvard street ...........
McKercher, Clark, assistant attorney, De-
partment of Justice, 1243 Kenyon street.
McLaurin, Anselm J., Immigration Com-
mission, Congress Hall...................
Mclean, Donald H., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Contingent Expenses, The Cairo.
McLean, Harry Clay, chief clerk, health
office, District of Columbia, 1373 Irving
a a
McLean, Rear-Admiral Thomas C., presi-
dent Board of Inspection and Survey,
The Benedick. ..i.. Loi veer cca hnnaton
McMichael, I. H., chief page, House of Rep-
resentatives, 2323 Pistreel......i.........
McMillin, Frank E., chief inspector, Post-
Office Department, 2417 Eighteenth
CIR A a SE RE a Se eb
McNamara, Stuart, assistant United States
attorney, District of Columbia, 2409 Eight-
eenthistreets. in io in sa
McNabb, Chas. E., attorney, Department
of Justice, The Gladstone... .. we re
McNeely, L. J., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Appropriations, The Ala-
Dama. ee aE As
McNeill, W. C., M. D., Howard University.
McNeir, William:
Bureau chief, State Department, 3413
Brown street............. J. od
United States Geographic Board.......
McPhaul, John, law clerk, General Land
Office, 1223 Irving street RE...
McRae, "Hector C., clerk, Office of the Clerk
of the House, 3, Bstreet. oon
McVean, M. J., Forest Service, Mt. Rai-
nier, Md A ee A et a er aa 3h
Maclennan, W.F., division chief, Treasury
Department, he TOTOND + sav ies
Mabbett, John S., clerk, House Committee
on Expendituresi inthe War Department,
TIOSHI SLECEL nisl iui vi sie bei iaie atuintoin bin luca in tel
Macauley, John B., examiner in chief,
Patent Office, Grafton street, Chevy
Macfarland, Henry B. F., Commissioner,
District of Columbia, The Marlborough.
Mackenzie, R L., messenger, House post-
office, Yorr Hi street... 5. a cea ilo
Mackey, F. D., House document room, 210
EC Street,... ii sia Se ee eae
Macomb, Col. Montgomery M. :
General Staff, 1271 New Hampshire
AVENUE LL 8, eis sis ain slo die spon dia ee
Board of Ordnance and Fortification. .
Maddox, Fletcher, solicitor, Internal Rev-
enue, 1753 0 street... Joi ecrier ae iotiie nits
Maddox, Robert IL., chief clerk, foreign
mails, The Alabama... vue ere cimse.
Magee, Charles I,., secretary, National
Red Cross, 116 Tennessee avenue NE. .
Magill, Maj. Louis J., assistant to adjutant
and inspector, Marine COEDS: vrs nvsininivins
374
250
223
246
273
258
254
221
277
248
274
Page.
Magruder, G. Lloyd, board of visitors, Hos-
pital JOLTNSANE ors ene enr on te irendy
Magruder, Willis B., division chief, Patent
Office, 1732 North Capitol street .
Maher, George W., division chief, Treasury
Departmeut, 1805 Belmont road .........
Maher, James D., deputy clerk, Supreme
Court of the United States, 2025 H street.
Mahoney, Lieut. Col. James E., command-
ing Marine Barracks. ..... .  -cieas toe.
Malloy, William M., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Foreign Relations, Y. M. C. A.
Bull@ing ee ae a a
Mann, B. Pickman, president, Board of Chil-
dren’s Guardians, District of Columbia. .
Mann, Charles H., superintendent, House
Press Gallery, 627 A street NE ..........
Mann, James R., Regent, Smithsonian In-
stitution oiieloiviole slaTeiuisie ia sie 0)s miele pic intu ulaisleu inte ui
Manney, Rear-Admiral H. N. (retired),
Bureau of Equipment. The Klsmere.....
Marean, Ralph B., Senate messenger,
Pinehurst, Chevy Chase, Mts
Marix, Capt. Adolph, chairman Light-
House Board, 1725 street... .. ci...
Markhany, Capt. Edw. M., U. S. A., assist-
ant to Engineer Commissioner, District
of Columbia; jor Nistreel ......... i...
Marlatt, C. L,., ‘Assistant Entomologist, 1440
Massachusetts avennes,...0. 0... ....
Marr, Samuel S., division chief, General
Land Office, 1318 Corcoran street........
Marsh, Frances M:, assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Rules, 133 North Carolina
avenue SI Soin Re sake
Marsh, William E., clerk, Senate Commit-
fe Mines and Mining, 1701 First street
Af Elma ER EL SE
Marshall, Brig. Gen. W. 1. :
Chief of Engineers, Stoneleigh court.
Board of Ordnance and Fortification. .
Commissioner Soldiers’ Home. ........
Marshall, Capt. Richard C., jr., assistant
to Quartermaster-General, 1737 Corcoran
HRT Gr TE eT a Be A
Marshall, R. B., division chief, Geological
Survey, 3157 Eighteenth street ..........
Martel, Viscount de, French embassy.....
Martin, Mr. Henri, secretary, Swiss lega-
tion, 1748 M street Sieh a ee Siena
Martin, John S., jr., translator, State De-
partment, 1731 Potreet
Martin, Leslie H.,clerk, Senate Committee,
Additional Accommodations for the Ii-
brary, Century Club......................
Martin, Pay Director J. R., Storekeeper,
Navy-Yard Tore studs re furte u Sl Cals wi SATS
Marvin, Prof. Charles F., division chief,
Weather Bureau, 1404 Girard street......
Mason, Maj. Charles F., assistant to Sur-
geon-General, U. S.A, 1839 U street.....
Mason, Rear-Admiral N. E. , Chief Bureau
of Ordnance, 1973 Biltmore street. .......
Mathewson, E. H., Bureau of Plant Indus-
try, 1486 Meridian place... Ls el
Matlack, M. E., printing and bill clerk of
the House, 230 A street SH........ ......
Matsui, Keishiro, Mr., counselor, Japa-
nese embassy, 2131 Bancroft place erin
Maury, W
Spanish Rventy Claims Commission,
1767 Massachusetts avenue .
Board of visitors, Hospital for Insane.
Maxam, Oliver M., ‘assistant general su-
perintendent, Life-Saving Service, 1749
Park roads 50 foo disdnt oe sath
Maxson, Louis W., patent examiner, Ken-
sington, Md
ME, Edgar H., law clerk, Office Solicitor
.S. N., 17 Quarry TOM. ners Lon nte
May, Geo, T., chief clerk, Office Comptrol-
ler of the Currency, 2119 F street........
Mayer, Carl F., division chief, General
Land Office, 3459 Holmead place ........
Mayo, Capt. H. F., naval secretary Light-
House Board. Yon Ontario .
Mayor des Planches, Baron Edmondo, Ttal-
ian ambassador, 1400 New Hampshire
AVENE, iyi ys vs vis shine sits dina lv abn vie eh iduiate
255
277
249
nk
Ba
N
Individual Index.
Page.
Megrew, J. P., captain, Capitol police, The
Rolandi.iss ie. vive iiveviries Die beta ee
Mejia, Seflor Don Federico:
Salvadorean minister, The Portland..
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republics oi. aii Sn ata
Melidn, Lafinur, Dr. Luis:
Uruguayan minister, 1529 Rhode Island
Avene a
Governing board, Bureau of American
RepuDHEs s.r nae
Melby, C. B., chief page, House of Repre-
sentatives, a6 lowa circle ,...............
Melvin, Alonzo, D., chief, Bureau of Ani-
mal Industry, 1751 Park road............
Meriam, Lewis, division chief, Bureau of
the Census, 1606 Seventeenth street.....
Merkling, Frank J., Senate messenger, 221
1 BIE rl be SRN SE eR
Merrell, Rear-Admiral John P., General
Board, A. SN Sed a a ee os
Merriam, C. Hart:
Chief, Bureau Biological Survey, 1919
Sixteenth street. .
United States Geographic Board ......
Merrill, Capt. Thomas E., General Staff,
‘The Damariscotta........................
A I Oe SR NL a Ss
Merrill, Henry S., assistant chief Revenue-
Cutter Service, 416 T street ........... i.
Merrill, Thomas $S., disbursing and ap-
pointment clerk, Bureau of the Census,
Chevy Chase, Md aa
Merritt, A. D. , principal examiner, Patent
Office, 3327 Seventeenth street...
Merry, EE Remington, jr., clerk, ‘Senate
Committee on Printing, 1025 Vermont
RT Ee SI FON Ra RT
Metcalf, Haven, Bureau of Plant Industry,
3620 Bleventh street... anes
Meyer, George von Lengerke:
Postmaster-General (biography), Con-
necticut avenue and S street.........
Member, Smithsonian Institution....
Meyer, H. H. B., division chief, Library of
Congress, 2602 Wisconsin avente.........
Meyers, Wm. F., assistant secretary, Board
of Commissioners, District of Columbia,
gto Trving slreet ii, it unio alin
Middleton, Jefferson, division chief, Geo-
logical Survey, 3412 Thirteenth street. ...
Miles, Basil, Superintendent of Foreign
Mails, v733 Twentieth street........ ...
Miller, Edward E.,clerk, House Committee,
Public Buildings and Grounds, The Ger-
MAMAS Sle ER sa a
Miller, Henry W., M. D., Hospital for the
TUNSATRE seh hres os roids ai
Miller, Kelly, dean, College Arts and
Sciences, Howard U niversity............
Miller, Iewis M., clerk, House Committee, -
Dil of Columbia, 118 Third street
Se es SR Lo SE
Mills, Brig. Gen. Anson, Mexican Water
Boundary Commission, 2 Dupont circle .
Mills, Edward, messenger, House post-
office zoo Cistreel =... ai nana,
Mills, John S., United States Googeapitc
Board a A A A Ee To a a
Less EE a
Milton, William H., Printing Investigation
Commission, Congress Hall..............
Mink, Passed Asst. Surg. O. J., Naval
Medical School, 1810 Tistreet............%
Mitchell, T,. P., Assistant Comptroller of
the Treasury, The Leamington..........
Mitchell, Thomas H., patent examiner,
1313 POITIIONE SETCCt. 2. os x tes sues sss
Mohler, John R., division chief, Bureau of
Animal Industry, 2317 First street. ......
Moll, Archibald G., messenger, House
Dost-office, 200 € street. ...... LL
Moltke, Count, Danish minister........:..
Momsen, Hart, division chief, Bureau of the
Census, Garrett EarkeMdi or. odade ie
Moncheur, Baron, minister of Belgium, 1719
JFL SEYeet (os vieicn sive Nis iete ei iatonto soleil chinaie
228
324
227
417
Page.
Money, Hernando D., National Monetary
Commission, The Portner................
Money, Hernando D., jr., clerk, Senate
Committee, Corporations in District of
Columbia, The Windsor .o...i.. i
Money, Lucretia E., Senate messenger,
he Windsor. ov in sain eh hee
Montagliari, Marquis Paolo di, counselor,
Italian embassy............coveietiennns..
Montero, Sefior Don Antonio, Cuban le-
gation, The Benedick i... 0 aaa. 0s
Montgomery, Charles P., division chief,
Treasury Department, 2825 Thirteenth
street i i rn a Ra ar ae vse
Montgomery, Maj. George, assistant to
Chief of Ordnance, Florence Court......
Moody, William Henry, associate justice
Supreme Court (biography), The Con-
TTT Fn ER rr OR SS IRR Ol Ls SR
Mooney, William M., disbursing clerk,
Post-Office Department, 1919 I street. .
Moore, Capt. Richard C., assistant to Chief
of Engineers, Washington Barracks. .
Moore, David, distributing clerk of the
House, The Driscoll... .... een loo,
Moore, Edward B., Commissioner of Pat-
ents, 2332 iIColumbia read. ......... i...
Moore, Hervey S., Senate messenger,
1700 Rifteenth street... ...... 0.0%
Moore, I.ewis B., dean, Teachers’ College,
Howard UniverSity ......... 0 nl.
Moore, Millard J., patent examiner, Glen-
carlyn, TS
Moore, Miss Mary Ella, secretary Board
Children’ s Guardians, District of Colum-
Moore, Willis I,., Chief Weather Bureau,
Tlie BHOTENANT vrs snes ass
Moores, Fdward S., purchasing agent,
Government Printing Office, 467 M
gireet..... ta a dL aS eat
Moran, W. H., assistant chief, Secret Serv-
ice, Toss Biltmore street. ..... i... i. L 0
Moreno, Vera, Commander Don Virgilio,
naval attaché Argentine legation........
Morgan, Herbert R., assistant naval as-
tronomer, 3420: R street ..... 0. Lo...
Morgan, Raymond B., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Pacific Railroads, 41 B street.....
Morisey, George H., messenger, soldiers’
roll The Roland... ci. svaeiie: nies a
Morley, C. H., assistant bookkeeper, Office
Sergeant-at-Arms of the House, 214 North
Capitolistreel i nd
Morris, Ballard N., patent examiner, 1761
Willand street 0h Bow nan Jae
Morris, Charles M., clerk, Senate "Com-
mittee, Patents, 504 Third 'streeti........
Morris, Finis D., division chief, Patent
Office, 63S street nr yi ai
Morris, "Martin F. , justice, court of appeals
(retired), 1314 Massachusetts avenue.....
Morrison, Hugh A., ir., assistant superin-
tendent reading room, Library of Con-
gress, o302 First street. ........ 0. 0...
Morrison, John G., assistant superintend-
ent reading room, Library of Congress,
2817 Fourteenth street...................0
Morrison, John IL,., stationery clerk of the
Honge, New Berne ..oviiv.s cou: solioe sieht
Morrison, Lisle, Bureau of Plant Industry,
TALON BAPE oe ses inns a on
Morrison, Thomas, bureau chief, State De-
partment, 1443 Sstreet........ o.oo
Morrow, Major Jay J.:
United States Engineer Office, 1930
Calvert street i ...l cv dius lie
River and Harbor Board ....
Morse, B. H., assistant engineer ‘of the
House, 2138 G SECC, Li ai eas 0
Morteza, Khan, Gen., Persian minister,
1800: Nineteenth street i... 0. on...
Mortimer, W. W., division chief, Patent
Office, 1755 Columbia road .
Morton, a L., patent examiner, "The On-
Morton, Lieut. Comdr. J. Pe Office Judge-
Advocate- General, U.S. N., 1615 Twenty-
Rrstiatreet id nial ho inlanan oni
219
418 Individual Index.
Page.
Mosby, John §., assistant attorney, De-
partment of Justice, 1371 I, street...... 255
Moseley, Edward A., secretary, Interstate
Commerce Commission, 1113 Sixteenth
Street ilo ra eT aa ne tre 273
Moses, Roy H., private secretary tothe Sec-
retary of the Navy, The Allenhurst ..... 257
Mosher, Alex., division chief, Patent Office,
750 Pwentiethistreet ...... vi il, on 263
Moss, H. N., superintendent of streets,
District of Columbia, 1790 Lanier place.. 375
Mowinckel, Mr. Hugo, secretary of Norwe-
glanlegation.... con al Ea 323
Mowry, H. N., private secretary to Assist-
ant Secretary of Agriculture, Lanham,
1 Eom el ee Ce es 265
Moxley, Fugene C., assistant to official re-
porters of Senate, 1150 Seventeenth
Cy a Ae a BE ee a Be 228
Mudd, A. I, chief clerk, Division of Publi-
cations, Agricultural Department, 1925
Pifteentiiolreet, ...cioi ese series 268
Mudd, Sydney E. jr., tvisant index clerk
of the House, Congress Halll oo ana 224
Mudd, W. Griffin, clerk, House Committee,
Expenditures, Department of Justice.... 226
Mulligan, Commander Richard T., Bureau
of Navigation, 1432 M street.............. 258
Mullowny, A. R., judge, police court, 1735
Oregon avenue. le re eae oO 319
Murphy, Edward V., official reporter,
Senate, 2511 Pennsylvania avenue. as... 227
Murphy. J. W., Speaker’sclerk............ 224
Murphy, James W., official reporter, Sen-
ate, 116 B street NE . 228
Murray, Brig. Gen. Arthur:
Chief of Artillery, 1616 Rhode Island ave-
MEE Sh a eed ey 254
General Stall... Sh ohn na dni 252
Board of Ordnance and Fortification.... 254
Murray, Lawrence O., Comptroller of the
Currency, The Benedick................, 250
Murray, Nat. C., assistant statistician, Ag-
ricultural Department, Takoma Park... 268
Myers, Albert P., clerk, House Committee,
Claims, The Royalton.................... 226
Nabuco, Mr. Joaquim:
Brazilian ambassador, 22 Lafayette
SAUATEL Lo aa aL as niles 320
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republics i. iv. inne dasa sine s 273
Nagai, Mr. Matsuzo, Japanese embassy,
The Champlalni. hl io iain 323
Nash, William I,., messenger, Speaker’s
table, gol street Ll nila ori aia 225
Neagle, Pickens, law clerk, Office Solici-
tor, U.S. N., 1467 Irving street ete 259
Neal, C. WwW, messenger, House post-office,
200: street, bo i see 227
Neal, Henry, Speaker's messenger, 1229
Batreet rR 224
Nébolsine, Commander, Russian embassy,
2115 Bancroft place.l. ir hn an ae Re 324
Neighbors, H. Fletcher, clerk, Secretary
of State, 1760 Church street ...... ....... 248
Neill, Charles P.:
Commissioner of Labor, 3556 Macomb
Street. Jo Sn Te Se es 2770
Immigration Commission ............. 219
Nelson, Knute, National Conservation
Commissions: ooh vi das moda an. 27%
Nesbit, John B., messenger, House poss
office, 238 North Capitol : street. . 227
Nesbit, Paymaster Donald W., Uv. 8 ‘N.,
New Varnum . sv turns ios 259
Nesbit, Scott, disbursing agent, Coast
and Geodetic Survey, The Luxor ....... 270
Neville, Maj. W. C., Commander Marines,
Navy-Vard RP 259
Nevitt, Dr. J. Ramsey, coroner, District of
Columbia] 1820 Calvert street. ats eaten UOT
Newberry, “Iruman Handy
Secretary of the Ey (biography),
1315: Sixteenthistreet: oi ai 257
Member Smithsonian Institution..... 272
Newell, Frederick H., Director Reclama-
tion Service, zror Sstreet .... co 265
Newsom, Charles F., Senate Sianngen de-
partmental telegraph, The Milburn . 228
Page.
Newton, Commander J.T", general inspect-
or of Naval Equipment, The Toronto....
Newton, James T., patent examiner, 1625
Reslreeh 1 arity vvrniviae sn ori cnind cairo Voi
Nicholson, Philip W., fire marshal, District
of Columbia, 1619 New Jersey avenue... .
Niedner, E., assistant clerk, House Com-
mittee, Public Buildings and Grounds,
603: Buclid street. tani Lo a
Niess, Edwin A., assistant attorney, Post-
Office Department, 61 Rhode Island ave-
ELL SH Pa Roh se EL i a
Nixon, Charles R., clerk, Office Secretary
of the Senate, 1102 Fourteenth street....
Nixon, G. A., patent examiner, Florence
OE ne a er Es
Nixon, Richard B.:
Financial clerk of the Senate, 1336
Fairmontstreet ......o. ovo tonnes
Disbursing officer, National Monetary
Commissions... i iil oe
Norris, Wm. F., attorney, Deparpment of
Justice, Ihe Marlborough EE
North, S. Director of the Census,
1414 a fn sEetreel ini sai onan
Norton, Commander Harold P. , Bureau of
Steam Engineering, Stonelgigh Court...
Norton Horace D., House messenger, 231
North Capitolstreet... i. ve. coset nn
Northup, Clarence G., assistant clerk, Sen-
ate Committee, Private I,and Claims, 1755
Columbia roads. dite vi santa ine rn ttenis
Noyes, Theo. W.:
President Public Library, District of
Columbia... oii. tose iba decane,
Director, Columbia Institution for Deaf
and Dumb. coi alt ahi ae he
Nutting, Naval Constructor D. C., Bureau
of Construction and Repair, 1814 Newton
Strela ct isthe ea es
Nyce, A. W., Senate messenger, 1827 Kalo-
rama road. Joel sn han
Nye, Francis, assistant district assessor,
1443 Belmont t0ad..: vor oinvs set sine
Nyman, Howard S., collector of the port,
1406 Twenty-first GErect ov th eh
O’Brien, john H., Senate messenger, The
CARIREE ols one a otis sts cas tit dans
O’Brien, Mrs. H., matron, Insane Hospital
O’Brien, Richard A. secretary, Board of
Plumbing, District of Columbia .........
O’Conmnell, Maurice D., Solicitor of the
Treasury, The Woodley... .c..uvii codon
O'Leary, Paymaster Charles R., assistant
storekeeper; Navy Vard................0
O'Malley, Mary, M. D., Hospital for In-
EE a ee a
O'Reilly, Brig. Gen. Robert M.:
Surgeon-Gemneral, U.S. A, 1825 Q street.
Board of Commissioners, Soldiers’
35 Coins Com Se Lo i a er i
NationalRed Cross... 0 lwo.
Obaldia, Mr. José de J., secretary, legation
Of PaARINA Gi, resis sis oo vit ahsee viv
Ober, Geo. C., president, Board Regular
Medical Examiners, and secretary, Board
of Medical Supervisors, District of Colum-
bia zioB street SH... . co cial
Offutt, A. E., purchasing agent, Hospital
foriinsanel aa Lie ase
Ogden, Edwin J., clerk, House Committee,
o Dxpenditures, Post-Office Department .
gden, S. R., House messenger, 1905 I street
oy Robert Shaw, Assistant Secretary
of War, 1755 Nstreet'. oo onion lu
Olmsted, Victor H., statistician, Agricul-
tural Department, 1761: P Street civ inn
Olsen, J. A., custodian, Washington Monu-
ment, TheTown ores ash
Olsen, Iauritz, messenger, soldiers’ roll,
227 New Jersey avenue. viv vii ahve
Olesen, Tory, Pension Office, 644 E street
NEB ss ln nse.
Orcutt, Warren H., chief clerk, Office of
the Inspector-General, 509 East Capitol
SERCel. Ce I Sa Ln Tl he a sh
Orton, W. A., Bureau of Plant Industry,
Takoma Park. oii aan savannas
Osborn, Carl H., Senate messenger ........
257
263
375
227
277
275
276
374
226
225
Ce
Re
Individual Index.
Page.
Osborne, John Ball, bureau chief, State
Department, 2116 Connecticut avenue..
Osterhaus, Lieut. H. W. ordnance duty.
NAVYSYATA isis rah SS Ah ss a
Ou Shou-tchun, Mr, first secretary, Chinese
legation, 2001 Nineteenth street..........
Overstreet, Jesse, National Monetary Com-
mission, New Willard... .................
Overstreet, H. I,., Assistant Chief Clerk of
the House, 156 Thirteenth street SE ....
Ovey, Mr. Esmond, M. V. O., British em-
bassy he Albany 0. os heen
Ow Keng Hsiang, Chinese special embassy
Oyster, James F., president Board of Edu-
cation, District of Columbia... ........ =.
Padgett, I,emuel P., National Monetary
Commission, The Dewey .....,. coven... -
Padr6é y Almeida, Sefior Don, first secre-
tary, Cubanlegation i... adios
Pagan, Oliver KE., attorney, Department
of Justice, 1965 Biltmore street ..........
Page, Fernando, messenger, soldiers’ roll,
sraD:street SI: Linens in Sins
Page, T,ogan W., director office of public
roads, Agricultural Department, 2223
Massachusetts avenue sl. oo ilio Sian
Page, William Tyler, clerk, House Com-
jes, Accounts, Friendship Heights,
Md oe a SR I SN
Palacios Costa, Mr. Alberto, first secretary
Argentine legation, The Benedick.......
Palmer, Aulick, United States mar-
shal, District of Columbia, 1401 Belmont
ET Ee a het a SR SS a Ca
Palmer, I. S., Bureau of Biological Survey,
1gz0 Biltmorestreet i. ly an
Pangburn, W. S., House document room,
323 Bast Caplio street vi. oi nv 5
Pardo, Mr. Felipe:
Peruvian minister, The Shoreham....
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republies:. inn inn Sl asians
Parker, E. W., division chief, Geological
Survey, 1815 Corcoran street. -...........
Parker, James I., assistant attorney to Sec-
retary of the Interior, 221 Floridaavenue.
Parker, Robert E., clerk to Assistant Sec-
retary of War, I'he Porlner........co..0
Parker, William W. W,, treasurer, Colum-
bia Institution for Deaf and Dumb, 1738
Connecticubavenue cou. 00 0.
Parkinson, Alfred C., minute and jour-
nal clerk of the Senate, 33 B Street. .....
Parsons, Arthur J., division chief, Library
of Congress, 1813 N street... on
Parsons, John H., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Education and I,abor........
Pastor, Sefior Don I,uis, first secretary,
Spanish legation, 1721 Q street...........
Patrick, G. E., division chief, Bureau of
Chemistuy: oi an asia
Patrick, Lewis S., clerk, Senate Committee,
Expenditures in Agricultural Depart-
ment; ThelaFetrad.. dni. covniiias
Patterson, A. B., Forest Service, The Marl-
TR LR ee RR Sl ME
Patterson, Margaret, assistant clerk, Senate
Commitee, Pensions i... voi funn
Paul, Edwin G., chief clerk, Reclamation
Service, College Park, Md... .............
Paull, George S., appointment clerk, Post-
Office Department, Kensington, Md.....
Payne, James F., House laborer, 1521 Pierce
Street a sna Fe ia,
Payne, Lieut. Comdr. Fred R., Bureau of
Navigation, The Westover...............
Payne, William K., clerk, House Commit-
tee, Ways and Means, The Burling-
Pease, Ferdinand H., assistant clerk Senate
Committee Immigration, 1404 Fifteenth
TB Xt ek ER NUE SE STR ST SSR
Pearsons, John H., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Education and I,abor, New
AYER Ee en SS LS rR
Peckham, Rufus W., associate justice,
Supreme Court (biography), 1217 Con-
necticut avenue vi nn Cra
322
321
221
419
Page.
Pederneiras, Lieut. Col. A. V. de, Brazilian
CINDAREY oi fet imine walsiaten aimee alate ee 320
Pedigo, Walter R., private secretary to Sec-
retary of War, The Alabama............ 251
Peelle, Stanton J., chief justice, Court of
Claims, TheCoteord oor ire ns 318
Peffers, John M., clerk, Senate Committee,
Enrolled Bills, oz3-H street... i. 221
Peirce, Vernon M., chief engineer, Office
Public Roads, Agricultural Department,
3401 Sixteenth street... .... oh... Lo. 269
Penn, Capt. Julius A., General Staff, 806
Seventeenth street... .......o.0 nL 252
Pennybacker, J. E., jr., Office of Public
Roads, Agricultural Department, 2308
Phiststreetis. ao ndon a nar 269
Peoples, Paymaster C. J., U. S. N.;" The
Mount Pleasant. ..h ie tie cabot 259
Percy, Medical I nspector H. T., medical
officer; Navy-Varde..... i ovo oii. 259
Perkins, Frank Walley, assistant superin-
tendent, Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1723
DeSales street ier os Sa i 270
Perkins, George C., director, Columbia
Institution for Deaf and Dumb.......... 276
Perkins, James B., Printing Investigation
Commission, 1613 New Hampshire
Nr} LA ee A Te ie 219
Perry, Frank Sprigg, assistant United States
attorney, District of Columbia, The Im-
parla ne 319
Perry, R. Ross, director, Columbia Institu-
tion for Deafand DUMD ................. 276
Person, Robert S., Auditor for the Interior
Department, 3030 Qistreet. icant. 250
Peters, J. G., Forest Service, Baltimore, Md. 267
Pettus, Ww. I assistant, Marine- Hospital
Service, 1722 Connecticut avenue. ....... 251
Petty, J. T'., assistant assessor, District of
Columbia, ga3vOistreet ol... ol. 374
Philbin, E. T., clerk, House Committee,
Mines and MINiAg i to heavy, 226
Phillips, A. E., superintendent District
sewers, ‘Che Porlmer.. 0. 0 i ve ceivess 375
Phillips, E. F., division chief, Bureau of
Entomology, 1770 Willard street......... 268
Phillips, Herman A., journal clerk of the
House, 3327 Eighteenth street... ...0.. 224
Phillips, P. Lee, division chief, Library of
Congress; i7iz:- HEH street coo. wo sion ool 246
Phillips, William, third assistant secretary
of State, 1612 K streel...i.. canis 248
Phinney, Arthur W., assistant clerk, House
Committee, Invalid Pensions, 236 North
Capitol street or J or vo sa Pata dl 226
Pickett, Charles J., Senate messenger, 606
a ae EN Be de 221
Pickens, James M., editor, Bureau of Ani-
mal In ustry, 1303 Wallach, plage....... 266
Pierce, A. I,., editorial cleric Bureau of
Chemistry, 1328 Eleventh street . 267
Pierce, Edwin S., Deputy Sergeant-at-Arms
of the House, 1412 Chapin street......... 225
Pierce, Frank, First Assistant Secretary
of the Interior, The Rochambeau........ 262
Pierce, Lovick, chief clerk, Bureau of Edu-
cation, grr Massachusetts avenue........ 264
Pillsbury, Rear-Admiral John E.:
Chief, Bureau of Navigation, 1755 Q
Sire a i i i Sea 258
General Board, U. S. N.. .... v0 260
Pillsbury, Dennis C., assistant clerk, Sen-
ate Committee, Claims, 912 8 street...... 221
Pifia, Sefior Don Ramén, Spanish minister. 324
Pinchot, Gifford:
Chief, Forest Service, 1615 Rhode Island
TR Erin Si am eR a, Sp CER Te 267
Chairman, National Conservation Com-
rT ELT Fo EL BE 277
Piper, Charles V., Bureau of Plant Indus-
try, 1647 Lamont street . 267
Platt, Benjamin S., enrolling clerk of ‘the
Senate, The RORNOKE ocr sreees inns a 220
Platt, Thomas C., chairman, Printing
Investigation Commission, The Arling-
1 8 eR Ee ON ESR SE 219
Pleadwell, Surg. F.L., Bureau of Medicine
and Surgery, U.S. N., The Marlborough. 259
i I I
420. Individual Index.
Page
Plummer, Fred G.:
Forest Service, 1333.0 street............ 267
Geographic Board. ....... ies ssseiasaes 274
Pombo, Sefior Don Eduardo, Colombian le-
gation Ais alae i500 di eis ie o'w Oh uiie + mua et haile a re a at eae 321
Poole, Capt. John Hudson, U. S. A., su-
perintendent, State, War, and Navy
Bellies 2119 S Te Sa ey 248
Pond, B. W., patent examiner, 1887 Newton
reel niibeennn alae 263
Pope, A. 1,., division chief, Patent Office, 627
East Capitol streel.... ..civu ed eisai 263
Portela, Sefior Don Epifanio:
Argentine minister, 1800 Massachu-
sells avenue... ..... hides ics ceive 320
Governing board, Bureau of American
REPUDHECS codes inv aiatabnimeins bani aiumiais s 273
* Portela, Sefior Don Julidn, Argentine lega-
Ed de Eh RE A LN a a 320
Porter, Maj. David D., asst. adjutant and
inspector, Marine Corps, 1751 Q street.... 261
Porter, Joseph I1., assistant division super-
intendent Post-Office Department, 3225
Hleventhistreet ......... oan oi. 00, 256
Porter, Maj. John Biddle, assistant to
Judge-Advocate- -General, bs. Al 17321
SUBCE. aisls (vis a sie ele nisiatals rnin else's: alaiuiaiallniatolol 252
Porter, Paul D., Deputy Sergeant-at-Arms
of the House, Congress Hall............. 225
Portes de la Fosse, Mr. des, counselor,
Frenchembassy.............vv. cooseivaes 322
Post, William I,., superintendent of docu-
ments, 15131 amont street. ............. ... 274
Pottenburgh, Harry, assistant disbursing
clerk of the House, The Ralston......... 224
Potter, Albert F., assistant forester, 1307
Peet a aa 267
Potts, Capt. T. M., Captain of the Navy-
a EE EI eB ER Tr 259
Powderly, T. V., division chief, Bureau of
Immigration, 502 Quincy street.......... 271
Powell, G. Harold, Bureau of Plant Indus-
try, 1867 Parkitoad coe seis sata ie canines 267
Powell, Grahame H., secretary, Board of
Ordnance and Fortification, 2503 Wis-
CONS AVEIUE, sass aoe =r is or 5a eb marviale 254
Powers, Le Grand, chief statistician, Bu-
reau of the Census, 3355 Eighteenth
SEECEL vets Jey vies loraivisie foie sisiniaininias vsaivia oiainiainte 270
Poyer, Commander John M., Bureau of
Navigation, The Champlain. ate tateeide 258
Pratt, Ralph B., private secretary to Com-
missioner West, rrr street: hc. oan 374
Prender, Robert H., chief clerk, Office
Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General, 145
Carroll street SE... v.vvi. io niaveisnes sinless 257
Pressey, Warren E., assistant postmaster
of the Senate, 149 A street NE........... 223
Preston, James D., superintendent Senate
Press Gallery, 1366 Meridian street. ..... 383
Preston, R. E., examiner, Bureau of the
Mint, 53 K Street NB. vos onan on 251
Preus, J. A. O., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Public Lands, 309 Maryland
avenMMEeNT Lr atte velit. 222
Preuschen von und zu Iiebenstein, Com-
mander Baron F., naval attaché, Austria-
Hungarian embassy, ‘Che Highlands... 320
Price, Byron J., Deputy Auditor, Navy
Department, 1428 Kstreet,, voi Gives 250
Price, Lieut. Commander H. B., Naval Bu-
reau of Ordnance, 2121 N street..... 238
Price, Medical Director Abel F., President
Board of Medical Examiners, U. S. N.,
2233 Q street. .....oooiiiiiiiiiiiiinne. 261
Price, Overton W.:
Associate forester, Forest Service,
Braddock Heights, Vali. ooo Dntiveas 267
National Conservation Commission. 277
Prince, Howard L., librarian, Patent Office,
DHE POT NET va ssi es ete ss ae esl nine pwn 263
Prince, Lieut. Col. Thomas c. assistant
to quartermaster, Marine Corps, The
AIDANY or oloiiien is sai ei sisiiimivn Siownitie visto divis 261
Prindle, Geo. B., Senate messenger, The
Burlington. oo, ee ees 221
Prittiwitz und Gaffron, Mr. von, German
embassy, 1744 Pstreet.................on.. 322
Page.
Procter, Lieut. Commander A. M., ord-
nance duty, Navy-Yard ........v...c0vyes
Proctor, C. B., battalion chief engineer, fire
department, District of Columbia, 1221 G
street NRE vii ober on ansio rine s shits
Proctor, James M., assistant United States
attorney, District of Columbia, Kensing-
tory Mid. ness a inh et ae
Proudfit, Samuel v., assistant commis-
sioner, General Land Office, 2550 Four-
LEOHEILBETOCE svar vn rs ciinis os Cas nnn ants
Prouty, Charles A., Interstate Commerce
Commissioner, The Portner..............
Pugh, James I,., jr., assistant corporation
counsel, District of Columbia, 3402 Mount
PIeASANE SLTCEE snes nro ran reine s
Pugh, William B., law examiner, General
ILand Office, Kenilworth street, North
Chevy Chase, NU ir a oe aa ss
Pujo, Arsené P., National Monetary Com-
mission, The Arlington Sea a we Las
Pullman, "Col. John W., assistant Quarter-
master-General, The Farragut..........
Pulsifer, Pitman, clerk, Senate Committee,
Naval ‘Affairs, 1457 Girard street.......
Pulsifer, Woodbury, clerk, Senate Commit-
tee, Commerce, ‘The Brunswick..........
Putnam, G. R., division chief, Coast and
Geodetic Survey, Cosmos Club
Putnam, Herbert, Librarian of Congress,
COSMOS CID, cans ir orate fois pani
Putnam, Lieut. Russell B., aid to comman-
dant Marine Corps, 1023 Vermont avenue.
Quaintance, A. L,., division chief, Bureau of
Entomology, 1807 Phelps place...........
Quesada, Senior Don Gonzalo de:
Cuban minister, 1750 Massachusetts
AVEIIUC Ss eels 2s pie n lo Bi air ont i he
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republics rN SR Sn
Quigley, Edward T., chief clerk, solicitor,
Department of Commerce and Labor,
616 Bast Capitol street. ........ .uiouels
Quinn, James P., House folding room, 1014
PATLOOTILIE SUECOL sy ses sven sonata nr
Rafter, G. S., patent examiner, 3105 Six-
CONLIN SLICEE: i sii s rr aves inane
Rainey, F. H., chief clerk, money-orde1
division, Post-Office Department, 2105 O
ee
Ralph, Joseph KE., director, Bureau of
Engraving and Printing, 1246 Newton
Street NI. tines snitis sein i ve diate
Ramsay, Emma F., Senate messenger,
The Bithelhurst..... 0. oes feet iients
Randall, George C., House folding room,
S12. D street NRL ont viv cussions
Randolph, John, assistant chief clerk,
Court of claims, si:listreel ood nv
Randolph, John 5. clerk to chief clerk,
War Department, "711 Corcoran street..
Ransdell, Daniel Moore (biography), Ser
geant- -at-Arms of the Senate, 130 B street
NE
Ransom, Brayton H., division chief, Bu-
reau of Animal Industry, 3012% R street.
Ratanayapti, Phra, chargé d’affaires ad in-
terim, Siamese legation, ‘The Arlington. .
Rathbun, Richard, assistant secretary
and curator, Smithsonian Institution, in
charge National Museum, 1622 Massa-
chusefts avenue... .. i.cs denn bios,
Ravaioli, Prof. Antonio, Italian embassy. .
Ravenel, W. de C., administrative assist-
ant, National Museum, 1611 Riggs place.
Rea, ‘Kennedy BE. assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Appropriations, go6 East
Capitol BITOOL or ies ons eins drs
Read, Capt. George W., General Staff.....
Reed, Clyde M., division superintendent,
Post-Office Department arate: ernie nininiats
Robes, Emil, House messenger, 10 B street
NID leitnins io he tests diate dure aida rwporesi lott
Reeder, I,. P., clerk, House Committee,
Irrigation of Arid Lands, 13 First street.
Reel, Miss Estelle, superintendent of In-
dian schools, The Arlington..............
Reeve, Felix A. , Assistant Solicitor of the
Treasury, 1628 Nineteenth street. .
259
375
272
323
272
221
252
256
225
226
264
255
\
Individual Index.
Reeve, Hermann D., clerk, House Commit-
tee, Military Affairs, 77 Seaton place.....
Reeves, Capt.” Y.. 8S. RK. Board of: :In-
spection and Survey, 1720 Twenty-second
Pie
Reichard, Edward, financial clerk, Office
Sergeant- -at-Arms of the House, 306 North
Carolina avenue SE. .
Reid, Bva C., M. D., Hospital for the In-
BANE es rs
Reisinger, Capt. Harold C., assistant pay-
master, Marine Corps, The Highlands. .
Reisinger, J. W. H., printing and docu-
ment clerk of the House, 120 C street... .
Remine, J. Q. A., House messenger........
Reouf, Ahmed Bey, first secretary Turkish
legation . . Sia ea ar ee Re a ee eT a
Retzmann, Commander, naval attaché,
German ‘embassy, The Portland.........
Reyburn, Robert, M. D., dean school of
medicine, Howard University . Eas Sh
Reynolds, C. Leslie, assistant superintend-
ent, National Botanic Garden, 1824 S
SEFC, Juillet ls io diesels o's tet in oie nietete ion i
Reynolds, James B., Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury, 1712 Histreet o.oo os
Rhoderick, E. P., division chief, Post-Office
Department, 924 Westminster street... ..
Rice, A. G., chief clerk, Bureau of Soils, I,iv-
ingston Heights, Vay hs ra
Rice, Anthony F., division chief, General
Land Office, 644. Gistreel. ion. hai ns
Rice, Maj. J. H., assistant to Chief of Ord-
nance, U.S, a 1722: 8i8treet. vive,
Rich, Wm. J., Datent examiner, 1468 Clifton
street.. terete el MaLeteta nuece
Rich, William H. , messenger, soldiers’ roll,
RE Venton. r= rears rete
Richards, Albert A. , special assistant attor-
ney, Department of Justice, The Sher-
Richards, Charles N., keeper of Senate sta-
tionery, 101 Massachusetts avenue.......
Richards, Dr. Alfred, District police sur-
TLE SRT TR LS CR EO ra iN pe RI
Richards, Lieut. Col. George, assistant pay-
master, Marine Corps, The Richmond. .
Richards, William P., District assessor,
137 S Boot. oh
Richards, W. S., disbursing clerk, Treasury
Department, he Portier...» ie iin
Richardson, J. S., chief clerk, ‘Commis
sioner of Internal Revenue, "The Cum-
Ber and RN a Sa bre
Rickert, M. Eugene, assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Printing, The I, aclede ......
Ricketts, Victor L., secretary, Printing
Investigation Commission, The Portner.
Richthofen, Baron Hartmann von, Ger-
man em bassy, 1530 Twenty-second street.
Riddleberger, H. H., clerk, Office Sergeant-
at-Arms, Senate, 1833 Vostreet coro
Rideout, Malcolm E., jr.,clerk, House Com-
mittee, Library, Bethesda, Md.
Ridgway, Robert, curator, National Mu-
SEI er a a
Riedesel, F. E., clerk, House post-office,
The WIcomieo sv irri aii
Rittenhouse, Irving, division chief, Gen-
So Land Office, Glen Echo Heights,
RS i Le ME ie Rae
Ritter, Alfred H., chief clerk, River and
Harbor Board, 1302 Park road
Ritter, R. P. , Senate messenger .
Rixey. P. M.:
Surgeon- General,
street
U.S. 'N., 1518
Rizer, Henry C., ef clerk, Geological
Survey, THO DOUVEE, Lire irnss cro
Roadstrum, V. N., special agent, Depart-
ment of justice, The Raleigh. .
Robb, Charles H., associate justice, ‘court
of appeals, The Rochambeau.............
Roberts, Thomas B., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Interoceanic Canals, 232 New Jer-
SEYAVENUE LL a I
Robertson, Jas., assistant, Nautical Al-
manac Office, 3018 Q street.......... ie
Page.
226
262
421
Page.
Robinson, C. B., veterinary surgeon, Dis-
trict of Columbia, gopsgtreet oh oe ll 375
Robinson, Jesse H., ‘division chief, Weather
Bureau, 1607 S BITCOh. ee hs inn es 265
Robinson, Phillips B., Senate messenger,
1219 Connecticut avenue I A I tr 222
Robinson, Naval Constructor R. H., Bureau
of Construction and Repair, 1322 Nine-
feenthistreel eo Col Sa som ONL 258
Robison, William B., United States mar-
shal’soffice, The Imperial .. ............. 319
Rochester, Maj. Wm. B., jr., Office Post Pay-
master, U. S. A., 1320 ‘Eighteenth street. 253
Rockwell, J. E, editor, Bureau of Plant
Industry, 31S Breet saa 266
Rodenberger, W. R., assistant superinten-
dent, House document room, 132 Third
street CY Ee re Te Le Sa 225
Rodgers, Brig. Gen. Wm. P., deputy gov-
ernor: Soldiers’ HOMIE. io. ve os sinerenessse 275
Rodgers, Rear-Admiral Raymond P.:
Chief, Office Naval Intelligence, 1715
Connecticut AVENUE... Lh SL 258
GeneralBoard, U.S. Ni... 0.0.0 260
Rodgers, J. G., assistant file clerk of the
House, The Gainesboro. 0. vu cus, ceiver 224
Roe, Harry V., document clerk of the
House, 634 D Street SH vo haan 224
Rogan, Chas. W., House messenger, 108 I
LT RE NER Ti 225
Rogers, Chas. C., collector of taxes, Dis-
trict of Columbia, 1745: Park voad........ 375
Rogers, Lieut. Col. Harry IL., Post Pay-
master, U. S. A., The Westmoreland . 253
Rope 'Paymaster-General Fustace B.
U.S. N., 2109 O street... .o. LLL 259
Rogers, Richard Reid, general counsel,
Isthmian Canal Commission, 929 Far.
ragutequare.. Joba 275
Rogers, Thomas E., superintendent, Na-
tional Bank Redemption Agency, The
Colm bin al ee ees 250
Rome, John, messenger, soldiers’ roll.. 225
Rommel, George M., husbandman, Bu-
reau Animal Industry, The Decatur... .. 266
Roosevelt, Theodore:
President of the United States (biog-
raphy), White House ................ 247
Presiding officer ex officio and mem-
ber Smithsonian Institution ........ 272
Patron ex officio Columbia Institution
for Deaf'and Dumb.................. 276
Root, Elihu:
Secretary of State (biography), 1500
Rhode Island avenue. ................ 248
Member, Smithsonian Institution..... 272
Chairman ex officio governing board,
Bureau American Republics......... 273
Roper, Daniel C., division chief, Bureau
of the Census, 816 Massachusetts avenue
A eS em PE Se 270
Rosa, Edward B., Physicist, Bureau of
Standards; Che Ontario... oo. LL 271
Rose, Henry M., assistant secretary of the
Senate, The Burlington a hh TA 220
Rose, J. N., associate curator, National
Muséum Ri Pe SE A RS Ne i Sl 272
Rosen, Baron, Russian ambassador, 1634 I
ireel. ol. RE SN Sa 324
Rosenau, Surg. M. J., Marine-Hospital
Service, 3211 Thirteenth street... ........ 251
Ross, Captain - Commandant Worth G.
Chief, Revenue - Cutter Service, The
Woodley a Fe STE es A ed 251
Rossiter, William S., chief clerk, Bureau
of the Census, Yo? K Stree APE Sn EL 270
Rousseau, H. H, U. , Isthmian Canal
Commission. 275
Royaards, Mr. Ww. n "The Netherlands
legation, Bausehiers.. co vies 323
Rubin, Cora M., Senate messenger, 113
Mirststicet NI mo a aan 223
Ruckman, Webster S., law clerk, Patent
Office, 3414 Mount Pleasant street ....... 262
Rudolph, Cuno H., executive committee,
Howard University A A SI Ee eS, 277
Runyan, Elmer G., inspector gas and
Totes, District of Columbia, 300 R street
N
422
Page.
Russell, Aaron, assistant in Office of Clerk
of the House, 1217'S street... 0.0L 0
Russell, Capt. Frederick F., Army Medical
Museum, 1928 Biltmore Street. ve
Russell, Charles W., Assistant Attorney-
General, The Burlington nn Ge
Ryan, W. v. , jr., messenger, House post-
office, gog Thirteenth street .
Ryder, ‘Bayard C., clerk, Office Secretary of
the Senate, 110 Maryland avenue NE..
Sabine, George W., assistant librarian of
the House, The Royalton ..
Sacket, Rodney, clerk, Office Secretary ‘of
the Senate, Ar-Bistreet ri ois Sil Te
Safford, George H., secretary and treas-
urer, Howard University, 2445 Bright-
WOOL AVENUE: son ray
Sagmeister, Joseph, assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Pacific Islands and Porto
RICO hn i dr a aes a ea
Salinas, F., Sefior Don Manuel, Chilean
legation, 1915 N Street. .....coaeeewnonnss
Saltzman, Maj. Charles McK., assistant to
Chief Signal Officer, The Mendota .... .
Sample, G. F., driver, ‘House post-office, 209
Qistreet or SA Sa ees
Sanders, Thomas B., Deputy Commissioner
of Navigation, 2144 Pi street ..............
Sands, Frederic B., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Commerce, 1466 Rhode
Island avenue... wl nl cee see
Sanford, Frank I,., division chief, Bureau
of the Census, 1458 Fairmont street .....
Sanford, Henry W., recorder, General Lang
Office, 1207 Sixth street . ;
Sanger, Monie, steward, Insane Hospital ..
Satterlee, Herbert X.., Assistant Secretary
of the Navy, Stoneleigh Court...........
Sault, W. H., House messenger, 219 Kast
Capitol BEE ier
Sawn, William F., assistant clerk, House
post-office, 927 O Blireet | i. rh
Sawtelle, H. F., District Health Depart-
ment, 3001 Eleventh street..............
Sawyer, Frank H., clerk, Senate Commit-
tee, Civil Service ‘and Retrenchment, 1702
Patreel os ide ita
Saxton, Henry D., chief clerk, Office of
Quartermaster - General, 1922 Calvert
SHIEH oi Sl tse svi cleisle vegies s Yarainieisle
Schaefer, Michael D., chief clerk, Bureau
of Construction and Repair, 117 Fourth
street NI oh er ise a
Schaefer, Peter C., president, board of
plumbing, District of Columbia .........
Schick, Rev. John M., board of visitors,
Hospital foriinsane.... 000 danas
Schlenker, Theo., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Pensions, 226 North Capitol
LE SE A Tr Er FO ENE i
Schlobohm, W. A., House document room,
227 New Jersey avenue ERT Ee
Schmeckebier, Laurence F., division chief,
Interior Department, 1769 Columbia road
Schreiner, Oswald, Bureau of Soils, 1436
Stree on ee es aes Set
Schroeder, E. C., Superintendent Experi-
ment Station, Agricultural Department,
Bethesda, Md. nn, sw doa nk
Schropp, H. J., House messenger, 807 Sixth
Streel. ea ad,
Schull, Capt. Herman W., assistant to Chief
of Ordnance, U. S. A., The Portsmouth. .
Schwartz, Benjamin H., clerk, House Com-
mittee, Revision of the Laws, Pennsyl-
NAME CID hire hte tine
Schwinn, George H., M. D., Hospital for
Insane wo... ia LA
Scofield, Carl S
Lanham, Md. EAT PERI J A TRE AT CH Eh
Scofield, john C3 assistant and chick clerk,
War Départment, 1614 P street.
Scott, Alexander, division chief, "Patent
Office, 1201 Kenyon Stree hyenas
Scott, James B., Solicitor for the Depart-
ment of State, 1956 Calvert street .......
Scott, Jos. A., division chief, Pension
Office, 504 Eighth street NE... ov-i.v, ARE
224
266
Individual Index.
Page.
Scott, W. F., chief clerk, House folding
room, 25 A street NE... cv... 00h, 0s 225
Scott, W. P., clerk’s document room, 207
Arstree tN en nL dal ra 224
Scott, William W., assistant attorney, De-
partment of Justice, 914 Westminster
BCC a a as via 255
Seaman, William H., patent examiner,
1424 Eleventh str eet OL SE A 263
Searle, William D., appointment clerk,
War Department, 1131 Twelfth street.... 251
Sebring, F A., clerk, police court, 1209 Ken-
VorEstreet nn oi cL TS nt 319
Seeds, Edward P., Deputy Auditor War
Department, 204 T enthstreet- NI3 250
Sellers, Iieut.Commander David F., Bureau
of Navigation, 1618 Eighteenth street ... 258
Sergent, J. F., messenger, House post-office,
{= 200: Second street... «ato, 227
Sewall, Eugene D., patent examiner, 1233
GIratd street. nie ro te a 263
Seyboth, Robert, division chief, Weather
Bureau, 21 V street NE.. 265
Shackford, Lieut. C., ordnance duty, Navy-
NARA BES Se eR ee) 259
Shamel, Archibald D., Bureau of Plant In-
dustry, St. James Hotel. 266
Shanahan, John D. , Bureau of Plant Indus-
try, 1742 S Street ii an i 267
Shand, Miles M., appointment clerk, State
Department, 3114 Sixteenth street. ....; 248
Sharp, Mrs. Kate M., board of visitors,
Hospifal for Insane... coi. reise ses 277
Sharpe, Brig. Gen. Henry G.:
Commissary-General, 1713 M street ... 253
Board of commissioners, Soldiers’
1 ER a a ee TE SR Bs 275
Shattuck, Capt. Amos B., assistant to Quar-
termaster-General, 1601 ‘T'wenty-third
ET HL I So a aA EA A RR Ee I SBN 252
Shaw, A. P., patent examiner, 2513 Cliff-
bourne place Ria Fae ST 263
Shaw, Herbert R. C., division chief, Pen-
sion Office, The Iawarden ne 264
Sheep, Wm. L..M.D., Hospital for Insane. 277
Sheild, Marcellus C., assistant clerk, House
Committee, Appropriations, The Cham-
plats anes aie ed ese aa 226
Shelton, Arthur B.:
Clerk, Senate Committee, Finance, 1712
RB Strect i... vic Fon vols Lonienionns vies we sats 221
Secretary, National Money Commis-
SION, a SE Re a 219
Shelton, Maj. George H., assistant, Bureau
of Insular Affairs, The "Marlborough .. 254
Shepard, Seth, chief justice, court of ap-
peals, 1447 Massachusetts avenue ........ 319
Sherfesee, W. F., Forest Service, The
Benedick.. 267
Shidy, Leland P. division chief, ‘Coast and
Geodetic Survey, 1617 Marion street. 271
Shih-yuan, Mr. Lin, Chinese legation, 2001
Nineteenth street... ....... .i... 0.0L 321
Shipe, H. W., division chief, Office Indian
Affairs, Ballston, YS 264
Shipp, Thomas Ro secretary, National
Conservation Commission . ra ai dri)
Shiras, George, associate justice, ‘Supreme
Court of the United States (retired) ..... 317
Shoemaker, Commander William R., Bu-
reau of Navigation, 2007 Kalorama road. 258
Shoemaker, D. N., Bureau of Plant Indus-
try, TARKOMB PATE: ier vias sins 266
Short, Levi E., House messénger, 222 Indi-
ANA AVENE I. hii rans sda we sells teas 225
Shouse, James H., messenger, soldiers’ roll,
227 New Jersey avenue . . 225
Shreve, John G., clerk, House Committee,
Labor, 219 East Capitol street. oh Sun, 226
Shriner, Mary L., clerk, Senate Committee,
Irrigation, The Ventosa. . 222
Shroyer, Harry E., assistant clerk, Com-
mittee, Printing, 1025 Vermont avenue. 222
Shuey, Theodore E., official reporter, Sen-
ate 2127 California AVenue ...........-... 227
Shultz, Civil Engineer J. O., Bureau of
vards and Docks, 1279 Twenty- first
street aaa RT ER Bhan CN Ri) 257
Individual Index. ; Ag LL
Page.
Shurter, FE. B., clerk, Senate Committee.
Expenditures War Department, Metro-
politan Hotel. i. i sivs ines neiiaiiavn es 221
Shurter. William M., president, Training
School TOtiBOYS «iene vs visitor voir siniie 374
Sibert, Maj. William I,., Isthmian Canal
COMMISSION ress ston Samm ena san sara d 275
Sicherman, Harry. M. D., Hospital for the
a Se 277
Simmons, George, division chief, Treasury
Department,’ The'Natchez............... 249
Simpson, George R., patent examiner, Lin-
col atels i RG ee a 263
Simpson, Pay Inspector Geo. W., dis-
bursing officer, Navy Pay Office, The Ro-
chambean dnt iL ans nmin 260
Sims, Commander William S., Bureau of
Navigation, 1228 Seventeenth street..... 258
Sims, Thetus W., director, Columbia Insti-
tution for Deafiand: Dumbs....-.. 0 ae 276
Sinnott, Jos. J., House special messen-
get BhetGlendower ii ii co tricia s 225
Skinner, C. W., Superintendent, Industrial
Home School, District of Columbia...... 374
Skinner, Frank C., examiner in chief, Pat-
ent office, 3425 Holmead place ........... 262
Skinner, Prof. A. N., Naval Observatory,
The: AIDA oi nis vhs ass sia ns wa dain wine 258
Skinner. W. W., Bureau of Chemistry,
Kensington, Md... 0. ad aves 268
Skybak, Mr. O., secretary, Norwegian le-
gallon Ln i a Sh een ee 323
Sladen, Capt. Fred W., Secretary General
Staff, 1941 Calvert street. .... Lian. 0 252
Slater, Samuel E., division chief, Office
Indian Affairs, 7415 S street .......... vei mon
Sloane, Charles S.:
Geographer, Bureau of the Census, 1521
Penmthustreet i ofr iain rte nsinie 270
Secretary, United States Geographic
Board es a a eat 274
Sloat, Frank D., financial clerk, Patent
Offices1a14Y, Street vo hs doe 262
Small, Reuel, official reporter. House, The
Hamilton ht na ries 228
Smith, Addison T., clerk, Senate Commit-
tee, Manufactures, 519 Stanton place NE 222
Smith, Commander W. Strother, Bureau of
Steam Egineering, The Westmoreland.. 259
Smith, Dr. P. G., superintendent Tubercu-
losis Hospital, Fourteenth and Upshur
ee I RR RE ns NU AR 375
Smith, Edward Garrett, assistant clerk,
Senate Committee, Post-Offices and Post
Roads, The Vendome 7; as aries 222
Smith, Erwin F., Bureau of Plant Industry,
1460 Belmont Breet aris 267
Smith, George Otis, Director, Geological
Survey, 2137 Bancroft Place sin cnn 264
Smith, Herbert A., editor, Forest Service,
IG RArent, se a aa 267
Smith, Herbert Knox, Commissioner Bu-
reau of Corporations, The Highlands. . 270
Smith, Horace H., , Senate messenger, The
Ethelhurst Tr EE EA ea ns LAR 223
Smith, Howard B., Senate messenger, 118
Third street NE. . 222
Smith, Hugh M. , Deputy Commissioner of
Fisheries, 1209 Msirect. os 271
Smith, J. LL. clerk House Committee, Edu-
OR rts ae 226
Smith, James Francis, assistant corpora-
tion counsel, District of Columbia, 1339 K
RR ee ee Bee TA En i Ee 375
Smith, Lincoln B., assistant attorney, De-
partment of Justice, 1758 Oregon avenue, 255
Smith, Naval Constructor S. F., Bureau of
Construction and Repair, The Marl-
BOOZ. Sos a Ln sis erie ne 258
Smith, Passed Asst. Surg. H. W., Naval
Medical School Hospital.o.ou i... on... 260
Smith, Ray L., appointment clerk, Isth-
mian Canal Commission, 1319 Massachu-
setis:avenue SH»... 0s ds 275
Smith, Sydney E., disbursing clerk, War
Department, 3037: O street... 0. 00 251
Smith, Sydney Y., bureau chief, State De-
partment, 3107 Mount Pleasant street..,. 248
Page.
smith, Sylvester C., National Monetary
Commission, The Rochambeau,........5 219
Smith, Thos. w., messenger, House post-
office, Y. M.C. A. Building Neb tier 227
Smith, W. A., in charge of Congressional
Recordat the Capitol, 1302 Euclid street.. 228
Smith, W. W., Senate messenger, Y. M. C.
ABRHIINE. a i Sabb re 222
Smith, Wm. M., chief clerk, Bureau Yards
and Docks, 3105 Eleventh street ......... 257
Smith, W. H. H., chief clerk, Bureau of
Steam Engineering, U.S. N., 2122 H street = 259
Smith, William R., superintendent Na-
tional Botanic Garden ................... 274
Smoot, Harlow XE., Senate messenger,
Y. M.C A, Building hie a melee tele dS la Tae 222
Smoot, Reed, National Conservaticn Com-
RUSTON or hs ns vide ee i cdi 277
Snyder, Capt. Harold C., Marine Barracks. 261
Snyder, George Fletcher, clerk, Senate
Committee, Interstate Commerce ...... 222
Solar, Col. Vicente del, Chilean legation.. 320
Solberg, Thorvald, Register of Copyrights,
108: Ristreet:SH Jon Lh Sota 246
Soleau, William I,., disbursing clerk, De-
partment of Commerce and Labor, 1361
Harvard street 52. cl iik Soni nies 269
Sonneck, Oscar G., division chief, Library
of Congress, 3030 "Macomb street .... 246
Sornborger, Charles B., appointment clerk,
Department of Justice, Garrett Park, Md. 255
Sowerby, Capt. F. G., British embassy,
Io15- Nt reat ue cto ib ra hh a as 322
Sowers, J. Louis, clerk, Office Clerk of the
House, 1305 Pennsylvania avenue SE.... 224
Sparrow, Lieut. H. G., Bureau of Equip-
ment, U.:S, N., The: Benedick........... 257
Spaulding, Gertrude B., assistant clerk,
Senate Committee, Indian Affairs, 309
Maryland avenue NE 222
Speel, Pay Diréctor John N., purchasing
officer, Navy Pay Office, 1516 Ki street.. 260
Spelling, Thomas C., special assistant at-
torney. Department of Justice, S13 K street 255
Spencer, KE. B., clerk, House Committee,
Expenditures Public Buildings, 1326 A
street NE, . 220
Spilman, William R., division ‘Superin-
tendent, Post-office Department, 324 Fifth
street SE Re nd I SA 257
Spiller, James, Senate messenger, 506 East
Capitolstreel. ihn hon ath a dies Sears 221
Spillman, William J., Bureau of Plant In-
dustry, 3153 Mount Pleasant street....... 266
Sponsler, C. F., chief engineer, Bureau of
Standards, 1450 Girard Street TE aE 271
Squier, Maj. George O., assistant to Chief
Signal Officer, U. S. A., The Highlands . 254
Sroufe, Robert, District sanitary officer, 523
Twelfth street NE re ni Se 376
Stack, Maurice J., M. D. , Hospital for In-
oe Ee a eRe 277
Stafford, Wendell P., associate justice, su-
preme court, District of Columbia, 1603
Irving ras Ee ga 319
Stallings, B. D., Division of Publications,
Agricultural Department, 048 S street... 268
Stanley, Elmer, House elevator conductor,
332 street NE ii. a i Se 227
Stanley. Maj. David S., assistant to Quarter-
master-General, 1810 Nineteenth street.. 252
Stallings, B. D., associate editor, Division
of Publications, Agricultural Depart-
ent, 048. S Street livin iv vos nies 268
Stauffer, CG. 'C., patent examiner, 1513
Twenty-eighth streck cern an 263
Staunton, Capt. Sidney A., General Board,
US. NL 1735: N Street: nl i vs 260
Steddom, Rice P., division chief, Bureau of
Animal Industry, 1617 Swann street..... 266
Steele, John I... clerk, Senate Committee,
Public Buildings and Grounds, 1742 P
treet we a 222
Stejneger, Leonhard, curator, National
MUSEU vas erm sa os sai ae 272
Stephens, Francis H.. ‘assistant corpora-
tion counsel, District of Columbia, 1714
Lr I SN 375
424 Individual Index.
Page.
Sterling, E. R., lieutenant, Capitol police,
The Wicomico... ou iin tno sates
Sternberg, Brig. Gen. Geo. M., board of
visitors, Hospital for Insane......
Steuart, William M., chief statistician, ‘Bu-
reau of the Census, The Kensington. .
Stevens, Maj. Pierre C., office Post Pay-
master, 1832 Jefferson place Cee lee ius
Stevens, ‘Wilfred, translator, State Depart-
ment, 823 Allison street. .....i is as
Stevens, W. M., messenger, House post-
office; yr Bsireet SB. ... oi nln,
Steward, Thomas G., examiner in chief,
Patent Office, 1336 Monroe street.........
Stewart, Alonzo H., Assistant Doorkeeper
of the Senate, 204 Fourth street SE.......
Stewart, Charles W.:
Librarian, Navy Department, 1211 Ken-
yon street .. elelnivivie sinimiws isiwistsialaiots
Member Geographic Board id. i.
Stewart, John C.; in charge Weather Bu-
reau map station, House of Representa-
tives, 2812 Thirteenth street i. ii...
Stewart, Joseph, Second Assistant Post-
Master-General, 1644 Newton street .....
Stewart, Wm. B., additional clerk, Senate
Committee, Post-Offices and Post-Roads,
sosiRandolph street... o.oo
Stiles, G. W., Bureau of Chemjstry, 4820
Iowa avenue Ea NR Se SE Re
Stine, Latimer B., division chief, Pension
Office, 140 FE str cet NE. sate saat
Stipe, William T., assistant clerk, House
Committee, Interstate and Foreign Com-
merce, 330 Maryland avenue NE .... ...
Stitt, Surg. E. R., Naval Medical School,
2310 Twentieth street .
Stocker, Naval Constructor R.. Board In-
spection and Survey, The Highlands. .
Stories, Willie Lawton, Senate messen-
street EC Eo Lr A OE OH I HE Coa
Stone, George F., Assistant General Super-
intendent Railway Mail Service, 3023
Macombstreet . ui. iaide snail
Stone, Nahum I., Bureau of Manufactures,
1674 Irving street NI Sy
Stouffer, Charles C., chief clerk, Pension
Qffice, 1207 Kenyon street......... 0...
Straight, H. Bloomer, Senate messenger,
reo Cstreel NI. 2. i is irae
Straight, John P., House folding room,
336 Bleventh street NB ...........0... ..,..
Stranahan, Charles G., bookkeeper, Office
Sergeant-at- -Arms of the House, 327 A
SCE I RR ea,
Stratton, S. W., Director, Bureau of Stand-
ards, The Farragut ARs AN IA I CE Th
Straub, Maj. Paul F., assistant to Surgeon-
seneral, U.S. A. The Concord... ......
Straus, Oscar S.:
Secretary of Commerce and Iabor
(biography), 2600 Sixteenth street ...
Member, Smithsonian Institution .....
President J,ight-House Board..........
Streets, Medical Director Thomas H.:
Naval Hospital, 2008 Hillyer place ..
Naval Retiring Board ............ .....0.
Strickland, Reeves T., law clerk and ex-
aminer of titles, Department of Justice,
Kensington; Md. ... 0000 0 ais
Strider, Luke C., justice of the peace, D
street and John Marshall place............
Struve, Mr. B. de, Russian legation........
Stuart, Alexander T., superintendent Dis-
trict schools, 16 Fourth street SE........
Stuart, Wm. M., clerk, Office Secretary of
Senate, 1012 Twelfth street ..............
Stubbs, KE. C., chief engineer of the Senate,
Ande, Mad Lida ross
Sturgis, Maj. Samuel D., General Staff,
SIV OISErCet. re LEE
Sudworth, George B., dendrologist, Forest
Service, 2042 Newark street. .............
Sullivan, Andrew J., deputy chief en-
gineer, fire department, District of Co-
lumbia, 1506 Thirty-second street. .......
Sullivan, "John Te Memisnger House post:
office, 1206 E street. . RE
277
Page.
Sullivan, M. R., patent examiner, The Nor-
pe ee a a 263
Sulloway, C. A, House document room, 309
Maryland ave RB. rie it 225
Summers, Alexander, statistician, Bureau
of Education, 1000 Kighth streel, io 264
Sumner, A. D., Senate messenger, New
NV ATI i es il ele ciate: lieve aie a le 223
Sumner, Charles J., superintendent, House
document room, 229 New Jersey ave. SE. 225
Sutton, Frank, division chief, Geological
Survey, Cosmos Club... a... 264
Sutton, George D., clerk, House Commit-
tee, Printing, 1474 Nistreet. ..i.......... 0. 226
Sutton, Lieut. J. R., harbor master, District
of:Columbia, 025 R street................. 376
Sweet, Lieut. G. C., Bureau of Equipment,
U.S. N., 2121 Natreet. iis ie 257
Swezey, George M., House messenger,
221 New Jersey avenue ER ee 225
Swift, John T., clerk, House Committee,
Merchant Marine and Fisheries, 26 Iowa
CHICIE ol Coin rt Sa Re EE 226
Swift, Maj. Eben, General Staff, 1028 Six-
teenth street i 252
Swindells, John A. District detective, 3328
Q Street il nh ar a ee ee 376
Swingle, Walter T., Bureau of Plant Indus-
EE DE AI re Be mT 267
Sylvester, Richard, superintendent, Metro-
politan police, 1223 Hueclid street i... 375
Taber, Alva S., division chief, General
Iand Office, 3610 Iowell street.. 262
Taft, William H., , president, National Red
CIO a a 276
Takahira, Baron Kogoru, Japanese am-
bassador, 7321 XK street. ...........,...... 323
Talbot, Ellen C., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Manufactures, The Derby-
Shire i ee SS a 222
Talcott, E. M., in charge street extension,
District of Columbia, 3126 Q street ...... 375
Talman, Charles F., librarian, Weather
Bureau, Woodley Inn, Cathedral Heights. 265
Tanaka, Maj. Kunishige, Japanese em-
bassy, Fhe Portland’. 7... io. 000.0. 323
Trang Shao Yi, Chinese special ambassa-
dor, 1301 Sixteenth street................ 320
Taniguchi, Commander Naomi, , Japanese
embassy, The Champlain. . eit ania
Tanner, James:
Register of Wills, District of Colum-
bia, The Richniond:, ce. oooein voce 319
National Red Cross...» rs ouins 276
Tappan, Capt. Benjamin, Board of Inspec-
tion and Survey, ’I'he Benedick.....:.... 260
Taylor, Naval Constructor David W., Bu-
reau of Construction and Repair, Navy-
Nardi eee I ae 258
Taylor, George M., Senate messenger, 218
AStreeb SIL. Soi rr a a 221
Taylor, George R., division chief, War De-
partment; Ballston, Va... ... Gall: 251
Taylor, Hannis, special counsel, Spanish
Treaty Claims Commission, 2018 O street. 255
Taylor, H. W., chief engineer, House of
Representatives, 100 Fifth street NE. 227
Taylor, James K., Supervising Architect,
‘Thehghlands,. Jo onl te wn, 249
Taylor, Leighton Croft, assistant clerk,
Senate Committee, Post-Offices and Post-
Roads, 207 East Capitol street ........... 222
Taylor, Lieut. Col. Charles W., assistant to
Adjutant-General........................ 252
Taylor, Miles, clerk, Senate Committee,
Examine the Civil Service, 1007 Otis place.  22r
Taylor, M. O., House messenger, 916 I
SETeet. di sa i LR 225
Taylor, M. W., librarian, Bureau of Chem-
istry, 1838 Wyoming avenue. Sel 267
Taylor, Stark B., bailiff, Court of Claims,
1504. S8treet ov. . Sa Ta 318
Taylor, William A., Bureau of Plant Indus-
try, 55 Q street NE ee a lS Sr 267
Taylor, W. C., deputy register of wills, 1400
Twenty- Brot street. oo 319
Teller, Henry M., National Monetary
Commissioti, PRE CATO rane sor 219
Tennant, Frederick A., law clerk, Patent
Office, Fhe POrtner. carn ts 262
Individual Index.
Page.
Terr, Nai, Siamese legation, The Hamil-
Terrell, Robert H., justice of the peace,
GEE Gistreeth. inv. coast na vain ae,
Terry, I,. Seward, examiner, detailed to
House Committee, Pensions, 1625 New-
fonustreet as on La re ne.
Thal, Mr. de, Russian embassy ...........
Theall, Elisha S., clerk, House Committee,
Naval Affairs, Union Trust Building....
Thirkeld, Rev. Wilber P., president How-
ard University hr a,
Thoby, Mr. Perceval, secretary Haitian
degation ll Shem ERAN hehe a
Thomas, C. N., resolution and petition
clerk of the House, 1410 M street........
‘Thomas, D. P., House messenger, IoI2
East Capitol street... ... oo ici ie. ,
Thomas, Edw. H., corporation counsel,
District of Columbia, 926 S street ........
Thomas, John H., law examiner, General
Land Office, 1439 Belmont road ..........
Thompson, A. H., division chief, Pension
Office, go4 Massachusetts avenue NE ....
Thompson, Harry H., division superintend-
ent, Post-Office Department, 1720 Willard
Street. dlve voise Br Sein reli te a Tete orl Teel
Thompson, James David, division chief,
Library of Congress, The Kenesaw......
Thompson, John G., Assistant Attorney-
General, Pe Calre iii. ciass saisssiveic ns
Thompson, John Q., Assistant Attorney-
General, ‘The Dewey... cv. ores asians
Thompson, Joseph M., House manager, de-
partmental telegraph....... 200. coi. 00
Thompson, Lieut. Commander I,. S., In-
spector Naval Electrical Appliances,
RE BACHElOr fh scsi caterers sarah as
Thompson, Maj. John ‘I, assistant to Chief
of Ordnance, U. S. A., Army and Navy
BH Ee GE Se RES SE,
Thompson, Royal W., clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Railroads, 21 Sixth street NE...
Thomson, George G., assistant chief clerk,
Post-Office Department, 1612 Monroe
a ee
Thorp, E. H., division superintendent,
Post-Office Department, 138 B street NE.
Thorp, Martin R., division chief, War
Department, 1725 Corcoran street........
Thurkow, Mr. G. 1,., Netherlands legation,
The Bachelor... i comic hasan
Tillman, B. R., jr., clerk, Senate Commit-
tee, Five Civilized Tribes, The Toronto.
Tindall, William, secretary, Board of Com-
missioners, District of Columbia, 1132
Filth slreet os i ih hil eae
Titcomb, John W., Bureau of Fisheries,
6osIrving street... 0. Sl. dies
Tittmann, Otto H., Superintendent, Coast
and Geodetic Survey, 2014 Hillyer
HIE ee Re ER
Todd, Maj. Henry D., General Staff, 1626
Nineteenthistreet. . oo. oa 00000
Todd, William B., assistant topographer,
Post-Office Department, 1243 Irving street
Toledo Herrarte, Sefior Dr. Don:
Guatemalan minister, The Highlands.
Governing board, Bureau of American
Republica. i avis ash ves
Tolman, I,. M., division chief, Bureau of
Chemistry, 1408 Emerson street. .........
Topping, William H., clerk, House Com-
mittee on Invalid Pensions, Congress
a mn a a Te
Torney, Col. Geo. H., Assistant Surgeon-
Yah I a CR Ee SE
Torok, Count Alexander, Austria-Hunga-
rian embassy, 1903 N street...............
Townsend, Charles O., Bureau of Plant
Industry, Takoma: Park,............... ..
Townsend, J. W., disbursing clerk, Treas-
ury Department, Kensington, Md.......
Townsend, W. W., patent examiner, 1447
Irving street ................. FESR
Tracewell, Robert J., Comptroller of the
reasnry,; 1746: Q street, ...... 0... .ovvi.
Tracy, Capt. Joseph P., General Staff, 1404
Twenty-first street......... Weir veeisel vey
324
319
226
324
226
250
425
Page.
Tracy, Thomas F., House messenger, Chi-
cago; Hotel nin iii donde dates
Tracy, William W., sr., Bureau of Plant
Industry, The Kenesaw............ see...
Trainer, John W., attorney, Department
of Justice, 1830 S street .......... . ae...
Travers, Arthur M., chief clerk, Office
Third Assistant Postmaster-General, 1841
Kalorama road... ........ 0c. dike
Travis, John A., messenger, soldiers’ roll,
1008 Hast Capitol street ....... sna eae
Treat, Charles H., Treasurer of the United
States, I'he Highlands... .......... i...
Trescot, T. C., Bureau of Chemistry, Ham-
mond.Count.. ro a a ae
Trimble, Matthew,assistant District asses-
sor and member excise board, 1320 Rhode
Island avenue. i alii on Lies,
True, A. C., Director Experiment Sta-
tions, Agricultural Department, 1604
Seventeenth street... oo... ove ore
True, E. R., cashier, Office Treasurer of
the United States, 1437 Clifton street... .
True,F. W., head curator, National Museum
True, Rodney H., Bureau of Plant Indus-
trys Glendale, Mi. ovina seasons
Truedson, A. M., clerk, House Committee,
Private Land Claims... .. J. oh ous
Tryon, F. M., patent examiner, 1225 Mas-
sachusettsiavenue SE............. 0.
Isai Fu, Prince, secretary Chinese special
CMPASSY. a A a a
Tucker, Capt. I,ogan, Quartermaster, Ma-
sine Barracks nr Nn
Tucker, G. P., principal examiner, Patent
Office, 633 GC street NB... oo son
Tucker, P. A., civilian assistant, Bureau of
Supplies and Accounts, 1116 Thirteenth
LY RA NR RR ET Si
Turner, Charles H., assistant United States
attorney, District of Columbia, 1322
Bwelfthstreel, td aves
EIT EON SE le Ses
Turner, William B., clerk, Office Secretary
of the Senate, The Nansemond .........
Tweedale, Alonzo, auditor District of Co-
lumbia, 2825 Fourteenth street...........
Tyler, Ralph W., Auditor Navy Depart-
ment, 3018 Eleventh street. ..............
Tyson, A. H., superintendent municipal
lodging house, District of Columbia, 312
Twellth street... .... iit ca avs vnenens
Ucker, Clement S., division chief, General
Land Office, 60 Bryant street.............
Ugglas, Count IL. af, Swedish legation ....
Uhler, George, Supervising Inspector-
General Steamboat-Inspection Service,
ag Buclid street oi, oo Lin nin bonis
Undén, Mr. U. T., Swedish legation.......
Underwood, Leonard, clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Transportation Routes to the Sea-
board, The Ventosa ui. oovi vi ilina.,
Updegraff, Harlan, chief, Alaska division,
Bureau of Education, The Stratford ... .
Updegraff, Prof. Milton, director Nautical
Almanac, 1719 Thirty-fifth street ........
Urcullu y Cervijo, Don Nicolas, Spanish
legation.... io dase me
Usher, Capt. Nathaniel R., assistant to
Bureau of Navigation, 1760 Corcoran
I El fi
Vail, Benjamin, House Department mes-
senger, 1110 East Capitol street..........
Vale, Henry Ambler, clerk, Senate Com-
mittee, Library, The Van Cortlandt.....
Valentine, Robert G., Assistant Commis-
sioner of Indian Affairs, 1028 Sixteenth
Van Deman, Capt. Ralph N., General Staff,
The Sherman ....: Si, unites ies sei
Van Horn, W. L., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee Pensions, 216 Maryland ave-
nue NI. olan Re aay
Van Orsdel, Josiah A., associate justice,
District Court of Appeals, 2500 Ontario
road... en, a RRR en i SR
Vanzant, J. W., District inspector of phar-
macy, 129: Fourth street SE, ccvrevevan--
250
250
272
426 Individual Index.
Page.
Varadhara, Phya Akharaj, Siamese minis-
Veitch, F. P., division chief, Bureau of
Chemistry, College Park, Md............
Velten, Mr. French embassy... .:........
Venable, Earl, clerk, Senate Committee,
Standard Weights and Measures, 113
Pirst street NEI. oo i rs av sien
Vermillion, KE. F.:
Chairman, automobile board, 123
Thirteenth street NE earns ts ais
Inspector of boilers. .... 5. Louvain,
Vernon, William T., Register of the Treas-
HEY azo RB strect... ne ee a
Vestal, Capt. Samuel C., General Staff,
1437 Park road i... ce es ei eee
Vianna-Kelsch, Mr. Gustavo de, Brazilian
embassy, Rauscher's............. .......
Vipond, B. L., acting accountant, Govern-
ment Printing Office, Hyattsville, Md..
Vogel, Mr. I,eo, Swiss minister, 2013 Hillyer
PACE ia ah ar ah eR
Von Bayer, Hector, architect and engineer,
Bureau of Pisherles, 2418 Fourteenth
A Sa EE A Se
Von Haake, Maj. Ron:
Topographer, Post-Office Department,
Hammond:Conrt... i. oi. viviaees
United States Geographic Board.......
Von ILivonius, Maj., German embassy,
1028 ISIE Rl i nh or ris ts stanton es
Von Stumm, Mr., German embassy, 1744
10 la SR Te peta a CR
Von Wedel, Count, counselor Russian em-
bassyi The Portland... ies coved.
Vreeland, Edward B., vice chairman Na-
tional Monetary Commission, The
DEWEY or Sh Sve eee a i ee
Vrooman, Charles K., chief clerk, Office So-
licitor of the Treasury, Hyattsville, Md.
Wadsworth, Maj. James W., President
Board of Managers National Home for
Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 346 Broad-
way, New York INV... doen
Wagner, Frank J., chief engineer, fire de-
partment, District of Columbia, 1910
Eighth sireet.......0.... o. en aio...
Weidner. C. W., Bureau of Standards, 1429
Bafect. voor
Waite, Merton B., Bureau of Plant Indus-
try; 1500 Columbia read... ......i5 cases
Wakefield, F. H., notification clerk of the
House, NeW VarnUnl.. i. cases ainsi
Walcott, Charles D., Secretary Smithson-
ian Institution and curator, National
Museum, 1743 Twenty-second street.....
Wales, George R., chief examiner, Civil
Service Commission, The Cordova.......
Walker, F. V., chief clerk, Navy Pay Office,
1526:Corcoran:street......... 00. LL Lk
Walker, John H., clerk, Senate Committee,
District of Columbia, 1334 Girard street. .
Walker, P. H., division chief, Bureau of
Chemistry, 1718 Corcoran street. .........
Walker, Ralph, House elevator conductor,
352K slrcet NE. Lou. cosas sin aes
Wall, Dr. J. S., District police surgeon....
Wallace, Capt. Charles S., disbursing offi-
cer, Signal Corps, U. S. A., gor Thirteenth
eo Ry he Rr ee a eC SR
Wallace, Frank C., foreman of printing,
Government Printing Office, 135T street.
Wallace, G. W., water registrar, District of
Columbia, i mes Se al
Wallmo, Pere G., clerk, House Committee
on Alcoholic Liquor Fraffic....... ...vee-
Walls y Merino, Sefior Don Manuel, Span-
ish legation. is on. oni a Sisto oe dele
Walsh, John, House messenger...........
Walsh, John E., District medical sanitary
inspector, 202 ‘East Capitol street. .......
Walters, Don C., House messenger, Burton
Hotel. oni ss de wh be a
Wang, Chintsu, Chinese special embassy.
Ward, Geo. nN division chief, Office
Indian Affairs, 1521 Monroe street.......
Ward. J. M., clerk to Sipsilniendomtal Dis-
trict building, 1201 Girard street. :
324
320
257 274
Page.
Warfield, Frank A., division chief, Pen-
sion Office, 1537 I' RS a 264
Waring, Dr. sf H. N., executive committee,
Howard University en re Be 277
Warmley, P. L., jr., testing engineer, of-
fice Public Roads, Agricultural Depart- .
ment, sors Dent place. ...... 0. oe. 268
Warner, Lee F., clerk, Senate Committee,
Indian Affairs, 1700 Fifteenth street... 222
Warner, Louis Henry, clerk, House Com-
mittee on Expenditures in the State De-
partment; ’The Richmond... nae... 226
Warner, Vespasian, Commissioner of Pen-
sions, Ihe Portland. os... rr 263
Warner, Willard F., chief clerk, Office of
Treasurer of United States, The Concord. 2350
Warwick, Walter W., examiner of ac-
counts, Isthmian Canal Commission .... 275
Waters, Charles M., division superintend-
ent, Post-Office Department, 509 Twelfth
BETCRL. oo rin ve ory tates a aetna aia Ss ea Es 256
Watson, Geo. S., chief clerk, fire depart-
ment, District of Columbia, 310 Third
BA A a a RE Se a RD 375
Watson, William A., House special mes-
senger, The Regent... oro. i. von. 225
Watts, Isaiah P., Senate messenger ....... 223
Weakley, A. D., D.D. S.;
President Board of Dental Examiners,
District of Columbia, 1339 K street .. 374
Dental surgeon, Hospital for Insane. 277
Weaver, H. O. , private secretary to the Sec-
retary of the Treasury, 1928 First street. 249
Weaver, Iieut. Col. Erasmus M:
General Staff, "The Parragut...... ..... 252
Board of Ordnance and Fortification.. 254
Webber, F. N., sr., special officer, Capitol
police, 526 Third street... oor... 15% 228
Weber, Alexander H., River and Harbor
Board, The Portsmouth. ..... ove 254
Weber, 'F. C., Bureau of Chemistry, 1214
Pwelfth Bitent.... ro 268
Webster, Daniel, janitor, House post-
office, 1127 C street Sh. vias si inact 227
Webster, F. M., division chief, Bureau of
Entomology, Kensington, Md........... 268
Webster, Richard M., special counsel, Post-
Office Department, ‘The Revere.......... 256
Weed, Theodore I.., private secretary to
Secretary of Commerce and Labor, 1628
SE Es SE Se A Ee re a 269
Weeks, John W., National Monetary Com-
mission, 1526 New Hampshire avenue. 219
Weiler, G. L., clerk, Office Secretary of the
Senate, Ld Fhird'street ...... 220
Weirick, J. H., Senate messenger, 1902 H
street... coro nen en STR 222
Welch, A. C., official reporter, House, The
CNBR W is ody iis ns oh aa ire rater ves 228
Welch, John, clerk, Office of Superintend-
ent of the Capitol, 116 Eleventh street
3 IHERB a 228
Wells, Commander Benjamin W., retired,
Office Judge-Advocate-General, Vs N.,
The Westmoreland, ............ 0... 259
Wells, Edmund J., clerk, Senate Commit-
tee, Judiciary, 1 C street LC es 222
Wells, Leona M., assistant clerk, Senate
Committee, Military Affairs, 1338 New
York avenue .. as 222
Wells, Philip P., law officer, Forest Service,
1325 Vermont avenue , .... Juin we 267
Wells, William C., acting chief statistician,
Bureau American Republics, Hyattsville,
Md dicen stn Sine Sr ana d 273
Welsh, Miss J. M., clerk, House Committee
on Disposition of Useless KExecutive °
Papers, 1722 Pennsylvania avenue....... 226
West, Henry I,., Commissioner, District
of Columbia, 1364 Harvard street........ 374
West, Maj. Parker W. , assistant to Inspec-
tor-General, 1712 H street or 252
Wheatley, J. B., Senate messenger, Bur-
ton Hotel... o.oo td non iailg 222
Wheeler, James C., Deputy Commissioner
of Internal Revenue, 1012: H street...
oR
AT
AR
AR
Individual Index.
i & i
i 1
®
Page.
Wheeler, William R.:
Assistant Secretary, Department of
Commerce and Labor, The High-
QandS Serie sedi See Be bre a
Immigration Commission. . FER
Whelchel, Jasper E., division “chief,
Bureau of the Census, 2803 Eighteenth
Street, Ti CS RR ee
Whipple, Brig. Gen.Charles H. ,Paymaster-
General, U. S. A, The Westmoreland .
White, Andrew D., Regent, Smithsonian
Institution; Tthaca, N.Y. ho Sano
White, Civil Engineer U. S. G., Bureau of
Yards and Docks, The Portland........
White, Commander William W., Bureau
of Steam Engineering, 1718 Q street... ..
White, David, associate curator, National
Musca, es Ae Se pees
White, Edward Douglass, associate justice,
Supreme Court of the U. S. (biography),
1717 Rhode Island avenue................
White, J. K., clerk, Capitol police, 1330
Pennsylvania avenue SH ara. hal
White, Union B., stenographer, Senate
Committee, University of the United
Sates ree a eeu a (etwas
White, Wm. A., M. D., superintendent
Hospital foriInsanes. 8. aa Su
Whitehead, Henry, Slostrigan, Congres-
sional Library, Taurel, Md
Whitney, Charles F., division chief, Pen-
sion Office, Silver Spring, Md non
Whitney, Elizabeth A., superintendent Re-
form 5CHOO0I fOr Girls... .onueennsns ons
Whitney, J. N., chief clerk, Bureau of Sta-
tistics, Department of Commerce and
Labor, 1619" Seventeenth streef...........
Whitney, Milton, chief, Bureau of Soils,
‘I'akoma Park, M
Whitson, Verona, Senate messenger, 236
Noxth:Capitol street... co... 0. on 3
Whittelsey, Lieut. Commander Humes H.,
Office Naval Intelligence, 1606 K street. .
Whitworth, Capt. Pegram, assistant to
Quartermaster-General, 918 Eighteenth
EE a aT eR ET AR a re
Wight, John B., director, Columbia Insti-
tution for Deaf and Dumb... ...
Wilbur, Cressy L., chief statistician, "Bu-
reau of the Census, 1374 Harvard street. .
Wilcox, A. D., chief clerk, Bureau of Insu-
lar Affairs, 2610 University place... 0.
Wiley, Harvey W., chief, Bureau of Chem-
istry, 1314 Fenthistreet. -- oviner. os
Wiley, I. H., House messenger, 18 Grant
pl
Wilkie, John E., chief, Secret Service, 2233
Eightéenth SUEEEL: r eers as
Wilkinson, A. G., patent examiner, 1526 K
ot BL oi DR re a et LC Ne FE NICO
Williams, Commander C. _S., General
Board, U.S. N., The Westmoreland......
Williams, E. S., messenger, soldiers’ roll,
16 Fourth street; SE. i... ........ i
Williams, Edward J., disbursing officer,
Isthmian Canal Commission... .........
Williams, Edwin I.., clerk, House Com-
mittee, Post-Office and Post-Roads, ‘The
Driscoll sos ee
Williams, Geotge H., chief clerk, Superin-
tendent of the Capitol, 1723 P street......
Williams, Henry E., Assistant Chief,
Weather Bureau, The Windsor ..........
Williams, J. R., file clerk of the House,
Pennsylvania Clb
Williams, I. S, Division of Publications,
Agricultural Department, 2304 First street
Wil So Lieut.Roger,commanding U.S.S
a LE A RT re a pe ITE a
Williams, Naval Constructor Henry, Bu-
reau of Construction and Repair, The
DCCA... vie cessor sie vin din sistem ceilalun sols
Williams, Robert, jr., Deputy Commis-
sioner of Internal Revenue, The Manor
HOUNEE Sal, cl ee rn Se iG eis sy rele
Williams, Roger, chief clerk, Board of Ex-
cise, District of Columbia, 18 Third street
TH
269
219
427
Page.
Williams, Stephen W., division chief, Gen-
eral Land Office, Takoma Park .......... 262
Wilmer, I,. Allison, special assistant attor-
ney, Department of Justice, 1225 N street. 255
Wilson, Charles Frederic, clerk, Senate
Committee, Rules, 2004 G street.......... 223
Wilson, Geo. S., secretary, Board of Char-
ities, District of Columbia, 7001 Georgia
AVEIITIE, Lod ie fen sith a aie sibaiie te sg oie 374
Wilson, H. M., Geological Survey, The
Oakland Jie ol fn Sr ny 265
Wilson, J. Ormond, President Industrial
Home School, District of Columbia....... 374
Wilson, James:
Secretary of Agriculture (biography),
The Portland. crt cee ns ais sia 265
Member, Smithsonian Institution..... 272
Wilson, Jasper, private secretary to Secre-
tary of Agriculture, The Portland........ 265
Wilson, Jesse H., Assistant Secretary, In-
terior Department, 2625 Eleventh street. 262
Wilson, John, chief clerk, Office Surgeon-
General, U. S. A., The Alabama......... 253
Wilson, Louis C., disbursing officer, Dis-
trict of Columbia, 1501 Park road...... 375
Wilson, Peter M., assistant financial clerk
of the Senate, 101 Qistreet....... LL 220
Wilson, W. E., secretary International
Waterways Commission, Buffalo, N. 276
Windisch -Graetz, Prince Vincent zu,
Austria-Hungarian embassy, Rauscher’s. 320
Wing, Willis H., assistant enrolling clerk
of the House, "118 Maryland avenue NE. 224
Winston, Isaac, editor, Coast and Geodetic
Survey, The Poriner.... 270
Winter, Lieut. John G., jr., assistant to
chief signal officer, The Sell 254
Winterhalter, Commander A. G.:
Hydrographer, Navy Department, The
Portnekir oo Jade bane lara sail. 258
United States Geographic Board...... 274
Winters, George W., House elevator con-
ductor, 3337 Seventeenth street.......... 227
Winthrop, Beekman:
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury,
1780 Massachusetts avenue........... 249
: Treasurer National Red Cross......... 276
Wise, Medical Director John C.:
Board of Naval Medical Examiners,
The Porfland an ric serine, 261
National Red Cross... i uv. ion. foavias 276
Witten, James W., chief law clerk, General
Land Office, 2518 Thirteenth street ...... 262
Wold, Ansel, clerk, Office Secretary of the
Senate, 147 North Carolina avenue SE . 220
Wolff, F. A., Bureau of Standards, 1429 R
Steels vii ss al ras nn eS a 271
Wood, G. M., editor, Geological Survey,
3S Irving streel on 265
Wood, George L., assistant division super-
intendent, Post-Office Department, 2109
Twelfth street, Baltimore, Md... oa nih 256
Wood, J. M. , superintendent District street
cleaning, 611 Tenth street NE. Css 357
Wood, J. . President Spanish Treaty
Claims Commission, The Dewey........ 255
Wood, Lieut. Col. W. PE assistant to In-
spector-General, The Farragut a ae ad 252
Woodruff, George W.:
Assistant attorney- general for the In-
terior Department, 1433 L street..... 255
National Conservation Commission ... 277
Woods, Adelaide E., assistant clerk, Senate :
Committee, Appropriations, 527 Twelfth
Stree NE... ah So ets 221
Woods, Albert F., assistant chief, Bureau
of Plant Industry, Takoma Park........ 266
Woods, Elliott, Superintendent of the Capi-
tol. Stoneleigh Court... cine iain 228
Woodward, H. M., permit clerk, District
of Columbia, Brookland................. 375
Woodward, William C., health officer,
District of Columbia, 508 I street ........ 375
Woolard, William F., chief clerk, Patent
Office, 3615 Newark street... .......... 262
Woolsey, M. B., clerk, House Committee,
Levees and Improvements of the Missis-
SIPPY RIVET vere vais via ve vis renee SR 226
\
{ {
428 Individual Index.
Page.
Worcester, William P., chief clerk, Marine-
Hospital Service, 1108 Spring road ...... 251
Wormeley, P. L., jr., testing engineer,
Office Public Roads, 3014 Dent place..... 269
Worsley, A. S., assistant engineer of the
Senate, 1243 New Jersey avenue......... 223
Wotherspoon, Brig. Gen. Wm. W., presi-
dent Army War College, The Dupont .. 252
Wrenn, A. C., chief clerk, Bureau of Equip-
ment, U. S:N., 234 Tenth street NE... 257
Wright, Daniel Thew, associate justice, su-
preme court, District of Columbia, 2032
Sixteenthistreet...... .... Li. Lan vonih vi. 319
Wright, George E., Senate messenger..... 222
Wright, Herbert, patent examiner, Ken-
sington, Vd. oa as eas 263
Wright, J. M., marshal, Supreme Court of
the United States, Metropolitan Club.... 317
Wright, IL,uke E.:
Secretary of War (biography), 2009 N
Street ta ER ns SR ea 251
Member Smithsonian Institution ..... 272
Wu Chao-chu, Mr., Chinese legation...... 521
Wu Ting-fang, Dr., Chinese minister, 2001
Nineteenth street... i. uti esi ven. 321
Wirdemann, J. V., captain of the watch,
Congressional Library, 124 Massachu-
gettsavenune NE... ui Sil soesidos ove 246
Wyatt, W. Carl, chief clerk, Office Public
Roads, Department of Agriculture, 36
Randolph place... oo ini vas. 269
Wyman, Bayard, division Sppertiendent.
Post-Office Department, The Westmore-
and ee eh ea Ta 236
Wyman, Walter:
Surgeon-GeneralMarine-HospitalServ-
ice, Stoneleigh Court................. 251
National Red Cross: . ivi: iidsicivaie sais 276
Board of Visitors, Hospital for Insane. 277
Wynne, I. B., patent examiner, 1424 Chapin
Street. (i hen lt Fe Betta tar alate a eae 263
Yénes, Francisco J., secretary, Bureau of
the American Republics, The Oakland... 273
Page.
Yang Yu Siu, Chinese special embassy.... 321
Yelverton, John D., division chief, General
Land Office, 3615 Newark street.......... 262
Yen, Dr. Wei-ching W., secretary, Chinese
legation, 2001 Nineteenth street......... 321
Yoacham, Seflor Don Alberto, secretary
Chilean legation, The Burlington........ 320
Yocum, I. C., assistant clerk, House Com-
mittee, Naval Affairs, 920 Nineteenth
SEFC ye erelic su iinisate sion sinteleicire wien leis a sin states 226
Yoshida, Mr. Isaburo, Japanese embassy,
1310: IN SET€CL. i. rhein oi vu ics eaten or ioinniva cuits 323
Young, Charles E., assistant superintend-
ent of work, Government Printing Office,
75 Rhode Island avenue... .... 0... 274
Young, Fred S., House mail contractor, 204
Bistreetn aut cidoidininss fr Ti sre 227
Young, H. Olin, Committee Inaugural Cer-
emonies, The Portland... ................ 219
Young, John C., clerk, Senate Committee,
Fisheries, 1302 Irving street. ............. 221
Young, James R., division superintendent,
Post-Office Department, 1001 New Hamp-
shire avenue... co... i. elites 257
Young, John R., clerk, supreme court, Dis-
trict of Columbia, 1522 R street.......... 319
Young, Mr. G., British embassy.......... 322
Young, Warren S., executive clerk, White
House, 20235 1 Street. +, oo co. vias ene seis 247
Yung Kwai, Mr., Chinese special embassy,
1505:Rhode Island avenue................ 321
Zalinski, Maj. Moses G., depot quarter-
master, 152K street.......... .... aa 253
Zalles, Sefior Don Jorge K., first secretary,
Bolivian legation® ...... o.oo 320
Zappone, A., chief, Division of Accounts
and Disbursements, Agricultural Depart-
ment 2222 Firstisireet ....... uh seu, 268
Zinkham, Louis F., superintendent of
Washington Asylum, Nineteenth and C
sireets SB... Jol. ea 375
Zon, Raphael, Forest Service, The Stone-
hurst,7..v. vi Joa, Ses ievis vavienie vn Celine 267
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REFERENCES
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General
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